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New ASHRAE Certification Available ATLANTA - The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) is offering a new high-performance building design professional certification program, and registration is now open. According to ASHRAE, this program provides the training and tools for the design of high-performance buildings that live up to the performance capability promised. “This new certification program will allow practitioners to demonstrate a well-rounded understanding and knowledge of how HVACR design is integrated into high-performing buildings to a
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University to Test New Smart Metal for Cooling COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Researchers at the University of Maryland are developing a new “thermally elastic” metal alloy for use in advanced refrigeration and air conditioning systems. The technology promises far greater efficiency and reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.The Maryland team will soon begin testing of a prototype system, with economic stimulus funding from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). The new grant is part of a program designed to bring game-changing technologies to market. “Air conditioning represents the largest share of home electric bills in the summer, so this new technology could have significant consumer impact, as well as an important environmental benefit,” sais Eric Wachsman, director of the University of Maryland Energy Research Center (UMERC).“The approach is expected to increase cooling efficiency 175 percent, reduce U.S. carbon dioxide emissions by 250 million metric tons per year, and replace liquid refrigerants that can cause e
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5622
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Suspect dressed as "Ironman" robs Palm Coast Bank Flagler County Sheriff's deputies responded to a report of a robbery at a Wells Fargo Bank in the Town Center Shopping Center on Belle Terre Parkway. Palm Coast liquor store robbedDNA leads to bank robber arrestsPolice: Man robbed in Palm Coast parking lot PALM COAST, Fla. -- He's no superhero, but a suspect is at the center of a manhunt following a bank robbery in Flagler County.Flagler County Sheriff's deputies responded to a robbery at a Wells Fargo Bank in the Town Center Shopping Center on Belle Terre Parkway about 4:05 p.m. today. Reports says a black man, about 5 feet, 4 inches tall, entered the bank with a handgun and demanded money. He was wearing a tan jump suit, "Ironman" mask, tan boots, gloves and a red and black backpack.The robber fled the scene in a maroon compact vehicle. The vehicle was last seen traveling northbound on Belle Terre Parkway. There were seven to 10 customers in the bank at the time. There were no injuries. Anyone with information on the incident is asked to contact the Sheriff's Office at (386) 313-4911. Copyright 2013 Cox Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. imtellin - 6/21/2013 5:23 AM must be saving his rockets for something big, if he escaped in a car ?? who's next in the superhero lineup ?? spidey, the man of steel ?? the amazing four???
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Recap: NY Giants vs. Oakland East Rutherford, NJ (SportsNetwork.com) - Terrell Thomas' interception thwarted an Oakland drive and set up the go-ahead touchdown, as the New York Giants came from behind for a 24-20 victory over the Raiders at MetLife Stadium.Andre Brown, in his first game of the season after recovering from a broken leg, scored from the one to put the Giants ahead late in the third quarter and finished the game with 115 yards on 30 carries.The Giants (3-6) survived a multitude of mistakes, including a fumble on the opening kickoff that led to an Oakland touchdown and the third pick-six thrown by Eli Manning this season, to earn their third straight win after a disastrous 0-6 start.Manning threw for 140 yards with a touchdown while completing only 12-of-22 passes in the victory, which was aided by a blocked punt return for a score. The Giants have now won six straight coming off a bye and snapped a five-game skid against AFC opponents."We are kind of coming together as a team and finding ways to win games in the fourth quarter and playing a little better," Manning said. "We've got to keep working offensively. Our defense has been playing outstanding. Our offense, we have to start being a little bit more consistent, having some better drives, not putting them in a bind and turning the ball over."Oakland (3-6) has lost two straight overall and eight in a row on the road dating back to last year.Terrelle Pryor ran for the lone Raiders' offensive touchdown and completed only 11-of-26 passes for 122 yards with the crushing interception. He also lost a fumble to derail Oakland's last series."Obviously I didn't have a great game," Pryor said. "A lot of fingers easily could be pointed at me. I understand that. We understand that. We just have to move forward."The Raiders held a 20-14 lead late in the third and were driving for more with the ball inside the Giants' 35, but Thomas picked off a poor Pryor throw and nearly went the distance with the return. He was taken down at the Oakland five and lost the ball, which went through the end zone for what would have been a touchback, but the play was ruled down by contact.After a pass interference penalty in the end zone, Brown waltzed in on the next play for a 21-20 lead.The Raiders went three-and-out to end the third quarter and the Giants ate up nearly seven minutes of the fourth quarter clock before settling for a 23-yard field goal to extend the margin to four.Oakland had a quick three-and-out, then got the ball back with 4:55 remaining at its own 33 after a partially blocked punt, but Pryor was stripped of the ball and the Giants recovered with 3:21 to play.Brown then helped run out the remaining time with five carries for 21 yards and a pair of clock-killing first downs.The Giants' woeful special teams issues again came to the forefront to start the game, as Jerrel Jernigan lost control on the kickoff return and the ball bounced directly into the hands of Andre Holmes, who raced 22 yards to the New York five. It took the Raiders just two plays to cash in, as Pryor scored from the one for a 7-0 lead.However, the Giants came up with their own big special teams play after Oakland was forced to punt on its next series. Damontre Moore came through the middle of the line untouched and blocked Marquette King's punt. Cooper Taylor scooped up the loose ball and went 21 yards for the tying touchdown.The Giants, though, gave it away again later in the first when Peyton Hillis fumbled at the New York 20. The Raiders could not take full advantage and settled for a 33-yard Sebastian Janikowski field goal for a 10-7 lead.New York went in front with its first possession of the second quarter, as Manning directed an 11-play, 90-yard series for a touchdown. He connected on 5-of-6 throws during the set, including a 5-yard strike to Rueben Randle for the score.The Giants had the ball in the final two minutes of the half and were headed toward a potential score, but Tracy Porter stepped in front of a poorly thrown Manning pass for the easy pick and cruised 43 yards to the end zone to instead give Oakland a 17-14 advantage heading to the break.Oakland opened the second half with an eight-minute drive, but it yielded just three points on a 24-yard Janikowski field goal. The 14-play, 74-yard set was keyed by a Pryor 23-yard pass on third down. Pryor should have been sacked for a loss, but bounced off linebacker Keith Rivers to keep the play alive.Game NotesOakland has lost 12 straight games in the Eastern time zone ... Porter notched his 10th career regular-season interception and third touchdown ... Manning has been picked off 16 times this season, three of which have been returned for scores ... The Giants hadn't beaten an AFC foe since a 41-27 triumph over Cleveland last October ... The Raiders haven't won away from Oakland since a 26-16 victory at Kansas City last Oct. 28 ... The Giants have won three straight against the Raiders, including a 44-7 rout four years ago at the Meadowlands, but Oakland still owns a 7-5 mark in the all-time series ... The Giants will host Green Bay next week before a visit from Dallas ... Oakland travels to Houston next Sunday.
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Messier ends association with Rangers New York, NY (Sports Network) - Ending nearly a decade and a half of affiliation, Hall of Famer Mark Messier announced his decision to depart the New York Rangers on Thursday."I would like to thank the New York Rangers and particularly Glen Sather for giving me the opportunity over the last four years to work with the Rangers. I am resigning my position with the Team to pursue an opportunity to expand the game of hockey in the New York area by developing the Kingsbridge National Ice Center," Messier admitted in a statement."Although some will perceive this as a reaction to the coaching decision, nothing could be further from the truth. I completely respect the decision that was made and for all the reasons it was made. I harbor no hard feelings toward Glen or the Rangers. This is a personal choice I am making to create a program in the New York area that will give our children more choices and opportunities in the future. I wish the Rangers nothing but the best in the future."Though rumored to be in the hunt to replace John Tortorella as the club's new head coach, former Canucks bench boss Alain Vigneault was officially named to the post earlier this week.Messier arrived in Manhattan in 1991, spending 10 seasons over two stints (1991-97; 2000-04) with the Rangers as a player, then re-joined the team in 2009 as special assistant to GM Sather -- his former boss in Edmonton. As team captain, he was instrumental in bringing the Stanley Cup back to the city in 1994 after a 54-year absence and remains a beloved franchise icon."Mark Messier will always be a part of the New York Rangers family. As a player and then as part of the management team, he brought incomparable passion and dedication to the organization. We wish him well in his future endeavors," added Rangers general manager Sather.
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Abortion In The Crosshairs Of Many States Run By GOP Author: The Bucking Jenny Arkansas women march for their rights @ ArkTimes.com While Republicans consider a compromise regarding the looming “fiscal cliff,” they insist on refusing to learn the lessons of this month’s election when it comes to social issues like abortion. Nationally, the GOP seems to regard the fact that they still maintain majority in the House, one of the few places where they didn’t suffer humiliating defeat, as a mandate from the people. We have already seen this happen in their steadfast refusal to vote for the Senate’s Violence Against Women Act because it would protect Native American women, immigrants, and gay, lesbian or transgender individuals. Unfortunately, as the few states who are still held in Republican majority begin their legislative sessions, we also are witness to brazen acts against women’s rights on a state level. Arkansas is one of those states that have a Republican House, Senate, and governorship. Enthused by the supposed mandate of the 2012 election, Arkansas state leaders have chosen to direct their energies not toward job creation or other economic solutions, but toward their sick fixation with abortion. One man, Rep. Andy Mayberry, was very enthused by the majority his party holds in that state and his chances for pushing through anti-choice laws that severely limit women’s access to abortion and contraception: “I will say that basically any opportunity now is more than any opportunity than we had in the previous session.” When I asked UniteWomen.Org’s Arkansas State Director, Jennifer Moser, what she and her organization thought about the impending threat of new legislation from Rep. Mayberry and his friends, she was very concerned. In her written response to me she said that, “The war on women is far from over.” In fact, what she describes is obviously just that, an organized attack on women as part of the War on Women: “Pro-Life organizations in Arkansas are pushing lawmakers to pass anti-choice legislation for the upcoming 89th general assembly. Arkansas Right To Life is currently petitioning residents on anti-choice legislation. According to their website, they are requesting signatures to ban “web cam” abortions, to ban abortions on an unborn child capable of feeling pain, and to opt out of the abortion coverage in the Obama healthcare law. “There have been bills in the past that have tried to limit or ban abortions in Arkansas. The most recent, HB1887, which was sponsored by Rep. Andy Mayberry, was adjourned without assigning a date for further decision. “At the present, Arkansas bans a safe second trimester abortion without exception (Ark. Code Ann. §§ 20-16-1201 to -1206). Women seeking abortions in Arkansas must go through mandatory counseling that could induce guilt or doubt, including enlarged pictures of aborted fetuses and offers to view an ultrasound of the fetus (Ark. Code Ann. §§ 20-16-901 to -908, -1101 to -1111). There are also restrictions on abortion coverage for state employees. In addition to an abortion and contraception refusal clause that allow certain individuals or hospitals to refuse a woman requesting an abortion or to refuse to prescribe contraceptive supplies or information. “The current laws and the upcoming proposed legislation are a direct violation of a woman’s right to choose when and how she procreates. There is conflicting information about whether or not a fetus canfeel pain at 20 weeks and studies conducted at the University of California San Francisco suggest that the fetus cannot start to feel pain until it is at or beyond 24 weeks. “Now that the Republicans have majority in both the House and Senate, many people are hoping that the proposed legislation will fly through without any opposition.” It seems that Ms. Moser has hit the nail on the head. In the states where anti-choice legislation is being proposed to congresses of Republican majority, it is expected to fly through without any opposition. Think Progress reports that in some states, like Ohio, Wisconsin, Arkansas, and Arizona, women’s health and their right to choose are being seriously threatened in spite of the fact that: “Voters across the country rejected radical anti-choice legislation in this month’s election, and far-right candidates whose campaigns centered on denying women abortion access overwhelmingly lost their races.” RECOMMENDED ARTICLESVictory For Women In Arkansas: Federal Judge Rules Abortion Ban UnconstitutionalThis GOP Primary Winner Believes Marriage Equality Causes TornadoesGOP Senator Thinks Pregnancy Tests In Bars Are Responsible, But Using Birth Control Isn’t Share this information!Share on Tumblr Pin ItDiggPocketPrintEmail Author: The Bucking Jenny Like many others, I was taught that talking about religion or politics was rude. But, here's the deal folks... We can't hide behind that anymore, we can't hide behind "let's agree to disagree," or "let's just move on". We aren't talking about issues that are hypothetical, or might hurt somebody we don't know, or a future generation we'll never see. This is it. We are at a point where we have to have the conversations because the people we aren't talking about... That's us. We have to share the facts. We have to ask each other why we believe the pundits, or old dis-proven rhetoric. All too often, I'm shushed by the family republican who honestly thinks I'm wrong but doesn't want to fight, or the friends-list ostrich who prefers ignorant bliss, or the resident face-book troll who knows I’m right and wants right silenced. I simply cannot stop talking about and trying to ensure the future of our nation, of my children's nation, to appease others. Dre November 28, 2012 5:48 pm Step one: Every woman against this moves out of Arkansas. Step two: Problem solved.
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About Adena Women's BoardAccreditations and AchievementsAdena HistoryDoing Business with AdenaQuality CareAdena Medical GroupAdena Annual ReportsCustomer Opinion Panel Adena Today! NewsletterAdena Health FoundationBilling and InsuranceAdena Community HealthFor ContractorsFor PatientsFor PhysiciansFor VisitorsHealth Care CareersInstitute for LearningVolunteerMedia Center Adena History In 1895, a tragic train wreck shook Chillicothe’s residents into action and planted the roots that would become the Adena Health System. When a B & O passenger train crashed just a few miles west of Chillicothe, there were no nearby medical facilities. Many of the injured were taken to private homes. This spurred Jane Welsh, Mary C. Manley, Alexander Renick, S.H. Mosher and Lucille Hinton into action. Under the guidance and urging of Dr. G. E. Robbins, these women went to work to solicit bedding, furniture, and money to start an emergency hospital in a small brick house at 107 North Bridge Street. The community showed overwhelming support and $2,500 was raised through community fundraisers like bazaars and baby shows. On June 27, 1895, the hospital was incorporated and on January 1, 1896, the Emergency Hospital was dedicated and opened for use. Initially, the facility was supported by a list of 1,000 citizens who donated one dollar a year and by local churches. Within 15 years, the Bridge Street building became inadequate and, in 1910, two acres of land were purchased at the site of the old Methodist Cemetery on the corner of Cherry and Chestnut Streets. The original construction had a capacity of 25 beds. The first addition was completed in 1919, providing 13 more rooms. In 1923, a house on the corner of Vine and Chestnut was purchased from the Sosman family for use as a nurses' home. Until then, nurses had been living in the attic of the hospital. With the increase of population, another addition was completed in 1932, bringing the total beds to 50 with 10 bassinets. Continued Post-War Growth. In the 1940's, when a survey showed that additional services and hospital beds were needed, the Board of Trustees, by means of a formal fund drive, raised $70,000 from local citizens and industry. With this and federal Hill-Burton funds, a 50-bed addition replaced the antiquated section of the building. In June of 1949 the Women's Board founded four guilds with the goal of promoting good public relations, giving service to the hospital and fundraising. In 1972, the Volunteer Advisory Council was formed to set standards and to coordinate all volunteer work in the hospital. To date, the Volunteer Advisory Council donates all Sugarloaf Gift Shop proceeds to the hospital and the scholarship fund, and the volunteers donate 36,000 plus hours to the hospital annually. In 1955, the Ford Foundation donated $52,000 to the hospital. Crowded conditions and unsatisfactory location of the laboratory and the x-ray departments prompted the Board of Trustees to employ an architect to develop a long-range program. In the summer of 1960, 50 beds were completed and various services were relocated. In 1964, the first building (circa 1910) was demolished and 50 more beds were added at a cost of $520,000. Included in this addition was a physical therapy department. Funds for its equipment were donated by the Ross County Society for Crippled Children and Adults. Advancing Our Care into the 21st Century. The continuing growth of Chillicothe Hospital, new concepts in medicine, and the care of the patients brought on the relocation in an all-new and better hospital. On December 31, 1973, the Chillicothe Hospital moved into the new Medical Center Hospital with a capacity of 230 beds. An additional 15 beds were added in 1983 for psychiatric patients, bringing total beds to 245. The 1980's brought about many significant changes in healthcare. One of the most significant changes in healthcare to occur in the 1980's was the great demand for outpatient services. In 1989, Medical Center Hospital broke ground for a $19 million renovation and expansion project that allowed for expansion for all outpatient services. In order to effectively adapt to those changes, the Board of Trustees of Medical Center Hospital chose to cooperate with Mount Carmel Health in 2001. By combining resources with this 816 bed multi-hospital system, the hospital was able to expand patient services and technological capabilities. In 2003, the relationship ended and Adena embarked on a major growth strategy. No Related Resources
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Macquarie/First Trust Global Infrastructure/Utilities Dividend & Income Fund Declares its Quarterly Distribution of $0.35 Per... Date : 05/10/2012 @ 4:26PM Source : Business Wire Stock : Macquarie/First Trust Global Infrastructure Dividend & Income Fund (MFD) Quote : 17.31 0.07 (0.41%) @ 6:00PM Macquarie First Global share price Macquarie First Global (NYSE:MFD)Historical Stock Chart 2 Years : From Apr 2012 to Apr 2014 Macquarie/First Trust Global Infrastructure/Utilities Dividend & Income Fund (the “Fund”) (NYSE: MFD) today declared the Fund’s regularly scheduled quarterly distribution payable on May 31, 2012 to shareholders of record as of May 24, 2012. The ex-dividend date is expected to be May 22, 2012. Macquarie/First Trust Global Infrastructure/Utilities Dividend & Income Fund (MFD): Distribution per share: Distribution Rate based on the May 9, 2012 NAV of $15.64: Distribution Rate based on the May 9, 2012 closing market price of $15.37: A portion of the distribution may be treated as paid from sources other than net investment income, including short-term capital gain, long-term capital gain and return of capital. The final determination of the source and tax status of all distributions paid in 2012 will be made after the end of 2012. The Fund is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company, investing predominantly in listed infrastructure and utilities companies in selected developed countries globally. The Fund’s investment objective is to seek a high level of current return consisting of dividends, interest and other similar income, while attempting to preserve capital. First Trust Advisors L.P., the Fund’s investment advisor, along with its affiliate First Trust Portfolios L.P., are privately-held companies which provide a variety of investment services, including asset management, financial advisory services, and competitive municipal underwritings, with collective assets under management or supervision of approximately $56 billion as of April 30, 2012 through unit investment trusts, exchange-traded funds, closed-end funds, mutual funds and separate managed accounts. Macquarie Capital Investment Management LLC ("MCIM") and Four Corners Capital Management, LLC ("Four Corners") are the Fund's investment sub-advisors. Both MCIM and Four Corners operate within Macquarie Funds Group (“MFG”) and are wholly-owned, indirect subsidiaries of Macquarie Group Limited ("Macquarie Group"). Macquarie Group is a global provider of banking, financial, advisory, investment and funds management services. Macquarie Funds Group is the global investment management business of Macquarie Group. The Fund's Core Component, which consists primarily of equity securities and equity-like securities issued by infrastructure issuers, is managed by MCIM, which started operations in 2004 with the launch of the Fund. MCIM and its Australia-based affiliates managed approximately $2.9 billion of assets as of April 30, 2012, in MFG’s Infrastructure Securities portfolios, which includes the Fund. The Fund's Senior Loan Component is managed by Four Corners. Four Corners was founded in 2001 and became a wholly-owned, indirect subsidiary of Macquarie Group in 2008. Four Corners managed approximately $1.4 billion of assets as of April 30, 2012, with an emphasis on Senior Loans. Past performance is no assurance of future results. Investment return and market value of an investment in the Fund will fluctuate. Shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Principal Risk Factors: The Fund invests principally in equity securities of companies in the infrastructure and utilities industry in various developed markets; accordingly the Fund’s NAV will fluctuate with changes in the value of the Fund’s holdings. Investment in infrastructure and utilities issuers is subject to various risks including governmental regulations, high interest costs associated with capital construction programs, costs associated with environmental regulation, the effects of economic slowdown and surplus capacity, competition from other providers of services and other factors. Investment in non-U.S. securities is subject to the risk of currency fluctuations and to economic and political risks associated with such foreign countries. The risks of investing in the Fund are spelled out in the prospectus, shareholder report and other regulatory filings. The Fund’s daily New York Stock Exchange closing price and net asset value per share as well as other related information can be found at www.ftportfolios.com or by calling 1-800-988-5891. 1 site:2 us 140416 03:25
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World Canadian government mulls appeal as couples rush to marry June 13 2003 12:00 AM ET The Canadian government said Wednesday that it will need more time to review an Ontario high court decision allowing same-sex couples the right to marry before it decides whether to appeal the decision to the Canadian supreme court or let it stand. In the meantime, increasing numbers of gay and lesbian couples are rushing to get marriage licenses at city clerk's offices across the province. The issue has divided parliament's Liberal caucus and put pressure on Justice Minister Martin Cauchon to act. Cauchon had promised a quick response but then backpedaled after further consideration. "It's a very serious matter, an important issue as well," Cauchon said outside the House of Commons. "It's a complex issue. What we're doing now is reviewing the verdict." Cauchon did not say when he will announce a response. The federal government has 30 days to appeal. If the government refrains from filing an appeal to the supreme court, the Ontario ruling becomes the law of the land. On Monday the Ontario court declared as unconstitutional the law limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples, making gay and lesbian couples immediately eligible for marriage licenses in Ontario. Nearly two dozen same-sex couples applied for licenses on Wednesday, one day after Canada's first legal wedding between two people of the same sex was conducted. Toronto city government spokesman Brad Ross said 18 of the couples are from Toronto and the others from southern Ontario. The Ontario attorney general said Wednesday that the province would respect the court ruling, indicating that such marriages would be registered. "I'm charged to follow the laws and will follow the laws with regards to this matter," Norm Sterling said. A parliamentary committee is studying the matter, and opinion polls indicate that a slight majority of Canadians favor legalizing equal marriage rights. Some cabinet ministers said it is time to change the legal definition of marriage to reflect modern social mores, but divisions have emerged among members of the governing Liberal Party. "We're taking an institution that's 5,000 years old--it's underpinned society for millennia and has been the chief way by which men relate to women, women relate to men, and children relate to their parents--and we're just deconstructing it," said John McKay, who represents a Toronto district. Nick Discepola, from a Montreal-area district, invoked a phrase from former prime minister Pierre Trudeau in supporting equal marriage rights. "What people do in their own bedrooms is their own business," he said. Conservative political parties, however, called on the Liberal Party government to appeal the ruling, and Alberta premier Ralph Klein said he would fight any effort to force his province to allow same-sex marriages. The Ontario ruling mirrors others in British Columbia and Quebec backing same-sex unions. However, it differs in that it calls for equal marriage rights immediately. Tags: World AddThis
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See the Ad Calling Gays "Depraved" Originally published on Advocate.com August 30 2011 2:15 PM ET A full-page ad that ran in Saturday's El Paso Times that used words like "poison," "evil," and "putrid" to describe homosexuality has been removed from the newspaper's digital edition.The advertisement comes from Michael Rodriguez, a local Catholic priest who has a vendetta against gays that the El Paso Times has given a forum to before.The El Paso Times was contacted several times by The Advocate, but the newspaper has not yet released a statement on the ad or its advertisement policies. A writer from the El Paso Times did indicate that many people were unhappy with their decision to run the ad and that the paper was working on their own story concerning the matter. The ad reached approximately 108,000 people, the circulation of the El Paso Times. Source URL: http://www.advocate.com/news/daily-news/2011/08/30/see-el-paso-times-ad-calling-gays-depraved [2] http://www.dallasvoice.com/el-paso-priest-likens-gays-rapists-local-newspaper-publishes-1037027.html
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The Black-White IQ Gap: Is It Closing? Will It Ever Go Away? Tuesday, November 28, 2006 | 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Wohlstetter Conference Center, Twelfth Floor, AEI 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 About This Event For decades, the difference in the test scores of blacks and whites on the SAT, National Assessment of Educational Progress test, Armed Forces Qualification Test, and traditional IQ tests has been a vexed issue for American educational policy. Two of the leading scholars of this controversial topic, James R. Flynn Listen to Audio Download Audio as MP3 of the University of Otago (New Zealand) and Charles Murray of AEI, will debate the causes of the difference, its implications, and recent trends. New studies of the subject by Professor Flynn and by Mr. Murray will be available for distribution at the session. Agenda 9:45 a.m. Registration 10:00 Panelists: James R. Flynn, University of Otago Charles Murray, AEI Moderator: Christopher DeMuth, AEI Noon Adjournment
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You are hereHome » Media Center » Press Releases » December 29th 2011 Office Of Attorney General Unveils Year-End Review for North Country Review Cites Progress For New York On Taxpayer Protection, Public Safety, Economic Justice, Public Integrity, Civil Rights & Environmental Protection ALBANY– The Office of Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman today issued an end-of-the-year review detailing many of its accomplishments for the North Country in areas including public safety, economic justice, taxpayer protection, public integrity, civil rights and environmental protection. “We’ve worked diligently this year to restore New Yorkers’ faith in the public and private sectors, and I am proud of the progress we’ve made for the people of the North Country,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “From cracking down on corruption in government, to rooting out fraud against taxpayers, to protecting consumers from financial crimes, and keeping our streets safe, each day we’ve moved closer to fulfilling the goal of building the best public law firm in the country to serve and protect all New Yorkers.” The following are some of the actions Attorney General Schneiderman has taken since January: Taxpayer Protection and Public Integrity - Launched a unique and much-needed Taxpayer Protection Bureau – designed to go after corruption in state contracts, pension fund rip-offs, and large-scale tax cheats – as part of an aggressive plan to root out fraud and return money illegal stolen from New York taxpayers at no additional cost to the state. - Secured many major Medicaid fraud recoveries, including a record-setting settlement that required Young Adult Institute, the state's largest residential service provider, to pay $18 million in damages. - Secured over 75 convictions of individuals who defrauded the Medicaid system in New York State, as well as in patient abuse and neglect cases. - Appointed public integrity officers to serve in each of the Attorney General's regional offices, including Watertown and Plattsburgh, to give taxpayers a place to go to report complaints of government corruption without fear of local politics influencing the outcome. - Announced the indictment and arrest of Jeri Mason, the former Town Clerk of Cape Vincent, for stealing up to $50,000 from the town. Mason was charged with Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, Defrauding the Government, and Official Misconduct. - Initiated a unique effort to crackdown on waste and corruption in earmarks, contracts, and other government spending through cooperation with Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. -Brought charges against a former employee of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance who was preying on Spanish-speaking New Yorkers to pocket thousands in taxpayer dollars. -Exposed a nonprofit set up by a state Senator that diverted member item funds for the personal use of individuals associated with the nonprofit. Four individuals allegedly participating in the scheme have been indicted, including the senator’s aide and an individual who shares a residence with the senator. The investigation was part of a groundbreaking public integrity initiative between the Offices of the Attorney General and State Comptroller. - In the administration’s first False Claims Act case, secured a $1.6 million settlement with a food service provider for illegally overcharging school districts and other education providers. - Closed the “Helmsley Loophole” that let tax evaders off the hook. The Attorney General’s program bill, which was drafted in collaboration with New York County District Attorney Vance and signed into law by Governor Cuomo, amends a law that prohibited the state from prosecuting income tax cheats who have been previously prosecuted in federal court for the “same criminal transactions” even if the crimes are distinct. Keeping Streets Safe and Communities Strong In 2011, Attorney General Schneiderman’s Organized Crime Task Force (OCTF) brought a number of prosecutions against gang members, major drug traffickers, and other members of organized crime. These prosecutions included: - Operation Pipeline: 37 individuals were charged with participating in a major drug distribution network that was funneling cocaine from New York City, Georgia, New Jersey and Pennsylvania throughout the Capital Region and elsewhere in New York. - Operation Bloodtrail: 41 members and associates of the violent "Bloods" street gang were charged in three separate indictments for operating a narcotics distribution ring that sold cocaine, heroin, marijuana and guns throughout the Capital Region and elsewhere in New York. During the investigation, law enforcement seized substantial quantities of controlled substances. In 2011, 11 defendants pled guilty and two were convicted after trial. Trial defendants were sentenced to lengthy prison sentences, well exceeding life terms: one received a total of 170 years; the other was sentenced to a total of 141 years. Additionally, 27 other defendants were sentenced, six are awaiting trial and two are awaiting sentencing. - Operation Horse Trail: In the largest heroin bust in Buffalo history, 15 individuals were charged with running a heroin distribution network in which the traffickers moved their product from the Bronx and funneled it to Buffalo. - Operation Shamrock: The Attorney General obtained an indictment against 10 individuals for operating a prescription drug and cocaine distribution ring on Buffalo city streets. The investigation focused on the sale and resale of prescription painkillers. -Operation Snowbird: Announced the arrests of 28 individuals charged with conspiring in a massive drug distribution network that transported cocaine from Florida and New York City to be sold throughout Western New York. The Attorney General office’s seized more than $2.7 million worth of cocaine and $700,000 in cash, and arrested the defendants in a series of raids. - Operation Beemer: The Attorney General obtained an indictment against 23 individuals accused of operating a drug distribution network that sent cocaine through the United States Postal Service (USPS) from Puerto Rico to various locations in Erie and Niagara Counties for distribution in communities throughout Western New York. - Operation Rockwell and Operation Re-Do: Announced charges against 38 individuals for their connection to two drug networks responsible for distributing cocaine throughout Central New York. The arrests and seizure of more than $200,000 in cocaine has helped to shut down a drug pipeline running from Georgia to New York City to Syracuse and Auburn for sale throughout the region. - OCTF also investigated numerous narcotics networks operated in Cayuga, Monroe and other counties in the Syracuse area and over the course of the year brought indictments against more than 60 traffickers, seized numerous kilograms of controlled substances and seized more than $700,000 in cash. - Operation Flatrate: The Attorney General obtained five separate indictments against 37 individuals on charges stemming from the operation of lucrative loan sharking and gambling activities closely controlled by the Gambino crime family. - Operation Car Wars: The Attorney General obtained an indictment against 21 individuals in a takedown of an extensive automobile theft and resale ring that stole hundreds of cars worth more than $10 million. In addition, Attorney General Schneiderman took action to keep New York’s communities safer and stronger: - Unveiled the “Internet System for Tracking Over-Prescribing Act” that would provide health care practitioners and pharmacists with centralized information to avoid over-prescribing, help shut down prescription drug trafficking, as well as identify and treat patients who seek to abuse prescription drugs. - Conducted an undercover investigation and busted 10 gun sellers from across New York State who jeopardized the public’s safety by violating the state's background check requirement for the sale of firearms at gun shows. -Following the announcement of the undercover investigation, the Attorney General joined Senator Kirsten Gillibrand in introducing the Gun Trafficking Prevention Act of 2011, a federal measure that will crack down on corrupt gun dealers and eliminate the steady flow of illegal guns into New York. - Announced the arrest in Puerto Rico of a fugitive who was wanted for scamming insurance companies out of millions of dollars. The Attorney General’s investigation revealed that Arthur Bogoraz defrauded no-fault insurance providers by using stolen identification information to set up medical practices, sent false bills to no-fault insurance companies, and then laundered more than $4.5 million in fraudulently filed claims. Economic Justice and Consumer Protection - Protected homeowners as a national leader by fighting for a fair 50-state mortgage settlement that holds banks accountable, brings meaningful relief to New Yorkers and gets the economy moving again. - Announced in Watertown a $3.5 million settlement with a financing company that defrauded soldiers from Fort Drum with inflated prices, high hidden fees and exorbitant interest rates for consumer electronics. The settlement will result in hundreds of soldiers being relieved of their financial debt. -Filed a lawsuit against Bank of New York Mellon (BNY Mellon) for defrauding clients in foreign currency exchange transactions, seeking recovery of nearly $2 Billion. - Secured a $553 million multi-state settlement with seven major technology corporations alleged to have illegally conspired to artificially inflate prices for liquid crystal display (LCD) screens used in televisions, computer monitors, and laptops. New York State taxpayers may receive upwards of $11 million, in addition to restitution to compensate consumers affected by the scheme. - Released a resource guide for veterans and active duty military personnel with information related to educational and housing benefits, as well as consumer protections and other legal issues. - Secured a $1.3 million settlement with Bank of New York Mellon, in conjunction with the states of Texas and Florida, for manipulative trading of auction rate securities. A subsidiary of BNYM used an intermediary to submit bids that should have been barred as self-dealing transactions, artificially lowering the clearing prices of auctions and harming investors. - Launched a comprehensive review on the rising cost of gasoline across New York State to compile data on prices being charged in these areas, and seek to determine the causes behind the recent increases where prices have soared to more than $4 per gallon. Attorney General Schneiderman took enforcement action against two downstate stations that gouged customers amidst Tropical Storm Irene. - Secured a $90.8 million settlement with UBS for fraudulent and anticompetitive conduct in its municipal bond derivative transactions. Of that amount, $63.3 million will go to a multi-state restitution fund for governments and nonprofits that entered into municipal derivatives contracts with UBS between 2001 and 2004. - Protected constituents who would be economically harmed by the loss of the Buffalo Bills home games and the canceling of Jets and Giants training camps by investigating whether the National Football League lockout violated state antitrust laws. - Announced a joint initiative with the State Comptroller to ensure that New Yorkers receive unpaid life insurance benefits. - Launched a thorough review of AT&T’s proposed acquisition of T-Mobile for potential anti-competitive impacts on consumers and businesses across New York State. The proposed merger would have created the nation’s largest wireless company with a total of 130 million subscribers nationwide, opening the door to a near duopoly shared by the merged firm and Verizon. Most recently, Schneiderman joined the U.S. Department of Justice’s antitrust lawsuit that led to the blocking of the acquisition. -Held statewide “office hours” in communities impacted by Hurricane Irene, assisting consumers with storm-related questions and concerns related to issues such as price gouging, insurance policies and delayed debt payments so that affected New Yorkers can get back on their feet. - Reached a multi-million dollar agreement with Banco Espírito Santo S.A. (BES) to settle an investigation into the solicitation and sale by BES and its affiliates of securities to BES’s U.S. customers without registering itself or any of its affiliates as securities broker-dealers or investment advisers, or any of their employees as salesmen, as required under New York’s Martin Act. - Secured $58.75 million in restitution from Wachovia Bank and Wells Fargo Bank as part of an ongoing national investigation of alleged anticompetitive and fraudulent conduct in the municipal bond derivatives industry. - Secured a $1.8 million settlement with the retail chain Michaels Stores, Inc. for engaging in deceptive advertising practices by misleading consumers into thinking they were receiving steep discounts over a two-year period. The company will change its advertising practices and contribute $1 million in art and craft supplies to public schools throughout New York State, in addition to $800,000 in civil penalties. - Secured $2.5 million for New York State in an agreement with the pharmaceutical manufacturer EMD Serono, Inc., to settle allegations the company caused false or fraudulent claims to be submitted to the Medicaid program. The multi-state settlement agreement totals $44.3 million, and stems from an investigation into whether the company paid doctors, in part, so that they would prescribe the multiple sclerosis drug Rebif to patients. - Secured a $2.5 million dollar settlement with the pharmaceutical company Pharmacia Corporation for inflating the cost of drugs sold to state health programs. - Joined the U.S. Justice Department in filing an antitrust lawsuit challenging the planned acquisition by medical waste services giant, Stericycle, Inc. of its smaller rival, Healthcare Waste Solutions, Inc. (HWS). The acquisition would result in Stericycle controlling 90 percent of the medical waste business in the New York City metropolitan area and price increases for customers. - Secured a $3.1 million settlement with the major pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, following allegations that it improperly marketed and promoted the antipsychotic drug Seroquel. The agreement is part of a record 37-state settlement totaling $68.5 million – the largest ever multi-state consumer protection-based pharmaceutical settlement. - Secured a settlement that will refund $1.1 million to more than 5,000 New Yorkers across the state who were defrauded by a deceptive and harmful debt settlement company. Freedom Debt Relief misled debt-saddled consumers about the amount of money they would save and the services it would provide, while reaping large profits in up-front fees. The company will also pay $100,000 in penalties to the state. - Filed a lawsuit against One Source Networking for using deceptive business practices against hundreds of Mohawk Valley consumers. The company and its owner are accused of repeatedly and persistently deceiving customers by requiring them to purchase an extended warranty in order to qualify for a vehicle loan. - Called on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to enact rules that would prevent unauthorized third-party charges on telephone bills or ‘cramming’ – a fraud that a recent U.S. Senate report found costs consumers upwards of $2 billion per year. This action was in conjunction with a coalition of 16 other attorneys general. Social Justice Environmental Protection, Civil Rights, Health Care, Labor, Charities - Led the fight for safety at Indian Point and other nuclear power facilities by challenging a decision by the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) that allowed the storage of high-level radioactive waste for at least 60 years after their closure without assessing the public and environmental impacts; calling on the NRC to include seismicity in the scope of review for the relicensing of Indian Point, and filing a petition to force Indian Point to comply with fire safety regulations. - Sued the federal government for failing to commit to a full environmental review of the proposed regulations that would allow natural gas drilling – including the potentially harmful "hydrofracking" technique – in the Delaware River Basin which includes the New York City watershed. - Cracked down on six website operators that illegally sold cigarettes to New York State residents, part of a disturbing trend that provides teens easy access to tobacco, and encourages a loss of hundreds of millions of dollars in state revenues. - Secured an agreement with the former General Motors Corporation that will dedicate $154 million to the environmental cleanup and redevelopment of contaminated sites in New York. - Took action to protect the air New Yorkers breathe by filing a lawsuit against Pennsylvania power plant Homer City Station that is emitting dangerous sulfur dioxide in violation of the federal Clean Air Act. The Office of the Attorney General is leading a coalition of attorneys general from Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, and Massachusetts, against efforts in the U.S. House of Representatives to remove critical environmental regulations that protect New York communities from toxic pollution; and is calling on the EPA to protect New York's air by implementing a proposed rule that would slash the amount of air pollution currently allowed to cross state lines. - Filed a lawsuit against "Coalition Against Breast Cancer," a sham charity that fraudulently solicited $9.1 million from the public under the guise of fighting breast cancer, only to funnel the money to organization insiders and fundraisers. He later secured two guilty pleas in connection with the bogus scheme. - Created the Leadership Committee for Nonprofit Revitalization, a task force charged with presenting a series of recommendations to the Attorney General to reduce regulatory burdens and costs for nonprofits while strengthening nonprofit accountability. - Launched the Religious Rights Initiative, a project of the OAG’s Civil Rights Bureau that will address religious rights issues and enforce anti-discrimination laws. The Initiative will target faith-based discrimination and violations of religious rights through public education, outreach and law enforcement, including litigation. - Released a fundraising report documenting how for-profit “telemarketers” pocket the bulk of contributions New Yorkers give to charities. According to Pennies for Charity, Where Your Money Goes: Telemarketing by Professional Fundraisers, in 2010, an average of just 36.9 cents of every charitable dollar raised by these professional telemarketing companies actually went to charity. He also issued a guide for consumers planning on making charitable contributions with important information to ensure that donations go where intended. - Launched a joint initiative with the NYS Bar Association to match volunteer attorneys with nonprofit organizations in need of legal counsel. The innovative partnership called “Charity Corps” will help improve governance and legal compliance by assisting nonprofits that cannot afford legal counsel. For additional announcements made in 2011 by the Office of Attorney General, please Click Here Groups audience: Antitrust Bureau Español
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Publications Contact Thank you for learning about our publications. Let me know if I can be of assistance. Street Smart, a twice-a-month e-newsletter from AGRM, provides exciting news and useful information from both inside and outside the association, vital statistics of interest to rescue missions, innovative ideas for fundraising and events, employment opportunities, and a brief devotional thought. Rescue magazine, a bimonthly print publication of AGRM, is published as a service to members of the association. Rescue provides current and useful information about issues and subjects pertinent to the ministry of rescue. Each issue features a profile of a rescue mission with a unique or innovative program, an article exploring two sides of an issue integral to missions, a hot topic feature, and departments that cover the day-to-day challenges and rewards of rescue mission ministry. AGRM’s publications welcome contributions and comments. Please send photographs, queries, ideas for articles, and feedback to Brad Lewis, director of communications, or mail to AGRM, 7222 Commerce Center Drive, Suite 120, Colorado Springs, CO 80919.
