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36.5°F Clear Obituaries Gunn, Kenneth W., Jr. Kenneth Gunn, Jr. Kenneth W. Gunn, Jr., 21, died at Elmendorf AFB hospital, on January 20, 2013. He was born at Edwards AFB, Ca., on September 22, 1990. He was the oldest son and the second child of Kenneth W. Gunn, Sr. and Angela Casteel-Gunn, younger brother to Amber and older bother to Brenton. He was currently a senior attending college at Alabama A & M University, in Huntsville. Kenny moved to Alaska with his family in January 1994, following a military PCS move from California. As a child he attended Chester Valley Elementary School and Wendler Middle School. Kenny always had a deep interest in learning, gardening and an inquisitive mind that helped him become an excellent student throughout school. He graduated with honors from Bartlett High School in 2009, where he was a member of the football team, state champion track team, Symphonic Band, Jazz Band and National Honor Society. As a senior at Bartlett, Kenny earned several awards that included Best Soloist Jazz Band, Most Valuable Jazz Band Member, the Louie B. Armstrong Award, and the Most Improved Athlete. He received a full four-year academic scholarship to Alabama A & M University during his senior year at Bartlett, where he had been a full time student, since the fall 2009 semester. He is survived in Anchorage by his family, father, Kenneth W. Gunn, Sr.; mother, Angela Casteel-Gunn; sister, Amber and brother, Brenton; extended family, uncles, Edward, Gregory, Anthony, Michael and Samuel Casteel and Robert Mobley, all of Chattanooga; Richard Ray of Battle Creek, Mi.; Billy Ray Franklin of Muscle Shoals, Ala., and Leroy Franklin of Denver; aunts, Loretta Mobley, Linda Casteel, Sherrie Taylor, Druehelen Casteel and Linda Height, all of Chattanooga; scores of cousins, friends and loved ones in Chattanooga, Anchorage and Alabama. Services will be held at Hawkinsville Missionary Baptist Church on Saturday, Feb. 2, at noon. Interment will be in Lakewood Cemetery. The body will lie in state after noon on Friday, Feb. 1, at John P. Franklin Funeral Home, 1101 Dodds Ave., 423 622-9995. Bobby Moore, Jr. of Rossville died on Thursday, April 10, 2014. Memorial services will be held at 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 19, at Delray Baptist Church with family receiving friends ... (click for more) Alvenia "Sweet Pea" Warner, 88, of Flinstone, Georgia died on Tuesday, April 15, 2014. She was born in Corinth, Ky., to the late Charles and Martha Bradley and was of the Baptist ... (click for more) Juanita June Marcum, the most loving and godly mother, died on Monday, April 14, 2014. Born in Portsmouth, Ohio, she lived in Delbarton, W.V.., for many years before making her home with her ... (click for more) Bobby Moore, Jr. of Rossville died on Thursday, April 10, 2014. Memorial services will be held at 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 19, at Delray Baptist Church with family receiving friends from 1 p.m. until service time at the church. Arrangements are by W.L. Wilson & Sons Funeral Home-Fort Oglethorpe. (click for more) Alvenia "Sweet Pea" Warner, 88, of Flinstone, Georgia died on Tuesday, April 15, 2014. She was born in Corinth, Ky., to the late Charles and Martha Bradley and was of the Baptist faith. She was also preceded in death by her husband, Ivan "Pop" Warner, daughter, Darlene Martha Woods, and grandson, Dewayne Young. Survivors include her children, Charles Sears, ... (click for more) Lusk, Raymond F. Foy, Betty Jane Flood Yerbey, Phyllis Proffitt, James V. "Jim" (Decatur) James V. “Jim” Proffitt, 76, of Decatur, TN, died on Monday, April 14, 2014. He was born in McMinn County, but grew up and lived most of his life in Meigs County. He was a patriot who loved his country and served in the Air force. He loved The Lord and all creations. Jim was a family man who was devoted to his mother, wife, daughter and grandchildren. He was preceded ... (click for more) Tate, Claudia McDowell (Dunlap) Claudia McDowell Tate, 84, of Dunlap, TN, died in a Chattanooga hospital Sunday, April 13, 2014. Claudia retired from her own restaurant, Claudia's Restaurant after owning and operating it for several years. She was preceded in death by her parents, Sam and Ethel Mathis McDowell; and sisters, Flossie Narramore and Violet Lively; brothers, Odis McDowell, ... (click for more) Blackwell, Floyd (Athens)
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NorthShore Health Center receives $1.2M federal grant U.S. Rep. Pete Visclosky, D-1st, has announced that Portage-based NorthShore Health Centers will receive $1,280,224 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as a continuing grant under the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Fiscal Year 2014 Service Area Competition. This federal funding will allow NorthShore to continue providing affordable primary care to their patients, including medical, dental, behavioral health, and pharmacy services, regardless of patients� level of health insurance coverage, according to a statement released today. �NorthShore was happy to receive word from Congressman Visclosky that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services awarded us $1.28 million,� NorthShore CEO Jan Wilson said. �We are very fortunate to have Congressman Visclosky�s support as we continue to move forward and offer services to residents of Northwest Indiana.� �Since 1997, NorthShore Health Centers has dramatically improved the quality of life for families throughout Northwest Indiana,� Visclosky said. �I thank NorthShore�s dedicated staff for their commitment to improve the scope and the quality of care available to all.� �Last year, NorthShore served more than 34,000 patients in over 100,000 visits, an increase of almost seven times the number of patients recorded when NorthShore first became a HRSA grantee in 2003,� the statement said. �In the upcoming fiscal year, NorthShore anticipates serving more than 45,000 patients with over 140,000 visits.�
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Taking Time to Catch Your Breath & Learning to Say "No" November 16, 2010 by Chief Family Officer There are more demands on my time than I can handle these days. A couple of weeks ago, I was asked if I would commit to helping out at school for an additional two hours per week, on top of the two weekly hours plus monthly meetings that I’m there. Over the weekend, I was asked if I would join the committee for the PTA’s largest fund raiser. I just got back from my last Mega Sale transaction at Ralphs, and found myself thinking that I don’t want to go shopping for a few days now. My friend is having surgery tomorrow and I want to provide her and her family with food to last a few days. My house needs cleaning. I’m sure you have a similar list of demands on your time. Over the years, I’ve actually gotten pretty good at saying no. I’ve learned that if I resent doing something, I’ll just drag my feet so both I and the requester end up feeling frustrated and bad. And that’s not helping anyone. So I turned down the two requests from school, as I feel I am helping out plenty and I really don’t want more school-related obligations on my plate. But I also need to simply take a breather right now. I’m actually happy that the Mega Sale is over at Ralphs so I’m not haunted by all the deals I’m not getting. I’ve gone every day since Sunday and while I’m looking forward to seeing what the sales will be starting tomorrow, I need a break from shopping. I will cook one meal for my friend and her family, but mostly I’m going to take over a lot of the free soup I picked up during the Mega Sale, plus some goodies and household items so they won’t have to worry about those things while my friend recuperates. I’ll take these things to her and hang out for a little while, so that too will be rejuvenating as we have a little bit of girl time. And I find that what’s more rejuvenating of all is simply spending a day at home without going out unless it’s absolutely necessary and cleaning up and getting some work done and taking care of business. So I’m picking a day when I can say “no” to all requests to look forward to. An at-home mani/pedi sounds good too. How do you catch your breath? Morning Coffee: Catch Up Time Warning: Your identity as a parent is taking over your life and you probably don’t even realize it Learning a little more about magnet schools every day Weight Watchers Week Nine: Learning to live with lifestyle changes Tip for Learning the Lyrics to Kids’ Songs Filed Under: Uncategorized Comments Kristin says: November 16, 2010 at 11:50 PM I can't relate to having to say "no" to anything lately, but I do have to say that it is very kind of you to be thinking of what your friend actually needs realistically while she's recuperating. I was in the hospital from September through mid-October, and my family helped us out tremendously financially or otherwise we'd have simply had an impossible time making it. My mother-in-law came and stayed a little over a week with us, though, to help us get the house cleaned up and take some of the stress off of my husband so he could relax a bit (my primary care giver with this bone infection and all else). It was SO helpful. But my aunt, who isn't in a position to help anyone financially (she repeats often, although we've NEVER asked nor would we- she's elderly but um, well, isn't broke) helps in a way that nobody else thought about. She did like you are doing, and brought over canned soup and paper towels, cleaning items and handy wipes. The array of things she brought was a little strange, because she brought over a bottle of baby oil we still haven't found a use for, but the thought she put into it was heartwarming. Also there have been many days when I couldn't leave the house or be left alone that the soup came in very handy! It was weird, though, because we were shocked that those were the first paper towels in our home in several months. We'd been making do with using rags and towels, and hadn't missed the paper towels. It wasn't intentional, we simply ran out and never bought more. It was probably along the lines of forgetting to get them! Kudos to you for being such a good friend! Camille says: November 16, 2010 at 11:54 PM We only have 1 car so it is very easy to say no! I can only do things in the evenings and even then my husband often has to go back work (he's a teacher!). But my kids are still little so I'm sure my time is coming. Chief Family Officer says: November 18, 2010 at 5:07 AM @Kristin – Thank you for sharing your perspective. I really appreciate it! (And I'm sorry you've had your own medical issues!) @Camille – I could so easily volunteer full-time for the school. Yep, your time is coming!
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-A A +A Friday, March 11, 2011 at 6:42 pm (Updated: October 7, 2:39 pm)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1003
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Duo arrested in burglaries -A A +A By The Staff Friday, February 1, 2013 at 6:15 pm Two people were arrested Thursday in connection with burglaries in and around Chiefland where residents lost guns, a pressure washer and checks that were used to purchase goods that were later returned for cash, according to a Levy Sheriff's Office spokesman.
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The pictures displayed are for the NEW version of the item, and NOT for refurbished. If you purchase the Refurbished version of this item, the accessory items may NOT BE INCLUDED with your order. Refurbished items are considered OEM, which means the product itself only. Please note: due to manufacturer version updates, pictures may vary from the actual item. Newer versions of this item may be shipped before the picture shown is updated.
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home / Services / Cancer and Blood Disorders / Research Research at Children's Hospital Advances in pediatric cancer care and its treatment starts out as research in specialized labs, clinics and hospitals all over the world as well as here at Children's. Collaborative, organized research done by more than 200 institutions worldwide has greatly improved the outcomes for children and teens diagnosed with cancer. Because of this collaborative research, survival rates for childhood cancers today have dramatically increased to between 80 percent to 85 percent as compared to just 20 percent only 50 years ago . Research is a major contributor to the great strides made in improving the care for children with cancer and the hope of someday finding a cure. In addition to cancer research, our Blood Disorders program staff has access to the most up-to-date treatment options through participation in local, national and international groups. Therefore, we offer the most current treatment options and the opportunity to participate in clinical studies if desired. We are committed to working together to search for better treatments, prevention and an eventual cure. At Children's, our clinical teams strive to provide the best treatment available to children and teens diagnosed with cancer and blood disorders. We have the largest clinical research staff in the region and more than 100 research studies that are currently enrolling patients. The majority of our cancer patients who are eligible for participation in a research study, provide consent to take part in one or more clinical trials. We are one of the most active participants in the nation in the number of patients enrolled in clinical trials, which results in rapid deployment of new information. Through participation in national and international cooperative research groups and our own supportive care research, we are able to continually improve our care and make advancements in the treatment of these childhood diseases. More about our cancer and blood disorders research Participating in Research Supportive Care Research Innovations in Care Clinical Trials Hematology Research Section Navigation
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HomeAbout Children'sOur HistoryDonations Donations Children's Hospital & Medical Center is grateful for the community's support in helping us achieve our goal of providing extraordinary care for children throughout the region. We invite you to explore the many ways to give to Children's and join our family of supporters. There are many ways to give. Please follow the links below to your area of interest.
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Meetings & Statements China & UN Home > Meetings & Statements Statement by Dr. Liu Yuyin, Chinese Delegate, on Sustainable Development at the Second Committee of the 64th UN General Assembly (New York, 2 November 2009) Mr. Chairman, First of all, I wish to thank the Secretary General for his reports on sustainable development. China associates itself with the statement made by the Sudan on behalf of the Group of 77 and China. On item 53 (a): Implementation of Agenda 21, the Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21 and the outcomes of the World Summit on Sustainable Development The international community and national governments have, in recent years, made tremendous efforts in implementing Agenda 21 and achieving sustainable development. Important strides have been made in promoting coordinated development in economic, social and environmental areas. However, as a result of successive waves of crises, all the major areas of sustainable development are now facing the prospect of seeing their progress reversed as the world economic growth slows down dealing heavy blows to the developing countries, and the challenges in areas such as climate, energy and water further intensify. Such conditions have put the achievement of the goals of Agenda 21, Johannesburg Plan of Implementation and the Millennium Declaration in serious jeopardy. In order to tackle this unprecedented "development crisis", the international community must redouble its effort and strengthen cooperation in order to move forward the sustainable development agenda. The international community, especially the developed countries, should honor their commitments in the areas of finance and technology, increase development assistance, and transfer environment-friendly technology so as to help developing countries enhance their capacity to achieve sustainable development. Monitoring and facilitation mechanisms should be set up for this purpose. CSD is the only organ in the UN system tasked with dealing in an integrated manner with economic, social and environmental issues. Its role must be further strengthened and countries are called upon to continue their support to the Commission. The whole UN system must enhance efficiency and effectiveness in implementing the follow-ups to the outcome of the World Summit on Sustainable Development. In this regard, the developing countries must continue to strengthen their capacity of self development as they explore development models suitable to their specific conditions and stay their course in sustainable development. The Chinese government endorses the idea of convening a summit on sustainable development in 2012 to carry out a comprehensive assessment and review of the obstacles and achievements in implementing Agenda 21. We voice our support to the government of Brazil for hosting this event. The Chinese government attaches great importance to sustainable development and has adopted a development strategy that is people-centered, comprehensive, well-balanced and sustainable. We aim to integrate our economic and social development, achieve harmonious development between humankind and nature, and strike a balance between immediate and long-term interests. We are in an all out effort to build a resources-saving and environment-friendly society, to develop an economy that is well-balanced with our population, resources and environment in order to build a "well off" society based on the harmonious co-existence between humankind and nature. Achieving these goals will not only benefit the Chinese people but also contribute to the sustainable development of the world as a whole. On item 53(b): Follow-up to and implementation of the Mauritius Strategy for the Further Implementation of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States Small island developing states face unique challenges in achieving sustainable development. Therefore, in the implementation of the Mauritius Strategy, the international community, and the developed countries in particular, have to take into full consideration their characteristics and vulnerability and increase support to the SIDS through financial assistance, transfer of applicable technology and support in capacity-building in order to enhance their capacity for sustainable development. At present, preparations are well under way for the five year review of the implementation of Mauritius Strategy. The UN should continue to play the leading role and mobilize greater support in carrying out examination and evaluation of the current and future economic, social and environmental vulnerability of the SIDS. It is necessary to establish various forms of partnerships involving multiple stakeholders to help SIDS achieve balanced and sustainable development in economic, social and environmental areas. To help SIDS achieve sustainable development is an integral part of China's South-South cooperation. Over the years, the Chinese government has continuously expanded and deepened its cooperation with SIDS and provided them with assistance within our capacity. We are ready to work with others in further strengthening international cooperation for the achievement of the goals contained in Mauritius Strategy. On item 53 (c): International Strategy for Disaster Reduction Natural disasters are a serious impediment to sustainable development worldwide. In recent years, weather-related disasters and extreme weather conditions have multiplied. The prevention of and response to natural disasters call for enhanced international and regional cooperation. First, it is necessary to implement the Hyogo Framework for Action 2005-2015, facilitate international and regional cooperation in disaster reduction and improve the cooperation system with the UN as the center. Second, in disaster relief cooperation, it is important to adhere to the principle of “humanity, neutrality and fairness” and respect the sovereignty and the right to participation of the recipient countries. It is also necessary to link emergency relief with post-disaster reconstruction and development. Third, it is necessary to strengthen exchanges in disaster relief technology and information, establish mechanisms of regional cooperation for monitoring, early warning and assessment of major natural disasters so as to minimize the damage brought about by disasters. Fourth, it is necessary to secure long-term, stable and predictable core resources for disaster reduction, intensify support to developing countries to help them in disaster reduction capacity building. On item 53 (d): Protection of global climate for present and future generations of mankind Confronting climate change and achieving sustainable development are an urgent and long-term task. They have a direct bearing on the conditions of human existence and the future of all countries' development and as such require unremitting efforts from each one of us. At present, the road to Copenhagen is far from being a smooth ride. Negotiations are bogged down on contention over certain fundamental principles. It all boils down to whether or not to adhere to the Convention, the Protocol and the Bali Roadmap, whether the developed countries should take the lead in reducing emissions, and how to translate into reality the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and the principle of equity. Mr. Chairman, The world is looking up to us to make the right choice on the issue of climate change, an issue that puts the human survival and development at stake. Countries are called upon to show a sense of responsibility to their own people and to the human society as a whole, to be firmly grounded in the present while looking forward to the future, to preserve United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and Kyoto Protocol as the main channels, to adhere to the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and to stick to the mandate of Bali Roadmap. It is necessary to effectively carry out our responsibilities, promote common development and achieve a win-win outcome for all. China is one of the countries that are most susceptible to the negative effect of climate change and is currently in an accelerated stage of industrialization and urbanization. We are faced with multiple tasks of economic development, poverty reduction, improvement of our people’s lives and protection of environment. Nevertheless, the Chinese government lays great emphasis on the issue of climate change and, in a show of high degree of responsibility towards long-term human development, has resolutely stayed the course on the road of sustainable development. We have enacted and implemented our National Plan for Coping with Climate Change, adopted effective policies, measures and actions in this respect and made tireless efforts in order to play our part in responding to climate change. On September 22 at the UN Summit on Climate Change, President Hu Jintao of China outlined four measures China will take to further respond to climate change. The Chinese government is ready to continue to work with others to create a better future for coming generations. On item 53 (e): Implementation of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification Desertification is a major issue facing sustainable development of human society. In May this year, CSD had a thorough discussion of the issue of desertification. And in October, the 9th conference of the states parties to the UN Convention to Combat Desertification was held. The international community should build on this momentum to take effective actions to implement the Convention and increase input in efforts to tackle desertification so as to facilitate the implementation of the Strategic Plan for the Decade. The developed countries must effectively honor their financial commitments to the Convention and come up with adequate, predictable and timely financial resources for the implementation of the Strategic Plan of the Decade with a view to making progress in combating desertification. On item 53 (i): Promotion of new and renewable sources of energy Energy conservation and development of new and renewable sources of energy are the inevitable future of the energy industry. It is an issue that has an important bearing on the development of the countries of the world. It is necessary for the international community to form a new concept of energy security based on “mutual benefit, cooperation, diversified development, coordination and guarantee”. We must strengthen dialogue and cooperation in a joint effort to safeguard world energy security. The international community must, in a spirit of interdependence, promote energy exploitation and utilization, carry out mutually beneficial cooperation, promote the development of new and renewable sources of energy and expand the application of advanced energy technologies. Against the backdrop of current financial and economic crisis, the developed countries must effectively honor their commitments in technology and financing and help developing countries in their efforts to develop new energy and enhance energy efficiency and support developing countries in their human resources training and capacity building. The Chinese government has always attached great importance to developing and utilizing new and renewable sources of energy. It is for us a high strategic priority. Under the principle of equality, mutual benefit, shared gains and win-win outcome, we are willing to continue to actively participate in energy cooperation and make our own contribution to achieving world energy security and sustainable development. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. 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Debate: High-speed rail (China Daily) Large Medium Small With its extensive size and large population, the country is set to expand its railway network. Two experts give their views on the future of its high-speed rail. John Scales: Combination of supportive features China is engaged in the largest national railway expansion program since the 19th century. Part of this program will construct a high-speed passenger railway network that will become the largest in the world. An important question is: How should plans for high-speed railways be viewed in the context of economic development? Even if high-speed railways in a developing country find a market of travelers willing and able to pay for the evident, personal benefits they derive from faster rail travel, this itself does not imply that there is developmental interest in this sector of the transport industry. Indeed, if the question is considered in this light, it might be said that fast travel is luxury consumption. It is generally affordable only by those in developing countries who have by definition already raised themselves above the masses of the poor, who are rightly the focus of much of the world's development. But is this narrow view justified? In the view of financial development institutions such as the World Bank, it is not. And it is certainly not a view that is applied when congested conventional roads are replaced by high-speed, high-quality expressways, where the consumption benefits of savings from travel time by higher-income, private car owners are routinely included in project appraisal methodologies. A country's plans to build high-speed rail lines or even, as in China, a high-speed network, will inevitably affect the overall performance of its transport system, operationally, financially and environmentally. That performance is important in economic development. In operational terms, a high-speed line will naturally provide faster speeds of travel for its users. But it may also free-up capacity on existing lines for other transport and affect interconnected modes, as well as alter both trip patterns and the relative use of different modes of transport. Fundamental changes in accessibility and mobility will influence national and regional economic development. In financial terms, the decision to sink public investment into high-speed rail will inevitably divert resources from other public investments in transport infrastructure or from outside the transport sector. Moreover, the long-term financial sustainability of high-speed rail may be a serious issue for national budgets. Resource allocation and budget in transport are clearly important to economic development. High-speed rail will also have various environmental and social consequences that may be negative or positive. Certainly, a high-speed passenger train will use more energy and generate more greenhouse gases than a slower passenger train over the same route. But if the higher speed attracts passengers away from road and air transport and, as in China, free up rail capacity for freight, it may reduce the overall long-term carbon intensit
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Search for Condition or Keyword: My Child Has: A-Z What We Do Find A CHOC Doc Patients & Families For Professionals Research Community Give to CHOC Eosinophilic Esophagitis Clinic :: Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease and Heartburn What is GERD? Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a chronic digestive disorder that is caused by the abnormal flow of gastric acid from the stomach into the esophagus. Gastroesophageal refers to the stomach and esophagus, and reflux means to flow back or return. Gastroesophageal reflux (GER) is the return of acidic stomach juices, or food and fluids, back up into the esophagus. GERD is very common in infants but can happen at any age. It is the most common cause of vomiting during infancy. What causes GERD? GERD is often the result of conditions that affect the lower esophageal sphincter (LES). The LES, a muscle located at the bottom of the esophagus, opens to let food into the stomach and closes to keep food in the stomach. When this muscle relaxes too often or for too long, acid refluxes back into the esophagus, causing vomiting or heartburn. Everyone has GER from time to time. If you have ever burped and had an acid taste in your mouth, you have had reflux. The lower esophageal sphincter occasionally relaxes at inopportune times, and usually, all your child will experience is a bad taste in the mouth, or a mild, momentary feeling of heartburn. Infants are more likely to experience weakness of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), causing it to relax when it should remain shut. This is often due to immaturity. As food or milk is digesting, the LES opens and allows the stomach contents to go back up the esophagus. Sometimes, the stomach contents go all the way up the esophagus and the infant or child vomits. Other times, the stomach contents only go part of the way up the esophagus, causing heartburn, breathing problems, or, possibly, no symptoms at all. Some foods seem to affect the muscle tone of the lower esophageal sphincter, allowing it to stay open longer than normal. These include, but are not limited to: High-fat foods Other foods increase acid production in the stomach, including: Citrus foods Tomatoes and tomato sauces Why is GERD a concern? Some infants and children with GERD may not vomit, but may still have stomach contents coming up into the esophagus and causing difficulty breathing, episodes of pneumonia, chronic coughing or wheezing, or in some cases, turning blue around the mouth. Although rare, infants and children can stop breathing for brief moments. What are the symptoms of GERD? Heartburn, also called acid indigestion, is the most common symptom of GERD. Heartburn is described as a burning chest pain that begins behind the breastbone and moves upward to the neck and throat. It can last as long as two hours and is often worse after eating. Lying down or bending over after a meal can also contribute to heartburn. Many children who are diagnosed with GERD will experience a dry cough, wheezing or trouble swallowing, instead of classic heartburn. Although each child may experience symptoms differently, signs of GERD in infants can include: Fussiness around mealtimes Refusal to eat Frequent vomiting Symptoms in children may include Frequent cough Coughing fits at night Wheezing Frequent upper respiratory infections (colds) Frequent ear infections Rattling in the chest Frequent sore throat in the morning Sour taste in the mouth The symptoms of GERD often resemble those of eosinophilic esophagitis, in addition to other medical conditions. At the CHOC Children’s Eosinophilic Esophagitis Clinic, we thoroughly assess each patient to ensure proper diagnosis. How is GERD diagnosed? Our gastroenterology specialists perform a physical examination and obtain a medical history of each patient. Additionally, we may use the following tests to help diagnose whether the child has GERD or other gastrointestinal condition: Endoscopy A test that uses a small, flexible tube with a light and a camera lens at the end (endoscope) to examine the inside of part of the digestive tract. Tissue samples from inside the digestive tract may also be taken for examination and testing. Learn more about endoscopy procedures at CHOC Children’s. pH monitoring Used to measure the acidity inside of the esophagus, this test is helpful in evaluating the extent of GERD. A thin plastic tube is placed into a nostril, guided down the throat, and then into the esophagus. The tube stops just above the lower esophageal sphincter, which is at the connection between the esophagus and the stomach. The end of the tube inside the esophagus contains a sensor that measures pH, or acidity. The other end of the tube outside the body is connected to a monitor that records the pH levels for a 24- to 48-hour period. Normal activity is encouraged during the study, and a diary is kept of symptoms experienced, or activity that might be suspicious for reflux, such as gagging or coughing. It is also recommended to keep a record of the time, type, and amount of food eaten. The pH readings are evaluated and compared with the patient's activity for that time period to help determine possible GERD triggers. Bravo pH studies In older children, the pH study can be done without an external wire. At the end of the upper endoscopy, the physician attaches a small capsule (approximately the same size as a pencil eraser) to the wall of the esophagus. The capsule sends information to a device outside the child’s body that records reflux events. This data collection device is about the size of a cell phone and can be attached to the child’s belt or waistband. The device needs to be within 3 feet of the patient during the 48 hours of recording time. Some patients say that they can feel the capsule while it is in place. This can cause mild, temporary discomfort for those patients. After the second day of collecting information about the child’s reflux, the Bravo capsule falls off the lining of the esophagus, travels through the gastrointestinal tract and is eventually passed in the patient’s stool. It does not have to be retrieved. Treatment for GERD Specific treatment will be determined by your child's doctor based on the following: The child's age, overall health and medical history. Extent of the disease. The child's tolerance for specific medications, procedures or therapies. The expectations for the course of the disease. The family’s opinion or preference. In many cases, GERD can be relieved through diet and lifestyle changes, under the direction of one of our specialists. We will evaluate: Medications the child is taking that may irritate the lining of the stomach or esophagus. Evidence of poor weight gain due to reflux. The types of foods the child is eating. Information about the child’s feeding and mealtime patterns. Caregivers are encouraged to: Watch the child's food intake and limit fried and fatty foods, peppermint, chocolate, drinks with caffeine (such as colas, Mountain Dew, and tea), citrus fruit and juices, and tomato products. Offer the child smaller portions at mealtimes, and include small snacks in-between meals if the child is hungry. Caregivers should avoid letting the child overeat. Allow him or her to let you know when he or she is hungry or full. Do not allow the child to lie down or go to bed right after a meal. The evening meal should be served at least two hours before bedtime. Infants with GERD should be held upright for 30 minutes after feedings. If bottle-feeding, keep the nipple filled with milk so the baby does not swallow too much air while eating. Try different nipples to find one that allows the baby's mouth to make a good seal with the nipple during feeding. Adding rice cereal to feeding may be beneficial for some infants. We typically recommend adding 1 teaspoon of rice cereal per ounce of formula. Burp the baby several times during bottle- or breast-feeding. The baby may reflux more often when burping with a full stomach. If needed, our specialists may prescribe medications to help with reflux. There are medications which help decrease the amount of acid the stomach makes, which cuts down on the heartburn associated with reflux. One group of this type of medication is called "H2-blockers." Medications in this category include famotidine (Pepcid) and ranitidine (Zantac). Another group of medications is called "proton-pump inhibitors." Medications in this category include omeprazole (Prilosec) and lansoprazole (Prevacid). These medications are taken daily to prevent excess acid secretion in the stomach. Another type of medicine we may prescribe is one that helps the stomach empty faster. If food does not remain in the stomach as long as usual, there may be less chance of reflux occurring. A medicine in this category that can be prescribed is metoclopramide (Reglan) or a very low dose of the antibiotic erythromycin. This medicine is usually taken three to four times a day, before meals or feedings, and at bedtime. Tube feedings Some babies with reflux have other conditions, such as congenital heart disease or prematurity. In addition to having reflux, these babies may not be able to eat or drink very much without becoming sleepy. Other babies are not able to tolerate a normal amount of formula in the stomach without vomiting and do better if a small amount of milk was given continuously. In both of these cases, tube feedings may be recommended. Formula or breast milk is given through a tube that is placed in the nose, guided through the esophagus, and into the stomach (nasogastric tube). Nasogastric tube feedings can be given in addition to or instead of what a baby takes from a bottle. Surgery In severe cases of reflux, a surgical procedure called fundoplication may be performed. This operation may be recommend if the child is not gaining weight due to vomiting, has frequent, severe respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia or has severe irritation in the esophagus. Learn more about surgery at CHOC Children’s. What is the long-term outlook for a child with GERD? Many infants who vomit will "outgrow it" by the time they are about a year old, as the lower esophageal sphincter becomes stronger. For others, medications, lifestyle, and diet changes can minimize reflux, vomiting, and heartburn. WHAT IS EOE? EOE TREATMENT EOE GLOSSARY PATCH TESTING RD PEDIATRIC RESIDENCY PROGRAM
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1010
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Temptation & lust - how a Christian can survive! "I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out" Can Christians overpower temptation and lust? OK - the answer you've all been waiting for - how do I stop lusting!!? The apostle Paul understood our predicament. He told the Romans, "I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out" (Romans 7:18-19). This means Paul struggled with sin-just like the rest of us. And like us, he would make up his mind not to commit a certain sin ever again. Did he succeed? No way!! Now, if the apostle Paul couldn't overpower his sin, what makes us different. Will power alone is not enough. Even when in a world free of erotic images, like a country like Pakistan, where men and women never hang out together, and the women are covered with clothing from their head to their feet, you still find prostitutes. If men in a country like that can't control their lust, how can we? From the moment we get up in the morning until we climb between the sheets, we're bombarded with erotic images and messages. Suppose you made up your mind to get through one day without lusting after a woman. On your way to work your eyes are drawn to the bikini-clad model greeting you from a billboard. A few moments later as you stop at an intersection, you aren't able to keep from noticing the attractively dressed young woman crossing the street. At work a friend brags about the gorgeous babe he bedded the night before. As you order lunch, the waitress with the short skirt winks at you and smiles. When you get back to the office, a coworker eagerly shows you his favorite erotic image on the Internet. On your way home you stop at the grocery store and catch yourself gazing at the seminude models that adorn the magazines by the checkout counter. When you finally get home, you plop down in an easy chair and flip on the TV. - you're exposed to more of the female anatomy than I found in the pages of Playboy when I was a kid. With the high level of erotic stimulation you face on a daily basis, do you believe you can control your lust alone? A friend once told me (and he said this with a straight face), "I'll never have a problem with sexual lust." I looked at him and said, "You're absolutely amazing. If that's true, you're stronger than Samson, godlier that David, and wiser than Solomon." I'll never forget his response. He sat down and stared at me for a half minute without uttering a word. And then he said, "I never though of it like that." I'll guarantee you, if Samson, David, and Solomon were here, they'd all say, "You can't defeat your lust alone!" You Can't Reform Your Lust "OK," you may be thinking, "maybe I can't beat it. But I can make myself better. I can reform my lust." I frequently talk with new Christians who think that becoming a follower of Christ means the lust problem is solved. It's as though they think Jesus waved some sort of magic wand over them and-presto!--their sinful nature was transformed. Their lust was gone. When they discover that their problem with lust seems even worse than before, they decide they'll study the Bible and pray more. Much to their surprise, that doesn't seem to solve the problem, either. Listen to Paul's words (Romans 7:10-11) "The very command that was supposed to guide me into life was cleverly used to trip me up, throwing me headlong."[1] As sinful human beings, our lustful appetites are so evil, they'll use God's good commands to tempt us. Like a rod stirring up dirt that has settled to the bottom of a jar of water, so God's law excites our lust. Forbidden things are more exciting. Women who are off-limits take on a greater appeal. God says don't and our lust says do. God says do and our lust says don't. Trying to reform our lust is like trying to make a dog into a person. For thirteen years a buff-colored cocker spaniel named Pumpkin graced our family. Over those years I taught Pumpkin all kinds of tricks. She obeyed the common commands like sit, lie down, and roll over. I also trained her to jump through a hoop, close a door, sit on her hind legs, and fall over as though dead when I shot her with an imaginary gun. Yet in spite of all my training, I couldn't keep Pumpkin from acting like a dog. She always did doggy things. She ate things people tried not to step in. She sniffed other dogs in places only dogs sniff. She went to the bathroom in public. No matter how well I trained Pumpkin, she was still a dog. Similarly, your sinful propensity doesn't reform when you enter a church. It doesn't change when you come to faith in Christ. You can go to church, read your Bible, pray daily, and even lead a ministry without reforming your sinful nature. Paul said, "I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature" (Romans 7:18). When we fall under the domination of our sinful nature, we're capable of doing anything evil, whether we're believers or not. When controlled by our lust, we can no more do good than a dog can talk. Yet when dealing with their lust, men sometimes think they can reform it. They deny its evil power. You may grow as a Christian. You may become more like Christ in your spiritual nature. But in the flesh, in your sinful nature, you're no better than the day you trusted Christ. And because your lust is driven by sin, you can't reform it. You Can't Starve Your Lust One of the problems I have with a lot of recovery programs is that their primary emphasis is on abstinence. They think the key to defeating an addiction is to stop the behavior. Now, please don't misunderstand me. We can't control any addiction unless we stop acting out. But if that's all we do, it won't work. We'll simply change addictions. For example, our lust will transfer from sex to alcohol. And if we stop drinking, it will move on to shopping or work or gambling. It's impossible to starve our lust to death. Until the day we're with the Lord, we'll struggle with sin. Your sinful nature will resist letting go. For a while you may ignore it. Later you may insist it doesn't really have a hold on you. But if you hope to break its power, you must first realize it's there and admit you don't have the power to dislodge it. Hopefully, you'll tire of fighting a losing battle. Paul did. In desperation he cried out, "Oh, what a terrible predicament I'm in! Who will free me from ... this deadly lower nature?" (Romans 7:24 LB). If someone as spiritually together as Paul realized he was fighting a losing battle, isn't it time for you to do the same thing? I know giving up isn't easy. But it's a step you must take if you're're going to find lasting freedom. Satan and his demons stalk the path of every believer As a Christian, you will be offered all manner of enticements to lure you away from an obedient and faithful walk with Christ. No one is exempt from this, and no one is completely successful in countering them (I John 1:8, 10), But some Christians succumb to temptation so often that they see no hope for victory. They give up and give in without a struggle. This is an unfortunate condition, born out of despair, for it will blind the believer to the marvelous provision God has made for overcoming temptation. The first thing the Christian must learn is that God does not lead him to sin. The Apostle James clearly condemns the attitude of blaming God for tempting circumstances (James 1:13-15). God may test His children, a process designed to purify and strengthen them, but He does not lead them into sin. Without exception, sin results when temptation strikes a sympathetic chord in the human heart, and man has no one to blame but himself. Blame himself he must, though, if he is to be forgiven. Our age is one in which blame is passed to society, to the pressures of the times, or to some other faceless, nameless creature. If one is to be forgiven, he must first humbly admit, "I have sinned." As long as he looks for someone or something else to blame, he will be totally helpless in combating temptation. The Christian needs to recognize the role of Scripture in overcoming temptation. The Psalmist stated, "Thy Word have I hidden in my heart, that I might not sin against Thee" (Psalms 119:11). When God's Word becomes an integral part of the believer's life, it fortifies that person against temptation's power. Christ Himself demonstrated the Word's power when He submitted to Satan's temptations with a quote from the Old Testament (Matthew 4:7). A systematic, prayerful study of Scripture is an absolute prerequisite to defeating temptation. The Word not only warns of Satan's methods (II Corinthians 2:11), but it empowers against attacks (Ephesians 6:11-17). Another essential to victory is to avoid temptation. On several occasions, Christ told His disciples to pray that they might not fall into temptation (Matthew 6:13; Luke 22:40). Some believers understand that temptation is not the same as sin, so then feel that they can enjoy the enticements of temptation without any harm. This behavior becomes a type of game - seeing how much titillation one can 'enjoy' without falling into overt sin. Such an attitude is sinful in itself, for it fails to take seriously God's commands for holiness in attitude as well as in action. One of the most crucial passages concerning temptation is I Corinthians 10:13. "No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able; but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, that you may be able to endure it." This verse is God's guarantee that He will never allow Satan to go too far. The temptation's intensity and the escape route will be uniquely tailored to the individual, and will not exceed his capacity. Knowing there is a way of escape, and using that way of escape, may be quite different things. If one is ignorant of God's Word, one will likely not recognize the escape when he sees it, for he won't know how God works. Whether or not he uses the escape, though, the believer can never truthfully claim that the temptation was so strong that he had to succumb to it. Another promise is that no one in this universe is uniquely tempted. While no two people are exactly alike, the temptations confronting each individual are basically the same as have confronted others. Jesus Christ was tempted in all points like we are, and suffered in this temptation, but did not sin (Hebrews 2:18; 4:15-16). He is, therefore, uniquely a sympathetic Savior, knowing from His own incarnate experience the pressure that temptation can exert. Since no one is uniquely tempted, Christians can help and learn from one another. Merely knowing that another Christian has overcome greed, for instance, may be just the assurance that someone needs to make another attempt to overcome it in his own life. The Christian who has grown in one facet of his spiritual life is responsible for helping other Christians who have not yet grown in that area. In this manner, Christians can edify (or, "build up") one another in their faith (Ephesians 4:15-16). The Scripture contains no promise of help in overcoming temptation for those who are unsaved. Indeed, until one repents of his sin and accepts by faith Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord, he has no capacity for pleasing God. But those who are saved may appropriate the power and wisdom of the Word, relying upon God's grace, and can therefore have victory, even over Satan's most subtle and compelling temptations. To experience God's grace, we must first recognize our need. That's not easy. You realize that you have a problem but still believe you can handle it alone. Guys especially hate to admit defeat. We don't want to ask for help. Lust is part of the world, I John 2:16-17, NIV. "For everything in the world, the cravings of sinful man, the lust of his eyes and the boasting of what he has and does--comes not from the Father but from the world. The world and its desires pass away, but the man who does the will of God lives forever." Lusting itself is often used as an excuse for further sin. Matthew 5:28, TLB. "But I say: Anyone who even looks at a woman with lust in his eye has already committed adultery with her in his heart." The lustful man will pay the consequences, Proverbs 6:25-29, NIV. "Do not lust in your heart after her beauty or let her captivate you with her eyes, for the prostitute reduces you to a loaf of bread, and the adulteress preys upon your very life. Can a man scoop fire into his lap without his clothes being burned? Can a man walk on hot coals without his feet being scorched? So is he who sleeps with another man's wife; no one who touches her will go unpunished." God's grace enables us to say no to lust, Titus 2:11-12, NIV. "For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. It teaches us to say "No" to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age. God will not allow us to be tempted beyond our ability to resist. I Corinthians 10:13, NIV. "No temptation has seized you except what is common to man. And God is faithful; He will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, He will also provide a way out so that you can stand up under it." Those who do not yield to temptation will be rewarded. James 1:12, TLB. "Happy is the man who doesn't give in and do wrong when he is tempted, for afterwards he will get as his reward the crown of life that God has promised those who love Him." When a Christian is faced with a temptation, he should run the other direction. II Timothy 2:22, TLB. "Run from anything that gives you the evil thoughts that young men often have, but stay close to anything that makes you want to do right. Have faith and love, and enjoy the companionship of those who love the Lord and have pure hearts." Prayer strengthens Christians against temptation. Mark 14:38, NIV. "Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the body is weak." Meet temptation with God's Word. Matthew 4:1,3,4, NIV. "Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the desert to be tempted by the devil. The tempter came to Him and said, If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread: Jesus answered, "It is written: Man does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God." Temptation & Lust help at christian advice.net 2003 ChristianAdvice Bible Study Tool a help page from Christian Advice Books from AMAZON Christian books dealing with Lust more info>> Books dealing with more information>> for an interesting study of temptation! Addicted to Porn? Don't be ashamed - this has happened to many people before it happened to you! This resource is great.
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INFORME N� 45/00 MANUEL M�NAGO CARHUARICRA AND ELEAZAR M�NAGO LAURA April 13, 2000 I. SUMMARY 1. By petition submitted to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (hereinafter "the Commission") by the non-governmental organization Asociaci�n Pro Derechos Humanos (APRODEH) on February 4, 1991, it was alleged that the Republic of Peru (hereinafter "Peru," "the State," or "the Peruvian State") violated the human rights of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura, when they were detained on September 9, 1990, by members of the military, and then disappeared. The State alleges that Messrs. M�nago were not detained by military forces. The Commission concludes that Peru violated, to the detriment of the above-named individuals, the rights set forth at Articles 7, 5, and 8 of the American Convention on Human Rights (hereinafter "the Convention" or "the American Convention") in conjunction with the provisions at Article 1(1), and makes the pertinent recommendations to the Peruvian State. II. PROCESSING BEFORE THE COMMISSION 2. On March 14, 1991, the Commission opened the case, transmitted the pertinent parts of the complaint to the Peruvian State, and asked that it provide information within 90 days. The State answered on November 29, 1991. On May 24, 1999, both parties were asked to provide the Commission updated information on the case, and the Commission placed itself at their disposal to try to reach a friendly settlement. On July 26, 1999, the State reiterated earlier arguments and stated that it did not consider it advisable to initiate a friendly settlement procedure. Accordingly, the Commission considered the possibility of reachinga friendly settlement to be exhausted. III. POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES A. The petitioner 3. According to the petitioner, on September 9, 1990, Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura, father and son, 35 and 13 years of age, respectively, were detained in Sogormo, district and province of Oxapampa, by members of the military from the Puente Paucartambo Base, under the command of a lieutenant by the last name of Vidal. 4. Petitioner further indicates that the members of the military entered the home of Mr. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra at approximately 1:30 a.m., and, not finding him, took his son, Eleazar M�nago Laura, who they forced to lead them to where his father was; he spent the nights at the "Independencia" secondary school at Sogormo, as the security guard. On reaching the school, the members of the military detained Mr. M�nago Carhuaricra. 5. Petitioner points out that on the morning of September 9, 1990, Mrs. Aquila Laura de M�nago, wife and mother of the victims, went to the Puente Paucartambo Military Base, and there a soldier informed her that the chief of the base was Lieutenant Vidal, but that he was not present at the time, as the night before he had gone out on an operation, in the direction of Sogormo, and had yet to return. 6. Petitioner argues that Mrs. Aquila Laura de M�nago returned to the same military base on September 11, 1990, but that she was not received, as there was a celebration at the base, and the members of the military were drunk, and were firing their weapons, so Mrs. Laura de M�nago decided to leave. 7. Petitioner adduces that as her efforts had not been fruitful, Mrs. Laura de M�nago went to the city of Oxapampa, where she communicated the disappearance of her husband and son to the Educational Services Unit (USE), the administrative organ of the Ministry of Education responsible for her husband's place of work. Mrs. Laura de M�nago was received by a lawyer from USE, who went with her to the Military Base at Oxapampa. The troops at that Base communicated by radio message with the Puente Paucartambo Base, where it was denied he had been detained or that Lt. Vidal had gone out on any operation towards Sogormo. 8. Petitioner states that Mrs. Laura de M�nago proceeded to file the respective complaint with the Public Ministry, to whom the Army also denied the detention. In addition, Mrs. Laura de M�nago took new initiatives at the Oxapampa military base, where a commander, who did not identify himself, told her he had received there other complaints, for rape and robbery, involving Lt. Vidal. The commander indicated to her that if she wished to obtain any information, she should lodge a complaint in Lima, to avoid being subject to retaliation. Notwithstanding all of her efforts, Messrs. M�nago Carhuaricra and M�nago Laura did not appear. B. The State 9. The State responded on November 29, 1991, and argued that Messrs. M�nago Carhuaricra and M�nago Laura, according to the Ministry of Defense of Peru, "have at no time been the subject of intervention by the forces of order of the 31st Infantry Division, this situation having been communicated with official communications Nos. 398 B-2 of July 2, 1990, 412 B-2 of July 13, 1990, and 437 B-2 of July 25, 1990, directed to the Provincial Prosecutor of the Fourth Mixed Provincial Prosecutorial Office of Huancayo, and official communication N� 152 B-2 of May 21, 1991, to the Provincial Prosecutor of the Special Prosecutor's Office of the Office of the Human Rights Ombudsman of Huancayo." IV. ANALYSIS A. Considerations on admissibility The Commission now analyzes the admissibility requirements of a petition established in the American Convention. a. Subject-matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction, and jurisdiction based on time and place of the events 10. The allegations in this case describe facts that would be violative of several rights recognized and enshrined in the American Convention that took place within the territorial jurisdiction of Peru when the obligation to respect and guarantee the rights established therein were in force for the State.[1] Therefore, the IACHR has subject-matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction, and jurisdiction based on when and where the alleged violations took place, so as to be able to take cognizance of the merits in the case. b. Exhaustion of domestic remedies 11. The fact that the first stages of the process, i.e., within the first 90 days that it was given to provide information about the facts alleged, the State did not present any objection on grounds of failure to exhaust domestic remedies, will be sufficient for the Commission to consider the requirement established at Article 46(1)(a) of the Convention to have been met. 12. The Commission recently decided, together, a group of 35 cases that involved 67 persons disappeared in various departments of Peru during the period from 1989 to 1993, and analyzed in detail the general phenomenon of disappearances in Peru. In those reports the Commission notes that habeas corpus was the adequate remedy in cases of disappearance for trying to find a person presumably detained by the authorities, to inquire into the legality of the detention, and, if possible, to secure his or her release. The IACHR also concluded that for the purposes of admissibility of complaints before this body, it was not necessary to file a habeas corpus remedy--or any other--for the purpose of exhausting domestic remedies, since from 1989 to 1993 there was a practice or policy of disappearances ordered or tolerated by various public authorities that rendered the habeas corpus remedy totally ineffective in cases of disappearance. In those reports the Commission found as follows: As stated earlier, the relatives of the victims applied on numerous occasions to various judicial, executive (military), and legislative authorities to locate the victims and secure their release. These efforts usually included writs of habeas corpus; complaints to the Attorney General, the Chief Prosecutor in San Mart�n, the Special Attorney for Human Rights in San Mart�n, the Office of the Special Ombudsman, and the Offices of the Provincial Prosecutors; and appeals to the Ministry of Defense, the Army High Command, the Office of the Inspector General of the Army, the Political-Military Commander in Chief, and the commanding officers at the military bases concerned. Despite all these efforts, the victims were never located and never reappeared. these procedures and appeals by the relatives of the victims proved fruitless, because the same people who had allegedly brought about the disappearances and who hid the evidence played a key part in the results of the investigations. None of the writs of habeas corpus was successful in any of the cases. Likewise, the complaints filed with the offices of the government prosecutors led to little more than a request for information from the military, who would deny the detention. The cases were then shelved without ever being brought before the competent court of the first instance. It should be added that generally the Peruvian Government's replies to the Commission denying responsibility for the disappearances are based precisely on photocopies, sent to the Commission, of official communications in which the military itself denies having carried out the arrests. [T]he Commission considers it important to provide certain clarifications regarding the exhaustion of domestic remedies in connection with the forced disappearances in Peru. In this regard, it should be noted that the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has held, in connection with the exhaustion of domestic remedies, that, "in keeping with the object and purpose of the Convention and in accordance with an interpretation of Article 46 (1)(a) of the Convention, the proper remedy in the case of the forced disappearance of persons would ordinarily be habeas corpus, since those cases require urgent action by the authorities" (and it is) "the normal means of finding a person presumably detained by the authorities, of ascertaining whether he is legally detained and, given the case, of obtaining his liberty." Thus, when a writ of habeas corpus is presented in the case of persons who were detained and then disappeared, and nothing comes of it because the victims are not located, those are sufficient grounds for finding that domestic remedies have been exhausted. the Court has also ruled that domestic remedies must be effective, that is, they must be capable of producing the results for which they were intended, and that if there is proof of a practice or policy, ordered or tolerated by the government, the effect of which is to prevent certain persons from availing themselves of internal remedies that would normally be available to all others, resorting to those remedies becomes a senseless formality, so that the exceptions to the exhaustion of domestic remedies provided for in Article 46(2) of the Convention would be fully applicable. its analysis of the substance of the case, set forth in section VI below, the Commission finds that, during the period in which the alleged events took place, there existed in Peru a practice or policy of disappearances, ordered or tolerated by various government authorities. For that reason, and given that that practice rendered writs of habeas corpus completely ineffective in cases of disappearances, the Commission finds that, for purposes of admissibility of complaints before this Commission, it was not necessary to attempt the habeas corpus remedy--or any other--in order to exhaust domestic remedies. Consequently, the Commission considers that the rule regarding exceptions to the exhaustion of domestic remedies established in Article 46(2) of the Convention is fully applicable.[2] 13. The Commission considers the foregoing considerations fully applicable to this case, as it involved an alleged forced disappearance in 1990 imputed to the Peruvian Army. The disappearance alleged in this case occurred during the time (1989-1993) when, the Commission determined, as set forth in the reference cited above, that there was a practice or policy of disappearances ordered or tolerated by several public authorities that rendered the habeas corpus remedy completely ineffective in cases of disappearance, thus the Commission established that for the purpose of the admissibility of complaints before the Commission, it was not necessary to bring a habeas corpus action--or any other--for the purpose of exhausting domestic remedies. Therefore, the Commission concludes that this case fits within the exception at Article 46(2) of the Convention, according to which the exhaustion requirement laid down at Article 46(1)(a) of the Convention is not applicable when "the domestic legislation of the state concerned does not afford due process of law for the protection of the right or rights that have allegedly been violated." c. Time period for submission 14. With respect to the requirement set forth at Article 46(1)(b) of the Convention, according to which the petition must be submitted within six months from the date on which the victim is notified of the final judgment that exhausted domestic remedies, the Commission observes that this requirement does not apply in this case. This is because the exception to the exhaustion requirement at Article 46(2)(a) of the Convention, as set forth in the previous paragraph, also holds--by mandate of Article 46(2) of the Convention--for the requirement concerning the time for submission of the petitions provided for at Article 46(1)(b) of the Convention. 15. The Commission, without prejudging on the merits, should add that the forced disappearance of a person by state agents constitutes a continuing violation by the State that persists, as a permanent infraction of several articles of the American Convention, until the person or corpse appears. Therefore, the requirement concerning the time period for submission of petitions, set forth at Article 46(1)(b) of the American Convention, does not apply to such cases. d. Duplicity of procedures and res judicata 16. The Commission understands that the subject matter of the petition is not pending before any other procedure for international settlement, nor does it reproduce a petition already examined by this or any other international organization. Therefore, the requirements established at Articles 46(1)(c) and 47(d) are also satisfied. e. Characterization of the facts 17. The Commission considers that the petitioner's presentation refers to facts which, if true, could characterize a violation of rights guaranteed in the Convention, for, as established supra, the issue submitted to the Commission is the forced disappearance of two persons. 18. For all the reasons set forth above, the Commission considers that it has jurisdiction to take cognizance of this case, and that pursuant to Articles 46 and 47 of the American Convention the petition is admissible, in the terms set forth above. B. Considerations on the merits 19. Having determined its jurisdiction to hear this case, and that in keeping with Articles 46 and 47 of the American Convention the petition is admissible, the Commission now moves on to set forth its decision on the merits, bearing in mind that the parties did not agree to initiate a friendly settlement procedure, and that the Commission already has sufficient grounds to make a decision on the merits. a. State practice of disappearances 20. In relation to the analysis of the merits of the present case, the Commission regards as pertinent to reiterate the following considerations concerning the practice of forced disappearances in Per� that the Commission set forth recently, when it decided an accumulated group of 35 cases involving 67 “disappeared” persons in different provinces of Per� during 1989-1993. To this respect, the Commission ruled in the following terms, which completely ratifies in the present case: … the Commission decided to combine the cases under review because it considers that the alleged events suggest a pattern of disappearances brought about by Peruvian State agents around the same time period (1989-1993), within the context of what are called anti-subversive activities, and employing the same modus operandi. Commission therefore decided to look into the possible existence of a practice of forced disappearances brought about by the Peruvian State, or at least tolerated by it, during the period in question (1989-1993). The Commission cannot ignore, to use the words of the Inter-American Court, "the special seriousness of finding that a State Party to the Convention has carried out or has tolerated a practice of disappearances in its territory." Nonetheless, it is crucial that the Commission, in accordance with the functions assigned to it, carry out that analysis, not only for the purposes of this report, but also to arrive at the truth regarding a policy of human rights violations, with all its possible repercussions for the clarification of other cases that have come to the attention of this Commission. this regard, it should be pointed out that the criteria used to evaluate evidence in an international court of human rights have special standards, which empower the Commission to weigh the evidence freely and to determine the amount of proof necessary to support the judgment. The modus operandi used, according to the petitions received by the Commission, in the arrests and disappearances in the cases in question, involving […] shows an overall pattern of behavior that can be considered admissible evidence of a systematic practice of disappearances. Commission has received a very large number of complaints of disappearances in Peru, many of which pertain to multiple disappeared persons. In its 1993 Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Peru, the Commission discussed the problem of the forced disappearance of persons in that country and indicated that it had already passed 43 resolutions regarding individual cases involving 106 victims. Subsequently, the Commission has continued to write reports on the matter. Moreover, the Peruvian State itself has officially recognized the existence of forced disappearances and has reported on 5,000 complaints of disappearances between 1983 and 1991. The large number of complaints of this type is a clear indication, in the Commission’s view, that disappearances in Peru followed an official pattern devised and carried out in a systematic manner. indication is supported by the fact that, at the United Nations (UN), the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, established by the Commission on Human Rights in 1980, had received 3,004 cases of forced disappearances in Peru. That Group points out that: vast majority of the 3,004 cases of reported disappearances in Peru occurred between 1983 and 1992, in the context of the Government's fight against terrorist organizations, especially the "Shining Path" (Sendero Luminoso). In late 1982, the armed forces and police undertook a counter-insurgency campaign and the armed forces were granted a great deal of latitude in fighting Shining Path and in restoring public order. While the majority of reported disappearances took place in areas of the country which had been under a state of emergency and were under military control, in particular in the regions of Ayacucho, Huancavelica, San Mart�n, and Apur�mac, disappearances also took place in other parts of Peru. Detentions were reportedly frequently carried out openly by uniformed members of the armed forces, sometimes together with Civil Defense Groups. Some 20 other cases reportedly occurred in 1993 in the Department of Ucayali and concerned largely the disappearance of peasants. Dr. Imelda Tumial�n, the ad hoc Provincial Prosecutor for the Department of Jun�n, has placed on record that in 1991 there were more than 100 disappearances in that Department. Likewise, in a note dated January 9, 1992, Peru's Assistant Attorney General pointed out that in the first 11 months of 1991 there had been 268 complaints of disappearances, and that only a few cases had been solved. For its part, the National Coordinating Body for Human Rights in Peru, a recognized nongovernmental umbrella group of various Peruvian human rights organizations, estimates that 725 persons disappeared in Peru between 1990 and 1992. The Commission has been told that reports circulating freely in Peru indicated that military personnel, and in some cases police officers, were carrying out disappearances. The Commission has received numerous articles and news reports on such disappearances, published by the print media and others. the basis of the foregoing evidence, the Commission concludes that in the 1989-1993 period there existed in Peru a systematic and selective practice of forced disappearances, carried out by agents of, or at least tolerated by, the Peruvian State. That official practice of forced disappearances was part of the "fight against subversion", although in many cases it harmed people who had nothing to do with the activities related to dissident groups. Perpetration of the disappearances On the basis of the various items of evidence mentioned above, the Commission sees fit to map out the steps usually involved in the above-mentioned official policy of disappearances: of the victims Commission has been told that, in general, perpetration of the disappearances was delegated to the political military commanders and the commanding officers at military bases. The latter imparted orders directly to the personnel who carried out the detentions, normally the first stage of the disappearance process. Peru's national police force was also in charge of perpetrating disappearances, usually through DINCOTE. often the abduction and disappearance of a person began with information obtained by members of the intelligence service, according to which that person was in some way linked to subversive groups, chiefly the Shining Path or the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA). It should be pointed out that in many instances the persons concerned were in no way involved with those subversive groups, but were unfortunate enough to have been included, fraudulently or by mistake, on the lists that would later lead to their disappearance. factor that, in certain Departments and under particular circumstances, could lead to the detention and later disappearance of many people was the fact that they were not carrying their voter registration documents, which were used for identification purposes. In certain cases, during checkpoint operations on public thoroughfares, a person unable to produce an identification document upon request was almost automatically considered a terrorist. a person was considered "suspect", he or she was arrested; on numerous occasions, this was the first step toward disappearance. Some arrests were carried out openly in public, others at the victim's home, usually in the early hours of the morning and in the presence of witnesses. Those charged with carrying out the detentions were heavily armed soldiers or police, sometimes dressed in civilian clothing, but most often in uniform. Generally, the soldiers or police paid little attention to the witnesses and proceeded to do what they came to do anyway. Arrests in people's homes were usually carried out in front of whoever happened to be there: wives, children, fathers, mothers, etc. Thus the normal pattern was for the personnel to arrest the victim regardless of who might be present, with no attempt to hide the official nature of what they were doing. Official denial of the detentions same day of the arrest, or in the days immediately following, relatives would go to the place where the victim was detained and be told that he or she was not being held. It should be stressed that since the arrests were usually carried out publicly, the relatives knew where the victim had first been detained. Nevertheless, the authorities denied the detention. As the Commission has established previously: The fact that the military authorities deny having carried out the detention thus merely confirms the clandestine nature of the military operations. Detention is neither registered nor officially admitted, in order to make it possible to employ torture during interrogation and if need be to apply extrajudicial punishment to persons considered to be sympathizers, collaborators, or members of the rebel groups. variation on this practice consisted of the authorities alleging that the victim had been released and even producing documents to show this, sometimes with a forgery of the victim’s signature, others with his or her real signature obtained under torture, when in fact the release had never taken place. Torture and extrajudicial execution of detainees the victim did not die as a result of the torture inflicted, he or she was generally executed in summary, extrajudicial fashion. The bodies were then hidden by burial in secret places chosen to make their discovery practically impossible. Amnesty for those responsible for the disappearances In general, cases of disappearance in Peru were not seriously investigated. In practice, those responsible enjoyed almost total impunity, since they were carrying out an official State plan. Despite that, the authorities decided to go even further by passing Act N� 26.479 (the "Amnesty Act") in 1995. Article 1 of that Law grants a blanket amnesty to all members of the security forces and civilian personnel accused, investigated, indicted, prosecuted, or convicted for human rights violations committed between May 1980 and June 1995. That law was later strengthened by Act N� 26.492, which prohibited the judiciary from ruling on the legality or applicability of the Amnesty Law. In its annual reports for 1996 and 1997, the Commission has addressed the issue of those amnesty laws in the overall analysis of the human rights situation in Peru. the Commission has been told that both laws can be rendered inapplicable by Peruvian judges, through what is known as their "broad powers" to rule on the constitutionality of laws--provided for in Article 138 of the Peruvian Constitution--the Commission considers the aforesaid laws an invalid attempt to legalize the impunity that existed in practice with regard to forced disappearances and other serious offenses committed by agents of the State. For example, the Commission has learned that the judges of the Constitutional Court, who were removed by the Congress, invoked that same Article 138 of the Constitution in their December 27, 1996, finding that Act N� 26.657 did not apply to President Alberto Fujimori. The burden of proof regarding disappearances The general principle is that, in cases of disappearance in which, in the Commission’s view, there is sufficient evidence that the arrest was carried out by State agents acting within the general framework of an official policy of disappearances, it shall be presumed that the victim’s disappearance was brought about by acts by Peruvian State agents, unless that State gives proof to the contrary. it is not incumbent upon the petitioners to prove that the victims have disappeared, because it may be assumed, for lack of proof to the contrary, that the Peruvian State is responsible for the disappearance of any person it has detained. This is even more important in view of the aforementioned government practice of causing disappearances. It is up to the State to prove that it was not its agents who brought about the disappearance of the victims. the "policy of disappearances, sponsored or tolerated by the Government, is designed to conceal and destroy evidence of disappearances". Then, as a result of action by the State, the petitioner is deprived of evidence of the disappearance, since "this type of repression is characterized by an attempt to suppress all information about the kidnapping or the whereabouts and fate of the victim." The fact is, as established by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: in contrast to domestic criminal law, in proceedings to determine human rights violations the State cannot rely on the defense that the complainant has failed to present evidence when it cannot be obtained without the State’s cooperation. Commission has explained in this regard that when there is proof of the existence of a policy of disappearances sponsored or tolerated by the Government, it is possible, using circumstantial or indirect evidence, or through relevant logical inference, to prove the disappearance of a specific individual when that would otherwise be impossible given the link between that disappearance and the overall policy. recently, the Commission has also determined that: burden of proof lies with the State, because when the State holds a person in detention and under its exclusive control, it becomes the guarantor of that person’s safety and rights. In addition, the State has exclusive control over information or evidence regarding the fate of the detained person. This is particularly true in a disappearance case where, by definition, the family members of the victim or other interested persons are unable to learn about the fate of the victim. This establishes the inversion of the burden of proof for cases of disappearance in Peru and the effects of that inversion on cases being heard by the Commission. Considerations relating to forced disappearances The General Assembly of the Organization of American States (OAS) has called the practice of the forced or involuntary disappearance of persons a crime against humanity that strikes against the fundamental rights of the human individual, such as personal liberty and well-being, the right to proper judicial protection and due process, and even the right to life. In that context, the member states of the Organization of American States (OAS) adopted, in 1994, an Inter-American Convention on the Forced Disappearance of Persons as a means of preventing and punishing the forced disappearance of persons in our Hemisphere. Commission has affirmed, in relation to the forced disappearance of persons, procedure is cruel and inhuman. ... [It] not only constitutes an arbitrary deprivation of freedom but also a serious danger to the personal integrity and safety and to even the very life of the victim. It leaves the victim totally defenseless, violating the rights to a fair trial, to protection against arbitrary arrest, and to due process. The UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances has affirmed that the forced or involuntary disappearance of a person is a particularly odious violation of human rights, and is doubly paralyzing form of suffering: for the victims, frequently tortured and in constant fear for their lives, and for their family members, ignorant of the fate of their loved ones, their emotions alternating between hope and despair, wondering and waiting, sometimes for years, for news that may never come. The victims are well aware that their families do not know what has become of them and that the chances are slim that anyone will come to their aid. Having been removed from the protective precinct of the law and "disappeared" from society, they are in fact deprived of all their rights and are at the mercy of their captors. If death is not the final outcome and they are eventually released from the nightmare, the victims may suffer for a long time from the physical and psychological consequences of this form of dehumanization and from the brutality and torture which often accompany it. family and friends of disappeared persons experience slow mental torture, not knowing whether the victim is still alive and, if so, where he or she is being held, under what conditions, and in what state of health. Aware, furthermore, that they too are threatened; that they may suffer the same fate themselves, and that to search for the truth may expose them to even greater danger. family’s distress is frequently compounded by the material consequences resulting from the disappearance. The missing person is often the mainstay of the family’s finances. He or she may be the only member of the family able to cultivate the crops or run the family business. The emotional upheaval is thus exacerbated by material deprivation, made more acute by the costs incurred should they decide to undertake a search. Furthermore, they do not know when--if ever--their loved one is going to return, which makes it difficult for them to adapt to the new situation. In some cases, national legislation may make it impossible to receive pensions or other means of support in the absence of a certificate of death. Economic and social marginalization is frequently the result.[3] b. Facts established 21. In keeping with the doctrine of the Commission outlined above, the general principle is that in cases of disappearance in which there are sufficient indicia of evidence, in the view of the Commission, that the detention was presumably effectuated by State agents in the general context of an official policy of disappearances, the Commission will presume that the victims were disappeared by agents of the Peruvian State, unless that State has proven otherwise. 22. Applying said considerations to this case, the Commission, in relation to the victims' detention, observes that the petitioner alleges that Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura were detained on September 9, 1990, at Sogormo, district and province of Oxapampa, by members of the military from the Puente Paucartambo Base, and that the State denies having carried out such detentions. 23. In this respect, and based on the facts narrated by the petitioner and the testimony taken from Mrs. Laura de M�nago, wife and mother of the victims, the modus operandi of the detention, and all other evidentiary indicia--which include the steps taken and remedies pursued internally aimed at locating and winning the release of the victims; the reports prepared by the military denying that the detentions had been effectuated by members of the military, without the Peruvian State having carried out a serious judicial investigation of the grave events; and the circumstance that the detentions occurred in 1990, when, as established by the Commission, there was a systematic and selective practice of forced disappearances carried out by agents of the Peruvian State, or at least tolerated by the State--the Commission concludes that it has sufficient grounds for establishing the veracity of the events denounced, with respect to the detention of the victims.[4] 24. Based on the foregoing, the Commission considers it true that the victims were detained by members of the Peruvian Army from the Puente Paucartambo Base, on September 9, 1990, at Sogormo, district and province of Oxapampa. 25. Therefore, and in keeping with the above-noted doctrine of the Commission, the Peruvian State had the burden of proving that it did not disappear Messrs. M�nago Carhuaricra and M�nago Laura. In this connection, the Commission observes that the State presented no evidence tending to show that it did not disappear Messrs. M�nago Carhuaricra and M�nago Laura, but rather denied that it had detained them. 26. Based on the reasons set forth above, the Commission concludes that the Peruvian State, through members of the Army from the Puente Paucartambo Base, detained Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura on September 9, 1990, at Sogormo, in the district and province of Oxapampa, and that it then proceeded to disappear them. 27. That detention and subsequent disappearance followed the characteristic pattern: the detention of the victims by military agents; an official denial of responsibility for the disappearance; the failure of the public authorities to carry out an investigation into the situation of the victims; the ineffectiveness of domestic remedies; the torture and possible extrajudicial execution of the victims; and absolute impunity, reinforced by the subsequent amnesty. c. Violation of the victims' human rights 28. The Commission now proceeds to analyze the specific violations by the Peruvian State of the rights set forth in the Convention implicit in the disappearance of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura. Right to Personal Liberty (Article 7 of the Convention) The American Convention establishes: Article 7. Right to Personal Liberty 1. Every person has the right to personal liberty and security. 2. No one shall be deprived of his physical liberty except for the reasons and under the conditions established beforehand by the constitution of the State Party concerned or by a law established pursuant thereto. 3. No one shall be subject to arbitrary arrest or imprisonment. 4. Anyone who is detained shall be informed of the reasons for his detention and shall be promptly notified of the charge or charges against him. 5. Any person detained shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to be released without prejudice to the continuation of the proceedings. His release may be subject to guarantees to assure his appearance for trial. 6. Anyone who is deprived of his liberty shall be entitled to recourse to a competent court, in order that the court may decide without delay on the lawfulness of his arrest or detention and order his release if the arrest or detention is unlawful. In States Parties whose laws provide that anyone who believes himself to be threatened with deprivation of his liberty is entitled to recourse to a competent court in order that it may decide on the lawfulness of such threat, this remedy may not be restricted or abolished. The interested party or another person in his behalf is entitled to seek these remedies. 7. No one shall be detained for debt. This principle shall not limit the orders of a competent judicial authority issued for nonfulfillment of duties of support. 29. A detention is arbitrary and illegal when not carried out for the reasons, and according to the formalities, established by law; when carried out without adherence to the standards established by law; and when it involves misuse of the authority to arrest--in other words, when carried out for purposes other than those envisaged and stipulated by law. The Commission has also pointed out that detention for improper ends is, in itself, a form of penalty without due process, or extralegal punishment, which violates the guarantee of a fair trial. 30. In this case, Peruvian citizens Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura were illegally and arbitrarily detained by members of the Peruvian Army. 31. It is necessary to recall the circumstances in Peru at that time, which generally affected most of the Departments where detentions and disappearances occurred. Continuous raids by armed groups had generated permanent unrest in the local population. For that reason, a "state of exception" had been declared in various Departments, which was, prima facie, justified by the crisis faced by the Peruvian State in fighting terrorism. By virtue of that state of emergency, in numerous Departments Article 2(20)(g) of the 1979 Constitution had been suspended,[5] which meant that the military was legally empowered to detain a person without a warrant from a competent judge, even if an individual was not being caught in flagranti. 32. Despite the prima facie legality of this measure, the security forces are not thereby entitled, without restrictions, to detain citizens arbitrarily. The suspension of the judicial warrant requirement for detention does not mean that public officials are exempted from observing the legal requirements for such detentions, nor does it annul jurisdictional controls over the manner in which detentions are carried out. 33. The suspension of the right to personal liberty authorized in Article 27 of the American Convention on Human Rights can never be absolute. There are basic principles at the heart of any democratic society that the security forces must respect in order to carry out a detention, even in a state of emergency. The legal prerequisites for detention are obligations that State authorities must respect, in keeping with their international commitment under the Convention to protect and respect human rights. 34. Secondly, in accordance with those principles, preventive detention by the military or police must be designed solely to prevent the escape of a person suspected of having committed a crime and thereby ensure his appearance before a competent court, either for trial within a reasonable period of time or for his release. No State may impose a sentence without a trial.[6] In a constitutional, democratic State in which the rule of law and the separation of powers are respected, all penalties established by law should be imposed by the judiciary after guilt has been established in a fair trial with all the procedural guarantees. The existence of a state of emergency does not authorize the State to disregard the presumption of innocence, nor does it confer upon the security forces the right to exercise an arbitrary and unlimited ius puniendi. 35. On this subject, Article 7(5) of the American Convention establishes that "Any person detained shall be brought promptly before a judge or other trial within a reasonable time or to be released...." Paragraph 6 of that article adds: "Anyone who is deprived of his liberty shall be entitled to recourse to a competent court, in order that the court may decide without delay on the lawfulness of his arrest or detention (...)". The Commission has also stated that anyone deprived of his liberty must be kept in an officially recognized detention center and brought, without delay, in accordance with domestic legislation, before a competent judicial authority. Should the authority fail to comply with this legal obligation, the State is duty-bound to guarantee the detainee’s right to apply for an effective judicial remedy to allow judicial verification of the lawfulness of his detention. 36. The Commission concludes that the Peruvian State is responsible for violating the right to personal liberty and security by arbitrarily imprisoning Peruvian citizens Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura; for violating their right of recourse to a competent judge or court that would rule on the lawfulness of their arrest; and, thereby, for violating Article 7 of the American Convention on Human Rights. Right to Humane Treatment (Article 5 of the Convention) 37. The American Convention establishes: Article 5. Right to Humane Treatment 1. Every person has the right to have his physical, mental, and moral integrity respected. 2. No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman, or degrading punishment or treatment. All persons deprived of their liberty shall be treated with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person. 3. Punishment shall not be extended to any person other than the criminal. 4. Accused persons shall, save in exceptional circumstances, be segregated from convicted persons, and shall be subject to separate treatment appropriate to their status as unconvicted persons. 5. Minors while subject to criminal proceedings shall be separated from adults and brought before specialized tribunals, as speedily as possible, so that they may be treated in accordance with their status as minors. 6. Punishments consisting of deprivation of liberty shall have as an essential aim the reform and social readaptation of the prisoners. 38. Since forced disappearance involves violation of multiple rights, violation of the right to humane treatment is implicit in the cases of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura. 39. In this regard, the Court has stated that "prolonged isolation and deprivation of communication are in themselves cruel and inhuman treatment, harmful to the psychological and moral integrity of the person and a violation of the right of any detainee to respect for his inherent dignity as a human being. Such treatment, therefore, violates Article 5 of the Convention, which recognizes the right to the integrity of the person.....".[7] 40. Accordingly, the Commission, on the basis of the facts presented, is convinced, by way of presumptive evidence, that Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura were tortured. The circumstances in which the victims were detained, kept hidden, isolated, and in solitary confinement, and their defenselessness as a result of being denied and prevented from exercising any form of protection or safeguards of their rights make it perfectly feasible for the armed forces to have tortured the victims with a view to extracting information about subversive groups or units. Accordingly, the Commission concludes that the Peruvian State violated the rights guaranteed to the victims under Article 5 of the Convention. Right to Life (Article 4 of the Convention) 41. The American Convention establishes: Article 4. Right to Life 1. Every person has the right to have his life respected. This right shall be protected by law and, in general, from the moment of conception. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life. 2. In countries that have not abolished the death penalty, it may be imposed only for the most serious crimes and pursuant to a final judgment rendered by a competent court and in accordance with a law establishing such punishment, enacted prior to the commission of the crime. The application of such punishment shall not be extended to crimes to which it does not presently apply. 3. The death penalty shall not be reestablished in states that have abolished it. 4. In no case shall capital punishment be inflicted for political offenses or related common crimes. 5. Capital punishment shall not be imposed upon persons who, at the time the crime was committed, were under 18 years of age or over 70 years of age; nor shall it be applied to pregnant women. 6. Every person condemned to death shall have the right to apply for amnesty, pardon, or commutation of sentence, which may be granted in all cases. Capital punishment shall not be imposed while such a petition is pending decision by the competent authority. 42. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has stated that the forced disappearance of persons "often involves secret execution without trial, followed by concealment of the body to eliminate any material evidence of the crime and to ensure the impunity of those responsible. This is a flagrant violation of the right to life, recognized in Article 4 of the Convention...". The Court also ruled that the fact that a person has disappeared for seven years creates a reasonable presumption that he or she was killed.[8] 43. In the cases of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura, it has been established their “dissapearance” by State agents, and there is sufficient evidence to support the presumptionthat they are dead--given that more than nine years have elapsed since their detention and disappearance--and the presumption that those responsible are agents of the State. 44. Therefore, the Commission finds that the Peruvian State violated the victims’ right to life, a fundamental right protected under Article 4 of the Convention, which states that "Every person has the right to have his life respected... No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life." Right to Juridical Personality (Article 3 of the Convention) 45. The American Convention establishes: Article 3. Right to Juridical Personality Every person has the right to recognition as a person before the law. 46. Article 3 of the American Convention on Human Rights establishes that every person has the right to recognition as a person before the law. When Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura were detained and then "disappeared" by State agents, they were excluded from the legal and institutional framework of the Peruvian State. In that sense, the forced disappearance of persons constitutes the negation of their very existence as human beings recognized as persons before the law.[9] 47. Thus, the Commission finds that Peru violated the victims’ right to recognition as persons before the law, enshrined in Article 3 of the Convention. to Judicial Protection (Article 25 of the Convention) 48. The Amercian Convention establishes: Article 25. Right to Judicial Protection 1. Everyone has the right to simple and prompt recourse, or any other effective recourse, to a competent court or tribunal for protection against acts that violate his fundamental rights recognized by the constitution or laws of the state concerned or by this Convention, even though such violation may have been committed by persons acting in the course of their official duties. 2. The States Parties undertake: a. to ensure that any person claiming such remedy shall have his rights determined by the competent authority provided for by the legal system of the b. to develop the possibilities of judicial remedy; and c. to ensure that the competent authorities shall enforce such remedies when granted. 49. From the information provided by the parties, it is clear that the Peruvian State has not complied with its obligation to investigate the facts of this case and initiate judicial proceedings. 50. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has stated that the principles of international law "refer not only to the formal existence of such remedies, but also to their adequacy and effectiveness, as shown by the exceptions set out in Article 46(2)."[10] It has also made it clear that the failure to provide effective, not merely formal, judicial remedies not only entails an exception to the rule that domestic remedies must be exhausted, but also constitutes a violation of Article 25 of the Convention.[11] 51. Peruvian law establishes that in all cases of offenses against the public order, the Office of the Attorney General represents both the State and the victim. The Office of the Attorney General is obligated to participate in investigating and prosecuting the crime. Consequently, it should promote and undertake whatever action may be required (provision of evidence, inspections, or any other) to establish the veracity of the complaint, to identify those responsible, if applicable, and to bring criminal charges against them. 52. The jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights confirms the provisions of domestic law when it refers to the obligation of States and says, with regard to the previous point, that "The State has a legal duty (...) to carry out a serious investigation of violations committed within its jurisdiction, to identify those responsible, to impose the appropriate punishment and to ensure the victim adequate compensation."[12] 53. The State must not evade, under any pretext, its duty to investigate a case involving violation of fundamental human rights. The Court says as much when it states that "the investigation... must be undertaken in a serious manner and not as a mere formality preordained to be ineffective. An investigation must have an objective and be assumed by the State as its own legal duty, not as a step taken by private interests that depends upon the initiative of the... family... without an effective search for the truth by the government."[13] 54. The right to be brought before a competent judge is a fundamental safeguard for the rights of any detainee. As the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has stated, judicial supervision of detention, through habeas corpus, "performs a vital role in ensuring that a person’s life and physical integrity are respected, in preventing his disappearance or the keeping of his whereabouts secret and in protecting him against torture or other cruel, inhumane, or degrading punishment or treatment."[14] 55. Precisely for that reason, Article 27 of the American Convention on Human Rights has established that essential judicial guarantees safeguarding certain fundamental rights cannot be suspended. As the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has ruled, "from Article 27(1), moreover, comes the general requirement that in any state of emergency there be appropriate means to control the measures taken, so that they are proportionate to the needs and do not exceed the strict limits imposed by the Convention or derived from it."[15] 56. The Court has also stated that the judicial nature of those means presupposes "the active involvement of an independent and impartial judicial body having the power to pass on the lawfulness of measures adopted in a state of emergency[16] and that "it must also be understood that the declaration of a state of emergency" whatever its breadth or denomination in internal law "cannot entail the suppression or ineffectiveness of the judicial guarantees that the Convention requires States Parties to establish for the protection of the rights not subject to derogation or suspension by the state of emergency."[17] 57. According to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, this also includes the right to a fair trial enshrined in Article 8, which "includes the prerequisites necessary to ensure the adequate protection of those persons whose rights or obligations are pending judicial determination."[18] The Court concluded that "the principles of due process of law cannot be suspended in states of exception insofar as they are necessary conditions for the procedural institutions regulated by the Convention to be considered judicial guarantees."[19] 58. Such a lack of access to effective domestic remedies against acts that violate fundamental rights constitute a violation by the Peruvian State of Articles 8 and 25 of the Convention. Obligation to respect and guarantee rights 59. In this case, it has been shown that the Peruvian State failed to comply with the obligation, set forth in Article 1(1) of the Convention, "to respect the rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of those rights and freedoms," because it violated rights established in Articles 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 25 of the Convention. 60. The first obligation of States, under Article 1(1) of the Convention, is to respect the rights and freedoms of all persons subject to their jurisdiction. With regard to this obligation, the Court ruled that "under international law a State is responsible for the acts of its agents… and for their omissions, even when those agents act outside the sphere of their authority or violate internal law". It ruled also that "any violation of rights recognized by the Convention carried out by an act of public authority or by persons who use their position of authority is imputable to the State."[20] 61. The Commission concludes that the forced disappearance of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura were acts perpetrated by agents of public authority, and that, therefore, the Peruvian State violated the rights of those victims, enshrined in Article 1(1) of the Convention, in relation to violations of Articles 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 25 of the Convention. 62. The second obligation set forth in Article 1(1) is to ensure free and full exercise of the rights and freedoms recognized in the Convention. On this the Court’s jurisprudence establishes that: "This obligation implies the duty of the States Parties to organize the governmental apparatus, and, in general, all the structures through which public power is exercised, so that they are capable of juridically ensuring the free and full enjoyment of human rights. As a consequence of this obligation, States must prevent, investigate, and punish any violation of the rights recognized by the Convention …"[21] 63. In the event of a "forced disappearance", the State is obligated to ascertain the whereabouts and situation of the victim, punish those responsible, and make reparation to the family members. In the case at hand, these obligations have not been met. Therefore, the Commission concludes that the Peruvian State has violated Article 1(1) of the Convention by failing to ensure the exercise of the rights and guarantees of the individuals involved. V. PROCEEDINGS SUBSEQUENT TO REPORT N� 96/99 64. The Commission adopted Report N� 96/99 (Article 50) in this case on September 28, 1999, during its 104th session. That Report, with the Commission's recommendations, was transmitted to the Peruvian State on October 21, 1999; the State was given two months to carry out the recommendations, counted from the date of transmittal of the Report. 65. By Note N� 7-5-M/558 of December 17, 1999, the State forwarded the Commission its considerations on Report N� 96/99, and stated its disagreement with aspects of fact and of law reflected therein, and with the conclusion reached by the Commission. The State alleged that the case should not be admitted on grounds that the petitioner had failed to exhaust domestic remedies, and added that "the exception to the requirement of exhaustion of domestic remedies provided for at Article 46(2)(a) of the American Convention on Human Rights is not applicable in case 10.670, as it is not true that there was a practice or policy of disappearances ordered or tolerated by the public authorities." 66. The Peruvian State indicated its specific discrepancy with the conclusion at paragraph 70 infra, and insists in this regard that Messrs. M�nago Carhuaricra and M�nago Laura were not detained by members of the police. It added that "consequently, the recommendations of the IACHR are not admissible, especially when the investigation carried out in due course regarding the alleged detention and later disappearance of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura, considering the circumstances of terrorist violence, was serious and impartial, and did not determine that any agents of the Peruvian State were responsible." 67. Finally, the State indicated with respect to amnesty laws Nos. 26.479 and 26.492 that "both laws were approved by the Congress of the Republic in the exercise of the functions that the Constitution confers on it, and are part of the policy of pacification initiated by the Peruvian State." 68. The Commission refrains from analyzing the reiterations of the Peruvian State in response to arguments made prior to the adoption of Report N� 96/99, and its expressions of disagreement with that Report, for pursuant to Article 51(1) of the Convention, what the Commission must determine at this stage of the procedure is whether the State did or did not resolve the matter. In this respect, the IACHR observes that the Peruvian State has not carried out any of the recommendations made to it by the Commission in its Report N� 96/99. 69. With respect to Peru's allegation that the amnesty laws are consistent with the Peruvian Constitution, the Commission recalls that the Peruvian State, on ratifying the American Convention on Human Rights, on July 28, 1978, contracted the obligation to respect and ensure the rights set forth in it. In this regard, and in keeping with Article 27 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, the Peruvian State cannot invoke its internal laws as justification for failure to comply with the obligations it assumed on ratifying the American Convention on Human Rights. Over the years, this Commission has adopted reports in several key cases in which it has had the opportunity to express its point of view and crystallize its doctrine with respect to the application of amnesty laws, establishing that such laws violate several provisions of both the American Declaration and the American Convention.[22] These decisions, which are in agreement with the criterion adopted by other international human rights bodies regarding amnesties,[23] have declared uniformly that both the amnesty laws and comparable legislative measures that impede or that determine the conclusion of the investigation and trial of State agents who may be responsible for serious violations of the American Convention or the American Declaration violate several provisions of those instruments.[24] This doctrine has been confirmed by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which has established that the States Parties have the duty "to investigate human rights violations, prosecute the persons responsible, and prevent impunity."[25] The Court has defined impunity as the failure to investigate, pursue, arrest, try, and sentence persons responsible for human rights violations, and has affirmed that the States have the duty to combat this situation by all legal means available, since impunity fosters the chronic repetition of such human rights violations, and the total defenselessness of the victims and their families.[26] The States Parties to the American Convention cannot invoke provisions of domestic law, such as amnesty laws, to fail to carry out their obligation to guarantee the complete and correct functioning of the justice system.[27] VI. CONCLUSION 70. The Commission reiterates its conclusion that the Peruvian State, through members of the Peruvian Army from the Puente Paucartambo Base, detained Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura on September 9, 1990, in Sogormo, district and province of Oxapampa, and later proceeded to disappear them by force; consequently, the Peruvian State is responsible for violations of the right to liberty (Article 7), the right to humane treatment (Article 5), the right to life (Article 4), the right to juridical personality (Article 3), and the right to an effective judicial remedy (Article 25) set forth in the American Convention on Human Rights. In addition, it has breached its general obligation to respect and ensure the exercise of these rights set forth in the Convention, in the terms of Article 1(1). VII. RECOMMENDATIONS Based on the foregoing analysis and conclusion, THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS REITERATES THE FOLLOWING RECOMMENDATIONS TO THE PERUVIAN STATE: 1. That it carry out an exhaustive, impartial, and effective investigation to determine the circumstances of the forced disappearance of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura, and that it punish the persons responsible, in keeping with Peruvian legislation. 2. That it void any domestic measure, legislative or otherwise, that tends to impede the investigation, prosecution, and punishment of the persons responsible for the detention and forced disappearance of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura. Accordingly, the State should nullify Laws 26.479 and 26.492. 3. That it adopt the measures required for the family members of Messrs. Manuel M�nago Carhuaricra and Eleazar M�nago Laura to receive adequate and timely reparation for the violations established herein. VIII. PUBLICATION 71. On March 2, 2000, the Commission transmitted Report 14/00--the text of which precedes--to the Peruvian State and to petitioners, in accordance to Article 51(2) of the Convention, and granted Peru an additional period to comply with the recommendations set out above. On March 31, 2000, the State forwarded the Commission a note which reiterated its considerations pertaining to the conclusions of fact and of law of the Commission, and did not state that it had taken any action towards compliance with the recommendations made by the Commission. 72. According to the above considerations, and Articles 51(3) of the American Convention and 48 of the Commission’s Regulations, the Commission decides to reiterate the conclusion and recommendations set forth in chapters VI and VII above; to make public the present report and include it in its Annual Report to the OAS General Assembly. The Commission, according to the norms contained in the instruments which govern its mandate, will continue evaluating the measures adopted by the Peruvian State with respect to the above recommendations until they have been complied with by the Peruvian State. Done and signed by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on the 13th of April 2000. (Signed): H[elio Bicudo, Chairman; Claudio Grossman, First Vice-Chairman; Juan M[endez, Second Vice-Chairman; Commissioners Marta Altoloaguirre, Robert K. Goldman, Peter Laurie and Julio Prado Vallejo. [ Table of Contents | Previous | Next ] The Peruvian State deposited the instrument of ratification of the American Convention on July 28, 1978. [2] IACHR, Report N� 51/99, Cases 10.471 and others (Peru), Annual Report 1998, para. 58 to 63. See also, IACHR, Reports Nos. 52/99, 53/99, 54/99, 55/99, 56/99, and 57/99 (Peru), Annual Report 1998. IACHR, Report N� 51/99, Cases 10.471 and others (Peru), Annual Report 1998, para. 68 to 95. See also, IACHR, Reports Nos. 52/99, 53/99, 54/99, 55/99, 56/99, and 57/99 (Peru), Annual Report 1998. As mentioned in paragraph 22, supra, the Commission has noted, citing doctrine of the Inter-American Court, that when the existence of a policy of disappearances sponsored or tolerated by the Government has been proven, it is possible, through circumstantial or indirect evidence, or by pertinent logical inferences, to show the disappearance of a specific individual, which otherwise would be impossible, by a link between the specific disappearance in question and the general practice. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Case of Vel�squez Rodr�guez, Judgment of July 29, 1988, para. 124. [5] According to which every person has the right: … Article 20: .. to personal liberty and security. Consequently, (g) No one shall be detained except with a justified, written order or by police officers in flagrante The Commission has established that: The rationale behind this guarantee is that no person should be punished without a prior trial which includes a charge, the opportunity to defend oneself, and a sentence. All these stages must be completed within a reasonable time. The time limit is intended to protect the accused with respect to his or her fundamental right to personal liberty, as well as the accused personal security against being the object of an unjustified procedural risk. (IACHR, Report N� 12-96, para. 76 (Case 11.245, Argentina), published in the 1995 Annual Report. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Vel�squez Rodr�guez case, op.cit., paragraph 156. Idem paragraphs 157 and 188. [9] Article 1(2) of the Declaration regarding protection of persons from forced disappearances defines disappearance as a violation of the norms of international law guaranteeing every human being the right to recognition as a person before the law. UN General Assembly resolution 47/133, December 18, 1992. [10] paragraph 63. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Vel�squez Rodr�guez case. Preliminary objections, Judgment of June 24, 1987, par. 91. [12] Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Vel�squez Rodr�guez case, op.cit., paragraph 174. [13] Idem, paragraph 177. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Habeas Corpus in Emergency Situations (Articles 27(2), 25(1) and 7(6), American Convention on Human Rights). Advisory Opinion OC-8/87 of January 30, 1987. Series A N� 8, paragraph 35. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Judicial Guarantees in State of Emergency (Articles 27(2), 25 and 8 of the American Convention on Human Rights), Advisory Opinion OC-9/87 of October 6, 1987, Series A N� 9, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Habeas Corpus in Emergency Situations, op.cit., paragraph 30. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Judicial Gurantees in State of Emergency, op.cit., paragraph 25. Idem, paragraph 28. Ibidem, paragraph 30. [20] paragraphs 170 and 172. Idem, paragraph 166. [22] Report 28/92, Argentina, Annual Report of the IACHR 1992-1993, para. 41; Report 29/92, Uruguay, Annual Report of the IACHR 1992-1993, para. 51; Reports 34/96 and 36/96, Chile, Annual Report of the IACHR 1996, paras. 76 and 78 respectively; Report 25/98, Chile, Annual Report of the IACHR 1997, para. 71; and Report 1/99, El Salvador, Annual Report of the IACHR 1998, para. 170. [23] See, for example, the study on impunity prepared in 1997 by Louis Joinet, U.N. Special Rapporteur on Impunity (United Nations Commission on Human Rights, Question of the impunity of perpetrators of human rights violations (civil and political), Revised Final Report, prepared by Mr. Joinet pursuant to decision 1996/119 of the Subcommission. E/CN.4/Sub.2/1997/20 Rev. 1, October 2, 1997. The Human Rights Committee of the United Nations declared that it was profoundly concerned over the amnesties granted by Decree-Laws Nos. 26.479 and 26.492, and concluded that those laws violate various human rights (Preliminary observations of the Human Rights Committee, Peru, CCPR/C/79/Add.67, July 25, 1996). In addition, the United Nations Committee Against Torture also examined the Peruvian amnesty legislation and expressed its concern over the practice of promulgating amnesty laws which in fact confer impunity on persons guilty of torture, in violation of many provisions of the Convention Against Torture (Summary record of the public part of the 333rd session: Panama and Peru, May 20, 1998. CAT/C/SR.333). [25] Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Case of Loayza Tamayo, Judgment of Reparations, November 27, 1998, para. 170. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Case of Paniagua Morales et al., Judgment of March 8, 1998, Series C, N� 37, para. 173. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Case of Loayza Tamayo, Judgment of Reparations of November 27, 1998, paragraph 168.
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8 Movies You Didn't Realize Were Big Hits This Year By Katey Rich 2012-12-06 15:01:44 comments You could probably rattle off the year's biggest movies without much effort, just based on what you saw people talking about the most all year. The Dark Knight Rises, The Avengers, Ted and all the others are the hits that are so huge everybody knows about them and has probably seen them. But there are a lot of different ways to define a hit, especially if you're a studio just trying to figure out if a film will make back its money. And there are a lot of elements of film grosses, like DVD sales and international licensing fees, that we simply can't see for ourselves. But looking over the year in box office over at Box Office Mojo, there are plenty of ways to be surprised by films that were way more popular than you ever dreamed. Whether because they opened slow and built up buzz, were hits only proportion to their budgets or made way more money overseas than they did in the States, here are 10 movies that became sizable hits while you weren't paying attention-- and may deserve a second thought if you wrote them off the first time. Magic Mike $165 million worldwide gross on a $7 million budget, $113 million domestic WIth its ads featuring beefcake men dancing in front of glittery backdrops, Magic Mike was sold as much more of a romp than it really was� but the gamble worked. It's wildly profitable after being made on such a tiny budget funded entirely by Steven Soderbergh and Channing Tatum, and it also hit a kind of cultural touchstone in a way that I'm sure has turned tidy profits for all-male strip clubs, too. In a world where so many independent films stumble, Magic Mike is the dream come true. The 10 Best Movie Music Moments Of 2012 The 10 Best On-Screen Couples Of 2012 2012 Movies Summed Up In Amazing Video Montage The Top 10 Movies Of 2012: Mack's List Operation Kino 95: Our Top Ten Films Of 2012 The 10 Most Disappointing Movies Of 2012 The 10 Best Action Movie Scenes Of 2012 The Top 10 Lines of Dialogue In 2012 Movies
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LP Release Tuesday: September 20th, 2011 By Joseph Giannone 2011-09-21 06:18:00 Tweet For this week�s installment of LP Release Tuesday, fans of Opeth will see this once technical death metal band change its sound entirely. On their latest outing Heritage, the band throws away their former technical death metal sound for a deep record of progressive rock and jazz fusion. Yea, we were surprised too. Opeth isn�t the only band releasing an album this week that changes things up. The always fantastic Tony Bennett is showing fans his second foray into duets, appropriately called, Duets II. Tony�s new record also features the last known performance of the late Amy Winehouse, among other surprises. Post-Hardcore outfit Thrice is releasing a new album this week after three years of absence, and indie rock group Clap Your Hands Say Yeah are attaining their indie cred with yet another record garnering �that� sound. This week looks good folks, and let�s starts it off with an artist most of us know. Here�s this week�s LP releases: 5) Tori Amos Night of Hunters Even if you don�t know her, Tori Amos is the singer-songwriter who set the trend for those famous, girl powered rock bands that everyone�s talking about now. Amos was rocking it out way before groups like Lykke Li, Grace Potter and The Nocturnals, and Florence + The Machine took the stage in the past five years. All too often audiences forget about her powerful presence, but it�s about that time again that we remember why she�s famous in the first place, even though her sound has changed considerably since her start in the early 90�s. Her new album Night of Hunters, like Opeth�s Heritage, has taken a radical shift in the previous stylings she once was known for. Instead of Amos� whimsical chamber pop, this time around we see her expanding into classical territory as she describes, �a 21st century song cycle inspired by classical music themes spanning over 400 years.� Four hundred years is correct, because the album features songs that cascade listeners with harps, cellos, horns, violins, and every other orchestral instrument under the sun. It's Beethoven meets Tori Amos. What more could you ask for? 4) Thrice Major/Minor Thrice is a band that doesn�t take no for an answer. Meaning, their music is in your face, no holds barred, and any other metaphor of unbridled intensity you can think of. The indie community likes to consider Thrice as an untouched entity that the �man� hasn�t gotten hold of yet, like the other indie act on this list, because its music hasn�t been altered by corporate suits. Sure, their sound has definitely changed quite a bit since their first outing Identity Crisis, all the way back in 2001, but the intensity is still there. Major/Minor sees the group delving deeper into their post-rock tendencies, making for another experimental album that fleshes away from past efforts. Already receiving rave reviews from outlets like Absolute Punk, Alternative Press and Blare, these favorable reviews have definitely been helped by the band's willingness to change their style over the years. Whether or not you feel that Thrice has become more accessible, or just better songwriters, there�s surely one thing that�s clear-- the band has taken off onto new heights and isn't stopping anytime soon. 3) Tony Bennett Duets II For years Tony Bennett has been that leading entertainer whose music has touched millions. Even though the man is 85 years old, his songs span generations of listeners. That�s quite an impressive hat to wear, but only a man with the voice, charisma and stage presence like Tony Bennett is worthy of that title. Bennett has released well over 70 albums since the star of his career and it seems like he is not planning to stop anytime soon, which is one of the reasons why he is loved by audiences young and old. Another factor that plays into why Bennett is known by my generation and many others before is the fact that he�s continued to collaborate with some of the most famous names in show business today. By making appearances on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Simpsons, Muppets Tonight, or singing side by side with the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Flavor Flav, Bennett has kept busy keeping his name relevant. Now with Duets II coming out this week, consider this his 10th revival. Singing with Lady Gaga, John Mayer, Faith Hill, Queen Latifah, Willie Nelson and Carrie Underwood among others, Bennett is quickly throwing himself into pop culture again. Another major breakthrough for this record, as we pointed out last month, is that this is also the last recording Amy Winehouse made before her untimely demise. All I have to say is that I�m glad Amy had her last performance with Tony Bennett, a man whose career spanning over fifty years, has touched millions of lives. 2) Clap Your Hands Say Yeah Hysterical Clap Your Hands Say Yeah is a prominent group that, like Thrice, has kept its soft bodied indie rock out of the hands of the corporate machine. This doesn�t matter to me at all though, because instead of turning up on the �man�s� doorstep, I care more about whether or not the band stays either gets a little better with each record or tries something new. Many hipsters want Clap Your Hands to stay away from the move towards a larger fan base through expensive exposure that only a major label can provide, but the only way they can still survive is by churning out good music that�s bound to gain a larger fan base. Even though they aren�t like other indie bands in the limelight, David Bowie and David Byrne have both been spotted at this Brooklyn, New York quintet�s shows. So does this mean they�re gaining more popularity? Maybe so. It�s now been four years since their last effort Some Loud Thunder, and Hysterical has finally made its way out. On their first album in four years, the band continues on the path of simplistic indie rock that most casual music fans won�t be able to get into, but have also expanded into some new territory. Prolific indie producer John Congleton takes the reins on this outing, guiding the boys through this album's sonic sound by taking them to a whole new level of creativity that will surely keep fans wanting more. 1) Opeth Heritage There are many things to be said about Opeth. Whether or not it�s bad, good, or indifferent, audiences tend to have an opinion of the group, even if they�ve never listened to their music. For a long time I�d never heard of them, and I know many are with me, but this doesn�t mean they�re not famous, because they are. What turns many away from them is the description of their sound as �technical death metal.� What is �technical death metal,� you ask? Well, it�s a form of death metal, obviously, that features heavy riffs, extremely fast tempos and growling vocals. Not many people tend to gravitate towards music that features �growling vocals.� To shake things up though, instead of looking towards the past on their latest record Heritage, Opeth sounds off to the future. On the LP, the Swedish group explores 1970�s jazz fusion, progressive rock and Black Sabbath�s coined hard rock by taking a leave of absence from the growling vocals and extreme instrumentation they were once famous for. Metal fans, like indie hipsters, might see this as the group seeking to attract a wider audience, but I see this as Opeth's chance to further themselves away from this tired genre. Instead of continuing with technical death metal sounds, which they�ve done since their debut album Orchid in 1995, band leader Mikael �kerfeldt has taken his group to an entirely different music hall, where the acoustics are better than anything they�ve entered previously. As Mikael stated in an interview, �It will be our 10th album/observation. I dig it; we all do. In fact, it feels like I've been building up to write for and participate on an album like this since I was 19.� It�s amazing that after twenty one years of creating death metal, Opeth is finally taking this major leap of faith that�s throwing them away from the proven sound that�s made them lots of money. But, I guess it�s time for change and it�s certainly welcome. I�m not saying that their previous albums have been worthless, even though I am not a fan of metal, but I will say that this foray into jazz fusion and progressive rock will help them garner that truly remarkable recognition they�ve been working for since their inception. Being a �technical death metal� band does have its drawbacks, but now Opeth has finally taken their musical abilities to new heights and will subsequently see new fans emerge who will take in everything they have to offer. That is the most wonderful thing about music in general, though. Most groups make their name by simply releasing the same style of music over and over again throughout their tenure. Yet, it�s those who make certain leaps of faith that make the process of art, worthwhile. Variety is the spice of life. Tweet Tony Bennett And Lady Gaga Recording Jazz Album Together LP Release Tuesday: November 22nd, 2011 LP Release Tuesday: January 31st, 2012 LP Release Tuesday: January 17th, 2012 Lady Gaga Got Naked For Tony Bennett LP Release Tuesday: November 15th, 2011 LP Release Tuesday: November 8th, 2011
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Justin Chatwin Is Leaving Shameless: What Does That Mean For Jimmy? One of the big cliffhangers from the third season of Showtime's Shameless was the fate of Jimmy, Fiona's boyfriend, who'd gotten himself mixed up with a drug kingpin. He was last seen boarding a boat and we were left to wonder if the repercussions of failing to keep his "wife" from getting deported would be fatal. This latest bit of news doesn't bode well for the character, but all hope is not lost! THR reports that producer John Wells announced that actor Justin Chatwin, who plays Jimmy in the Showtime drama, will not be returning to the series for Season 4. Or at the very least, that his days as a series regular have come to an end. Does that mean Jimmy's dead? Not so fast! The site adds that Chatwin could return for one or two episodes, which might indicate that Jimmy did survive whatever fate awaited him on that boat. The more pessimistic speculation is that the actor's possible return for one or two more episodes could come in the form of flashbacks to explain what happened to Jimmy on the boat - so maybe he did die. In a nutshell, this news confirms nothing about the character's fate beyond the likelihood that he and Fiona are over for good. If Jimmy did live, perhaps he decided to head back to med school like he planned, and that would explain his permanent exit. I liked Chatwin on the show, so it's disappointing that he's leaving. But from a plot standpoint, I'm excited to see how his story is resolved and what kind of impact it has on Fiona. When the series left off, it seemed like everyone was leaving. While we can hope that some of the Gallaghers will find their way back home in Season 4, it looks like Jimmy's gone for good. Tweet Watch Californication's Season 7 Premiere Here, See Heather ... Penny Dreadful Digs Up Cast Photo, Posters And Behind The Sc... Homeland Production Is Moving To Cape Town, South Africa For... Shameless Will Switch From Drama To Comedy For This Year's E... Masters Of Sex And Ray Donovan Set For Summer Returns Breaking Bad's Betsy Brandt Joining Masters Of Sex Showtime Will Get In Bed With Hedge Fund Managers For New Pi... Shameless Renewed For Season 5 Because Nobody Cancels The Ga...