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» Parents & Kids » Family Parsha Ekev(Deuteronomy 7:12-11:25) Test of Character It's a nice feeling to be able to get the things we want. But it's also a test of character. How are we going to react to our good fortune? God loves us and wants to give us good things, but He also wants us to develop an attitude of gratitude. Having plenty can make a person feel conceited, forgetting to be grateful to God, who ultimately has given him whatever he has. It can even cause someone to act like he's better than someone who doesn't have as much as he does. Our Torah portion this week reminds us that whatever good we have is a gift from God. Let's enjoy what we have - without letting it go to our heads. In our story, a boy teaches his friends to be grateful and not haughty about what they have. "RIDING HIGH" David Solomon's sleek new state-of-the-art "Ultima-bike" was the talk of the neighborhood. With the strength of a mountain bike, the speed of a racer, and a day-glow paint job that made it look like a streak of light cruising down the road. Soon the other boys in the neighborhood just had to have one, and followed David's lead. They pleaded with their parents for the expensive new bike, and soon almost everyone seemed to be riding an "Ultima" of his own. Stuart Freed, who lived in an apartment house at the end of the street, came home one day and asked his parents if he could also get the bike. His father sighed and answered, "Stuart, I know how much you want a new bicycle like your friends, but right now money is pretty tight and we just can't afford it. I'm afraid you'll just have to make do with your old bike for the time being." Stuart understood, but was disappointed. His old three-speeder looked so clunky compared to the sleek new bicycles all his friends seemed to be suddenly riding. The next day when David invited him to join him and some other guys on a bike trip, Stuart hesitated. He felt embarrassed to be seen with his old bike, but David encouraged him and at last Stuart agreed. "Great!" David said. "We're all meeting at 3:00 in the school parking lot. See you there!" When he got there, Stuart cringed. There were five boys gathered, all of them on brand new Ultima-bikes ... except for Stuart. Joey, one of the guys, quipped, "Hey Stuart, your bike looks like it's ready for the junkyard. You sure you're gonna make it?" Some of the other guys started to laugh, but David quickly cut them off. Shaking his head, he walked over to boy who made the joke. "Joey, that wasn't funny," he said sternly. "Just because you've got a new bike and he doesn't isn't any reason to put him down. It's one thing to feel happy about having a new bike - I do too - but that doesn't make us any better than somebody who doesn't have one. And it certainly doesn't give us the right to hurt anybody's feelings ... does it?" Joey was silent. It was obvious that David's point had hit home, and he felt bad about what he had said. Then, to break the tension, David turned to the tall, strong, Stuart and said loudly with a big smile, "Anyway, the way this guy can ride, he'd probably ride circles around us even if we were on motorcycles and he was on a roller skate!" This time, everybody laughed, including Stuart. And with that, the friends all took off down the road on their way to a good time. Q. Did Joey do the right thing when he teased Stuart about his old bike? A. No, we shouldn't put people down if we have something they don't. Q. How did Stuart feel when Joey said what he did? A. He felt very hurt and embarrassed. Q. How did he feel after David spoke up for him? A. He felt much better since David said something nice about him. He felt accepted even though he didn't have a new bike. Q. Why do you think that someone who has more than somebody else would want to put the other person down? A. It's easy to confuse a person's value with the value of his possessions. "Since I have more, I must be better than him." This could tempt a person to act conceited and insult others. We should try to remember that everything we have is only a gift from God and therefore there is no reason to feel like it makes us somehow better than the next guy. God gives everybody just what he or she needs to accomplish his or her mission in life. It has nothing to do with who is "better" or "worse." Every human being has infinite value just because he or she is a person created by God. Q. In our story Joey tried to make Stuart feel bad, and David tried to make him feel good. Who do you think had more self-confidence, Joey or David? Why? A. David. When a person feels good about himself he naturally wants to make other people feel good too. But when someone starts putting others down, usually it's because he's not so happy about who he himself is, and tries to lower others in order to make himself look good. Q. Can you think of something you're really grateful to have? Q. Would you say that if somebody worked hard to earn his money or possessions, he has the right to feel proud of himself and even to feel superior to those who didn't work as hard as he? A. While being hard-working is certainly an admirable trait, still it is important to remember that everything we have, or have accomplished is ultimately a gift from God. He gave us the strength and the tenacity to work hard, gifts that perhaps others lack. Also, our success is only in God's hands. Many people may work as hard or even harder than we did, yet not succeed. It's important to feel grateful and take pleasure in our success. But its not a reason to look down on others. Q. Our sages teach us that a person should desire to be neither poor nor rich, but rather in the middle-class. Why do you think this is so? Do you agree? A. Both poverty and wealth are difficult tests of a person's character. If one has too little, he can be tempted to steal from others. Having plenty could tempt a person to become conceited and forget that everything is a gift from God. Someone with just enough--but not too much, is most likely to succeed on a personal character level, which is the success that counts the most. Nesanel Yoel Safran Nesanel Yoel Safran, originally from Boston, is an Israel-based writer, as well as a student and teacher of Jewish spirituality. A graduate of Brandeis University, he is author of a wide variety of children’s and adult features, and currently at work on a full-length novel exploring personal transformation and spiritual awakening.
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News & Press: Feature Technology Trends Shaping IT Jobs Wednesday, December 12, 2012 (0 Comments) Posted by: TechServe Alliance Share At a recent conference this past summer in Florida, technology research organization Gartner Group presented ten trends that are changing how IT professionals will be doing their jobs. Although many of the trends as reported by TechTarget.com were not necessarily news to technologists, here are several interesting takes on how the trends will likely impact IT jobs in the near-term future. As the "technological landscape" become increasingly more complex, IT professionals will be forced into be more "generalists" and have a broad base of skills. Although there will likely still be a need for technologists with specialized knowledge and skills in specific applications as well as in networking and storage, as IT become more integrated, so will people who will be able to work across disciplines. With the consumerization of IT, Gartner's analysts believe that service desks will become somewhat obsolete via crowdsourcing. The Wikipedia definition certainly supports that contention by defining it as "a distributed problem-solving and production model. In the classic use of the term, problems are broadcast to an unknown group of solvers in the form of an open call for solutions." Clearly, service desks will not be necessary if end users can find answers on their own about devices and applications online via friends, online forums, or social networks. About TechServe Alliance TechServe Alliance is a collaboration of IT services firms, clients, consultants and suppliers dedicated to advancing excellence and ethics within the IT services industry. Hundreds of IT staffing, IT solutions and IT consulting firms and tens of thousands of affiliated professionals, count on TechServe Alliance to keep their leadership informed, engaged and connected. TechServe Alliance serves as the voice of the industry before the policymakers and the national and trade press. By providing access to the knowledge and best practices of an entire industry and tapping the "collective scale" of hundreds of companies, TechServe Alliance supports its members in the efficient delivery of best-in-class IT services for clients and exceptional professional opportunities for every IT consultant.
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Seymour Cassel Comedy Drama > Domestic Comedy Drama > Marriage Drama Drama > Family Drama Drama > Ensemble Film Josie and the Pussycats Home » Movies » Actor: Gena Rowlands Page 1 of Hope Floats Sandra Bullock, Harry Connick, Jr., Gena Rowlands, Mae Whitman, Michael Par� Actor/director Forest Whitaker (Waiting to Exhale) helmed this romantic drama about a one-time high-school beauty queen who returns to her hometown ... Julia Roberts, Dennis Quaid, Robert Duvall, Gena Rowlands, Kyra Sedgwick The feminist outrage of Thelma & Louise (1991) screenwriter Callie Khouri blended superbly with director Lasse Hallstrom's predilection for stories ... Peter Chelsom Sharon Stone, Elden Henson, Kieran Culkin, Gena Rowlands, Harry Dean Stanton In the tradition of My Left Foot (1989), Peter Chelsom directed this emotional drama of outcasts, adapted from the Rodman Philbrick's popular young ... Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams, James Garner, Gena Rowlands, James Marsden Directed by Nick Cassavetes, this adaptation of author Nicholas Sparks's bestselling novel revolves around Noah Calhoun's (James Garner) regular ... Hysterical Blindness Uma Thurman, Gena Rowlands, Juliette Lewis, Justin Chambers, Ben Gazzara Two aging single women in 1980s New Jersey enact a depressing routine of deluded barroom romance in this made-for-cable drama. At least 15 years ... Playing by Heart Willard Carroll Anthony Edwards, Dennis Quaid, Ellen Burstyn, Gena Rowlands, Jay Mohr, Jon Stewart, Ryan Phillippe, Sean Connery, Gillian Anderson, Angelina Jolie, Madeleine Stowe Sophomore writer/director Willard Carroll weaves together an all-star cast in interlocking stories about finding love in Los Angeles. The film's ... Marjane Satrapi, Vincent Paronnaud Chiara Mastroianni, Catherine Deneuve, Gena Rowlands, Sean Penn, Iggy Pop Filmmakers Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi collaborated to co-write and co-direct this adaptation of Satrapi's bestselling autobiographical ... Gena Rowlands, Winona Ryder, Giancarlo Esposito, Rosie Perez, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Roberto Benigni, B�atrice Dalle, Lisanne Falk Jim Jarmusch's deadpan comedy-of-the-night is a collection of five vignettes taking place in the enclosed space of a cab ride, each occurring ... Broken English Zoe Cassavetes Parker Posey, Melvil Poupaud, Drea de Matteo, Gena Rowlands, Justin Theroux A single thirtysomething whose friends all seem to be romantically involved, happily married, or with child meets an eccentric Frenchman who shows ... Richard Dreyfuss, Holly Hunter, Danny Aiello, Laura San Giacomo, Gena Rowlands Swedish director Lasse Hallstrom made his American movie debut with this romantic comedy, starring Holly Hunter as Renata Bella, an aimless Bostonian ... Paul Mazursky John Cassavetes, Gena Rowlands, Susan Sarandon, Vittorio Gassman, Raul Julia This comedy is set upon a remote Greek island and is very loosely based on Shakespeare's classic play. The tale centers on a middle-aged New York ... Gena Rowlands, Mia Farrow, Ian Holm, Blythe Danner, Gene Hackman Grad-school administrative head Marion Post (Gena Rowlands) is in the midst of writing a book. The walls are thin in the apartment she's taken for ... Lonely Are the Brave Kirk Douglas, Gena Rowlands, Walter Matthau, Michael Kane, Carroll O'Connor Although it never quite escapes the pitfalls of pretension, this film was Kirk Douglas's bid for the affections of the art house crowd, and it ... Paulie Gena Rowlands, Jay Mohr, Tia Texada, Tony Shalhoub, Cheech Marin, Bruce Davison In the Babe tradition of talking animatronic animals, this comedy adventure gets underway when animal-research-lab janitor Misha (Tony Shalhoub) ... Gordon M. Douglas Frank Sinatra, Jill St. John, Richard Conte, Gena Rowlands, Simon Oakland Frank Sinatra brings a sneering Rat Pack ethos to his first hard-boiled detective role in Tony Rome. Tony is an ex-cop who lives on a houseboat off ... An Early Frost Aidan Quinn, Gena Rowlands, Ben Gazzara, Sylvia Sidney, John Glover Originally telecast November 11, 1985, An Early Frost was the first TV movie to deal with the subject of AIDS. Aidan Quinn plays a personable young ... Brian Skeet Deborah Kara Unger, Jared Harris, D.B. Sweeney, Gena Rowlands, Brooke Shields In an exclusive neighborhood in upstate New York, family and friends gather to commemorate the AIDS-related death of Tony (played in flashbacks by D ... Minnie and Moskowitz Jack Danskin, Sean Joyce, Gena Rowlands, Seymour Cassel, Val Avery, Timothy Carey, Katherine Cassavetes Can a straight-laced woman find happiness with a scruffy hippie who has a bad habit of getting beaten up? Minnie Moore (Gena Rowlands) was a prom ... John Marley, Gena Rowlands, Lynn Carlin, Seymour Cassel Faces is right: this definitive John Cassavetes film consists almost exclusively of tight, uncomfortable close-ups. It takes place in the fourteenth ... Charms for the Easy Life Joan Micklin Silver Gena Rowlands, Mimi Rogers, Susan May Pratt, Geordie Johnson, Kenneth Mitchell Charlie Kate Birch (Gena Rowlands) is a peculiarly powerful Southern matriarch, an anachronism in the early 20th century. She's a self-educated woman ... Unhook the Stars Tom Proctor, Gena Rowlands, Marisa Tomei, G�rard Depardieu, Jake Lloyd, Moira Kelly The great overlooked actress Gena Rowlands was cast in the starring role of Mildred in this film directed by her son, Nick Cassavetes. Rowlands ... A Woman Under the Influence Gena Rowlands, Peter Falk, Matthew Cassel, Matthew Laborteaux, Christina Grisanti John Cassavetes' harrowing masterpiece charts the emotional meltdown of a suburban housewife and its effects on her blue-collar Italian family. Gena ... D.J. Caruso Angelina Jolie, Ethan Hawke, Tch�ky Karyo, Olivier Martinez, Gena Rowlands A female detective on the trail of a psychotic killer discovers love in a dangerous time in this thriller, based on the novel by Michael Pye. Illeana ... What If God Were the Sun? Stephen Tolkin Gena Rowlands, Lacey Chabert Inconsolable after learning that her father died in an adjacent hospital room while she cared for another patient, an ER nurse who never believed in ... Val Avery
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image-2 November 8th, 2011 by The Intern
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5638
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All Roads Lead to China: Business News, Analysis, and Insights from China HomeAbout MePressroomSpeaking Water Scarcity in China: Urbanization, Food, and Energy Tuesday, October 8, 2013 1:51 Posted in category China's Other Cities, Invest in China, The Big Picture Over the last couple of days there have been a couple of stories about water in China, and the fact that it is/ will be China’s primary limit to growth. As with many stories, they do not have the time to get into the nitty gritty or to present the problem in a way that is visually tangible, so I wanted to upload a quick post with a couple of my own thoughts. First, take a look at the image above, which was supplied by a friend (who used publicly available information) that shows how water is used in China, and offers a glimpse into the future of China’s water usage. For me, the power of this image is that while China’s per capita water footprint (just like any footprint) is one that is respectable when compared to a western country that is actually NOT the narrative that is important. The narrative that is important to follow is that (1) China’s URBAN footprints are vastly different than the aver
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5639
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VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON London, SW7 Events & Tickets at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London Sorry, but we don't have any tickets available at the moment
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5640
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Advanced search Board index ‹ General ‹ Res Diversae molasses in January Miscellaneous Other Topics. by bnjtokyo » Mon Sep 02, 2013 2:32 am I don't know where would be the best place to post this link. "Slow as molasses in January" is not slang and it is not an idiom. A cliche perhaps? Certainly a metaphor. The article at the link discusses the historical molasses flood in Boston, but, according to the ngram tool, the expression predates that event by several years.http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... cs-science bnjtokyo Posts: 301Joined: Tue Mar 01, 2005 4:11 amLocation: Tokyo Re: molasses in January by Philip Hudson » Mon Sep 02, 2013 3:37 am I would class "Slow as molasses in January" as an idiom. Why wouldn't you? The article you referenced is about a very unusual tragedy. That molasses wasn't slow. by bnjtokyo » Mon Sep 02, 2013 8:25 am As I said elsewhere, an idiom is more than the sum of its parts. It generally needs to be explained the first time you hear it, or you won't be able to understand it. If you are familiar with the denotation of "slow," "as," "molasses," "in" and "January" (in the northern hemisphere), the meaning of the phrase is obvious. Compare "kick the bucket." If you understand each element, how can it connote "suicide" without additional explanation? by Perry Lassiter » Mon Sep 02, 2013 8:17 pm You're right about explanations, whether or not about idioms. Never thought of kick the bucket applying specifically to suicides. It's a generic term for shoving off, passing over, shuffling off this mortal coil, even dying. But does idiom always require explanation? Slow as molasses is obvious, and to add "in January" is to intensify it. (Just wondered if they substitute July in Brazil? by Slava » Mon Sep 02, 2013 8:28 pm I do not think kicking the bucket has anything to do with suicide per se, here's why:http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/218800.html by bnjtokyo » Mon Sep 02, 2013 9:29 pm Enter "idiom" in the search box on the top page of this website and the OneLook Dictionary provides this definition:"an expression whose meanings cannot be inferred from the meanings of the words that make it up"It provides the following example: “to have your feet on the ground” is an idiom meaning “to be sensible.” As for "kick the bucket," the phrase was explained to me by a member of the folk, so I guess I was taken in by a folk etymology. by Philip Hudson » Mon Sep 02, 2013 10:31 pm Living in the South of the USA, January is a pretty temperate month. "Slow as molasses in January" has nothing but an idiomatic meaning to me. We have an English idioms class in our ESL school at church. You can be sure the average Chinese student with a learner's knowledge of English considers this an idiom. Perhaps "kick the bucket" is more idiomatic than the molasses idiom. "Kick the bucket" means die by any means. if you "kick the bucket" you have "bought the farm", "cashed in your chips", are "pushing up daisies". Shakespeare suggests "shuffling off this mortal coil". Passed" or "passed away" are common euphemisms for death that I often hear. I prefer the simple word "died" or "dead". "I had a dog.His name was Rover.And when he died,He was dead all over.” by Stargzer » Tue Jan 07, 2014 11:13 pm Speaking of "kick the bucket," have any of you ever seen the movie "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World?" At the beginning, Smiler Grogan (Jimmy Durante) runs over a cliff and is thrown from his car. Four cars of people go over to help him. As he dies, one of his legs straightens out and kicks a bucket down the hill. That's just the start of the madness! by Perry Lassiter » Wed Jan 08, 2014 6:33 pm Philip, do you want to amend your statement about the temperate weather in the South during January? Return to Res Diversae
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War on Iraq TomDispatch.com / By Tom Engelhardt U.S. Continues to Brutalize Iraqis in the Cause of the 'Surge' Five years after the invasion, to speak of this urge to surge and its results as "success" or as "good news" is essentially obscene. Comments Comments | Like this article?Join our email list:Stay up to date with the latest headlines via email. On March 19, 2003, as his shock-and-awe campaign against Iraq was being launched, George W. Bush addressed the nation. "My fellow citizens," he began, "at this hour, American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger." We were entering Iraq, he insisted, "with respect for its citizens, for their great civilization and for the religious faiths they practice. We have no ambition in Iraq, except to remove a threat and restore control of that country to its own people." Within weeks, of course, that "great civilization" was being looted, pillaged, and shipped abroad. Saddam Hussein's Baathist dictatorship was no more and, soon enough, the Iraqi Army of 400,000 had been officially disbanded by L. Paul Bremer, the head of the occupying Coalition Provisional Authority and the President's viceroy in Baghdad. By then, ministry buildings -- except for the oil and interior ministries -- were just looted shells. Schools, hospitals, museums, libraries, just about everything that was national or meaningful, had been stripped bare. Meanwhile, in their new offices in Saddam's former palaces, America's neoconservative occupiers were already bringing in the administration's crony corporations -- Halliburton and its subsidiary KBR, Bechtel, and others -- to finish off the job of looting the country under the rubric of "reconstruction." Somehow, these "administrators" managed to "spend" $20 billion of Iraq's oil money, already in the "Development Fund for Iraq," even before the first year of occupation was over -- and to no effect whatsoever. They also managed to create what Ed Harriman in the London Review of Books labeled "the least accountable and least transparent regime in the Middle East." (No small trick given the competition.) Before the Sunni insurgency even had a chance to ramp up in 2003, they were already pouring billions of U.S. tax dollars into what would become their massive military mega-bases meant to last a millennium, and, of course, they were dreaming about
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BooksAdvanced SearchBrowse GenresBest SellersNew & Future ReleasesPaperbacksSeasonal OffersStudy BooksAudiobooksSell Your Books Have one to sell? Sell yours here Publisher: learn how customers can search inside this book. I�d like to read this book on Kindle The Book of Abraham [Hardcover] Marek Halter (Author) Show # more hardcovers Show # more paperbacks Amazon.co.uk Trade-In Store Did you know you can use your mobile to trade in your unwanted books for an Amazon.co.uk Gift Card to spend on the things you want? Visit the Books Trade-In Store for more details or check out the Trade-In Amazon Mobile App Guidelines on how to trade in using a smartphone. Learn more. › See more product promotions Publication Date: Jan 1986 A family saga with a difference, The Book of Abraham opens on the backdrop of a burning Jerusalem in 70 CE as Abraham the Temple scribe flees the destruction of his home. Two thousand years and a hundred generations later, another Abraham perishes, immolated in the fires of the Warsaw Ghetto. But the chain that links these two Abrahams - a chain that stretches from Jerusalem to Warsaw through Rome, Alexandria, France and Greece - is one of family ties, and the unforgettable, powerful and poignant story that is told is that of one family; the author's own. This is a new edition of a phenomenal bestseller that has already sold over 5 million copies worldwide. A family saga with a difference, The Book of Abraham opens on the backdrop of a burning Jerusalem in 70 CE as Abraham the Temple scribe flees the destruction of his home. Two thousand years and a hundred generations later, another Abraham perishes, immolated in the fires of the Warsaw Ghetto. But the chain that links these two Abrahams - a chain that stretches from Jerusalem to Warsaw through Rome, Alexandria, France and Greece - is one of family ties, and the unforgettable, powerful and poignant story that is told is that of one family; the author's own. This is a new edition of a phenomenal bestseller that has already sold over 5 million copies worldwide. Necessary Lies › Diane Chamberlain Beautiful Disaster (Beautiful 1) › Jamie McGuire The Children of Abraham › Marek Halter All Change (Cazalet Chronicles) › Elizabeth Jane Howard If You Awaken Love Emuna Elon A Beautiful Wedding (Beautiful 3) › Jamie McGuire 1447211251,1471115038,1559700769,0330508989,1592641458,1471133567,1848452152,0263910466,1471115143,1847562353,0099574675,1447219694,1782110186,1409151522,0552164135,1408704943,0751549258,0753827662 Publisher: Henry Holt & Co; First American Edition edition (Jan 1986) Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,306,126 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) Discover books, learn about writers, and more. Lowell Bair Marek Halter An extraordinary achievement. --Iris MurdochA great novel. --Le MondeA story of suffering and hope, longing and wandering, struggle and achievement…An exceptional book. --Shimon Peres MAREK HALTER was born in Warsaw in 1936. When he was five, he and his family escaped from the Nazis by crawling through the sewers under the Warsaw Ghetto. He has lived in France since 1950. In addition to being a writer, Marek Halter is also an artist and a human rights activist and has served as president of the European Foundation for Science, Art and Culture. His book Le Fou et Les Rois, which recounts his experiences working for Middle East peace, won the Prix Aujourd'hui. Necessary Lies by Diane Chamberlain Paperback Zipporah, Wife of Moses: (Canaan Trilogy) by Marek Halter Paperback The best fiction story ever on Jewish history By "enjoylaos" Format:Hardcover I read this book 3 times over the last 10 years and everytime it impressed me more.It's beautifully written and very detaillistic. It tells the story of a Jewish family from the time of the tribe father Abraham until present times.Never before have I read a book on Jewish history with this much detailed information.Although it is a fiction novel, it provides a good insight in Jewish history and customs.I recommend this book (and the follow up Abrahams Son's) to everyone who is interested in the history of the Jewish people. Exciting and Interesting Epic By Gary Selikow Format:Paperback In this epic work of Jewish history, Marek Halter uses an ancient document passed down from generation to generation through the centuries, and fleshed it out to create an exciting and informative epic novel.Beginning in 70 CE (AD) Halter begins with the flight of a Jews called Abraham fron the burning city of Jerusalem, together with his family, during it's destruction by the Romans.Taking us through the history of a Jewish family from Jerusalem to North Africa to Spain, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Russia and Poland, This is a history of Halter's family and of the Nation of Israel.The words of the book are permeated with words of wisdom such as "A dream of cake is a dream, not a cake, but a dream of a journey is itself a kind of journey" as well as the prayers of the Jews through the millenia: " May the Allmighty protect us from those who persecute us, and against those who speak evil of us. Blessed be the Allmighty". These words are as pertinent today as ever. The book deals with question such as why the Chumash started with the creation. And sayings such as Sof Tov Hakol Tov- All's Well That End Well"-Now we know how Shakespeare got the name for the play of that title.We read of the cruel decrees of the Roman Emperor Hadrian, outlawing circumcision, observance of the Sabbath and study of the Jewish Law, in the Land of Israel, creating a situation where being a Jews in the Land of the Jews was punishable by death.Hadrian went so far as changing the name of Judea to Palestine, after the enemies of the Jews who had once occupied the environs of Gaza, the Phillistines.We learn of the massacres perpetrated during the crusades, the Spanish Inquisition and the bloody pogroms of Chmielnicki in which thousands of Jewish men, women and children were cruelly slaughtered. Of the struggles of the Nation of Israel: " Do not fear the venom of the wicked...aim your arrows and strike down the evildoer..."The book speaks of the yearning through the exile, of the Jews for the Land of Israel and Jerusalem, and we are introduced to historical figures as diverse as the false messiah Shabbatai Tzvi, the beautiful Marrano Dona Gracia (Nasi), and the apostate Uriel Acosta.We read of the loves and the struggles of the lives of the real life figures in this epic.finally the book ends with the account of the Abraham who perished in the flames of the Warsaw ghetto, where the Jews fought a valiant battle against the Nazi monstrosity, always longing for freedom in their own land, the Land of Israel. Read more › From The Sacking of Jerusalem To The Rebirth Of Israel By Dai-keag-ity - Published on Amazon.com Format:Paperback Marek Halter's novel traces the history not only of one family, but by proxy, of Judaism itself for the last nineteen centuries. Beginning with the sack of Jerusalem by Romans in AD 70, the descendants of a scribe called simply "Abraham" record the births and deaths in a scroll that Abraham carried with him out from the burning city. We track his children and their children and their children on into Alexandria, Tours, Moorish Spain, and finally Poland at the time of the Nazi conquest of eastern Europe. As we pass from generation to generation, we encounter literally hundreds of men and women who can trace their heritage to the first Abraham of the Scroll. We follow them through times of peace and prosperity, and more frequently through occasions of tragedy. Through it all, pogroms and persecutions, plagues and wars, migrations and exiles the members of this one extraordinary family maintain their identity and faith and persevere into the twentieth century.Excellent for historians and lovers of literature, Jews and non-Jews alike. By Danny C - Published on Amazon.com Format:Hardcover Unlike the objective conveyance of history, this work of fiction captures the overwhelming sorrows of the Jewish people throughout the diaspora. By cleverly using a geneological scroll, relating the experiences of the family throughout the generations, Halter compassionately reveals the essence of the Jewish people as continuous survivors in a world which dispossesses them. His manner of writing is reflective and easy to read, yet he does not shy away from difficult concepts. I have no criticisms of this book. Since I seldom get to read for pleasure, I was very fortunate to have been recommended it. I do have some advice for anybody who plans to read it. Read it slowly. Stop between chapters and digest the many rich concepts offered. I was sorry when I finished it for that reason. How many times can that be said of anything? - Published on Amazon.com Format:Paperback In this epic work of Jewish history, Marek Halter uses an ancient document passed down from generation to generation through the centuries, and fleshed it out to create an exciting and informative epic novel.Beginning in 70 CE (AD) Halter begins with the flight of a Jews called Abraham fron the burning city of Jerusalem, together with his family, during it's destruction by the Romans.Taking us through the history of a Jewish family from Jerusalem to North Africa to Spain, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Russia and Poland, This is a history of Halter's family and of the Nation of Israel.The words of the book are permeated with words of wisdom such as "A dream of cake is a dream, not a cake, but a dream of a journey is itself a kind of journey" as well as the prayers of the Jews through the millenia: " May the Allmighty protect us from those who persecute us, and against those who speak evil of us. Blessed be the Allmighty". These words are as pertinent today as ever. The book deals with question such as why the Chumash started with the creation. And sayings such as Sof Tov Hakol Tov- All's Well That End Well"-Now we know how Shakespeare got the name for the play of that title.We read of the cruel decrees of the Roman Emperor Hadrian, outlawing circumcision, observance of the Sabbath and study of the Jewish Law, in the Land of Israel, creating a situation where being a Jews in the Land of the Jews was punishable by death.Hadrian went so far as changing the name of Judea to Palestine, after the enemies of the Jews who had once occupied the environs of Gaza, the Phillistines.We learn of the massacres perpetrated during the crusades, the Spanish Inquisition and the bloody pogroms of Chmielnicki in which thousands of Jewish men, women and children were cruelly slaughtered. Of the struggles of the Nation of Israel: " Do not fear the venom of the wicked...aim your arrows and strike down the evildoer..."The book speaks of the yearning through the exile, of the Jews for the Land of Israel and Jerusalem, and we are introduced to historical figures as diverse as the false messiah Shabbatai Tzvi, the beautiful Marrano Dona Gracia (Nasi), and the apostate Uriel Acosta.We read of the loves and the struggles of the lives of the real life figures in this epic.finally the book ends with the account of the Abraham who perished in the flames of the Warsaw ghetto, where the Jews fought a valiant battle against the Nazi monstrosity, always longing for freedom in their own land, the Land of Israel. I found this book not only interesting but quite enjoyable. - Published on Amazon.com Format:Mass Market Paperback This is the story of a family, from the first Abraham who witnesses the burning of Jerusalem in 70 AD to an Abraham who dies in the Warsaw Ghetto during WWII.A new look into the Jewish history and their perspective on world events, quite different than the Christian perspective.I found this book not only enlightening but quite enjoyable and very hard to put down.A must read for any history buff. - Published on Amazon.com Format:Mass Market Paperback This is the story of a family, from the first Abraham who witnesses the burning of Jerusalem in 70 AD to an Abraham who dies in the Warsaw Ghetto during WWII.A new look into the Jewish history and their prospective on world events, quite different than the Christian prospective.I found this book not only enlightening but quite enjoyable and very hard to put down.A must read for any history buff. Books > Fiction > Historical I am the Author, and I want to comment on my book. I am the Publisher, and I want to comment on this book.