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HP Looks to Resuscitate its Dying Mobile Business by Heading to India The company will launch two phablet-sized devices in an emerging market where Samsung and Nokia are on fire. By Florence Ion Wed, January 15, 2014 It's a life lesson anyone can live by: if what you're doing isn't working, try something new. That seems to be the motivation behind HP's latest venture into India. HP Slate 6 Re/code reports that HP has announced plans to re-enter the smartphone market with two new phone-tablet hybrids in India, an emerging market where other major phone manufacturers have also taken their business. HP was once a proponent of touchscreen, PDA devices, but lost its steam after buying Palm in 2010. The company hasn't released a mobile phone since 2009 (though it did release a few tablets, including a few Android-powered ones and the WebOS-powered TouchPad). The two phablet devices coming to India are the 6- and 7-inch Slate 6 and Slate 7 VoiceTab, respectively. The phones run Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean, feature quad-core processors, and come with 16GB of internal storage, as well as expansion slots. Both devices will be available for purchase next month, though HP hasn't mentioned a price just yet. If you're exhausted by the idea of more large-sized smartphones, you're justified: according to IDC, devices with larger screens, ranging from 5 to 7 inches, accounted for nearly 23 percent of all smartphone sales. It makes sense for a company like HP, which is looking to gain some footing, to go after the low-hanging fruit. It also makes sense that HP is diving into an established emerging market. Samsung and Nokia hover around 15 percent marketshare in India, and numbers like that can make any country seem like a veritable investment to a company struggling for a piece of the pie. Ron Coughlin, senior vice president for the consumer PC business at HP, expressed hope about entering the market overseas, telling Re/code that the devices resonated with India's consumers and that "India had the highest purchase intent." If the company is successful, it's likely it will try on the US for size--again. For now, Coughlin said that HP is merely focusing on a successful launch in India. Originally published on www.techhive.com. Click here to read the original story.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1016
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City of Knoxville, Tennessee Madeline Rogero, Mayor FOLLOW THE MAYOR www.facebook.com/mayorrogerowww.twitter.com/mayorrogero Former Mayor Crossley Passes December 15, 2006 - Prominent Knoxville lawyer and former Knoxville Mayor Robert L. Crossley, 78, died December 15, 2006 at his home in West Knoxville. A memorial service will be held on Monday, December 18, 2006 at 3:00 p.m. at St. John's Cathedral (413 Cumberland Avenue). The family will receive friends following the service at the church. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be made either to the Knoxville Bar Foundation or St. John's Cathedral. A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Crossley moved to Knoxville with his family in 1938. He graduated from Knoxville High School in 1946 and entered the U.S. Navy, serving in Guam. After completion of his military service, he enrolled at the University of Tennessee and received a law degree in 1952. He was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity, Phi Eta Sigma honorary society, Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity, Omicron Delta Kappa honorary society, and was elected to the Order of the Coif. He was editor-in-chief of the Tennessee Law Review in 1952. After graduation from law school, he worked as a tax advisor for the accounting firm Lybrand, Ross Bros. & Montgomery in New York City for two years. He returned to Knoxville in 1954, and began his practice of law with the firm Morton and Morton. Several years later, he joined Fowler, Rowntree and Fowler where he practiced until 1962. He served as Knoxville City Law Director from 1962 to 1965. In 1964, when Mayor John Duncan was elected to the U.S. Congress, Crossley was appointed acting mayor. He served 31 days until Leonard Rogers took office as mayor in early January of 1965. Crossley then returned to the private practice of law, joining the firm Baker, Worthington, Barnett and Crossley in 1965. Over the next thirty years, the firm, which came to be known as Baker, Worthington, Crossley, Stansberry & Woolf, grew to become one of the largest and most prestigious in the state. In 1995, desiring to return to a smaller and more personal practice of law, Crossley joined the firm Long, Ragsdale and Waters. He later formed The Crossley Law Firm and enjoyed the solo practice of law. At the time of his death, he was a member of the firm Lacy, Moseley and Crossley. In 1959, Crossley was asked to teach a class to help prepare U.T. law school graduates for the bar exams. At that time there was no established bar study program. Crossley started the Crossley Bar Review that year with a little over a dozen students. The program eventually was taken statewide, and over the next 38 years prepared over 10,000 future lawyers, judges and law professors for the state bar examination. Crossley sold the program in 1997 to a national bar review company. Crossley was a member of the Knoxville, Tennessee and American Bar Associations. He served as president of the Knoxville Bar Association in 1975. The local association twice honored him for his service, giving him the prestigious Governor’s Award, the Association’s highest honor, in 2005, and naming him a fellow of the Knoxville Bar Foundation in 2003. He served as a member of the Tennessee Supreme Court Commission on the Future of the Tennessee Judicial System, and was certified as a Civil Trial Specialist by the Tennessee Commission on Continuing Legal Education and Specialization. He was also nominated for appointment to the Tennessee Supreme Court in 1998 by the Tennessee Judicial Selection Commission. Crossley was a longtime member of the old Knoxville City Club, Cherokee Country Club and Club LeConte. He was active in community affairs, including service as the Chairman of the Board of The Webb School of Knoxville. He was an active member of St. John’s Cathedral, serving as a lay reader and usher. In his spare time, he enjoyed golf, travel, family and friends. Crossley was preceded in death by his parents, W. J. and Elva Crossley. He is survived by his wife, Janet Testerman Crossley; a brother, W. J. (Bud) Crossley, Jr. and wife, Lib; a sister, Nancy Crossley Dean and husband, Scott; children, R. Louis Crossley, Jr. and wife, Laurie; Catherine E. (Trinka) O’Fallon and husband, Jim, and Mary A. Crossley and husband, Tom Juring; step-children, Muffet Testerman Buckner and husband, Jimmy; Ben Testerman and wife, Ramona; Janet Testerman Cleary and husband, Dennis; six grandchildren, six step-grandchildren and several nephews and nieces. PRESS RELEASE INDEX SITE TOOLS: Add to FavoritesAdobe PDF ReaderEmail PageFont SmallerFont NormalFont LargerGet DirectionsMake Home PagePrint PageRSS/XML FeedSearch A to Z ListSite MapTraduzca en Español
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1017
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"Transportation & Storage" in Andover, KS
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1018
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"Breakfast" in Lafayette, TN 417 Highway 52 Byp W, Lafayette, TN 5213 Hwy 31 E, Westmoreland, TN
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1019
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"Banks" in Scotts Valley, CA
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1020
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"Coats" in St. Matthews, KY 1. Martin + Osa 7900 Shelbyville Rd., Louisville, KY
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1021
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Tully's Coffee (Reported Closed) 13100 N.E. 70th Pl.,
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1022
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Casey's Pub & Grill 9201 Fm 1488 Rd,
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1023
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Bringing home 'Babe': What you should know before getting a pet pig — When most people think of their ideal pet, a certain breed of dog or cat instantly comes to mind. However, for those who love more exotic pets and are willing to put in a little more time and effort, a pot-bellied pig can be an ideal choice. Pot-bellied pigs, including mini and micro pigs, can make good indoor and outdoor pets," said Philippa Sprake, clinical assistant professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVM). "Pigs are social animals and each has their own personality. While pigs are unbelievably intelligent (and adorable), there are a few things pet-owners should know before bringing little Wilbur home to stay. The first thing future owners should do is check with their local homeowners’ association as well as their home’s zoning regulations to ensure that pigs can be kept on the property. Pigs can be extremely noisy, especially when adapting to a new environment, and the last thing any new pet owner wants is an angry neighbor or landlord trying to have the pet removed. "When it comes to deciding on a piglet, it is very important to choose one that is at least 8 weeks old, weaned, and comes from a reputable breeder to ensure that it is healthy," said Sprake. "Also, even though they are called miniature, micro pigs can still grow to around 40 pounds and full size or traditional pot belly pigs can reach 100 pounds or more, so it is important to see the parents of the pig you are planning on taking home to evaluate your piglet’s potential adult size."
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1024
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Barclaycard Premiership 2002/2003 Historical league standings at 14th September 2002
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Stoneman Check out The Stoneman each weekday from noon to 6pm. And for his poignant, yet hysterical, look on life, check out his blog! MICK JONES AND LOU GRAMM EYING NEW FOREIGNER MUSIC FOR 2015 by Stoneman Mick Jones revealed that the first new songs by him and co-founding Foreigner frontman Lou Gramm in 20 years might hit the public next year. The pair's June 2013 performance of "I Want To Know What Love Is" and "Juke Box Hero" at the Songwriters Hall Of Fame in New York City marked the first time the pair has performed together in a decade after Gramm left Foreigner for a second time. Jones has rekindled a relationship with Gramm, and revealed to Classic Rock magazine, that the duo, who wrote most of Foreigner's classic hits together, might be teaming up one more time, explaining, "Lou told me a few weeks ago he's discovered a few songs we were writing in the '80s, but never quite finished. We might take time next year to bring a couple of those out of the vaults. . . It's a question of wading through them and finding a cassette machine to play them on." When asked if a reunion -- which would sideline current lead singer Kelly Hansen -- would be unfair, Jones was quick to point out: "Kelly has dedicated everything to the band. He's phenomenal. So anything I do will be sensitive to that. If Lou and I do something it'll be inclusive. No way will he replace Kelly." Jones was asked what shape a Lou Gramm / Kelly Hansen Foreigner show might take, and he explained, "Something special where the old members can be involved. That would be cool. But nothing in the immediate future." (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestSocial : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestLocations : New York CityPeople : Kelly Hansen, MICK JONES THE ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME INDUCTS 2014 CLASS The 2014 Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony took place in Brooklyn, New York at the Barclays Center. A truncated version of the evening's events will air on HBO on May 31st at 9 p.m. The inductees to the Rock Hall class of 2014 were Kiss, Nirvana, Linda Ronstadt, Cat Stevens, Peter Gabriel, Daryl Hall & John Oates. Ahmet Ertegun Awards went to the Beatles' late manager Brian Epstein and original Rolling Stones manager/producer Andrew Loog Oldham. The Award for Musical Excellence -- formerly known as the Side-Men category -- was presented to the E Street Band, who were inducted by Bruce Springsteen. Glenn Frey -- who got his major break as apart of Linda Ronstadt's backing band -- saluted her at the ceremony. Ronstadt did not attend the event, but a show-stopping tribute of her best-loved songs was performed by Stevie Nicks, Carrie Underwood, Emmylou Harris, Sheryl Crow, and Bonnie Raitt. Questlove of the Roots saluted Hall & Oates. Surprise inductor Art Garfunkel paid tribute to Cat Stevens, and Peter Asher, of Peter & Gordon and record production fame, did the honors for his friends, Brian Epstein and Andrew Loog Oldham -- who also was a no show at last night's event. Rage Against The Machine's Tom Morello, inducted Kiss, who surprisingly were all on their best behavior and spoke respectfully -- and at times even lovingly -- towards each other as they recalled their early years. The evening's closest thing to a celebrity roast was Coldplay's Chris Martin's induction of Peter Gabriel. R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe inducted Nirvana -- who closed the celebrations by reforming with three women fronting the band -- Joan Jett, St. Vincent, and Lorde, respectively. THE SCENE BACKSTAGE LAST NIGHT In one of the most candid moments of the induction, Bruce Springsteen recalled a conversation he had at his home with Steve Van Zandt, who had urged Springsteen to force the Rock Hall's hand and induct the E Street Band along with him in 1999. Springsteen talked frankly about the reasons and situations as too why he elected to go in as a solo act. Backstage, Steve Van Zandt was asked his feelings pertaining to that: ["Y'know, we were having many conversations about, y'know, the reunion, and all that. And Bruce had tried some things with other players -- as he absolutely has a right to do -- and who can blame him, him trying different things with different people. Tom Morello was asked about what he made of Kiss' inner-band issues going into the Rock Hall: ["Well, the way I look at it is; every garage band and every stadium band has beef. There's nothing special about that. Tonight is about what is special and that's the awesome band that Kiss is and was, and the four original members and how they rocked my world, how they've rocked the planet since. So that other stuff doesn't matter to me. Although Kiss came backstage for photo ops, Ace Frehley was the only member to come back and talk to the press: ["Well, most of my influences are older than me. I'm one of the older inductees (laughs), y'know? I grew up with the Who, Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, and Led Zeppelin. Y'know, those were the guys that influenced me. I influenced a lot of those guys that are getting inducted — guys like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and everybody else. But I'm so happy to be here, y'know, it's been 15 years (since the first) could've inducted us, y'know? But 15 years later they did. I'm just thrilled to be here and I'm in good company." Glenn Frey touched upon how the Eagles learned their craft while serving as Linda Ronstadt's backing band: ["Obviously the first thing we all noticed was what a great singer she was. And for Don (Henley) and I, to be the two harmony singers to be singing with all these incredible songs that she loved, y'know, was just the step in the right direction for us. We both loved harmony singing, and to be able to do it with Linda was a treat." Peter Gabriel said that he's always been in the right place at the right time to help further his craft: ["I just think I'm very fortunate because I've worked with extraordinarily people, great musicians. For me, it's not about rock n' roll or any label. I think it was (Count) Basie who said 'There's only two kinds of music -- good and bad.' And that's what I subscribe to." Daryl Hall -- who has been openly critical of Hall & Oates being passed over for the past 16 years -- was asked about how he felt to finally be inducted: ["Y'know what I think? I think it's all about the past and we're about the present, if you want to know the truth. I got so much going on personally — and I know John does, too. I actually had to take time off to do this, 'cause I got so many other projects going on. I mean, that's not blowing smoke, it's really true. I got two television shows (laughs), touring (growls) -- on and on and on." Michael Stipe was asked about the first time he met Kurt Cobain: ["It was in Chris' basement in Seattle. He and Courtney had moved into the house next door to my former guitar player Peter Buck. And they lived side by side. They were late to a little party at Chris' house. The first time I looked into his eyes, I went -- I, I, I get it. He is all that. He is a very special person." LAST NIGHT'S SETLIST AT THE ROCK HALL "Digging In The Dirt" - Peter Gabriel "Washing Of The Water" - Peter Gabriel and Chris Martin "In Your Eyes" - Peter Gabriel with Youssou n'Dour "Father And Son" - Cat Stevens "Wild World" - Cat Stevens "Peace Train" - Cat Stevens "Different Drum" - Carrie Underwood "Blue Bayou"- Emmylou Harris and Bonnie Raitt with Carrie Underwood "You're No Good" - Sheryl Crow with Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt and Carrie Underwood "It's So Easy" - Stevie Nicks, Sheryl Crow, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt, Carrie Underwood "When Will I Be Loved" - Stevie Nicks, Sheryl Crow, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt, Carrie Underwood "The E Street Shuffle" - Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band "The River " - Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band "Kitty's Back" - Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band "She's Gone" - Hall & Oates "I Can't Go For That (No Can Do)" - Hall & Oates "You Make My Dreams Come True" - Hall & Oates "Smells Like Teen Spirit" - Nirvana with Joan Jett "Aneurysm" - Nirvana with Kim Gordon "Lithium" - Nirvana with St. Vincent "All Apologies" - Nirvana with Lorde ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME FAST FACTS The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation was created in 1983. Artists become eligible to enter the Hall 25 years after the release of their debut single. The official Rock Hall and Museum opened on September 2nd, 1995 in a building designed by I. M. Pei. The city of Cleveland was chosen after successfully lobbying that "rock and roll" had started with Alan Freed, a Cleveland native who first took to the airwaves in the city. The inductees to the Rock Hall class of 2013 were Rush, Heart, Donna Summer, blues legend Albert King, Randy Newman, and rappers Public Enemy. The prestigious Ahmet Ertegun Lifetime Achievement Award was given to record mogul Lou Adler and Motown founder Berry Gordy, Jr. The first Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony took place on January 23rd, 1986 in Cleveland, Ohio. The inaugural class of the Hall of Fame featured rock's forefathers -- Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, the Everly Brothers, Ray Charles, James Brown, Sam Cooke, and Jerry Lee Lewis. Included in the Non-Performer category were Sun Records founder Sam Phillips, and seminal disc jockey Alan Freed. Also inducted that night in the Early Influence category were blues icon Robert Johnson, country's Jimmie Rogers, and boogie-woogie pianist Jimmy Yancey. Columbia Records' A&R man John Hammond -- who was responsible for discovering Billie Holliday, Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, and Bruce Springsteen, among others -- received the Hall's first Lifetime Achievement Award. The emotional inductions included Keith Richards' speech inducting Chuck Berry, and John Lennon's sons Julian and Sean Lennon inducting their father's hero, Elvis Presley. CHECK IT OUT: All the Rock Hall inductees over the years: http://bit.ly/1kw9QH2 CHECK IT OUT: Scenes from last night's induction ceramonies: (0) Comments ZZ TOP & JEFF BECK TEAMING UP FOR SUMMER TOUR ZZ Top and Jeff Beck have just announced a joint 20-date U.S. summer tour, according to Vintage Vinyl News. The trek kicks off on August 8th in Missoula, Montana's Ogren Park and winds down on September 12th in The Woodlands, Texas at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion. Prior to hitting the road Stateside, Beck and ZZ Top will play two European dates set for June 30th in Milan, Italy and July 2nd in Saarbruken, Germany. JUST ANNOUNCED: ZZ Top & Jeff Beck tour dates (subject to change): August 8 - Missoula, MT - Ogren Park August 9 - Woodinville, WA - Chateau Ste. Michelle August 10 - Eugene, OR - Cuthbert Amphitheatre August 12 - Saratoga, CA - The Mountain Winery August 13 - Los Angeles, CA - Greek Amphitheatre August 15 - Murphys, CA - Ironstone Amphitheatre August 16 - Las Vegas, NV - The Joint August 20 - Englewood, CO - Fiddlers Green Amphitheatre August 22 - Oklahoma City, OK - Zoo Amphitheatre August 23 - Kansas City, MO - Starlight Theater August 24 - Maryland Heights, MO - Verizon Wireless Amphitheater August 27 - Clarkston, MI - DTE Energy Music Theatre August 28 - Highland Park, IL - Ravinia August 31 - Mashantucket, CT - MGM Grand Theater at Foxwoods September 2 - Boston, MA - Blue Hills Bank Pavilion September 3 - Columbia, MD - Merriweather Post Pavilion September 4 - Wantagh, NY - Nikon at Jones Beach Theater September 6 - Alpharetta, GA - Verizon Wireless Amphitheater September 7 - St. Augustine, FL - St. Augustine Amphitheater September 12 - The Woodlands, TX - Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : Alpharetta, Boston, Clarkston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Maryland, Mashantucket, Milan, Missoula, Montana, Murphys, Oklahoma City, Saarbruken, Saratoga, St. Augustine, Texas, The Woodlands, Wantagh, Woodinville, WoodlandsPeople : Jeff Beck PRE-AC/DC ALBUM BY YOUNG BROTHERS TO SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY An album featuring guitarists Malcolm and Angus Young before they went on to form the legendary AC/DC is being reissued, according to Ultimate Classic Rock. The disc by the Marcus Hook Roll Band, called Tales Of Old Grand-Daddy, will surface on June 2nd on CD, vinyl and digital download. The band was the brainchild of the Youngs' older brother George, who had been a member of the Easybeats and scored a U.S. hit with that act's "Friday On My Mind." After the Easybeats broke up in 1969, George and his musical partner Harry Vanda started the Roll Band in 1972, releasing three singles and recording a full-length album in 1973. It was for this album that George recruited his younger brothers. The album marks the first time Malcolm and Angus worked in a recording studio. George told Classic Rock magazine, "It was the first thing Malcolm and Angus did before AC/DC. We didn’t take it very seriously so we thought we’d include them to give them an idea of what recording was all about.” George added that he didn't remember much about the sessions because almost everyone was getting drunk. He explained, "We all got rotten -- except Angus, who was too young -- and we spent a month in the studio boozing it up every night." The Marcus Hook Roll Band did not last long and never played live, while Angus and Malcolm started AC/DC in November 1973. AC/DC is reportedly gearing up to record its first new album since 2008's Black Ice and play select shows this year to celebrate the band's 40th anniversary. CHECK IT OUT: See the album cover and track listing, as well as a photo of the Youngs in the studio, at http://bit.ly/1gfyHvO Listen to "Red Revolution" from the Marcus Hook Roll Band: (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Angus Young, George, Harry Vanda, Malcolm Young PAUL STANLEY SAYS KISS HAD NO OTHER CHOICE THAN TO GO UNMASKED posted Mar 4 2014 12:53PM Paul Stanley feels that Kiss had no other option than to go "unmasked" in 1983 with the release of their Lick It Up album. Stanley, who will be inducted along with Kiss into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame next month, has come under attack along with Gene Simmons for deciding that no lineup of Kiss would be performing at the celebrations -- in essence robbing fans of one last time to see the band's founders, including Ace Frehley and Peter Criss, play together. Over 30 years ago, on September 18th, 1983, Kiss -- then featuring guitarist Vinnie Vincent and drummer Eric Carr -- unveiled themselves without makeup for the first time live on MTV. Paul Stanley told Guitar World that it had come to a point where Kiss needed to make a drastic change, recalling, "I didn’t see any other choice at that point. And I take my hat off to Gene that, although he was uncertain about it and maybe less comfortable with it, he came to realize that it was the right move. Or at least he saw that I was very committed to the idea." (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Ace Frehley, Eric Carr, Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss, Vinnie Vincent BILLY JOEL RELEASING 1987 RUSSIAN DOC AND CONCERT CD IN DELUXE PACKAGE Billy Joel will release a deluxe edition of A Matter Of Trust: The Bridge To Russia documentary on May 20th. The collection will be issued as a two-CD set, a DVD/Blu-ray package, and in a deluxe edition that collects both the audio and visual elements together. Rolling Stone reported that the deluxe edition contains the documentary -- which premiered last month on Showtime -- "along with a book of rare photos and new liner notes." The original live album chronicling Billy's Russian visit, 1987's Kohuept -- which translates to "Concert" -- only featured 12 songs, but the new CD -- A Matter Of Trust: The Bridge To Russia - The Music, features newly remastered sound with 11 additional tracks -- including a bonus rehearsal version of the Beatles' classic "She Loves You." Although Billy Joel's primary instrument has always been the baby grand piano, he revealed that when recording 1980's Glass Houses, he felt the need to stretch out with different keyboard, as his act started to fill the arena and "enormo-domes" across the world. As witnessed in A Matter Of Trust: The Bridge To Russia -- Billy didn't pay a second thought to flipping the electric piano over when his lighting director kept spotlighting the audience who immediately froze from being singled out. Disc One: "Odoya" "Prelude/Angry Young Man" "Honesty" "The Ballad Of Billy The Kid" - previously unreleased "She's Always A Woman" - previously unreleased "Scenes From An Italian Restaurant" - previously unreleased "Goodnight Saigon" "Stiletto" "Big Man On Mulberry Street" "Baby Grand" "What's Your Name" - previously unreleased "The Longest Time" - previously unreleased "An Innocent Man" Disc Two: "Pressure" - previously unreleased "Allentown" "A Matter Of Trust" "Only The Good Die Young" "It's Still Rock And Roll To Me" - previously unreleased "Sometimes A Fantasy" "You May Be Right" - previously unreleased "Uptown Girl" "Big Shot" "Back In The U.S.S.R." "The Times They Are A Changin'" "She Loves You" - previously unreleased Russian concerts rehearsal recording "New York State Of Mind" - previously unreleased "Piano Man" - previously unreleased (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Billy Joel, BILLY JOEL RELEASING 50 YEARS AGO: THE BEATLES LAND IN AMERICA & PLAY 'THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW' t was 50 years ago today (February 7th, 1964) that the Beatles landed at New York's JFK Airport launching what has become known as the "British Invasion" and forever changing the face of popular music -- along with literally everything that came after -- arguably marking the modern world's cultural "big bang." The group's trip took in three appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show -- one being pre-taped prior to their first live appearance, and two full-scale concerts: the first at Washington, D.C.'s Washington Coliseum on February 11th -- one year to the day of recording their debut UK album, Please Please Me -- and a second show on February 12th at New York's prestigious Carnegie Hall. Once in New York, George Harrison fell ill with a 102-degree temperature and missed the following day's photo shoot in and around Central Park and a camera blocking session at the midtown CBS studio. He was well enough to recover for the show without incident. Prior to the visit, on January 20th, 1964, the album Meet The Beatles was released. Although, it wasn't the first Beatles record released in America; Vee-Jay's Introducing The Beatles beat the band's Capitol Records debut by just short of six months, it was Meet The Beatles, with its hit chart-topper "I Want To Hold Your Hand" that kick started the post-Kennedy '60s, the British Invasion, and completely revolutionized how music was written, played, sung, and produced. On February 1st, 1964, Meet The Beatles entered Billboard's Top 100 LP listings at Number 92, jumping the next week to Number Three, and the following week -- February 15th, 1964 -- hitting Number One for the first of 11 weeks. Despite Paul McCartney's claims, the Beatles did not wait until topping the U.S. charts to come to America. The logistics of waiting until February 1st, 1964 to plan the group's entire itinerary -- including lodging, travel, security, and numerous contracts -- would be nothing short of ridiculous. "I Want To Hold Your Hand" knocked Bobby Vinton's "There! I've Said It Again" out from the top spot and stayed at Number One for a whopping seven straight weeks, before being toppled by the Beatles' own "She Loves You," which after two weeks was overturned on April 4th, 1964 by the band's official new single, "Can't Buy Me Love" -- the same week that "Fab Four" made history by holding down the Top Five positions in the Billboard singles chart. Sunday night (February 9th) marks the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' American debut on The Ed Sullivan Show. Seen by over 73 million viewers, the show has gone on to become one of TV's most iconic moments, much like Neil Armstrong's 1969 walk on the moon. The Beatles performed twice, both opening and closing the program. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : New York, Washington, D.c.People : Bobby Vinton, George Harrison, Neil Armstrong, Paul McCartney THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND RETIRING FROM THE ROAD AFTER 2014 The Allman Brothers Band will retire from the road at the end of 2014, which in effect will put the largely non-recording band to rest after 45 years. Bandleader and co-founder Gregg Allman spoke candidly about the band's end during an interview with Relix, revealing, "This is it -- this is the end of it. 45 years is enough and I want to do something else, anyway. Everyone has their own real good perspective (sic) bands." Allman was pressed about a possible Allman Brothers Band reunion in the future: "Who's to say? We may get together every five years and just do one play at a time." Earlier this month, Allman Brothers Band guitarists Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks announced their departure from the legendary group after this year. Haynes joined the band via co-founding member Dickey Betts in 1999, with Derek Trucks -- the nephew of drummer Butch Trucks -- joining in 1999. Trucks will focus his efforts on his Tedeschi-Trucks Band with his wife, Susan Tedeschi. Haynes will carry on his work with his primary band Gov't Mule and possible future gigs with the Dead. Fans will no doubt be clamoring to catch one of the band's upcoming annual "March Madness" shows at New York City's Beacon Theatre -- marking the final run of one of rock's most beloved traditions. The Allman Brothers Band's 2014 "March Madness" run at New York City's Beacon Theater will play on March 7th, 8th, 11th, 12th, 14th, 15th, 18th, 19th, 21st, 22nd, 25th, 26th, 28th, and 29th. On April 11th and 12th, the Allmans will perform in Live Oak, Florida at the Wanee Festival at the Spirit Of Suwannee Park. The Allmans' third annual Peach Music Festival is set for August 14th through the 17th. The event, which will take place at Scranton, Pennsylvania's Pavilion At Montage Mountain, will feature two headlining sets from the band -- including a set to close out the weekend. The Allmans' final date on the books for the year is set for September 7th at Arrington, Virginia's Lockn' - Interlocking Music Festival at Oak Ridge Farm. CHECK IT OUT: The Allman Brothers Band in 1996 performing "Blue Sky" live on Austin City Limits: (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : Arrington, Austin City, Florida, New York City, Pennsylvania, Scranton, VirginiaPeople : Butch Trucks, Derek Trucks, Dickey Betts, Gregg Allman, Susan Tedeschi, Trucks Band, Warren Haynes FLASHBACK: THE EAGLES' 'HOTEL CALIFORNIA' ALBUM HITS NUMBER ONE by Stoney It was 37 years ago today (January 15th, 1977), that the Eagles' album Hotel California hit Number One. The album, which was released on December 8th, 1976, was the group's third chart-topper in a row, following 1975's One Of These Nights and 1976's compilation Eagles/Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975. Hotel California included two Number One hits featuring the group's main songwriters and distinctive lead vocalists, with guitarist Glenn Frey taking the lead on "New Kid In Town," and drummer Don Henley singing the album's famous title track. The album's third single, "Life In The Fast Lane," just missed the Top Ten, peaking at Number 11 in the spring of 1977. Hotel California featured the addition of former James Gang guitarist Joe Walsh, who joined shortly after co-founder Bernie Leadon's departure. It turned out to be the only Eagles album featuring the lineup of Henley, Frey, Walsh, guitarist Don Felder, and co-founder and bassist Randy Meisner. The album's themes reflected the state of America through the decaying Los Angeles rock scene, which by the mid-'70s had changed from an earnest singer-songwriter community into a far more decadent lifestyle fueled by celebrity, money, and drugs. In their original review of the album, Rolling Stone commented on Hotel California's music and its reflection of its creators by saying, "Hotel California showcases both the best and worst tendencies of Los Angeles-situation rock. . Its lyrics present a convincing and unflattering portrait of the milieu itself." Hotel California went on to top the charts for eight nonconsecutive weeks, and to date has sold over 16 million copies. Over the years, the Eagles have included most of the Hotel California album in their concert setlists, including such classic album tracks as "Wasted Time," "Victim Of Love," "and "Pretty Maids All In A Row." The Eagles' Hotel California LP has been replicated into the "world's largest record" to sit on top of the L.A. Forum in commemoration of the band's six-night residency at the newly revamped venue. The Eagles kick off their 2014 dates at the Forum on January 15th, 17th, 18th, 22nd, 24th and 25th. Rolling Stone reported, "The record, which is indeed made of vinyl, covers a staggering 5.7 acres. The record is 407 feet in diameter and spins at 17 miles per hour or roughly 70 r.p.m — but sadly, will not play any music. It is held up by what (the company designing the structure) Pop2Life claims is the only 120-foot truss circle in the U.S and is visible from over a mile high, with planes flying into LAX able to spot the classic album from above. The Forum hired 75 people to construct the album over Christmas time." (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_Culture, Hospitality_RecreationSocial : Entertainment_Culture, Hospitality_RecreationLocations : America, Los AngelesPeople : Bernie Leadon, Don Felder, Don Henley, Glenn Frey, James Gang, Joe Walsh, Randy Meisner, Rolling Stone STARS TEAM UP IN ATLANTA TO SALUTE GREGG ALLMAN On Friday night (January 10th) Gregg Allman and the Allman Brothers Band were among the many performers who took the stage at Atlanta's Fox Theatre at the All My Friends: Celebrating The Songs & Voice Of Gregg Allman tribute concert. Highlights included performances by Jackson Browne, Sam Moore, Dr. John, Taj Mahal, Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks, John Hiatt, Zac Brown, Keb’ Mo’, Train's Pat Monahan, Martina McBride, and Widespread Panic, among others. "Come & Go Blues" - Warren Haynes "End Of The Line" - Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks "Stand Back" - Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks "Can’t Lose What You Never Had" - Devon Allman, Jimmy Hall and Robert Randolph "Please Call Home" - Sam Moore "Just Another Rider" - Keb’ Mo’ "Just Before The Bullets Fly" - Brantley Gilbert "Let This Be A Lesson To Ya" - Dr. John "Queen Of Hearts" - Pat Monahan "One Way Out" - John Hiatt "Statesboro Blues" - Taj Mahal and Gregg Allman "Just Ain’t Easy" - Widespread Panic "Wasted Words" - Widespread Panic and Derek Trucks "I’m No Angel" - Trace Adkins "Trouble No More" - Trace Adkins "Multi-Colored Lady" - Vince Gill "All My Friends" - Martina McBride "Can You Fool" - Pat Monahan and Martina McBride "Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More" - Eric Church "Win, Lose Or Draw" - Eric Church "These Days" - Jackson Browne and Gregg Allman "Melissa" - Jackson Browne and Gregg Allman "Midnight Rider" - Vince Gill, Zac Brown and Gregg Allman "Dreams" - The Allman Brothers Band "Whipping Post" - The Allman Brothers Band "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" – Full cast Actor William Hurt has been cast as the present-day version of Gregg Allman in the upcoming Allman biopic, Midnight Rider. Hurt is best known for his work in such films as The Big Chill, Broadcast News, along with his Oscar-winning role in 1985's Kiss Of The Spider Woman. Hurt joins the cast, which features All American Rejects lead singer Tyson Ritter, who plays the younger Allman in the film, along with Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn's son Wyatt Russell, who'll portray the late Duane Allman. Tickets are now on sale for the Allman Brothers Band's 2014 "March Madness" run at New York City's Beacon Theater. As it stands now, the band will play 10 nights between March 7th and 22nd -- with more shows expected to be added should the initial dates sell out. The Allmans' Beacon dates are: March 7th, 8th, 11th, 12th, 14th, 15th, 18th, 19th, 21st, and 22nd. The Allman's third annual Peach Music Festival is set for August 14th through the 17th. The event, which will take place at Scranton, Pennsylvania's Pavilion At Montage Mountain, will feature two headlining sets from the band -- including a set to close out the weekend." SIDE NOTES The Allman Brothers Band guitarists Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks have announced their departure from the legendary group after this yea. Haynes joined the band via co-founding member Dickey Betts in 1999, with Derek Trucks -- the nephew of drummer Butch Trucks joining in 1999. Speculation is divided between who will replace the two iconic guitarists and whether the Allman's should simply pack it in while on top. CHECK IT OUT: From Friday's tribute -- Gregg Allman, Zak Brown and Vince Gill performing "Midnight Rider": (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : Atlanta, New York City, Pennsylvania, ScrantonPeople : Butch Trucks, Derek Trucks, Dickey Betts, Duane Allman, Goldie Hawn, GREGG ALLMAN, Jackson Browne, Jimmy Hall, John Hiatt, Kurt Russell, Martina McBride, Pat Monahan, Robert Randolph, Sam Moore, Susan Tedeschi, Tyson Ritter, Vince Gill, Warren Haynes, Widespread Panic, William Hurt, Wyatt Russell, Zac Brown, Zak Brown STARS ANNOUNCED FOR CBS BEATLES TRIBUTE SPECIAL The first performers have been announced for CBS' upcoming Beatles tribute, The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute To The Beatles. The Eurythmics -- Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart -- will reunite for one night only, with the show also featuring appearances by Alicia Keys with John Legend, Maroon 5, and a special team-up of John Mayer and Keith Urban. Other performers are expected to be announced soon. The Night That Changed America, celebrates the Beatles' career and the 50th anniversary of landing in America and first appearing on The Ed Sullivan Show. The show will tape on Monday, January 27th, the day after The 56th Annual Grammy Awards, and will be broadcast on CBS on Sunday, February 9th at 8 p.m. ET/PT -- exactly 50 years to the day, date, and time of the "Fab Four's" original Sullivan Show appearance. The Beatles’ first Capitol album, Meet The Beatles!, was released on January 20th, 1964. After holding down the British Number One spot chart position for five consecutive weeks in the England, “I Want To Hold Your Hand” reached the top of the U.S. singles chart on February 1st, 1964, holding the top spot position for seven consecutive weeks -- and within two months, over 3.5 million copies of Meet The Beatles! were sold in the U.S. On January 21st, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' first U.S. Number One hit, "I Want To Hold Your Hand" and their American debut on The Ed Sullivan Show, Capitol Records will release the 13 CD set, called, The U.S. Albums, which will span the group's American albums from 1964’s Meet The Beatles! to 1970’s Hey Jude. As most fans are aware of, the "Fab Four's" U.S. albums differed from the band's British releases, with the albums including different tracklistings, song mixes, album titles, and cover art. The new box includes: Meet the Beatles! (1964); The Beatles’ Second Album (1964); A Hard Day’s Night (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1964); Something New (1964); The Beatles’ Story (1964); Beatles ’65 (1964); The Early Beatles (1965); Beatles VI (1965); Help! (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1965); Rubber Soul (1965); Yesterday. . . And Today (1966); Revolver (1966) and Hey Jude (1970). The collection and individual albums are now available for pre-order on iTunes. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Alicia Keys, Annie Lennox, Dave Stewart, John Legend, John Mayer, Keith Urban JIMMY PAGE PROMISES FIRST THREE LED ZEPPELIN REISSUES THIS YEAR Although fans were hoping to get their hands on all of the new Led Zeppelin remasters this year, the wait for the majority of the band's catalogue continues, according to Ultimate Classic Rock. Jimmy Page posted an update on his officiate website (JimmyPage.com) stating, "The first of the Led Zeppelin reissues -- comprising of Led Zeppelin I, Led Zeppelin II, and Led Zeppelin III -- will be released this year. I’ve also been working on some of my own material from the archives that will be unleashed in 2014." The wait for Led Zeppelin IV, Houses Of The Holy, Physical Graffiti, The Song Remains The Same, In Through The Out Door, and Coda, will likely stretch into 2015. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Jimmy Page 2014 ROCK HALL TO INDUCT KISS, PETER GABRIEL, HALL & OATES, NIRVANA, LINDA RONST The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has announced the inductees for the 2014 class. The six artists selected for the Performer Category are: Kiss, Peter Gabriel, Daryl Hall & John Oates, Nirvana, Linda Ronstadt, and Cat Stevens. Ahmet Ertegun Awards will go to the Beatles' late manager Brian Epstein and original Rolling Stones manager/producer Andrew Loog Oldham. The Award for Musical Excellence -- formally known as the Side-Men category -- will be presented to the E Street Band. The 29th Annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will take place on Thursday, April 10th, 2014 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. The 2014 Ceremony will again be open to the public, as it has been for the Induction Ceremonies in Cleveland in 2009 and 2012, and Los Angeles in 2013. This will be the first time that the ceremony will be open to the public in New York City. Tickets will go on sale to the public in January. A pre-sale for Rock and Roll Hall of Fame members will take place in advance of the public on-sale date. To be eligible for the member pre-sale, you must be an active Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum member by December 31, 2013 at 11:59 PM EST. Exact sale dates will be announced in January. Details at www.rockhall.com. The 2014 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Performer Inductees were chosen by more than 700 voters of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation. Artists are eligible for inclusion in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 25 years after the release of their first recording. For this year’s Inductions, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame again offered fans the opportunity to officially participate in the selection process. The public was able to cast votes online for who they believe to be most deserving of induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The top five artists, as selected by the public, comprised a "fans' ballot" that was tallied along with the other ballots to choose the 2014 Inductees. Three of the top five artists from the fan ballot will be inducted in 2014. THE FOLLOWING ARTISTS ARE NOT IN THE ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME Boston, The Monkees, Joe Cocker, Yes, Sonny & Cher, Ringo Starr, Bernie Taupin, Brian Wilson, Gram Parsons, Grand Funk Railroad, Chicago, ELO, Journey, the Zombies, Frankie Avalon, Squeeze, Pat Benatar, Todd Rundgren, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Badfinger, Big Star, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Sting, Humble Pie, Eddie Money, T.Rex, Beatles recording engineers Norman Smith and Geoff Emerick, Styx, Free, Who engineer and producer Glyn Johns, Billy Idol, Rockpile, The Runaways, rock photographers Jim Marshall, Ethan Russell, Gered Mankowitz, Dezo Hoffman, Astrid Kirchherr, Annie Leibovitz, Henry Diltz, and Bob Gruen; Chubby Checker, The Guess Who, rock journalist Lester Bangs, The Turtles, Def Leppard, Deep Purple, Cheap Trick, The Scorpions, Rolling Stones pianist Ian Stewart, Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels, Kansas, Thin Lizzy, Joe Walsh, Delaney & Bonnie, Roxy Music, The Dictators, Brian Eno, Meat Loaf, America, XTC, The Searchers, Leslie Gore, The Raspberries, Paul Revere & The Raiders, MC5, Herman's Hermits, The Moody Blues, Mountain, Blue Oyster Cult, Chic, The New York Dolls, The Steve Miller Band, Peter Frampton, Jethro Tull, Foreigner, Bad Company, and many more. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : Boston, Brooklyn, Chicago, Cleveland, Kansas, Los Angeles, New York, New York CityPeople : Ahmet Ertegun, Andrew Loog Oldham, Annie Leibovitz, Astrid Kirchherr, Badfinger, Bernie Taupin, Billy Idol, Bob Gruen, Brian Eno, Brian Epstein, Brian Wilson, Cat Stevens, Chubby Checker, Daryl Hall, Dezo Hoffman, Eddie Money, Ethan Russell, Frankie Avalon, Geoff Emerick, Gered Mankowitz, Henry Diltz, Ian Stewart, Jim Marshall, Joe Cocker, Joe Walsh, John Oates, Leslie Gore, Lester Bangs, Linda Ronstadt, Meat Loaf, Mitch Ryder, Norman Smith, Pat Benatar, Paul Revere, Peter Frampton, Peter Gabriel, Ringo Starr, Todd Rundgren FAMILY GUY PRODUCER EXPLAINS DECISION TO KILL OFF BRIAN Seth MacFarlane's Family Guy doesn't exactly come to mind when thinking about TV's heartfelt dramas but Sunday's (November 24th) episode took a sad turn when writers killed off the Griffin family dog, Brian -- voiced by MacFarlane. E! News sat down with executive producer Steve Callaghan to get to the bottom of the decision to kill off a character who had appeared in every episode of the animated series since the pilot. Steve explained, "This was an idea that got pitched in the writers room and it sort of caught fire, and we thought it could be a fun way to shake things up. As soon as this idea came up, we started talking about what the next couple episodes could be and we got very excited about the way this change will affect the family dynamics and the characters. It seemed more in the realm of a reality that a dog would get hit by a car, then if one of the kids died. As much as we love Brian, and as much as everyone loves their pets, we felt it would be more traumatic to lose one of the kids, rather than the family pet." When asked if he is worried about fan backlash from the twist, Callaghan responded, "Our fans are smart enough and have been loyal to our show for long enough, to know that they can trust us. We always make choices that always work to the greatest benefit of the series." The Griffin family wasted no time in replacing Brian with a new dog named Vinny -- voiced by The Sopranos actor Tony Sirico. Fans of the show have already started a petition to bring Brian back. (1) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestSocial : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestPeople : Seth MacFarlane, Steve Callaghan, Tony Sirico Stevie Nicks on American Horror Story? posted Nov 14 2013 12:57PM Stevie Nicks will make a cameo appearance on FX's American Horror Story: Coven. The series, which has referenced Nicks and utilized backing tracks of her music, has confirmed that she will appear. Nicks is reportedly a fan of the show and renowned for her romanticizing witches in such Fleetwood Mac classics as "Rhiannon" and "Sara," among others. There's still no word as to what Nicks' role will be or when she'll begin shooting her scenes. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Stevie Nicks FORMER BLACK SABBATH DRUMMER CAN'T LISTEN TO NEW ALBUM Former Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward has revealed in a new interview with Rock Cellar that he tried to listen to the recently released Sabbath reunion album, 13, but had to stop after just a few minutes. Ward said, "The only thing I’ve heard from 13 is maybe 40 seconds of the first song, and then I turned it off. I haven’t heard anything off that album at all. And to be quite honest, I don’t care to either. It’s too painful. If I want to rip my guts out, I’ll put it on.” Ward, the group's founding drummer, has played on and off with Sabbath over the years and had initially signed on for the original lineup's first album in 35 years and accompanying tour, announced in late 2011. But he quit shortly before the writing and recording of the disc began, saying he was dissatisfied with the terms of the contract he had been offered. Although he never specified what his issues were, the other members of Sabbath later hinted that Ward was not physically up to the task of performing live. It was rumored that Sabbath wanted to bring a second drummer on the road to share duties with Ward, which he allegedly balked at. Sabbath used Rage Against The Machine drummer Brad Wilk for the recording of 13, while Tommy Clufetos has been the live drummer. Ward added that he remains "deeply touched" by the outpouring of support that many fans have shown him, saying, "It tears me up, you know. Even as I’m talking to you now, I’m not far away from a tear. I had to follow my heart under the most difficult circumstances.” Sabbath has been touring for much of the past year behind 13 and has dates lined up in Europe for this month and December. DID YOU KNOW? Bill Ward recently underwent surgery for perforated diverticulitis, a very serious gastrointestinal condition in which the walls of the intestine have become perforated. According to Blabbermouth, his operation was said to be successful, and he was expected to make a full recovery. Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi, who was diagnosed with cancer last year. wrote online, "Dear Bill, sorry to hear you've been unwell. Hope you make a speedy recovery. Best wishes, Tony." (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Bill Ward, Brad Wilk, Tommy Clufetos, Tony Iommi ACE FREHLEY SLAMS BACK AGAINST GENE SIMMONS Former Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley took time out to counter some of Gene Simmons' recent remarks against him and Peter Criss. Blabbermouth reported that during an appearance on New York City's Q104.3, Frehley touched upon Kiss' probable entry into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame next year, and Simmons' recent inference that Frehley and Criss would not be performing with Kiss if they get the nod. Frehley said: "I'm happy that I'm gonna be inducted -- most likely -- next year, in April, in New York City, and it should be be a great event. There's no way Gene can put a lid on it. I mean, what's he gonna do?" Frehley, who's clearly stung by Simmons seemingly constant attacks on his "blown opportunities" with Kiss and his substance abuse problems went on to take a few knocks of his won against the Kiss bassist, saying, "Gene's living in the past. He's become a caricature of himself. I mean, from the very beginning, his only motivation was money. The guy has no friends; he's not respected by his peers; he's pissed off thousands of fans; he's never had a hit single, like I've had. I had the most successful Gibson signature-series guitar in history. He didn't. It goes on and on. He took the safe route: he never got loaded, he never partied. I took the same route Elvis Presley took and (Jimi) Hendrix and Keith Richards and Jim Morrison. . . it's endless. I have all this life experience and thank God I can live to talk about it. What's he gonna talk about? All he can do is badmouth other people." (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestSocial : Entertainment_Culture, Human InterestLocations : New York CityPeople : Ace Frehley, GENE SIMMONS, Hendrix Richards, Jim Morrison, Keith Richards, Peter Criss 108 Rock Star Guitars ~ LOOK INSIDE THE BOOK! Guitar aficionados are in for a real treat with the new deluxe book, 108 Rock Star Guitars. The 396-page art book by photographer and author Lisa S. Johnson features incredibly high quality and artistic shots of some of rock's most legendary axes, revealing, "the intimate details, the wear and tear, nicks, scratches, sweat stains, burn marks and personal adornments" that most fans have never been close enough to spot. Late, great guitar pioneer Les Paul provided the book's Forword and Johnson offers up first hand details of her quest in shooting each guitar for the book -- which features instruments by such notables as Keith Richards, Ron Wood, Jimmy Page, Eric Clapton, Peter Frampton, Bruce Springsteen, Rick Nielsen, Slash, Robby Krieger, Ace Frehley, Nancy Wilson, Bonnie Raitt, Jack White, Zakk Wylde, Billy Gibbons, Tom Morello, Joe Walsh, and many more. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Ace Frehley, Billy Gibbons, Bonnie Raitt, Bruce Springsteen, Eric Clapton, Forword, Jack White, Jimmy Page, Joe Walsh, Keith Richards, Les Paul, Lisa S. Johnson, Nancy Wilson, Peter Frampton, Rick Nielsen, Robby Krieger, Ron Wood, Slash, Tom Morello, Zakk Wylde IT'S OFFICIAL: METALLICA IS HEADED FOR ANTARCTICA As rumored earlier this week, Metallica will play a concert in Antarctica next month, according to Blabbermouth. The one-of-a-kind show is being sponsored by Coca-Cola Zero and fans from several Latin and South American countries will get a chance to enter a contest and win the opportunity to join the band on the expedition. Metallica stated, "After over 30 years as a band, we have been unbelievably fortunate to visit just about every corner of the earth . . . except for one. That is all about to change as we are set travel to Antarctica, the only continent that Metallica has never played on until now!! We are partnering with Coca-Cola Zero for one of the most unique and special concert events in our career as we'll be performing near the heliport of the Argentine Antarctic Base Carlini on Sunday, December 8, 2013." Fans from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica and Mexico will be able to enter the contest, starting on October 28th and ending on November 22nd. The winners will leave on December 3rd in a cruise from the port of Ushuaia, in Tierra del Fuego, on a 10-day journey to Antarctica. While on their trip, the winners will get to view the landscapes of the continent. participate in lectures to be provided by specialists, see audio-visual material on the work of the scientists and receive environmental information. The concert will take place under a dome at the Carlini Argentine Base will be heard by the fans through headphones, with no other amplifiers or sound system. The gig will also be live-streamed in the participating countries. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Metallica FLASHBACK: LYNYRD SKYNYRD'S PLANE CRASHES posted Oct 18 2013 12:58PM It was 36 years ago Sunday (October 20th, 1977), that a plane carrying Lynyrd Skynyrd crashed in a swamp near Gillsburg, Mississippi. At the time, the group was en route to its next show in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The crash took the lives of lead singer Ronnie Van Zant; guitarist Steve Gaines and his sister, backup singer Cassie Gaines; Lynyrd Skynyrd manager Dean Kilpatrick, as well as the plane's two pilots. All the other members of the band suffered horrific injuries, from which they eventually recovered. Two years later, survivors Gary Rossington and Allen Collins (guitars), Billy Powell (keyboards) and Leon Wilkeson (bass) formed a new group, the Rossington-Collins Band. A decade after the plane crash, the surviving members of Skynyrd regrouped under the legendary name and played a series of dates to mark the anniversary with Johnnie Van Zant, the younger brother of Ronnie Van Zant, stepping in as his permanent replacement. (1) CommentsTags : Topics : Disaster_Accident, Entertainment_CultureSocial : Disaster_Accident, Entertainment_CultureLocations : Baton Rouge, Gillsburg, Louisiana, MississippiPeople : Allen Collins, Billy Powell, Cassie Gaines, Dean Kilpatrick, Gary Rossington, Johnnie Van Zant, Leon Wilkeson, Ronnie Van Zant, Steve Gaines JOHN LENNON REMEMBERED ON HIS BIRTHDAY posted Oct 9 2013 11:57AM Today (October 9th) marks what would have been John Lennon's 73rd birthday. By nightfall tonight, hundreds of fans will have made the pilgrimage to Central Park's Strawberry Fields in New York City for a day of remembrance, sing-alongs, and celebrations dedicated to the memory of Lennon. Strawberry Fields, a triangular patch of land dedicated to Lennon by the city of New York and named after the Beatles' 1967 hit, sits directly across the street from the Dakota, Lennon's Manhattan apartment building, where he was gunned down on December 8th, 1980 at the age 40. Today is also Lennon and Yoko Ono's son Sean Lennon's 38th birthday. Fans were shocked earlier this week when Lennon's star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame was defaced by vandals. Volunteer fan crews have been working overtime to get the star ready for today's celebrations. The star, which is adjacent to the Beatle's record label headquarters in Los Angeles, is the primary spot for fans to gather both on Lennon's birthday and the day of his death. Last month we reported that Lennon's only full-rehearsed concert from 1972 is getting a drastic overhaul. Producer Jack Douglas, best known for his work with Aerosmith, Cheap Trick, and Lennon's final 1980 songs on Double Fantasy and Milk And Honey, revealed to us in an exclusive interview that plans are in the early stages to restore the show for an upcoming release. On August 30th, 1972, Lennon and Yoko Ono were backed by Elephants Memory for two full concerts at New York's Madison Square Garden. The performances, known as the One To One concerts, included an afternoon matinee and an evening performance, benefited the Willowbrook House, with the proceeds from the shows going to help establish new accommodations for the mentally handicapped inhabitants of the former Willowbrook institution in Long Island, New York. Douglas, who was behind the boards for the 2010 Double Fantasy Stripped Down collection, says that unlike the 1986 LP and VHS versions of the '72 show -- called, Live In New York City -- he plans to include material from both the afternoon and evening charity concerts. No release date has been set. JOHN LENNON FAST FACTS Lennon's full birth name was John Winston Lennon. In April 1969, he legally changed his middle name to "Ono." Although Lennon is often said to be an only child, he in fact has five half-siblings. Julia and Jacqui Dykins are on his mother Julia's side, as well as another sister, Victoria, who was adopted at birth. In the mid '70s, Lennon's father Freddie fathered two sons, named David and Robin Lennon. Lennon's mother Julia taught John his first song on the guitar, Fats Domino's "Ain't That A Shame." Lennon and Paul McCartney made a handshake deal in late 1957, agreeing that all compositions written by either one of them -- solo or in collaboration with each other -- would be credited to "Lennon-McCartney." The Beatles performed Lennon's first original composition, titled "Hello Little Girl," at their unsuccessful Decca Records audition on January 1st, 1962. After the Beatles' breakup, both Lennon and McCartney gave separate interviews detailing who wrote what within the duo's partnership. They two agreed on everything except two songs -- Lennon claimed that he wrote the majority of the lyrics to McCartney's "Eleanor Rigby" and McCartney claimed that he wrote the melody to Lennon's "In My Life." Although uncredited, Lennon helped write the lyrics to George Harrison's song "Taxman" from the Beatles' Revolver album and "Piggies" from "The White Album." Lennon's lucky number was nine. The number popped up in several of his songs, including "One After 909," "Revolution #9," and "#9 Dream." Although primarily a rhythm guitarist, Lennon played bass on several McCartney-written Beatles classics, including "Back In The U.S.S.R.," "Helter Skelter," "Let It Be," and "The Long And Winding Road." Lennon played keyboards on "I'm Down," "Tell Me What You See," "The Night Before," "We Can Work It Out," "Penny Lane," "The Being For the Benefit Of Mr. Kite," "All You Need Is Love," "Hello Goodbye," "I Am The Walrus," "Hey Bulldog," "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da," "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," "Because," and others. Lennon also played lead guitar on a number of Beatles tracks too, including "Get Back," "You Can't Do That," "Honey Pie," "Yer Blues," "For You Blue," "The Ballad Of John And Yoko," and "I Want You (She's So Heavy)." Lennon published two books of short stories and prose during the height of Beatlemania -- 1964's In His Own Write and 1965's A Spaniard In The Works. In 1986 a novel written in the late-'70s, titled Skywriting By Word Of Mouth, was published posthumously. Prior to returning to Yoko after their infamous 14-month separation in the early 1970s, Lennon was planning to travel to New Orleans to record with McCartney, who was then working on Wings' Venus And Mars album. Lennon and McCartney last saw each other on April 24th, 1976, when they watched Saturday Night Live as producer Lorne Michaels offered the Beatles a whopping $3,000 to reunite on the show. They briefly considered heading to Rockefeller Center where the show was being performed, as a gag. The two last spoke on the phone in early 1980. Before deciding to take a five-year sabbatical from recording, Lennon was composing material for a 1976 album, tentatively titled Between The Lines. In the years prior to his death in New York, Lennon usually woke up around dawn each day, and by mid-morning would walk over to the since-closed upscale neighborhood coffee house Cafe LaFortuna and read The New York Times, The London Times, and several other international newspapers to get a global view of daily current events. Lennon was also known to occasionally go out for drinks at his local watering hole, Malachy's Donegal Inn, only a block away from the Dakota. At the time of his death, John and Yoko were rumored to be planning a world tour, to tentatively start in the spring of 1981 with a free show in New York's Central Park, and eventually culminating with a concert in the Beatles' hometown of Liverpool. In the weeks prior to his death, Lennon was working on two new songs, called "You Saved My Soul (With Your True Love)" and "Dear John." An edited version of "Dear John" appears on the 1998 John Lennon Anthology. (1) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : Liverpool, Long Island, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York, New York City, VictoriaPeople : David Lennon, Fats Domino, George Harrison, Jack Douglas, Jacqui Dykins, John Lennon, John Lennon Anthology, John Winston Lennon, Julia Dykins, Lorne Michaels, Paul McCartney, Robin Lennon, Sean Lennon, Yoko Ono ACE FREHLEY AND PETER CRISS PASS ON OFFICIAL KISS DOCUMENTARY Following years of bad blood, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss have opted out of appearing in what's being billed as the definitive Kiss documentary, You Wanted The Best You Got The Best. Classic Rock magazine spoke to director Alan G. Parker, who's behind the officially sanctioned film, and he shed light on why the two co-founders are staying away from anything having to do with Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, explaining, "Gene and Paul were shocked at first, but now they don't seem to be. There's been so much bitchiness down the years, and so much said about and done to Ace and Peter that they interpreted the request to be in the movie as a favor to Gene and Paul. Because of that they won't go anywhere near it. The negotiations were interesting to say the least." In the end Parker will use footage shot of Frehley and Criss by band archivist -- and current lead guitarist -- Tommy Thayer back in 2001. In addition to Thayer and current drummer Eric Singer, Parker has filmed interviews with former guitarist Bruce Kulick and his brother Bob Kulick -- who performed on many of the band's studio tracks. Parker also held, "positive meetings" with the family of Eric Carr, the band's late drummer, who replaced Peter Criss in 1980 and died of heart cancer in 1991. With a few more interviews still to undertake, Parker "hopes to show the finished film to the band in February or March, followed by a spot at the Cannes Film Festival in May and a worldwide opening in the autumn of 2014." Former Kiss filmmaker Tommy Thayer now "portrays" Frehley's character in Kiss' live show. Unlike Frehley's original replacement Vinnie Vincent -- who was given his own unique persona -- fans have had mixed reactions to Thayer duping some fans into thinking Frehley is still playing with the band. Thayer looks at it from a theatrical, rather than a historical perspective: "You've had different guitarists in and out of the band, and different members -- at this point, if you start introducing new characters and new makeup designs and things, that I think that it really dilutes the whole core and, y'know, the original foundation of what Kiss is. And those four original characters are certainly the whole basis of it. To change that and come up with a new design or character, it just convolutes things." Ace Frehley left Kiss after the band's 2002 Farewell dates, saying afterwards that he took the word "farewell" seriously. Peter Criss claimed that his contract with Kiss wasn't renewed in March 2004. Both charges have been disputed by Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. INTERNET COMMENTS at ClassicRockMagazine.com and UltimateClassicRock.com -- agree or not? Chuck Thim wrote: "While I agree that Frehley & Criss have shot themselves in the foot numerous times because of their dependecies & most of the time have only themselves to blame, Gene & Paul, (mostly Gene), could've shown more class over the years. The bashing should've ended years ago. A compliment every now & then wouldn't kill him. I can't say I blame Ace & Peter for not participating. That being said, I wouldn't be surprised if they're not just holding out for money. I'm sure they didn't make as much as Gene & Paul through the reunion years. Not sure if it was true, but I had read that Ace owed a lot in back taxes on his Conneticut mansion. Neither he nor Criss have ever been wise with their money. wasn't music a lot more fun before we realized it was a business?" Brayton Wright wrote: "This film is being paid for by Universal - not Gene/Paul or KISS Co. Alan Parker is the one behind it and his resume is impressive for these documentaries. He has no incentive to lean it to Gene/Paul's favour when it's not them footing the bill. He wouldn't make a biased documentary now if he hasn't before. It'd be detrimental to his reputation as a filmmaker. Ace/Peter passed up on this - the largest platform for their side of the story, honestly. The fans lose on this because they're robbed of everyone's take. Ace/Peter want to have their side told? They just passed on it, and it's a shame." warptek wrote: "Gene and Paul were shocked at Ace and Peter? Gee, could it be you both have bad mouthed them in the press for years and years, fired Peter, replaced the legendary Ace f****** Frehley with a tribute band replacement? Get real, pompous arrogant pr****. I wish whats left of this once great band would just quietly disappear." Gary Fox wrote: "they were fired because they couldn't cut it musically or physically anymore" CHECK IT OUT: Kiss in 1998 performing "I Was Made For Loving You" live at Dodger Stadium: (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : ACE FREHLEY, Alan G. Parker, Bob Kulick, Brayton Wright, Bruce Kulick, Chuck Thim, Eric Carr, Eric Singer, Gary Fox, Gene Simmons, KISS DOCUMENTARY, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss, PETER CRISS PASS, Tommy Thayer, Vinnie Vincent CHRISTINE McVIE JOINS FLEETWOOD MAC ONSTAGE IN LONDON As expected, retired Fleetwood Mac keyboardist Christine McVie joined her former bandmates on stage last night (September 25th) at London's O2 Arena for a show-closing rave-up of their 1977 Rumours classic, "Don't Stop." McVie, who quit the band shortly after its 1997 live album The Dance and reunion tour with Lindsey Buckingham, will also perform tomorrow night (September 27th) for the final London gig of Fleetwood Mac's current world tour. NME.com reported that during the show, Stevie Nicks dedicated "Landslide" to Fleetwood Mac co-founder, legendary blues guitarist Peter Green, who was in attendance. (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : LondonPeople : Christine McVie, Lindsey Buckingham, Peter Green, Stevie Nicks JIMI HENDRIX REMEMBERED It was 43 years ago today (September 18th, 1970), that Jimi Hendrix died at the age of 27, about two months shy of his 28th birthday. Over 40 years later, the events surrounding his death remain sketchy at best, with the only clear fact being that the coroner report stated that Hendrix had asphyxiated in his own vomit, which mainly consisted of red wine. Monika Dannemann, his girlfriend at the time, has long contended that he was alive when placed in the ambulance. Hendrix fans are in for a treat this fall with a new American Masters special airing on PBS. The two-hour documentary, Jimi Hendrix: Hear My Train A Comin,' will be released on DVD on November 5th -- the day of its TV premiere -- along with the new concert CD culled from Hendrix's two concert appearances on May 18th, 1968 as part of the Miami Pop Festival. The two new releases cap off the year-long commemoration of what would've been Hendrix's 70th birthday. Back in March, the guitarist's latest vault release, People, Hell And Angels, debuted at Number Two on the Billboard 200 album charts. Earlier this summer fans welcomed the latest Jimi Hendrix "official bootleg" sold through AuthenticHendrix.com. The collection, Live In Cologne, which has been bootlegged numerous times over the years, is more of a historical curio for die-hards than an audiophile's delight, having been recorded on January 13th, 1969 in Cologne, Germany by a fan using a single microphone in the audience. The set was released on 180-gram vinyl with a digital download as a web exclusive. The tracklisting to the Jimi Hendrix Experience's Live In Cologne is: "Come On (Let The Good Times Roll)," "Foxey Lady," "Red House," "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)," "Fire," "Spanish Castle Magic," "Hey Joe," "Sunshine Of Your Love," "Star Spangled Banner," and "Purple Haze." ODD CIRCUMSTANCES OF HENDRIX'S DEATH Hendrix aide James "Tappy" Wright claimed in his recent memoir Rock Roadie that Hendrix's final manager Michael Jeffery confessed to killing the legendary guitarist a year after Hendrix's death in September 1970. According to Wright, Jeffery claimed that he plied a semi-conscious Hendrix with enough pills and alcohol to kill him so that he could collect insurance money and not risk Hendrix breaking their management agreement. Wright, who also roadied for Elvis Presley and Tina Turner, among others, said that Jeffery said in his confession: "I had to do it, Tappy. You understand, don't you? I had to do it. You know damn well what I'm talking about. . . I was in London the night of Jimi's death and together with some old friends . . . we went round to Monika's (Dannemann's) hotel room, got a handful of pills and stuffed them into his mouth . . . then poured a few bottles of red wine deep into his windpipe. I had to do it. Jimi was worth much more to me dead than alive. That son of a bitch was going to leave me. If I lost him, I'd lose everything." Jeffery, who died in 1971, had told Wright that he had taken out a $2 million policy out on Hendrix, which named him as the chief beneficiary. The official cause of Hendrix's death was "barbiturate intoxication and inhalation of vomit." The events surrounding Hendrix's death have always been shady, especially when it comes to how Hendrix was found and who exactly called for an emergency crew -- neither things which are ever out of the ordinary in an O.D. case. FRIENDS AND FANS REMEMBER JIMI HENDRIX Eddie Kramer, who was the engineer on the Jimi Hendrix Experience albums Are You Experienced?, Axis: Bold As Love, and Electric Ladyland, recalled his memories of Hendrix's death: ["We had just completed Electric Lady Studios, and we were halfway through a record which was going to be called The Cry Of Love. I spoke to Jimi a week before he died, and he was very positive, and was looking forward to coming back to America. His death was an unfortunate accident, there's no question about that."] Journey guitarist Neal Schon first saw Hendrix play when he was only in his teens, and says that he was simply the greatest guitarist he ever saw perform: ["Y'know, if I had to pick one guy, I'd probably say Jimi Hendrix, just because he was so innovative in inventing the electric guitar, almost reinventing it."] Janie Hendrix, Jimi Hendrix's step-sister and president and CEO of Experience Hendrix and Authentic Hendrix, told us that Hendrix was always good to his father Al and was about to buy the family a new house -- but one a bit different than the one he'd grown up in as a boy: ["He was gonna come stay with us, and he told my dad to go look for a house on Mercer Island, which here it's a little island that you can get to via bridge. It was where all the upper-class people lived, and he wanted him to go find a house in that area, and he was going to come stay with us."] Stephen Stills spent hours jamming with Hendrix and recalled that Hendrix turned him on to restringing lefty guitars for righties for a better sound: ["Jimi showed me up close and personal, something about the positioning Woodstock promoter Michael Lang recalls trying to talk Hendrix out of his closing spot at the legendary 1969 festival: ["I think they came in Sunday morning. I asked them if they wanted to go on earlier. And Michael (Jeffery, Hendrix's manager) said 'No, we definitely want to close the show.' I said 'Well, closing the show might not be good idea. It's running approximately 12 hours behind. Chances are you're going to be closing in the morning,' and they sort of insisted on it. Unfortunately, most of the audience was gone by the time Jimi played. But he played an unbelievable set."] Chicago trombonist and co-founder James Pankow recalls the band touring with Hendrix being a life-changing experience: ["That was quite an experience. He was a god, if you will. He could snap his fingers and disappear into thin air, in a matter of speaking. He was psychedelic ladyland. Musically he was daring and innovative as anybody was -- if not more. I mean, an Africa-American who played guitar left-handed, a trio who had a bigger sound than big ensembles, and did music that was not only expressive, but was characteristic of the day."] Band Of Gypsies bassist Billy Cox was asked what he thinks Hendrix would have accomplished had he not died in 1970: ["I get asked that question quite often, and we were gravitating toward more, like, The Rays Of The New Rising Sun. We were gravitating toward classical music, I think. We would've taken those modes into a classical vein. And then he had thought about perhaps maybe going to Juilliard, and there's no telling. (He) always talked about it."] CHECK IT OUT: The Jimi Hendrix Experience on June 18th, 1967 live at the Monterey International Pop Festival performing "Hey Joe" and "The Wind Cries Mary": (2) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CultureLocations : Chicago, Cologne, LondonPeople : Al, Authentic Hendrix, Billy Cox, Eddie Kramer, Elvis Presley, James "Tappy" Wright, James Pankow, Janie Hendrix, Michael Jeffery, Michael Lang, Monika Dannemann, Neal Schon, Stephen Stills, Tina Turner GENE SIMMONS CALLS KISS CO-FOUNDERS 'DRUNKS' AND 'LOSERS' Gene Simmons can't stop taking swings at Kiss co-founders Peter Criss and Ace Frehley, according to Ultimate Classic Rock. In the current issue of Rolling Stone, Simmons who carries on the Kiss banner 40 years later with Paul Stanley, talked about the group, while publicizing his and Stanley's joint memoir, Nothin' To Lose: The Making Of Kiss (1972-75). As always, Simmons pulled no punches when talking about the disappointment he feels towards Criss and Frehley, but refused to take any of the blame the former drummer and guitarist -- along with millions of fans -- continue throw his way, declaring, "I am the bad guy. I won't stand for drunks and alcoholics who get up on stage and consider it their birthright. I consider it a privilege to get up there and arrive on time and be sober, and I'll be an a***hole to anybody who thinks otherwise. You know who else is an a***hole? Your teacher was an a**hole. Your parents are a**holes. Your drill sergeant was an a***hole. Because they wouldn't let you get away with s***. Ace and Peter have had a lifetime of being losers. And not just with drugs and alcohol. They're losers because of wrong decisions. You sleep in the bed you make. How many chances in life do you get? They were in and out of the band three different times. Why should they get another chance?" Nothin' To Lose: The Making Of Kiss (1972-75), was co-written with Ken Sharp and draws on "more than 200 interviews, offering a captivating and intimate fly-on-the-wall account of their launch, charting the struggles and ultimate victories that led them to the threshold of super-stardom. Constructed as an oral history, the book includes original interviews with Paul, Gene, Ace, and Peter, as well as producers, engineers, management, roadies, costume and stage designers, fans, and musical contemporaries from the time." (0) CommentsTags : Topics : Entertainment_CultureSocial : Entertainment_CulturePeople : Ace Frehley, Gene Simmons, Ken Sharp, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss advertise with us Another new Post Entertainment_Culture Human Interest Texas Kansas City New York City Los Angeles Alpharetta Maryland Boston Gene Simmons Oklahoma City Jeff Beck Billy Joel Angus Young Kelly Hansen Malcolm Young Paul Stanley Peter Criss Ace Frehley Vinnie Vincent Eric Carr BILLY JOEL RELEASING George Harry Vanda Missoula Mashantucket Woodlands St. Augustine Saarbruken Saratoga Archives
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1026
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Classicsonline Home » Artists » » Giulini, Carlo Maria Update me on new releases by Giulini Carlo Maria Giulini (1914 - 2005) Carlo Maria Giulini initially studied the viola with Remy Principe and composition with Alessandro Bustini at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia in Rome, before turning to conducting with Bernardino Molinari. As a student he played in a string quartet, and during the late 1930s was a member of the viola section of the Augusteo Orchestra of Rome, playing under conductors such as Furtwängler, Klemperer, Richard Strauss and Bruno Walter. During World War II he was a member of the Italian army, before going into hiding because of his anti-Fascist beliefs; however with the collapse of Germany in Europe, in 1944 he was chosen to conduct the first concert to celebrate the liberation of Rome, in a programme at the Augusteo featuring Brahms’s Symphony No. 4. After this, Giulini became the assistant to Fernando Previtali at the Rome Orchestra of Italian Radio, becoming its chief conductor in 1946. He conducted many opera performances for radio and began to appear abroad, at festivals in Prague and Strasbourg. Having made his professional debut in the opera house at Bergamo in 1950 with Verdi’s La traviata, in the same year he formed the Milan Orchestra of Italian Radio, of which he was the first chief conductor. A broadcast performance of Haydn’s Il mondo della luna in 1951 brought him to the attention of Toscanini and de Sabata and he made his debut at La Scala, Milan, the following year with Falla’s opera La vida breve. It was while hearing Giulini conduct rehearsals for this production that Walter Legge offered him a recording contract with his Columbia label of EMI. When de Sabata relinquished his post as chief conductor at La Scala in 1953, Giulini succeeded him, bringing several notable new productions to its stage, including Bartók’s Bluebeard’s Castle, Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea, and the first staged performances in Italy of Stravinsky’s ballet score Les Noces. He developed a close working relationship with the two major stage directors of the period, Luchino Visconti and Franco Zeffirelli, and with Maria Callas, whom he conducted in La traviata, Gluck’s Alceste and Rossini’s Il barbiere di Siviglia. Giulini’s United Kingdom debut took place in 1955, when he conducted the Glyndebourne Festival Opera in Verdi’s Falstaff at the Edinburgh Festival, and his American debut came in the same year, with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Visconti’s legendary production of Verdi’s Don Carlo at Covent Garden (1958), the first night of which was broadcast, established Giulini’s public reputation in the United Kingdom as a conductor of the first rank; and soon afterwards he began to conduct Legge’s Philharmonia Orchestra in concert. Together, and frequently with the Philharmonia Chorus, they gave many notable concerts, producing a steady stream of distinguished recordings. Giulini and Visconti collaborated on two further productions at Covent Garden, both of operas by Verdi: Il trovatore and La traviata. After the latter, Giulini announced his intention of gradually withdrawing from conducting in the opera house, concentrating instead on orchestral work. Between 1969 and 1978 Giulini was principal guest conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra alongside its chief conductor Georg Solti, and during this period he was also chief conductor of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra (1973–1976). He succeeded Zubin Mehta as chief conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra in 1978, remaining in this post until 1984. During this period he returned to the world of opera, giving performances of Falstaff in Los Angeles, London and Milan in 1982; the production was also recorded. Prior to his retirement from conducting in public in 1998, he limited himself to concerts and worked with just a few orchestras (the Orchestre de Paris, the Philharmonic Orchestra of La Scala Milan, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Berlin and Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestras). At the start of Giulini’s career many saw him as a successor to Toscanini and to a lesser extent the latter’s protégé, Guido Cantelli; but in fact Giulini’s performances were quite different in temperament and style from those of these two distinguished musicians. Giulini’s interpretations were often very expansive in terms of tempi, and frequently possessed the richest of orchestral textures and a wonderful plasticity of phrasing; the undoubted emotional impact of many of his performances came from the gradual but relentless build-up of tension, rather than from the shock of hurricane-like tempi as with Toscanini. Possessed of strong and deep ethical beliefs, Giulini also differed totally from his Italian colleagues in his interaction with orchestral players, commenting for instance: ‘My intention always has been to arrive at human contact without enforcing authority. A musician, after all, is not a military officer. What matters most is human contact. The great mystery of music-making requires real friendship among those who work together. Every member of the orchestra knows I am with him or her in my heart.’ Giulini’s seriousness of purpose shines through in his numerous studio and live recordings, and in the range of his repertoire, which for instance easily encompassed the works of Britten, Bruckner and Mahler, as well as the more expected Italian and operatic composers. His discography is very large, and to his many recordings for EMI may be added those made towards the end of his career for Deutsche Grammophon and Sony/Columbia. Of his many operatic recordings, those made with Walter Legge of two of the Mozart/da Ponte operas, Don Giovanni and Le nozze di Figaro, have well stood the test of time; and the later operatic recordings, for Deutsche Grammophon, which include Falstaff and Il trovatore, are finely observed. Fine as his studio recording for EMI of Don Carlo is, the live recording of his Covent Garden performance has a breadth and vigour that is extraordinary. Giulini’s orchestral recordings for Legge maintained a uniformly high standard, his accounts of music by Brahms with the Philharmonia Orchestra being especially notable. As with the operatic recordings, his later orchestral recordings, such as those of music by Mahler and Bruckner, lean towards the introspective in character. In an interview for the magazine Ricordiana, published in July 1958, Giulini succinctly expressed a key element of his philosophy of performance: ‘I feel people should just listen to the music and that the opinions and details about the interpreter are irrelevant.’ © Naxos Rights International Ltd. — David Patmore (A–Z of Conductors, Naxos 8.558087–90).more.... BRUCKNER, A.: Symphonies Nos. 7 and 9 ...USD 15.98 BRUCKNER, A.: Symphony No. 7 / FALLA, M. ...USD 9.99 BRUCKNER, A.: Symphony No. 8 / DVORAK, ...USD 19.98 BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 8USD 15.98 BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 9USD 9.99 CALLAS, Maria: Callas and Friends (The ...USD 10.99 CATALANI, A.: Wally (La) [Opera] (1953)USD 19.98 CHAUSSON, E.: Poeme de l'amour et de la ...USD 9.99 Classic Experience (The) - 135 of the ...USD 11.49 Classic Experience IIUSD 3.99 DE LOS ANGELES, Victoria: Very Best of (The)USD 10.99 DE LOS ANGELES, Victoria: Very Best of (The)USD 10.99 DEBUSSY, C.: Mer (La) / Nocturnes / ...USD 10.99 DEBUSSY, C.: Mer (La) / Nocturnes / ...USD 10.99 DINNER CLASSICSUSD 19.98 DOMINGO, Placido: Very Best of (The)USD 8.99 DOMINGO, Placido: Very Best of (The)USD 7.99 Essential ChoralUSD 4.99 Essential MozartUSD 4.99 Essential OperaUSD 4.99 Page : 1 2 3 4 5 6
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You Are Here: home / Events on October 6, 2012 Teen Book Club: Why We Broke Up Saturday, October 6, 2012 Discussions happen the first Saturday of each month from 12:30-1:30 over snacks. More info... Found 1 results (of 24 total).
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1028
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4:30 PM - 6:30 PM Directions to this location: Lawrenceville More info... Teen Time: Teen Advisory Council Monday, April 28, 2014 Grades 6-12. More info... Teen Time Monday, May 5, 2014 4:30 PM - 6:30 PM Directions to this location: Lawrenceville More info... Teen Time Monday, May 12, 2014 4:30 PM - 6:30 PM Directions to this location: Lawrenceville More info... Teen Time: Teen Advisory Council Monday, May 19, 2014 Grades 6-12. More info... Found 5 results (of 1674 total).
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1029
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Student Life High Adventure Club takes on ice climbing Posted by Elizabeth Benson on January 26, 2014 at 11:59 pm Students from the High Adventure Club at Central Michigan University traveled to Fenton this weekend to practice their ice climbing abilities at the Peabody Ice Climbing complex. Members of the club traveled there Friday morning to climb the massive man-made ice walls before the festival’s official start Saturday. “The climbing areas were two metal structures (where) they pour water over from the top down over the course of several days and let it freeze like a natural sort of waterfall,” said Jeffrey Davies, a Commerce senior. “You get spikes on your boots and pickaxes to climb up with, then you clip yourself into a rope for safety, and climb your way up.” The two walls were 75 feet and 45 feet tall, respectively, and took several days to create. “You have to really dig into the ice with your tools to make it to the top,” Davies said. “Both walls were tilted at different angles, so one had a more severe tilt that makes it easier to climb, and the other was nearly vertical, making it much more difficult.” On Saturday night, after the climbing was done for the day, the students and other patrons enjoyed a party in the barn, which included live music, food and dancing. Dealing with the cold The group planned to camp out in tents in the orchard, but was instead able to sleep on the barn floor with a space heater to combat the subzero temperatures. “We expected to be sleeping outside in tents, so we were happy when the owner of the place offered us the barn floor to sleep on,” said Arian Perez, a grad student from Sandusky. “It was still plenty cold, I think it was around negative 20 Friday night and negative 10 Saturday.” Perez said he was excited about sleeping outdoors, highlighting the adventure and the challenge, but knew it would be awful while the group was fighting the cold throughout the night. Many of the students who went had never been ice climbing before. “I got into rock climbing a while ago, but I’d never been ice climbing before, so I just sort of had a ‘why not?’ mentality about it,” said Miranda Andrews, a Reed City junior. “I really enjoyed it, I mean, it’s definitely different than rock climbing. I think it requires more strength, really, but once you get used to it, it’s just as fun.” Perez echoed her sentiments, and said she had been looking for like-minded people to be active with on campus. “I wanted to go because I love climbing and being active, and I wanted to meet people early on in the semester that shared my interests,” Perez said. “So when something came up again, I could jump on board.” The High Adventure Club has made an annual trip to go ice climbing for several years now, Davies said. The club used to travel to the Upper Peninsula every year to a different ice festival, but they changed their prices and stopped offering the group a special discount, so the members found a new venue. Discovering adventure Davies, a four-time ice climber, said it was all in the thrill of adventure for him. “Not a lot of people know about these activities – they’re not very popular – but there are people who do them on a daily basis, and it’s not that difficult to get into if you know the right people who can show you how to do it,” he said. ”And that’s what is so great about the High Adventure Club. We’re all about getting members who know how to do these things, and then having them show the other members.” HAC sponsors two larger trips a year. In the fall semester, they go white water rafting in West Virginia, and in the spring, they travel to the ice festival in Fenton. Throughout the course of the year, the group plans several smaller trips, be it caving in southern Indiana, rock climbing in Kentucky or even backpacking through the Michigan countryside for a weekend, Davies said. Andrews said the HAC gives her a chance to get out and get active with her classmates. “I did a lot of sports in high school, but my first year of college I didn’t do anything, just school and work, and it drove me nuts,” she said. “I can’t sit still for that long, and then I discovered the High Adventure Club, and the rock wall here, and everything else, and I’ve really enjoyed it.” Perez, a first-timer with the club, was glad she had gone with the group, giving her a chance to get out and have new experiences. “I just think it’s really important to get outside and interact with the elements in the winter time, because it’s really easy to get depressed and hate winter,” she said. “If you go out and get active, that really helps with that.” Share this:EmailPrintMore Pin It Author: Elizabeth Benson
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1030
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In just two seasons, head coach Brian Kelly has rejuvenated the Central Michigan University football program. The Chippewas enjoyed their most successful campaign of the decade in 2005, Kelly’s second year at the helm. CMU put together a four-game winning streak midway through the season en route to a 6-5 overall record and 5-3 mark in the Mid-American Conference. It marked the Chippewas’ first winning record since 1998 and most overall and conference wins since the same season. “Brian Kelly is a motivated, talented leader who respects the traditions of Central Michigan University while building a future of academic distinction, athletic excellence, and national prominence” said CMU President Michael Rao. “He holds CMU’s student-athletes to high standards in the classroom with mandatory study tables, resulting in a number of players named to the Academic All-MAC team. Coach Kelly recruits outstanding student-athletes, energizes alumni and donor support, and elicits attention from national media. The success of his program reflects positively on the entire CMU community.” The 2005 squad opened the conference schedule by winning at Miami, 38-37, and in October defeated Toledo at home, 21-17, to become the first MAC program to defeat both defending conference divisional champs in the following regular season. The victory over Toledo also was noteworthy, as it marked CMU’s first win over the Rockets since 1994. The Chippewas also knocked off the 2005 conference champ, Akron, by rallying from a 17-7 halftime deficit to claim a 31-17 win in the Rubber Bowl on October 1. The victory was the first of four in a row in the month of October. In two seasons under Kelly, the Chippewas have displayed significant improvement on both sides of the ball. Offensively, CMU displayed remarkable balance in 2005. The Chippewas ranked in the top four in the MAC in both rushing offense (158.8 ypg) and passing offense (260.1 ypg), the first time since 1996 that CMU finished in the top four in the conference in both categories in the same season. The Chippewas’ 418.9 yards per game of total offense was the highest since 1996; CMU’s yards of total offense per game has increased in each of the past two seasons. The Chippewas’ most dramatic improvement defensively has come in the area of rush defense. The 2005 Chippewa defense led the Mid-American Conference in rushing defense, surrendering just 113.7 yards per game on the ground. In 2003, the year before Kelly took over, CMU ranked last in the MAC in that category, allowing 245.8 yards per game rushing. CMU has improved its win total in each of Kelly’s first two seasons, and the Chippewas’ 10 wins over the past two seasons are the most in a two-year stretch since the 1998 and 1999 teams won a total of 10 games. “The entire Central Michigan University family is excited about the direction in which our football program is headed,” said Director of Athletics Dave Heeke. “I am thrilled that Brian Kelly is our football coach. He provides outstanding leadership and has a track record of success. The future is very bright for our football program.” Kelly took over a program prior to the 2004 season that had won three or fewer games in three of the four previous seasons. He guided the Chippewas to a 4-7 mark in 2004, with two losses coming by five points or less. Among the four wins were a 24-21 overtime win at home against rival Western Michigan and a 41-40 win over Ball State in the season finale, a game in which the Chippewas rallied from a 27-0 first-quarter deficit. Three players from the Chippewas’ 2004 squad are currently on NFL rosters. Eric Ghiacuic and Adam Kieft were drafted in the fourth and fifth rounds, respectively, in 2005, while Tory Humphrey spent last season with the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent. Humphrey was recently allocated to the Amsterdam Admirals for the 2006 NFL Europe season. Three different players have garnered All-MAC first team honors under Kelly. Daniel Bazuin, the 2005 MAC Defensive Player of the Year, is a two-time first-team honoree. Active on the national level, Kelly is a member of the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) Ethics Committee and is one of 62 Division I-A coaches to hold a vote in the USA Today Top 25. Kelly arrived at CMU fresh off consecutive NCAA Division II national titles at Grand Valley State University. He was 118-35-2 in 13 seasons at Grand Valley, including 103-22-2 in Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference play. The Lakers were 41-2 in Kelly’s final three seasons, winning 32 consecutive games at one point, and claiming Division II national championships in 2002 (14-0) and 2003 (14-1). His 2001 squad finished 13-1 and advanced to the national championship game. Kelly was named the AFCA Division II Coach of the Year twice (2002 and 2003) and led the Lakers to five conference titles and six Division II Playoff appearances in his 13 seasons at Grand Valley. The Lakers never finished lower than third in the GLIAC, a conference whose membership numbered between 11 and 14 teams, during Kelly’s tenure. Kelly mentored a pair of finalists for the Harlon Hill Award, presented annually to the top player in Division II. Curt Anes won the award in 2002 after finishing runner-up in 2001, while Jeff Fox was third in the balloting in 1998. Both players were quarterbacks in Kelly’s system. Kelly’s Grand Valley players earned 77 All-America awards, with four players moving on to the NFL and another three to the Canadian Football League. His 2001 national runner-up squad set 77 NCAA, GLIAC, and school records, including setting the all-time Division II scoring record by averaging 58.4 points per game. The 2001 team also became the first Division II unit in 53 years to average more than 600 yards per game in total offense (600.8 ypg in 14 games). Grand Valley followed up its record-shattering 2001 season by averaging 497.5 ypg and 47.0 ppg during its undefeated 2002 national championship run. The 2003 team, meanwhile, was more noted for its defense. The Lakers defeated North Dakota, 10-3, in the 2003 national title game. A native of Chelsea, Massachusetts, Kelly attended St. John’s Prep School in Danvers, Massachusetts. He was a four-year letterwinner at Assumption College (Massachusetts) as a linebacker. After graduating from Assumption in 1983 with a bachelor’s degree in political science, he served as linebackers coach, defensive coordinator, and softball coach from 1983-86 at Assumption. Kelly joined the Grand Valley staff in 1987 as a graduate assistant and defensive backs coach. He became the defensive coordinator and recruiting coordinator in 1989 and took over as head coach in 1991. His first team finished 9-3 and qualified for the NCAA Playoffs. Brian and his wife, Paqui, have three children - Patrick Liam (9), Grace Marie (6), and Kenzel Michael (5). They reside in Mount Pleasant. Privacy Policy | Site Map | Contact Us
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In their own words: 8 lives changed by the Iraq War By Daphne Sashin, CNN Carmel, California Groton, South Dakota 8 Voices from the Iraq War CNN iReport invited those affected by the Iraq War to share their stories While some feel positive about their service there, others see downsides "Was it the right thing to do? Nobody really knows," says one iReporter (CNN) -- Joyous homecomings flash on television screens with the return of troops from Iraq. But away from the jubilation, stories of loss, darkness and ambivalence emerge. CNN iReport invited service members, contractors and others affected by the Iraq War to tell how it changed their lives. While some stories resonated with pride, out of the dozens of iReports submitted, a darker theme surfaced about whether the war was worth the price. In their own words (edited for length and clarity), here are eight stories from eight years in Iraq, compiled from interviews and iReports that reflect the spectrum of feelings about the war: 'I don't know if it was all worth it' Emily Trageser, 31, joined the Army in 2000 and deployed to Iraq for the 2003 invasion with the 101st Airborne Division. She returned to the United States in early 2004. I don't think that the gravity of what we were doing ever really hit me. I was just a silly 23-year-old, excited to be a part of something big with one of the best-known units in the United States Army. I was like a little kid on a family trip with my nose pressed against the window, not wanting to miss anything on this grand adventure. When I contrast my experience with what happened later on in the war, it makes me feel guilty that my time there was so easy. Every time I heard about a soldier from my old unit who was hurt or killed, I felt a tremendous anger but was unsure of where to direct it. I find it embarrassing when someone thanks me for my service, because I feel like I didn't really do anything compared to some. But I have the memories of my time there, which I treasure. I don't know if it was all worth it. I know now that the invasion was based on flawed intelligence, although at the time, everyone thought that Saddam Hussein was developing weapons of mass destruction. Everyone. So we liberated Iraq from a madman, and saved them from perhaps a later, worse fate. So much blood, and where are the Iraqi people now? Are they in a better situation? We want to know, we want reassurance, that all the American lives, both lost and ruined, were worth it. I can't say. 'A factory producing painful lives' Nicholas Panzera, 29, deployed to Mosul and Baghdad, Iraq, from August 2005 until November 2006. He served with the 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment from Fort Wainwright, Alaska. Baghdad during that time was a complete firestorm, and four days from going home to Alaska, orders came from the president extending our deployment indefinitely. To help make sense of my thoughts and emotions I wrote poems. Some were long, some very short, and each one meant more to me than any weapon I had to carry while protecting myself in that nightmare. a landscape that spits acid in your face, destroys civilization with its sourness. god has no place here. yet the people embrace him as they are whipped. evil smells swim through the hairdryer heat. grit bounces off the eyelids of a shunned existence. smashed and burned. the souls of many exit through this place. a factory producing painful lives, one after another. -- from "Land of Pain," 2006 I will never be able to forget how I saw human beings treat one another with such hateful intentions. Where families were tortured and murdered for following one religious doctrine or another. Where the police robbed the very people they were hired to protect with their lives. Where murderers would be freed by relatives in the Iraqi judicial system. We removed one corruption and replaced Saddam Hussein with officials that were just as murderous and evil. 'Feeling like you're a bad person' Marc Loiselle, 32, served as an infantry platoon leader in Iraq during two tours between 2003 and 2006. He is now a schoolteacher in Seattle and doesn't usually tell people he is an Army veteran. The secret about combat -- what not even the harshest anti-war cynic will tell you -- is coming home and walking around every day feeling like you're a bad person. All things surrounding Iraq continue to be the black hole in the otherwise loving light surrounding me in my life. Though life was difficult when I was in combat, I never really suffered until I got home. I lost everything. My wife, my place to live, my friends, and the future that I had once seen. It was not worth the lives. To say nothing of the money, material, energy and effort. It was not worth the lives of my friends to take the lives of someone else's friends so that they would not take the lives of someone else's friends. It was not worth liberating Iraqis so that warlords, thugs and gangsters could rule over Iraqis. There were no WMDs, or ties to al Qaeda, or ties to 9/11. We talk about the superiority of our culture, but then we invade their country and set them at each other's throats like animals. The Iraq War, from its planning to our withdrawal, as a whole, has been a fiasco, an embarrassment, a disaster. 'Proud to be a part of something' Tyler, 24, is a platoon leader in the Army. He spent a year in Iraq, 2010-2011, helping to shut down more than 40 U.S. military bases. He asked not to use his full name because he is still in the Army. This was my first deployment to Iraq and the amount accomplished is simply astonishing. As bases closed and troops left, the U.S. military was humming at full speed. As we departed, I have never felt more proud in my life to be a part of something. Being deployed also gave me a greater sense of just how good America truly is ... from the air and scenery to the security. When was the last time an American citizen worried about an IED on one of our highways? Or when the temperature hit 135? We are truly blessed, and I feel sorry for anyone who does not realize this. Any war that has been fought is worth the sacrifices. I trust in my country as well as God that when we are asked to fight, the end will be a just cause. Is that the case for Iraq? Sure. We are talking about a dictator who killed his own people and suppressed their voices. 'War didn't kill me, but coming home almost did' Eric Sofge, 31, served as an Army infantry officer in Iraq in 2007. He is now a law student at the University of San Francisco. Eric Sofge with his platoon served in Iraq in 2007. When I came home, the first thing my wife said to me was that she was filing for divorce. So ended an eight-year relationship and sent me spiraling into despair and hopelessness. The war didn't kill me, but coming home almost did. Sadly, almost everyone who was there has struggled and will struggle for possibly the rest of their lives. The families who lost someone there will never fully recover. And the soldiers who came back wounded have to deal with something I cannot imagine. The Iraq War was a waste because although we did depose a dictator, we ruined the country in the process. Most Iraqis have paid a tremendous price for it. I oftentimes remember people telling me, "It was better under Saddam." Clearly there were strategic interests in toppling Hussein, but I'm not convinced that those interests outweighed the costs to this nation. It also cost the U.S. a tremendous amount in international credibility. I realize that it's possible that in 20 years from now the Iraq War may be seen as the turning point in the Middle East from dictatorships and theocracy to democracy and civil liberties, but I highly doubt that. 'Pleading for us to stay' Jeffrey Tracey, 55, was trained as a biological weapons inspector responsible for verifying the information that Iraq provided related to their WMD programs. As a Canadian, but trained by the United Nations at a six-week course in Vienna, I felt honored to be selected as an international observer and weapons inspector for this most important mission. When we were notified that we were to leave the country in advance of the initiation of the armed invasion, the Iraq citizens were beside themselves, begging for us to stay. One woman, a single parent with two children, dropped to her knees in front of me, pleading for us to stay. She knew that there would be substantial collateral damage on the streets of Baghdad because Saddam had offices and building throughout the city mixed within residential areas. The invasion of Iraq and the subsequent hostilities have left a mixed taste in my mouth. For starters, the principle excuse to invade Iraq to discover WMD was a nonstarter from the get-go. The U.N. found no traces of Iraq reconstituting their WMD programs, nor did the subsequent Iraq Survey Group. Whether it was a sound decision to invade Iraq to seek WMDs (or to seek a regime change) will be debated for a long time. 'It just kept going on and on' Jim Lewandowski, 48, deployed to Iraq in early 2004 as a member of the South Dakota National Guard. He served as a gun truck commander, assisting in more than 270 convoy security escort missions. We didn't think of it as an occupation, but we were going there to do whatever we needed to win, whatever that would end up being ... a patriotic sense of, "This is what our country needed us to do, so we were going to do it and do it well." But when we were there, it seemed like the war was over. There was just a sense that we had done all that we could possibly do, if we had done anything. [Saddam Hussein] had been located, they hadn't found any weapons of mass destruction, and they didn't believe they would ever be found. So there was a kind of a feeling of, "Why are we still here?" We probably might have wrecked their country, but we offered to repair or do what we could, and there wasn't that feeling of "Help us." It was more, "Get out of here." None of us could see a reason why we were still there. And it just kept going on and on. Was it the right thing to do? Should we have been there, or should we have left sooner? Nobody really knows. The only thing we received was President [George W.] Bush saying only history will be able to tell, which kind of tells me nobody knows. 'The hardest part was re-integration' Spencer Alexander, 24, deployed to Iraq in August 2009 as an infantryman with the Army. He stayed until July 2010. Spencer Alexander, 24, deployed to Iraq in August 2009. He stayed until July 2010. In the end, we freed the Iraqi people from a dictator. We helped build up their infrastructure after tearing it down. We helped train their leaders, police and military so that on their own the Iraqi people have a chance at a brighter future. Our attempts to win the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people may never change the contempt many Iraqi people still have for Americans, but at least during my time in Iraq I know my unit touched the lives of many people in a positive way. But I'm afraid the bad outweighs the good. I don't know any soldiers who really have a positive view on any of it. Most guys, almost all of them reflect on how relationships went bad, and other people have been through more stuff -- lost lives and seen people killed. There's a lot of negativity. The hardest part was re-integration. When I first got back, I was a lot more quiet. I didn't talk to people as much. I was expecting when I got back, it was going to be all happy. I used to enjoy movies and playing Xbox and now I'm just sitting around. Part of complete coverage on The Iraq war's impact Soldiers and wives bound by war Daniel and Amanda DeGeneres were deployed shortly after their wedding in 2007. "That was our honeymoon -- Iraq," she says. War tests couple's love -- 4 times Iraq has shaped the lives of Raquel and Nathan Dukellis. Married 11 years, they've been apart nearly half of it with training and deployments. Soldier returns to Iraq as lawyer He was an intelligence officer when the war started. Now he is seeking justice for his fellow soldiers with a new weapon -- the courts. Justice for soldier killed by insurgents updated 5:41 PM EST, Mon December 5, 2011 Troops go to court, rather than on the hunt, for insurgents who killed U.S. soldier. CNN's Martin Savidge reports. Wars in Iraq: What I'll remember With the current Iraq war winding down, reporters, producers and executives share the stories that they'll remember from the wars. A soldier's final day in Iraq updated 10:17 AM EST, Fri December 9, 2011 CNN was there as Sgt. 1st Class Tim Willingham spent his last day in Iraq after three tours of duty. 'Vietnam type' wall in Iraq for soldiers At Camp Warrior in Iraq, most U.S. troops have left, but a wall with the names of the fallen remains. Burned Iraqi boy's road to recovery updated 10:17 AM EST, Tue December 6, 2011 Youssif shows off his "certificate of citizenship," an award given to the Iraqi boy by his school in Los Angeles for being exceptionally nice. Photos: Iraq through a window Images from conflict photographer Ben Lowy's Iraq series show life in the war-torn country from a Humvee and through night-vision goggles.