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BooksAdvanced SearchNew ReleasesBest SellersThe New York Times® Best SellersChildren's BooksTextbooksTextbook RentalsSell Us Your BooksBest Books of the MonthDeals in Books Gary Giddins GARY GIDDINS is a long-time columnist for the Village Voice and a preeminent jazz critic who received the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award, and the Bell Atlantic Award for Visions of Jazz: The First Century in 1998. His other books include Bing Crosby: A Pocketful of Dreams--The Early Years, 1903-1940, which won the Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award and the ARSC Award for Excellence in Historical Sound Research; Weatherbird: Jazz at the Dawn of Its Second Century; Faces in the Crowd; Natural Selection; and biographies of Louis Armstrong and Charlie Parker. He has won an unparalleled six ASCAP-Deems Taylor Awards, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Peabody Award in Broadcasting. Books by Gary Giddins Celebrating Bird: The Triumph of Charlie Parker by Gary Giddins (Oct 1, 2013) Sell this back for an Amazon.com Gift Card Satchmo: The Genius of Louis Armstrong by Gary Giddins Order in the next 5 hours to get it by Thursday, Apr 17. Visions of Jazz: The First Century by Gary Giddins Weather Bird: Jazz at the Dawn of Its Second Century by Gary Giddins Bing Crosby: A Pocketful of Dreams--The Early Years 1903-1940 by Gary Giddins Warning Shadows: Home Alone with Classic Cinema by Gary Giddins Rhythm-a-ning: Jazz Tradition And Innovation by Gary Giddins Natural Selection: Gary Giddins on Comedy, Film, Music, and Books by Gary Giddins (Aug 1, 2006) Faces In The Crowd: Musicians, Writers, Actors, And Filmmakers by Gary Giddins (Apr 2000) Riding On A Blue Note: Jazz And American Pop by Gary Giddins (Jan 7, 2000) Celebrating Bird the Triumph of Charlie Parker by Gary Giddins (Nov 1986) Faces in the Crowd: Players and Writers by Gary Giddins > See search results for author "Gary Giddins" in Books Gary Giddins forum When Garys 2nd part of Bings autobiography coming out? › See all discussions... › Start a new discussion You are subscribed to new release e-mails for Gary Giddins. You are no longer subscribed to new release e-mails for Gary Giddins. E-mail me when there are new releases by Gary Giddins. Ted Gioia Ricky Riccardi John Edward Hasse Dave Gelly Laurence Bergreen Scott Yanow John F. Szwed Scott Knowles D... ARRAY(0x1c61b54c)
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The Circle of War in the Middle Ages: Essays on Medieval Military and Naval History L. Andrew Villalon (Author), Donald J. Kagay (Editor), L.J. Andrew Villalon (Editor) Paperback — Different aspects of medieval warfare form the focus for this collection of essays by both established and new scholars. They range from a reconsideration of several problems of military historiography to explorations of the medieval view of divine influence on the battlefield, and the emergence of complex strategic and tactical norms of naval warfare in the medieval Mediterranean. Other topics examined include the role of mercenaries; crusader warfare; and Anglo-Norman women at war.Contributors: BERNARD S. BACHRACH, THERESA M. VANN, PAUL E. CHEVEDDEN, STEPHEN MORILLO, EDWARD G. SCHOENFELD, KENT G. HARE, KELLY DEVRIES, STEVEN ISAAC, JEAN A. TRUAX, STEVEN G. LANE, DOUGLAS C. HALDANE, LAWRENCE V. MOTT Series: Warfare in History (Book 6) Publisher: Boydell Press (May 6, 1999) An excellent volume. MEDIEVALISTS.NET This very interesting set of essays on medieval military and naval history (has) no consistent theme beyond a desire to question the assumptions of past generations of historians, and to provide fresh answers, and this is done admirably. MEDIEVAL REVIEW (US) Valuable collection... Illustrates the remarkable vitality of medieval military history. All essays have something new to offer, and many point to major new developments. JOURNAL OF MILITARY HISTORY (US) Well-crafted essays... can be strongly recommended to those interested in military organization and the practice of war in medieval Europe (the twelfth and tyhirteenth centuries are particularly well served). HISTORY ARRAY(0xa9aa2ef4)
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by Randolph T. HolhutChief of AR CorrespondentsDummerston, Vt.February 2, 2011 On Native GroundVERMONT TAKES ON THE CONCEPT OF CORPORATE PERSONHOOD BLOOMSBURG, Pa.. --- A man who killed 100 sled dogs has received not a prison sentence but workers' compensation from a British Columbia agency. The man successfully proved he suffered post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after he claimed he was ordered to kill the dogs. "It was the worst experience [he] could ever imagine, his lawyer told CKNW, Vancouver, which had obtained the government document and then contacted the Humane Society. Howling Dog Tours Whistler, a division of Outdoor Adventures Whistler (OAW), had added hundreds of dogs prior to the 2010 Winter Olympics, anticipating a significant increase in tourists who wanted to experience sled dog racing. Its advertising claimed that for $169 tourists could experience "a once in a lifetime experience [with] your team of energetic and loveable Alaskan Racing Huskies." However, the tourism interest, combined with a lack of seasonal snow, collapsed after the Olympics. According to the British Columbia review decision, issued Jan. 25, the man, unidentified by name in the document but later revealed to be Robert Fawcett, general manager and founder of Howling Dog Tours Whistler, "was tasked to cull the employer's herd by approximately 100 dogs." OAW denies it issued any such orders. Fawcett claims he was under orders to significantly improve the financial performance, and that killing about one-third of the pack was the last resort. However, a statement posted on the OAW website says "there were no instructions given to Mr. Fawcett as to the manner of euthanizing dogs on this occasion, and Mr. Fawcett was known to have very humanely euthanized dogs on previous occasions." Thus, it seems entirely plausible that OAW expected Fawcett to eliminate about one-third of the pack. OAW has suspended all dog sled operations. Fawcett, the review board said, claimed he made extraordinary efforts to adopt out the dogs, but told the Board there was only limited success. He said he contacted a veterinarian to humanely euthanize the dogs, but the veterinarian refused to kill healthy animals. In a summary of testimony, the Compensation Board noted that Fawcett previously "euthanized dogs due to old age, illness, injury and where there were unwanted puppies." Killing dogs for population control is not acceptable, according to Mush With PRIDE, an industry-wide organization for dog sled owners. The Review Board noted Fawcett experienced stress in previous kills, many done by gunshot, but did not experience PTSD until after the killings in April 2010. Peter Fricker of the Vancouver Humane Society, said that his experience "in every case where people use animals to make money and when there are financial difficulties the animals' lives are put at risk." On April 21, 2010, Fawcett began the executions, using a shotgun, rifle, and knife to kill 55 dogs. Two days later, he killed 45. Most of the kills were not "clean." The workers' compensation board reported that dogs suffered as much as 20 minutes after first being shot before dying, and that some were shot and put alive into a mass grave. The dogs were forced to watch others being killed before they, too, would be killed. In panic and fear, they began to attack their executioner who wrapped his arms in foam to prevent his own injuries. By the end of each day of killing, Fawcett was covered by the blood of his victims. The compensation board noted Fawcett's family physician "indicated that [following the killings] the worker [complained] of poor appetite, inability to cope, poor memory and concentration, agitation, anger and hopelessness after the mass culling." A psychologist, according to the board's report, "noted that he [Fawcett] complained of panic attacks, nightmares, sleeps disturbance, anger, irritability and depressed mood." Almost all references to the killings - by official documents and on the OAW website - use the word "euthanized" to describe what happened to the dogs and not the more accurate, "murdered." The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Vancouver Humane Society are now investigating the killings, and criminal charges may be filed. Fawcett may believe he was ordered to get rid of the animals to improve cost-effectiveness. He may also believe he had no other option but kill them to meet the financial demands of his employer. Yet there is always an option, and nothing can excuse what he did or how he carried out the executions. The "Superior Orders Doctrine," informally known as the "I was only following orders" defense, is no defense at all. The first time it was recorded was probably in 1476, when Pietro diHagenbach, a knight in the Holy Roman Empire, claimed that atrocities and torture committed under his direction, but not personally conducted by him, were ordered by his superior, the Duke of Burgundy. For allowing such heinous crimes, DiHagenbach was beheaded. The Nuremberg Defense by Nazis following World War II that they couldn't be held accountable for the Holocaust and its atrocities because they "were only following orders" was dismissed by the court. The Nuremberg Principle IV is clear: "The fact that a person acted pursuant to order of his Government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law, provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him." In U.S. v. Keenan (1969), a Marine private claimed he was not guilty of a war crime when he killed an unarmed and elderly Vietnamese civilian because he was following the direct order of his superior. However, the Court of Military Appeals ruled "the justification for acts done pursuant to orders does not exist if the order was of such a nature that a man of ordinary sense and understanding would know it to be illegal." Clearly, invoking the "following orders" defense for committing illegal and immoral acts in a non-military setting, when the terror of war isn't imminent, is even more appalling and inexcusable when a person's life isn't in jeopardy. Robert Fawcett may be experiencing PTSD as a result of the torture and murder of 100 Huskies. He may need long-term physical and mental care. But he cruelly and brutally killed those animals, for whatever reason he thought he had to. For that, there can be no defense.
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Question of the Day - Cemeteries in Hamilton, Massachusetts Cemeteries in Hamilton, Massachusetts Permanent link David Allen LambertNEHGS Online Genealogist Question: I am planning a trip to Massachusetts this spring. Specifically I am hoping to visit the cemeteries in Hamilton, Mass. Can you give me some guidance of where they are and the condition of their records? Answer: The town of Hamilton was split off from Ipswich, Mass. in 1793. So if you are looking for earlier burials you will need to search in Ipswich. That being said the earliest gravestone in the Hamilton Cemetery is from 1707, obviously a cemetery that was being used prior to the incorporation of the town of Hamilton itself. The Hamilton Cemetery is located on Bay Road (Route 1A) across from Cutler Road. The gravestones before 1850 are referred to as G.R. 1 in the Vital Records of Hamilton, Massachusetts to the end of the year 1849 (1908), and as G.R. 5 in the Vital Records of Ipswich, Massachusetts to the year 1850 (1910). The cemetery department in Hamilton can be reached directly at 978-468-5580. This information is from my 2009 edition of A Guide to Massachusetts Cemeteries available from the NEHGS store.Posted by David Lambert at 03/30/2011 11:58:24 PM | Comments
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ABA Mission and Goals ABA History and Timeline Careers ABA Departments ABA Governance and Policies Requests for Proposals Financial Reports Affiliated Organizations ABA Charities Donate Contact the ABA ABA Online Home > ABA Groups > Division for Public Services > Commission on Homelessness & Poverty > Pages Lawyers Working to End Homelessness Lawyers Working to End HomelessnessIn the fall of 2005, ABA President Michael Greco called on the legal profession to commit to a “renaissance of idealism.” He spoke of redefining legal help for those who need it the most but can afford it the least. With the legal profession full of individuals with the brightness, creativity, and energy to help others, it seems natural to use these qualities to help people stricken by poverty or homelessness. Yet even today, many people associated with the legal profession, be they lawyers, law students, judges, or non-profit workers, are unsure of the ways in which they can contribute to the struggle against such life-threatening circumstances. This book, Lawyers Working to End Homelessness , aims to eliminate this disconnect. Recognizing that many in the legal profession have the desire and ability to help the most impoverished members of our society, the ABA Commission on Homelessness and Poverty has invited outstanding individuals to relate their personal experiences of using the law to combat poverty and homelessness. The resulting articles reflect the diversity of experience and talent of the legal profession, as well as the ingenuity and creativity of those that have sought alternate methods of helping others. With contributions from a broad range of lawyers, judges, law students, and service providers, the book speaks to all readers who are interested in using their skills to help those who are often overlooked or ignored. This comprehensive book contains 29 articles, including the following: An introduction by 2005-2006 ABA President Michael Greco, explaining how addressing poverty and homelessness can help fulfill his call for a renaissance of idealism; An article by Maria Foscarinis that details how her love of pro bono work led her to devote her career to national policy advocacy and the establishment of the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty; An article by Casey Trupin, staff attorney at Columbia Legal Services and co-founder of Street Youth Legal Advocates of Washington, which highlights an innovative program whereby law students conduct outreach and provide supervised legal representation to homeless and runaway youth;An article by John Ammann, Professor of Law at Saint Louis University School of Law, which describes a major litigation, aided in large part by law students, that protected homeless people against mistreatment from their own city;An article by Jeffrey Simes, a partner at Goodwin Procter, that documents his law firm’s journey as it worked on securing the rights of homeless children to attend public schools;An article by Emiko Ryan, an AmeriCorps attorney who established a program in Hawaii to provide holistic services to the homeless; andAn article by Steve Binder describing the establishment, growth, and success of the innovative Homeless Court Program that removes barriers to housing, treatment, and employment by addressing outstanding misdemeanor criminal matters and moving homeless people from the streets, through shelter programs, to self-sufficiency.For those who have always considered helping people who are homeless but do not know where to start, this book can offer a multitude of examples from individuals who have successfully transferred their legal skills into aid for people who cannot afford the barest of shelters. For those who are looking for a way in which to use the law for the greater good but are not fully decided in which area to work, the book can offer compelling and in-depth exposure to a world that cries out for compassion. And for all readers, the book offers a renewal of optimism—a recognition of the problems of poverty and homelessness combined with the knowledge that the legal profession is uniquely capable of providing hope in the area. Through its work, the ABA Commission on Homelessness and Poverty aims to expose and ameliorate the devastating effects of homelessness. With this book, lawyers and those who work in the legal profession are invited to join in the struggle, and one day, use their abilities to end homelessness. To order the book through the ABA Web Store, click on this link http://www.abanet.org/abastore/index.cfm?section=main&fm=Product.AddToCartπd=4180012 . For more information please contact the Commission at 202/662-1693 or homeless@americanbar.org. Print
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Home » Magazine » 1984 » Volume 35, Issue 5 In Safekeeping The National Archives, America’s official safe-deposit box, is only fifty years old—but it is already bulging with our treasures and souvenirs August/september 1984 | Volume 35, Issue 5 PrintEmailTHE NATIONAL ARCHIVES has been called variously the nation’s memory, storehouse, attic, and soul. The institution is known as the place where Americans can find their roots, as the country’s Hall of Heroes, and, by cynics, as the nation’s wastebasket. All these labels are, in fact, perfectly apt. In the handsome National Archives building on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, in the fifteen regional records centers, and in the seven presidential libraries—which altogether make up the National Archives—are stored 3,250,000,000 documents, 5,000,000 still pictures, 91,000,000 feet of motion pictures, and 122,000 sound and video recordings. The range is breathtaking: the most important holdings are the nation’s birth records—the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights—which, carefully guarded and preserved, are on permanent display; less awesome are such homey exhibits as a handwritten letter from Queen Elizabeth of Great Britain to President Eisenhower, sending him a recipe for “Drop Scones.” The wastebasket label is quite accurate too. Every year the federal government generates some 7,000,000 cubic feet of records—the tax returns alone would fill ninety railroad cars—which are sent to the National Archives to be appraised and honed down to the 1 to 3 percent that are of permanent enough value to be retained. “Good records,” one archivist has said, “go to the heavenly archives and the bad ones go to the flames.”It comes as a surprise to many people to learn that the National Archives is only fifty years old. When the nation was founded, the government records followed Congress around to wherever it was sitting, moving eleven times before 1800. The government’s establishment in Washington determined in what city the records would be kept, but the lack of a fireproof depository still left the papers vulnerable. Again and again, bills were introduced in Congress to authorize the building of a proper fireproof building, and again and again, the project was shunted aside. Finally, in 1921, a fire at the Commerce Department virtually destroyed the 1890 census and damaged census records back to 1790, leading at last to the passage of a bill in favor of a National Archives building. The architect John Russell Pope was chosen to design it, and construction started in 1932. Oddly enough, it was two more years before the National Archives Act of 1934 officially established the agency that would inhabit the building and defined its mission.Now, fifty years later, our records are uniquely accessible. As well as documenting all the acts of our government—treaties, maps, trade agreements—a remarkably detailed portrait of the American people emerges through millions of military service records, hundreds of thousands of pension claim files, and the immigration and naturalization documents of our vast immigrant population. Census records detail our vital statistics, and federal court records register crime. And for comic relief, the archivists have preserved such oddities as the Declaration of Independence reproduced in alphabet noodles. The following portfolio is excerpted from a forthcoming book, The National Archives of the United States by Herman Viola, to be published by Harry N. Abrams. The photographs are by Jonathan Wallen. —B.K. WHEN YOU’RE IN WASHINGTON Congress (U.S.)
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E-Waste Systems sets agreement with California’s Zak Enterprises E-Waste Systems, Inc., (EWSI) headquartered in London, has joined forces with Zak Enterprises of Santa Clara, California to expand its geographic coverage with immediate customer services. Zak Enterprises is based in the heart of Silicon Valley and is among the longest serving companies in the end of life electronics industry. The new agreement will allow service delivery to customers of both companies with consistent, high quality standards. Product has already begun flowing from Zak customers in Europe through EWSI’s network with more expected to follow. EWSI’s strategy includes acquiring and partnering with enterprises that share the commitment to providing compliant, cost-effective and environmentally-responsible services for e-waste processing, reverse logistics and hardware recycling. EWSI expects to extend its reach and offering to apply best practice professional management and to invest in state-of-the-art technology. The three-year agreement defines the quality services under offer; provides for full audit trails of all transactions; provides a mechanism for sharing economic benefit; requires periodic reviews; and includes non-disclosure and non-circumvention terms. 877-777-0043 • Fax 419-931-0740 • 900 W South Boundary, Bldg. 6 Perrysburg, OH 43551
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CenterPoint buys massive N.J. DC Monday, February 18, 2013 Developer CenterPoint Properties last week said it recently closed the $83 million acquisition of a 1.5 million-square-foot distribution center occupied by bookstore Barnes & Noble in Monroe, N.J. It was the largest amount ever paid by Chicago-based CenterPoint for a single building and brings its holdings in the New Jersey market to 2.9 million square feet. Barnes & Nobles' lease for its e-commerce fulfillment center runs through 2020. The facility, located about 30 minutes from the Port of New York and New Jersey, ships a wide variety of merchandise, including electronics, toys, games and gifts. - Eric Kulisch ...