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Iranians, Syrians share common cause By Solmaz Sharif, Special to CNN Syrians demonstrate against the regime of Bashar al-Assad in February. Many Iranians sympathize with the Syrian people and the violence they are dealing with The roles were reversed in 2009 when Iran was in turmoil after a disputed election Meanwhile, the governments of Iran, Syria are also very supportive of each other Editor's note: Solmaz Sharif is Iran Affairs coordinator at cyberdissidents.org. For more than 12 years, she has worked as a journalist for Persian media outlets such as BBC Persian and the Etemad Melli Newspaper. She is also founder of the first Iranian women's sports magazine, Shirzanan. (CNN) -- Two months ago, Emad Ghavidel turned on the television in Tehran and saw graphic footage of an injured Syrian child crying out in pain. The 24-year-old Iranian rapper was horrified by the violence and the government's brutal crackdown on Homs. The more Ghavidel learned about it, the angrier he became. He decided to channel his frustration into his music. He wrote a song, "The Battle of Homs," expressing support for the Syrian protesters and lashing out against the regime of Bashar al-Assad. "I swear to the laments of grieving mothers, I swear to the tears of grieving mothers, you will pay for it, Bashar al-Assad," raps Ghavidel. "Even if I am drowned in my own blood, I will not shut up." Within weeks, the song went viral on YouTube and was an instant sensation in the Middle East. Iranian helping Syrian government "I received many encouraging messages from both Syrians and Iranians," said Hamed Fard, an Iranian who helped Ghavidel produce the song. Assad e-mails show insight into regime Many Iranians sympathize with the Syrian people, and the two peoples share a common bond, said Ahed al-Hendi, a Syrian who now serves as Arabic Programs coordinator at cyberdissidents.org. In 2009, many Iranians were arrested and tortured -- and some were even killed -- as they protested the disputed presidential election. Iran stands firm behind Assad "When the Green Revolution was sparked in Iran, we stood with the Iranian people and supported their cause," Al-Hendi said. "Now, lots of Iranians are supporting our cause. "We are all facing one enemy. The mullah's regime in Iran and the Assad regime (in Syria) support each other openly, and their alliance is very rooted. But we need an alliance between a democratic Iran and Syria, not an alliance of dictatorship." Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently praised Syrian officials for how they "are managing" the yearlong uprising in Syria. Also, activists claim to have found a series of e-mails that showed al-Assad took advice from Iran on how to handle the unrest. Throughout the uprising, the Syrian government has described opposition leaders as terrorists looking to destabilize the country. To date, more than 9,000 people have been killed in the conflict, according to the United Nations. "As a human and a journalist, it is unbearable to witness this crime," said Sasan Aghai, an Iranian who works for the Sobh-e Azadi newspaper. "Everyone around the world who cares about human rights should be bothered by what it happening in Syria. It's genocide." This is not Aghai's first foray into political activism. As an active supporter of the Green Movement, he was arrested for "activity against the country's security" and spent time in Evin prison, the notorious prison for Iran's political dissidents. Artists were also among those arrested. Aria Aramnejad, a young Iranian pop singer, was taken into custody after he posted a song on YouTube in support of the Green Movement. Ghavidel is keenly aware of the risks he faces as a rapper. Iran's Ministry of Islamic Guidance does not consider rap an art form, so no Iranian rapper can get government permission to record a song. "All Iranian rappers work underground," he said. "We all have difficulties recording and distributing our songs, but I don't let these problems stop me. "People ask me if I'm worried about the consequences of my song, but I don't believe I've said anything wrong. I want to hope that there is enough freedom of speech in my country that I can criticize a mass murder." Such support has not gone unnoticed by the Syrian opposition. The Syrian National Council recently published a letter thanking the citizens of Iran. "It is important for all of us to know that we share one region and that our struggles and freedoms are connected," the letter said. "The Syrian and Iranian regimes have cooperated very closely throughout the years to oppress their own people and to destabilize the region around them. We believe that the only way that our people can prosper is by cooperation and mutual respect to each other's past, present and future aspirations." Would a Syrian revolution have an effect on Iran? Aghai thinks it is unlikely. "I don't think the Syrian revolution will result in an Iranian revolution as well," he said. "But after losing one of its good allies in the region, we can say that the power of the Iranian regime will start to fade." Part of complete coverage on Syrian crisis New plan for removing chemicals updated 8:28 AM EST, Tue March 4, 2014 Syria has submitted a revised proposal "that aims to complete the removal of all chemicals" from the country before the end of April. ISIS defector: Destroy ISIS now updated 5:32 AM EST, Tue February 18, 2014 CNN's Arwa Damon reports on ISIS defector who says destroying ISIS as critical as defeating regime. Refugees scramble to flee violence The U.S. wants a United Nations resolution that will, among other things, bring humanitarian aid for refugees in Syria. Syrian town scarred by ISIS rule When the radical Islamist militia ISIS arrived in the Syrian town of Addana a year ago, many welcomed them. What followed changed their minds. Brutal tactics in Syria's war CNN obtained video clips from Syrian activists documenting the atrocities committed by members of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, known as ISIS. What are the U.S. options in Syria? updated 3:17 PM EST, Tue February 18, 2014 On Crossfire, Danielle Pletka discusses what the U.S. needs to do to resolve the Syria crisis. Syrian children dying of hunger Her almond-shaped brown eyes shine through her sunken face as a doctor lifts her sweater to reveal a tiny rib cage pushing against her skin. Life after war in a refugee camp updated 12:46 PM EST, Tue February 4, 2014 The Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan is home to around 100,000 Syrian refugees. CNN spent several days meeting the residents of the camp. EXCLUSIVE: Photos may prove torture Renowned war crimes prosecutors and forensic experts have found "direct evidence" of "torture and killing" by the Assad regime. How Syrian kids learn to recover Traumatized children who have witnessed the horrors of war are being helped to read -- and rebuild a normal life. CNN's Becky Anderson reports. Touring Syria's most dangerous city A battle zone tour organized by the Syrian government for CNN and several other media outlets Wednesday was more than bizarre. Syria's youngest victims updated 12:35 PM EST, Wed January 22, 2014 CNN's Atika Shubert meets with the family of a little girl who was wounded in Syria, now living in a refugee camp. Zaatari's 110 year old refugee updated 9:56 AM EST, Mon January 27, 2014 110 year old, Jabari Alawali walked for over 10 hours to reach Jordan from Syria. Home | Video | CNN Trends | U.S. | World | Politics | Justice | Entertainment | Tech | Health | Living | Travel | Opinion | iReport | Money | Sports
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What lies behind renewed tensions over the Falkland Islands? By Barry Neild and Dave Gilbert, CNN updated 11:43 AM EST, Thu January 3, 2013 Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner pictured in 2012 marking the anniversary of the Falklands war. Several countries have disputed Falklands ownership since first recorded landfall in17th century Islands have been coveted as strategic shipping stopover and potential wellspring of resources Argentina and Britain fought over the islands in 1982 More recently, the Argentinians have accused the British of blatant colonialism London (CNN) -- Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has again opened the dispute over sovereignty of the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, accusing the British government of blatant colonialism. Known to the Argentinians as Las Malvinas, the two countries went to war over the territory in 1982 after the then military government in Argentina landed troops on the islands. In an open letter to British Prime Minister David Cameron and published in British newspapers Thursday, the Argentinian leader said "Britain, the colonial power, has refused to return the territories to the Argentine Republic, thus preventing it from restoring its territorial integrity." The British government was swift to respond, insisting that there would be no discussions over sovereignty "unless and until such as the time as the islanders so wish." It is the latest in a recent series of incidents that has raised tensions between the two countries. British Royal Navy frigate HMS Antelope explodes in the bay of San Carlos off East Falkland during the 1982 Falklands conflict. British troops arriving in the Falklands Islands during the 1982 Falklands conflict. A line of British soldiers in camouflage advancing during the 1982 Falklands conflict. Britain's Prince William is deployed to the Falkland Islands on a six-week tour of duty as a search and rescue helicopter pilot. David Cameron has accused Argentina of "colonial" attitudes towards the Falklands. Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has asserted her country's sovereignty of Las Malvinas. A man stands next to a map of the Falkland Islands reading 'They are Argentinian' during a demonstration in front of the British embassy in Buenos Aires in January. Argentinian activists burn a Union Jack during a demonstration in front of the British embassy in Buenos Aires in January. Argentinian war veterans and relatives march with torches in Buenos Aires during the 28th anniversary of the 1982 conflict. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher meets personnel aboard the HMS Antrim during a visit to the Falkands in 1983. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her husband Denis, left, visit Stanley Junior School, Stanley on the Falkland Islands in 1983. Pictured in 1980, leaders of Argentina (left to right): President General Jorge Rafael Videl, Admiral Armando Lambruschini , General Leopoldo Galtieri and Brig Gen O Domingo Graffigna. Sukey Cameron hands in a petition at Downing Street demanding full British citizenship to 300 Falkland islanders whose grandparents were not born in Britain, 25th September 1981. Flashpoint Falklands Photos: Britain and Argentina's standoff Explain it to me: Falkland Islands Falklands War retrospective 2012: British official defends Falklands policy Argentina: UK exploiting Falklands What led to the latest dispute? The Argentinian president has raised the sovereignty issue several times over the last two years, including a claim at the U.N., but the dispute made global headlines when Prince William, second in line to the British throne, was deployed on a military mission to the islands in 2012. The UK also decided to dispatch the new warship HMS Dauntless to the Falklands -- a move that inflamed anger in Argentina which accused Britain of militarizing the South Atlantic. Tensions were raised again in December when the UK renamed a portion of the British Antarctic Territory as Queen Elizabeth Land in honor of the British head of state Queen Elizabeth II. Argentina also has a claim on some of the territory and lodged a protest with the British. Last year also saw a public confrontation between the two countries' leaders when Fernandez tried to hand a letter to Cameron at the G-20 summit -- a letter he refused to accept -- and there was more bad feeling between the nations ahead of the London 2012 Olympics when Argentina released a video boosting its Olympic team that was filmed on the islands. Where are the Falklands and why are they important? Located in the South Atlantic Ocean, about 480 kilometers east of the tip of South America, the windswept Falklands have long been coveted as a strategic shipping stopover and potential wellspring of natural resources. Their remoteness, however, exposed them to neglect and complex wrangling over ownership among British, French, Spanish and Argentinian interests. Argentina's forerunners formally declared possession in 1820, prompting Britain to reclaim a sovereignty it originally declared In 1765. Falklands conflict in photos Despite regular challenges, notably in 1982, British control has endured and the Falklands' current population of about 3,000 looks to London to safeguard oil, fishing, farming and tourism incomes. What happened in 1982? Documents recently revealed under the UK's 30-year rule show that the British government was surprised by the Argentinian invasion of the islands on April 2, 1982, with the then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher describing it as "the worst... moment of my life." In evidence given to the Falkland Islands Review Committee in October 1982, and some months after the war ended, Thatcher said there were no warning signs from Argentina since its 1977 statement saying there would be talks. "I never, never expected the Argentines to invade the Falklands head-on," she told the committee. "It was such a stupid thing to do, as events happened, such a stupid thing even to contemplate doing." The files also show that Thatcher's Cabinet was trying to pursue a diplomatic solution to the crisis through the help of then U.S. Secretary of State Alexander Haig, while also preparing a military response. Locator map of the Falkland Islands British naval forces were dispatched after Argentinian President Leopoldo Galtieri's military dictatorship put troops on the Falklands. Soldiers fought land battles on the islands, aircraft were shot down and ships were attacked with significant losses of life -- most notably the Argentinian General Belgrano and Britain's HMS Sheffield, HMS Antelope and RFA Sir Galahad. Britain declared an end to fighting after 74 days and following the surrender of Argentinian troops. Argentina put its death toll at 645. Britain's civil and military losses amounted to 255. How did the United States and other world powers react? President Ronald Reagan's administration declared economic sanctions against Argentina. It also gave its Cold War ally a strategic edge by supplying potent Sidewinder missiles to counter Argentina's Exocets. At the height of the conflict, a meeting of the world's biggest economies -- including the UK, U.S., Germany, Italy, France, Japan and Canada -- backed Britain's position. Falklands Timeline 1690 British captain makes first recorded landfall 1765 Britain claims islands 1820 Argentina formally declares ownership 1833 British mission reclaims sovereignty 1982 British and Argentinian troops clash in South Atlantic Why won't the UK give up the islands like it did Hong Kong? Britain acknowledges its claim to the Falklands is disputed, but has made clear it has no intention of discussing the sovereignty issue with Argentina. Professor Clive Schofield, an expert in maritime territorial disputes at Australia's University of Wollongong, said last year that there was no comparison to Hong Kong, which Britain returned to Chinese control after expiry of a set lease in 1997. "The UK position on the Falklands is that they are under British sovereignty -- they are not leased from anyone," he said. What has happened to the islands since the end of the war in 1982? Spurred by the conflict and stung by accusations of neglect, Britain began taking renewed economic interest in the Falklands. It protected fishing rights and asserted control over oil exploration licenses. It also stepped up its military interests, building a new airfield and bolstering naval, army and air force presences. Images of life in the Falklands Cooperation between Britain and Argentina -- by now an established democracy whose militarist past has left current leaders distrustful of its armed forces -- has improved, but Buenos Aires continued to reject any territorial claim to Las Malvinas other than its own. The Falkland Islanders are due to hold a referendum on their political status on March 10/11, 2013. According to the Falklands legislative assembly, the vote is intended to affirm islanders' desire to remain a self-governing territory of the United Kingdom and to reject claims of ownership by Argentina. So why is the language between London and Buenos Aires so tense now? Analysts have previously pointed to Argentinian politicians seeking to divert voters from the pain caused by inflation and reduced subsidies on oil, gas and electricity. "The government is being squeezed from lots of different areas, so one way to distract from the economic problems facing the country is to raise the Malvinas issue," Professor Mark Jones, an expert in Latin American politics at Rice University in Texas said last year. "It's one of the few issues outside football that you can get universal consensus on." In the UK, Cameron -- a successor to Thatcher as leader of the Conservative Party -- must be seen to defend the principles of his predecessor who mobilized troops to reclaim the islands. British Falklands conflict veteran Simon Weston said: "It's not about asserting a claim, it's about allowing people of the Falklands to have the right to self-determination." What has Argentina done to bolster its claims? Regional allies were recruited to the cause at the end of 2011, with members of the South American Mercosur trading bloc uniting to ban Falklands-flagged vessels from their ports. This is largely "diplomatic dressing" that will do little to isolate the islands, Professor Roett Riordan, who heads the Latin American program at John Hopkins University in Washington D.C, said last year. Is this really all about oil? Partly. There is Argentinian resentment of a British oil exploration project launched off the Falklands in 2010. This has been worsened by Argentina's recent relegation from exporter to net importer of hydrocarbons. Analysts, however, insist this remains a sideshow to the political traction offered by the Malvinas dispute. How much oil is there? Press reports say up to 8.3 billion barrels of undersea oil reserves could lie in the Falklands economic zone -- a radius of 320-kilometers around the islands, but despite successful drilling, this quantity is still speculative. The figures are backed by claims from small oil ventures, including Rockhopper and Borders & Southern Petroleum, which are hoping to raise capital for further exploration in fields licensed by the islands' British-backed government. Attempts to attract investment in the projects has been hampered by the Anglo-Argentinian dispute. Many major oil firms have interests in Argentina and are wary of upsetting Buenos Aires by involving themselves in the Falklands. Also a problem is the considerable cost of extracting deep water reserves from the remote South Atlantic. Professor Alex Kemp, a petroleum economics expert at the University of Aberdeen, described the Falklands oil reserve estimates as "optimistic," adding that even if they are proven, the cost of exploiting them could still be prohibitive. "It's one thing doing exploration, but when you come to development, we're talking about bigger volumes of materials and to get that there is expensive because at the moment there's nothing there -- just sheep farmers," he said. "It will take a few 100 million barrels to make it worth it, and there's a number of ifs and buts before we get there." Is conflict likely again? No, say analysts. While there are parallels with the 1980s -- politicians using Anglo-Argentinian tensions to court votes and divert from economic woes at home -- there is little appetite for conflict on either side. Any action is likely to remain in the diplomatic sphere. A former senior British military officer said in early 2012 that UK military cutbacks had left Britain unprepared for another Falklands conflict. Argentina is apparently in a similar state, with a heavily depleted military that experts say would be no match even for Britain's depleted force. "Even if Argentina wanted to go to war, they have no military capacity," Jones said. He said Fernandez's own antipathy towards the military -- a legacy of her political opposition to Argentina's former dictatorship -- meant she would be unlikely to support even a maritime blockade of British vessels. Part of complete coverage on Falklands - Malvinas What lies behind renewed tension? Argentina and the UK have again been involved in a war of words over the disputed islands. But why has tension flared once more? Falklands war wounds still fresh updated 4:04 PM EDT, Mon April 2, 2012 The war itself lasted for less than three months. But 30 years on, tensions between Britain and Argentina remain over the Falklands conflict. Nobel winners urge Falklands talks updated 3:22 PM EDT, Tue March 27, 2012 Six Nobel Peace Prize laureates have urged Britain's PM David Cameron to hold talks with Argentina on the future of the Falkland Islands. Falkland Islands place hopes on oil updated 10:06 AM EDT, Mon April 2, 2012 The government of the Falkland Islands is placing its hopes on oil to help improve the local economy, as CNN's Rafael Romo reports. Falklands filled with reminders of war updated 11:35 AM EST, Thu February 9, 2012 CNN's Dan Rivers goes on a tour of the Falklands, showing old mine fields being cleared and other relics of war leftover on the Islands. Tension rises over Falklands oil CNN's Dan Rivers explains why drilling for oil off the Falklands Islands is increasing tensions between Argentina and Britain. Falklands: Penguins, tea and tensions updated 10:32 AM EST, Mon February 13, 2012 CNN's Dan Rivers visits the Falkland Islands, a tiny speck of 'Britishness' in the south Atlantic, complete with red phone boxes and warm beer. British official defends Falklands policy CNN's Max Foster talks to Jeremy Browne of Britain's Foreign Office about rising tensions with Argentina over the Falkland Islands. Falklands war vet on the conflict Falklands war veteran Simon Weston says the Falkland Islands are under constant harassment from Argentina, 30 years on. Tension over Prince in Falklands The decision to send Prince William on a deployment to the Falkland Islands has caused a row between Britain and Argentina.
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Our journey with the Clintons on gay rights By Donna Brazile, CNN Contributor updated 12:38 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2013 Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, pictured in October 2012, has become one of the most powerful people in Washington. Here's a look at her life and career through the years: Before she married Bill Clinton, she was Hillary Rodham. Here, Rodham talks about student protests in 1969, which she supported in her commencement speech at Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Rodham, center, a lawyer for the Rodino Committee, and John Doar, left, chief counsel for the committee, bring impeachment charges against President Richard Nixon in the Judiciary Committee hearing room at the U.S. Capitol in 1974. Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton helps first lady Rosalynn Carter on a campaign swing through Arkansas in June 1979. Also seen in the photo is Hillary Clinton, center background. Bill Clinton embraces his wife shortly after a stage light fell near her on January 26, 1992. They talk to Don Hewitt, producer of the CBS show "60 Minutes." With Hillary, Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton waves to the crowd at his victory party after winning the Illinois primary on March 17, 1992. Al Gore, Tipper Gore, Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton wave to supporters at the Chautauqua Institution in Chautauqua, New York, after they gave speeches on family values on August 23, 1992. Clinton gestures at a campaign rally November 3, 1992, in Denver. After taking office, President Bill Clinton chose his wife to head a special commission on health care reform, the most significant public policy initiative of his first year in office. Bill and Hillary Clinton have a laugh together on Capitol Hill in 1993. Clinton pours herself a cup of tea in 1993 while testifying to the Senate Education and Labor Committee about health care reform. Clinton speaks at George Washington University on September 10, 1993, in Washington, during her husband's first term. Clinton waves to the media on January 26, 1996, as she arrives at federal court in Washington for an appearance before a grand jury. The first lady was subpoenaed to testify as a witness in the investigation of the Whitewater land deal in Arkansas. Hillary Clinton looks on as President Bill Clinton addresses the Monica Lewinsky scandal in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on January 26, 1998. Hillary and Bill Clinton arrive at Foundry United Methodist Church on August 16, 1998, in Washington. He became the first sitting president to testify before a grand jury when he testified via satellite about the Lewinsky matter. Clinton shakes hands during a St. Patrick's Day parade in the Sunnyside neighborhood of Queens, New York, on March 5, 2000. Clinton waves to the crowd as she arrives on the stage at the Democratic National Convention on August 14, 2000, in Los Angeles. Clinton campaigns for a Senate seat October 25, 2000, at Grand Central Station in New York. Hillary Clinton is sworn in as a senator of New York in a re-enactment ceremony with, from left, President Bill Clinton, nephew Tyler, daughter Chelsea, brother Hugh Rodham, mother Dorothy Rodham and Vice President Al Gore on January 3, 2001, in Washington. Andrew Cuomo, Eliot Spitzer and Clinton celebrate with a crowd of Democratic supporters after their wins in various races November 7, 2006, in New York. Clinton speaks during a post-primary rally on January 8, 2007, at Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester, New Hampshire. The Clintons pay a visit to the 92nd annual Hopkinton State Fair in Contoocook, New Hampshire, on September 2, 2007. Clinton speaks at a campaign rally September 2, 2007, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She was running for the Democratic presidential nomination. Clinton addresses a question during a debate with other Democratic presidential candidate at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, on September 26, 2007. Also pictured are U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, left, and former U.S. Sen. Mike Gravel of Alaska. Felipe Bravo, left, and Christian Caraballo are covered with Hillary Clinton stickers in downtown Manchester, New Hampshire, on January 8, 2008. Clinton campaigns in Council Bluffs, Iowa, with her daughter, Chelsea, on January 1, 2008, two days ahead of the January 3 state caucus. Clinton waves as she speaks to supporters at the National Building Museum on June 7, 2008, in Washington. After pulling out of the presidential race, Clinton thanked her supporters and urged them to back Barack Obama to be the next president of the United States. Obama and Clinton talk on the plane on their way to a Unity Rally in Unity, New Hampshire, on June 27, 2008. Obama watches Clinton address the Democratic National Convention on August 26, 2008. The two endured a long, heated contest for the 2008 nomination. Sen. Charles Schumer, left, looks toward Secretary of State designate Clinton as Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Sen. John Kerry, center, looks on during nomination hearings January 13, 2009, on Capitol Hill. Clinton testifies during her confirmation hearing for secretary of state on January 13, 2009, in Washington. Clinton, as secretary of state, dances with a local choir while visiting the Victoria Mxenge Housing Project in Philippi, a township on the outskirts of Cape Town, South Africa, on August 8, 2009. Clinton looks through binoculars toward North Korea during a visit to an observation post July 21, 2010, at the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas. Clinton walks up the steps to her aircraft as she leaves a meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations on July 23, 2010, in Hanoi, Vietnam. Hillary and Bill Clinton pose on the day of their daughter's wedding to Marc Mezvinsky on July 31, 2010, in Rhinebeck, New York. U.S. President Barack Obama and Clinton observe a moment of silence before a NATO meeting November 19, 2010, in Lisbon, Portugal. Clinton listens as Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu makes a brief statement November 29, 2010, before a bilateral meeting at the State Department in Washington. Clinton shakes hands with a child during an unannounced walk through Tahrir Square in Cairo on March 16, 2011. Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Clinton and members of Obama's national security team receive an update on the Osama bin Laden mission May 1, 2011, in the Situation Room of the White House. Clinton checks her personal digital assistant prior to departing Malta on October 18, 2011. Clinton speaks as Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai listens during a news conference at the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, on July 7, 2012. Clinton arrives at Ben Gurion International Airport in Israel on July 15, 2012. Clinton looks on as Obama makes a statement in response to the attack at the U.S. Consulate in Libya on September 12, 2012. Clinton applauds Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi during a ceremony where Suu Kyi was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal on September 19, 2012. Bill Clinton kisses his wife after introducing her at the Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting on September 24, 2012, in New York City. Clinton shakes hands with Libyan President Mohamed Magariaf on September 24, 2012, in New York. Clinton stands during a news conference following meetings at the prime minister's office in Pristina, Kosovo, on October 31, 2012. Clinton said that Kosovo's unilaterally declared independence, fiercely opposed by Serbia, was "not up for discussion." Clinton chats with Suu Kyi before Obama speaks at the University of Yangon in Yangon, Myanmar, on November 19, 2012. Obama looks at Clinton before the start of a bilateral meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, far right, during the East Asian Summit in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on November 20, 2012. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shakes hands with Clinton at the prime minister's office November 20, 2012, in Jerusalem. Clinton arrives December 4, 2012, for a NATO meeting to discuss Syria and Turkey's request for Patriot missiles to be deployed protectively on the Turkish-Syrian border. Clinton receives a sports jersey and football helmet from Deputy Secretary Tom Nides, center, after returning to work on January 7, 2013, following a fall where she hit her head and doctors later detected a blood clot. The number 112 represented the number of countries that she had visited as secretary of state. Clinton and her husband arrive for the inauguration for Obama's second term on January 21, 2013. Clinton testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Capitol Hill on January 23, 2013. Lawmakers questioned Clinton about the security failures during the Benghazi, Libya, attacks that led to the death of four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens. From left, first lady Michelle Obama stands with former first ladies Laura Bush, Clinton, Barbara Bush and Rosalynn Carter at the opening ceremony of the George W. Bush Presidential Center in Dallas on April 25, 2013. Bill and Hillary Clinton speak to guests at the Clinton Global Initiative on June 14, 2013, in Chicago. Clinton poses for pictures at St. Andrews University in St. Andrews, Scotland, on September 13, 2013. Clinton received an honorary degree from the university. From left, Clinton, former first lady Laura Bush and former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush listen to speakers during the memorial service for Nelson Mandela in Soweto, South Africa, on December 10, 2013. Hillary Clinton's career in the spotlight This week, the Supreme Court will hear two historic cases about marriage equality Donna Brazile: The Clintons show us it's OK to evolve and to stand on the right side of history She says President Clinton, who signed the Defense of Marriage Act, now says it needs to go Brazile: Hillary Clinton also supports gay rights; now it's up to the Supreme Court justices Editor's note: Donna Brazile, a CNN contributor and a Democratic strategist, is vice chairwoman for voter registration and participation at the Democratic National Committee. She is a nationally syndicated columnist, an adjunct professor at Georgetown University and author of "Cooking with Grease: Stirring the Pot in America." She was manager for the Gore-Lieberman presidential campaign in 2000. (CNN) -- Sometimes, a First Family remains a first family -- a mirror of our times -- even after the president leaves office. So it is with the Clintons. This week, the United States Supreme Court will hear two landmark cases about marriage equality. One is a challenge to California's Proposition 8, a law passed in 2008 that bans same-sex marriage in the country's most populous state. The other is about a federal law, the Defense of Marriage Act, which prevents all legally married gay and lesbian couples from receiving the more than 1,000 federal rights, benefits and obligations that come from marriage. That means no joint tax returns, no joint Social Security and no military survivor benefits for gay and lesbian military families, just to name a few. These are huge cases. We're at one of those decisive national moments that you read about in textbooks as a kid—moments where we come together as a country and never fail to rise to the occasion to build a more perfect union. Opinion: California wants a do-over on same-sex marriage vote The moment is made even more historic by the long journey we've traveled as a country to get to this point. Today, 58% of Americans support marriage equality, and that number jumps to 81% when you only count people under 30. But support wasn't always that decisive. As recently as 2004, the Republican Party actively exploited divided public opinion on the issue and focused President George W. Bush's re-election campaign on fiddling with our Constitution to explicitly define marriage as between a man and a woman. Opinion: The real 'modern family' in America But that was then. America has dramatically changed for the better. And more often than not, the change hasn't come from courts or from Congress -- it's come from conversations in pews, PTA meetings and around dinner tables. America has gotten to know gay and lesbian people, and we've come to love them as ourselves. Opinions have evolved, and sometimes those evolutions have been challenging and painful, but they have always been honest. By now, nearly every American has thought about these issues or come to a different view. It is through deeply personal transformations that we've arrived at this historic moment. Opinion: Straight marriage is the real issue This brings me to my main point. The American people respect the Clintons because they've walked this journey with us. They've debated with us and struggled with us, and they've shown us it's OK to evolve and to stand on the right side of history. Clinton reversal on DOMA Earlier this month, President Bill Clinton published an op-ed in the Washington Post entitled "It's time to overturn DOMA." It took a lot of courage. After all, Clinton signed the law in 1996. Today, nearly two decades later, he looked back on the law he signed and concluded, "I know now that, even worse than providing an excuse for discrimination, the law is itself discriminatory. It should be overturned." Millions of Americans know exactly how the man feels. After all, they too once opposed equality for gay and lesbian Americans, and now they join him in wanting to make things right. Hillary Clinton backs same-sex marriage And just this week, Hillary Clinton broke new ground. As secretary of state, she was the first in American history to declare to the United Nations that "gay rights are human rights, and human rights are gay rights." Now, in a video produced for the Human Rights Campaign, she took the last big step and fully embraced marriage equality, arguing that discriminating against "any of our daughters and sons solely on the basis of who they are and who they love is to deny them the chance to live up to their own God-given potential." Opinion: The county where no one's gay The Clintons have walked this journey alongside the country they have spent a lifetime serving, and it only makes us respect them more. When the nine justices of the Supreme Court take their seats to hear the two landmark cases this week, Bill and Hillary will surely be looking on — two citizens out of hundreds of millions watching and waiting for justice. Share your reaction to the arguments The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Donna Brazile. Part of complete coverage on The state of gay rights CNN LGBT rights calculator Find out which states mirror your values on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights. iReport: Send support messages CNN columnist John D. Sutter asks readers to send in video messages of support for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer friends and loved ones. America is at a crossroads on gay rights updated 10:24 AM EDT, Thu March 21, 2013 Next Tuesday and Wednesday, the nine justices of the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on two momentous cases. Gay people live in 50 Americas Three years ago, when Scott Hamilton moved from New York to Oklahoma for work, his marriage, and all the rights that went with it, dissolved in the transition. Gay marriage, then group marriage? updated 10:24 AM EDT, Thu March 21, 2013 The attractive civil rights rhetoric of "marriage equality" masks a profound error about what marriage is. No one should be fired for being gay updated 12:51 PM EDT, Fri March 22, 2013 Gay people can be fired because of who they are in 29 states. CNN columnist John D. Sutter says it's time for that to change. Video: Standing up to discrimination Andre Cooley says he was fired because he's gay. Even though the law in Mississippi doesn't protect him, he fought back. Court shouldn't rewrite law on gay marriage Ryan T. Anderson, from the Heritage Foundation, says "CNN risks obscuring that conversation about what marriage is by framing the issue as measurable by an 'LGBT rights calculator.'" Video letter to a lost friend updated 10:46 AM EDT, Fri March 22, 2013 A friend's murder inspired him to make a lifelong push for gay rights. Jody Renaldo speaks about his loss and action. Nondiscrimination laws threaten free markets Peter Sprigg from the Family Research Council argues against nondiscrimination laws that protect gays in the workplace. Video: Asking for marriage rights In Mississippi, same-sex marriage is not legal. John D. Sutter follows a group of women looking to change that. The real 'modern family' in America I, like millions of Americans, tune in each week to check out the latest adventures of America's favorite "Modern Family," especially Mitch and Cam and their adorable daughter Lily. Video: Young and out in Mississippi updated 1:07 PM EDT, Sun March 24, 2013 The county where no one's gay updated 5:41 AM EDT, Mon March 25, 2013 Statistically speaking, Franklin County should be straighter than John Wayne eating Chick-fil-A. GOP shifting on same-sex marriage This is what party modernization looks like. Gay Americans pay more taxes for fewer rights updated 9:01 AM EST, Mon February 25, 2013 Suze Orman says our federal government should legalize same-sex marriage and end discrimination against gay couples. The secret gay agenda updated 9:07 AM EDT, Sun June 17, 2012 LZ Granderson says the real agenda of the gay community is all provided for in the U.S. Constitution. The right helped launch the same-sex movement updated 5:46 PM EDT, Mon May 14, 2012 Michael Dorf and Sidney Tarrow say a back-burner issue for LGBT community became a rallying cry for gay activisits only when conservatives brought their opposition to the national stage.
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Reason for the price increase? Thread: Reason for the price increase? Wonderbot Posts 1,041 Reason for the price increase? Working on two reasons, which both make sense to me... 1) They want to book a band with a very high price... 2) They're making up the money from purchasing the polo fields. It's probably #2... With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams; it is still a beautiful world. Coachella: 08, 09, 10, 11, 12w1, 12w2, 13w1, 14w2 Lollapalooza: 08,10,11,12 Burning Man: 08,10
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1036
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Live oaks: Tree that sparked debate was diseased, owner says By Jackie R. Broach Coastal Observer It was the cutting of a large oak tree in Murrells Inlet several months ago that prompted Georgetown County officials to take a second look at tree protection rules and started a battle between environmentalists and proponents of property rights. But even if protections for oaks had been in place, the tree at the center of the issue couldn’t have been saved, said Barb Royal, an owner of the property on Bend Avenue where the tree once stood. “The tree was deemed hazardous by a certified arborist and it was not safe to live in the house with the tree there,” she said this week. “We didn’t want to take the tree down, but we have three children playing in the yard. It wouldn’t have been safe to keep it.” Initial reports were that the tree was cut to make way for a swimming pool, which had many inlet residents furious. Efforts to contact the property owners at the time were unsuccessful. The tree was estimated to be about 200 years old, according to longtime Inlet residents, and age was one of the reasons it became a hazard, Royal said. “That and because they built a house 5 feet from the tree which compromised the root system,” she added. The Royals have lived in the house for about a year. “It was hollow,” she said of the tree. “My 5-year-old daughter could stand in it.” She knows people were upset after it was cut, she said. “We mourned the loss with everyone else and would never want people to willy-nilly take down trees.” But this was a human rights issue, in her opinion. “I believe in the laws, but also that people have the right to feel safe in their home,” she said. As for the debate the tree stirred up, she said she thinks “it’s great.” She’s glad if it has people taking a closer look at tree protection. [E-Mail Article To a Friend] Buy Photo Reprints ˆ€© 2012 Coastal ObserverHome | Photos | Obits | Classifieds | Local Events | Ad Specs | Subscribe
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RESEARCH HISTORY Artifact Information PROJECTILE POINTS Multi-media videos The Coe Foundation for Archaeological Research, Inc. (CFAR) is a non-profit 501(c)3 tax-exempt corporation (TIN: 56-1651114). To make a tax-deductible donation, simply print this page to return it to us with your gift. (Please make checks payable to CFAR) The Coe Foundation for Archaeological Research Raleigh, N.C. 27611-5311 YES! I believe in the preservation of our archaeological heritage. Archaeology is our link with the past. Enclosed is my tax-deductible gift of $____________ ___ Steward of the Past $5,000 and up ___ Corporate $2,500 and up ___ Protector of the Past $1,000 and up ___ Friend of the Past $500 and up ___ Business $250 and up ___ Patron $100 and up ___ Please send me information about the bequest of real estate, securities, etc. I am interested in including The Coe Foundation of Archaeological Research in my will. The Coe Foundation for Archaeological Research, Inc. Post Office Box 25311 Raleigh, North Carolina 27611-5311 www.coe-foundation.org
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Council of Europe sites International organisations' and national web sites NGO�s,academic and sites http://www.coe.int/T/F/Droits_de_l%27Homme/Ecri The Council of Europe today deals with racism - which extends beyond national borders - by means of a global approach, covering the range of problems faced by society and, above all, involving all member States on an equal footing. Since 1993, this has become the specific mandate of a committee composed of independent members, the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI). http://www.coe.int/T/E/Human%5FRights/Minorities Council of Europe action in the field of protection of minorities and integrating diversity is based on the principle that the protection of minorities is part of the universal protection of human rights. Action includes standard setting, intergovernmental co-operation, activities for the development and consolidation of democratic stability and confidence building measures in civil society. It extends to many related policy fields and involves, in addition to the intergovernmental co-operation, the Parliamentary Assembly and the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe as well as specialised bodies. Action in the field of protection of national minorities and integrating diversity are a continuously evolving process. International organisations' and national web sites http://www.un.org/esa/population/aboutpop.htm The Population Division is responsible for providing the international community with up-to-date and scientifically objective information on population and development. The Population Division provides guidance to the United Nations General Assembly, Economic and Social Council and the Commission on Population and Development on population and development issues and undertakes regular studies on population levels, trends, population estimates and projections, population policies and population and development interrelationships. http://www.unhcr.ch/french/fwelcome.htm UNHCR, the United Nations refugee organization, is mandated by the United Nations to lead and coordinate international action for the world-wide protection of refugees and the resolution of refugee problems. UNHCR�s primary purpose is to safeguard the rights and well-being of refugees. UNHCR strives to ensure that everyone can exercise the right to seek asylum and find safe refuge in another state, and to return home voluntarily. http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu2/7/b/mmig.htm Special rapporteur on the human rights of migrants Special rapporteur examines ways and means to overcome the obstacles existing to the full and effective protection of the human rights of this vulnerable group, including obstacles and difficulties for the return of migrants who are non-documented or in an irregular situation, with the following functions: (a) To request and receive information from all relevant sources, including migrants themselves, on violations of the human rights of migrants and their families; (b) To formulate appropriate recommendations to prevent and remedy violations of the human rights of migrants, wherever they may occur; (c) To promote the effective application of relevant international norms and standards on the issue; (d) To recommend actions and measures applicable at the national, regional and international levels to eliminate violations of the human rights of migrants; (e) To take into account a gender perspective when requesting and analysing information, as well as to give special attention to the occurrence of multiple discrimination and violence against migrant women. http://www.ilo.org/public/english/protection/migrant The International Migration Branch (MIGRANT) main task is to assist countries in policy formulation, and in establishing or strengthening legislation, administrative measures, structures and practices for effective management of labour migration. It focus on three component objectives: protecting the rights of migrant workers and promoting their integration in countries of destination and countries of origin; forging an international consensus on how to manage migration; improving the knowledge base on international migration. http://www.iom.int International Organization for migration (IOM), is dedicated to promoting humane and orderly migration for the benefit of all. It does so by providing services and advice to governments and migrants. IOM works to help ensure the orderly and humane management of migration, to promote international cooperation on migration issues, to assist in the search for practical solutions to migration problems and to provide humanitarian assistance to migrants in need, including refugees and internally displaced people. http://www.osce.org/odihr The Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights is the principal OSCE institution responsible for promoting progress in the Human Dimension, strengthening democratic structures, and advancing human rights http://europa.eu.int/comm/justice_home/unit/immigration_en.htm The policy on asylum, the free movement of persons, visa policy, rules governing the crossing of the EU's external borders, immigration policy and the rights of nationals of third countries have become a full Community responsibility with the entry into force of the Treaty of Amsterdam on 1 May 1999. http://www.museoemigrante.sm Republic of San Marino - The Museum of the Emigrant - Permanent Centre of Studies on Emigration Established in 1997. Its main priority is the collection, conservation, analysis and divulgation of the documentary patrimony of the Sammarinese emigration. NGO�s, academic and other sites http://www.jur.kun.nl/cmr Centre for Migration Law - University of Nijmegen (NL) http://www.legislationline.org Legislationline is a free-of-charge online service provided by the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). http://www.generiques.org/sommaire.html The Association G�n�riques was created in 1987 and is both a research and a cultural body. Its object is to develop knowledge in the field of migration. http://www.ciemi.org The CIEMI, the Documentation Center, aims to sensitize to issues of internal and international migrations, through a documentation library (50,000 references, 14,000 books and 300 periodicals), and the publication of news reports (one periodical : Migrations Soci�t�) and books. http://www.mshs.univ-poitiers.fr/migrinter/index.htm MIGRINTER est une �quipe de recherche sp�cialis�e dans l��tude des migrations internationales et des relations inter-ethniques. Cr��e en 1985, l'�quipe MIGRINTER, a d�velopp� un p�le qui conduit de fa�on int�gr�e des activit�s de recherche, de formation, de publication et de documentation sur les migrations internationales et leurs effets dans les pays de destination comme dans ceux d'origine. http://cec-kek.org/CCMEeng/ccmeindx.htm Founded in 1964, the Churches' Commission for Migrants in Europe (CCME) is an organisation of churches and ecumenical councils. It promotes awareness-raising on issues of racism and xenophobia within the churches and in society; it conducts studies of the situation of migrants, refugees and minority ethnic people at local, national and international levels. http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/migrants Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. http://www.international.metropolis.net The International Metropolis Project is an international forum for research and policy on migration, diversity and changing cities. It is set of co-ordinated activities carried out by a membership of research, policy and non-governmental organizations who share a vision of strengthened migration policy by means of applied academic research. http://www.migpolgroup.com The Migration Policy Group (MPG) is an independent organisation committed to policy development on mobility, migration, diversity, equality and anti-discrimination by facilitating the exchange between stakeholders from all sectors of society, with the aim of contributing to innovative and effective responses to the challenges posed by migration and diversity. http://www.infomie.net Ce centre de ressources Internet sur les mineurs isol�s �trangers s�adresse aux professionnels associatifs et institutionnels pour qui la cr�ation d�une communaut� de sp�cialistes issus de diff�rents pays, appara�t capitale. Le site permettra d�acc�der rapidement � des informations actualis�es, de prendre connaissance de formations adapt�es et d��changer sur les points de vue et les pratiques. Il se propose �galement de recueillir des t�moignages et exp�riences de terrain provenant des pays du Sud et de l�Est qui tentent de d�velopper des alternatives locales pour les jeunes. http://www.pmc-europe.info The Platform Migrants and European Citizenship (PMC) is an international association born in December 2003 of a hundred associations from European networks working for the construction of a European society open to everyone and for the promotion of a European Citizenship. It has an important role on the development of associations dealing with immigration issues. The Platform constitutes a mediator to reduce the information gap between European institutions and civil society The objective of the Platform Migrants and European Citizenship is to broaden the national and european basis, to link permamently the members associations in order to improve the relations between.national and european institutions
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Scott County High Point Trip Report three areas on Jackson Hill (600+ ft) Date: January 25, 2004 Author: Ken Oeser From Sikeston at the junction of Interstates 55 and 57, go north 14 miles on I-55 to exit 80. Turn left onto Highway 77 and drive west for 1.5 miles to Benton and turn right onto Highway E. Follow east-northeast for 6.2 miles and turn left onto Highway N, then go uphill 0.7 mile to the junction with PP. Find a place to park. The two highest areas from hand-leveling are the points on the southwest side of the intersection and the area 100 yards southeast of the intersection, both easy, wooded bumps not far from the side of the roads. The area on the northeast side of the intersection, with a trailer on it, levels lower.
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« Salish Kootenai College Visit Northwest Indian College Visit » Coaching and Investing in Our Students’ Futures Most of us who have achieved a measure of success in our lives had someone special who believed in us—a family member, teacher, coach, or other caring individual who provided encouragement at a critical time. I was raised by my grandmother from the time I was five months old. We were very poor, often living on less than $50 per month. At times we went without real food for weeks, subsisting solely on coffee and homemade bread. When I was six years old and my grandmother was in her mid-fifties, the two of us worked as a team, picking potatoes as migrant workers. My grandmother was well educated, especially for an American Indian woman born in 1899. Although money was extremely tight, every time she got a buffalo nickel, she put it in a can. “This is your college money,” she would say. My grandmother died when I was a senior in high school. I was devastated. At 17, I thought my life was over. The person who believed in me and cared about me most was gone. But she had sown a seed—belief in the value of an education. And eventually her dream for me was fulfilled. I worked my way through college cleaning animal cages. I advocated for Indian prison inmates, mentored Indian kids, and worked at the Native American Rights Fund. In 1975, I became the first American Indian to graduate from the University of Nebraska. Today, as President and Chief Executive Officer of the American Indian College Fund, I help our country’s Native people take the most important step to controlling their destiny and improving their lives. I help them get an education. I wanted to share my story to help inspire others. I also want to let all of you know–students, donors, tribal college faculty and staff–that I am proud and grateful to have you as a partner in this important work. This entry was written by admin, posted on May 18, 2010 at 5:13 pm, filed under Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
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Let's Move! Comes to DSG Park Free event takes place Sat. Feb 5 from 10 am-12 pm February 2, 2011 ColoradoRapids.com Let's Move DL Photo Credit: DCUnited.com Commerce City, Colo.- The Colorado Rapids, Dick’s Sporting Goods Park and Commerce City will be hosting a one-year anniversary celebration of the Let’s Move! campaign. This free event will be held on Saturday, February 5 from 10 a.m. – 12 p.m. at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park and is open to the public. Among other activities, fans will have the opportunity to take pictures with the MLS Cup! Come join the Rapids and their mascots for this Let’s Move! one-year anniversary celebration, enjoy healthy snacks and take part in activities to learn more about eating healthy and staying active. Activities for children and adults will be physical and academic. Included in physical activities are hula-hooping and running stairs, and academic activities will focus on learning about making healthy choices. The first 300 children will also receive a free t-shirt. The Let’s Move! campaign was started by First Lady Michelle Obama and works closely with the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services to educate children and their parents about childhood obesity and how to fight it with a heavy emphasis on staying active, and making healthy choices. For more information on Let’s Move! click here. Stay Connected
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CMH Community Center Health Compass Center for Orthopedics and Sports Medicine CMH/OHSU Cancer Care Center CMH/OHSU Cardiology Clinic CMH Pulmonology Clinic Endocrinology Clinic ENT/Cosmetic Surgery Clinic Pediatric Clinic Primary Care Clinic Medical Surgical Orientation: Registration process Orientation: FAQ Health interactives Interactive health information Careers Volunteers Comments & concerns Pediatric Clinic overview Healthy Kids program Clinics: Pediatric Clinic Jennifer File, DO Dr. File grew up as an Army brat, moving every few years to locations all over the country. Because she moved so much and spent a quarter of her childhood in Germany, she developed a love for learning about different cultures and languages. In college, she majored in German and minored in Spanish. Soon after college, she served two years as a Peace Corps volunteer in the small village of Hort, Hungary, as a primary school teacher. During her second year, she volunteered monthly at a Bosnian refugee camp. When she arrived in the U.S., she started her premedical studies while working in various positions with Physicians for Human Rights, most notably as the liaison officer for the Bosnia Project. She then started medical school. When not in the office, you might find her on the beach with her dog, snowboarding, going for a run or doing a little yoga. Read more about Dr. File. Ramchander Madhavarapu, MD Dr. Ram, as he is known, is board-certified in pediatrics. He received his medical degree in India and worked 10 years in various medical fields. He practiced in general pediatrics and specialized in neonatology in Ireland and England. He did his residency at St. Joseph's Hospital in New Jersey. After practicing for some years on the East Coast, he moved to Astoria, where he was an independent practitioner before joining Columbia Memorial Hospital. He is married and has a son and a daughter. Read more about Dr. Ram. Katrina McPherson, MD Dr. McPherson is a native Oregonian and was raised on a farm near Klamath Falls. Besides helping on the farm as a youngster, she was a competitive gymnast for 10 years. She also learned to work on cars and restored a 1958 MG and a 1975 Camaro. She lived in Germany for a year with the study abroad program at Oregon State University, then lived in Ecuador and worked at a rainforest reserve for two summers. While attending medical school at Johns Hopkins University, she was able to spend two months at a hospital in Cameroon and returned there four years later at the end of her training in pediatrics. She lived in Miami, Fla., for eight years, where she worked in a pediatric emergency room and learned to speak fluent Spanish. She moved to Astoria in 2009. She and her husband have two children. Read more about Dr. McPherson. Back to top. Learn more A guide to choosing the right car seat Does your child have ADHD? © Columbia Memorial Hospital | 2111 Exchange St. | Astoria, OR 97103 | 503-325-4321
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Published on Columbia Daily Spectator (http://www.columbiaspectator.com) Home > Singer on Broadway: The popularity Trapp and NBC’s ‘Sound of Music’ Singer on Broadway: The popularity Trapp and NBC’s ‘Sound of Music’ By Jenny Singer I was out of the country when “The Sound of Music Live!” aired on NBC, but I wasn’t out of reach of the explosion of Internet rage that surfaced on every media outlet from the New York Times to tweets by DiGiorno Pizza in response to it. The national simulcast was a massive ratings hit for the network, with nearly 20 million viewers. Critics’ responses ranged from “meh” to tepid approval. But blogs, Twitter, Facebook, and other online media exploded with righteous fury at what they saw as a bastardization of everyone’s favorite anti-Nazi childhood classic. It has never been my dream to launch a defense of Carrie Underwood—that human representation of statistics about what “real Americans” like, with her forgettable, twangy music and constant invocation of a higher power—but here goes. It was all but universally acknowledged that Carrie Underwood was not suited to the role of Maria. From the moment that she and her globular hairdo were introduced in promotional material to the event of her expressionless performance, it was clear that America’s one-time idol would not bear comparison with Julie Andrews. I do not deny that Underwood’s drama skills are impoverished, and I agree with the accusations that her singing, so listenable in her own work, was stylistically unsuited to Rodgers and Hammerstein’s (CC ’23 and CC ’16!) music. Carrie Underwood was the right choice for Austria’s most hapless nanny because of her popular appeal. Musical theater was once America’s favorite artistic pastime. Broadway stars performed on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” families purchased records of “The Music Man,” and theater was enjoyed not just by “theater kids,” but by anyone who watched movies. Now most Broadway shows that succeed are major blockbuster productions, forcing producers to invest in shows that take fewer risks artistically. The Broadway musical has suffered for over a decade because of its reputation as a tired, expensive, marginal art form. If it takes Carrie Underwood’s inappropriate belting to renew national interest in musical theater, so be it. The millions of families who gathered to watch the broadcast experienced musical theater almost as they would have in a Broadway theater. The production was lavish, it was a classic musical filled with first-rate talent, and most importantly, it was live. With our proximity to Broadway theaters and opportunities for discounted tickets, Columbia and Barnard students may easily forget that access to live theater, especially of Broadway quality, is a privilege few possess. Most Americans don’t have $250 to spend on tickets for each of their family members at theaters that are only a subway ride away. NBC gave the public an opportunity to access professional-quality theater, and in making that theater live, it let children who have never seen the curtain rise over a professional stage feel the anticipation, fear, and joy of watching a real musical. Those who derided the performances of Underwood and her co-star Stephen Moyer forget that “The Sound of Music Live!” provided jobs to dozens of musical theater professionals, and not only the inimitable Audra McDonald. Most of the actors hired for smaller parts and to fill the ensemble were not Hollywood stars, but the same singers and dancers who make their living as theater performers. I am a great lover of snark, but I was ashamed at the response of fellow musical theater lovers, and even that of the cast of the original movie and surviving members of the von Trapp family. The criticism I heard was not just about the production itself, but the gall of NBC to attempt it. Yes, how dare Americans be provided with free culture? How dare a major network attempt to engage with a family classic? Theater is not the property of wealthy, East Coast intellectuals. “The Sound of Music Live!” allowed the tradition of the “Great American Musical” to be shared with millions of people who would not normally have access to it. The more national networks and mainstream media outlets choose to produce and share musical theater, the more artists are employed, and the more life can be explored and celebrated through song and dance onstage. If you didn’t like “The Sound of Music Live!” get even by supporting live theater and engaging with art in a way that is meaningful to you. Just make sure it involves yodeling and puppets. Jenny Singer is a Barnard College junior majoring in English. Singer on Broadway runs alternate Fridays.