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« SpaceX, NASA to Host Social Marking Launch of Historic Mission ISS Expedition 30 Crew Returns, Next Mission Readied At Baikonur » Cheeseburgers and Techno-Turkeys: The Troubled Childhood of Hubble By Ben Evans An odyssey of exploration began on 25 April 1990, when Steve Hawley gingerly pulled Discovery's robot arm away from the Hubble Space Telescope. Photo Credit: NASA More than two decades ago, this very week, one of the most important missions in the annals of scientific discovery got underway with the launch of NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. This enormous, $1.5 billion observatory, with its five instruments and finely ground mirrors, promised to revolutionise astronomy: it would peer deeper into the cosmos than ever before, unhindered by the distorting effects of Earth’s atmosphere. In time, it would examine ‘nurseries’ of young stars and ‘graveyards’ of ancient ones, would study galaxies in unprecedented depth, would watch as a comet smashed into Jupiter, would trace violent storms on Uranus and Neptune and would create maps of far-off Pluto, whose resolution will remain unmatched until the New Horizons probe reaches the tiny world in 2015. To this very day, Hubble remains priceless, its images having long since become art, such is their majestic beauty. “It’s Americana,” astronaut Rick Linnehan once said of the telescope, “like cheeseburgers or Clint Eastwood. It just pervades everything.” Yet Hubble’s success would begin with a tortured childhood which made it the butt of cruel humour and an object of cynical criticism from NASA’s political opponents. In the first few months of its orbital life, Hubble was in trouble. None of this could have been further from anyone’s mind on 10 April 1990, as controllers counted down towards the launch of the telescope on STS-31. Aboard Space Shuttle Discovery were five astronauts – Loren Shriver, Bruce McCandless, Steve Hawley, Kathy Sullivan and the man who would one day become NASA’s first African-American Administrator, Charlie Bolden – who had been tasked with the enormous responsibility of getting this gigantic icon of astronomy into the highest orbit ever attained by the Shuttle. However, the 10th was not to be their day. The countdown clock stopped at T-4 minutes, when abnormal pressures and turbine speeds were detected in one of Discovery’s Auxiliary Power Units. Two weeks later, on the 24th, they were back for another try. This time, the clock halted at T-31 seconds, just before the on-board computers assumed primary control, due to glitch with a liquid oxygen fill and drain valve. When this had been rectified, STS-31 roared into space. “Our window on the Universe!” crowed the launch announcer as Discovery speared towards a 600 km orbit, atop a pillar of golden flame. Within hours, the Shuttle’s payload bay doors were open, revealing the monster telescope in all its splendour. Thirteen metres in length, glistening with shiny insulation and weighing in at an impressive 11,000 kg, Hubble filled the bay and left the astronauts awestruck. In fact, its aluminium coating was so reflective that it blazed brightly in the harsh, unfiltered sunlight…so brightly that Steve Hawley would later recommend that future servicing missions should rendezvous with the telescope during orbital darkness, to avoid momentarily blinding the astronauts or their cameras. Almost filling Discovery's payload bay - as well as the camera field of view - the Hubble Space Telescope is lifted to its pre-deployment position on 25 April 1990. Photo Credit: NASA Deployment occurred on the second day of the mission, 25 April, when Hawley gingerly grappled the massive payload and positioned it above the bay, with its large aperture door facing forward. Its two high-gain antennas were released, springing ‘downward’ and ‘outward’, and the next step was to open British Aerospace’s solar arrays, which would unfurl like kitchen roller blinds. The first array came out perfectly and Shriver reflected that it was incredible to behold. The second array was more problematic. It began to unroll for a few centimetres, then abruptly stopped. Everyone’s heart skipped a beat. Time was of the essence. After cutting umbilical power to the telescope, the astronauts had less than two hours on internal batteries to get the arrays open and enable Hubble to draw its own electricity. If that did not happen, the batteries would die…and so would the telescope. The worry went up in notches with the realisation that Hubble might be in severe difficulty. An EVA repair seemed the only solution. Having reduced Discovery’s cabin pressure the previous night, McCandless and Sullivan were already downstairs, clad in their space suits, in the airlock, with tools, ready to go outside. McCandless was convinced that he knew the source of the problem: a glitch with a tension monitoring module. This was a unit of software to detect any excessive strain on the array and prevent it from tearing or binding. It would stop the array-deployment process and the spacewalkers would then have to fix it manually. To give them more time, they had partially completed their pre-EVA procedures before Hubble was grappled. “What’s left,” said Sullivan, “is to button up the suit, breathe 40 minutes of pure oxygen, close the hatch, depress and get outside.” It was a double-edged sword, for despite having a spacewalk, it also meant that Sullivan’s other task of photographing the deployment would be missed. Before launch, she had resolved to literally “wallpaper the telescope with photos”…in fact, she wanted a cover shot on Aviation Week. Now, after working for five years on Hubble, she was locked up in the airlock and might not even see the instant of its release. With only minutes remaining before she and McCandless would have been directed to fully depressurise the airlock, Mission Control told them that the problem was an erroneous software indication…from the tension monitoring module. An engineer requested permission to command the module to ‘No Op’ (‘No Operation’, effectively taking it ‘out of the loop’) and was certain that this would enable the stubborn second array to unfurl. Flight Director Bill Reeves concurred and fellow astronaut Story Musgrave radioed up the news: Hawley was to orient Hubble in a ready-to-deploy attitude and if the attempt to ‘No Op’ worked, the array would probably start unfurling immediately and they would have to release the telescope as quickly as possible. It worked. Charlie Bolden was astounded, but McCandless offered a wizened grin. He had worked on Hubble for so long that he knew, instinctively, what had caused the problem. Seven weeks before launch, in early March 1990, Kathy Sullivan backs out of the airlock to perform a simulated repair of the Hubble Space Telescope. Photo Credit: NASA Steve Hawley’s primary concern during the deployment, aside from the array, was the very remote chance that Discovery’s robot arm might fail. The joints of the arm were intentionally limited in terms of their speed, thereby offering him some margin to respond to contingencies, and that meant that the motion he could command was restricted. As he lifted Hubble, it ‘wobbled’ – a lot more than the simulator had taught him that it should – and not until after landing did he realise that the signal ‘noise’ in the joints contributed to random imparted motions. In his post-mission debriefings, he recommended that future simulations should take joint noise into account…a recommendation which would prove hugely beneficial for Swiss astronaut Claude Nicollier, who would grapple Hubble on the first servicing mission and for Hawley himself, who would fly the second. Charlie Bolden was not immune to the irony that the crew had actually practiced a solar array deployment failure during their last integrated simulation, shortly before launch. In that instance, McCandless and Sullivan had manually wound out the array, although they knew that doing such an action for real had the potential to severely damage the telescope. “Once you did that,” Bolden said, “it took it out of its automatic mode and it would no longer be able to take care of itself…sort of like taking a baby from the womb, putting it on a respirator and putting it in a position where the rest of its life it would need something. That was what that would have meant for Hubble…until you send another crew up and put on another set of solar arrays and reset the clock.” Disappointment at being unable to perform an EVA was stretched a little further when McCandless and Sullivan were unable to see the moment of deployment. Bolden certainly felt for them, still cooped up in the airlock. “So we deploy Hubble, coming off the Pacific Ocean, across the west coast of South America,” he told the NASA oral historian, “and it’s just the most beautiful thing you can imagine. It comes off the end of the arm and down. We’re looking at the Andes Mountains and it goes right across the coast between Bolivia and Venezuela.” Shortly afterwards, he and Shriver pulsed Discovery’s thrusters, twice, to raise their orbit slightly, causing them to fall steadily ‘behind’ the telescope. As Hubble drifted serenely away, the three men on the flight deck gaped at what they were seeing. Then, all of a sudden, and in unison, they all barked: “Camera! Somebody get a camera!” Stunning view of the curvature of Earth from STS-31. Hubble's large cross-sectional size required the Shuttle to deliver the telescope into one of the highest orbits ever achieved by astronauts. Photo Credit: NASA Bolden helped to save the day in terms of the photography. An IMAX large-format camera was already filming the deployment from the rear of the payload bay and Bolden also acquired some spectacular footage from the cabin, with the hand-held IMAX. Having sealed McCandless and Sullivan in the airlock, he shot a length of film as he floated upstairs to the flight deck, focusing firstly on Shriver at the orbiter’s controls, then on Hawley at the robot arm’s controls, and then through the windows to reveal Hubble in all its magnificence. It was not like a ‘normal’ camera, where it was possible to see what was going through the lens; instead, Bolden had nothing to gauge whether he was doing the right thing. After the flight, his biggest surprise was not just that the camera worked, but that it also stayed in focus. Later, IMAX would include Bolden’s imagery as part of its Blue Planet and Destiny in Space documentaries. Four days later, on 29 April 1990, Shriver and Bolden brought Discovery onto the concrete runway at Edwards Air Force Base in California’s Mojave Desert, capping a mission which promised to open a new set of eyes on the Universe. In the first few weeks, Hubble’s early problems seemed benign: a few communications glitches, drifting star trackers and snagged coaxial cables were part and parcel in the process of wringing out a new spacecraft. More serious concerns arose when temperature changes bent materials in the solar arrays’ booms, the effect of which was magnified by the orientation mechanism in such a way that it physically ‘bounced’ the whole telescope. The result was a ‘jittering’ in Hubble’s images and, since the booms only stabilised in the final few minutes of orbital daylight, the pointing system was only able to meet its design specifications for a fraction of each orbit. NASA engineers worked with their counterparts at Lockheed to change the control program in Hubble’s computer and successfully counteracted the vibrations. On 21 May, the telescope returned its first images of a double star in the Carina system and these were lauded as being much clearer than were achievable with ground-based instruments. Four weeks later, calamity befell the mission: on 24 June Hubble failed a focusing test. Its secondary mirror had been adjusted to focus the incoming light from a celestial source, but a fuzzy ring – like a halo – encircled even its best images, creating a blur. Additional tests revealed that the telescope was suffering from a condition known as a ‘spherical aberration’ in its primary mirror. In essence, the manufacturer, Perkin-Elmer, had ground it to the wrong specification, removing too much glass and polishing it too flat…by a mere fiftieth of the width of a human hair. The consequence was that Hubble was unable to acquire sharp images. With mounting horror, NASA realised that its attempts to sell its scientific showpiece on the basis of its ability to see further into the cosmos than ever before, with unprecedented clarity, now became increasingly hollow. The promised white knight of astronomy was turning instead into a white elephant. Their mission accomplished, the crew of STS-31 depart Discovery on the runway at Edwards Air Force Base in California on 29 April 1990. Photo Credit: NASA Even Hubble’s chief scientist, Ed Weiler, admitted that its capabilities were comparable only to “a very good ground telescope on a very good night”. The politicians were quick to vent their fury. Senator Barbara Mikulski, a Democrat from Maryland, exploded that Hubble was “a techno-turkey” and wasted taxpayers’ money. Meanwhile, Senator Al Gore – then a Democrat for Tennessee and later Vice President during the Clinton administration – observed that, for the second time in less than half a decade, NASA’s quality control shortcomings had been exposed. The press had a field day. Particular venom was levelled at the fact that NASA had accepted Perkin-Elmer’s $64.2 million bid to build the mirror and rejected a more expensive, though more thorough, $99.8 million proposal from Eastman Kodak and defence contractor Itek. On 28 July, the New York Times reported that Kodak-Itek’s bid would have subjected the mirror to two independent checks of its grinding and polishing accuracy. Almost certainly, this would have caught the error before launch. NASA responded that, with 20-20 hindsight, it would have cost $100 million to incorporate additional tests and independent checks of the telescope optics into the Perkin-Elmer contract, but the effect upon the general public was the same. The space agency was rendered a laughing-stock on late-night TV talk shows. David Letterman compiled a pejorative list of Top Ten Hubble Excuses, whilst others criticised NASA for its mismanagement of both the Hubble development and the Solid Rocket Boosters which doomed Challenger. Several space policy analysts, including John Logsdon, noted that attitudes had changed from the 1960s, in which problems were anticipated and incorporated into planning, to the late 1970s and 1980s when little effort was made to prepare for unforeseen obstacles. In early July 1990, NASA established an investigating committee, chaired by Lew Allen, the head of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. His report – published the following November – harshly criticised the incorrect assembly of the ‘reflective null corrector’, an optical device used to determine the figure of Hubble’s mirror. The location of a lens in the device was improperly measured and the null corrector guided the polisher to shape a perfectly smooth mirror…with the wrong curvature. Analysis revealed that the curvature flaw in the primary mirror exactly matched the flaw in the null corrector. A second null corrector, made only with lenses, was also built to measure the vertex radius of the finished mirror. It, too, clearly identified an error in the primary mirror. However, neither warning sign was heeded and Allen’s report noted that “both indicators of error were discounted at the time as being themselves flawed”. During the fabrication process, technicians simply assumed the perfection of the mirror and of the reflective null corrector and rejected information from other independent tests, convincing themselves that no problems existed. Twelve light-years from Earth, the M82 galaxy - nicknamed 'The Cigar Galaxy' - blazes brightly in this Hubble image. Photo Credit: NASA/Space Telescope Science Institute The errors went back to 1981-82, when Perkin-Elmer and NASA were both distracted by cost and schedule difficulties. Allen’s report particularly condemned Perkin-Elmer’s quality control and communications failures, as well as NASA’s own failure to correct them. In orbit, the spherical aberration was particularly obvious in its effect on Hubble’s wide-field planetary camera and faint object camera, both of which suffered in terms of their spatial resolution and their ability to acquire images of distant sources. Having said this, the aberration was well characterised and stable and, over time, enabled astronomers to optimise the results obtained by Hubble with sophisticated techniques, such as ‘deconvolution’, whereby software algorithms and image processing methods removed many of the blurring effects of optical distortion. Spectroscopy was less severely affected, because the instruments required less focused light and by increasing the exposure times it became possible to gather valuable images. However, the jittering of the solar arrays left Hubble’s high-speed photometer virtually useless. Nevertheless, by the end of 1991, the telescope had made almost 2,000 quality observations of hundreds of astronomical objects, including storms on Saturn and images of Pluto’s moon, Charon. At the start of the following year, 1992, a quarter of all the papers presented before the American Astronomical Society drew on Hubble data. A repair was critical in order to restore the telescope to its pre-flight billing and, although the primary mirror could not be replaced, a new device – the Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement (COSTAR) – was built to restore its vision. COSTAR was manifested onto the first Shuttle servicing mission to Hubble. For the STS-31 astronauts, there would be involvement in these efforts, both directly and peripherally. Kathy Sullivan had already been assigned to another mission and Steve Hawley had gone to work for NASA’s Ames Research Center, so they watched from afar, but Bruce McCandless dug in with some early development of COSTAR and Charlie Bolden, for a time, hoped to command the repair mission. “Deep down,” he said later, “I was kind of keeping my fingers crossed that that would be my next mission.” Eventually, that command went to another astronaut and the spectacular repair of Hubble, in December 1993, proved to be one of NASA’s most defining moments. Many senior administrators had little faith that the repair would work, but its success contributed greatly to a changing attitude towards the Shuttle. As for Hubble itself, hardly anyone remembers the circumstances surrounding the spherical aberration today; Wikipedia, for one, gushes in far more detail about its astounding scientific discoveries, its contributions to physics and astronomy and cosmology and its importance to humanity as a species. The mirror problem is now little more than a footnote in history…and it should be, for Hubble has overcome the torment of its early childhood and performed grandly. When the crew of the final Shuttle servicing mission departed the telescope in May 2009, they left an observatory far more powerful and considerably more capable than even the magnificent showpiece which STS-31 had launched, almost two decades earlier. In the words of John Grunsfeld, who visited the telescope in space more times than any other human being, the honour and the privilege of being involved with such an icon made it worthy of the risk to his own life. Doubtless the other astronauts associated with Hubble feel the same way. “Hubble is worth risking my life,” he once said. “It’s that important. It’s teaching us so much about our world, the Universe, who we are and our place in the cosmos.” And today, in 2012, after 22 years, Hubble remains important and its teaching goes on. EmailTwitterFacebookLinkedInTumblrPinterestRedditGooglePocketStumbleUponDiggPrint April 28th, 2012 | Tags: Astronaut, Bolden, Exploration, Explore, Human Space Flight, Kennedy Space Center, KSC, NASA, Shuttle, Space, space exploration | Category: astronaut, astronomy, BAE Systems, Ben Evans, Bolden, Challenger, Charles Bolden, Congress, Discovery, Earth, Edwards Air Force Base, ESA, European Space Agency, Hubble Space Telescope, Human Space Flight, NASA, Space, space shuttle 1 comment to Cheeseburgers and Techno-Turkeys: Hubble’s Troubled Childhood I have been exploring for a bit for any high-quality articles or weblog posts on this kind of area . Exploring in Yahoo I ultimately stumbled upon this website. Reading this information So i am satisfied to show that I have an incredibly just right uncanny feeling I discovered exactly what I needed. I so much certainly will make certain to do not put out of your mind this web site and provides it a glance on a constant basis. Tweets by @AmericaSpace
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The Colonel Gilbert Potter Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution held a fingertip luncheon and awards ceremony on February at the Amityville Library. Regent Jeannette Krauszer , Vice-Regent Susan Shreve a ---------------------------------------------------------------------
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The Littlewood-Paley theory for Jacobi expansions William C. Connett and Alan L. Schwartz Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 251 (1979), 219-234 MSC: Primary 42C10; Secondary 33A65, 42B25 Full-text PDF Free Access Abstract | Similar Articles | Abstract: The machinery for harmonic analysis utilizing Jacobi polynomial expansions is developed using the explicit form of the convolution kernel discovered by Gasper. Various maximal functions, and the standard Littlewood-Paley functionals are studied and an application is given to multiplier theorems. References Askey, A transplantation theorem for Jacobi series, Illinois J. Math. 13 (1969), 583–590. MR 0246038 N. Bailey, Generalized hypergeometric series, Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, No. 32, Stechert-Hafner, Inc., New York, 1964. MR 0185155 (32 #2625) G. Bartle, The elements of real analysis, 2nd ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York-London-Sydney, 1976. MR 0393369 (52 #14179) Bonami and Jean-Louis Clerc, Sommes de Cesàro et multiplicateurs des développements en harmoniques sphériques, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 183 (1973), R. Coifman and Guido Weiss, Analyse harmonique non-commutative sur certains espaces homogènes, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 242, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1971 (French). Étude de certaines intégrales singulières. MR 0499948 C. Connett and Alan L. Schwartz, A multiplier theorem for ultraspherical series, Studia Math. 51 (1974), 51–70. MR 0358209 L. Schwartz, A multiplier theorem for Jacobi expansions, Studia Math. 52 (1974/75), 243–261. MR 0387934 C. Connett and A. L. Schwartz, The theory of ultraspherical multipliers, Mem. Amer. Math. Soc. 9 (1977), no. 183, iv+92. MR 0435708 Gasper, Positivity and the convolution structure for Jacobi series, Ann. of Math. (2) 93 (1971), 112–118. Gasper, Banach algebras for Jacobi series and positivity of a kernel, Ann. of Math. (2) 95 (1972), 261–280. Gasper and Walter Trebels, A characterization of localized Bessel potential spaces and applications to Jacobi and Hankel multipliers, Studia Math. 65 (1979), no. 3, 243–278. MR 567079 (81k:46030) -, Multiplier criteria of Marcinkiewicz type for Jacobi expansions (preprint). H. Hardy and J. E. Littlewood, A maximal theorem with function-theoretic applications, Acta Math. 54 (1930), no. 1, 81–116. MR 1555303, http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02547518 Koornwinder, Jacobi polynomials. II. An analytic proof of the product formula, SIAM J. Math. Anal. 5 (1974), H. M. Macdonald, Note on the evaluation of a certain integral containing Bessel's functions, Proc. London Math. Soc. (2) 7 (1909), 142-149. Neri, Singular integrals, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 200, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1971. Notes for a course given at the University of Maryland, College Park, Md., 1967. MR 0463818 Pollard, The mean convergence of orthogonal series. III, Duke Math. J. 16 (1949), 189–191. MR 0028459 (10,450d) M. Stein, Topics in harmonic analysis related to the Littlewood-Paley theory., Annals of Mathematics Studies, No. 63, Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1970. MR 0252961 M. Stein and Guido Weiss, Introduction to Fourier analysis on Euclidean spaces, Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1971. Princeton Mathematical Series, No. 32. MR 0304972 G. Szegö, Orthogonal polynomials, third ed., Amer. Math. Soc. Colloq. Publ., vol. 23, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, R. I., 1967. N. Watson, A treatise on the theory of Bessel functions, Cambridge Mathematical Library, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995. Reprint of the second (1944) edition. MR 1349110 (96i:33010) Zygmund, Trigonometric series: Vols. I, II, Second edition, reprinted with corrections and some additions, Cambridge University Press, London, 1968. MR Bibliography [1] R. Askey, A transplantation theorem for Jacobi series, Illinois J. Math. 13 (1969), 583-590. MR 0246038 (39:7344) [2] W. Bailey, Generalized hypergeometric series, Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, New York, 1964. MR 0185155 (32:2625) [3] R. Bartle, The elements of real analysis, Wiley, New York, 1967. MR 0393369 (52:14179) [4] A. Bonami and J. L. Clerc, Sommes de Cesàro et multiplicateurs des développments en harmoniques sphériques, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 183 (1973), 223-263. MR 0338697 (49:3461) [5] R. Coifman and G. Weiss, Analyse harmonique noncommutative sur certains èspaces homogènes, Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 242, Springer-Verlag, Berlin and New York, 1971. MR 0499948 (58:17690) [6] W. C. Connett and A. L. Schwartz, A multiplier theorem for ultraspherical series, Studia Math. 51 (1974), 51-70. MR 0358209 (50:10674) [7] -, A multiplier theorem for Jacobi expansions, Studia Math. 52 (1975), 243-261. (See also A correction to the paper ``A multiplier theorem for Jacobi expansions", Studia Math. 54 (1975), 197.) MR 0387934 (52:8772) [8] -, The theory of ultraspherical multipliers, Mem. Amer. Math. Soc. No. 183, 1977. MR 0435708 (55:8666) [9] G. Gasper, Positivity and the convolution structure for Jacobi series, Ann. of Math. 93 (1971), 112-118. MR 0284628 (44:1852) [10] -, Banach algebras for Jacobi series and positivity of a kernel, Ann. of Math. 95 (1972), 261-280. MR 0310536 (46:9634) [11] G. Gasper and W. Trebels, A characterization of localized Bessel potential spaces and applications to Jacobi and Hankel multipliers (preprint). MR 567079 (81k:46030) [12] -, Multiplier criteria of Marcinkiewicz type for Jacobi expansions (preprint). [13] G. H. Hardy and J. E. Littlewood, A maximal theorem with function-theoretic applications, Acta Math. 54 (1930), 81-116. MR 1555303 [14] T. Koornwinder, Jacobi polynomials. II, An analytic proof of the product formula, SIAM J. Math. Anal. 5 (1974), 125-137. MR 0385198 (52:6063) [15] H. M. Macdonald, Note on the evaluation of a certain integral containing Bessel's functions, Proc. London Math. Soc. (2) 7 (1909), 142-149. [16] U. Neri, Singular integrals, Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 200, Springer-Verlag, Berlin and New York, 1971. MR 0463818 (57:3757) [17] H. Pollard, The mean convergence of orthogonal series. III, Duke Math. J. 16 (1949), 189-191. MR 0028459 (10:450d) [18] E. Stein, Topics in harmonic analysis related to the Littlewood-Paley theory, Ann. of Math. Studies, no. 63, Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, N. J., 1970. MR 0252961 (40:6176) [19] E. Stein and G. Weiss, Introduction to Fourier analysis on Euclidean spaces, Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, N. J., 1971. MR 0304972 (46:4102) [20] G. Szegö, Orthogonal polynomials, third ed., Amer. Math. Soc. Colloq. Publ., vol. 23, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, R. I., 1967. [21] G. N. Watson, A treatise on the theory of Bessel functions, second ed., Cambridge Univ. Press, New York, 1966. MR 1349110 (96i:33010) [22] A. Zygmund, Trigonometric series, second ed., Cambridge Univ. Press, New York, 1968. MR 0236587 (38:4882) Retrieve articles in Transactions of the American Mathematical Society with MSC: Retrieve articles in all journals http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-1979-0531976-3 S 0002-9947(1979)0531976-3 Article copyright: © Copyright 1979 American Mathematical Society
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News & Media Relations Google +1 ADVANCED AUTOMOTIVE RADAR HELPS CAR MAKERS INCREASE DRIVER SAFETY THROUGH INTELLIGENT VEHICLE DESIGN Analog Devices’ analog front-end for automotive radar enables adaptive cruise control and blind spot detection in a single, cost-competitive IC. Norwood, MA (05/25/2011) - Automotive safety is evolving from passive systems such as seat belts, airbags and crash detection to active sensing networks capable of collision avoidance and accident prevention. Radar is an especially promising active safety improvement and has the potential to significantly reduce the number and severity of distracted driving accidents. Analog Devices, Inc. (NYSE: ADI), whose integrated inertial sensing iMEMS® technology helped make airbags a standard automotive safety feature over 15 years ago, is introducing an affordable, high-performance, radar AFE (analog front-end) IC today. Watch this video to learn more about automotive radar and the AD8283 Radar AFE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5655
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SCIENTIFIC CRITIQUE - Proposed primate experiments Posted 1 August 2001 A submission by Animal Aid. The very scientific validity of the proposed centre is open to question and should be subject to broad consultation and intense scientific scrutiny before any claims of such research being in the public interest are heeded. The basic premise of the proposed science is that "how specific brain systems work normally to produce behaviour and also how they may malfunction in neuropsychiatric or neurological disorders" is the same in human and non-human primates; so that results from research in monkeys can be extrapolated to the therapeutic benefit of human patients. This is not the case, however. Animal "models" of such complex and multifactorial conditions as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, or Huntington's Disease, stroke, depression and other psychiatric disorders bear little relation to the real diseases in humans. They fail to reflect the complexities and idiosyncrasies of the human brain as well as failing to mimic the progression of the symptoms as they evolve over several years in patients. For example, marmosets are much used in research into Parkinson's Disease although their brains do not even develop Lewy bodies; a generally recognised marker for the disease in humans. In fact, recent experiments at Cambridge University, purported to be furthering stroke research, revealed the gulf between the reality of human stroke patients and their marmoset "model" counterparts: the monkeys were able to run, climb, swing and jump almost as normal just three weeks after their artificially-induced "stroke". Yet the experiment was undertaken in marmosets , according to the researchers, because "it is inherently difficult to extrapolate the findings from rodent studies." This experiment clearly shows the inherent absurdity of extrapolating the results from marmosets to man. In recent "Huntington's Disease research" at Cambridge University, the researchers admitted that their brain-damaged marmosets "did not replicate the symptoms or pathology of Huntington's Disease." Indeed, as with research into Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases, these artificially created "models" will not reveal why the brain cells die, and will therefore not contribute to stopping the disease process. It is human-based observations that have established the biochemical bases of these neurological illnesses and that will provide targets for possible therapies in the future. In recent research in marmosets at Guy's, King's and St. Thomas' School of Biomedical Sciences in London, the researchers were surprised to find some Parkinson's drugs elicited reactions opposite to those produced in rats, and unable to explain why. In order to avoid conflicting results between different species; a seemingly inexplicable problem confronting researchers in almost all recently published experiments attempting to compare brain function between humans and experimental animals; the studies must necessarily be conducted in donated human brain tissue (from operations or post mortem) or non-invasively (using scanners) in patients or in healthy volunteers. The Humane Research Trust, for example, funds studies at the Cambridge Brain Bank at Addenbrooke's Hospital, using tissue cultured from patients undergoing surgery or who have died but wanted to help research into the condition from which they suffered. Functional MRI scanners can monitor the brain activity of volunteers as they undertake tests of memory and other skills, to reveal brain areas that are active during particular activities. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a new technique which temporarily disrupts the functioning of the brain, allowing scientists to assess the impact of "switching off" specific regions without permanently removing them. The Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research is funding such studies at Oxford University. There are many additional state-of-the-art imaging techniques now available, including PET (positron emission topography), CAT (computer-aided tomography), MEG (magnetoencephalography), EROS (event-related optical signals). These sophisticated techniques are of immense value when used to study humans, but their expense cannot be justified for studying primates from whom the data obtained will not be applicable to humans. An objective reading of recent experiments aimed at studying brain function in primates at UK universities including Oxford and Cambridge demonstrates that the only way to ascertain which brain regions are involved in specific human thought processes and abilities is to study the human brain. Results from the brains of any other species are simply misleading and can result in ineffective or dangerous therapies for humans. Indeed, the authors of a recent "stroke" experiment on cats and monkeys at Guy's, King's and St. Thomas' Hospitals School of Medicine, London, concluded that it is not surprising that clinical trials of stroke medications based on animal models were unsuccessful because of the differences between human and animal brain function. The record of animal experiments in predicting useful treatments for stroke patients is abysmal, in fact. According to researchers at the Mayo Clinic, "over-reliance upon such animal models may impede rather than advance progress in the treatment of this disease." Animal "models" are equally damaging in other spheres of research and medicine. The inventor of the polio vaccine, Dr. Albert Sabin, stated that the vaccine was "long delayed by the erroneous conception of the nature of the human disease, based on misleading experimental models in monkeys." Dr. Mark Feinberg, a leading AIDS researcher, said in 1997: "What good does it do you to test something in a monkey? You find five or six years from now that it works in the monkey, and then you test it in humans and you realise that humans behave totally differently from monkeys, so you've wasted five years." There is, unfortunately, no shortage of human accident victims or patients with neurological illnesses, who are obviously the ideal subjects for research into their respective conditions, with, of course, their full and informed consent. Yet this most valuable of resources is neglected and under-funded while huge sums are allocated to spurious research in animals which will not benefit and may even harm the very patients it is claimed to be serving. Permission for this proposed "Centre for Neuroscience" should be refused, in the national interest, and the funding should be re-allocated to clinical research in hospital and university departments and such valuable but underfunded institutions as brain banks and other human tissue banks. Help stop monkey lab Planning objection Sainsbury appendix Find out more about the campaign here. Help us in the campaign against vivisection - make an online donation now. Find out more about experiments on primates in our Mad Science Awards 2001 report.
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Mineko YAGIWARA Staff in:Fairy Tail (TV 2/2014) : Key Animation (ep 1)Muv-Luv Alternative: Total Eclipse (TV) : 2nd Key Animation (TAP; 4 episodeseps 2, 10, 12, 24), Key Animation (ep 19)
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News Sazae-san is Last TV Anime Using Cels, Not Computers Chibi Maruko-chan, Doraemon switched to computers in 1999, 2002 Sazae-san is now the last Japanese animated television series that uses layers of transparent plastic film known as "cel art," instead of computers, for its production. One of the remaining holdouts in the past, Chibi Maruko-chan, replaced physical cels with computers in 1999, and Doraemon did the same in 2002. Studio Ghibli, Sunrise, Toei Animation, and most veteran studios switched during 1990s, while newer companies such as Gonzo and Satelight have been using computers for "painting" and digital compositing since their inception. Most studios consider traditional cel animation to be ill-suited to the era of high-definition imagery for several reasons: vibrations and slight movements can be seen between frames, static electricity can cause dust to appear on the cels, and too many cel layers can cause the lower cel layers to appear blurry and less saturated in color. However, Yōichi Tanaka, a department head at Eiken (the main studio behind Sazae-san), said that some of those points are actually advantages. "The subtle flickering of lines adds warmth to the images. It gives the viewers a sense of familiarity and security." The people who are capable of drawing cel artwork grow fewer as they get older; Eiken and three to four other studios employ 120 people to handle the cels of Sazae-san, but 20-30% of the artwork is drawn in China. Manufacturer Taiyō Shikisai once made 20 million yen (about US$200,000) a month from cel paints at its peak, but now makes 500,000 yen a month (about US$5,000) from them. Taiyō Shikisai head Shigeji Kitamura said, "It's the culture of Japan. We want to continue making the paints even if that cuts into our profits." Source: Asahi via Canned Dogs
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Creation Compromise at Baylor University by Ken Ham author-ken-ham baylor-university creation-compromises As we are in the final months of ministry for 2004, a year which we themed “Refuting Compromise” in our newsletter and website, I wanted to share a very sad, but real-life example of compromise at high levels in the church. As I’m writing to you, AiG just ran a family conference at the Waco Convention Center in Waco, Texas. This city is the home of Baylor University—the largest Baptist university in the world, with 14,000 students enrolled in more than 200 programs. [See also Baptist School Afraid of Creation and Saddened by University’s Stance on Creation.] Many Baylor students told me that most students who attend this university have to go through a “Christian Scriptures” course—sadly, from what I was told by students who have attended this class, it greatly undermines the authority of the Word. For example: Moses didn’t write Genesis authors “JEDP” (the discredited “documentary hypothesis”) wrote Genesis there were two contradictory accounts of creation the Jews borrowed their creation accounts from other cultures, etc., etc. One young Baylor student told me she was really struggling and having a crisis of faith. After I answered (to the best of my ability) her (and other students’) questions about these various anti-biblical teachings, the young lady couldn’t thank me enough for answers. On the one hand, I was so thrilled to see her so excited to know she can really trust God’s Word. On the other hand I was so burdened that she and so many thousands of others like her are being led astray by compromising Baylor professors. After hearing a number of talks at the AiG seminar, one young Baylor student told me he has seen many students come from homes and churches where they were taught to trust the Word of God, but after taking the Christian Scriptures course, their faith was in shatters. Two other Baylor students told me that they were so burdened for their professors, that they purchased 45 copies of AiG’s Refuting Compromise and Refuting Evolution to personally hand out to their science and religion professors. I gave them a highly subsidized AiG price on many books as I knew they were sacrificially using their own finances to reach their faculty with the truth of God’s Word. After returning to the AiG office, I received many emails concerning our outreach in Waco. Let me share just a few from Baylor students—and a concerned parent. “In the classroom, I have experienced science professors teaching evolution unapologetically. During class no one questions what is taught. “The religion department, in my experience, has taught that the Creation account in Genesis is not literal, there are two non-compatible Creation stories, and that the behemoth and leviathan in Job are only metaphorical.” Another student wrote: “In the past week I had a friend and a professor tell me that they have their opinions and do not want to hear mine. The professor did not accept the books I offered. Nothing would change her mind.” From another Baylor student: “You repeatedly mentioned wanting to get your materials into the hands of students and pastors and, as I told you last weekend, I am offering my hands to be filled with AiG materials.” Another person, who is involved in a Christian ministry that has an outreach to Baylor students, wrote: “I had a great time and learned a ton to help me! This conference helped me tremendously in my ministry …” On the Saturday of the seminar, the Waco Tribune-Herald newspaper published an article about a Baylor professor who was going to give lectures at a local Unitarian church. The article clearly reveals one of the major problems in the church in this day and age. As background, you should know that we are increasingly finding that church leaders and Bible/seminary professors (who train pastors and others) are being influenced by “postmodernism”—an increasingly pervasive thought pattern of not believing in absolutes. In fact, George Barna found that only 9% of teens from churches believe in absolute truth—reflecting what is being taught at many Christian colleges/churches/seminaries. Well, this is the excerpt from the Waco newspaper: “In a world many people see in terms of black and white absolutes, Baylor University philosophy professor Robert Baird studies the shades of gray. “‘Postmodernism: What’s all the fuss?’ a free adult education class, will be presented at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Waco. “Baird said that the Bible can be viewed as the story of people on a journey, an example that spiritual life is a continual quest for truth and meaning, rather than a strict reading that it depicts the ‘arrival at an absolute certainty …’ [emphasis ours] “Baird says he is more of the moderate path, one that recognizes the fallibility of humanity and that people therefore cannot claim certainty for one’s views.” Notice that although Baird feels that people cannot claim certainty for one’s views, he is very certain that you can’t do this! On the basis of Scripture (Rev. 3:15–16), I believe students would be better off being prepared with the right foundation in God’s Word and attend a pagan university, than go to a compromising (‘lukewarm’) “Christian” school, where every student takes a course that undermines biblical authority and leads them away from the Christian faith. Sadly, there are only a few really great Christian colleges that stand uncompromisingly on the absolute authority of the Word of God, as they should. In the same Waco newspaper, Baylor was described as a “great” university. But even if it produces great scientists, great nurses, great businessmen, great teachers and so on—all this becomes nothing compared to a person’s spiritual state, which determines their eternity! Taking a consistent reading of Genesis as we do at AiG—and using observational science to defend our faith and oppose the wrong foundation of evolutionary ideas—proclaims a message of certainty to the youth and adults who live in this relativistic society. Finally, from a homeschooling mom (and former science teacher) in Waco: “I attended the AiG conference here in Waco. I was so encouraged and embolded about taking a stand for what the Bible states very plainly about creation, Noah, etc. “I taught science to 4th–6th graders for five years after attending a “Christian” university. I felt a loss as to how to do it—I wish I’d known about AiG 20 years ago! “What a valuable service. Thank God for your willingness to ‘take the heat’ from those who feel you are ‘nuts.’ Thanks for giving us the courage to be nuts along with you!” Sadly, and ironically, much of the church itself is tearing down the foundation of Christianity in this nation by rejecting the literal history in Genesis 1–11—which is foundational to the gospel, Christian morality and the entire Christian worldview. AiG and its website are engaging the church and culture to rebuild this foundation. We need to raise up students and adults who know they can believe God’s Word. As a part of this, we can sometimes look to “heroes of the faith” who have stood on God’s Word. As a child, I remember Pilgrim’s Progress being read to me. Two things struck me. First, how I was like Pilgrim in that I needed to get the burden of sin off my back. The second was that as I grew older and learned about the author, John Bunyan, I felt almost a burning in my soul because of the admiration I had for the man. No matter how much he was persecuted for preaching the Word of God, he would not stop. That was such an inspiration to me to stand on the Word of God. Because of the effect that Bunyan and his classic book have had on my life, I really wanted to make available to you a unique set of five audio CDs, featuring a full-length dramatization in Bunyan’s original “old English” style. It’s been specially made for us by an extremely talented group of actors. Because Bunyan is one of my heroes of the faith, I wanted to give you the opportunity to receive this professionally produced audio recording. It’s excellent. I believe you’ll love it for yourself, or will give it as a Christmas gift! Please, help call the church and culture to return to the Word of God! Help keep these daily articles coming. Support AiG. Uncensored Science: Bill Nye Debates Ken Ham “Is creation a viable model of origins in today’s modern scientific era?” This DVD features Bill Nye and Ken Ham debating one of the biggest questions concerning the scientific community today. Subscribe today and get a FREE video download! Answers magazine is the Bible-affirming, creation-based magazine from Answers in Genesis. In it you will find fascinating content and stunning photographs that present creation and worldview articles along with relevant cultural topics. Each quarterly issue includes a detachable chart, a pullout children’s magazine, a unique animal highlight, excellent layman and semi-technical articles, plus bonus content. Why wait? Subscribe today and get a FREE DVD download!