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Your browser does not support iframes. Read a digital copy of the latest edition of the Columbine Courier online. Tancredo pushes bill to mandate flex-fuel vehicles -A A +A By AJ Vicens Monday, June 16, 2008 at 6:00 pm If Tom Tancredo gets his way, all cars produced in America after 2018 will have to be capable of running on more than just gasoline. Tancredo — the five-term Littleton Republican representative in the twilight of his congressional career — introduced federal legislation June 10 that would mandate that every car in America produced after the 2018 model year either run on alternative fuels or be a flex-fuel vehicle capable of running on gasoline and other fuels.
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Home > John Stanley John Stanley [1]JohnStanley John Stanley is best known for his long stint (1945–1959) as the writer of the Little Lulu comic book series, a cult classic. He also wrote and drew a number of humor comics, including Melvin Monster, O. G. Whiz, Thirteen Going on Eighteen, and memorable issues of Nancy and Sluggo. Inducted 2004 Source URL: http://www.comic-con.org/awards/hall-of-fame/john-stanley?page=7
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Archaia Brings "Hawken" Demo, More To NYCC 2012 Wed, October 10th, 2012 at 11:32pm PDT New York City won’t be the same after this weekend at New York Comic Con as Archaia Entertainment and Meteor Entertainment announced their plans to promote the upcoming HAWKEN video game and prequel graphic novel hardcover at the gigantic comics and pop culture show, to be held Oct. 11-14 at the Javits Center on Manhattan’s West Side. At the Archaia booth (#1520), Meteor Entertainment and Adhesive Games will set up a playable, multiplayer demo of HAWKEN, a first-person mech shooter that is catching a lot of buzz as one of the most anticipated, free-to-play titles coming to PC. Attendees will get to pilot their mech to collect energy, protect their base, and take out their enemies in this fast-paced game. Fans can also meet Adhesive Co-founder and Creative Director Khang Le as he signs free, limited-edition HAWKEN autograph cards, the fourth in a series of four. (Check at the Archaia booth for a signing schedule.) Be sure to stop by and pilot a mech this weekend and get your free, exclusive giveaway! Le will also be demoing in the Wacom/Epson booth #1765 on Thursday and Friday from 5-6pm. Come watch and learn as he creates live HAWKEN art on Wacom’s Cintiq 24HD Touch pen display. This art will then be printed on Epson R2000 printer. In addition, famed rock poster artist Justin Hampton will have an exclusive silk-screen HAWKEN poster for sale in Artists Alley at booth DD6 for $40 each. Hampton’s poster is the first piece of art available to the public as part of the transmedia approach for HAWKEN. The poster is a perfect representation of Hampton’s rock and roll roots in the Pacific Northwest. His works have been featured in Rolling Stone, Sports Illustrated, Maxim and many others. Two, separate panels at New York Comic Con will further the HAWKEN experience. “Meteor Entertainment Presents HAWKEN” panel will take place on Friday, Oct. 12 from 6:45-7:45pm in room 1A07. Attendees will receive closed beta access for HAWKEN and get to take a walk through the game and hear about the various transmedia components for the game from Khang Le and other panel participants. And at the “Archaia Presents: Transmedia in Graphic Novel Publishing” panel—taking place Saturday, October 13 from 6:30-7:30pm in Room 1A06—attendees will hear from Khang Le and Archaia Publisher Mike Kennedy the latest developments on the HAWKEN: GENESIS graphic novel, an original story Archaia will publish in March 2013 that will delve into the world of the game and enhance the user’s experience. Never-before-seen pages from the book will be presented for the first time for fans, so this is your opportunity to get a glimpse of the work in progress! “It has been amazing to work with Meteor and Adhesive this past convention season to get the word out about theHAWKEN game and graphic novel, so it is only fitting that we go out with a bang in the best city in the world, New York!” exclaimed Mel Caylo, Archaia Marketing Manager. “Play the game, get free swag, learn some cool info—what more could you want?” “Archaia’s expertise has been a tremendous help at this past year’s conventions in prepping for the release ofHAWKEN,” added Shannon Gerritzen, Meteor Entertainment PR Manager. “This is the last major consumer facing event for the season and we want to be sure the fans get as much HAWKEN as possible before the December launch.” For more information about New York Comic Con, visit newyorkcomiccon.com. About Archaia Entertainment, LLCArchaia is a multi-award-winning graphic novel publisher with more than 75 renowned publishing brands, including such domestic and international hits as Mouse Guard, Return of the Dapper Men, Bolivar, Rust, Gunnerkrigg Court, Old City Blues, Awakening, The Killer, Tumor, Syndrome, Artesia, and an entire line of The Jim Henson Company graphic novels. Archaia has built an unparalleled reputation for producing meaningful content that perpetually transforms minds, building one of the industry’s most visually stunning and eclectic slates of graphic novels. Archaia was named Graphic Novel Publisher of the Year by Ain’t it Cool News, Comic Related, and Graphic Policy, which honored the publisher two years in a row. Archaia was honored with nine 2011 Eisner Awards nominations and two Awards for Best Graphic Album and Best Anthology. So far in 2012, Archaia has been further honored with six Harvey Award nominations, two Harvey Awards, six Eisner nominations and three Eisner Awards, and both Gold and Silver awards from ForeWord Reviews. In addition to publications, Archaia has successfully emerged as a prolific storyteller in all facets of the entertainment industry, extending their popular brands into film, television, gaming, and branded digital media. For more information, visit the Archaia website at www.archaia.com. About Adhesive GamesAdhesive Games is an independent game studio located in Los Angeles, CA founded by Creative Director Khang Le, formerly of Project Offset. HAWKEN, the studio’s premiere title, is a free-to-play mech shooter scheduled for open beta 12.12.12 (December 12, 2012). For more information about Adhesive visit www.adhesivegames.com. About Meteor EntertainmentBased in Seattle, WA, Meteor Entertainment is a newly formed videogame publisher focused on successfully publishing F2P games globally, with an emphasis on compelling content and setting the standard for customer service and community engagement. Meteor’s 12/12/12 launch of HAWKEN, created by Adhesive Games, will be its first tent pole title. To learn more about Meteor Entertainment visit www.meteor-ent.com and be sure to check out www.playhawken.com. TAGS: archaia, hawken, meteor entertainment, nycc2012, adhesive games
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The Seller's Corner 18 pages: First ... Rank: WatcherGroups: Member, Super Seller Shop at My StoreJoined: 3/15/2007Posts: 837Points: 129,109Location: Atlanta, GA Shipping is free within the U.S. for orders of $20 or more. Come and see what I've got for sale!Come visit my blog: http://jgv6442.blogspot.com/Or expose yourself to my tremendously bad poetry: http://jgvhaiku.blogspot.com/ Posted: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 9:55:03 AM Posted: Saturday, March 16, 2013 11:41:09 AM Posted: Friday, March 22, 2013 8:46:48 PM Posted: Monday, March 25, 2013 6:38:02 PM Posted: Tuesday, April 02, 2013 10:35:46 AM Posted: Friday, April 05, 2013 10:15:17 AM Posted: Sunday, April 07, 2013 9:13:21 PM Posted: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 8:17:19 PM Posted: Monday, April 15, 2013 10:44:17 AM Posted: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 10:41:07 AM Posted: Saturday, April 20, 2013 10:32:33 AM Posted: Friday, April 26, 2013 12:50:10 PM
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1048
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(October-November 1959)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1049
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Fightin' Air Force (October 1958)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1050
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'); } else {GA_googleFillSlotWithSize("ca-pub-1304704158939332", "comingsoon_ros_230x90", 230, 90);} Movie News Comic-Con: The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Will Set Up the Next Two Movies Source: Sandra Orion One of today's big panels at the San Diego Comic-Con was Sony's Hall H presentation, which included the first footage from The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and you can read what was shown and said here, but beforehand, ComingSoon.net/SuperHeroHype had a chance to talk with producer Avi Arad who teased us a little on what to expect from future movies, an interview we will share soon. He did tell us that when we see the new movie in May, 2014, a lot of our questions would be answered and at a press conference just before the panel, director Marc Webb was also asked about setting up the third and fourth movies in the upcoming sequel once they were announced. Q: When the sequels were announced, was it harder to keep the movie contained rather than just waiting for the next sequel? Marc Webb: The universe we had conceived of began before we started shooting the first movie. There were seeds that had developed around us, but the primary focus was executing this movie as best as we all could. Contained is an interesting word. There is a hugeness of scale to this movie. The ensemble is pretty extraordinary. There is a simple unifying theme that is at the heart of the film that will be very impactful. It was fun to tease out little bits of pieces of other characters and if you pay attention in this next movie, you'll see other things that might be in store for us in the future. Q: Marc, you touched on this earlier, but could you elaborate on what you are laying down the foundation for in this movie that we will see in subsequent movies? Webb: You'll have to wait and see. We really want to be protective of the plot of the movie. We want to protect the enjoyment that people should have when they walk into a theater and experience the movie for the first time. That's a really fun thing to do. So rather than being coy and dodgy that's really what our intention is. There is a lot of thought and a lot of consideration, a lot of detail work and a lot of meetings behind closed doors about how the universe unfolds, but we are going to be very protective of how we reveal that information. With that in mind, you may have to wait for the May 2, 2014 release of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 to get some more answers, but look for our interview with Arad very soon.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1051
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'); } else {GA_googleFillSlotWithSize("ca-pub-1304704158939332", "comingsoon_ros_230x90", 230, 90);} The Weekend Warrior The Weekend Warrior: August 5 - 7 Greetings and welcome back to the Weekend Warrior, your weekly guide to the weekend's new movies. Tune in every Tuesday for the latest look at the upcoming weekend, and then check back on Thursday night for final projections based on actual theatre counts. If you aren't doing so already, you can follow The Weekend Warrior on Twitter where he talks about box office, movies, music, comic books and all sorts of random things. Updated Predictions and Comparisons - UPDATE: Not much to say except that we're holding the line on our prediction for "Apes" even though it's probably the highest prediction out there this week. The overwhelmingly positive reviews should help convince anyone who was doubtful that it's worth seeing, which should help make it a first choice on Friday. We've been going back and forth on whether The Change-Up might succeed but it's essentially going to be fighting for third against Cowboys and Aliens rather than giving The Smurfs much of a run for the kid/family audience that really has few other choices in theaters. 1. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (20th Century Fox) - $47.6 million N/A (down .2 million) 2. The Smurfs (Sony) - $22.0 million -38% (up .3 million) 3. Cowboys & Aliens (DreamWorks/Universal) - $17.6 million -52% (up .1 million and 1 spot) 4. The Change-Up (Universal) - $17.4 million N/A (down .8 million and 1 spot) 5. Captain America: the First Avengers (Marvel/Paramount) - $13.0 million -49% (up .3 million) 6. Crazy, Stupid, Love. (Warner Bros.) - $12.0 million -38% (same) 7. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 (Warner Bros.) - $10.5 million -52% (down .3 million) 8. Friends With Benefits (Screen Gems/Sony) - $4.8 million -48% (same) 9. Horrible Bosses (New Line/WB) - $4.2 million -40% (down .3 million) 10. Transformers: Dark of the Moon (Paramount) - $3.0 million -52% (down .4 million) Weekend Overview The last month of summer kicks off with two fairly high concept movies, one linked to a famous movie franchise of the '70s, the other a comedy teaming two burgeoning stars who have both done their fair share of hit comedies. With solid brand name value from the popular franchise of the '70s and a very different CG-driven take on the concept, Rise of the Planet of the Apes (20th Century Fox), starring James Franco and Freida Pinto, hopes to offer a new take on the prequel to the '70s classic Planet of the Apes. With Andy Serkis and others doing performance capture to play the apes combined with groundbreaking computer-generated apes by Weta FX ("The Lord of the Rings"), it's a film that's created just as much interest as it has concern among fans of the earlier movies. The generally slower box office and pushback against sequels and remakes might keep the movie from the type of opening it might have done, say, three or four years ago, but it should still be able to bring a significant number of guys from 15 to 40 and older due to the connections to the sci-fi classics and due to a strong marketing campaign that focuses on the "apes attack" action. It's basically going to win the weekend with an opening between $45 and 50 million, though it will have to get good word-of-mouth to stay afloat the weekly releases of movies looking for the same genre audience. Also opening this weekend and trying to get business away from the high-profile action-thriller is something like the sixth or seventh R-rated comedy this summer, The Change-Up (Universal) with Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman switching bodies for comedic results. This sort of high-concept comedy is usually relegated to PG family films so it's definitely something different trying to do it in an R-rated context. One would assume the movie would appeal mostly to 20-to-30 something guys, who will be just as interested in the Apes, but will women come to see the funny actors? Or is everyone tired of R-rated comedy after so many big hits this summer? We think this one might struggle its opening weekend but potentially bring in some word-of-mouth business because it does deliver some strong laughs. This week's "Chosen One" is Alex Gibney and Alison Ellwood's documentary Magic Trip (Magnolia) about Ken Kesey and his 1964 road trip with the "Merry Band of Pranksters," which you can read more about below. Last August kicked off with the Will Ferrell-Mark Wahlberg action-comedy The Other Guys (Sony), which kicked Christopher Nolan's Inception out of its roost in the top spot to take #1 with $35.5 million. Opening in third place (behind Inception with $18.5 million) was the 3D threequel Step Up 3D (Disney) with $15. 8 million in 2,435 theaters. The Top 10 grossed $118 million, a number which shouldn't be too hard to beat with Rise of the Planet of the Apes doing better than The Other Guys. Rise of the Planet of the Apes (20th Century Fox) Starring James Franco, Freida Pinto, John Lithgow, Brian Cox, Tom Felton, David Oyelowo, Andy Serkis Directed by Rupert Wyatt (The Escapist); Written by Amanda Silver, Rick Jaffa Genre: Action, Thriller Tagline: "Evolution Ends, Revolution Begins" Plot Summary: Scientist Will Roadman (James Franco) has been working on a cure for Alzheimers in hopes of saving his father (John Lithgow) and he's been doing experiments for a smart drug on a chimp named Caesar (played by Andy Serkis... honestly!). When his boss shuts down the experiment, Caesar is sent to a primate reserve where his intelligence is used to form a revolution among the apes to escape and fight back against the human oppressors. Damn, dirty CG apes. Mini-Review No one likes to see their favorite movies poked and prodded in order to remake them for modern audiences, maybe because it's been done so much and so poorly in recent years it's hard to imagine anyone, let alone a relatively unknown director such as Rupert Wyatt, can succeed where more experienced directors have failed. That's one of the reasons why this prequel to the 1968 sci-fi thriller "Planet of the Apes" is such a pleasant late summer surprise, because whatever expectations you're likely to have going in, there's a good chance this movie will surpass them. As the movie opens, James Franco's Will Rodman is developing a smart drug to try to cure Alzheimer's, which his father (John Lithgow) suffers from, and after the first experiment on a female ape goes wrong, he discovers the ape's progeny has also picked up some of her traits. He takes the young chimp renamed "Caesar" home and over the years, Caesar picks up more and more as Will starts trying out his drug on his father. As we've seen with James March's recent doc "Project Nim," there's only so long you can keep a chimpanzee as a pet before they start acting like the wild animal they are. An incident between Caesar gets him sent to a primate reserve where he's subjected to abuse while trying to interact with his own kind for the first time. It's a similar classic slow-build origin story that's become so popular in recent years, but every story element, character or plot twist is introduced in a way that adds up to create true motivation for what happens later in the movie. In this case, it's not the apes who are the antagonists, as much as it is the combination of corporate greed and animal cruelty that ultimately forces them to rise up against their "masters." Serkis is so good performing as Caesar that he easily shows up the human characters, maybe since he's much more emotive than the actors playing them, whether he's portraying the younger and more playful Caesar or showing his transition to the angry militant leader. Franco is a little stiff but never as bad as we've seen him before even though he's mostly acting opposite a guy in a sensor suit. Although the focus always remains on Caesar and his perspective, there are a number of great supporting characters both who help him and stir up his desire to revolt with the likes of Brian Cox and up 'n' coming Tyler Labine making the most out of their roles. Tom Felton and David Oyelowo end up taking the main antagonist roles, and Freida Pinto is easily the weakest link - the Katie Holmes in "Batman Begins" if you choose to use that analogy. Even in some of the less inspired moments, it still ends up being a film filled with real human emotion and dramatic weight, far more than we normally see in a "summer movie." Patrick Doyle's terrific score does a fine job embellishing it, yet you can tell that Wyatt has done well enough that the scenes would work without it. The true brilliance of the film comes from the contributions by Wyatt's collaboration with Weta Digital, and once you realize that Caesar and every single ape in the movie is constructed entirely from CG and performed by an actor, it's an even more amazing achievement. Every single frame of the film looks fantastic as Wyatt takes full advantage of the city of Vancouver from the forests to the bridge to the architecture. There are a few noticeably wonky bits of CG but considering how much of the movie is CG, the one or two clunky bits are rare compared to the visual moments that really leaves your jaw agape. Once the apes escape from the primate shelter, the last act of them laying siege to the city delivers a terrific payoff, and fans of the series should appreciate some of the subtle references to the original movie including a possible hint of where things might go next. Fox doesn't exactly have a great track record for rebooting franchises, so for "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" to come out the same summer as "X-Men: First Class" really shows the studio is ready to change fanboys' perceptions of them as a studio who only f*ck up beloved franchises. Bottom line is that "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" is up there with some of the best franchise reboots from "Star Trek" to "Batman Begins" and "Casino Royale," and anyone seeing it, whether they're a fan of the previous movies or not, will leave it hoping it does well enough to warrant more. Rating: 8.5/10 The attempt to reboot, remake and "prequelize" every possible franchise continues with this innovative take on the '70s franchise that had actors walking around in monkey costumes behaving as if they were doing Shakespeare. The first movie starring Charlton Heston was released in 1968 and it's long been considered a classic in science-fiction and action, leading to four more movies in the '70s, which showed diminishing returns in quality and box office. It led to both live action and animated television series following the release of the fifth movie Battle for Planet of the Apes. And then the franchise lay dormant for quite some time until in 2001, Tim Burton tackled a remake of Planet of the Apes with Mark Wahlberg. Burton had already established himself with two "Batman" movies that were incredibly successful and a few more esoteric movies after that but taking on such a beloved classic was a huge deal and it was one of the big event movies of that summer with a fantastic opening (for that year) of $68 million. Even though it ended up grossing roughly $360 million worldwide, the movie was not exactly loved with many fans being disappointed with some of the choices, and then it once again lay dormant. Now, 20th Century Fox are ready to try to revive the franchise with a prequel that takes a different approach to the way the apes were brought to life in past movies and the show using make-up and costumes. They're also tackling the reboot in a way that's worked quite well in recent years by creating a new origin story that's meant to act as a prequel to the 1968 movie. So far, that's worked well for James Bond in Casino Royale, Batman with Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins, and J.J. Abrams' Star Trek. Just a few short months back, Fox tried doing it with Matthew Vaughn's X-Men: First Class, which didn't do nearly as well as some of those others even if it was generally liked by critics and fans alike. Helming this reboot prequel is Rupert Wyatt, the British director who made his feature film debut a couple years back with the low-key Sundance film The Escapist, which was also about a prison break of sorts. The movie certainly has an eclectic cast starting with modern Renaissance man James Franco, whose career began in the '90s with a role on Judd Apatow and Paul Feig's cult show "Freaks and Geeks," which led to his casting in Drew Barrymore's Never Been Kissed. Some might see Franco's big break being cast as Harry Osborn in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man a few years later, and that's led to being cast in the lead for other movies such as Tristan and Isolde and Annapolis, neither which did very well when released within weeks of each other in January 2006. Since then, Franco's career has been up and down, appearing in low-profile indies or making cameos in movies like The Wicker Man, while doing the Spider-Man movies. His real turn came a couple years back when he decided to go back to school, which led to a desire to not just be "an actor." He directed the documentary Saturday Night and took on a recurring role on the soap opera "General Hospital," the latter not something you'd normally see from an actor once they make movies. Last year, he starred in Danny Boyle's 127 Hours, which garnered him an Oscar nomination but only grossed $18 million domestically. His return to comedy in David Gordon Green's Your Highness alongside fellow Oscar nominee Natalie Portman didn't fare well, topping out at $21 million. The thing is that these last two things prove that Franco, regardless of his prominence in the public spotlight, hasn't been able to translate all of his publicity into box office, and that may be why the ads and trailers are focusing more on the CG apes and not so much on the actors. Franco is joined by actress Freida Pinto, who first made waves in Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire, but hasn't been doing very much since then. Since then she's appeared in films directed by Woody Allen and Julian Schnabel, but this will be her first high-profile wide release since then and it will be followed by Tarsem Singh's Immortals later in the year, so it will be a good barometer to see if she's able to transcend her early breakout film. A lot of attention is being focused on Andy Serkis, who is once again donning the motion-capture suit to create Caesar, the chimpanzee leader of the apes. This is something Serkis has done quite successfully already, first as Gollum in Peter Jackson's "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy, giving a performance that many thought was worth Oscar accolades, and he followed that by performing the title role in Jackson's remake of King Kong. The cast is rounded out by Tom Felton, Draco Malfoy from the "Harry Potter" movies, Brian Cox and others. Despite the eclectic casting, the name brand value of "Planet of the Apes" is a better commodity than the star power, which may be why the title has made a number of transitions from "Caesar: Rise of the Apes" to its current title, which references the original movie. 20th Century Fox have done a fine job marketing the movie for the most part slowly showing more and more of the story and doing different television commercials to different demographics. During sports shows, they focus on the bestiality of the apes and their rampage, while during morning talk shows (mostly catering to women), they focus on Caesar as an adorable chimp and his relationship with James Franco. Tricky, huh? Still, it's more likely that men will be interested as they'll be more familiar with the franchise. Unfortunately, 20th Century Fox have already proven they can botch up what should be a sure thing with last year's Predators and The A-Team, both movies that should have been able to capitalize on the nostalgia of 25 and older males who tend to have the cash to go to movies. While they haven't necessarily turned this into a must-see event movie, they've done a good job generating awareness and get people interested in checking it out, and it's likely to do better than either of those 2010 disappointments. Rise of the Planet of the Apes should have a solid opening day as the guys who think the photo-realistic CG take on the apes looks cool will go out to see it either at midnight or on Friday and casual moviegoers should immediately know what to expect from seeing the title on the marquee. Why I Should See It: The CG-generated apes look absolutely brilliant and this really could be a great introduction to a fan-favorite franchise from the '70s. Why Not: We've seen way too many bad James Franco movies to believe that he's going to be nearly as interesting as the Andy Serkis-performed Caesar. Projections: $45 to 48 million opening weekend and roughly $130 million total. The Change-Up (Universal) Starring Ryan Reynolds, Jason Bateman, Leslie Mann, Olivia Wilde, Alan Arkin Directed by David Dobkin (Wedding Crashers, Fred Clause, Shanghai Nights); Written by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (The Hangover, Flypaper, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past) Tagline: "Who says men can't change?" Plot Summary: Childhood friends Mitch and Dave (Ryan Reynolds, Jason Bateman) have gone in different directions with their lives, Dave getting a good job as a lawyer, getting married and having three kids, while Mitch is an actor who spends his free time smoking pot and slacking off. One night, they're out drinking and suggest they might want each other's lives while peeing in a fountain and the next morning they find themselves in each other's bodies. Review Analysis: Yes, it's another R-rated comedy but it's not the last one of the summer, yet the genre continues to thrive with a number of movies coming very close to crossing the $100 million mark, something that once was a rarity but now is the norm. This one does have a lot going for it, the main one being the fact that it brings together David Dobkin, the director of Wedding Crashers, the R-rated comedy that grossed $200 million in the summer of 2005, and Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, who wrote the original screenplay for The Hangover, which grossed over $250 million a few years back. It also is the first time, at least that we know, that the body-switching comedy premise seen in movies like Freaky Friday, Vice Versa and others has been used in an R-rated context, one that looks at the differences between married and single guys and how the latter might transition into the former when given the responsibility of caring for children. In that sense, it combines a number of '80s premises because in some ways, the idea of a single guy being put into a body of a father having to care for kids is a bit like Michael Keaton in "Mr. Mom." More important than the concept is that The Change-Up brings together two comic actors who have been paying their dues for years and have certainly slipped if not into the realm of the A-lister, they're at least right on the outskirts, Jason Bateman and Ryan Reynolds. Bateman is an interesting case because like James Franco, star of this week's other big movie, he started at a very young age on television, except that Bateman spent at least the '90s in relative obscurity before having a huge comeback with movies like Dodgeball and the Ron Howard-produced television series "Arrested Development." Filmmakers like Pete Berg and Jason Reitman have kept Bateman going to the point where he was officially moved into leading man roles in Mike Judge's Extract and The Switch opposite Jennifer Aniston, though neither did particularly well. Even so, Bateman has played a part in a large number of successful movies including Will Smith's Hancock and the ensemble comedy Couples Retreat and he's coming off the enormous comedy hit Horrible Bosses, which is about the pass the $100 million mark, so he's fresh in moviegoers' minds. Reynolds meanwhile is coming off the rather disappointing showing for his fourth appearance as a superhero in Green Lantern, which has barely made $150 million worldwide, but the good thing is that The Change-Up returns him to comedy which he's generally been most successful with, particularly when paired with Sandra Bullock in 2009's The Proposal. That was Reynolds' second-biggest movie following his introduction as Deadpool in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which has been rumored to have a spin-off prequel starring Reynolds. Who knows if that might happen with Green Lantern failing? Maybe Warner Bros. won't bother with GL sequels which will make it more likely. Either way, Reynolds certainly is known and the fact he's back doing comedy, something he does so well, will certainly be a draw for the movie, as well as his pairing with Bateman. The movie also stars Leslie Mann aka Mrs. Judd Apatow, who really broke into the big time with her hilarious performances in her husband's The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up, as well as other roles since them. They're also joined by the sexy-hot Olivia Wilde, who just appeared in Jon Favreau's Cowboys & Aliens this past weekend, as well as co-starring in Disney's TRON: Legacy last year, and Oscar winner Alan Arkin, who will bring some gravitas to the whole thing. As much or more than some of the other R-rated comedies this summer, The Change-Up will be playing up the combination of star power with premise, and certainly the idea of a responsible married man and his slacker single best friend will be something that all guys either married or single will be able to relate to. In fact, it's something so much more relevant for guys that one wonders why Universal would release it this weekend. Taking on Rise of the Planet of the Apes may hurt the comedy, because it's likely to lose most guys to that, but there's a chance that women may still go to what looks like a guys' comedy just for the sake of seeing Ryan Reynolds doing comedy again. Universal has had decent success with R-rated comedies, beginning with the aforementioned Apatow-directed films and also having success with some of the movies he's produced, most notably this summer's Bridesmaids, which is one of the most profitable films of the summer. Apatow has nothing to do with this movie though, so they're instead hoping that the connections to The Hangover and Wedding Crashers, two of the highest grossing R-rated comedies of all time, will do the trick. Even though this is by no means the worst R-rated comedy of the summer, it's also not the strongest in terms of what it has to offer. There's also some danger of there being burn-out, especially among the older moviegoers who are probably getting ready for their summer vacations before school begins again. The first two weeks in August have always been fine for releasing movies with Will Ferrell having great success on this weekend, but we do think it's taking on a much stronger movie in "Apes" and might have trouble bringing in more than $20 million. If people like it (and they probably will), it should have decent legs but we think it will gross closer to the normal $40 to 60 million range these sorts of comedies tend to do rather than breaking out. Why I Should See It: Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman have proven themselves to be very funny on their own; just imagine them playing each other! Why Not: In order to earn its R rating, it sometimes goes into gross-out territory not unlike the Farrelly Brothers and it's kind of a turn-off. Projections: $17 to 19 million opening weekend and roughly $50 million total. THE CHOSEN ONE: Magic Trip (Magnolia) Starring Ken Kesey, Ken Babbs, Neal Cassady, Paula Sundsten, Jane Burton, Kathy Casamo, George Walker, Steve Lambrchet Directed by Alex Gibney (Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, Casino Jack and the United States of Money, Taxi to the Dark Side, Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson and more) and Alison Ellwood (editor of some of those); Written by Alex Gibney, Alison Ellwood Tagline: "Ken Kesey's Search for a Kool Place" Plot Summary: Using virtually unseen 16mm film footage, audio tapes and archival photos, Oscar-winning documentarian Alex Gibney and his regular collaborator Alison Ellwood recreate the legendary 1964 cross-country bus trip led by "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" author Ken Kessey along with his "Merry Band of Pranksters," a drug-fueled journey that was made famous by Tom Wolfe in his legendary novel "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test." Interview with Alex Gibney & Alison Ellwood I'm going to have to preface this week's "Chosen One" by saying that as much as I love the documentary work by Alex Gibney, which has been featured fairly prominently in this column, "Magic Trip" isn't my favorite film of his. It may be because the '60s and hippie culture is not a subject matter that particularly interests me, but anyone who has read about Ken Kesey's trip in Tom Wolfe's "Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" will be impressed by how Gibney and his regular editor Alison Ellwood, now co-directing, have recreated this historic road trip and its aftermath. In a psychedelically-painted bus dubbed "Further," Kesey and a bunch of significantly younger artists and wannabes, travel across country, influenced by Jack Kerouac's "On the Road." One of their numbers, Neal Cassady, is even said to be one of the influences for that novel. The opening introduction to Ken Kesey, narrated by Stanley Tucci, is about as traditional as the doc gets, as the rest of the film uses film footage of differing qualities and imaginative animation by title designer Karin Fong's Imaginary Forces, to show a fairly linear look at every aspect of the trip, narrated by the living Pranksters as well as existing interviews with the late author himself. Combine the amazing rarely-seen footage and the testimonials with great musical decisions of era-relevant tunes and you end up with a movie that really puts you into the experience, a great introduction to the '60s, covering many of the personalities of the pre-"Summer of Love" era. On returning from the road trip, the Pranksters start throwing a series of parties in Northern California that helped start the hippie culture that led to the likes of Woodstock etc., all fueled by the use of marijuana, LSD and other hallucinogenic drugs, making them somewhat legendary for the times. I have to be honest that as much as I thought I knew about the era, I learned a lot of things from the doc, such as the fact that the proclaimed "Acid Test" actually had a graduation ceremony as Kesey tried to break away from his LSD connections. As much as the film is interesting for that historic sense, the problem is that most of the Pranksters are high off their asses on this trip and watching their antics without any sort of substance to put yourself in a similar head makes it harder to really appreciate their experience. It also doesn't quite have the social or political relevance of something like "Chicago 10," instead being a movie that will appeal to '60s enthusiasts (and possibly Deadheads for the connection Kesey has to the Grateful Dead in their early days) but not seem as much of interest to others. While Magic Trip may not immediately feel like Gibney's most inspired doc compared to his more politically-tinted work, it's certainly a unique look at interesting times and people. As much as the '60s may seem like a long, long time ago, it's easy to see how watching the Prankster's adventure in Magic Trip might create the inspiration for young people to get in their own car or multi-colored bus and discover our country for themselves. Magic Trip opens on Friday, August 5, in New York at the Cinema Village, in San Francisco at the Embarcadero Center Cinemaand in Berkeley and Santa Cruz. It expands to Portland, Santa Barbara and Los Angeles on August 12. Also in Limited Release: Rachel Weisz stars in Larysa Kondracki's drama The Whistleblower (Samuel Goldwyn Films), playing real-life smalltown police officer Kathryn Bolkovac, who took a job as a peacekeeper in Bosnia only to discover a ring of corruption and lies involving sex trafficking and UN officials who knew about it and covered it up. Also starring Vanessa Redgrave, David Strathairn and Monica Bellucci, the real world thriller opens in select cities on Friday. Mini-Review Evan Glodell wrote, directed and stars in the Sundance and South by SouthWest favorite Bellflower (Oscilloscope) as Woodrow, a guy who spends all his time with his friend Aiden (Tyler Dawson) building flamethrowers and crazy futuristic cars, but when he meets Milly (Jessie Wiseman), he falls for her, and everything starts falling apart. It opens in New York and Los Angeles on Friday. Mini-Review: There's a good chance you'll walk out of Evan Glodell's debut either thinking you've experienced absolute genius or that you've wasted an hour and 45 minutes watching absolute horsesh*t; which side of that divide you fall upon will probably depend on your perspective and whether you're able to figure out what the filmmaker was trying to do with this mish-mash of ideas. It begins like so many other post-mumblecore movies we've seen in recent months with a bunch of annoying young people who drink too much, say "dude" too much and jump into bed with whomever is handy. In the case of best friends Woodrow (played by Glodell) and Aiden (Tyler Dawson), they're too busy spending their time building a flamethrower and dreaming of a future where they'll own a Mad Max style monster car to worry about girls, until one night, they meet friends Milly and Courtney (Jessie Wiseman, Rebekah Brande) in a bar and Woodrow and Milly hit it off. Their first date immediately turns into a road trip across the country, leaving all their friends wondering what happened to them. The movie then jumps forward an unknown amount of time when Woodrow and Millie have been together for a while and he comes home to find her having wild sex with her old roommate Mike, at which point he flips out and drives off on his motorcycle, getting into a debilitating accident. The movie then gets darker and darker, crazier and crazier, and we wish you the best of luck trying to figure out what exactly is going on. Woodrow starts sleeping with Courtney, who his pal Aiden had been dating, and he then gets into a bit of back and forth with Milly, leading to a series of violent actions and equally violent retributions. It's so dark and grim and different from the first half that at times, you're apt to be wondering if you're watching some sort of side effects of Woodrow's accident, possibly some sort of brain damage? The thing is that if you like the mumblecore rom-com aspect of the first half, you're likely to be truly disturbed and bothered when things start going wrong, as cool as it may look. Glodell certainly has an inventive way of telling a story and innovative way of shooting things, especially in the darker second half, which takes advantage of his custom-built cameras. There's something that can be said about the way the movie explores male bonding and friendship, but there really isn't much of a story here, and as it spirals further into madness, you wonder what you're supposed to get out of any of it. Glodell clearly has talent, maybe not so much as a writer--that's probably the weakest aspect of the movie--but certainly as director and actor, and his co-stars also have personalities that can get them more work, especially Wiseman, who could easily be the next Greta Gerwig. Maybe given something that requires a bit more structure or discipline, Glodell can strive as a filmmaker. For now, he seems to be straddling the line between the madness of Nicolas Refn and Lars von Trier and the low-fi production values of Joe Swanberg, and as "Bellflower" proves, those two things don't necessarily coexist well within the same movie. Camilo Castelo Branco's Portugese novel Mysteries of Lisbon (Music Box Films) is adapted by Raul Ruiz, the story of Joao, the bastard child of two members of the aristocracy who weren't allowed to marry and his search for the truth about his parents. It opens exclusively at Lincoln Center's Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center on Friday. Scott Rosenbaum's musical drama The Perfect Age of Rock and Roll (Red Hawk Films) stars Kevin Zegers as famous musician Spyder who returns to his hometown along with his mentor August West (Peter Fonda) and manager Rose (Taryn Manning) along with his crew of musicians. Once there, he reconnects with his former friend Eric (Jason Ritter) who he used to make music with but is now a music teacher. It opens in select cities Friday. Rashaad Ernesto Green's Gun Hill Road (Motion Films Group) stars Esai Morales as a man returning home to the Bronx after three years in prison to learn that his wife Angela (Judy Reyes) is having an affair and that his son Michael (Harmony Santa) is having sexual identity issues and is trying to get a sex change. It opens in New York and L.A. on Friday. Next week, the last month of summer continues with a battle between two R-rated movies, the horror franchise Final Destination 5 (New Line/WB) and the action-comedy 30 Minutes or Less (Sony), starring Jesse Eisenberg, Danny McBride and Aziz Ansari. Emma Stone, Bryce Dallas Howard and Viola Davis star in the adaptation of the best-selling novel The Help (DreamWorks/Touchstone Pictures), while the popular singing television show comes to theaters with Glee: The 3D Concert Movie (20th Century Fox). Copyright 2011 Edward Douglas
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1052
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Published on Department of Commerce (http://www.commerce.gov) Remarks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts Submitted on September 13, 2013 - 4:24am Categories: Deputy Secretary Speeches [1] Manufacturing Technology Acceleration Centers [2] Massachusetts Institute of Technology [3] Acting Deputy Secretary of Commerce Patrick D. Gallagher [4] AS PREPARED FOR DELIVERYFriday, September 20, 2013CONTACT OFFICE PF PUBLIC AFFAIRS202-482-4883Acting Deputy Secretary of Commerce Patrick GallagherRemarks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MassachusettsThank you, President Reif and Andrew Liveris. It’s great to be here. to MIT and its Production in the Innovation Economy team. I read the report. It’s a major contribution to our understanding of American manufacturing, innovation, and competitiveness. Secretary Pritzker asked that I send her regards. She’s at the U.S.-Mexico High Level Economic Dialogue in Mexico City with Vice President Biden. Among other things, they’re discussing how we can work together to strengthen advanced manufacturing in both countries. I liked most about the report is that it provided me with a great construct for thinking about what the federal government and the Administration are doing. talks about this issue in the context of a 21st-century, global economy. It talks about the importance of innovation and staying on the cutting edge. And it talks about how communities and regions are where the action is. I’d like to step through each of those areas. let’s talk about the big picture. The Administration got a crash course in understanding manufacturing’s role in U.S. global competitiveness on Day 1. Two major American companies were headed for failure – GM and Chrysler. Some might think that Ford would see this as a chance to gain market share. But Ford CEO Alan Mulally himself didn’t think so. He said that without federal help, GM and Chrysler’s failure could have taken down the supply base, the entire industry, and perhaps even turned the recession into a depression. we all know, President Obama took the steps to ensure that didn’t happen. Today, the auto and auto parts industry has added more than 190,000 jobs since the industry’s June 2009 low. Also, auto production growth has played a central role in strength
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Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce Names Joshua Levy and Richard Segal Emerging Leadership Council Chairs By Danny Diaz Date posted: February 14, 2014 E-mail The Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce (Chamber) has appointed Joshua Levy, Attorney at Pardo Gainsburg, and Richard I. Segal, Trial Attorney at Kluger Kaplan, Co-Chairs of the Emerging Leadership Council (ELC). “When I started my involvement with the Chamber in the early 1990s, the Emerging Leadership Council would have been beneficial to me in providing mentorship and ensuring that I was getting the most out of my membership,” said Chamber Chairman and SVP of Gibraltar Private Bank & Trust Michael S. Goldberg. “The creation of this council a few years ago, has assisted in identifying and cultivating leaders in the community. I know Richard and Josh will do a great job in leading this diverse group of business professionals and help with their continued growth.” The ELC is a group of young professionals who are leaders in their professions. Their role as council members prepares them for future leadership roles within the Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce. They work to promote, encourage and generate relationships through a variety of networking opportunities and events. The council also organizes a mentorship program where members are encouraged to select a member of the Chamber’s board as a mentor. The mentor relationship helps the council members to better understand the principles of effective leadership and to develop themselves as future leaders and professionals in Miami Beach. Levy is an attorney at Pardo Gainsburg, P.L., a boutique Miamibased law firm, which specializes in complex commercial litigation, construction law, real estate law and construction and hotel management consulting services. The firm consults with and represents a wide variety of clients in complicated business litigation, with an emphasis on construction law, insurance defense, employment matters and workers compensation. The firm has a successful appellate practice handling cases before the state and federal appellate courts and the Florida Supreme Court and has been involved in hundreds of mediations and has negotiated a multitude of settlements. He has also litigated and won one of Florida’s most important decisions in the field of worker’s compensation fraud. Segal is an attorney that practices in Kluger Kaplan’s commercial litigation and family law groups, assisting clients in a range of business and corporate litigation matters, and matrimonial disputes, including dissolutions of marriage and prenuptial agreements. He has extensive experience handling disputes with large financial institutions in real estate, wealth advisory, investment management, and trust relationships and transactions. Richard specializes in fiduciary duty disputes and punitive damages claims. Kluger Kaplan takes on sophisticated and complex cases in Florida and throughout the country. You might be interested in these stories:Mount Sinai Medical Center Achieves New Status as Accre...Miami Beach, Miami-Dade County continue to see very act...2013 Elayne Weisburd Excellence in Education Luncheon H... About Danny Diaz Comments are closed
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By Competition Accessories on Chris “CP” Pfeiffer is addicted to motorbikes and riding motorcycles at their limit is what he does. Innovative is one way to describe him as he is always doing new stunts and adding new stunts to his book of tricks. In January 1, 2006, Chris started riding a BMW F800s in freestyle riding and after no more than 2 months of practice on the new bike, Chris won the US Street bike Freestyle Competition and the legendary “Stuntwars” in Florida. Look at this video of Chris aboard a BMW motorcycle on a bobsled run and you will see that he has a highly tuned skill level. Now take a look at this video of Hannes Pfeiffer, his 3 year old son and you will see a future champion in the making. Chris discovered his passion for Motorbikes as a young kid. At 5 years of age, he was ready to take over the handlebars from his motorcycle-enthusiast father. One of his first attempts at motorcycle riding was in his parent’s garden with a lowered Sachs 100. Like Father Like Son, the next generation is ready to take the reins. Written by John Campbell, Courtesy of AllAboutBikes.com About Competition Accessories
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Bridgestone Signs New 3-Year Deal With MotoGP By AllAboutBikes.com on Bridgestone, the official tire supplier of the MotoGP, has just signed a new deal with Dorna Sports that will keep it in its position for the next three years. Bridgestone will be the official tire supplier until at least 2014, and will help the MotoGP as it transitions to a 1000cc championship series. Under the new deal, Bridgestone will continue to provide tires and technical support to each rider on the premier class grid. “I am both proud and excited that we are able to demonstrate our ongoing commitment to MotoGP by extending our participation as Official Tyre Supplier to the premier class with a new three-year deal,” said Mikio Masunaga, Vice-President and Member of the Board, Bridgestone Corporation. “Bridgestone has a very rich heritage in the leading motorsport categories across the world, and MotoGP represents a significant part of this history.” Bridgestone has been the official tire supplier since 2009, but has been involved in the MotoGP for much longer than that. 70 GP victories, 179 podiums, and four MotoGP championships have been won with the help of Bridgestone tires. “I am very pleased that we can continue to work closely with Bridgestone for another three years after this season, and I would like to thank them for their continued commitment to MotoGP,” said Carmelo Ezpeleta, CEO of Dorna Sports. “Bridgestone has a great track record in all forms of motorsport, in particular MotoGP, and has done a great job since they were appointed the championship’s first ever Official Tire Supplier, so we all know they are up to the task this season and over the following three years. “Their ongoing commitment at this early point is important in allowing us to plan for the future, especially for the teams as they are already underway with their development plans for next year and the new 1000cc era, and I believe it also demonstrates the value of MotoGP as a business platform.” Courtesy of AllAboutBikes.com About AllAboutBikes.com