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Antievolution.org Discussion Board > Specifically About Intelligent Design > Cabbages and Kings > Invidious comparisons Topic: Invidious comparisons, The polemics of "intelligent design"< Next Oldest | Next Newest > Wesley R. Elsberry Posted: May 07 2002,10:07 Intelligent Design advocates often deploy very negative analogies concerning their critics. Such analogies have included things like the former Soviet regime, McCarthyites, and Nazis.This thread is for documenting specific instances where ID advocates engage in political speech at the expense of their critics.I'll start things off with a recent example.Mark Hartwig: Compares Darwinists to NazisMark Hartwig has taken over the "Weekly Wedge Update". In his column for May 5, 2002, Hartwig makes an analogy between "Darwinists" and the Nazi oppressors of Czechoslovakia.Quote The intimidation tactics, however, signal something important about Darwinists. That "something" was explained in an insightful little piece by one A.J. Obrdlik. Published in 1942, it was a study of "gallows humor" in Czechoslovakia during the Nazi occupation. In that article, Obrdlik made a very keen observation:Gallows humor is a reliable index of the morale of the oppressed whereas the reaction to it on the part of the oppressors tells a long story about the actual strength of the dictators: If they can afford to ignore it, they are strong; if they react wildly with anger, striking their victims with severe reprisals and punishment, they are not sure of themselves, no matter how much they display their might on the surface. With the growing success of the Wedge, I'm sure we're going to see a lot more of this stuff. But Darwinist tactics will become a lot less intimidating as people realize that they signify not strength but panic. Edited by Wesley R. Elsberry on May 25 2002,10:18 --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Here is a fantastic recent example from your friend and mine, Jonathan Wells.There You Go Again:A Response to Kenneth R. MillerJonathan WellsDiscovery InstituteApril 9, 2002Quote The believers in Darwinian evolution who currently dominate our educational establishment think that all students--even those headed for careers in auto mechanics or real estate--should believe, as they do, that all of us are descended from ape-like creatures through genetic accidents and survival of the fittest. Promoters of this doctrine have recently been urging the Ohio State School Board to adopt science standards that would require all high school graduates to memorize Darwinian theory without questioning it, and without being exposed to any of the mounting evidence against it. To help in this campaign, the promoters enlisted the support of Brown University biology professor Kenneth R. Miller, who represented them before the Board on March 11. Miller is not a disinterested scientific expert. As the co-author of an introductory biology textbook that has been purchased for use in the Ohio public school system, he has a substantial personal stake in the controversy. In 2000, I published a book, Icons of Evolution, criticizing the way biology textbooks--including Miller’s--systematically distort the scientific evidence to provide support for Darwin’s theory. In his appearance before the Ohio State School Board, Miller attempted to respond to some of my criticisms. In his eagerness to defend Darwinian orthodoxy, however, Miller bungled the attempt. It takes a rather amazing amount of gall for Wells to accuse Ken Miller of not being a "disinterested scientific expert" because of Miller's interest in his textbook, when Wells obviously has (at the very least) a similar level of interest in his own book Icons.Also interesting in the above quote is how Wells appears to (now) be denying the common descent of humans and apes, whereas if you read Icons of Evolution carefully one finds quotes like (paraphrase) "it is clear that the human species has a history". AFAICT Wells actually does believe in some kind of guided evolution (i.e. he disagrees only with the "genetic accidents and survival of the fittest" bit), that's probably what he would say about the first sentence if pressed, but it is interesting how he managed not to distinguish his view from the special creationist view.Returning to the fold under pressure, perhaps... Wesley R. Elsberry Stephen Meyer compares Ken Miller to HimmlerThis one is reported by no less an authority than Jonathan Wells.Quote Another interesting aspect of the press conference was a statement by Ken Miller, featured on the evening news, to the effect that ID advocates are trying to present their views to the public "without the approval of science." Afterwards, in private, Steve Meyer kept repeating Miller's pompous declaration with a heavy German accent, sounding for all the world like Heinrich Himmler, Hitler's propaganda chief.-- Jonathan Wells on 2002/03/11 session with the Ohio BOE --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Jonathan Wells: Darwinism analogous to former Soviet regimeQuote These critics include embryologists, paleontologists, biochemists, molecular biologists, medical doctors, philosophers, and even lawyers. Unfortunately, the North American science-and-religion establishment has largely turned a deaf ear to these critics, preferring instead to abandon classical theology and embrace metaphysical materialism and moral relativism. But I see the situation as analogous to the last years of Soviet communism. A small, powerful elite controls all the official information outlets while the evidence against the official position swells quietly, like a wave building offshore. Someday soon, to the surprise of many people in academia and the media, the wave will break. I predict that the Darwinist establishment will come apart at the seams, just as the Soviet Empire did in 1990.-- "Darwinism: Why I Went for a Second Ph.D." by Jonathan Wells --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Phillip Johnson: Compares Gould to GorbachevIt seems timely to revisit this offering by "wedge" strategist, DI CRSC advisor, and author of the rejected Santorum amendment, Phillip E. Johnson.Quote Gould’s uncomfortable situation reminds me of the self-created predicament of Mikhail Gorbachev in the last years of the Soviet Empire. Gorbachev recognized that something had gone wrong with the Communist system, but thought that the system itself could be preserved if it was reformed. His democratic friends warned him that the Marxist fundamentalists would inevitably turn against him, but he was unwilling to endanger his position in the ruling elite by following his own logic to its necessary conclusion. Gould, like Gorbachev, deserves immense credit for bringing glasnost to a closed society of dogmatists. And, like Gorbachev, he lives on as a sad reminder of what happens to those who lack the nerve to make a clean break with a dying theory.-- Phillip E. Johnson's "The Gorbachev of Darwinism" (1998) --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker William Dembski: Compares Darwinism to former Soviet regimeQuote Dembski, whose recent book, "The Design Inference," presents in great detail how the Intelligent Design argument satisfies logic and probability, likes to compare the movement's influence on science to the freedom and democracy movements and their effect on Eastern Europe. Criticism of Darwinism now threatens the hegemony of Darwinism, he says, just as the move toward freedom upset the Soviet empire.Stephen Goode's "Scientists Find Evidence of God" (1999/04/19) --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Phillip Johnson: Compares Methodological Naturalism to former Soviet regimeQuote Behind this student movement is a more general intellectual movement that will bear fruit in the coming century. It is a bit thin on the ground for now, but so was the Christian faith in the first century. Materialism as a philosophy is superficially powerful but moribund, as we saw when the Soviet Union collapsed without a struggle a decade ago. Methodological naturalism is a branch on the materialist tree that will lose its power to intimidate when the tree is known to be hanging in midair.-- Phillip Johnson, Foreword to "Unapologetic Apologetics" (2001) --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Phillip Johnson: Compares Darwinism to the Soviet UnionQuote Darwinian evolution with its blind watchmaker thesis makes me think of a great battleship on the ocean of reality. Its sides are heavily armored with philosophical barriers to criticism, and its decks are stacked with big rhetorical guns ready to intimidate any would-be attackers. In appearance, it is as impregnable as the Soviet Union seemed to be only a few years ago.-- Phillip E. Johnson, "Darwin On Trial" (2nd ed.), p.169. --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Posts: 1Joined: May 2002 John Calvert: compares KCFS to Nazisfrom a series of letters in the Pratt Tribune (Calvert's letter can also be found here):Quote One thing that Jack Krebs and I agree with is that Pratt can be likened to an outpost under siege in a cultural war....My wife and I just returned from a trip to Belgium. We visited Bastogne where a few brave Americans of the 101st Airborne Division were surrounded by the German Army during the battle of the bulge. The German attack was led by a crack SS unit that took no prisoners.What were we fighting against in Bastogne? We were fighting against a Nazi regime that used the philosophy of Naturalism to justify a eugenics program of terrifying proportions. Naturalism is the belief that all phenomena result only from the laws of chemistry and physics and that teleological or design explanations are not valid. Naturalism is not science. It is a belief system.In the same manner, the defenders in Pratt are fighting against Naturalism, although they may not realize it. Rather than fighting against science, they are actually fighting for science. They are fighting for science that is driven by logic and critical thinking rather than by a philosophy that teaches to the exclusion of all other teachings that we are the products of only chance and necessity. They are fighting for science that is driven by the scientific method rather than science that is driven by a philosophy of Naturalism....Rather than using logic and good science to support its assault on the brave contingent in Pratt, the KCFS is using tactics one would expect from those that besieged Bastogne: scare tactics, misinformation and no substantive discussion of the real issues....So, we are back looking at Pratt as the bombs fall. The question is whether the Board and the Community will be supported by the rest of us as they have had the guts that General McAullife and the other brave Americans had that cold winter day in Bastogne 54 years ago. McAullife's reply was very simple when asked to surrender: "Nuts!" McAullife and the 101st were subsequently relieved by elements of Patton's Third Army. In the same way we all need to rise up and put our hands together for the Pratt Board and Pratt Citizens that have just characterized the outrageous censorship by the science establishment as "Nuts!"Jack Krebs' reply to this letter, along with a longer response to the charges made by Calvert, can be found here:http://www.sunflower.com/~jkrebs....art%201 Edited by Jesse on May 25 2002,13:45 Wesley R. Elsberry William Dembski: Compares opponents at Baylor University to NapoleonQuote Dembski, as the director of the center, also commented on the report in a one-paragraph e-mail message following its release. "The report marks the triumph of intelligent design as a legitimate form of academic inquiry. This is a great day for academic freedom," Dembski began. He concluded by observing that "Dogmatic opponents of design who demanded the Center be shut down have met their Waterloo. Baylor University is to be commended for remaining strong in the face of intolerant assaults on freedom of thought and expression."-- Christianity Today: "Baylor's dismissal of Polyani Center director Dembski was not a smart move." (2000/10/23) --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker William Dembski: Approves of comparing opponents at Baylor University to McCarthyitesQuote Baylor University President Robert Sloan has removed me as director of the Michael Polanyi Center despite his having personally solicited me to come to Baylor and establish the Center as a means of furthering work on intelligent design. Some Baylor faculty have exerted enormous pressure on Baylor to disassociate the university from me and my research. Earlier President Sloan had properly characterized these efforts as "intellectual McCarthyism."-- William Dembski: Press release (2000/10/19) --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Saddly, the ARN crash denied the opportunity to quote Dembski calling his critics "leftists." It was in the thread called something like "Removing hypotheticals" or some such. --------------"Science is the horse that pulls the cart of philosophy."L. Susskind, 2004 "SMOLIN VS. SUSSKIND: THE ANTHROPIC PRINCIPLE" William Dembski: Forrest and the "leftist" remarkQuote Barbara Forrest's letter is the worst sort of leftist guilt-by-association diatribe.-- William Dembski, post to ARN discussion forum, 2002/04/17 03:38 PM --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Thomas Foley William Dembski: In academia, "creationist" = "holocaust denier"Quote [I]t seems to me that [Robert] Pennock and MIT Press have deliberately tried to undermine my standing in the academic community. Pennock chose popular and outdated work of mine, positioned various critiques of my work with it, gave me no opportunity to reply to my critics, and packaged it all in a volume titled "Intelligent Design Creationists and Their Critics," thus casting me as a creationist, which in contemporary academic culture is equivalent to being cast as a flat earther, astrologer, or holocaust denier.How Not to Debate Intelligent Design - (2001/01/08) Wesley R. Elsberry Michael Shermer, a critic of "intelligent design", has made such a comparison before.Quote In Why People Believe Weird Things I compared these evolution deniers to Holocaust deniers, pointing out how they use the same style of argumentation and commit the same fallacies of logic in their parallel attempts to distort the historical record for political, ideological, or religious purposes.-- Michael Shermer's "ID Works In Mysterious Ways"I don't want anyone to get the idea that invidious comparisons are exclusively employed by ID advocates. I do want to document that ID advocates do deploy invidious comparisons, and show something of the poor level of justification usually given for the deployment of such comparisions by the ID advocates. --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Phillip Johnson compares "Darwinists" to Napoleon's army in MoscowQuote They have lost a big one. They're like Napoleon's army in Moscow. They have occupied a lot of territory, and they think they've won the war. And yet they are very exposed in a hostile climate with a population that's very much unfriendly.That's the case with the Darwinists in the United States. The majority of the people are skeptical of the theory. And if the theory starts to waver a bit, it could all collapse, as Napoleon's army did in a rout.(Source: The Dick Staub Interview: Phillip Johnson) --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker John Calvert compares Darwinists to Nazis and Communists.ID Net letter to Kansas BOEQuote What if our newspaper reporters were directed by their editors to write accounts of past events using the philosophical assumption that all democratic viewpoints are not valid? We have seen the results of this kind of censorship on open and objective reporting in all dictatorial regimes, such as the Third Reich in Germany and communist Russia under Stalin. I can remember when we had Radio Free Europe radio stations beaming all the news to Russians because their government censored any views that were inconsistent with the communist manifesto.The precise same thing is happening in our country with regard to the issue of what causes life and its diversity. That is essentially a historical question. If the history is driven by a Naturalistic agenda that censors one of the two competing hypotheses we will be engaging in the same sort of propaganda that characterized Nazi Germany and Communist Russia.theyeti theyeti Dembski compares "Darwinism" to former Soviet Block:Quote With the Intelligent Design movement this dissent has now become focused, promising to overturn the cultural dominance of Darwinism much as the freedom movements in eastern Europe overturned the political dominance of Marxism at the end of the 1980s.From The Intelligent Design Movement at ARN.theyeti Wesley R. Elsberry Dembski deploys Soviet::Darwinist analogy, yet againQuote In the current intellectual climate it is impossible to get a paper published in the peer-reviewed biological literature that explicitly affirms intelligent design or explicitly denies Darwinian and other forms of naturalistic evolution. Doubting Darwinian orthodoxy is comparable to opposing the party line of a Stalinist regime. What would you do if you were in Stalin's Russia and wanted to argue that Lysenko was wrong? You might point to paradoxes and tensions in Lysenko's theory of genetics, but you could not say that Lysenko was fundamentally wrong or offer an alternative that clearly contradicted Lysenko. That's the situation we're in. To get published in the peer-reviewed literature, design theorists have to tread cautiously and can't be too up front about where their work is leading. Indeed, that's why I was able to get The Design Inference published with Cambridge University Press but not No Free Lunch, which was much more explicit in its biological implications. -- Topic: ID and Peer Review --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Dembski compares treatment of ID to trial and death of SocratesID Will Win in the EndQuote When the Athenian court convicted Socrates for subverting the youth of Athens, he was given the option of proposing an appropriate punishment for his misdeeds. Since Socrates was convinced, not merely of his innocence, but also of his good worth, he proposed that Athens “punish” him by honoring him as a city benefactor. This proposed punishment did not set well with the Athenian court. Had Socrates proposed exile, he probably would have lived. As it was, his proposal earned him a hemlock milkshake. Just as Socrates was a benefactor for Athens, so intelligent design is a benefactor for science. Just as the Athenian court thought otherwise, so does the scientific community. theyeti theyeti In an amazing display of orginality, Johnson compares "naturalism" to the Soviet Union. http://www.worldmag.com/world/issue/04-03-04/cover_2.asp (This is one of a series of articles in which ID advocates fantasize about what their inevitable victory is going to look like.)Quote New historical scholarship reflected in a stunning PBS television documentary exposed the Inherit the Wind portrayal of the Scopes trial as a hoax, kicking off an era of historical revisionism in which book after scholarly book exposed how propaganda techniques had been employed to create a mythology of inevitable progress toward naturalism, similar to the governing mythology of the Soviet Union, which had proclaimed the inevitable replacement of capitalism by communism. The collapse of the Soviet Union put an end to the Soviet myth, just as the scientific collapse of Darwinism, preceded as it was by the discrediting of Marxism and Freudianism, prepared the way for the culture to turn aside from the mythology of naturalism to rediscover the buried treasure that the mythology had been concealing. theyeti Edited by theyeti on Mar. 30 2004,11:21 niiicholas Dick Hoppe replies to an invidious comparison:Science another way of knowing the creationBy Richard B. Hoppehttp://www.marionstar.com/news/stories/20040506/opinion/367497.htmlQuote Roth claims that the theory of evolution is an integral part of "... atheism, communism, Nazism, secular humanism, and the New- age movement." Any idea can be perverted for evil ends. That does not tell us about the idea, it tells us about how humans can pervert ideas. Should we also mention the use of the Bible, especially Leviticus, in support of slavery in the 19th century as another example of how humans can pervert an idea? And Lysenko's views of organic change, which dominated Soviet biology for 30 years, was exactly the opposite of the theory of evolution - it denied the theory of evolution! Roth could at least get the historical facts right. And a creationist goes for a Darwinian Hat-Trick of Evil:Creation-Evolution Headlines, May 2004:http://www.creationsafaris.com/crev0504.htmQuote Janet Browne and other historians have pointed out how Charles Darwin’s views fit neatly into the 19th century political climate of British imperialism. Herbert Spencer (originator of the term “survival of the fittest”) told Andrew Carnegie that his cutthroat capitalism was a normal and natural outworking of the laws of nature. Karl Marx felt that Darwinism provided the scientific justification for his communist views. Whether Nazism, communism, or laissez-faire capitalism, each view that promoted ruthless competition and survival of the fittest used The Origin of Species as a scientific justification. Wesley R. Elsberry Casey Luskin Invokes TolkienQuote An ominous force, lurking in the courts of kings, the halls of learning, and even the towers of wizards, threatens to dominate a society. Those who opposed the force have been systematically excluded from power. Some make peace with the force, advancing their personal interests, but are foolishly deceived into believing the force will not consume them and their descendants. Others refuse to acknowledge the force and stay secluded in their shires, pretending there is no impending threat to their way of life. Yet one small alliance, composed of brave souls with differing backgrounds, cultures, and belief systems realize the weakness of the force and have organized a fellowship to stop it. No, I’m not talking about The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien - I’m talking about the intelligent design (ID) movement, and the force of materialistic philosophy. Of course, Luskin invokes Tolkien badly:Quote A second significant tribute came from Biola professor of philosophy John Mark Reynolds, who compared Johnson to Gandalph from The Lord of the Rings.Tolkien fans figuratively eviscerate people over misspellings like "Gandalph". Johnson Invokes SatanQuote Reflecting upon the proceedings, Phillip Johnson gave his own analogy for the debate over evolution and ID. Using the Gospel accounts of Jesus' temptation in the wilderness, Johnson said Satan has tempted modern universities by offering "all the scientific institutions and research funding you need" as long as they will ask only materialistic questions and find only materialistic answers. Johnson noted that Jesus might have us reply, "Man shall not live by research funding alone but by following the evidence wherever it leads." Based on the evidence presented at this conference, the evidence points towards design.One wonders how Satan tempted the community of 19th century scientists who rejected non-natural explanations in science. They were, after all, predominantly theists, far fewer of whom were affiliated with institutions, and many of whom were independently wealthy. --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Here's a precious one:http://www.strengthsandweaknesses.org/gop_state_convention.htmQuote "Importantly, whereas the highly successful TBSE challenge to the dogmatic militant Darwinian thought police was conducted in Austin by TBSE members and supporters, the effort to get out the word to "Teach Evolution Weaknesses" across the state will need additional volunteer help. Texas has over 1200 high schools in 1040 independent school districts (ISDs). Please help in your high school!" Wesley R. Elsberry Dembski Compares Biologists to the TalibanQuote Touchstone: Where is the ID movement going in the next ten years? What new issues will it be exploring, and what new challenges will it be offering Darwinism?Dembski: In the next five years, molecular Darwinism -- the idea that Darwinian processes can produce complex molecular structures at the subcellular level -- will be dead. When that happens, evolutionary biology will experience a crisis of confidence because evolutionary biology hinges on the evolution of the right molecules. I therefore foresee a Taliban-style collapse of Darwinism in the next ten years. Intelligent design will of course profit greatly from this. For ID to win the day, however, will require talented new researchers able to move this research program forward, showing how intelligent design provides better insights into biological systems than the dying Darwinian paradigm.(Anonymous (Touchstone Magazine), (2004). "The Measure of Design: A conversation about the past, present & future of Darwinism and Design." Touchstone, 17(6), pp. 60-65.)I have some comments on Dembski's response. --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Johnson Invokes GoebbelsQuote Dr. Goebbels would have been impressed to see what propaganda can accomplish even in a democracy, where citizens are legally free to protest. If a cultural elite has sufficient control of the news media and the textbooks, it can marginalize disfavored opinions by confining them in categories that effectively label them as unworthy of serious consideration.I see that one salubrious effect of the essay that Mark Perakh and I wrote on invidious comparisons of biologists to Soviets and Nazis is that ID advocates seem to have figured out which of the Nazis actually was in charge of propaganda. (Jonathan Wells wrote that it was Himmler; we pointed out the error.) While we might wish certain other of our points to be taken, we can be hopeful that we have alleviated some trivial amount of ignorance in the ID advocate ranks. --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Denyse O'Leary Calls Critics of ID "Brownshirts"Quote All you who value freedom of thought, try to make the time to go to Center for Science and Culture and read Meyer's paper. Read it and pass it on, before today's intellectual brownshirts find some way to stop you.Just to be sure that everyone is on the same page, "brownshirts" is an allusion to some of the most vicious of the Nazis.Quote Hitler’s Nazi party (its official full name was National Socialist German Workers Party) had several militarized wings. One of them (often referred to as Brown Shirts) was the SA (Sturm Abteilungen, i.e. “Storm Detachments”) notorious for vicious violence against the Party’s adversaries; it was prominent in the early years of the Nazi’s rise to power; its members are properly called stormtroopers. Many of them, including their chief Ernst Röhm, who could become a potential rival to Hitler, were murdered on Hitler’s order in 1934.(Source: HOW INTELLIGENT DESIGN ADVOCATES TURN THE SORDID LESSONS FROM SOVIET AND NAZI HISTORY UPSIDE DOWN)I offered to make Meyer's paper available via my server as of August 28th, 2003:Quote Posted by Wesley R. Elsberry on August 28, 2004 12:10 AMOne wonders at the confidence of the DI CSC… they “trust” that readers will find Dr. Meyer’s paper more persuasive and more substantive than our critique, yet one will note, as Nick did, that they fail to provide a direct link to the critique. Hmmm.We have no problem linking to their page. On the contrary, I’ve long been an advocate of disseminating the work of antievolutionists. That material makes the very best argument for antievolution being a pseudoscience. (This goes back years to when I ran a BBS system and offered various creationist essays in addition to the scientific responses.) I just posted the DI link for the Meyer 2004 paper on the Antievolution.org discussion board, and I would be willing to host an unaltered copy of the DI page on Meyer 2004 on the AE site if the DI CSC is willing to give permission for me to do so.(Source: Comment on "Meyer's Hopeless Monster") --------------"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker Bessier, Elaine (2004). "Teacher warns of evolution battle," Johnson County Sun, Sept. 30, 2004.The day after Jack Krebs spoke on evolution education in Kansas at the University of Kansas, John Calvert of the Intelligent Design Network commented to the press:[quote]John Calvert of Lake Quivira, a founder of Intelligent Design Network Inc., said Wednesday the forum "reminded me of the Ku Klux Klan with the grand wizard on the stage promoting hate on a particular group, suppressing criticism. This is about whether a particular theory of science affecting origins can be criticized."[/i](Calvert, 09/29/04)URL: http://www.zwire.com/site....5&rfi=6 theyeti Rep. Cynthia Davis of Missouri compares ID opponents to Al-Qaeda hijackers.As quoted in the New York Times:Quote State Representative Cynthia Davis of Missouri prefiled two bills for the next session of the Legislature that she said "reflect what people want." One would remove the state's requirement that all forms of contraception and their potential health effects be taught in schools, leaving the focus on abstinence. Another would require publishers that sell biology textbooks to Missouri to include at least one chapter with alternative theories to evolution. "These are common-sense, grass-roots ideas from the people I represent, and I'd be very surprised if a majority of legislators didn't feel they were the right solutions to these problems," Ms. Davis said."It's like when the hijackers took over those four planes on Sept. 11 and took people to a place where they didn't want to go," she added. "I think a lot of people feel that liberals have taken our country somewhere we don't want to go. I think a lot more people realize this is our country and we're going to take it back." Lovely.theyeti 49 replies since May 07 2002,10:07
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Cryptography, Steganography, etc. Hashing Functions Thread: Hashing Functions itPro Posts 34 Hashing Functions A debate has come up recently and I was wondering what others thought about it. The debate is about whether or not it increases security to add content to user input. Here's the two scenarios: - A user registers a password. - The password is hashed. - The hash is stored in the database, along with the username. - When comparing passwords to user input later, the user inputs a password. - The new hash is then compared against the hash stored in the database to determine if the user authenticates. - The date and time is stored in the database. - That date and time that is stored is then added to the input. - A hash is created from the combination of the input and the stored date and time. - Later, a user enters input. - The input is then paired with the date and time that is found by searching for the username. - The input and date / time combination is then hashed. - The new hash is then compared to the hash stored in the database. My argument is that adding content to the user's input before hashing it will prevent dictionary attacks, (especially if the date/time fields are stored in a separate table in a separate database.) Last edited by itPro; May 22nd, 2008 at 05:06 PM. Reply With Quote May 22nd, 2008, 05:46 PM oofki Posts 1,053 You are basically talking about salting. Yes it is a good idea but it doesnt have to be that complicated. Md5($userspass . "8fjSDJF99aFkkSDffffL9@fkFD9"); If something like that was used even if the users password was "a" then it would be a plus all that garbage making it almost impossible to crack if someone obtained the md5 hash of the users password. http://jumblehub.com Posts 17,178 Strictly speaking I don't think that you are "adding content", you are just using a different methodology? It is generally fairly trivial to find a user name and in the first scenario it is even stored in the same file. It should be reasonably possible to reverse engineer? I am not sure how realistic it is to assume that someone can access the password/user file and not any other file such as the date/time/user one? The thing about user names is that organisations tend to use a standard format which should be pretty easy to deduce if you know it. So, if you use the user name it wouldn't really matter if you stored them in a separate file. Assuming that the date/time/user file is secure then this would be more secure. OK you have a fixed number of 12 characters but there is the added complication of the cracker having to know what format it is stored in, even if they know how it is being done? Also deducing the date and time of creation would be difficult? I don't think that either method is particularly susceptible to a "dictionary" attack. I would have thought that brute force would be the way to go, particularly if you enforce a sensible password policy. Last edited by nihil; May 22nd, 2008 at 07:27 PM. Posts 34 Strictly speaking I don't think that you are "adding content", you are just using a different methodology? This is just semantics. lol It is generally fairly trivial to find a user name and in the first scenario it is even stored in the same file. It should be reasonably easy to reverse engineer? I think you're missing the entire point. There are two fields stored in the same record, and they are date and time. There is nothing anywhere in the database stating that the date and time are used in creating the hash, (other than the C# code-behind, Windows Application C# files, or your method of choice). For all the casual database table-reader knows, this is just a stamp on when the login was created. If the attacker was a little brighter than the average Joe, who says that the date and time are paired with the input in exactly the order that I stated? Who says that they can't be hashed first before being added, added in reverse order, or any other possibility that could have astronomical odds of guessing, all while remaining a unique final hash? The odds of reversing such a hash are even more astronomical than the odds of guessing the proper method of putting together the string that is used to create the hash, (since you have to know what is being used to create the hash in order to know whether or not you have successfully reversed the hash.) If you really want to get over-the-top complex, throw in the OS SID, the MAC address, and any other unique identifier that you would want to add before the hashing takes place. It is not really a question of access to the local machine, as they would have to get that far in order to be a real threat anyway. Moving the data simply makes things a little more complicated for the attacker. (That's really the point to security anyway. If you add enough obstacles, the work involved with reaching the prize costs more than the prize itself.) The username would only be an indicator of which fields would be added to the input, (or used to find the other additions to the input perhaps). Assuming that the date/time/user file is secure then this would be more secure. OK you have a fixed number of 12 characters but there is the added complication of the cracker having to know what format it is stored in, even if they know how it is being done? I'm not sure what you're referring to here. What is 12 characters? That's just the thing. If you use either of these methods, you don't have to enforce a password policy. This eliminates the need to rely on users to be IT-saavy enough to use complex passwords, as well as the necessity for forcing them to use a randomly-generated complex password. They can use the word "cat" for a password, and it can be converted into a password that is no longer weak. This will not fix the "weakness" in the sense that an attacker could not auto-generate attempts into the interface directly and find it quickly through brute-force, but this would make it much tougher on the database side, if access was achieved directly. The trick then is to prevent an attacker from using the interface itself in a brute force attack. Posts 4,429 If an attacker can only attack this scheme through the login prompt, the setup you propose doesn't add anything security-wise, as the software automatically appends the date/time to the input before hashing it. In that case, there is absolutely no difference between the two alternatives you propose. Posts 34 That's true. Didn't I just say that? If an attacker uses other methods, such as accessing the database directly and discovering all of the hashed passwords, then this added security makes a huge difference, for the reasons that I described above. Posts 17,178 Hi, I think that you misread me. I was saying that the first method is not particularly secure and is also quite common, so an attacker might be expected to try it. That is what I meant by saying that the second method was more secure because the attacker would have to know the format, even if they knew that you were using a date/timestamp. Ah! that is why you didn't see my point, it is the date/time such as: DD/MM/YY and HH/MM/SS which would give you 12 characters excluding the separators. Like I said: but there is the added complication of the cracker having to know what format it is stored in Given the variety of possible formats, including the month in words, this vastly increases the number of combinations that would have to be tried. That brings me to oofki's suggestion. Use salting. This adds a random string to the data before it is hashed, thus ensuring that they are all unique and virtually uncrackable within a reasonable time and resource framework. Because it is random and unique it is far more secure. User passwords and date/timestamps are not neccessarily unique. You can enforce unique user IDs however so to ensure that your system was unique you would need to use their ID as well. That's just the thing. If you use either of these methods, you don't have to enforce a password policy. I wouldn't recommend that. I doubt if you would get it past a security audit. This eliminates the need to rely on users to be IT-saavy enough to use complex passwords There are plenty of software solutions that will force them to do it. I normally suggest that they use their own "packing" and don't tell anyone what it is. For example: �1234<"My Password">ABCD$ That's a 25 character complex password that you won't forget. When you want to change it just change the "My Password" bit. Posts 34 �1234<"My Password">ABCD$ Thank you. I particularly like this method. I will most likely initiate my own "version" of this. =) Reply With Quote May 23rd, 2008, 08:21 PM Posts 34 That brings me to oofki's suggestion. Use salting. This adds a random string to the data before it is hashed, thus ensuring that they are all unique and virtually uncrackable within a reasonable time and resource framework. Because it is random and unique it is far more secure. User passwords and date/timestamps are not neccessarily unique. You can enforce unique user IDs however so to ensure that your system was unique you would need to use their ID as well. I was reading back over the thread just in case I missed anything, and I noticed something. If something is truly random, then it is not guaranteed to be unique. As well as any programmer knows "random", it is following a pattern, with the fault of using duplicates. That is actually why using a date/time stamp is better, since it will ALWAYS be unique, which, in-turn, protects data integrity. Having a set structure is more professional and accurate, whereas random will at some point break the system. As you said, it will not, if you enforce unique usernames, but that might prove harder to do in a larger company, and certainly more of a pain for the users themselves. Last edited by itPro; May 23rd, 2008 at 08:47 PM. Posts 4,429 My issue with the scheme has always been that the only case where it adds security is when your hashes are vulnerable (i.e. when the attacker has access to the hash - the salting, then, indeed adds an extra layer of security). In that case, though, you have other problems to worry about If the attacker does not have access to the hash, the scheme does not add security. ZWinCrypt - Simple C++ Library for Hashing, Encryption and Compression By encipher in forum Cryptography, Steganography, etc. OS Types and Functions! By Black Cluster in forum Other Tutorials Forum General math functions header By Kamikaze Badger in forum Code Review Question about functions in C++ By Kamikaze Badger in forum General Programming Questions Useful JavaScript functions By jethro in forum Other Tutorials Forum
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5661