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Will you pay $650 up-front for an iPhone 4S to pay less monthly? Virgin Mobile is betting you will Matt Hamblen (Computerworld (US)) How many pre-paid buyers will pony up $650 for a new 16GB iPhone 4S to be able to get no-contract service starting at $30 a month?Some analysts believe there won't be very many customers who will take advantage of such a plan, as announced this week by Virgin Mobile USA and luanching June 29. That's especially the case, the analysts said, with Android phones costing less than one-third of the iPhone on a typical pre-paid plan."I can't see too many Virgin customers calling up and saying I won't sign up for your service unless I can get an iPhone, especially since credible Android devices are one-half to one-fourth the cost," said Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates."The costs of these [iPhones] is so high and we've seen little success in a non-subsidized model," like the one Virgin is offering, said Gartner analyst Phillip Redman. "I have many doubts this [Virgin] plan will work also, but Apple has surprised us before... Maybe there's enough pent-up demand at these small carriers, but the sales numbers won't be big."Sprint, which owns Virgin, sees things differently, of course. Sprint and Leap Wireless, which buys Sprint network CDMA 3G service, are exploring ways to expand the popularity of the iPhone beyond the traditional base of post-paid subscribers.Post-paid customers get the same iPhone subsidized by the Sprint, AT&T and Verizon Wireless for $199-- less than one-third the Virgin cost-- but must sign a two-year contract for monthly service is more than double the discounted $30 monthly price Virgin is offering for 300 minutes of voice and unlimited texting and data."The Virgin Mobile brand is extremely well-positioned to carry this iconic device and accelerate its growth as an alternative for previous post-paid subscribers," Jayne Wallace, director of communications for Sprint, said by email. "There's no question that the iPhone on both our pre-paid and post-paid platforms is a win-win for the business all around."She explained that post-paid contracts are slowing down across the industry. "The growth area in the market continues to be the no-contract space," she added, explaining that was why Sprint acquired Virgin in 2009 and created its multi-brand Sprint Prepaid Group in 2010.Pre-paid customers have traditionally been viewed as younger or on a budget and might not even have a credit account to pay for a two-year post-paid service plan. But Wallace indicated that "the face of pre-paid has changed from the traditional pay-as-you-goers, now that we can offer the better devices, services and value."Even so, pre-paid customers are still not considered as profitable to carriers as post-paid, and Sprint has struggled more than AT&T and Verizon at keeping its post-paid customers in recent years. Sprint added 489,000 pre-paid customers in the first quarter, but lost 192,000 post-paid contract customers.Still, there's an upsurge of interest in pre-paid industry-wide. AT&T and Verizon Wireless are considering offering the iPhone and more high-end smartphones to pre-paid customers, in the endless pursuit of more customers and more revenues, analysts said.Boost Mobile, another pre-paid brand from Sprint, is also expected to offer the iPhone on a pre-paid basis, said Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC.Paying $650 up-front for an iPhone with Virgin will be the biggest obstacle for pre-paid buyers, Llamas said. "That $650 is still a lot of money, no matter what the per-month cost," he said. "Forget about college students and just look at younger users who are now on pre-paid deals."Llamas said there's obviously a market for the Virgin plan. "There are some buyers for it, but the question is just how big is that market? We know that pre-paid users want smartphones" based on current pre-paid purchases of BlackBerry and Android smartphones."Those BlackBerry and Androids on pre-paid plans aren't slouches as far as phones go, but the iPhone pre-paid will bring a new level of cachet and a new level of demand," Llamas said.By comparison, Sprint's 24-month post-paid plan for smartphones offers 450 minutes of voice, plus unlimited text and talk for $79.99. With the $450 added cost of the iPhone on Virgin, the Virgin overall cost including $30 a month service and phone for two years would still be $750 less, or $31.25 a month less, than the post-paid plan.(The $30 service fee is discounted by $5 from $35 if a customer arranges for automatic payment with a credit or other account.)Llamas said that customers will need to evaluate whether that $31.25 monthly difference is worth it, since any data usage above 2.5GB per month on Virgin could be throttled to a slower speed and since the Virgin coverage map seems to have some gaps that could effect a user's experience depending on where he works or lives. "Virgin would be fine in metro areas," he added.Leap's iPhone offer on its Cricket service is $150 less for the up-front hardware cost than Virgin's, but Leap will charge $55 a month for unlimited voice, data and text. Leap's service is regional, not national, available to about 20% of the country. Leap is a separate Sprint company that operates as a Mobile Virtual Network Operator and buys network capacity from Sprint.Whatever happens to Sprint's experiment with the Virgin Mobile pre-paid iPhone plan, Llamas noted that the ultimate winner is going to be Apple. Sprint has a four-year commitment to Apple to pay $15.5 billion for iPhones, and must satisfy the debt in whatever way it can."The one who's sitting pretty with all this pre-pay is Apple," Llamas noted. "Pre-pay to Apple is another distribution chain, another set of customers who may or may not upgrade to another phone regularly.""This approach is another opportunity to sell more people on the iPhone and upgrade them," he said. "Sprint's the one on the hook."Matt Hamblen covers mobile and wireless, smartphones and other handhelds, and wireless networking for Computerworld. Follow Matt on Twitter at @matthamblen or subscribe to Matt's RSS feed. His email address is mhamblen@computerworld.com.See more by Matt Hamblen on Computerworld.com.Read more about mobile and wireless in Computerworld's Mobile and Wireless Topic Center. Your employees demand more apps, more data, more convenience—which places a major strain on IT. Satisfy both sides with a Mobile App Management (MAM) solution. Here’s a guide to help you understand the critical success factors before getting started. CISO 2013 Security Insights: A new standard for security leaders eBook - Flash Buyers Guide
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When to use Google instead of Amazon's cloud Late last year Google finally took the beta wrapping off of Google Compute Engine (GCE), the company's infrastructure as a service cloud platform it's aiming to take on Amazon Web Services with. Brandon Butler (Network World) Generally, GCE and AWS are similar services: They both offer compute and storage on an as-needed basis, meaning that customers can spin up and down IaaS services without having to invest in capital hardware. AWS has been offering cloud-based IaaS services for much longer than Google, so the company has a head start in the dozens of services it offers from its cloud and the reliability of those, says Cloudyn's co-founder and Vice President of product Vitally Tavor. GCE, meanwhile has only a handful of services, but the offerings it has put out in the market are generally higher-performing, giving customers more theoretical bang for their buck.So, is it time to switch your AWS workloads over to GCE? Tavor says for some applications, the answer could be yes.Generally, for short-lived applications that require a high-performance machine, Google's cloud seems to be a good fit for them, Tavor says. For complicated applications that are hosted in the cloud for a long period of time and that use a variety of different types of cloud-based services - from warehouse database to load balancers to domain name systems and content delivery networks - AWS still seems like the better choice, he says.One easy way to determine if you're a candidate to migrate workloads from AWS to GCE is to look at what AWS services are being used and see if those are available in Google's cloud. Google has a base compute, storage, database and data analytics (named BigQuery) offerings. The AWS equivalents of those are Simple Storage Service (S3) and Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and Elastic MapReduce (EMR).Of Cloudyn's users, about half of them only use the basic compute and storage services in AWS's cloud, which Google also offers. So, they could theoretically move those workloads over to GCE, says Sharon Wagner, co-founder and CEO of Cloudyn. The other half of Cloudyn's customers use advanced features in AWS's cloud which Google has not yet rolled out and therefore they may not be as ideal candidates for moving applications over to GCE, he says.One major difference between AWS and GCE is the pricing scheme. AWS has three pricing options for customers: 1) The default is on-demand, which are spun up and spun down at a customer's request with no long-term commitment; 2) Spot instances that are acquired in a biding auction and can be less expensive but are best for fault-tolerant applications because the services can be interrupted unexpectedly at any time; 3) Reserved instances are less expensive (by up to 65%) than on demand but require a long-term one or three year contract.GCE, on the other hand, has per-minute billing, compared to AWS's on-demand hourly billing. So, if customers want short-lived compute jobs to run, GCE can generally be a better choice. If a customer is looking to run something in the cloud for a long time, then AWS pricing can be more advantageous.Google's GCE pricing can be found here while Amazon's EC2 pricing is here. As a comparison, AWS's standard m3 instance is US$0.113 per hour, while Google's standard instances is $0.104, both come with 3.75GB of memory. "For many apps, it's good enough," Tavor says about GCE. GCE still has some issues to work on though: It has scheduled maintenance a couple times a year during which services are unavailable. GCE also currently only supports Linux OS, not Windows. But, it's a high-performing and globally distributed cloud platform, so it's certainly worth considering now, he says.If a customer is in a position to use GCE, Tavor says it's generally a good idea to spread workloads across multiple cloud providers. Even with service-level agreements (SLA) which guarantee a certain level of uptime, these IaaS cloud services can still go down.AWS recommends that customers spread their workloads across multiple availability zones within its cloud; for customers looking for extra protection they can spread workloads across multiple regions in AWS's cloud. Still even more protection would be to spread workloads across multiple providers. GCE has advanced to a point where it is a destination for users to consider using as a backup or primary service, Wagner says.That can be easier said than done though. The ideal applications to move are lightweight ones, meaning they don't have a lot of data (less than a couple of terabytes) attached to them. Moving them from one provider to another could be as easy as just running your application in GCE compared to AWS. But, if services have been designed to run specifically in AWS's cloud, or to take advantage of some features that only AWS has - such as its DNS Server, CDN, Redshift or its custom DynamoDB database, then they may be better off staying in AWS's cloud, Tavor says.Cloudyn's platform has in the past only supported AWS tracking, but today it rolled out support for GCE instances as well. As part of Cloudyn's SaaS-delivered package, it will analyze a customer's IaaS usage and alert them if there are better configurations of virtual machine or storage instances that can be used. The new features allow customers to do a price comparison of running applications in AWS versus GCE.Google and AWS aren't the only games in town either. Microsoft and Rackspace have compelling IaaS offerings as well, Tavor says.Rackspace excels in OpenStack workloads, while Microsoft in Windows applications. IBM, he says, will be interesting to watch as the company has announced plans to significantly ramp up its cloud footprint in 2014. More about: Amazon, Google, IBM, Linux, Microsoft, Rackspace Chinese Bitcoin exchange focuses on cash transactions to keep cryptocurrency in play Mt. Gox asks for postponement of Karpeles' deposition in U.S. court Tags: Amazon Web Services, Cloudyn, Configuration / maintenance, Google, Cloud, hardware systems, internet, cloud computing, Data Center Simply being compliant is not enough to mitigate attacks and protect critical information. Organizations can reduce chances of compromise by shifting away from a compliance-driven approach. This guide provides the Top 20 Critical Security Controls (CSCs) developed by the SANS Institute to address the need for a risk-based approach to security. IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Transform IT, Transform the Enterprise
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United will return to America (From Congleton Guardian) Congleton Guardian » United will return to America 1:31pm Tuesday 4th February 2014 in National Sport News David Moyes will take Manchester United on a summer tour of the US Manchester United have announced that they will tour the United States in the build-up to next season. Exact details will be announced in the coming weeks, but United have confirmed that they will visit "a number of destinations in the country" on the tour this summer. This will be United's fifth pre-season tour of the US, with the most recent one coming in 2011 when they played four American teams and Barcelona across three cities. Plans for the tour may be affected if David Moyes' side have to take part in the early quali
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The Greatest Hoax? Global Warming, Says Sen. James InhofeBy Roger AronoffJune 11, 2012The issue of global warming continues to be a fault line in this country and across the world. There are, on the one hand, those who believe, like Al Gore, that the earth is warming to a catastrophic degree, that it is caused by man’s overuse of carbon-based energy, and if we don’t hurry and do something about it we will face the melting of glaciers and ice sheets, biblical flooding, and increased tornadoes and hurricanes. Their holy grail is the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which they cite as confirmation of their theories. In a recent interview with Senator James Inhofe (R-OK), we discussed his recent book, The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future, in which he documents his personal journey of discovery on this issue—from his early days in politics, as the mayor of Tulsa, to his time as a congressman—from his years in the insurance and oil businesses, and seeing firsthand the heavy hand of the federal government. In what way is global warming a hoax? Inhofe said, “...I’m talking about MoveOn.org, George Soros, Michael Moore, the Al Gore Hollywood elites, and all that. These are people who really want to believe this, and they have unlimited funds that they pour into campaigns. They brag about having ‘defeated’ people, which they’re able to do, and that’s how they got so much political power. That is where the hoax comes in, because they’re perpetrating a hoax, and that hoax is that catastrophic global warming is taking place in the world now, and it’s due to manmade gases—CO2, carbon, methane, that type of thing—and what they want to do is just shut down this machine called America.”Inhofe has led the battle in the Senate to block cap-and-trade legislation after it had passed the House. Cap-and-trade is supposed to be a market-based plan to reduce pollution, and in this case CO2, with the goal of halting or slowing global warming. He has had quiet support in the Senate, but he was the one willing to be hammered by the media and his Senate colleagues for not toeing the line and agreeing that this is settled science and necessary for the preservation of earth as we know it. A recent article in American Thinker by Randall Hoven, a retired Boeing Technical Fellow who, following a three-year stint in the U.S. Navy, worked at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory from 1979 to 1982, has laid out the most recent scientific findings on global warming. He uses data from NASA/GISS (Goddard Institute for Space Studies) data going back to 1880, and the Hadley Center from Great Britain which goes back with the data to 1875. In short, both temperature data sets (NASA and Hadley Center) show:Minimal global warming over the last 130 to 160 years: about half a degree Celsius per century. No statistically significant global warming in the last 14 to 17 years. Global cooling in the last 9 to 13 years. In addition, Hoven cites the same data to shatter another myth, the melting of the Arctic ice. “While Northern Hemisphere winter sea ice extent was shrinking over much of the time that satellite measurements have been available (since 1979), the trend over the last eight years has been growth. There has been no statistically significant shrinkage of winter sea ice in the Northern Hemisphere for 13 years (since 1999).”Adds Hoven, “Southern Hemisphere winter sea ice extent has grown over all the 32 years that satellites have been measuring it. And that growth is statistically significant.”But James Hansen, who heads up GISS, sees it quite differently. “[g]lobal warming isn’t a prediction. It is happening.” Hansen, in a New York Times column in May, called the situation “apocalyptic” and faulted President Obama for failing to “provide the leadership needed to change the world’s course.”However, in late March of this year, a group of 49 former NASA scientists and astronauts joined a growing list of scientists who now publicly reject the global warming theory that says, with a high degree of certainty, man-made CO2 is a major cause of climate change. They all signed an open letter to NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, criticizing the agency for its role in advocating this theory as proven science, while ignoring or neglecting empirical evidence contradicting the conventional view. The group who signed the letter includes seven Apollo astronauts and two former directors of NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. They argue that NASA, and specifically GISS, rely too heavily on climate models that have not been borne out over time. “We believe the claims by NASA and GISS that man-made carbon dioxide is having a catastrophic impact on global climate change are not substantiated,” they wrote, “especially when considering thousands of years of empirical data. With hundreds of well-known climate scientists and tens of thousands of other scientists publicly declaring their disbelief in the catastrophic forecasts, coming particularly from the GISS leadership, it is clear that the science is NOT settled.” Another figure lauded by Sen. Inhofe is Václav Klaus, the president of the Czech Republic. He spoke in May at The Heartland Institute conference in Chicago, where he stated that the global warming alarmists “have succeeded in establishing the religion of environmentalism as the official religion of Western society—a religion that demands a radical transformation of Western civilization. Skeptics must continue the ideological battles. As he has stated previously, the purpose of this entire issue is to control human behavior—human liberty.”As with every issue, there will always be conflicting opinions, and in many cases, conflicting facts. So in the end, each person has to decide for him or herself whether or not they choose to believe that man-made global warming is real, and if so, what can and should be done about it. To those who believe, or in some cases claim to know it is occurring, what is the optimum average global temperature we should be seeking? Could a planet that is another degree or two warmer mean less need for heating fuel, and a higher yield in food crops? Are we certain that carbon dioxide is the culprit, and is it realistic to think we can tweak that average global temperature by reducing its output; and at what cost in terms of dollars, and in terms of the surrendering of our sovereignty to a United Nations bureaucracy that is largely hostile to U.S. interests?Now that thousands of scientists dissent from the alarmist point of view, and former hardcore believers have abandoned the theory, can the remaining scientists still claim there is a consensus that man-made global warming exists, and that we must take drastic measures to prevent the potential catastrophic impact of said warming? And should the media still label the skeptics as “deniers,” as in Holocaust deniers? In The Greatest Hoax, Inhofe states, “I believe that many globalist elites have worked within the United Nations to expand its responsibility to an alarming degree. Now, instead of facilitating international cooperation, I believe the UN’s primary institutional goal—in practice, if not in word—is to actively build a global utopia. The UN believes that it can—with enough power and influence—determine what is best for the world by reaching agreements by majority agreement, or better yet—consensus—among all of the member states participating at the United Nations.”Also in the book, Inhofe publishes verbatim more than 100 of the leaked emails from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) of East Anglia University, resulting in what came to be known as “ClimateGate.” If it wasn’t clear that the global warming theory was in trouble when the ClimateGate scandal erupted in 2009, showing the corruption in academia willing to “hide the decline” and suppress scientific studies and views that didn’t conform to those of the “warmists,” then it should have been when they largely dropped the term “global warming” and replaced it with “climate change.” Who, after all, could disagree with the notion that the climate is changing? It has been changing since the beginning of time. One would have to be positively anti-science to make such a suggestion, a term thrown around a lot by the Left to describe the Republicans who ran for president this year. Copyright ©2012 Roger AronoffRead more by Roger AronoffSend us your comments about this article. Home Current Issue About Us Cartoons Submissions Subscribe Contact Links Humor Archive Login Please send any comments, web site suggestions, or problem reports to webmaster@conservativetruth.org
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Home > Bill Nighy > Bill Nighy Wants To Go Back In Time And Tell Younger Self Not To Smoke Bill Nighy Bill Nighy - Bill Nighy Wants To Go Back In Time And Tell Younger Self Not To Smokeby WENN | 06 October 2013 Picture: Bill Nighy - 51st New York Film Festival - About Time - Premiere at Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center - Red Carpet - New...British movie star Bill Nighy would like to go back in time and convince his younger self not to start smoking.The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel star admits there's a lot of things he would like to change about himself if he stumbled across a time travel contraption - and his nicotine habit would be the first thing to go. He tells Wenn, "I'd go back to whoever offered me a cigarette for the first time and say, 'No, thank you very much!'" And he would also like to tell the young Nighy to lighten up. He explains, "I made a mess of being young. I was terrible at it. I made it such hard work. If I did go back in time all I'd say to my younger self was, 'Lighten up, it's Ok. It works out'. "If I would've known that things work out, I would have arranged to be more cheerful for the previous part of my life! I was pretty go
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Liste der Erklärungen zum Vertrag Nr. 209 Drittes Zusatzprotokoll zum Europäischen Auslieferungsübereinkommen Datum 16/4/2014 Aserbaidschan : Declaration contained in the instrument of ratification deposited on 8 January 2014 - Or. Engl.The Republic of Azerbaijan ratifies the Third Additional Protocol to the European Convention on Extradition and declares that it is unable to guarantee the implementation of the provisions of the Protocol in its territories occupied by the Republic of Armenia (the Nagorno-Karabakh region of the Republic of Azerbaijan and its seven districts surrounding that region), until the liberation of those territories from the occupation and complete elimination of the consequences of that occupation. The Republic of Azerbaijan declares that, until the liberation of its territories occupied by the Republic of Armenia from the occupation and complete elimination of the consequences of that occupation, the Republic of Azerbaijan shall not cooperate with the Republic of Armenia within the framework of the Protocol. (the schematic map of the occupied territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan is available here). In Kraft: 1/5/2014 - Obenangegebene Erklärung bezüglich Artikel: - Lettland : Declaration contained in the instrument of ratification deposited on 26 January 2012 - Or. Engl.In accordance with paragraph 5 of Article 4 of the Third Additional Protocol to the Convention, Latvia declares that consent to extradition under the simplified procedure and renunciation of entitlement to the rule of speciality may be revoked. In Kraft: 1/5/2012 - Obenangegebene Erklärung bezüglich Artikel: 4 Declaration contained in the instrument of ratification deposited on 26 January 2012 - Or. Engl.In accordance with Article 5 of the Third Additional Protocol to the Convention, Latvia declares that the rules laid down in Article 14 of the Convention do not apply where the person extradited by Latvia, in accordance with Article 4 of the Protocol, consents to extradition and expressly renounces his or her entitlement to the rule of speciality. In Kraft: 1/5/2012 - Obenangegebene Erklärung bezüglich Artikel: 4, 5 Niederlande : Declaration contained in the instrument of acceptance deposited on 6 July 2012 – Or. Engl.The Kingdom of the Netherlands accepts the Protocol for the European part of the Netherlands and the Caribbean part of the Netherlands (the islands Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba) In Kraft: 1/11/2012 - Obenangegebene Erklärung bezüglich Artikel: 16 Declaration contained in a Note verbale from the Permanent Representation of the Netherlands deposited with the instrument of acceptance on 6 July 2012 – Or. Engl.In accordance with Article 5 of the Third Additional Protocol to the Convention, the Kingdom of the Netherlands declares that with the application of the Protocol by the European part of the Netherlands and the Caribbean part of the Netherlands (the islands Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba), the rules laid down in Article 14 of the European concention on Extradition do not apply. Slowenien : Declaration contained in the instrument of ratification deposited on 11 April 2014 Or. Engl.Pursuant to Article 4, paragraph 5, of the Protocol, the Republic of Slovenia declares that the consent to extradition may be revoked until the Competent Court of the Republic of Slovenia takes its final decision on extradition under the simplified procedure. Declaration contained in the instrument of ratification deposited on 11 April 2014 Or. Engl.Pursuant to Article 5 of the Protocol, the Republic of Slovenia declares that the rules laid down in Article 14 of the Convention do not apply where the person extradited by the Republic of Slovenia consents its extradition and expressly renounces his or her entitlement to the rule of speciality. Tschechische Republik : Declaration accompanying the instrument of ratification deposited on 17 January 2013 Or. Engl. In accordance with Article 5(a), of the third additional Protocol to the European Convention on Extradition, the Czech Republic declares that the rules laid down in Article 14 of the European Convention on Extradition do not apply where the person extradited by the Czech Republic consented to the extradition, in accordance with Article 4 of the third additional Protocol. Zypern : Declaration contained in a Note Verbale from the Permanent Representation of Cyprus, dated 6 February 2014, deposited with the instrument of ratification, on 7 February 2014 - Or. Engl.In accordance with Article 5 (b) of the Third Additional Protocol to the European Convention on Extradition, the Republic of Cyprus declares that the rules laid down in Article 14 of the European Convention on Extradition do not apply when the person extradited by the Republic of Cyprus consented to her or his extradition and expressly renounced her or his entitlement to the rule of specialty, in accordance with Article 4 of the said Additional Protocol. In Kraft: 1/6/2014 - Obenangegebene Erklärung bezüglich Artikel: 14, 5 Quelle : Vertragsbüro auf http://conventions.coe.int – * Disclaimer <!- Début pied structure -> <!- Fin pied structure ->
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Setting the stage: Space-time and Quantum Mechanics Posted on October 18, 2010 By College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics facebook Renowned theoretical physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed delivered the first in his series of five Messenger lectures on "The Future of Fundamental Physics" Oct. 4.Formerly a professor at Harvard, Arkani-Hamed currently sits on the faculty at the prestigious Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where Einstein served from 1933 until his death in 1955.The Messenger lectures are sponsored by the University Lectures Committee. The lectures were established in 1924 by a gift from Hiram Messenger, who graduated from Cornell in 1880. Cornell Chronicle: We exist because of quantum mechanics, Messenger lecturer says Cornell Department of Physics Experimental Elementary Particle Physics at Cornell Nima Arkani-Hamed Nima Arkani-Hamed: Standard models of particle physics Nima Arkani-Hamed: Space-time is doomed Nima Arkani-Hamed: Why a macroscopic universe? Nima Arkani-Hamed: What might we know by 2020? More from The Future of Fundamental Physics 36:41 MyPlaylist PHYS 101/102 #1: Electromagnetic Waves Lecture 4 | Introduction to Scattering Amplitudes
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Tuesday, November 08, 2011Last Update: 9:46 AM PT Businessman Says Former Partner Tried to Settle Dispute by Calling a Hit Man By IULIA FILIP Tweet FORT WORTH (CN) - A Texas businessman claims a former business partner who operated a "long-running Ponzi scheme" responded to a demand for arbitration by making "terroristic threats" against him and asking a hit man how much it would cost to have him killed. Robert Yonke and his company Trailer Safety Devices LLC sued Karl Pratt, Gwendolyn Cannon and their company, Safety Sentry, in Tarrant County Court. The complaint states: "Two companies owned by Mr. Yonke, including Trailer Safety, filed two arbitrations alleging fraud and breach of contract against defendants. Defendants, facing imminent liability totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars in these arbitrations, refused to participate in either of the arbitrations or pay their share of the arbitration costs and expenses. Instead, Pratt, acting on behalf of himself, Cannon and Safety Sentry, elected to try to derail the arbitrations by making death threats against Mr. Yonke." Pratt, of Granbury, Texas, founded Safety Sentry, which makes trailer hitch safety devices. It is owned and controlled by Pratt and Cannon, according to the complaint. "Mr. Pratt claims to be an 'inventor of the Safety Sentry trailer hitch lock, a ground-breaking product that is guaranteed to prevent trailers from coming loose while driving and from being stolen while parked,'" the complaint states. "In reality, Mr. Pratt is nothing more than a con artist. For more than two years, defendants have operated a Ponzi scheme which defrauded more than thirty investors out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Plaintiffs have obtained affidavits of more than a dozen victims of defendants' Ponzi scheme." The affidavits are not included in the complaint. Yonke says he demanded arbitration after the defendants breached contracts with his companies. "On or about Feb. 15, 2011, two entities owned by Mr. Yonke, Trailer Safety Devices, LLC and Adrenaline Motorsports, LLC dba Yonke Motorsports, LLC, relying on numerous misrepresentations made by Pratt and Cannon (including many of the same misrepresentations that were made to the dozens of other victims of defendants' Ponzi scheme), entered into separate contracts with Safety Sentry. "After Safety Sentry failed to perform its obligations with respect to both contracts, Trailer Safety and Adrenaline filed separate arbitration proceedings with the American Arbitration Association." (Parentheses in complaint). Yonke says that since September, the defendants refused to participate in the arbitrations, or to pay their share of the arbitration costs. "Instead, defendants conspired in a scheme to intimidate Yonke and Trailer Safety by making terroristic threats against Yonke's life," the complaint states. "In late September or early October 2011, Pratt was caught by the FBI in a recorded conversation threatening to kill Yonke. During this conversation, Pratt claimed to a witness that he had a hit man in mind that would do the job and even went so far as to call the man and speak to him about the price that would be charged for killing Yonke. In making these threats, Pratt was acting on behalf of himself, Cannon and Safety Sentry. Shortly thereafter, Pratt was arrested by the Hood County Sheriff's office on an outstanding warrant from Louisiana. "While Pratt was in jail on this warrant, Cannon discussed the death threats with authorities who were investigating the death threats as well as defendants' long-running Ponzi scheme. Cannon promised the investigators that in light of this information, she would not bail Pratt out of jail. Shortly thereafter, Cannon reneged on her promise and provided Pratt's release from jail, so they could continue their scheme to defraud additional victims and intimidate Yonke." Yonke seeks actual and exemplary damages for assault, terroristic threats and conspiracy. He claims: "Pratt does not have sufficient resources to pay money damages. Safety Sentry is a worthless shell of a company, as its assets have been looted by Pratt and Cannon for their own personal use, including gambling binges in Louisiana and Nevada. Pratt owns no assets and is a habitual writer of hot checks. While Cannon owns some property, it is not enough to satisfy the damages that will be awarded to Yonke and Trailer Safety in this case." He also wants the defendants enjoined from contacting him or making death threats against him. He is represented by Josh Borsellino with Haynes and Boone. Home
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Self-Help>Getting Started>Preparing for Court>Discovery Court Basics Lawyers and Legal Help Before You File Your Case Filing Papers in Court Fee Waivers Going to Court Preparing for Court FAQs Researching the Law Resolving Your Dispute Out of Court Divorce or Separation Abuse & Harassment Eviction & Housing Seniors & Conservatorship Problems With Money Civil Appeals Self-Help Glossary During the pretrial stage of a court case there is an important step called “discovery.” During discovery, both sides collect and exchange information about the case and prepare for trial. During discovery, you can: Collect facts; Get witness statements informally; Get witness statements in a deposition; Find out what the other side is going to say; See how good you think their case is; See how good your own case is; and Get all the important information you need to present your case in court. Discovery can be very expensive and time-consuming. In most civil cases the costs of discovery make up almost all the costs. It takes a lot of time for lawyers and their staffs to write up questions, review the responses, and argue in court about whether the other side did not respond to everything they should have. And it takes a lot of time to ask for, collect, and review the sometimes thousands of documents that may be involved in a case. Discovery can be both formal and informal. In either case, the information that is gathered during discovery is not filed with the court. It is just shared with the other side in the lawsuit. Discovery is very complicated and often requires knowledge of evidence rules and other legal strategies. It is often necessary to have a lawyer help you with discovery. If you are representing yourself in your case, discovery may be a good part of your case to let a limited-scope lawyer handle on your behalf. Find out more about limited-scope representation. Informal discovery/investigation Informal investigation includes all information-gathering that you can do on your own working with cooperative people or organizations both before and after a lawsuit is filed. You can do a lot of this informal investigation before the case even starts, and it can help you decide if you should even file a case. This often includes: Conducting interviews with witnesses; Gathering documents from public agencies, police officers, doctors, etc.; Taking photographs (like of damaged property, accident sites, or other relevant objects or places); or Finding out about the other side’s insurance coverage. You may not be able to use everything you find out during this investigaive process in court, but it can help you prepare your case. Formal discovery Formal “discovery” is a legal process that can be used after a case has been filed. There are several discovery “tools” you can use to get information the other side has. Some of the formal discovery tools include: Interrogatories — written questions directed to the other party that the other party must answer in writing and under oath. The answers can be used at trial. Depositions — oral, in-person questions that the person being deposed must answer under oath. You can take the deposition of a party in the case or of “third-parties,” which are people other than those directly involved in the case, like expert witnesses. Usually a court reporter takes down everything that is said in the deposition and produces a written transcript. It is also common to videotape a deposition. Requests for production of documents — either for a particular document or a class of documents likely to be relevant to your case. Requests for Admissions — when a party asks the other side to admit a statement is true, in general to allow the case to focus on what is truly in dispute. Responses to these written requests can be used at trial. Subpoenas — written court orders requiring the other side or a third party to testify or produce certain physical evidence such as books, records, or other documents for inspection. During the discovery process, lawyers can object to questions, requests for admissions, interrogatories, and other requests. If the other side does not agree with the objections and insists on getting the requested information, he or she can file motions in court to ask a judge to decide the discovery issues. NOTE: There are also rules about formal discovery. Depending on the type of case it is, there may be limits on the number of questions that each side can ask, for example, and how long the discovery stage of the case may continue. It is important to learn and follow these rules. Talk to a lawyer for help understanding these rules. Click fo help finding a lawyer. Or go to your local law library for help researching these rules.
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Policy & Administration>Administrative Office of the Courts>Bidders / Solicitations>RFP Archive>Public Trust and Confidence in the California Courts, Phase 2 Public Trust and Confidence in the California Courts, Phase 2 The Administrative Office of the Courts’ Planning and Effective Programs Unit seeks the services of a consultant to assist in completing Phase 2 of the project, “Trust and Confidence in the California Courts.” Phase 1 of the project resulted in the September 2005 publication, Trust and Confidence in the California Courts, A Survey of the Public and Attorneys, a report for the Judicial Council by the National Center for State Courts. The consultant must have expertise in structuring research and investigative strategies for obtaining strategic information—including focus group methodology—from (1) members of the public who use the California courts, (2) trial court administrators, and (3) judicial officers. These research strategies must be brought to bear on issues of public trust and confidence in the courts that were identified in Phase 1 of the project. The data gathered and findings of Phase 2 must result in considered analysis and specific recommendations to the Judicial Council and AOC that will facilitate the development of actionable forms of judicial branch policy. Written proposal must be received no later than 1:00 p.m., October 21, 2005. Oral, facsimile, or email submitted proposals will not be accepted. For more information or questions regarding this RFP, please see the Submission of Questions section on the coversheet of the RFP. RFP (PDF, 185 KB) Questions and Answers (PDF, 27 KB)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1067
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NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for rehearing under Rule 22 as well as formal revision before publication in the New Hampshire Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk/Reporter, Supreme Court of New Hampshire, Supreme Court Building, Concord, New Hampshire 03301, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion goes to press. Opinions are available on the Internet by 9:00 a.m. on the morning of their release. The direct address of the court's home page is: http://www.state.nh.us/courts/supreme.htm THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Hillsborough-northern judicial district ARTHUR SLATTERY & a. THE NORWOOD REALTY, INC. Wenger & Cronin, P.C., of Bedford (John G. Cronin and John F. Bisson on the brief, and Mr. Bisson orally), for the plaintiffs. Sheehan Phinney Bass + Green, P.A., of Manchester (James E. Higgins on the brief and orally), for the defendant. DALIANIS, J. The defendant, Norwood Realty, Inc., appeals from a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, Arthur Slattery and Barbara Bielagus, on a promissory note. The issues on appeal are whether the Superior Court (Conboy, J.) erred in: (1) denying the defendant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; (2) admitting into evidence testimony regarding defendant's efforts to compromise its claims; and (3) admitting testimony of a witness's undisclosed state of mind as to his understanding of the promissory note. We affirm. The plaintiffs brought suit based upon a promissory note executed by the defendant on February 10, 1986, in conjunction with its acquisition of the commercial division of the Norwood Group, Inc. The defendant obtained $4.6 million to finance expenses associated with its acquisition of the assets of the commercial division, a release of a covenant not to compete in the commercial real estate brokerage business, and the termination of a contingent payment related to previous business arrangements. The promissory note provides in part: The principal and interest of this note shall be payable in consecutive monthly installments of $18,525.89 (adjusted as provided below), such payments to be made on the tenth (10th) day of each month commencing on March 10, 1986. A final payment equal to the balance of this note shall be made on February 10, 1992. The monthly payment shall be adjusted quarterly when interest rates change so as to make the blended monthly payment sufficient to amortize this Note over a six (6) year period. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Makers [sic] obligation to make payments thereunder shall be suspended (with interest continuing to accrue) during the 12 months following any fiscal year of Maker in which Makers [sic] net revenues from its residential division fall below The defendant argued at trial that because its net revenues never equaled or exceeded $5.4 million, the note terminated and no further payments were due. The plaintiffs' position was that despite the suspension provision, the balance of the note was due on February 10, 1992. After a four-day trial, the jury found in favor of the plaintiffs and awarded them $530,000.44, the principal balance due on the promissory note. The defendant then moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The trial court denied the motion, ruling that the Court cannot find, and does not find, that as a matter of law the sole reasonable inference that may be drawn from the evidence, which must be viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, is so overwhelmingly in favor of the defendant that no contrary verdict may stand. "The trial judge has very little discretion when deciding whether to grant the motion for judgment n.o.v." Gowen v. Brothers, 121 N.H. 377, 380, 430 A.2d 159, 161 (1981). "The standard is a rigorous one: [a party] would be entitled to judgment n.o.v. only when his case is established by the sole reasonable inference from undisputed facts." Id. (quotations omitted). "The court cannot weigh the evidence or inquire into the credibility of the witnesses, and if the evidence adduced at trial is conflicting, or if several reasonable inferences may be drawn, the motion should be denied." Broderick v. Watts, 136 N.H. 153, 159, 614 A.2d 600, 604 (1992) (quotation omitted). In this case, the parties disagreed as to the proper interpretation of the promissory note. When we interpret an ambiguous contract, our focus is on "the intent of the contracting parties at the time of the agreement." R. Zoppo Co. v. City of Dover, 124 N.H. 666, 671, 475 A.2d 12, 15 (1984). The jury heard four days of conflicting testimony and therefore was in the best position to assess the parties' intent and determine the witnesses' credibility. "When there is a question of fact concerning what was intended by certain terms within a contract, the dispute is to be resolved by the trier of fact, whose findings will be upheld if supported by the evidence." Id. at 671, 475 A.2d at 16. A review of the record demonstrates that several reasonable inferences could be drawn from the evidence. Because the record contains sufficient evidence to support the jury's verdict, we hold that the trial court did not err in denying the defendant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. See Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Custombilt, Inc., 128 N.H. 167, 169, 512 A.2d 1098, 1100 (1986). The defendant also challenges the trial court's decision to allow the testimony of Stewart Pratt, chief executive officer of The Hunneman Real Estate Company in Boston, Massachusetts. In 1992, Pratt was interested in expanding the business into New Hampshire and contacted Robert Phillips at Norwood Realty, Inc., about potentially purchasing the company. During the course of discussions, Phillips indicated to Pratt that "he had a legal, as well as a moral, obligation to pay Mr. Norwood for a note that had become due in the earlier part of the year, and it would have to be part of the purchase price." The defendant argued that Pratt's testimony was evidence of statements made in compromise negotiations, which are inadmissible under New Hampshire Rule of Evidence 408. The trial court ruled that on the 1992 testimony relating to discussion of the promissory note where allegedly Mr. Phillips acknowledged a legal obligation under the note, I don't believe that 408 is implicated and so I'm drawing the line. I am going to permit Mr. Pratt to testify with regard to what Mr. Phillips told him. As I said, I'm keeping my eye on the ball as to evidence which goes to the parties' intent in coming to the agreement under the promissory note. I conclude that such testimony does go to that issue. That it is an admission. Decisions by the trial court to admit evidence are not disturbed on appeal "unless they are clearly untenable or unreasonable to the prejudice of the complaining party's case." Clipper Affiliates v. Checovich, 138 N.H. 271, 275, 638 A.2d 791, 794 (1994). New Hampshire Rule of Evidence 408 provides in part: [E]vidence of (1) furnishing or offering or promising to furnish, or (2) accepting or offering or promising to accept, a valuable consideration in compromising or attempting to compromise a claim which was disputed as to either validity or amount, is not admissible to prove liability for or invalidity of the claim or its amount. Evidence of conduct or statements made in compromise negotiations is likewise not admissible. The Rule "is designed to exclude the offer of compromise only when it is tendered as an admission of the weakness of the offering party's claim or defense." Gelinas v. Metropolitan Prop. & Liability Ins. Co., 131 N.H. 154, 166, 551 A.2d 962, 969 (1988) (quotation omitted). Characterizing Pratt's testimony as involving compromise of a disputed claim is not accurate. Pratt was exploring with Phillips a business opportunity; the discussion did not involve settlement negotiations between the parties. Rather, the statement was an admission by Phillips of his contractual obligations. Furthermore, Pratt could not compromise the parties' obligations under the note. Thus, Pratt's testimony conflicted with neither the letter nor the intent of Rule 408. See id. at 167, 551 A.2d at 969. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this evidence. See Panas v. Harakis & K-Mart Corp., 129 N.H. 591, 613, 529 A.2d 976, 990 (1987). Finally, the defendant challenges the admission of testimony of Karl Norwood, a former principal of Norwood Realty, Inc. The defendant argues that Norwood testified as to his undisclosed state of mind concerning his understanding of the promissory note. We do not reach the issue of whether admitting this testimony was error because we hold that any error was harmless. The trial court's ruling did not rest upon the challenged testimony, and, after reviewing the record, we are satisfied that the plaintiff was not prejudiced by its admission. See MacFarlane v. Rich (MacFarlane), 132 N.H. 608, 612-13, 567 A.2d 585, 589 (1989). Affirmed. JOHNSON, J., sat for oral argument but retired prior to the final vote; THAYER, J., sat for oral argument but resigned prior to the final vote; BROCK, C.J., and BRODERICK and NADEAU, JJ., concurred; HORTON, J., retired, specially assigned under RSA 490:3, concurred; NADEAU and DALIANIS, JJ., took part in the final vote by consent of the
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1068
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High court sends back Texas race-based plan WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has sent a Texas case on race-based college admissions back to a lower court for another look. The court's 7-1 decision Monday leaves unsettled many of the basic questions about the continued use of race as a factor in college admissions. Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the court, said a federal appeals court needs to subject the University of Texas admission plan to the highest level of judicial scrutiny. The compromise ruling throws out the decision by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld the Texas admission plan. Kennedy said the appeals court did not test the Texas plan under the most exacting level of judicial review. He said such a test is required by the court's 2003 decision upholding affirmative action in higher education. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the lone dissenter. Justice Clarence Thomas, alone on the court, said he would have overturned the high court's 2003 ruling. Justice Elena Kagan stayed out of the case, presumably because she had some contact with it at an earlier stage when she worked in the Justice Department. Abigail Fisher, a white Texan, sued the university after she was denied a spot in 2008. She has since received her undergraduate degree from Louisiana State University. The challenge to the Texas plan gained traction in part because the makeup of the court has changed since the last time the justices ruled on affirmative action in higher education in 2003. Then, Justice Sandra O'Connor wrote the majority opinion that held that colleges and universities can use race in their quest for diverse student bodies. O'Connor retired in 2006, and her replacement, Justice Samuel Alito, has shown himself to be more skeptical of considerations of race in education. Another factor fueling Fisher's lawsuit was that the university has produced significant diversity by automatically offering about three-quarters of its spots to graduates in the top 10 percent of their Texas high schools, under a 1990s state law signed by then-Gov. George W. Bush. The admissions program has been changed so that now only the top 8 percent gain automatic admission. More than 8 in 10 African-American and Latino students who enrolled at the flagship campus in Austin in 2011 were automatically admitted, according to university statistics. Even among the rest, both sides acknowledge that the use of race is modest. In all, black and Hispanic students made up more than a quarter of the incoming freshmen class. White students constituted less than half the entering class when students with Asian backgrounds and other minorities were added in. The university said the extra measure of diversity it gets from the slots outside automatic admission is crucial because too many of its classrooms have only token minority representation, at best. At the same time, Texas argued that race is one of many factors considered and that whether race played the key role in any applicant's case was impossible to tell. The Obama administration, 57 of the Fortune 100 companies and large numbers of public and private colleges that feared a broad ruling against affirmative action backed the Texas program. Among the benefits of affirmative action, the administration said, is that it creates a pipeline for a diverse officer corps that it called "essential to the military's operational readiness." In 2003, the court cited the importance of a similar message from military leaders.
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Fed announces yet another "fix" for a still-broken system Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that quantitative easing would continue in 2013. The spending to purchase mortgage-backed securities would increase from current levels of $40 billion per month to $85 billion per month and would include the purchase of long-term treasury bonds as well. The Fed will continue this new round of quantitative easing (QE4) until the unemployment rate falls below 6.5 percent. This means it will be spending $85 billion a month (more than $1 trillion a year, if it lasts that long) to spur on job growth through lower interest rates.At this rate, the Fed will theoretically increase its balance sheet to a whopping $4 trillion dollars by the end of 2013. A herculean effort, since just five years ago the Fed had less than $1 trillion on the books. However, if the inflation rate rises faster than expected, the treasury buying will stop before that point.What surprises me the most is the fizzle we saw on Wall Street after the announcement. The market rallied shortly and then fell.It concerns me that an announcement of this magnitude had little to no effect on the exchanges. It seems that, like any addiction, it takes more and more of the substance to get us excited, and an additional $45 billion a month doesn't appear to be enough to get the traders going.What is it going to take to fix our ailing system? Between the fiscal cliff and QE4, what else does Washington have in its arsenal to ease the pain and keep us going for a few more years?In my opinion, we need to get off the addiction of debt. We need to demand that the government begin to cut back on its spending habits and start decreasing -- not increasing -- our debt.Joe Wirbick is president of Lancaster financial services firm Sequinox and specializes in retirement planning and distribution. This allows him to concentrate on developing strategies that help address the unique issues that confront retirees and those approaching retirement. Write to the Editorial Department at editorial@cpbj.com
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Jeff Lobach named Barley Snyder managing partner - Last modified: December 5, 2013 at 9:09 AM Jeff Lobach - (Photo / Submitted) Lancaster County-based law firm Barley Snyder LLP has named Jeff Lobach managing partner to succeed Timothy Dietrich, who has served in the role since 2008. Lobach, a Barley Snyder partner, assumes the leadership role to oversee the firm's operations and long-term planning at the start of next year.Lobach has worked at Barley Snyder for 30 years, including at a firm that became part of Barley Snyder, and received his law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1981.His practice is focused on business and real estate transactions, the formation and governance of businesses and nonprofits, real estate development, financing, family-owned businesses and higher education.Lobach said his selection was "unplanned but not unwelcome" and he is excited about continuing to grow the firm and its relationships with clients.Barley Snyder has more than 60 attorneys and five offices in Central and Eastern Pennsylvania, including in the Hanover, York and Lancaster markets.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1071
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Freshmen at Lorain County Community College in Elyria, OH
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U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service Eleanor O'Donnell prepared this bulletin. Assistance was provided by: Ronald J.Bernier, Genealogist, Washington, DC; Claudette Stager, National Register Coordinator, Tennessee Historical Commission; and Sally Sims Stokes, Curator of the National Trust for Historic Preservation Library Collection at the University of Maryland at College Park, MD. National Register Home | Publications Home | Previous Page | Comments or Questions
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Weird WorldThe 8 Least Impressive Guinness World Records The 8 Least Impressive Guinness World Records Ian Cheesman On May 22, 2007 Katsusuke Yanagisawa became the oldest person to summit Mt. Everest. This 71 year old former school teacher has since joined the ranks of Bear Grylls and Lance Armstrong as "People Whose Achievements Invalidate Your Pathetic Existence." This is the stuff of a worthwhile world record, a moment highlighting the richness of human potential. Of course, as any quick study of the Maury studio audience will attest, that potential is rarely exercised by the masses. And the folks who put out the Guinness Book of Records (GBR) have a lot of blank pages to fill ... #8. Greatest Distance Thrown in a Car Accident As Newton once postulated, a body will remain at rest, or continue to move at a constant velocity, unless an external net force acts upon it. That law should now be renamed Matthew McKnight's law, as no one has demonstrated it as spectacularly as he did the day he was standing around and a car hit him going 70 mph, flinging McKnight a distance equal to more than a third of a football field. McKnight was struck when he pulled over to help accident victims on Interstate 376 on October 26, 2001. His kindness was repaid with an involuntary flight of 118 feet as well as a broken shoulder, pelvis, leg and tailbone. Luckily he was quickly surrounded by a crack medical staff who, seeing how far the man had been flung, knew that Guiness must be contacted STAT. From then on, no matter what else McKnight may have accomplished in his life, he would forever hold the record for Greatest Distance Thrown In a Car Accident. Congrats, Matthew! It was actually McKnight's emergency room physician, Dr. Eric Brader, that submitted paperwork for the record, because nothing in the Hippocratic Oath specifically bars you from "just being kind of a dick". Longest Ear Hair This next honoree was actually the inspiration for John Mayer's seminal hit (double entendre intended) "Your Body Is A Wonderland". Of course, it was a much earlier iteration of the song, back when the working title was "Your Body Is A Monument To All That is Vile And Unholy". Radhakant Bajpai of Naya Ganj, Uttar Pradesh, India, was "blessed" with extraordinarily long hair sprouting from the center of his outer ears. The record actually specifies the hair originates from the "middle of the pinna", meaning that GBR has had to maintain separate records for the longest hairs from multiple regions of the ear. Radhakant's ear hair/tendrils measure an incredible 13.2 cm (about 5.25 inches) at its longest point, though it is slightly shorter when pulled back into pigtails. "Making it to Guinness World Records is indeed a special occasion for me and my family," said Radhakant. "God has been very kind to me." It's not clear exactly how God compensated Radhakant for the grotesquely long ear hair though most experts postulate that it would take at least three extra inches of penis to consider the deal even. Or, maybe we're misreading the man's comments and he really is proud of his ear hair; perhaps in his culture it is a trait to be treasured and the hair represents the gentle, fluffy kitten that lives inside a man's skull. Regardless of why he's thankful, he should probably be thanking the shameless Guinness editors, or perhaps all of the people who failed to set any sort of impressive record that year, but probably not God. Largest Collection of Traffic Cones Not all collections are equal. For some, completing a collection involves scouring the planet for rarities that all would envy. For others, it involves yanking mundane bits of municipal property off the road and appropriating it for their own uses. Guess which one David Morgan opted for when he assembled his collection of traffic cones? David has a collection of 137 different, presumably stolen, traffic cones. Based on the picture, this includes "The orange conical one", the "off-orange conical one" and the rare "yellow pointy one that someone drew a penis on the side of." David owns approximately two thirds of all the types of traffic cones ever made, which is more impressive when you realize that means someone out there is actually a traffic cone historian and can thus validate the scope of his collection. We'll take their word for it. Greatest Distance Moonwalked in One Hour The people of the Balkan states are best known for their indomitable spirit and their adoption of pop culture trends 20 years after they've expired in America. The sum of these two qualities coalesced on September 10, 2006 when Krunoslav Budiselic set the world record for the greatest distance moonwalked in one hour. Krunoslav managed to cover 5.255 km (3.265 miles) moonwalking at the Athletic Stadium Mladost, in Zagreb, Croatia on that fateful day. Witnesses to the event described it as both "plodding" and "impressively fruity" according to our translation. As news of Krunoslav's triumph spread across the land, the people celebrated his victory by overthrowing the local government in a bloody coup. The excitement from this accomplishment even managed to trump the buzz surrounding The Removal Of The World's Largest Appendix (measuring at 26 cm/10.24 in), occurring in Zagreb just a month prior. Zagreb is now petitioning to the U.N. to be formally recognized as the "WTF Capital Of The World". If Other Industries Were As Evil as the RIAA If The Real World Played by Disney Cartoon Rules 5 Reasons 'Big' Had The Most Depressing Happy Ending Ever 6 Creepy Old School Novelty Toys (for Weird Perverts) 6 Fake Foods You (Will Wish You Didn't) Have in Your Kitchen The 5 Most Implausible Old School Rap Songs
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» BACK TO CRASH.NET Crash.Net BTCC News Porsche star named as Plato team-mate 1 February 2013 One of Britain's brightest young racing talents has joined the MG KX Momentum Racing team as team-mate to Jason Plato.Sam Tordoff has been racing since he was ten years old and making it to the BTCC represents the culmination of a lifetime ambition. Replacing Andy Neate in the line-up, he will race one of Triple 888 Engineering's award-winning MG6 GT that Plato took so close to the 2012 crown, after graduating from the Porsche Carrera Cup.The coming season won't mark Tordoff's first appearance in the BTCC, after he debuted on the Brands Hatch Indy circuit in 2010, but will be a full-time return for the Leeds youngster, who began racing karts as a boy and worked his way up ladder via the Renault Clio Cup and Carrera Cup.“I'm thrilled to be joining Jason, Ian [Harrison] and the rest of the team and I'm determined to do well – even if it means beating Jason!” Tordoff commented.Last year, Tordoff - who has a degree in Mechanical Engineering and works as a trainee accountant with the JCT600 motor group - won a place at the Plato-mentored KX Akademy, the bursary programme set up by the KX energy drink brand that sponsors the MG team.“Sam's a great young talent and brings a lot to our team,” Plato explained, “He's a fast learner and it will be great to see him alongside me on the podium – but I'm planning to be on the top step.” » BACK TO CRASH.NET
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The Time Bandit In 1983, over 100 antique clocks – worth millions of dollars – were stolen from the L.A.MayerMuseum for Islamic Art in Jerusalem. It took 25 years for the clocks to find their way back home. Sometimes it just takes time to solve a crime. by Deborah Rubin Fields Have you ever been stumped by a puzzle? Admittedly, some puzzles take a long time to solve. I think you’ll agree, however, it does seem to be “stretching it” to plug away at a puzzle for 25 years. Yet, Jews are known as a “stiff-necked people (Exodus 32:9).” So perhaps this explains why Israeli police struggled for a quarter of a century to solve the puzzle of 102 (a number of media reports had stated 106) missing clocks. One spring night in 1983, these time pieces disappeared from Jerusalem’s L.A. Mayer Museum for Islamic Art. You’ve probably figured out that these museum clocks were not your utilitarian house or office clocks. They weren’t meant to hang on your kitchen wall or to sit on your nightstand. They were classy antiques. Some were inlaid with jewels. Many had been cast from gold. One had even belonged to Queen Marie Antoinette. Altogether, they were worth millions of dollars. So you see why the police wanted to crack the clock mystery. Given the magnitude of the theft, a special task force within the Israeli police (which is a national service) was set up to work on this case. Reportedly, Interpol was contacted and the company which had insured the collection hired private investigators. Please Subscribe to Crime Magazine to view full content http://crimemagazine.com/subscribe Julius Caesar was Assassinated - 44 B.C. Firefighters Shot Dead at Upstate NY Fire Mexico security forces abducted dozens in drug war: rights group Queen of Mean is Sentenced
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Jason Lindstrom's Fundraiser: The Blue Steel Team Jason "I'm pretty sure there's a lot more to life than being really, really, ridiculously good looking. And I plan on finding
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Washington, Thursday, May 17, 2001 HUMAN RIGHTS PROBLEMS IN KAZAKHSTAN HUMAN RIGHTS PROBLEMS IN KAZAKHSTANHON. CHRISTOPHER H. SMITHof New Jersey Mr. Speaker, I rise today to call attention to the lamentable human rights situation in Kazakhstan. On April 4, in a meeting with Kanat Saudabaev, Kazakhstan's new Ambassador to Washington, I welcomed his desire for cooperation and his willingness to improve his country's image, but I emphasized that Kazakhstan's reputation has indeed been badly tarnished and that concrete actions, not implausible pledges of democratization, were necessary. Considering the recent political trends in that important Central Asian country, I would like to share with my colleagues a number of the concerns I raised with Ambassador Saudabaev. As a Washington Post editorial pointed out on May 1, President Nursultan Nazarbaev has recently been intensifying his longstanding campaign of repression against the political opposition, independent media, and civil society. Especially alarming is the escalation in the level of brutality. In the last few months, several opposition activists have been assaulted. Platon Pak of the ``Azamat'' Party was stabbed on February 7. Fortunate to survive, he said his attackers told him to ``deliver their message to the head of his political party.'' On March 1, Ms. Gulzhan Yergalieva, the Deputy Head of the opposition ``People's Congress of Kazakhstan'' and a well-known journalist, was--along with her husband and son--attacked and robbed in her home. Prior to these incidents, both opposition parties strongly criticized the Kazakh Government's running of an electoral reform working group. In late February, Alexandr Shushannikov, the chairman of the East Kazakhstan branch of the ``Lad'' Slavic Movement, was beaten by unknown assailants in the town of Ust-Kamenogorsk. Less violent harassment of the opposition has continued unabated. Amirzhan Kosanov, the Acting Head of the Executive Committee of the opposition Republican People's Party of Kazakhstan (RNPK), found threatening graffiti in the stairwells of his apartment building, on the doors of his apartment, and on neighboring buildings on March 17. Later that night, hooligans threw rocks at the windows of the apartment of Almira Kusainova, the RNPK's Press Secretary. In one case, a large rock shattered one of the windows. To add insult to injury, Mr. Kosanov has been barred from leaving Kazakhstan. He is the former Press Secretary of Akezhan Kazhegeldin, Kazakhstan's former Prime Minister and now the exiled head of the RNPK. Claiming Mr. Kosanov had access to ``state secrets,'' the authorities have confiscated his passport--even though he had left Kazakhstan many times before. To round out the campaign against Mr. Kosanov, a series of articles and reports in pro-government media have accused him of adultery and pedophilia. In addition, Pyotr Afanasenko and Satzhan lbrayev, two RNPK members who were Mr. Kazhegeldin's bodyguards, were sentenced in April 2000 to three years in prison for a weapons offense; an appeals court upheld the convictions. The OSCE Center in Almaty has stated that it considers the charges to be political in nature. Moreover, these two individuals, as former members of the security forces, should be in special prisons instead of being incarcerated among the general prison population, where they are in danger. Along with the targeting of opposition activists, the ongoing crackdown on freedom of the press has continued. Most media outlets have long been under the direct or indirect control of Mr. Bapi, who was sentenced to one year in jail and ordered to pay $280 in court expenses, was immediately pardoned under a presidential amnesty. Still, his conviction remains on the books, which will prevent him from traveling abroad, among other restrictions. Mr. Bapi is appealing the verdict. As for Mr. Gabdullin, the prosecutor's office issued a press release on April 6 stating that it had dropped the case against him due to ``the absence of [a] crime,'' although his newspaper has not yet received formal confirmation. While both editors are currently at liberty, as the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) points out, their newspapers cannot publish in Kazakhstan because local printers will not risk angering local officials. In an April 17 letter to President Nazarbaev, CPJ concluded that ``we remain deeply concerned about your government's frequent use of politically-motivated criminal charges to harass opposition journalists'' and called on him ``to create an atmosphere in which all journalists may work without fear of reprisal.'' Apart from intimidating individual journalists and publications, Kazakhstan's authorities have taken legal action to restrict freedom of speech. The country's Senate on April 17 approved a draft media law that limits the retransmission of foreign programs and will also subject Internet web pages to the same controls as print media. Moreover, media outlets can be held responsible for news not obtained from official sources. In other words, if the New York Times or CNN runs stories Kazakhstan's leadership finds distasteful, Kazakh media outlets risk legal sanction for re-running those reports. Considering the ongoing investigations by the U.S. Department of Justice into high-level corruption in Kazakhstan, it is easy to draw inferences about what kinds of stories the authorities would eagerly spike. Indeed, although Mr. Gabdullin and Bapi were formally prosecuted for articles in their newspapers, both had also previously signed an open letter, published in the January 15 edition of Roll Call, expressing their support for the investigation. Mr. Speaker, Kazakh authorities have also stepped up harassment of NGOS. The OSCE Center in Almaty, the Washington-based National Democratic Institute (NDI), and Internews-Kazakhstan had jointly organized public forums in 9 regions of Kazakhstan to educate local citizens, media, and interested parties about the proposed amendments to the media law. After the law's passage, local organizers of these Forums on Mass Media were called in to the Procuracy for ``conversations.'' Other government agencies which took part in this intimidation were the Tax Police and the Financial Police. According to OSCE sources, the authorities offered local NGOs ``friendly'' advice about not working with the OSCE and NDI. In Atyrau, one NGO contacted by the Financial Police did not even participate in these forums but that did not stop the police from sending a written request for Finally, Mr. Speaker, to round out a very depressing picture, Kazakhstan's parliament is reportedly working towards the adoption of amendments to the law on religion that will severely limit freedom of conscience. The draft provisions would require at least 50 members for a religious association to be registered (the law currently requires 10). In order to engage in ``missionary activity,'' which would involve merely sharing religious beliefs with others, individuals--citizens or not--would have to be registered with the government, and religious activity would be permitted only at the site of a religious organization, which could bar meetings in rented facilities or even private homes. Violation of these provisions could lead to a sentence of one-year in prison or even two years of ``corrective labor,'' and to the closing of religious organizations. These draft amendments to the religion law were introduced in Kazakhstan's parliament in early April. According to the U.S. Embassy in Almaty, no date has been scheduled for discussion of the legislation though it is expected the measure will be considered before the current session ends in June. The U.S. Government, the OSCE, and other international agencies have expressed concern about the possible restriction of religious liberty, and there is reason to fear the worst. In recent months, the attitude underlying these draft amendments has already had a real impact on believers. American citizens who did humanitarian work in several cities in Kazakhstan have been harassed, intimidated and eventually deported. The formal cause of their expulsion was violation of administrative regulations but one official told an American the real reason was because they were Christians. In one particularly brutal, ugly case, Americans who had been told to leave the country were preparing to do so when the authorities brought them back from the airport so they could be videotaped for TV broadcasts portraying them as engaging in various sorts of subversive activities. An American family preparing to leave Ust-Kamenorgorsk was harassed by a Kazakh security official who threatened to spend the entire night in their tiny apartment to make sure they left. It took several hours before he could be persuaded to leave, despite the fact that his presence was frightening a pregnant American woman. Jehovah's Witnesses have also reported stepped-up harassment and intimidation. Over the past few months, central and local media have been attacking Jehovah's Witnesses, who are depicted as religious extremists. In one bizarre case, according to the Witnesses, a television station broadcast video footage of Islamic terrorists, who were described as Jehovah's Witnesses, as well as footage of a police raid on a meeting held in a private home. Kazakhstan's new Administrative Violation Code, which went into effect in February, allows the suspension or prohibition of religious organizations for evading registration or for violating assembly rules. This has already been used to suspend the activity of a group of Jehovah's Witnesses in Kyzyl-Orda. A similar case is pending in Taraz. Just today, May 16, Keston News Service reports that authorities have declared a Baptist church in the town of Kulsary (Atyrau region) illegal and ordered it to stop all meetings, claiming that it may not function until it is registered. In fact, Kazakh law does not ban activity by religious communities without registration, but the regional prosecutor upheld the ban. Church leaders intend to appeal the decision, but local lawyers are afraid to take such a case. Keston further reports that on April 10, the authorities in Kyzylorda fined a Baptist church 7,750 tenge (about $53) and suspended its activities until it obtains registration. In February, police had raided a Kazakh-language service at that church, demanding that participants show their identity documents and write statements about the gathering. They confiscated religious writings in Kazakh and Russian, and took five people, including the leader of the service, Erlan Sarsenbaev, to the police station. According to the Baptists, the police told them ``During the Soviet times, believers like you were shot. Now you are feeling at peace, but we will show you.'' When Sarsenbaev refused to write a statement, police officers ``began to hit him on his neck, abdomen and head with a plastic bottle filled with water.'' Finally, they forged his signature, and wrote the statement on his behalf. As President Bush recently said, ``the newly independent republics of Central Asia impose troubling limits on religious expression and missionary work.'' This trend in Kazakhstan is especially disturbing because despite the consistent consolidation of presidential power and general crackdown on opposition and dissent, relative religious freedom had been one of the bright spots. It seems this bright spot is about to disappear. Mr. Speaker, a few weeks ago, Erlan Idrisov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Kazakhstan, visited Washington. In his public speaking engagements, he focused on Kazakhstan's emphasis on stability and its desire for good relations with its neighbors. These are understandable priorities which the United States has every reason to support. But Minister Idrisov simply discounted charges of human rights problems, arguing on May 2 at the Carnegie Endowment that the above-mentioned Washington Post editorial is ``not the final word'' on the human rights situation in his country. Minister Idrisov may disagree with any Washington Post editorial, if he likes. But when you consider many other sources, such as the State Department's report on human rights practices, the Committee to Protect Journalists (which last year named President Nazarbaev one of the world's ten worst enemies of the media), and the OSCE Center in Almaty, the overall impression is clear and indisputable. Despite official Kazakh claims about progress, the human rights situation is poor and threatens to get worse. If President Nazarbaev wants to change that impression and convince people that he is sincere about wanting to democratize his country, he must take concrete steps to do so. The time is long past when we could take his assurances at face value. Rep. Smith at a hearing on inter-parliamentary cooperation on June 16, 2010
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1078
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Washington, Friday, September 9, 2011 Mr. SMITH of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, as Chairman of the Helsinki Commission and Co-Chairman of the Poland Caucus, I have long been struck by the way in which history casts both long shadows and rays of light in Poland. I have had the privilege of traveling to Poland, one of America's closest allies, and was overwhelmed by the weight of history when I met with those who are building the Museum of the History of Poland's Jews. Institutions like this are not only critical for Poland's future generations, but for what all of us, around the world, can learn from Poland. Today, I rise today to commemorate the 67th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, a courageous act of defiance by the people of Poland against the brutal Nazi occupation during the Second World War. On August 1, 1944, the Polish Underground began its struggle to liberate Warsaw, to further weaken the collapsing German eastern front and to establish Polish sovereignty in response to the Red Army's advance to the city's outskirts. Despite the courage and fortitude of the Polish people, the Underground could not overcome the Nazis' determination to oversee the complete destruction of the Home Army and the city, bolstered by official orders and a directive that the massacre was to serve as a ``terrifying example'' to Europe. More than 200,000 civilians and members of the Home Army were killed in Warsaw over a 63-day period. Between August 5 and August 8, the Nazis murdered more than 40,000 people--overwhelmingly civilians--in the Wola district of Warsaw alone. Survivors, describing the horror of the executions, told of the indiscriminate slaughter of thousands of women and children. Approximately 700,000 Warsaw residents were expelled from their homes and forced out of the city--many sent to death, labor, or POW camps. Hitler ordered that Warsaw should be razed to the ground; Heinrich Himmler declaring in the most chilling terms that Warsaw ``must completely disappear from the surface of the earth.'' To that end, the Nazis systematically targeted buildings filled with deep meaning for the Poles, including cultural treasures, monuments, palaces, libraries, churches, and the Old Town. By the beginning of October, the Polish capitol was reduced to rubble--85 percent of the buildings in Warsaw had been destroyed. But from ashes come diamonds and, despite this barbaric campaign, the Polish desire for freedom and liberty could not be extinguished--not even by the decades of communist oppression which followed the end of the war. Such courage and resilience continues to define the Polish people. Today, Poland is a successful democracy and one of our strongest military allies. More to the point, Poland's leadership on issues related to democracy and human rights gives true meaning to the alliance concept of ``shared values.'' Poland has tirelessly support democratic movements in Northern Africa and Eastern Europe, particularly in Tunisia, through democracy activists and transition experts, and Belarus. Poland has served as a regional force in the effort to encourage human rights and democracy in Belarus in the wake of the December 2010 post-election political crackdown, maintaining free media outlets that operate in Belarus and opening Polish universities to students expelled for pro-democracy activities. On July 1, Poland assumed the six-months rotating Presidency of the European Union. It can only strengthen our transatlantic alliance to have the EU led by a country that has accomplished so much over the past 20 years both political and economically. As it happens, Poland has one of the fastest growing economies in Europe and is the only EU country not faced with a recession amidst the global financial crisis. As chairman of the U.S. Helsinki Commission and co-chairman of the Congressional Poland Caucus, I commend Poland's leadership on democracy and human rights throughout the OSCE region and globally. Polish-American ties remain strong and steadfast because of such dedication to these common values. More than that, however, I have unwavering respect and admiration for the people of Poland, whose courage and determination in the face of so many historic tragedies--of which the Warsaw Massacre is only one example--is a source of continued inspiration. Countries
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By Erika B. Schlager, Counsel for International Law Overview From September 26 to October 7, 2011, the OSCE participating States met in Warsaw, Poland, for the annual Human Dimension Implementation Meeting (HDIM). The meeting was organized by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, according to an agenda approved by consensus of all 56 participating States. The HDIM is Europe’s largest annual human rights gathering and provides a venue for participating States and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to review the implementation of the full range of core human rights and fundamental freedoms (e.g., freedoms of speech, assembly and association; prevention of torture; right to a fair trial), as well as rule of law, free elections and democracy-building issues. National minorities, Roma, tolerance and non-discrimination are also on the agenda. In accordance with OSCE procedures, the agenda included three specially selected topics, each of which was given a full day of review. In 2011, those subjects were: 1) “Democratic elections and electoral observation,” 2) “Freedom of movement,” and 3) “Enhancing implementation of OSCE commitments regarding Roma and Sinti.” U.S. Delegation The U.S. Delegation was headed by Ambassador David Johnson. Other members of the delegation included Ambassador Ian Kelly, Head of the U.S. Mission to the OSCE; Ambassador Cynthia Efird, Senior State Department Advisor to the Helsinki Commission; Ambassador Suzan Johnson Cook, Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom; and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Thomas Melia. Helsinki Commission staff participated in all aspects of the delegation’s work. Patrick Merloe, National Democratic Institute, Kathleen Newland, Migration Policy Institute, and Ethel Brooks, Rutgers University, served as Public Members of the delegation, addressing democratic elections, freedom of movement, and the situation of Romani people in the OSCE region respectively. Public Members have traditionally been included in U.S. delegations to OSCE human dimension meetings as a means of bringing special expertise to the U.S. delegations and to promote greater knowledge of the OSCE process in civil society. Highlights of This Year’s Meeting The severe crackdown in Belarus which followed elections last December was a focus of attention throughout the two-week meeting, both in formal sessions and special side events. During the final session, the United States delivered a statement focused on the use of the Moscow Mechanism regarding Belarus -- an OSCE tool used in exceptional circumstances to conduct fact-finding regarding extreme human rights concerns. The mechanism had been invoked in April by 14 participating States and a report was presented to the OSCE Permanent Council by the Mechanism Rapporteur, Professor Emmanuel Decaux, on May 28. NGOs also demonstrated throughout the meeting on behalf of Belarusian political prisoner Alex Bielatskiy. The United States also raised issues which remain unresolved following the 2003 invocation of the Moscow Mechanism regarding Turkmenistan. In particular, Ambassador Johnson drew attention to the continued disappearance of Ambassador Batyr Berdiev, the former representative of Turkmenistan to the OSCE. Although Turkmenistan officials did not to participate in the HDIM, human rights groups concerned with Turkmenistan were present and members of the opposition-in-exile made a statement expressing their willingness to return to Turkmenistan and participate in the February 2012 presidential elections. They also called for the OSCE to conduct a full election observation mission for those elections. In its opening statement, the United States observed that Kazakhstan had failed to fully implement the commitments on domestic reform it had made in 2007 in Madrid upon receiving the Chairmanship for 2010, that leading human rights activist Yevgeniy Zhovtis remained in prison as a result of a trial that lacked due process, that Kazakhstan had adopted measures in a one-party parliament giving the current president continued power and immunity from prosecution for life and had held a poorly-conducted snap presidential election following an attempt to push through a referendum to obviate future elections for the incumbent. Although Kazakhstan protested the U. S. characterization of 2010 as “a year of missed opportunities for reform,” Kazakhstan’s adoption of a new restrictive religion law during the course of the human dimension meeting illustrated the very point the United States was making. In fact, of the topics restricted to three-hour sessions, the subject of religious liberties was the most oversubscribed, with Kazakhstan’s new religion law generating particular criticism. As at previous meetings, the allocation of time during the meeting was highly problematic, with speaking time at some of the sessions limited to only one or two minutes to accommodate dozens desiring the floor, while other sessions ended early with time unused. Other real-time developments during the HDIM also found their way into discussions. Following the outbreak of fighting on September 27 at a Kosovo border crossing with Serbia, Serbian representatives at the meeting engaged in a sharply worded exchange with Albanian officials. (Serbia's engagement at the meeting was of particular note in light of Belgrade's bid to serve as OSCE Chair-in-Office in 2014.) The outbreak of anti-Roma rioting in every major Bulgarian town or city during the HDIM underscored the urgency of addressing the chronic human rights problems affecting Roma as well as the acute and escalating crises. Many participants also raised concern regarding continuing human rights abuses against ethnic Uzbeks in southern Kyrgyzstan in the wake of widespread violence last year and in advance of Kyrgyzstani elections in October. During the formal sessions, NGOs demonstrated on behalf of Kyrgyzstani political prisoner Azhimzhon Askarov. The United States engaged fully in all aspects of the meeting, holding bilateral meetings with other OSCE participating States and extensive consultations with NGOs. The United States also organized two side events. The first focused on on the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. Professor Louise Teitz from the Hague Permanent Bureau (an intergovernmental organization that administers this and other Hague Conventions), and Corrin Ferber from the Department of State, made presentations, with additional comments provided by Consul General Linda Hoover, U.S. Embassy Warsaw. The second event focused on fundamental freedoms in the digital age. DAS Thomas Melia moderated the discussion, which included comments by the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Dunja Mijatovic; Agata Waclik-Wejman, policy counsel for Google; and Nataliya Radzina, a Belarusian journalist who faces a lengthy prison sentence in Belarus. Conclusions The Human Dimension Implementation Meeting served as an important forum for the United States to raise issues of concern, both formally and informally, and to hold extensive consultations with governments, OSCE officials, and representatives of civil society. That said, this year's HDIM was somewhat diminished relative to past meetings. First, member states of the European Union appeared divided or preoccupied (or both). As a consequence, on a number of subjects – for example, the session that included migrant workers, refugees, and displaced persons -- there was neither a coordinated European Union statement nor statements by individual EU member states speaking in their national capacity. This voice was missed. Second, the level of participation on the part of governments as well as civil society was reduced. This may be in part due to economic factors. But it may also reflect other factors. Prior to the HDIM, for example, Belarus and Russia dragged out the adoption of an agenda until the last possible moment, making it especially hard for NGOs to plan their participation. In addition, OSCE has, in recent years, scheduled so many human dimension meetings throughout the year that it is difficult for government and non-governmental experts to cover them all. (In addition to the discussion of tolerance and non-discrimination at the HDIM, those issues have been or will be addressed at three different ad hoc meetings, as well as one of the Supplementary Human Dimension Implementation Meetings.) The Lithuanian Chairmanship also scheduled some meetings in Vienna during the HDIM, although the modalities call for all Vienna meetings to be suspended during the HDIM to facilitate participation by the representatives to the OSCE. Similarly, the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly fall meeting overlapped with the final sessions of the HDIM. In fact, the modalities for the OSCE's human dimension activities were a dominant theme during the HDIM's closing session -- presaging the opening of discussions in Vienna on that issue held immediately after the HDIM at the insistence of Belarus. While many governments, including the U.S., believe the way in which the OSCE organizes its human dimension activities could be improved, the discussions themselves risk being held hostage by those countries inimical to the OSCE's human rights work. Filter by:
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OSCE STATES ENCOURAGED TO INTENSIFY EFFORTS TO COMBAT CHILD PORNOGRAPHY Helsinki Commissioners Team with the International Center for Missing and Exploited Children to Educate Lawmakers (Brussels) – U.S. lawmakers from the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe urged fellow parliamentarians from more than 50 countries to enact comprehensive laws to combat child pornography and prosecute those involved in the multi-billion dollar industry. A U.S.-sponsored resolution on “Combating Trafficking and the Exploitation of Children in Pornography,” was unanimously adopted and issued in Brussels today. “Child pornography is a plague that affects every OSCE participating State,” said Helsinki Commissioner Representative Joseph R. Pitts (R-PA). “Currently, those who produce or disseminate child pornography can evade criminal liability by operating in countries with weak laws against child abuse and child pornography.” On Monday, the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s plenary session unanimously approved the resolution cosponsored by Rep. Pitts. Pitts heads the U.S. Delegation in Brussels for the annual meeting of the Parliamentary Assembly of the 56-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). The delegation includes Rep. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-MD), Rep. Alcee L. Hastings (D-FL), who serves as PA President, Rep. Robert B. Aderholt (R-AL), Rep. Hilda Solis (D-CA), Rep. Diane E. Watson (D-CA), Rep. G.K. Butterfield (D-NC), and Rep. Gwen Moore (D-WI). “As the parliamentary resolution recognizes, the lives of children exploited through child pornography are forever altered,” said Pitts. “First, they are victimized by the sexual abuse involved in producing the pornography. Then, they are re-victimized as the images are irretrievable and potentially viewed forever.” Pitts called on lawmakers to pass legislation to combat child pornography and strengthen the ability of law enforcement to crack down on networks often operating across borders. The appeal came at a special side meeting convened by the International Center for Missing and Exploited Children (ICMEC) to educate parliamentarians on the scope of exploitation and abuse of children through pornography widely distributed via the Internet. A new study of child pornography released by the ICMEC, surveying laws in 184 Interpol member countries produced alarming results: more than half of these countries (95) have no laws addressing child pornography and in many other countries, the existing laws are inadequate. “Child pornography is a high profit/low risk business,” concluded Pitts. “The risk of prosecution is low, and the potential to make huge sums of money is high. I urge my parliamentary colleagues to criminalize the exploitation of children in pornography. Only then can we ensure our children are protected.” In many OSCE countries there remain significant gaps in the existing legal framework that hamper the effectiveness of law enforcement agencies to combat international child pornography networks operating across borders, principally via the Internet. A survey of the OSCE countries based on the report, Child Pornography: Model Legislation & Global Review, finds that: 6 countries lack any laws criminalizing any aspect of child pornography; 32 countries lack any legal definition of child pornography; 16 countries have failed to make the possession of child pornography a crime; 20 countries lack laws criminalizing the distribution of child pornography via computer and the Internet; and 50 do not require Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to report suspected child pornography to law enforcement. To date, Belgium, France, and the United States are the only OSCE countries to have enacted comprehensive laws addressing all 5 of these areas. The Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, also known as the Helsinki Commission, is a U.S. Government agency that monitors progress in the implementation of the 1975 Helsinki Accords. Combating Trafficking and the Exploitation of Children in Pornography OSCE Adopts New Goals for the Fight Against Human Trafficking U.S. Helsinki Commission to hold Hearing on Human Trafficking Chairman Smith Calls on Dutch Government to Conduct Thorough Investigation of Child Sex Trafficking Allegations Smith Chairs Hearing on Human Trafficking in a Troubled Economy 19 Helsinki Commission to Hold Hearing on Labor Trafficking
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U.S. HELSINKI COMMISSION TO HOLD HEARING ON THE IRAQI REFUGEE CRISIS Hearing Will Focus on Humanitarian Relief, Resettlement, Security Implications for the Region and Beyond (Washington, D.C.) Congressman Alcee L. Hastings (D-FL), Chairman of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (U.S. Helsinki Commission) and Co-Chairman Senator Benjamin L. Cardin (D-MD), will hold a hearing entitled “OSCE Partner States and Neighbors Overwhelmed by Iraqi Refugees: Band-aid Solutions to Implosion in the Middle East?”, on Thursday, April 10, 2008 at 2:30 p.m. in room 1100 of the Longworth House Office Building. The hearing will focus on the impact of the massive displacement of Iraqi citizens on Jordan, Syria, Egypt and Turkey as well as other countries in the region; the security implications of this humanitarian crisis; and efforts by the United States and others to address the plight of Iraqi refugees, including humanitarian relief, resettlement of Iraqi refugees, host country commitments, European cooperation as well as a long-term plan to address this crisis. The hearing comes on the heels of General David Petraeus’ and Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker’s testimony before Congress about the Iraq war. Chairman Hastings, who is Special Representative on Mediterranean Affairs for the Organization for Security Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Parliamentary Assembly, has introduced comprehensive legislation to address this humanitarian and security crisis. In January, Chairman Hastings and Congressman John Dingell wrote to President Bush requesting an additional $1.5 billion in funding for assistance to Iraqi refugees in the FY 2009 budget. They also wrote to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in February, calling on her to develop a long-term plan to address the plight of Iraqi refugees and internally displaced populations (IDPs). Testifying before the Commission will be: Panel I – Ambassador James Foley, Senior Coordinator for Iraqi Refugees, U.S. Department of State Ms. Lori Scialabba, Senior Advisor to the Secretary of Homeland Security for Iraqi Refugees, Department of Homeland Security Panel II – Mr. Michel Gabaudan, Washington Director, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Mr. Anders Lago, Mayor of Sodertalje, Sweden – The city of Sodertalje has a population of 83, 000 and has taken in more than 5,000 Iraqi refugees. Mr. Noel Saleh, Member, Board of Directors, Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services (ACCESS) – Created in 1971 by a group of volunteers in Dearborn, Michigan, ACCESS assists the Arab immigrant population adapt to life in America and has been integral in assisting Iraqi refugees who have resettled in the United States. WHAT: U.S. Helsinki Commission to Hold Hearing on the Iraqi Refugee Crisis WHEN: Thursday, April 10 at 2:30 p.m. WHERE: 1100 Longworth House Office Building The Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, also known as the Helsinki Commission, is a U.S. Government agency that monitors progress in the implementation of the provisions of the 1975 Helsinki Accords. The Commission consists of nine members from the United States Senate, nine from the House of Representatives, and one member each from the Departments of State, Defense and Commerce.
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HASTINGS CONTINUES TO LEAD ON MINORITY POLITICAL PARTICIPATION AT UN FORUM WASHINGTON - Governments at all levels need to improve outreach to minority communities to better represent the diversity of their people, Congressman Alcee L. Hastings (D-FL) said this week at the United Nations Forum on Minority Issues. Congressman Hastings, Co-Chairman of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (U.S. Helsinki Commission), outlined several easy ways policy makers can more proactively involve minority citizens, including regular face-to-face meetings to bring them into the legislative process, advertising government job openings in minority communities, and expanding mentoring opportunities that give youth a positive experience with government. The full text of his remarks is available here. United Nations Independent Expert on Minority Issues Gay McDougall convened the forum in Geneva, Switzerland Nov. 12-13. Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA), Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, chaired the forum. Congressman Hastings spoke at a session about concrete steps to advance minority political participation. He also reported on April’s Black European Summit in Belgium, a joint venture of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, Office of the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, and the Socialist Group of the European Parliament. The Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, also known as the U.S. Helsinki Commission, is an independent agency of the Federal Government charged with monitoring compliance with the Helsinki Accords and advancing comprehensive security through promotion of human rights, democracy, and economic, environmental and military cooperation in 56 countries. The Commission consists of nine members from the U.S. Senate, nine from the House of Representatives, and one member each from the Departments of State, Defense, and Commerce. Hastings Raises Cause of Roma, Muslims through Commission Minority Events with French Delegation U.S. and European Parliamentarians Press for Minority Gains 1 Transatlantic Minority Political Leadership Conference – News Conference Cardin Introduces Maryland’s Ian Kelly, Nominee for Ambassador to OSCE Click here for the previous year's Press Releases
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St. Luke Baptist Church, shown on Aug. 2, is framed by massive, old oaks and is one of the most beautiful buildings in Hog Hammock, a community on Sapelo Island, Ga. Facebook
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Organizer Books Solid-Color Magazine Holders Keep catalogs, trade publications, and magazines tidy, organized, and at your fingertips when you need them. Easy-to-assemble holders are made of heavy coated cardboard in 4 muted colors; each one measures4" x 9 1/4" x 11 3/4" high. Set of 4 (1 of each color)
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About Us Local NewsSportsBusinessObituariesPolice ReportsWeather & Web CamsSubmit News Search: web powered by News News Sports Girls soccer soccer team recognized for academic excellence by Dairy Farmers of Oregon Girls soccer soccer team recognized for academic excellence by Dairy Farmers of Oregon Written by Jef Hatch, Pilot staff writer October 21, 2011 09:58 pm Not only do the members of the Brookings-Harbor High School girls soccer team work hard on the field, they also work hard in the classroom.And the OSAA and the Dairy Farmers of Oregon are recognizing them for their efforts with the Academic All-State Award.The Bruins have the ninth highest team G.P.A. among 4A girls soccer teams with a season average of 3.59. “This awards program continues our tradition of celebrating Oregon’s student athletes,” said Pete Kent, executive director of the Oregon Dairy Products Commission. “Their efforts are impressive, and we’re proud of their recognition.”BHHS Athletic Director Jon Young echoed those sentiments.“As an athletic director, I’m very proud of them,” he said. “It’s a reflection of their hard work and dedication on the field showing up in the classroom.”According to Brianna Juarez, all of the members of the team work hard to keep their grades up – even doing homework on the bus.“It’s really hard playing sports year-round, especially if you have to have class participation for your grade,” she said. “A lot of girls work on homework on the bus on the way to games and most of us go home after practice, do our homework and go to bed.”Fellow senior Louie Deraita, who maintains a ninth-in-class 3.93 G.P.A., agreed. “Some of us have little study groups, and we ask each other for help sometimes, too,” she said. “We motivate each other, too, because if you don’t have good grades you shouldn’t be on the field.“School comes first.”According to Head Coach Fred Juarez, a lot of the girls on the team have really stepped up. Some of them have taken their grades from below a 2.0 all the way to a 4.0 grade point average during the soccer season.The OSAA and the Dairy Farmers will provide each of the Lady Bruins a lapel pin to recognize their accomplishment.When asked what it means to be honored with the recognition, Deraita was quick to respond.“It means we work hard, not only on the field, but in the classroom, too.” News
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From the April-13, 2005 issue of Credit Union Times Magazine • Subscribe! SBA Finds Small Business Lending Often Gets Scaled Back after Bank Mergers April 13, 2005 • Reprints WASHINGTON - Small business lending tends to fall by the wayside after an internal merger at a large bank. This is one of the conclusions for a just-released study from the SBA, The Effects of Mergers and Acquisitions on Small Business Lending at Large Banks. The study looked at the nation's top 50 bank holding companies (BHC) and found that banks that are acquired, but not placed under the more direct control that accompanies a formal merger, may do about the same amount of small business lending as prior to the acquisition. In contrast, the merging of bank charters within the BHC seems more likely to reduce small business lending. When BHCs acquire and then change the ownership of banks-but do not merge them with their other banks, or with each other-small business lending is not heavily impacted. But as BHCs merge bank subsidiaries and otherwise shift assets into their larger banks, their small business lending declines, the study found. The study's authors used annual data for 1997 to 2002, which incorporates data for small business lending during the 2001 national recession and the 2002 recovery. All banks examined had at least $300 million in assets. There were other key findings. Small business lending declined significantly across each of the various dependent variables and loan sizes. Both internal growth and total growth tend to reduce small business lending for each loan size category. Also the more concentrated the assets become in its larger banks, through either internal growth or through mergers of its bank subsidiaries, the less small business lending the BHC does, the study found. "The results suggest that, in general, larger BHCs tend to do less small business lending," said Diana Hancock, Joe Peek, and James Wilcox of KeyPoint Consulting, LLC and authors of the study. "That masks some important distinctions: small business lending can be affected quite differently by the way in which a BHC becomes larger and the extent to which the BHCs consolidate their bank subsidiaries." The authors cite a study that showed small business lending at banks has been a formidable player. Between 1994 and 1999, lending here grew more than 20% while banks' share of total loans declined about 10%. They also note that larger banks increasingly dominate small business lending. For example, during that period the share of small business bank loans under $100,000 held by the largest banks rose and the share held by the smallest banks fell. Mergers and acquisitions have almost always been the death knell for small business lending, according to the study. Citing other research, the authors said more than 6,000 mergers and acquisitions between the late 1970s and early 1990s reduced small business lending. However, they also find that the reductions were almost entirely offset by increases in small business lending by banks that did not merge that operated in the same markets as the merging banks. Still, one reason why small business lending by large banks may not have been much affected by their mergers is that large banks tend to merge with smaller banks, which tend to be more heavily engaged in small business lending, the study found. Another reason might be that financial innovations and changes in technology have "eroded some barriers" to the involvement of larger banks in small business lending. "For example, the increasing use of credit scoring in loan originations, as well as securitization after origination, are reducing screening and monitoring costs and, in turn, reducing the importance of both established lending relationships and physical proximity between borrowers and lenders," the study said. To the extent that large banking organizations adopt the technologies and innovations of credit scoring and the securitization of small business loans more quickly and widely than smaller banks, these large BHCs could garner a larger share of small business lending, the authors said. -msamaad@cutimes.com
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Credit Union Times Editorial Cartoons: Slide Show By Credit Union Times June 02, 2011 • Reprints Credit Union Times, April 16, 2014 Credit Union Times, April 9, 2014 Credit Union Times, March 26, 2014 Credit Union Times, March 5, 2014 Credit Union Times, Feb. 26, 2014 Credit Union Times, Feb. 5, 2014 Credit Union Times, Jan. 29, 2014 Credit Union Times, Jan. 8, 2014 Credit Union Times, Dec. 18, 2013 Credit Union Times, Nov. 27, 2013 Credit Union Times, Nov. 6, 2013 Credit Union Times, Oct. 30, 2013 Credit Union Times, Oct. 9, 2013 Credit Union Times, Sept. 25, 2013 Credit Union Times, Sept. 4, 2013 Credit Union Times, Aug. 28, 2013 Credit Union Times, Aug. 7, 2013 Credit Union Times, July 31, 2013 Credit Unio Times, July 17, 2013 Credit Union Times, July 3, 2013 Credit Union Times, June 26, 2013 Credit Union Times, May 29, 2013 Credit Union Times, May 8, 2013 Credit Union Times, April 24, 2013 Credit Union Times, Feb. 13, 2013 Credit Union Times, Feb. 6, 2013 'Skunk at the Bankers' Garden Party', Credit Union Times, Dec. 12, 2012 Credit Union Times, Dec. 5, 2012 Credit Union Times, Oct. 31, 2012 Credit Union Times, Oct. 24, 2012 Credit Union Times, June 6, 2012 Credit Union Times, Feb. 29, 2012 Credit Union Times, Feb. 22, 2012 Credit Union Times, Aug. 3, 2011 Credit Union Times, July 27, 2011 Credit Union Times, June 15, 2011 Credit Union Times, June 8, 2011 Credit Union Times, June 1, 2011 Credit Union Times, April 20, 2011 « Previous Page 5 of 144 Next » Mr. Disterhoft is the University of Iowa Community CU CEO who lobbied the president about the MBL cap at a recent town hall meeting. SarahSnellCooke
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Another Defendant in St. Paul Croatian Fraud Case Pleads Guilty November 21, 2012 • Reprints Another defendant, Marko Nikoli, involved in the $70 million St. Paul Croatian Federal Credit Union fraud case pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of financial institution fraud and one count of money laundering in U.S. District Court in Cleveland. Nikoli is the nephew of Koljo Nokolovski, a pivotal figure in the SPCFCU case who was sentenced in May to 18 years in prison for fraudulently obtaining $5.6 million from the credit union in the Cleveland suburb of Eastlake, Ohio. Nikoli fraudulently received $1.4 million from SPCFCU loans in June 2003 and in May 2005, and then transferred $937,500 to a bank in Skopje, Macedonia, according to court documents. Court records also show Nokolovski used $60,811 from SPCFCU funds to buy a Mercedes Benz for Nikoli. Nikoli is scheduled to be sentenced March 18, 2013. Nineteen people have been indicted for their role in SPCFCU’s collapse. Others involved also have pleaded guilty and have been sentenced, while some are awaiting trials. The NCUA, which lost $186.4 million as a result of the SPCFCU fraud case, closed the credit union and began its liquidation process in May 2010. Show Comments
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Privacy Notice Bill Reintroduced in House February 15, 2013 • Reprints Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer’s (R-Mo.) is re-introducing legislation Friday that would eliminate the current requirement that financial institutions mail annual privacy notices to all customers explaining information sharing practices, even the policies that have not changed, his office said. Instead, the Eliminate Privacy Notice Confusion Act, co-sponsored by Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.), would require banks and credit unions to provide the information only if privacy policies have changed. A similar version of the bill passed the House in December but was not taken up by the Senate in that session of Congress. “I was extremely pleased that the House previously supported this legislation to eliminate unnecessary, costly, confusing and often ignored mailings that clog up people’s mailboxes and I am hopeful that this new measure will ultimately be approved by the U.S. Senate and signed into law by the president,” Luetkemeyer said. “Not only will this bill reduce the costs passed onto the customers of banks and credit unions but also will make it more likely that people will pay closer attention to important mailings they receive from their financial institutions because they are receiving fewer,” he said. CUNA President/CEO Bill Cheney said the streamlined requirement would reduce the amount of diverted time and resources that credit union staff could be using to provide services to members. NAFCU President/CEO Fred Becker lauded the bill as one of the priorities outlined in his organization’s five-point regulatory relief plan. Show Comments
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1090
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Washington Governor Makes It Official: State Credit Unions Can Pay Board Members April 23, 2013 • Reprints Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a new law Monday that gives state-chartered credit unions the option to pay board members. “He (the governor) did say he thought it was a good bill…and congratulated everyone who worked on it,” said David Postman, executive director of communications for the governor’s office in Olympia. The Northwest Credit Union Association helped draft the new legislation and endorsed it before state House and Senate committee hearings in February and March. Introduced to the Washington legislature in January, the legislation was unopposed as it was unanimously passed by the state House on April 12 and the state Senate on Feb. 26. In addition to compensating board members, the new law will permit credit unions to compensate members of a credit union’s supervisory committee. The NWCUA and credit unions across the state supported the compensation measure because of growing fiduciary and regulatory complexities that demand more time and work requirements from board members, the league said. Supporters also said the compensation option could help attract diverse board members with specific skills that could contribute to the credit union movement. In addition to board compensation, the new law allows Washington state-chartered credit unions to invest with a registered investment company or collective investment fund, give credit unions six years to partially occupy real property purchased for future expansion, and require credit unions’ board of directors to meet as few as six times a year with as least one meeting in each quarter. Washington has become the 11th state to break from the long-held credit union tradition of board volunteers. Last month, Tennessee became the 10th state to give state-chartered credit unions the option to pay its board members after Gov. Bill Haslam signed a new law in March. Georgia, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Texas also permit state-chartered credit unions to compensate their board members. Show Comments
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1091
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NOT EVERY PALESTINIAN BOY WANTS TO DIE A MARTYR by DEBKAfile "Israel’s month-long offensive to smash Palestinian terrorists strongholds in the West Bank has had a side effect worth noting: some ordinary Palestinians are no longer afraid to speak out and admit their distress – in front of television cameras. In the Jabalya camp of the Gaza Strip, the local correspondent for Israel’s Channel 2, Seliman a-Shafi, gave Sunday night viewers a rare glimpse into the mind of a would-be suicide killer - a terrified adolescent aged 14 who freely told his story. Sent on a suicide mission against an Israeli military position – he did not say by which group - he set out with another boy in the dark of night. Halfway there, he stopped. “I didn’t want to die,” he said, tears rolling down his face. 'I wanted to go back to my family.' He tried to persuade his friend to return home with him. The friend refused. The boy turned back alone and a few minutes later heard an explosion. Filled with fear, he ran hard until he reached the safety of home. The boy’s family took part in the interview, led by his comfortably ample mother surrounded by her large brood. 'They take our children when they are too young to understand, to decide if they want to die. Why don’t the take the louts hanging round the markets? My boy is in shock. He can’t stop weeping. He doesn’t know whether he did right or wrong. We don’t let him out of the house without his father – in case he changes his mind again, or they catch him. We are all in shock.' In a strong, assertive voice, she told the interviewer that she was not the only mother in this situation. The Gaza Strip is full of women keeping a tight hold on their young sons. 'All of us here are badly traumatized. But there is not a single psychologist in the whole territory to help us.' The boy from Gaza was not by any means the youngest child to be marked out as a 'martyr'. In Jenin, where the walls were plastered with large posters depicting dozens of dead youths, Israeli soldiers learned to beware of innocent-looking 10- and even 7-year olds with hidden bombs." CUTTING EDGE NOTE: This situation facing Israeli soldiers sounds a lot like the situation that faced U.S. soldiers in Vietnam, where the civilian many times was your enemy. Not only were youngsters booby-trapped to kill our soldiers, but little old ladies killed many an American soldier.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1092
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Home 2013 UCI Cyclocross World Cup at Tabor LIVE Submitted by admin on Sat, 10/26/2013 - 09:39 - Full On Demand broadcasts: Elite Women - Elite Men (CTV subscription) - Video: Recap of Men's race (English, CTV, 02:33) - Video: Final lap of the men's race (Sporza, Dutch, 08:51) - Video: Van der Haar cannot take advantage of late bike change (Sporza, Dutch, 0:53) - Video: Van der Haar and Nys fall (Sporza, Dutch, 02:21) - Video: Walsleben and Van der Haar take off (Sporza, Dutch, 08:32) - Video: Race start and first lap of the men's race (Sporza, Dutch, 08:17) - LIVE video here and here and here and here. (Not available in all countries) - Elite Women's race expected LIVE here and here from around 1:25pm CET (7:25am U.S. Eastern). Elite Men race coverage starts around 2:45pm CET (8:45am U.S. Eastern). - Next update as live video coverage gets underway. - Video: 2012 elite men race last lap (Dutch, 08:33) - Riders expected on the start line in the Elite Women's race include: Compton, Harris, Wyman, De Boer, Cant, Antonneau, Miller, Havlikova, Chainel-Lefevre, Ferrier-Bruneau, Van Loy, Kloppenburg, ... - Riders expected on the start line in the Elite Men's race include: Van der Haar, Nys, Albert, Pauwels, Meeusen, Vantornout, Peeters, Wellens, Aernouts, Mourey, Jouffroy, Page, Field ... 2013/2014 cyclocross action continues... - Lars van der Haar won the first round of the 2013/2014 UCI CX World Cup, elite men race, last week in Valkenburg. Marianne Vos won the women's race in Valkenburg. - Note that Cycling TV is also showing the Elite Women race live. The women's race gets underway at 1:30pm CET (7:30am U.S. Eastern). The Elite Men race gets underway at 3:00pm CET (9:00am U.S. Eastern). Subscribers to CTV will also be able to watch the races On Demand. - Coverage gets underway at around 2:45pm CET (8:45am U.S. Eastern) with the Elite Men race beginning at 3:00pm CET (9:00am U.S. Eastern). Pre-race coverage may include highlights of the Women's race. - The 2013 UCI Cyclocross World Cup at Tabor is Saturday, October 26. There will once again be live streams. Official website here (auto-translated to English) - Elite Women Start List - Elite Men Start List - Live streaming video: 2:45pm CET (8:45am U.S. Eastern) Tabor LIVE video streaming (Subscription, worldwide) (Cycling TV) (Elite Women LIVE here: 1:25pm CET (7:25am U.S. Eastern)) (Elite Men LIVE here: 2:55pm CET (8:55am U.S. Eastern)) UCI Channel(not available in all countries) (Sporza live stream) (2:45pm CET (8:45am U.S. Eastern)) Alternative Copyright © Pete Geyer/www.cyclingfans.com
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1093
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Courtesy: Athletics Communications Takedown Wrestling Hosting Reunion Show Saturday DES MOINES, Iowa – Takedown Wrestling Radio will be hosting the Cradle Gear Cyclone Reunion Show this Saturday live from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m., hosted by Scot Casber, Brad Johnson and former Cyclone All-American Kurt Backes. The show will feature a number of guest appearances from former Cyclone All-Americans and NCAA champions with college wrestling and Olympic wrestling being the focus. Here’s a complete schedule of all guests that will be on the show: 9:05 a.m. – David Zabriskie (three-time All-American and 2010 heavyweight NCAA champion) 9:20 a.m. – Zach Roberson (three-time All-American and 2004 133-pound NCAA champion) 9:35 a.m. – Jon Reader (three-time All-American and 2011 174-pound NCAA champion) 9:45 a.m. – Trent Paulson (three-time All-American and 2006 157-pound NCAA champion) 10:00 a.m. – Bobby Douglas (head coach 1992-2006, holds 198-75-3 career dual record) 10:15 a.m. – Chris Bono (three-time All-American and 1996 150-pound NCAA champion) 10:30 a.m. – Travis Paulson (three-time All-American) 10:45 a.m. – Joe Heskett (four-time All-American and 2002 165-pound NCAA champion) Fans are encouraged to join in on the conversation live by calling (866) 333-5966 or (515) 204-5966. To listen to the show, tune into KXNO 1460 am. You can also listen on the web at KXNO.com or takedownradio.com.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1094
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United States » Washington, D.C. » How To Ancestry.com - District of Columbia Genealogy & District of Columbia Family History Resources The previous version can still be found here: Ancestry.com - District of Columbia Genealogy - Databases, Sources, How To's Ancestry.com Wiki - District of Columbia Family History Research This entry was originally written by Johni Cerny in Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources. This wiki is a free service of Ancestry.com. FamilySearch Wiki - District of Columbia This outstanding wiki introduces records and strategies that can help you learn more about your ancestors. It explains terms associated with this state's particular genealogy research and describes the content, use, and availability of major genealogical records. The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration - Know Your Records Program Free events to keep you in the know, held in Washington, DC, and College Park, Maryland.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1095
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Your browser does not support iframes. Read a digital copy of the latest edition of Cynthiana Democrat online. State advises no parking on Church Street -A A +A By Becky Barnes Tuesday, August 12, 2008 at 8:00 pm Church Street residents have been given a letter from the states Transportation Cabinet regarding the impending traffic detour. Due to a recent state assessment of the U.S. 27 North viaduct, which deemed the bridge structurally unsound, the weight limit of the bridge has been reduced to 10 tons. Cynthiana Mayor Jim Brown said this will create a need for traffic to be diverted off of U.S. 27 to Church Street until the new bridge can be constructed.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1096
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Home > Music > Seasonal Music > seasonal music Christmas with Harold Melvin & the Bluenotes Harold Melvin & the Bluenotes. The beautiful harmonies of this soulful quintet will put you in mind of angels heard on high as they bring you a doo-wop style holiday concert. Selections include "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," "Winter Wonderland," "Jingle Bells," "Let It Snow," "O Tannenbaum," "The First Noel," "Joy to the World," "We Wish You a Merry Christmas," "Silent Night," "Jingle Bell Rock," "Deck the Halls," "Santa Claus Is Coming To town," and "O Holy Night.""One of the defining names in modern rhythm and blues � Harold Melvin was considered one of the major forces behind the 'Philly Sound,' a well-orchestrated soul style that developed in the 1970s."�New York Beacon Michael McDonald: This Christmas Michael McDonald, vocals. DeMarco Johnson, keyboard & harmonica. Mike Haynes, trumpet. Dan Needham, drums, & ... Studio: Razor & Tie. Format: CD. UPC: 888837376525. Daedalus Item Code: 39066
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Food, building workers on strike at U. of Illinois CHAMPAIGN – Almost 800 building-service and food workers walked away from their jobs and onto the picket lines at the University of Illinois’s Urbana-Champaign campus Monday, unhappy over wages and other issues in a contract proposal from the school.
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Israeli leader signals readiness to compromise JERUSALEM – Israel’s prime minister, known for his rigid negotiating positions, has been sending signals that he is ready for significant compromises in a peace deal with the Palestinians – and that he accepts the narrative increasingly favored by his opponents that says ending the West Bank occupation is essential for Israel itself.
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