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CARTER-HUBBARD PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff, v. WRMC HOSPITAL OPERATING CORPORATION, Defendant NO. COA05-420 Filed: 1 August 2006 1. Public Records_hospital's contract to purchase medical practice_not competitive A public hospital's contract to purchase the practice of the only gastroenterologist in the county was not exempt from the Public Records Act as containing competitive health care information, and the trial court correctly granted summary judgment for plaintiff newspaper. The legislature did not intend to keep confidential dealings such as this, which do not involve trade secret information or competitive price lists. N.C.G.S. §§ 131E-97.3, 131E-99. 2. Pleadings_denial of motion to amend_no abuse of discretion The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying plaintiff's motion to amend its complaint to allege a violation of the Open Meetings Law where defendant was not given notice of the purported violation and was not prepared to respond to it. There was likewise no abuse of discretion in the denial of costs and fees. Judge CALABRIA concurring in part and dissenting in part. Appeal by defendant from an order entered 24 January 2005 by Judge James M. Webb in Wilkes County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 2 November 2005. Willardson, Lipscomb & Miller, LLP, by John S. Willardson, for plaintiff-appellee. McElwee Firm, PLLC, by John M. Logsdon, for defendant- The Bussian Law Firm, PLLC, by John A. Bussian, for North Carolina Press Association, amicus curiae. Linwood L. Jones for North Carolina Hospital Association, amicus curiae. BRYANT, Judge. Wilkes Regional Medical Center Hospital Operating Corporation (“defendant”) appeals the trial court's order granting summaryjudgment in favor of Carter-Hubbard Publishing Company, Inc. (“plaintiff”). Plaintiff appeals the trial court's denial of motions to amend the complaint and to tax costs and attorney fees against defendant. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm. Plaintiff publishes the Wilkes Journal Patriot, a major news source for the citizens of Wilkes County. Defendant is the governing body of Wilkes Regional Medical Center (“WRMC”), a public hospital owned by the Town of North Wilkesboro. In 2004, defendant purchased Dr. Nicholas Cirillo's (“Dr. Cirillo”) medical practice. This purchase took place because “Dr. Cirillo was the only gastroenterologist located in Wilkes County, and WRMC [wanted] to assure the continued availability of gastroenterological services to [WRMC's] patients.” Subsequently, plaintiff requested a copy of defendant's purchase agreement with Dr. Cirillo (the “contract”). Defendant refused to provide the contract, contending that the contract amounted to “competitive health care information” under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 and, therefore, was not subject to disclosure. Plaintiff believed, under the North Carolina Public Records Act, defendant was required to disclose the contract. On 8 September 2004, plaintiff filed suit, pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 132-9, seeking an order compelling defendant to disclose the contract. On 25 October 2005, defendant filed an Answer stating the contract was not subject to disclosure because it was considered “competitive health care information” within the meaning of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3. On 20 January 2005, at a hearing held in Wilkes County Superior Court, the court grantedsummary judgment in favor of the plaintiff, concluding that the contract did not contain “competitive health care information” and “should be produced in its entirety.” Defendant moved to stay the court's order pending appeal. The trial court denied defendant's motion and ordered defendant to produce the contract. Defendant filed a Petition for Writ of Supersedeas with this Court on 25 January 2005. On 16 February 2005, we granted defendant's motion and stayed the trial court's order pending appeal. On review of a motion for summary judgment, this Court considers whether “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that any party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 56(c) (2005). In this case, there were no genuine issues of material fact and summary judgment was appropriate. However, we consider de novo whether the trial court properly concluded that plaintiff was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Hlasnick v. Federated Mut. Ins. Co., 136 N.C. App. 320, 323, 524 S.E.2d 386, 388, aff'd in part on other grounds, 353 N.C. 240, 539 S.E.2d 274 (2000). In its order the trial court stated: “The contract in question does not contain 'competitive health care information' within the meaning of [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 131E-97.3 . . . and should be produced[.]” In this appeal we decide whether the trial court erred in finding the contract at issue is a public record and granting summary judgment for plaintiff. Therefore, in this caseof first impression, we determine whether a public hospital's contract to purchase a medical practice should be considered “competitive health care information” and therefore exempt from the Public Records Act. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (2005). [1] Under the Public Records Act, our Legislature granted liberal access to public records. See McCormick v. Hanson Aggregates Southeast, Inc., 164 N.C. App. 459, 596 S.E.2d 431 (2004); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 132-1(b), 132-6 (2005) (defining public records as “the property of the people” and allowing examination of public records). “Public records” include: all documents, papers, letters, maps, books, photographs, films, sound recordings, magnetic or other tapes, electronic data-processing records, artifacts, or other documentary material, regardless of form or characteristics, made or received pursuant to law or ordinance in connection with the transaction of public business by any agency of North Carolina government or its subdivisions[.] N.C. Gen. Stat. § 132-1(a) (2005). “Absent clear statutory exemption or exception, documents falling within the definition of 'public records' in the Public Records Law must be made available for public inspection.” Virmani v. Presbyterian Health Servs. Corp., 350 N.C. 449, 462, 515 S.E.2d 675, 685 (1999) (citation omitted). Exceptions and exemptions to the Public Records Act must be construed narrowly. See News & Observer Publ'g Co. v. Poole, 330 N.C. 465, 412 S.E.2d 7 (1992) (In the absence of clear statutory exemption or exception, documents falling within the definition of “public records” in the Public Records Act must bemade available for public inspection.); see also Three Guys Real Estate v. Harnett County, 345 N.C. 468, 472, 480 S.E.2d 681, 683 (1997) (“If the language of the statute is clear and is not ambiguous, we must conclude that the legislature intended the statute to be implemented according to the plain meaning of its terms.”); State v. Hooper, 358 N.C. 122, 125, 591 S.E.2d 514, 516 (2004) (“Where the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, there is no room for judicial construction and the courts must construe the statute using its plain meaning.”) (internal quotations and citations omitted). Defendant argues the contract at issue amounts to “competitive health care information” and is therefore exempt from the public records statute. We note that our legislature has exempted from the definition of “public record” what it refers to as “competitive health care information.” Information relating to competitive health care activities by or on behalf of hospitals and public hospital authorities shall be confidential and not a public record under Chapter 132 of the General Statutes; provided that any contract entered into by or on behalf of a public hospital or public hospital authority, as defined in G.S. 159-39, shall be a public record unless otherwise exempted by law, or the contract contains competitive health care information[.] N.C.G.S. § 131E-97.3 (2005). Defendant contends the legislature has linked the term “competitive health care information” with the term “confidentialcommercial information” (See footnote 1) in determining what is protected underN.C.G.S. § 131E-97.3 (2005). Defendant therefore urges this court to take a very broad view of the term. However, “competitive health care information” is not specifically defined in our statute. “Health care” is defined in the American Heritage Dictionary as “[t]he prevention, treatment, and management of illness and the preservation of well-being through the services offered by the medical and allied health professions.” The American Heritage College Dictionary 626 (3rd ed. 1997). Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 “competitive health care information” includes “financial terms” of a contract and any “health care information directly related to financial terms in a contract.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 (2005). North Carolina General Statutes, Section 131E-99 is the only statute that gives some indication of what the legislature intended by its use of the term “competitive “The cardinal principle of statutory construction is that the intent of the legislature is controlling. In ascertaining the legislative intent courts should consider the language of the statute, the spirit of the statute, and what it seeks to accomplish.” State ex rel. Util. Comm'n v. Public Staff, 309 N.C. 195, 210, 306 S.E.2d 435, 444 (1983) (citations omitted). “'Other indicia considered by this Court in determining legislative intent are the legislative history of an act and the circumstances surrounding its adoption[.]'” County of Lenoir v. Moore, 114 N.C. App. 110, 115, 441 S.E.2d 589, 592 (1994) (quoting In Re Banks, 295N.C. 236, 239-40, 244 S.E.2d 386, 389 (1978)), aff'd, 340 N.C. 104, 455 S.E.2d 158 (1995). When multiple statutes address a single matter or subject, they must be construed together, in pari materia, to determine the legislature's intent. Whittington v. N.C. Dept. of Human Res., 100 N.C. App. 603, 606, 398 S.E.2d 40, 42 (1990). Statutes in pari materia must be harmonized, “to give effect, if possible, to all provisions without destroying the meaning of the statutes involved.” Id. Where there is one statute dealing with a subject in general and comprehensive terms, and another dealing with a part of the same subject in a more minute and definite way, the two should be read together and harmonized, if possible, with a view to giving effect to a consistent legislative policy; but, to the extent of any necessary repugnancy between them, the special statute, or the one dealing with the common subject matter in a minute way, will prevail over the general statute[.]” Food Stores v. Bd. of Alcoholic Control, 268 N.C. 624, 628-29, 151 S.E.2d 582, 586 (1966) (quoting 82 C.J.S. General and Specific Statutes § 369 (1953)). Under a prior version of N.C.G.S. § 131E-97.3 any contract entered into by a public hospital (whether or not it contained competitive healthcare information) was a public record unless otherwise exempted. shall be confidential and not a public record under Chapter 132 of the General Statutes; provided that any contract entered into by or on behalf of a public hospital, as defined in G.S. 59-39, shall be a public record unless otherwise exempted by law. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (1994)(emphasis added). Thereafter the statute was amended and in its current version allows a contract entered into by a public hospital to be exempt from the public records requirement only if the contract contains competitive health care information. See N.C.G.S. § 131E-97.3 (2005). Because N.C.G.S. § 131E-99 appears to be one of the few statutes to guide us as to what the legislature intended by using the N.C.G.S. § 131E-97.3 term “competitive health care information,” we construe these two statutes together. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 limits as confidential and not a public record, only that information relating to “financial terms and other competitive health care information directly related to financial terms” in a health care services contract. Such language, while arguably applicable to financial terms of a contract involving the “prevention, treatment, and management of illness” does not encompass the acquisition of a medical practice. Further, the contracts under this statute are between the hospital and those who pay the hospital as opposed to employees or potential employees. The financial terms and other competitive health care information directly related to the financial terms in a health care services contract between a hospital or a medical school and a managed care organization, insurance company, employer, or other payer is Chapter 132 of the General Statutes. . . . N.C.G.S. § 131E-99 (2005). Reading these two statutes together the contract terms that are not financial nor financially related would not be considered competitive health care information and therefore would not beexempt. Unlike the price lists in Wilmington Star-News, which specified costs and reimbursement rates of medical services to customers, and which “a reasonable trier of fact could conclude that the price lists constituted trade secrets,” the contract here is a contract with a public hospital to purchase a medical practice. There is nothing in the record to suggest that other hospitals or entities were competing for Dr. Cirillo's medical practice, and therefore nothing to suggest this contract contained “financial terms” or health care information directly related to financial terms such that this contract should be kept confidential. Defendants cite contract terms such as price, assets and liabilities, future obligations (e.g. performance bonuses) and other financial information as “competitive health care information.” Defendants claim disclosure of such information would place the hospital at a future competitive disadvantage, impair the ability to acquire future confidential information and is a type of information that would not customarily be released between two non-public entities. Defendants argue that the public may be outraged at learning the purchase price without understanding future profit implications. We decline defendant's offer to more broadly define the term “competitive health care information.” Defendant's definition is based on competitive business aspects of public hospital operations, aspects which, unless they involve trade secret information, are also likely subject to disclosure. We do notthink the legislature intended such business dealings _ which do not involve trade secret information nor competitive price lists _ to be kept confidential. We do not read N.C.G.S. § 131E-97.3 nor 131E-99 separately or in para materia to require such secrecy. Wilmington Star-News v. New Hanover Reg'l Med. Ctr., 125 N.C. App. 174, 480 S.E.2d 53, appeal dismissed, 346 N.C. 557, 488 S.E.2d 826 (1997), analyzed the prior version of this statute. In Wilmington Star-News this Court held a public hospital and HMO were not entitled to the benefit of the statutory exemption from disclosing price lists in a contract between the public hospital and the HMO. Id. The price lists were not property of a private person within the meaning of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 132-1.2(1)(b) (See footnote 2) , therefore the information was not exempted from disclosure. Id. We recognize that this holding arguably may adversely affect public hospitals' ability to compete with nongovernmental entities but we consider that question an appropriate legislative issue. As to any arguable competitive disadvantage to [the public hospital], we consider appropriate the succinct observation of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, “disclosure of prices charged the Government is a cost of doing business with the Government.” Racal-Milgo Gov't Sys. v. Small Business Admin., 559 F. Supp. 4, 6 (D.C. Wilmington Star-News at 182, 480 S.E.2d at 57 (emphasis added). Even though the statute changed such that contracts between public hospitals and HMOs were not automatically considered publicrecord, such public hospital contracts are nevertheless subject to the determination of whether they contain “competitive health care information” before any exemption applies. Moreover, the spirit of the public records statute survives _ public records are the “property of the people”; and the language of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia is equally applicable -“disclosure of prices charged the Government is a cost of doing business with the Government[.]” Racal-Milgo Gov't Sys. v. Small Business Admin., 559 F. Supp. 4, 6 (D.C. 1981). Therefore, after careful review of the record on appeal, including review of the contract previously viewed by the trial court in camera, we hold that the trial court properly determined the contract “does not contain competitive health care information” and therefore should be disclosed to the public. Cross-Assignments [2] Plaintiff raises two cross-assignments of error: (1) the trial court erred in denying its motion to amend the complaint to allege violations by the defendant of the North Carolina's Open Meeting Law; and (2) the trial court erred in denying plaintiff's request to tax costs and attorney fees against the defendant. On appeal, we review both a trial court's denial of a motion to amend a complaint and a trial court's denial of costs and fees under an abuse of discretion standard. See Thorpe v. Perry-Riddick, 144 N.C. App. 567, 570, 551 S.E.2d 852, 855 (2001); Martin v. Hare, 78 N.C. App. 358, 360-61, 337 S.E.2d 632, 634 (1985). An abuse of discretion occurs “where a court's ruling is manifestly unsupportedby reason or so arbitrary that it could not have been the result of a reasoned decision.” Thorpe, 144 N.C. App. at 570, 551 S.E.2d at 855. As to the denial of the motion to amend, the trial court declared no reason for the denial of the motion. We may, however, examine any “apparent reasons for such denial.” Hare, 78 N.C. App. at 360-61, 337 S.E.2d at 634. It is evident from the transcript that defendant was not given notice of the purported open meetings law violation and, therefore, was not prepared to respond to it. As such, the trial court's denial of plaintiff's motion did not amount to an abuse of discretion. Likewise, the record reveals no abuse of discretion in the trial court's denial of costs and fees. Affirmed. Judge HUDSON concurs. Judge CALABRIA concurring in part and dissenting in part in a separate opinion. CALABRIA, Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part. I fully concur with the portion of the majority's opinion dealing with plaintiff's cross-assignments of error. However, I must respectfully dissent from the majority's narrow interpretation of the scope of the “competitive health care information” exemption under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (2005), despite the absence of any words of limitation in the plain language of the applicable statute. Because N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 establishes that the General Assembly sought to place public and private hospitals onequal terms in negotiating contracts containing any type of competitive health care information, my approach would be to interpret N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 more broadly to effectuate our Legislature's intent. Under the Public Records Act, our Legislature has generally granted liberal access to public records. See, e.g., Knight Publ'g v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hosp. Auth., 172 N.C. App. 486, 489, 616 S.E.2d 602, 605 (2005). Thus, “[i]n the absence of [a] clear definition of 'public records' in the Public Records Act must be made available for public inspection.” Id. (citation and internal brackets omitted) (emphasis added). See also N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 132-1(b), 132-6 (2005) (defining public records as “the property of the people” and allowing examination of public records). Our Legislature has created a clear statutory exemption from the definition of “public record” for what it refers to as “competitive health care information”: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (2005). In this case of first impression, we are asked to consider the scope of “competitive health care information.” Defendant arguesthe contract at issue amounts to “competitive health care information.” In support of this argument, defendant produced, inter alia, an affidavit of the President and Chief Operating Officer of WRMC, Ted Chapin (“Chapin”). Chapin stated, If a private provider were allowed to have access to the terms and conditions of the contracts of a public hospital such as WRMC, the private provider would have a substantial competitive advantage when negotiating for physician practices based on having superior information. If the substantive provisions of an existing contract were available to a different physician practice during subsequent negotiations, WRMC would be at a competitive disadvantage during the negotiations. Essentially, WRMC would be negotiating against itself, based upon its prior contracts. By contrast, a private health care provider which does not have to disclose the contents of its contracts would not be constrained during negotiations by any of the terms in prior or existing contracts. Plaintiff counters, via its affidavit of Julius C. Hubbard, Jr. (“Hubbard”), the Vice President of Carter-Hubbard, that: If public funds are utilized to purchase a physician's practice, the public has the right to know how those funds are being spent. Year-end profits and losses of Wilkes Regional Medical Center will certainly be influenced by the expenditure of funds for acquisition of physician's practices and the public has a right to know how those funds have been spent. To hide behind the guise of “competitive health care information” as justification for providing that information is to deprive the citizens of Wilkes County . . . information to which they are justly entitled. In order to interpret our Legislature's intent, it is necessary to begin with the plain language of the statute. State v. Hooper, 358 N.C. 122, 125, 591 S.E.2d 514, 516 (2004) (“Where the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, there is noroom for judicial construction and the courts must construe the statute using its plain meaning”) (citations omitted). The plain language of the statute exempts from the term “public record” contracts that include “competitive health care information.” “Competitive” is derived from the term “competition.” “Competition” means “[t]he effort or action of two or more commercial interests to obtain the same business from third parties.” Blacks Law Dictionary 7th Edition (1999). “Healthcare” means “[t]he prevention, treatment, and management of illness and the preservation of well-being through the services offered by the medical and allied health professions.” The American Heritage College Dictionary 3rd Edition (1997). Pursuant to the plain language of the statute, I would hold the contract at issue amounts to “competitive health care information.” The contract relates to “healthcare” in that the purchase of Dr. Cirillo's private practice ensured the “prevention, treatment, and management” of gastroenterological services to Wilkes County residents. Likewise, the agreement is “competitive” in that public and private hospitals commonly compete in the marketplace to obtain physician practices. The contract remains “competitive” even in the absence of specific evidence in the record that hospitals were directly competing for Dr. Cirillo's particular practice because of the impact the release of the specific terms of the contract would have on future negotiations of WRMC by placing WRMC in an inferior negotiating position for health care services compared to private hospitals. Thus, the contract atissue is within the scope of the exemption stated in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3. This plain language analysis is further supported by the history of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3. See Cochran v. North Carolina Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 113 N.C. App. 260, 262, 437 S.E.2d 910, 911-12 (1994) (noting it is appropriate to consider “circumstances surrounding the enactment of the act with an eye towards the evil sought to be remedied when determining the legislative intent”). A prior version of this statute read: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (1994) (emphasis added). Under this prior version of the statute, this Court held, The plain language of this section exempts certain information from the Public Records Act when two requirements are met: (1) The material must relate to competitive health care; and (2) the material must not be a contract executed with a public hospital. Wilmington Star News, Inc. v. New Hanover Regional Medical Center v. PHP, Inc., 125 N.C. App. 174, 178-79, 480 S.E.2d 53, 55 (1997) (emphasis added). Thus, under the prior version of this statute, if a contract was “entered into . . . by or on behalf of a public hospital” it would be considered a public record, unless otherwise exempted. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (1994). In a case analyzing the prior version of the statute, this Court held that price lists in a contract between a public hospital and a private HMO were subject to disclosure under the North Carolina Public Records Act. Wilmington Star News, Inc., 125 N.C. App. at 179, 480 S.E.2d at 55. Because the price lists were included in a contract executed with a public hospital, under the plain language of the prior statute, the price lists were not exempt from the Public Records Act. Id. At the time of the Wilmington case, the Legislature had already enacted N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 of the Hospital Licensure Act, entitled “Confidentiality of health care contracts.” Ch. 713, 1995 N.C. Sess. Laws 345. The version in effect at the time of the Wilmington case stated: The financial terms or other competitive health care information in a contract related to the provision of health care between a hospital and a managed care organization, Chapter 132 of the General Statutes. Ch. 713, 1995 N.C. Sess. Laws 345 (emphasis added). However, this Court was unable to rely on N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 in the Wilmington case because, at the time, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 “specifically provided that [it shall] not affect any litigation pending prior to ratification on 21 June 1996 and shall expire on 1 June 1997.” Wilmington Star News, Inc., 125 N.C. App. at 178, 480 S.E.2d at 55. Subsequently, in 1997, the Legislature amended § 131E-99 to read: The financial terms and other competitive Chapter 132 of the General Statutes. An Act Pertaining to Confidentiality of Healthcare Contracts, ch. 123, 1997 N.C. Sess. Laws 238 (emphasis added). The Legislature also removed the expiration date set forth in the earlier version. See ch. 123, 1997 N.C. Sess. Laws 238. Accordingly, as of May 1997, contracts between public hospitals and private HMOs were exempt from disclosure under this separate provision. In 2001, the Legislature amended § 131E-97.3 to its current version. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (2005). Prior to the amendment, all contracts of public hospitals constituted public records unless otherwise exempted. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 (1994). As stated previously, contracts between public hospitals and HMOs were already exempt under the separate provision of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99. However, the Legislature amended the statute to also exempt contracts of public hospitals that contain “competitive health care information.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E- 97.3. Amicus Curiae North Carolina Press Association (“Press Association”) argues that exemptions to the Public Records Act must be narrowly construed and that “'competitive health care information' as used by the General Assembly reaches only financial information that relates directly to the provision of health care services on a competitive basis to HMOs and similar entities.” While I agree with the Press Association's contention that generally our courts interpret exemptions to the Public Records Act narrowly, I disagree with the Press Association regarding our Legislature's intent in using the term “competitive health care information.” If our Legislature intended to give information categorized as “competitive health care information” this narrow meaning, it would be redundant to enact N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 since this particular exemption already existed in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99. See State v. Benton, 276 N.C. 641, 658, 174 S.E.2d 793, 804 (1970) (“It is always presumed that the [L]egislature acted with care and deliberation and with full knowledge of prior and existing law” (citations omitted)). To the contrary, the plain language of these statutes indicates that they are not equivalent. North Carolina General Statute § 131E-99 is a narrow statute that enumerates specific financial terms and other competitive health care information relating to financial terms as exempt from public record status. Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99, only contracts between certain enumerated entities are exempt and the information at issue must be financial terms or other competitive health care services contract.” On the other hand, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3 states no limitations on either the parties to the contract (except that the contract must be by or on behalf of a public hospital or public hospital authority) or the type of contract, and there is no evidence in the language of the statute or our review of the scantlegislative history that our Legislature intended to include these constraints. If the Legislature intended to include such constraints it would have done so explicitly as it did when it changed the language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-99 from “financial terms or other competitive health care information in a contract . . .” to “financial terms and other competitive health care information directly related to the financial terms[.]” (Emphasis added). Because of the absence of any of the constraints our Legislature included in other statutory exemptions, I would hold that “competitive health care information” includes all contracts that “relat[e] to competitive health care activities” by or on behalf of a public hospital or public hospital authority. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-97.3(a). See also Gibbons v. Cole, 132 N.C. App. 777, 780, 513 S.E.2d 834, 836 (1999) (“[Our courts] are without power to create provisions and limitations not contained in the language of the statute itself” (citation omitted)). For reasons previously mentioned, I would hold that the purchase of a medical practice is a competitive health care activity, and thus, the contract at issue is “competitive health care information.” In contrast, other hospital contracts such as a pure construction contract would not amount to a contract regarding competitive health care information because a construction contract does not directly relate to “[t]he prevention, treatment, and management of illness and the preservation of well-being through the services offered by medical and allied health professions.” The American Heritage CollegeDictionary 3rd Edition (1997). For the foregoing reasons, I would remand to the trial court for entry of summary judgment in favor of defendant. Footnote: 1 See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 132-1.2: Confidential information. Nothing in this Chapter shall be construed to require or authorize a public agency or its subdivision to disclose any information that: (1) Meets all of the following conditions: a. Constitutes a “trade secret” as defined in G.S. 66-152(3). b. Is the property of a private “person” as defined in G.S. 66-152(2). c. Is disclosed or furnished to the public agency in connection with the owner's performance of a public contract or in connection with a bid, application, proposal, industrial development project, or in compliance with laws, regulations, rules, or ordinances of the United States, the State, or political subdivisions of the State. d. Is designated or indicated as “confidential” or as a “trade secret” at the time of its initial disclosure to the public agency. (2) Reveals an account number for electronic payment as defined in G.S. 147-86.20 and obtained pursuant to Articles 6A or 6B of Chapter 147 of the General Statutes or G.S. 159-32.1. (3) Reveals a document, file number, password, or any other information maintained by the Secretary of State pursuant to Article 21 of Chapter 130A of the General Statutes. (4) Reveals the electronically captured image of an individual's signature, date of birth, drivers license number, or a portion of an individual's social security number if the agency has those items because they are on a voter registration document. N.C.G.S. § 132-1.2 (2005); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 26(2005) (“Protection of Confidential Information”).Footnote: 2 This section protects the property of a private person which property constitutes trade secret information as defined in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 66-152(2). *** Converted from WordPerfect ***
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2011 NBA All-Star Starters Revealed, What About the Reserves? Jan 27, 2011 – 7:13 PM Chris Tomasson Denver coach George Karl likes to say each All-Star squad should have 15 players, rather than 12. It's a great idea for the West this season, with there about to be some serious snubs. As for the East, 10 seems a better number this season in a conference that after the top teams has as much depth as the local park's kiddie pool. Perhaps the East should concede two spots to the West. Throw in that Houston's Yao Ming, named the West starting center, will miss the Feb. 20 Game in Los Angeles, and that would give the West 15 players with All-Star recognition. The starters were announced Thursday night, and there wasn't anything to complain about other than how ridiculous it was that fans (hello, China) continued to vote for Yao in bunches even after it was announced Dec. 17 he was out for the season with a foot injury. Even before then, he was averaging 10.2 points in a meager five games. The East starters will be Orlando's Dwight Howard at center, Miami's LeBron James and New York's Amar'e Stoudemire at forward and Miami's Dwyane Wade and Chicago's Derrick Rose at guard. Other than Yao, West starters named were Oklahoma City's Kevin Durant and Denver's Carmelo Anthony at forward and the Lakers' Kobe Bryant and New Orleans' Chris Paul at guard. Now, on to the reserves. After the coaches cast their ballots, here's who should be announced next Thursday as well as which players might be ticked off: Update: 2011 NBA All-Star Reserves Announced Eastern Conference Center: Al Horford, Atlanta. Horford might not want the Hawks one day to trade for a true center. Although undersized for the position at 6-foot-10, he's looking at another free trip to the All-Star Game due to the East having few quality centers behind Howard. (Chicago's Joakim Noah would be a candidate for this spot, as well, but he's still sidelined following thumb surgery.) Horford was an All-Star last season when he averaged a modest 14.2 points, and he's up to 16.3 this season. Kevin Garnett, Boston. Life's certainties are death, taxes, Dick Clark being propped up on New Year's Eve and Garnett being booked in late February. It will be the 14th consecutive All-Star plane ticket issued for "The Big Ticket.'' Paul Pierce, Boston. This guy is showing no signs of slowing down at 33. He's averaging 19.1 points and shooting 51.4 percent, the first time he's been over 47.2 in his 13-year career. Chris Bosh, Miami. James calls the Miami the "Heatles.'' Although nobody is sure who on the team is Ringo Starr, Bosh definitely is George Harrison. He's quiet but quite effective. Guards: Ray Allen, Boston. Allen, who twice has been named an injury replacement and made the team in 2003-04 even after missing 25 early-season games, has a way of slipping into All-Star Games just like he gets open for jumpers. Allen, vying for his 10th appearance, is averaging 17.3 points and shooting 50.5 percent. Like Pierce, Allen is on pace to shoot 50 percent for the first time in his career, and he's a 15-year man. Rajon Rondo, Boston. They're trying to paint Los Angeles green. Rondo would make four Celtics in the All-Star Game, which would tie in an NBA record. But Boston does have the East's best mark at 34-10. The four can try to have a more pleasant time at the Staples Center next month than they did in their Game 7 NBA Finals loss last June. Joe Johnson, Atlanta. About a month ago, Johnson seemingly had little chance at a fifth straight All-Star appearance. All he's done in January is average 25.2 points on 50.0 percent shooting to raise his seasonal averages to 19.6 on 43.5 marksmanship. And the Hawks have gone 8-3 in January. Snubs (if anybody in East really can be called one): Raymond Felton, New York guard. Felton can blame Johnson for taking his spot with his recent play. Not long ago, Felton looked a good bet to make his first All-Star team. But the Knicks have dropped six of their past seven games. Since their 16-9 start, New York (23-21) is just 7-12. Felton's numbers of 17.5 points and 8.9 assists are solid, but not good enough for a point guard to make an All-Star team off a team barely above .500. Carlos Boozer, Chicago. It doesn't help Boozer that he's missed 18 games due to injury. Then again, Lakers big man Pau Gasol missed 17 early last season and was an All-Star and there was Allen's mystifying selection in 2003-04, when he didn't play in his first game until Dec. 23. Perhaps Boozer, a guy who's often injured, can end up being an injury replacement if the East needs one. Western Conference Center:
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2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5664
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A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition (Recipients)—Excise) Bill 2005 Part of a package of four bills, the bill imposes a goods and services tax on recipients of taxable supplies made under a long-term non-reviewable contract to the extent that it is an excise duty. Bill A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition (Recipients)—General) Bill 2005 Part of a package of four bills, the bill imposes a goods and services tax on recipients of taxable supplies made under a long-term non-reviewable contract to the extent that it is neither a duty of customs nor a duty of excise. Bill A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition-Customs) Bill 1999 A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition-Excise) Bill 1999 Veterans' Affairs portfolio Bill A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Imposition-General) Bill 1999 A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Transition) Bill 1999 A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Bill 1999 A New Tax System (Indirect Tax Administration) Bill 1999 A New Tax System (Indirect Tax and Consequential Amendments) Bill (No. 2) 1999 A New Tax System (Indirect Tax and Consequential Amendments) Bill 1999
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Alabama Commissioners of Agriculture and Industries Reuben Francis Kolb: 1887-1891, 1911-1915 Reuben Francis Kolb, of Montgomery, Ala., was born April 16, 1839, at Eufaula, Barbour County, Ala.; was the son of Davis Cameron and Emily Francis (Shorter) Kolb, the former of Cheraw, Cheraw District, S.C., the latter of Eufaula, Ala.; and the grandson of Jesse and Susan Kolb, of Cheraw, S.C.; and of Reuben C. and Mary (Gill) Shorter, of Eufaula, Ala. The great-grandfather came from Germany, was a soldier in the Revolutionary Army, and was killed on the Pedee River, S.C., on which spot a monument erected by the Government, stands today as a memorial of his devotion to his adopted country. Capt. Kolb was educated in the common schools of Eufaula and at the University of N.C., from which he graduated in June, 1859. He was a farmer. Was Commissioner of Agriculture from 1886-1890, and unsuccessful candidate for Governor in 1890 and 1892. He was a Sergt. in Co. B. 1st Ala. Regt. for 12 months; then raised and commanded Kolb's Battery of Artillery through the War of Secession, during the last year of which he was in command of a battalion. He was a Democrat, and was for twenty-five years on Executive Committee of Barbour County; a Baptist. He married at Eufaula, Ala., Jan. 30, 1860, Calledonia Cargile, the daughter of Thomas and Louisa Ann Cargile, of Eufaula, Ala. Authorities: Alabama Department of Archives and History, Official and Statistical Register, 1913, 20. Return to Alabama Commissioners of Agriculture and Industries Return to Alabama Constitutional Officers http://www.archives.alabama.gov/conoff/kolb.html Updated: October 7, 2009 "We tell the story of the people of Alabama by preserving records and artifacts of historical value and promoting a better understanding of Alabama history." Contact Us | Feedback | Site Index | Translate | Alabama.gov P.O. Box 300100 / 624 Washington Ave.
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Why Choose Catholic Schools? Find a School Preschools and Day Cares Other Catholic Schools Search for: Parishes SchoolsBrowse: Home / Find a School View list of Preschools and Day Cares In Louisville’s Catholic preschools and day cares, children age 0-6 play, socialize, and receive the spiritual and educational guidance to prepare them for their transition into elementary school. Learn more about Louisville’s Catholic preschool programs here. View list of Elementary Schools Thirty-eight Catholic parish, regional and private elementary schools serve nearly 13,590 students (grades PK-8) in six counties of the Archdiocese of Louisville. The chart below provides basic information about each school, including the availability of before- and after-school care, preschool and daycare services. Catholic Elementary School Report View list of High Schools Nine Catholic secondary schools serve 6,112 students. Eight of the schools are located in Jefferson county and one in Nelson county. The chart below provides basic information about each school, including open house and registration dates for the 2013-2014 school year. View list of Other Catholic Schools Four Catholic private schools serve a variety of needs and ages. The chart below provides basic information about each school, including the availability of before- and after-school care, preschool, and daycare services. The enrollment cited is last school year’s official enrollment figure. Call the Catholic School Information Line: (502) 634-1315
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... Sports update: Hoisting the Stanley Cup without hot goalie hard to do ... Business update: GM sales eyed for impact of ignition switch recall ... OU Women's Golf No. 5/6 in Preseason Rankings NORMAN — The University of Oklahoma women's golf team is ranked No. 5 nationally to start the 2013-14 season according to Golfweek, which unveiled the Sooners' spot Friday as part of its top-25 countdown. OU was slotted in the No. 6 spot in the Golf World/WGCA preseason coaches' poll.The Sooners are the top Big 12 team in both sets of rankings, with Oklahoma State (7/14) and Baylor (19/24) also appearing in both polls. Texas is No. 19 in the coaches' version.Chirapat Jao-Javanil, the 2012 NCAA individual champion who is Golf Digest's No. 7 player to watch in the country this year, own's three of OU's top four single-season scoring averages and the school's top career mark. She is joined on the roster by fellow seniors Anne-Catherine Tanguay (No. 2 school career scoring average), Emily Collins (No. 5 school career scoring average) and Kaitlyn Rohrback (competed in nine of team's 11 events last year).OU adds four freshmen to the roster, and the OU coaching staff says they could contribute in a big way.The newcomers are Haley Hill (Edmond), Amanda Johnson (redshirt; Duncan), Alexandra Kaui (Las Vegas, Nev.; competed in 2013 U.S. Women's Open) and Maggie Neece (Colleyville, Texas).
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Home > Programs & Services > Bariatrics (Weight Loss) Bariatric Surgery TeamComplete care from a respected group. The highly talented staff at Aria's Comprehensive Center for Bariatric Surgery has the expertise that brings effectiveness and safety to patient care. Together, our accomplished, board-certified surgeons in Aria's bariatric service have a record of more than 40 years of successfully providing general and laparoscopic surgery. The Center’s bariatric professionals work closely with patients to monitor progress after surgery, helping patients to achieve steady and healthful weight loss. This may include adjustments to the stomach band and help via support groups, psychological counseling, and nutritional counseling. Luca Giordano, MD, FACS, Director of Bariatric Surgery/Bariatric Services, and Head of the Section on Minimally Invasive Surgery, at Aria Health, earned his medical degree at the University of Rome, did his residency in general surgery at Albert Einstein Medical Center, in Philadelphia, and completed a fellowship in Minimally Invasive Surgery at Cedar Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. A highly experienced surgeon, Dr. Giordano served as Chief of Surgery at Musumechi GECAS Hospital in Catania, Italy, before coming to Aria. He is a fellow of the American College of Surgery and has been certified by the American Board of Surgery since 2003. Dr. Giordano also serves as a clinical assistant professor of surgery at Jefferson Medical College. Elizabeth Renza-Stingone, MD, FACS, is a board-certified General Surgeon and Fellow of the American College of Surgeons (FACS). She completed a fellowship in Minimally Invasive Surgery and Bariatrics at New York Medical College. Her surgical and professional expertise includes: laparoscopic bariatric operations (bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, and band), fore-gut surgeries (antireflux procedures, paraesophageal hernia repairs), laparoscopic herniorraphy, laparoscopic and open colon surgery, endocrine surgery, and trauma. Alfred Bogucki, MD, FACS, earned his medical degree, and completed his internship and residency, at the Medical College of Pennsylvania. He completed a fellowship in trauma surgery at Aria Health and is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons. Dr. Bogucki specializes in advanced laparoscopic procedures and has been an attending physician practicing general surgery at Aria health since 1993. Mark LiBassi, MD, FACS, earned his medical degree, and completed his internship and residency, at the Medical College of Pennsylvania, where he served as chief surgical resident. He is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and a member of the Society of Laparoscopic Surgeons and the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons. As an Aria general surgeon, and Director of the Department of Surgery, Dr. LiBassi conducts laparoscopic surgery as one of his areas of specialization. Contact Aria's Comprehensive Center for Bariatric Surgery at 1-877-808-ARIA (2742) to make an appointment for a consultation. You can also attend a FREE seminar, where you can learn more about bariatric surgery and have your questions answered by one of our physicians. Support groups are also available for pre- and post-operative patients that provide the encouragement and information for those dealing with obesity. Schedules are available online for our seminars and support groups. A Frequently Asked Questions page is also available to answer some of the questions you might have right now. BariatricsBariatric Surgery ApproachesBariatric Surgery TeamComprehensive Center for Bariatric Surgery LocationsFREE Seminars & Support GroupsSupport StaffFAQs View by Distinguished Centers Select Center View by Featured Programs Select Featured Program View by Areas of Interest Select Area of Interest Cardiovascular Disease/Cardiology Endocrine Surgery Gastrointestinal Disease/Gastroenterology Gynecology & Women's Health Oral Medicine Plastic/Reconstructive Surgery Special Distinction & Accreditation for Aria's Health Center Seek health. Reclaim health. Departments, Divisions, Sections Aria’s patients have access to university-level care where they find the specialized and subspecialized services they need. Choose an Aria Physician Search the database of accomplished Aria physicians. Find an Aria Doctor Getting Healthy, Staying Healthy Comprehensive health care requires a dedication to preventive health and wellness. Aria's Wellness Programs
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< Go BackBirthmarksWhat are birthmarks?Birthmarks are areas of discolored and/or raised skin that are apparent at birth or within a few weeks of birth. Birthmarks are made up of malformed pigment cells or blood vessels.Although the cause of birthmarks is not known, most of them are benign (noncancerous) and do not require treatment. Babies with birthmarks should be examined and diagnosed by a doctor.What are the most common types of vascular birthmarks?The following are the most common types of vascular birthmarks:Macular stains or salmon patches. These are characterized by pink to red marks that may appear anywhere on the body. Angel kisses and stork bites are the most common type of vascular birthmark:Angel's kisses. Marks located on the forehead, nose, upper lip,�and eyelids that usually disappear with age.Stork bites. Marks on the back of the neck that usually disappear with age.Hemangioma. A common vascular birthmark. Hemangiomas become visible within the first few weeks or months of life and continue to grow rapidly for about six to nine months. Then, they gradually lose this red color and also shrink. They are called strawberry patch hemangiomas.Port-wine stain (also called nevus flammeus). A port-wine stain is a flat, pink, red, or purple mark that appears at birth, often on the face, arms, and legs, and continues to grow as the child grows. Port-wine stains do not go away and often require treatment if located on the eyelid or forehead. Port-wine stains involving the face may cause eye problems.What are the most common types of pigmented birthmarks?The following are the most common types of pigmented birthmarks:Moles (also known as congenital nevi).�These can be skin-colored, brown or black, flat or raised and small or large. They can occur anywhere on the body. Moles can also occur in adulthood, but only moles that are present at birth are considered birthmarks. Congential nevi can develop into cancer later in life.�Cafe-au-lait spots.� This is French for coffee with milk. These are usually oval-shaped and light brown or black. Typically these fade with age and are not a problem. However, many of them grouped together can be a sign of other health�issues and should be examined by a doctor.�Mongolian spots. These are blue, or blue-gray spots on the lower back or buttocks. They are most common in babies with darker skin, such as African-American or Asian babies. They can be mistaken for bruises and they usually fade with age.��
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5670
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Stormy Season Clears for Exciting Future Arizona women's basketball completed its 2013-14 season on Thursday, finishing a year where the Wildcats faced multiple injuries and adversity throughout the year. Wildcats Battle, Fall to USC, 59-54 in Pac-12 Tournament Arizona women's basketball fell to USC on Thursday in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament in Seattle, Wash. on Thursday. Wildcats to Face USC in Pac-12 Tournament Arizona women's basketball will face USC in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament on Thursday, March 6 at 2:30 p.m. PT in Seattle, Wash. The game will be shown live on the Pac-12 Networks. Wildcats Fall to Ducks in Eugene, 90-78 Arizona women's basketball (5-24, 1-17) fell to Oregon (15-14, 6-12), 90-78 on Sunday in its final regular season game. Oregon State Runs Past Arizona Freshman LaBrittney Jones scored double-digits in her fourth-consecutive game, but Arizona women's basketball (5-22, 1-15) fell to Oregon State (20-9, 12-5), 78-48 on Friday night in Corvallis, Ore. Arizona Wraps Regular Season in Oregon Arizona women's basketball (5-22, 1-15) will wrap up its regular season in Oregon this weekend to take on Oregon State (19-9, 11-5) on Friday, Feb. 28 at 7 p.m. PT and Oregon (13-14, 4-12) on Sunday, March 2 at 1 p.m. Arizona Falls in Overtime Heartbreaker to Colorado Arizona women's basketball (5-22, 1-15) fell in an overtime heartbreaker to Colorado (15-12, 5-11), 61-56 on Sunday at McKale Center. Women's Basketball Falls to Utah, 52-47 Freshman Breanna Workman tied her career-high scoring mark with 14 points, but Arizona women's basketball (5-21, 1-14) fell to Utah (11-15, 4-11), 52-47 on Friday night at McKale Center. Taking the Floor One Last Time Arizona seniors Erica Barnes, Kama Griffitts and Carissa Crutchfield will be taking the floor of McKale for the final time Sunday, Feb. 23, when the Colorado Buffaloes come to town. Three-Point Shooting Lifts No. 6 Stanford Over Arizona Arizona women's basketball (5-20, 1-13) fell to No. 6 Stanford (24-2, 13-1), 74-48 on Sunday at Maples Pavilion in Palo Alto, Calif. Women's Basketball Falls to No. 22 California in Berkeley Arizona women's basketball (5-19, 1-12) fell to No. 22 California (17-7, 9-4), 65-49 on Friday night in Berkeley, Calif. Women's Basketball Travels to the Bay Arizona women's basketball will hit the road to Northern California to take on No. 22 California on Friday, Feb. 14 at 8:30 p.m .and No. 6 Stanford on Sunday, Feb. 16 at 1 p.m. Wildcats Battle, Fall to USC, 59-54 in Pac-12...
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5671
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About Lake Chicot Located in the flat Delta lands of southeastern Arkansas, Lake Chicot is a true natural wonder. A 20-mile-long, former main channel of the Mississippi River, it is the biggest oxbow lake in North America and Arkansas's largest natural lake. The Great River Road National Scenic Byway travels some of the lake's shoreline. Fishing: Bluegill fishing is popular in Lake Chicot. Channel catfish, crappie and largemouth bass also frequent the cypresses, willows, buckbrush, dead timber and docks along the lake's shores. In its open waters, anglers seek out striped bass. Because of its southern location, prime fishing on Lake Chicot usually begins earlier in the spring than on Arkansas's other major lakes. It is also stocked with Florida-strain largemouth bass, so be prepared with stout tackle. Lake Chicot State Park, on the lake's north end, has 127 campsites and 14 cabin units (seven duplexes) located in a pleasant grove of large pecan trees. The park has a store well-stocked with camping and fishing supplies, a marina, a swimming pool, laundry facilities, a tree-shaded picnic area, and two reservable group pavilions. Rental fishing boats are available and personal craft may be launched for free at the park. The Chicot County Park, located near the lake's southern end, is another good site for those with RVs. It features full hook-ups, concrete pads and unlimited stays. The Jack R. Rhodes Lake Front Park is a day-use area located in downtown Lake Village. The state park's self-guided levee tour (brochures available at the park) is a 30-mile drive, much of it atop the levees that now protect the area from Mississippi River floods. Tour highlights include waterfowl and wading birds, the remains of a Native American mound, a site called Whiskey Chute where river pirates once roamed, and a visit to the Lake Chicot Pumping Plant, which diverts silt-laden waters away from the lake. Free Vacation Kit
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5672
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Mammals are warm-blooded vertebrates which, with the exception of a few notable species, nurse their young on milk produced by the female’s mammary glands, give birth to live young, and have bodies insulated by hair. Around one in four of the world’s mammals are currently threatened with extinction. ChimpanzeeFind out more » Search results for mammals Showing 1–90 of 1,426 results Page 1 2 3 … 16 Next » Aardvark (Orycteropus afer) While the bizarre and elusive aardvark (Orycteropus afer) may look vaguely similar in appearance to… More about the Aardvark » Aardwolf (Proteles cristata) Dog-like in appearance, the aardwolf (Proteles cristata) is a hyaena characterised by a distinctive… More about the Aardwolf » Abbott’s duiker (Cephalophus spadix) This secretive, forest-dwelling antelope was first photographed in the wild as recently as 2003… More about the Abbott’s duiker » Aceramarca gracile mouse opossum (Gracilinanus aceramarcae) Information on the aceramarca gracile mouse opossum (Gracilinanus aceramarcae) is currently being… More about the Aceramarca gracile mouse opossum » Addax (Addax nasomaculatus) The Addax (Addax nasomaculatus) is a desert living antelope and is well adapted to its harsh… More about the Addax » Aders’ duiker (Cephalophus adersi) The rarest and most highly endangered of Africa’s duiker species , the diminutive Aders’ duiker… More about the Aders’ duiker » Aellen’s roundleaf bat (Hipposideros marisae) Information on the Aellen’s roundleaf bat is currently being researched and written and will appear… More about the Aellen’s roundleaf bat » African brush-tailed porcupine (Atherurus africanus) Information on the African brush-tailed porcupine is currently being researched and written and will… More about the African brush-tailed porcupine » African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) The strong and imposing African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) is Africa’s only wild cattle species , and… More about the African buffalo » African civet (Civettictis civetta) A nocturnal, opportunistic mammal, the African civet (Civettictis civetta) is the largest African… More about the African civet » African clawless otter (Aonyx capensis) The dexterous, hand-like forefeet of the African clawless otter are its most remarkable feature… More about the African clawless otter » Perhaps one of the world’s most emotive and iconic animals, the African elephant (Loxodonta… More about the African elephant » African giant shrew (Crocidura olivieri) The aptly named African giant shrew is one of the largest shrews in the world . Like most shrews, it… More about the African giant shrew » African golden cat (Caracal aurata) The African golden cat (Caracal aurata) is little known by science, but is the subject of much… More about the African golden cat » African linsang (Poiana richardsonii) Information on the African linsang (Poiana richardsonii) is currently being researched and written… More about the African linsang » African manatee (Trichechus senegalensis) The African manatee is the least known of all the Sirenians ; the unique group of manatees and… More about the African manatee » African palm civet (Nandinia binotata) Information on the Afriacn palm civet is being researched and written and will appear here shortly… More about the African palm civet » African striped weasel (Poecilogale albinucha) Information on the African striped weasel (Poecilogale albinucha) is currently being researched and… More about the African striped weasel » African wild ass (Equus africanus) The African wild ass (Equus africanus) is the ancestor of the domestic donkey , and has a similar… More about the African wild ass » African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) The African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) is one of the world’s most social and distinctive canids. The… More about the African wild dog » Agile gibbon (Hylobates agilis) Information on the agile gibbon is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the Agile gibbon » The agile mangabey is a large, slender monkey, with relatively long limbs, a long muzzle, and a tail… More about the Agile mangabey » Alaotran gentle lemur (Hapalemur alaotrensis) The Alaotran gentle lemur has a woolly, dense, dark-grey coat, with a chestnut tinge on the crown… More about the Alaotran gentle lemur » Aldabra flying fox (Pteropus aldabrensis) The Aldabra flying fox is one of only four mammals found on Aldabra Atoll in the Seychelles . Its… More about the Aldabra flying fox » Allegheny woodrat (Neotoma magister) The Allegheny woodrat (Neotoma magister) is a medium-sized North American rodent which superficially… More about the Allegheny woodrat » Information on Allen's swamp monkey (Allenopithecus nigroviridis) is being researched and written… More about the Allen's swamp monkey » Alpine marmot (Marmota marmota) Information on the Alpine marmot is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the Alpine marmot » Alpine musk deer (Moschus chrysogaster) Information on the Alpine musk deer is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the Alpine musk deer » Alpine shrew (Sorex alpinus) A small, secretive, mouse-like species, the alpine shrew (Sorex alpinus) is slender-bodied and… More about the Alpine shrew » Altai weasel (Mustela altaica) Information on the Altai weasel is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the Altai weasel » Amami rabbit (Pentalagus furnessi) The Amami rabbit is a unique member of the rabbit family, having evolved in isolation over the… More about the Amami rabbit » Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis) The Amazonian manatee is a most bizarre-looking aquatic mammal, and was first described as a curious… More about the Amazonian manatee » American badger (Taxidea taxus) The American badger (Taxidea taxus) is a broad, robust mammal with a rather flattened body, a thick… More about the American badger » American beaver (Castor canadensis) North America’s largest rodent, the American beaver, exhibits a wide range of physical adaptations… More about the American beaver » American bison (Bison bison) The American bison, the largest mammal in North America, once roamed the continent in vast herds and… More about the American bison » American black bear (Ursus americanus) With a population double that of all other bear species combined, the American black bear is by far… More about the American black bear » American marten (Martes americana) Information on the American marten is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the American marten » American mink (Neovison vison) The American mink (Neovison vison) is a medium-sized, semi-aquatic mustelid with a long, slender… More about the American mink » American pika (Ochotona princeps) The American pika (Ochotona princeps) is a small member of the rabbit family that inhabits alpine… More about the American pika » American red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) Distinguished from other tree squirrels by its smaller size , the American red squirrel is, as its… More about the American red squirrel » Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis) The Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis) is considered to be one of the most critically… More about the Amur leopard » Anatolian ground squirrel (Spermophilus xanthoprymnus) A terrestrial, diurnal rodent , the Anatolian ground squirrel (Spermophilus xanthopyrmnus) is a… More about the Anatolian ground squirrel » Andaman horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus cognatus) Information on the Andaman horseshoe bat is currently being researched and written and will appear… More about the Andaman horseshoe bat » Andean cat (Leopardus jacobita) The Andean cat is considered to be one of the most endangered wild cats in the world and perhaps the… More about the Andean cat » Andean hairy armadillo (Chaetophractus nationi) Armadillos are one of the oldest groups of mammals. Once thought to be closely related to turtles… More about the Andean hairy armadillo » Andean night monkey (Aotus miconax) With their small, rounded head and large eyes, giving a rather owl-like appearance, the night… More about the Andean night monkey » Anderson's gerbil (Gerbillus andersoni) The little-known Anderson’s gerbil is a relatively slender-built, medium-sized gerbil. It has fairly… More about the Anderson's gerbil » Anderson’s mouse opossum (Marmosa andersoni) Only seven individuals of this small marsupial have ever been found, all from a small region of… More about the Anderson’s mouse opossum » Information on the Angola colobus is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the Angola colobus » Ankarana sportive lemur (Lepilemur ankaranensis) Information on the Ankarana sportive lemur is currently being researched and written and will appear… More about the Ankarana sportive lemur » Antafia sportive lemur (Lepilemur aeeclis) Information on the Antafia sportive lemur is currently being researched and written and will appear… More about the Antafia sportive lemur » Antarctic fur seal (Arctocephalus gazella) A large, hardy and charismatic inhabitant of the Antarctic region, the Antarctic fur seal… More about the Antarctic fur seal » Antarctic minke whale (Balaenoptera bonaerensis) The Antarctic minke whale (Balaenoptera bonaerensis) is one of the smallest and most abundant of the… More about the Antarctic minke whale » Antillean fruit-eating bat (Brachyphylla cavernarum) A little-known bat of the Caribbean, the Antillean fruit-eating bat (Brachyphylla cavernarum) has a… More about the Antillean fruit-eating bat » Antillean giant rice rat (Megalomys desmarestii) Information on the Antillean giant rice rat is currently being researched and written and will… More about the Antillean giant rice rat » Apennine brown bear (Ursus arctos marsicanus) Information on the Apennine brown bear is currently being researched and written and will appear… More about the Apennine brown bear » Arabian leopard (Panthera pardus nimr) The Arabian leopard (Panthera pardus nimr) is the largest and most powerfully built of all Arabian… More about the Arabian leopard » Arabian oryx (Oryx leucoryx) At one time extinct in the wild, this desert antelope can once again be seen wandering the dry… More about the Arabian oryx » Arabian spiny mouse (Acomys dimidiatus) Named for the fur on its back which, when stroked against the direction of the hair follicles… More about the Arabian spiny mouse » Arabian tahr (Arabitragus jayakari) Although the Arabian tahr is relatively small, its strength and agility should not be underestimated… More about the Arabian tahr » Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) The Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) is superbly adapted for life at sub-zero temperatures . While this… More about the Arctic fox » Arctic ground squirrel (Spermophilus parryii) One of the largest species of ground squirrel , the Arctic ground squirrel (Spermophilus parryii) is… More about the Arctic ground squirrel » Arctic hare (Lepus arcticus) One of the world’s largest hares , the Arctic hare (Lepus arcticus) has a distinctive, uniformly… More about the Arctic hare » Argali (Ovis ammon) The argali (Ovis ammon) is the largest of the wild sheep, and the males have impressive horns that… More about the Argali » Arnoux’s beaked whale (Berardius arnuxii) One of the largest beaked whale species, Arnoux’s beaked whale is almost identical in appearance to… More about the Arnoux’s beaked whale » Asia Minor spiny mouse (Acomys cilicicus) The Asia Minor or Turkish spiny mouse is so-called as the back of both males and females are covered… More about the Asia Minor spiny mouse » Asian badger (Meles leucurus) Information on the Asian badger (Meles leucurus) is being researched and written and will appear… More about the Asian badger » Asian buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) At up to more than a tonne in weight, the Asian buffalo is a massive, powerful animal, with a wider… More about the Asian buffalo » Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) are smaller than their African savannah relatives (Loxodonta… More about the Asian elephant » Asian garden dormouse (Eliomys melanurus) The agile Asian garden dormouse is well-adapted for climbing around the rocky surfaces and… More about the Asian garden dormouse » Asian short-clawed otter (Aonyx cinerea) This charismatic mammal, equally at home in the water and on land, is the smallest of the world’s… More about the Asian short-clawed otter » Asian tapir (Tapirus indicus) Its unmistakable two-tone pattern distinguishes the Asian tapir, the only Old World tapir, from the… More about the Asian tapir » Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus) This Asiatic bear has a similar appearance to its better-known American relative (the American black… More about the Asiatic black bear » Asiatic golden cat (Pardofelis temminckii) Information on the Asiatic golden cat (Pardofelis temminckii) is currently being researched and… More about the Asiatic golden cat » Asiatic wild ass (Equus hemionus) The Asiatic wild ass is the most horse-like of all the species of ass . The general colour of its… More about the Asiatic wild ass » Assam macaque (Macaca assamensis) A species of Old World monkey, the Assam macaque (Macaca assamensis) is a rather thick-set macaque… More about the Assam macaque » Atlantic humpbacked dolphin (Sousa teuszii) The most distinctive feature of this rather elusive cetacean is its distinctive humped appearance… More about the Atlantic humpbacked dolphin » Atlantic spotted dolphin (Stenella frontalis) Often observed in the clear, shallow waters surrounding the Bahamas, the Atlantic spotted dolphin is… More about the Atlantic spotted dolphin » Atlantic white-sided dolphin (Lagenorhynchus acutus) The Atlantic white-sided dolphin is a large, robust species , which is easily recognised by the… More about the Atlantic white-sided dolphin » Australian sea lion (Neophoca cinerea) Information on the Australian sea lion is currently being researched and written and will appear… More about the Australian sea lion » Aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) The bizarre aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) is one of the most unusual primates on the planet… More about the Aye-aye » Ayres black uakari (Cacajao ayresi) Discovered as recently as 2008, the Ayres black uakari has only been seen twice in the wild… More about the Ayres black uakari » Azara’s agouti (Dasyprocta azarae) Information on Azara’s agouti is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly… More about the Azara’s agouti » Azores noctule (Nyctalus azoreum) The Azores noctule (Nyctalus azoreum) is the only species of mammal endemic to the Azores… More about the Azores noctule » Bactrian deer (Cervus elaphus bactrianus) Information on the Bactrian deer is currently being researched and written and will appear here… More about the Bactrian deer » Badger (Meles meles) With its striking black and white striped head, the badger (Meles meles) is one of our most… More about the Badger » Baiji (Lipotes vexillifer) The baiji (Lipotes vexillifer) is probably the rarest cetacean in existence; human activity severely… More about the Baiji » Baikal seal (Pusa sibirica) The Baikal seal is remarkable for being the only pinniped that is restricted solely to a freshwater… More about the Baikal seal » Baird's tapir (Tapirus bairdii) Baird's tapir is the largest of the American tapirs and the largest indigenous mammal in Central… More about the Baird's tapir » Baird’s beaked whale (Berardius bairdii) Baird’s beak whale (Berardius bairdii) is a deep-diving cetacean belonging to a group known as the… More about the Baird’s beaked whale » Page 1 2 3 … 16
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5673
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Published on Arms Control Association (http://www.armscontrol.org) Arms Control Today > September 2009 > Burnishing Reagan’s Disarmament Credentials > Burnishing Reagan’s Disarmament Credentials Burnishing Reagan’s Disarmament Credentials Reviewed by Paul Boyer Reagan’s Secret War: The Untold Story of His Fight to Save the World From Nuclear Disaster By Martin Anderson and Annelise Anderson Crown Publishers, 2009, 450 pp. The husband-and-wife team of Martin and Annelise Anderson has established a cottage industry of producing works enhancing Ronald Reagan’s image. The truly Herculean labors of the Andersons, who are based at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, have already given us Reagan in His Own Hand (2001), a selection of the future president’s radio talks; Reagan: A Life in Letters (2004); Reagan’s Path to Victory: The Shaping of Ronald Reagan’s Vision (2004); Stories in His Own Hand: The Everyday Wisdom of Ronald Reagan (2007); and Reagan in His Own Voice, a three-CD set of the radio talks. Their latest effort, Reagan’s Secret War, welcomed with lavish praise by Henry Kissinger, James Baker, Ed Meese (“superb”), and George Shultz (“an immense contribution”), continues in the same admiring vein. For the Andersons, Reagan is a colossus who even in death still dominates America: “His spirit seems to stride the country, watching us like a warm and friendly ghost.” Acknowledging Nancy Reagan’s help in giving them access to classified documents, the Andersons quote her plea to them: “I just want people to know who Ronnie is.” They conclude, “We hope this book has helped to accomplish that goal.” One may safely predict that this work will please the former first lady, to whom, along with Shultz, the Andersons dedicate the book. How the broader world of scholars, arms control insiders, and observers of the Reagan years will view it may be more problematic. Much of the book consists of direct quotes from Reagan’s speeches, letters, pre-presidential radio talks, private communications with Soviet leaders, diaries (as edited and abridged by historian Douglas Brinkley), and comments at meetings of the National Security Council (NSC) and the smaller National Security Planning Group (NSPG). Like Bibles in which Jesus’ words are printed in red, every quote from Reagan is highlighted with an impressive gray background scrim. The authors range widely over Reagan’s presidency, including the 1981 assassination attempt, the economic program, and the Iran-contra scandal. Yet, as the subtitle promises, the focus is on Reagan’s strategic thinking, particularly the 1983 Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). The Andersons make a simple point: Above all else, Reagan was a man of peace whose unwavering objective, rooted in his personal history and reinforced by his brush with death in 1981, was a world free of nuclear weapons. The Andersons quote Reagan’s repeated assertions of his peaceful intentions and wholly endorse his insistence that the massive military buildup and intensified nuclear weapons competition of his first term were only a means to his utopian goal: to force the Soviets to recognize the futility of competition and the inevitability of total nuclear disarmament as their best option. With equal conviction, they embrace Reagan’s view that the missile defense system envisioned in his SDI proposal would advance the cause of peace. As the United States developed and deployed a foolproof anti-missile system, the Russians would realize that competition in this area too was futile and would gratefully welcome Reagan’s offer to share the new technology. Once the shimmering vision of universal nuclear disarmament was achieved, a global defensive shield would protect all the world’s peoples against any cheaters or rogue states tempted to nuclear adventurism. As the Andersons uncritically quote vast swaths of Reagan’s rhetoric and embrace his own assessment of his motives, they sometimes seem simply to be channeling him rather than offering a critical assessment of the implications, context, and contemporary resonance of his strategic thought. The book certainly has its merits. The authors convincingly portray Reagan as an active shaper of strategic policy. Those who view him as merely a gifted actor who stumbled into the presidency and amiably occupied the office for eight years as a puppet-like figure manipulated by others will find little reinforcement for their view in this book. Edward Teller, Kenneth Adelman, Richard Perle, the far-right beer baron Joseph Coors, the Harvard Sovietologist Richard Pipes, and other influential figures are mentioned, but the Andersons’ account emphasizes Reagan’s prickly independence of mind, which clearly comes through. Working with Shultz, his secretary of state once the preening Alexander Haig had been dumped, Reagan forcefully pursued his objectives, clinging tenaciously to SDI despite resistance within his own administration. “I will make the decisions,” he informed the NSC after his inauguration, and he lived up to his word. (The hollow bravado of George W. Bush’s similar “I am the decider” comment, as he announced in 2006 that Donald Rumsfeld would remain as secretary of defense, offers yet another example of Bush’s somewhat forlorn effort to emulate Reagan.) The extensive citations from Reagan’s diary offer convincing evidence that his public avowals of peaceful intentions were not merely boilerplate pieties, but sincere expressions of a firmly held conviction that all his military and strategic policies, however they struck others, would ultimately advance his vision of a world free of nuclear weapons. Reagan’s Secret War challenges those who have argued that SDI was essentially a bargaining chip to extract arms control concessions from Moscow. Had this been the case, Reagan would have cashed in his chips at the 1986 Reykjavik summit, rather than clinging to SDI despite the breathtaking concessions dangled by the Russians in exchange. He really believed in SDI. The authors underscore the depth of Reagan’s religious beliefs, contributing to our heightened awareness of the importance of religion in U.S. politics and foreign policy generally, an awareness driven home during the presidency of George W. Bush. In a diary entry after the assassination attempt, Reagan wrote, “Whatever happens now I owe my life to God, and will try to serve him in every way I can.” This sense of divine obligation, they argue, reinforced Reagan’s conviction that the quest for peace should be his guiding principle. (In this connection, the Andersons might profitably have explored Reagan’s well-documented belief that unfolding world events could be correlated with Bible prophecies of the end times.) Flawed History Ultimately, however, although Reagan’s Secret War does shed light on some important aspects of Reagan’s tenure, it is rather disappointing as a work of history. Even its principal contribution, the quotes from classified NSC and NSPG documents, exchanges with Soviet leaders, and summit conference transcripts, to which Martin Anderson gained access through the intervention of Nancy Reagan and Karl Rove, raises questions. Which documents were released or withheld, and why? The documents that are quoted contain many ellipses, inevitably raising cautionary flags. For example, here is the Andersons’ version of a key exchange at Reykjavik in which Reagan rejects Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s insistence that the United States limit SDI research to the laboratory only: “I can’t go along with that…. In my country…I have a lot of critics who wield great influence…. They will accuse me of breaking my promise to the people of the United States regarding SDI.” What additional material is represented by the ellipses? Were such deletions made before the documents were shown to the authors or after? As with all historical work based on privileged access to restricted sources, the Andersons’ use of these records, while of interest, involves troubling methodological issues. Even the heavily redacted quotes that the Andersons provide contain some revelations that complicate their rose-tinted perspective. At a December 1981 NSC discussion of Moscow’s repression of the Polish Solidarity movement, Reagan mused, “Can we afford not to go all out? I’m talking about a total quarantine of the Soviet Union.” This stunning idea dismayed even Haig, not usually given to dovish hesitations. A total economic quarantine would be “a matter of life and death” for Moscow, he warned: “They would go to war over this.” Reagan passed off the incident with a joke. “[E]veryone stock up on vodka,” he advised as the meeting ended. The Andersons’ narrow range of sources further weakens the book’s scholarly value. They note their access to classified documents and their interviews with some surviving members of Reagan’s inner circle. Beyond this, however, their notes are striking for the total absence of the large body of work by historians, strategic thinkers, scientists, ethicists, public intellectuals, and journalists that bears directly on the book’s topic.[1] The authors draw a chapter epigraph from Paul Lettow’s Ronald Reagan and His Quest to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (2005) but do not otherwise cite Lettow’s useful and generally pro-Reagan study. Deterrence and Defense Any reader relying solely on Reagan’s Secret War will gain little understanding of strategic thinking as it had evolved by the 1980s. Not only the Russians, but most U.S. strategists, including some of the most hawkish, understood that, in the world of nuclear strategy, even “defensive” moves such as SDI had offensive implications. If the airtight missile defense system envisioned by Reagan actually had proven feasible and been deployed, it would have radically altered the strategic balance. The United States would have been able to launch a nuclear first strike with no fear of a devastating counterblow. Reagan simply shrugged off such criticism. His goal was peace, and in his fantasy scenario, missile defense technology generously shared with the Russians would go hand in hand with total nuclear disarmament. Yet, Cold War nuclear strategy, as elaborated by game theorists and think-tank intellectuals, did not rely on wishful thinking or protestations of goodwill, but on calculations of different outcomes rendered more or less likely, at least theoretically, by different weapons systems, deployment patterns, and targeting configurations, irrespective of particular leaders temporarily in power or their assurances of peaceful intentions. The radical disconnect between Reagan’s visionary scenario and the foundational principles of deterrence theory contributed significantly to the drumfire of criticism directed at his missile defense proposal. Reagan’s Secret War does not begin to address the radical way SDI challenged deterrence theory, as formalized in the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty. Under that treaty, the two superpowers pledged not to develop national missile defense systems and allowed themselves only two local missile defense systems each: one for their capitals and the other to protect one offensive launch site apiece. They thereby laid themselves open to nuclear attack, on the principle that the best safeguard against all-out nuclear war was the certainty that any nuclear attack would trigger a devastating retaliatory response. The Andersons quote Reagan’s ritualistic expressions of revulsion against deterrence theory, a revulsion widely shared by theologians, moral philosophers, and anti-nuclear activists because the theory did assume a capability and willingness to commit mass slaughter if deterrence failed. Nevertheless, for more than 30 years, neither Cold War adversary had exercised the nuclear option despite each side’s ever more lethal strategic arsenals. It seemed plausible to conclude that fear of retaliation, whether or not formulated theoretically or codified by treaty, had played a role in this restraint. This history suggested that the principle of deterrence and the ABM Treaty embodying it should be abandoned only after the most careful strategic analysis. Yet, nothing in Reagan’s Secret War suggests that Reagan, for all his alleged strategic sophistication, ever engaged SDI’s profound implications at a deep level or really grasped the point the Russians and his domestic critics were making. The Andersons share Reagan’s puzzlement that Gorbachev and his team proved unwilling to accept the president’s peace-loving protestations at face value and instead treated SDI as a grave escalation of the nuclear arms race, a potentially fatal blow to the concept and reality of deterrence, and an insuperable barrier to the dramatic strategic arms cuts the two leaders were considering. (The Andersons’ blow-by-blow account of Reykjavik, although familiar in outline, is deeply depressing, as Gorbachev repeatedly presses for concessions on SDI in exchange for major strategic arms reductions and Reagan simply digs in his heels ever more stubbornly.) The authors are equally mystified that not only the Russians but also many domestic commentators, including powerful media voices such as Time magazine, blamed Reagan for the Reykjavik failure. Reagan’s hawkish reputation, they insist, was a canard promulgated by “political enemies.” The book’s tunnel-vision focus on Reagan obscures the intense behind-the-scenes battles that SDI triggered within the administration and precludes attention to the larger political, economic, and cultural factors influencing events—Congress, the media, churches, the popular culture, military contractors profiting from the Reagan military buildup, and universities and think tanks that stood to gain from SDI research appropriations. The deep skepticism about SDI’s technical feasibility that arose within the scientific and technological communities and, more cautiously, in the Pentagon—a skepticism amply borne out by years of failed tests—receives minimal attention. Apart from an annoyed January 1983 reference by Reagan to “the placard carriers,” one gets little inkling of the groundswell of support for the Nuclear Weapons Freeze campaign that swept America in 1981-1982, a grassroots uprising viewed by many historians as a major factor behind Reagan’s March 1983 SDI speech. (Among the protesters was Columbia University senior Barack Obama, who in 1983 published a plea in a campus newsmagazine for “a nuclear free world” despite the “military-industrial interests” with their “billion-dollar erector sets.”) Contemporary Resonances The authors do not reflect much on Reagan’s arms control legacy. A less reverential observer might have noted not only Reagan’s doubtless sincere longing for a nuclear-free world and the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty removing intermediate-range missiles from Europe, but also features of the Reagan years such as the continued destabilizing deployment of ICBMs equipped with multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles and the bloated military budgets with their dizzying array of weapons systems. These elements were not unique to the Reagan presidency, but many observers found them particularly worrisome because of other aspects of his time in office. During the Reagan years, there was insistent talk by administration officials about surviving nuclear war through civil defense. In addition, Reagan articulated a particularly Manichaean worldview, famously calling Moscow “the focus of evil in the modern world.” Although the “us versus them” construction was a staple of Cold War rhetoric, Reagan reinforced and escalated it in a way that arguably still colors much U.S. thinking, even though the adversary has changed. Notably, in prosecuting his “global war on terror,” Bush pledged to “rid the world of evil.” Among the other longer-term impacts, Reagan’s attachment to the concept of missile defense has resulted, in the two decades since he left office, in a multibillion-dollar research program that has produced meager results while leading to continued wrangling with Moscow over installations in eastern Europe. Complicating any assessment of Reagan’s relevance to the contemporary arms control discourse is the fact that the present situation is both more complex and more promising than that of the early 1980s. The Iranian and North Korean nuclear programs, the hostility of nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, the continued provocation of Israel’s nuclear weapons, cyberthreats to weapons-control systems, risks of nuclear materials falling into terrorists’ hands, the difficulty of distinguishing nuclear power from nuclear weapons programs—all this presents complexities hardly imaginable as Reagan and Gorbachev haggled at Geneva and Reykjavik. In other ways, however, the situation is more hopeful than it has been in years. Total nuclear disarmament is again being seriously discussed at the highest levels. In his Prague speech last April, President Obama not only called for the abolition of nuclear weapons, but proposed steps toward that goal considerably more concrete than anything in Reagan’s earnest but vague rhetoric. Even more interesting has been the emergence of Shultz, Reagan’s old comrade in arms, now nearing 90, as one of the authors of a proposal outlining a series of specfic steps leading to the eventual abolition of nuclear weapons. In a January 2007 Wall Street Journal op-ed piece, a Hoover Institution conference, and a follow-up Journal piece in January 2008, the group, which also includes former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of Defense William Perry, and former chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), urged redoubled efforts to reduce the nuclear threats confronting humankind, with the long-term aim of eliminating nuclear weapons. The proposal is backed by a larger bipartisan group of politicians, diplomats, scientists, and others, including Martin Anderson. Although it invokes Reagan’s vision, the four statesmen’s approach is quite different. It proposes a series of immediate and intermediate measures, it avoids the ideological rhetoric that so compromised Reagan’s credibility, and, while recognizing that the United States and Russia still possess 95 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons, it defines the threat as a complex global issue. Above all, Shultz and his colleagues are not hamstrung by having to insist, as Reagan did, that progress toward comprehensive nuclear disarmament must be hostage to U.S. missile defense plans. Their action agenda still speaks of missile defense research as a “cooperative multilateral” effort, pursued through negotiations, not U.S. fiat, and even including a Joint Data Exchange Center based in Moscow. To what extent this initiative will prevail within a Republican party riven by ideological conflict remains unknown. In a June 30 op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, Richard Perle, assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan years, and Senator Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) have denounced Obama’s call for further U.S.-Russian nuclear weapons reductions as “dangerous wishful thinking.” Kenneth Adelman, head of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in the Reagan years, warns that to envision a world free of nuclear weapons is “to lose all grip on reality.” Reagan’s arms control legacy seems, at best, a mixed one, and it is not yet clear how urgently a Department of State with much on its plate and a Democratic Congress grappling with a recession, health care, and environmental issues will address the goal articulated by Obama in Prague. Nevertheless, the present moment is clearly one of considerable promise for those committed to nuclear abolition, Reagan’s oft-stated goal. A critical assessment of how Reagan’s strategic views and policies relate to these developments might have added a timely contemporary dimension to Reagan’s Secret War. The authors’ boundless admiration for their hero and their determination to laud his every decision and utterance have resulted in a book that will be welcomed by true believers but contributes less to our historical understanding and, ironically, to Reagan’s reputation than a more objective, comprehensive, and intellectually probing work might have done. Click here to comment on this article. Paul Boyer, professor of history emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is author of By the Bomb’s Early Light: American Thought and Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age (1985) and Fallout: A Historian Reflects on America’s Half-Century Encounter With Nuclear Weapons (1998). He edited Reagan as President: Contemporary Views of the Man, His Politics, and His Policies (1990) and is author of the forthcoming “Selling Star Wars: Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative” in Selling War in the Media Age: The Presidency and Public Opinion in the American Century (2010). 1. See, for example, John Tirman, ed., The Fallacy of Star Wars (New York: Vintage Books, 1984); Keith B. Payne, Strategic Defense: “Star Wars” in Perspective (Lanham, MD: Hamilton Press, 1986); Joseph S. Nye Jr., Nuclear Ethics (New York: Free Press, 1986); Michael Charlton, From Deterrence to Defense: The Inside Story of Strategic Policy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987); Lawrence Freedman, The Evolution of Nuclear Strategy, 2nd ed. (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1989); Erik K. Pratt, Selling Strategic Defense: Interests, Ideologies, and the Arms Race (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 1990); William J. Broad, Teller’s War: The Top-Secret Story Behind the Star Wars Deception (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992); Frances FitzGerald, Way Out There in the Blue: Reagan, Star Wars, and the End of the Cold War (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000). The Arms Control Association is a non-profit, membership-based organization. Source URL: http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2009_09/Book
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Home >> Military Medals & Insignia >> Attachments / Devices >> Silver Marksmanship Letter E Device Silver Marksmanship Letter E Device Criteria: A Marksmanship Device is an award of the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard � presented as an attachment to the Marksmanship Ribbon. There are two Marksmanship Devices presented for scoring as a Sharpshooter or Expert on a pistol and rifle qualification course. The Sharpshooter Marksmanship Device is typically referred as the �S Device.� The Expert Marksmanship Device is referred to as the �E Device� (not to be confused with the Battle E Device). The Expert Marksmanship Device is worn on the Marksmanship Ribbon in lieu of the full sized Marksmanship Medal. When wearing the Marksmanship Medal, the Expert Marksmanship Device is not displayed.
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NFL roster cut down dates next week, which means KC Chiefs depth chart will get a shake-up Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports The Kansas City Chiefs will be trimming their roster nearly in half within the next 10 days as NFL roster cut down dates come up. With nearly 1,200 players hitting the market, it's a good time to remind you that the Chiefs are first on the waiver wire. That depth chart will receive a shake-up. NFL roster cuts. One of the most underrated times of year to make your team better. Right now every NFL team has a maximum roster of 90 players, which is what teams carry in training camp. Next week, on August 27, the Kansas City Chiefs will be cutting down to 75 players, which means 15 players will get the boot on that date. That round of cuts will put a whopping 480 players on the market. 480 is a lot. Four days later, on August 31, the Chiefs will be cutting another 22 players to get down to the 53-man roster maximum. That's over 700 (!!) players that will go on the market on that date. August 27: Cut down to 75 players (3 p.m.) August 31: Cut down to 53 players (5 p.m.) September 1: Teams can create practice squads (11 a.m.) September 3: Teams can place players on IR "Designated for return" (3 p.m.) Combined, there are nearly 1,200 players that will hit the market by August 31. For many of those players, the dream is over. They were undrafted free agents who were long shots to make the team anyway. They're probably not getting another shot. But for other players, it's not over. In fact, some good, known players will be cut during that time. If a team doesn't want to carry a veteran player's full salary on their roster, they will cut them. Perhaps it's a cap issue or maybe the player is good but just overpaid. Maybe the team cuts the player hoping to sneak them onto the practice squad, which will be created on September 1. Players must be cut first and then re-signed to the practice squad, so they are exposed to the rest of the league. For veterans that are cut, they will immediately be free agents and eligible to sign with any time. Non-vested veterans (those with three or less years in the league) will be subject to the waiver wire. And, oh by the way, who's No. 1 on the waiver wire? Your KC Chiefs are. The benefits of being the worst team in the NFL. Take a look at our sort-able roster here. It's not so hard to find the first 15 cuts, which will be comprised mostly of rookie free agents. It gets a little harder when you make your next round of 22 cuts. The Chiefs will be cutting a veteran player that will surprise, it happens every single year. A surprise undrafted free agent will make the team. As of today, the Chiefs have just $288,000 in salary cap space, which is the second lowest amount in the league. That doesn't mean the Chiefs won't be active. It just means they very well could be cutting someone with the intent of giving themselves more salary cap space. Here's a list of some of the highest paid Chiefs players so you can see who's getting Casey Printers money. I will get into this more a little later this week but I do expect the Chiefs to be active during this period. It's a new regime so there are a lot of end-of-the-roster guys that the new regime is not loyal to. Positions where you think the Chiefs have a need, such as wide receiver, are probably positions the Chiefs front office is keeping an eye on. More from Arrowhead Pride: Posterized: Quintin Demps to the house! Best case / worst case with the Chiefs offensive line Who approves this trade MORE? Chiefs special teams make it look so easy Arrowheadlines: Chiefs News 8/21
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Title: Spatiotemporal cattle data - a plea for protocol standardization Authors Anderson, Dean Estell, Richard Cibils, Andres - Submitted to: Positioning Citation: Anderson, D.M., Estell, R.E., Cibils, A. 2013. Spatiotemporal cattle data - a plea for protocol standardization. Positioning. 4:115-136. Interpretive Summary: The global navigation satellite system (GNSS), commonly referred to as the global positioning system (GPS), is a new and evolving technology capable of providing unique and exciting ways to study, understand and ultimately manage livestock. To optimize its potential requires expertise beyond just animal/range science when this tool is deployed. A practical understanding of the field operation and maintenance of electronic hardware as well as software is essential in order to gather adequate amounts of data that can be analyzed employing the most robust spatiotemporal statistical tools. This dictates the need for functional teams to be in place when conducting this type of research. Furthermore, it is essential that the protocol followed by these teams be standardized. This manuscript suggests minimum protocols that should be considered by those charged with managing animal dominated landscapes required to provide multiple goods and services. It was not until the end of the 1990’s that animal born satellite receiver’s catapulted range cattle ecology into the 21st century world of microchip technology with all of its opportunities and challenges. With the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) insight into how cattle use a landscape is being revealed from previously secrete temporal and spatial behaviors. The most common system to date deployed for studying ungulates is known as the global positioning system (GPS). With its use has come a clarity and completeness in documenting spatial and temporal data in new and exciting ways that offer almost unlimited possibilities to better understand and manage both the economic as well as societal returns from animal dominated landscapes required to provide multiple goods and services. However, its use on free-ranging cattle is not without challenges, some of which are yet to be optimally solved. To maximize the usefulness of GNSS data consideration must be given to: developing a standardized protocol for reporting and analyzing research that facilitates the interpretation of results across different ecosystems, develop optimum ranges over which to collect satellite fixes depending upon the particular behaviors of interest, and concurrently develop electronic hardware and equipment platforms that are easily deployed on animals that are light, robust and capable of being worn by cattle for extended periods of time without the need for human intervention especially to change batteries. Once the data are collected appropriate geographic information system (GIS) based models should be used to produce a series of visually observable flexible management strategies, some of which may support methodologies that are yet to be commercialized and adopted into future plant-animal interface management routines.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5678
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Title: Coffee and Alzheimer’s disease - animal & cellular evidences Authors Miller, Marshall - Shukitt-Hale, Barbara Submitted to: Coffee: Emerging Health Effects and Disease Prevention Citation: Miller, M.G., Shukitt Hale, B. 2012. Coffee and Alzheimer’s disease - animal & cellular evidences. In: Chu, YiFang, editor. Coffee: Emerging Health Effects and Disease Prevention. New York, NY: John Wiley. p. 77-96. Technical Abstract: Increases in lifespan in modern times have put significant social and academic emphasis on age-related pathologies. Of the many chronic, non-acquired diseases, dementias are among the most fiscally and psychologically burdensome to society. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevalent and well known form of dementia. Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that the consumption of coffee may reduce the risk for cognitive decline, dementia, and AD. In one study, coffee was associated with a 65% risk reduction for late life dementia and AD among those consuming 3-5c/day of coffee or tea during their middle life relative to non-drinkers. Caffeine in coffee has been implicated as the active component associated with risk reduction of cognitive decline and dementia among coffee drinkers, particularly among women. However, coffee also contains a variety of other bioavailable and potentially therapeutic phytochemicals. This chapter briefly reviews Alzheimer’s disease and then discusses the evidence for coffee’s (and the components of coffee) neuroprotective effects in both cellular and animal models of Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, and age-related cognitive decline.
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Theme: Intimate Alvar Aalto was one of Finland's first Modernists. His unique architectural style is characterized by asymmetry, curved lines, and contrasting natural materials. His early works were flavored with a "heroic functionalism" that was based around the idea that a structure's use should determine its form Biomorphic, Clean, Intimate, Modernist architecture, Nordic sensibilities, Post-war scandinavian design, Round, Tranquil
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ID VenueMuseum of Catalonia Modernista Art Start Date19. marec 2010 End Date31. december 2015 NameMuseum of Catalan Modernista Art DescriptionBarcelona's first museum devoted exclusively to Modernisme opened on 19 March 2010. Containing works by leading Catalan artists, it is housed in a Modernista building at Carrer Balmes 48, designed by architect Enric Sagnier. The museum is the result of a private initiative by art collectors and gallery owners Fernando Pinós and Maria Guirao, who have assembled in an area of 1,000 square metres a total of 350 works in the fields of painting, sculpture and the decorative arts. The 42 artists represented include Gaudí, Busquets, Llimona, Arnau, Casas, Renart, Rusiñol, Gargallo and Anglada Camarassa. URLhttp://www.mmcat.ca
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The Ashmolean and the University of Oxford The Ashmolean is a University Museum and a Department of the University, which owns the collections and employs the museum staff. The Museum has very close links with the faculties, and the colleges, and museum staff undertake a great deal of University teaching and research. The Museum's Collections are also an important teaching and research resource for scholars and students from other institutions both in this country and abroad. Undergraduate degree courses at Oxford University involving museum staff and collections include bachelors degrees in Archaeology and Anthropology; Ancient and Modern History; Classical and Ancient History; Egyptology and Ancient Near Eastern Studies; Classics; History of Art; Fine Art; Arabic, Persian and Turkish; Islamic Art and Archaeology. In many casesdissertation topics for these degrees are based on Museum collections. Postgraduate courses using the Museum collections and staff include Masters degrees in European Archaeology; World Archaeology; Landscape Archaeology; Professional Archaeology; Greek and/or Roman History; Classical Archaeology; Byzantine Studies; Cuneiform Studies; Egyptology; History of Art; Islamic Art and Archaeology; Modern Chinese Art and Literature. Masters students often continue their studies in these areas basing doctoral theses on the museum collections, supervised by museum staff. In addition the Ashmolean hopes soon to offer elective courses to medical students (Ancient Medicine, Ways of Seeing and Observing), as well as providing a cultural resource independently of set courses. All undergraduates of Oxford and Oxford Brookes Universities receive an invitation to a special evening event in the museum in their first year. Ashmolean's Green Initiative
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Arts 'Coal + Ice' Exhibit Opens in Beijing BEIJING, September 24, 2011 — The documentary photography exhibition Coal + Ice opens at Three Shadows Photography Art Centre. Featuring the work of 30 photographers from China, the U.S., Canada, Malaysia, Russia, Hungary, Poland, Norway, Italy, Germany and the United Kingdom, Coal + Ice visually narrates the hidden chain of actions triggered by mankind’s use of coal. (2 min., 43 sec.). Visit the exhibition website. Read the New York Times article "Beijing Gallery Puts a Focus on Global Warming".
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b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Saul Jacob Rabino (1892 - 1969) Saul Jacob Rabino Lived/Active: California / Russian Federation Known for: Painter, sculptor, lithographer Login | Register View AskART Services *may require subscription Available for Saul Jacob Rabino:Quick facts (Styles, locations, mediums, teachers, subjects, geography, etc.) (Saul Rabino)yesBiographical information (Saul Rabino)yesBook references (Saul Rabino)1Discussion board entries (Saul Rabino)4 Please send me Alert Updates for Saul Jacob Rabino (free)What is an alert list?Ad Code: 4 Born in Odessa, Russia on July 8, 1892. Rabino (né Rabinovitz) studied at the Russian Imperial Art School and Ecole des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. After moving to Los Angeles in 1932, he became active in the local art scene. He died there of cirrhosis of the liver on Oct. 29, 1969. Exh: Laguna Beach AA; LA AA, 1937; NY World's Fair, 1939; Beverly-Fairfax Center, 1944; Eastside Community Center (LA), 1954; Temple Valley Beth Shalom (Encino), 1965. In: LA Public Library; Hebrew Sheltering Hom (showing 500 of 729 characters).
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Thanks! I've been trying to figure that out for months.
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Posted by mthoreau on February 2, 2009 at 1:31pm in Water Cooler In my experience. The main reason that scientific naturalism doesn't have the same kind of popular following that Christianity or Islam does, is because it isn't very appealing on an emotional level. Most people would rather be comfortable than aware. This is why I think that Pantheism has such potential. It doesn't advocate any kind of supernatural realm or soul, and it provides all the solace and richness of religion. I am still learning about Pantheism, but its reverence for nature and respect for what is real resonate with me. I know that it might sound a little religious when it talks about "god". But God as is defined by a Pantheist simply refers to the laws of the universe and material reality. What does A/N know about Pantheism. Any thoughts? Tags: Permalink Reply by BB on February 2, 2009 at 2:56pm I have a few questions that may need to be addressed. How is "pantheism" practiced, and what impact does it have on the way people think? If people actually sit down and think it out to the end, what is the difference between pantheism and scientific naturalism? What impact will this have on peoples lives? What happens to the concept of "god" (remember, a-theist nexus)? Pantheism and atheism do not go hand in hand. Pantheism (all is god or god is all) confuses the issue. Is there a god? Is the Universe god? Is God the universe? What do those questions even mean? They don't mean anything... not when you get down to the level where we move from concepts to practical application. How does it provide solace in a way that naturalism doesn't? Carl Sagan said, "We are made of star stuff". How is that any less consoling than some vague idea that the universe is god? There is a form of pantheism called Naturalistic Pantheism (check out the World Pantheist Movement and the Universal Pantheist Society), but it doesn't strike a chord with me. Are we out there trying to get people comfortable, or are we hoping to get people to think things through, ask questions and come to their own conclusions without adherence to doctrine and dogma? What does pantheism REALLY bring to the table that we don't already have within naturalism. Are we playing semantics games by calling it something different? I am not trying to be combative, I am honestly curious. I have never really had any experience with pantheism or people that hold to a pantheistic view of the universe. What about pantheism is more appealing? Does it answer questions naturalism does not? Can you describe what it means, how it works, etc.? Permalink Reply by LeaT on February 3, 2009 at 12:02pm For me anyway, what I would find appealing in pantheism is the lack of scripture in dogma, and of course, that there is no idea of having a personal relationship with a skydaddy! I don't like the fact that pantheism necessarily ascribes this universal force a sentience. Why does it have to be sentient? I think we need to reform the ideas of pantheism. Right now I don't find the current forms of pantheism very satisfying. Permalink Reply by mthoreau on February 2, 2009 at 7:51pm First of all, I did not intend to post this in the water cooler section, I made a mistake. Second. It is a semantics game. I could call an apple an orange, but that wouldn't change the properties of an apple one bit. Baruch Spinoza, the "original" pantheist did a lot of his work at a time when atheism and naturalistic conclusions about the universe were punishable by death or exile, and theism still held a great deal of intellectual respectability. Third. By all means, feel free to be combative, it makes for a lively debate. Basically, Pantheism (I know, the name sounds like it's some variation of poly-theism) is a different way of looking at the same set of data. I'm pretty sure that Carl Sagan was a Pantheist and it really doesn't deviate from naturalism in any way. It does however, take certain philosophical stances in regards to scientific data though, this is where things get a little more subjective. I would read Spinoza's Ethics, for a better description, but here is my understanding of it. Pantheism doesn't have any rituals or anything associated with it. Like naturalism, it isn't really something you "do" as it is something you believe. However, a lot of pantheist websites recomend meditation to relieve stress and focus you mind. It holds a deterministic view of the universe and concludes that mind is mearly a function of body. The "spiritual" part of it comes from its reverence for beauty and the vastness of the universe. A Pantheist would feel reverence for these things simply because of the way it makes him/her feel, and nothing more. To most people, Atheism represents a dull gray depressing universe in which nothing is worth anything. The Pantheism gives people an emotional outlet for their sense of wonder and a subject of veneration (the universe). Theoretically, Christian theology doesn't "do" anything either. But it definately guides the actions of those who adhear to it. The main difference between naturalism and pantheism is that when Pantheism states "All is One" it is intended to be interpreted as an impetus for selflessness. Permalink Reply by LeaT on February 3, 2009 at 12:05pm "A Pantheist would feel reverence for these things simply because of the way it makes him/her feel, and nothing more." And I don't get why you need a skydaddy for this, seriously. Can't you just enjoy the universe anyway just the way it is? It's just that simple. Btw, I made an interesting chart regarding the theistic variations. I might upload it here for you to see it too. http://img218.imageshack.us/img218/9196/theismfl2.jpg Permalink Reply by mthoreau on February 3, 2009 at 12:47pm Like I said, it's mostly a semantics game. But it presents its self in a very easy to swallow package for the intellectually lackluster. Permalink Reply by LeaT on February 3, 2009 at 1:55pm Aye, I guess, and quite a silly one to add. Maybe we should rather try to reform the idea of what pantheism truly means? Even on wikipedia it states that a sentience must be provided. I am aware this might take time, but such a change is imo worth fighting for (and I'd rather see a majority of people being pantheists than theists). Permalink Reply by BB on February 4, 2009 at 1:39pm I get what you are saying, and I have one major concern. If people come to the right conclusions for the wrong reasons, although they may be right, they won't be justified in their belief and can be easily swayed to change their minds (again). The right beliefs for the wrong reasons can be very dangerous. Look at someone like Kirk Cameron (Way of the Master, look at the Banana). He was an "atheist"... but it wasn't because he had actually thought things through. They aren't setting up a straw man, they ARE the straw man. The "converted", those that move from one idea to another, tend to be far more outspoken. When you try to make something easy to swallow for the intellectually lackluster, you get what you pay for. You get sheep. And when those sheep join a new flock, they leave with a passionate dislike for an idea they "left behind" (Tee, hee, kirk cameron pun). People who are happy and comfortable, but unable to tell you why they believe what they believe are far more likely to strike out at people that disagree with them. They are the ones that "find God" and then live their lives with an outspoken hatred for an idea they dropped for bad reasons. Yes, pantheism would make it easier for some people to accept the idea that there is no personal god. Some would dig deeper and find out more, strengthening the intellectual foundations of their belief. My worry is for the others. The "intellectually lackluster". If they leave because there is more comfort to be found somewhere else (and the idea of a personal god can be VERY comforting), or if they find the banana to be proof of a personal gods existence, we not only lose someone, we create an outspoken enemy who will spout such nonsense constantly. They are loud and they are many. Why add to that? Permalink Reply by mthoreau on February 4, 2009 at 2:35pm Perhaps I am being a bit cynical, but I really don't think that the difference between Atheists and Theists is really a matter of intellect. First off, I'm not familiar with the Pantheist conception of a divine sentience and I'm skeptical of wikipedia's ability to provide an accurate portrayal of Pantheism when splitting rhetorical hairs. The intellectually lackluster (fundies) are going to have the same appeal that they have always had and no amount of reason or logic is going to diminish that. All we can do is make our case as marketable as possible, and hope that it sticks. I really don't see how an increase in Pantheism would increase the number of loud fundies in any way, and it sounds kind of like a slippery slope argument. Permalink Reply by BB on February 5, 2009 at 3:20pm It could be a slippery slope argument, and I had actually typed that at the end of the post, but removed it for one very important reason. It isn't a "this bad thing might happen" argument. It is an argument that points to a real pattern. It has been seen too many times before. We see so many former "atheists" being set up as spokesmen for the faith they have found (Lee Strobel, Kirk Cameron, Ann Rice, Francis Collins, etc.). You aren't being cynical. I am not saying that the main difference between atheists and theists is intellect. It would be stupid of me to say so. There are some VERY smart theists out there. There are also some very stupid atheists. We can get into studies showing an inverse correlation for levels of education/IQ and religiosity, but that won't remove the fact that intellect does not equal atheist. My approach is different, and I think that is where my problem with this idea comes from. The marketable idea rubs me the wrong way for one reason. I advocate logic, reason and critical thinking much more than I do "atheism". I have far more respect for someone who can tell me why they believe what they believe (even if I disagree), than I will for someone I agree with but who has arrived at their conclusion for bad reasons. I don't want to make the "atheist" message appealing. I want people to actually sit down and think for themselves. I want them to hold a position to the degree of certainty that the evidence allows. I want them to be open to new evidence. I don't mind if they disagree, as long as they know why and are willing to talk about it. I am not looking for people who believe what I believe, just people who think (and keep thinking). Appealing to the "intellectually lackluster" removes the safeguards of open discourse and an appeal to logic, discussion and debate. I think a marketable "case" is a good idea, but I don't feel comfortable marketing it to people that won't appreciate it. To use a biblical analogy, it's like tossing pearls before swine. You may be right, this may be an excellent idea (and it isn't one I would stand in the way of when I see it being done). I just have this hopeful fantasy of people talking, learning and exploring the world together, instead of accepting ideas because they are comfortable or easy to grasp (and therefore easy to give up when someone comes up with a question they can't answer). Permalink Reply by LeaT on February 5, 2009 at 5:03pm BB; I think many people agree with you and we would prefer it this way. In my personal experience though (and I think many yet again, will agree) some people REFUSE to think. What to do about it? The person who comes up with a good answer should get rewarded by the Nobel Prize, because I honestly have NO clue whatsoever. The very idea of not thinking is remote for me I cannot understand such a life of just accepting everything as it is, simply as I have always loved to probe. I do believe that's the major problem here. With that said, demanding everyone to think for themselves may seem as a far more idealistic view than at least wishing people to become pantheists and get rid of all stupid religious dogma. Permalink Reply by LeaT on February 5, 2009 at 7:27am Well, the problem is that some people like to probe, some people don't. That's how we are wired in our personalities; unfortunately it also seems a majority of the human population belongs to the latter category. Why, I cannot say, it's something which've bothered me for a very long time. I agree that you are presenting a form of slippery slope argument, because regardless of what ideas we present the people who do not like to think will never think regardless of what we say. There will always be fundies of various kinds as long certain people will have a habit of developing a fundemental mindset. My major issue here is that why should the idea of a personal god be more comforting than the idea that you are a part of a great and wonderful whole? Even if we account Judaism, Christianity and Islam as the same (for comparison), a majority of the world's population don't believe in a monotheistic religion and worship a personal god (it can be argued regarding Hinduism, but in some forms Hinduism is pantheistic). Yes, Islam, Judaism and Christianity are world religions, but they are not the only ones, and there are many various forms of world religions that don't support the idea of having a personal relationship with a monotheistic god. According to Wikipedia (this can be taken with a grain of salt), over 50% of the world's population alone worships pagan religions that adhere to any form of animistic or shamanistic thinking. What does that tell us about humans and our inclination to believe in a personal relationship with god? For me, it tells me that people can do without it just fine and there are better religions out there which can substitute this god in ways we cannot fully understand because our mindset is so limited because of all the monotheistic indoctrination. Permalink Reply by LeaT on February 3, 2009 at 1:56pm Oh I forgot to add, atheism can be replaced by animism.
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Numerology - "13" Still mystically related to the 12, is the more arcane 13. 13 is the 12 around 1. There are 12 Jurors and 1 Judge. 13 is the master with 12 disciples. 13 is the experiencer of the 12 signs of the zodiac. There are only 12 months in the Gregorian sun calendar but there are 13 months in the lunar calendar. 13 (like 6) represents the moon and the female energy (5/12 = solar/male), the essence of which has long been silenced by the Illuminati and religious Sun/Son worship. This is why 13 is propagated in popular-culture as being an unlucky number. It is meant to be unlucky for you, not for the initiated elites who understand its mystical qualities. In the Old Testament, the number 13 takes on the connotation of revolution and rebellion. Genesis 14-4 reads, “Twelve years they served Chedorlaomer, and the thirteenth year they rebelled.” "Hence every occurrence of the number thirteen, and likewise of every multiple of it, stamps that with which it stands in connection with rebellion, apostasy, defection, corruption, disintegration, revolution, or some kindred idea." -E.W. Bullinger, “Number in Scripture” (205). Alexander the Great ruled for 13 years and bought his horse Bucephalas for 13 gold coins (then he died at 33). During the Salem witch trials of 1692, 13 women were executed. When the colonies were being set-up, (New) York Rite Freemasonry had 13 degrees. The original American flag had 13 stars and 13 stripes for the original 13 colonies. Mason Pierre L’Enfant designed a 13 street pentagram in the middle of Washington D.C. The D.C. Freemason Temple of Understanding is located 13 blocks north of the White House, directly in line with the Washington Monument In 1913 the criminal Federal Reserve was founded; it is composed of 12 regional banks dominated by the New York Federal Reserve Bank. In 1933 they began printing bills with Illuminati pyramids and Bohemian Grove owls on them. Those bills also encode the number 13 repeatedly. There are 13 stars above the eagles head, 13 steps on the Pyramid, 13 letters in Annuit Coeptis, and 13 letters in E Pluribus Unim. There are 13 vertical bars on the shield, 13 horizontal stripes at the top of the shield, 13 leaves on the olive branch, 13 fruits, and 13 numbers. In the Department of Treasury seal on the front, there is a Free Masonic square, like the compass/square on the Masonic seal and if you get a magnifying glass, you’ll see there are 13 holes in the square. Small wonder Bankruptcy is Chapter 13. "Since the date, 1776, is placed on the bottom course of the pyramid [on the Great Seal of the U.S.], and since the number 13 has been so important in the history of the United States and in the symbols of the seal, it is not unreasonable to suppose that the 13 courses of the pyramid may represent 13 time-periods of 13 years each.” -Paul Foster Case, “The Great Seal of the United States” Since 1776 in Roman numerals is at the base of a 13-step pyramid on the dollar bill, one could interpret this as 13 cycles of 13 years (13x13 = 169). Certain researchers have convincingly shown how every 13 years from July 4th, 1776 to 1945 (169 years later) major steps forward in the Brotherhood “Great Work” have been taken. In 1776 America and the Illuminati were founded; in 1789 the Illuminati stirred the French Revolution, adopted the US constitution, and Great Seal; in 1802 Washington D.C. was incorporated into the States; and on it goes every 13 years up to 1945 when the New World Order’s United Nations formed, and 33rd president and 33rd degree Freemason Harry Truman ordered atomic genocide and brought the world into “the Nuclear age.” In fact this 13-time, 13-year cycle ended on July 4th, 1945 and it was exactly 33 days later on August 6th when B-29 bomber Enola Gay, on Mission No. 13, dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima (and another on Nagasaki 3 days later). In 1948 the Rockefeller Fund funded a new government building at 1313 east Sixtieth Street. In 1962 the “Cuban Missile Crisis” lasted 13 days, and 13 months later, to the day, JFK was assassinated 11/22/63 (11+22 = 33). He was shot in the exact same 3 spots as Mason Hiram Abiff, who, representing the persecution of the Templars on Friday the 13th, 1307, was struck in the back, the throat, and the head. The Apollo 13 spacecraft took off at 1:13 (13:13 military time) and suffered the explosion two days later on April 13, 1970. “Do you really think all of this is coincidence? What are the odds? So what are we really looking at? We have President George Bush Jr. who is 13th cousin of Britain's Queen Mother, and of her daughter Queen Elizabeth and is a 13th cousin once removed of the heir to the throne, Prince Charles. Officially becoming the 43rd President on December 13th of a nation, who had originally 13 colonies, who celebrates its independence day July 4 which is exactly 13 days after Summer Solstice on June 21. In this calculation, June 22 is counted as 'Day 1. Whom some consider this country to be the 13th tribe of Israel. Bush who rules from the White House which the cornerstone was laid by a Masonic Ritual on Saturday, October 13, 1792, when the Georgetown Lodge No. 9 of Maryland gathered for the ceremony, which is surrounded by 13 approximately straight lines of avenues which [mason] L'Enfant planned for the city which were symbolic of the [13] stripes of the national flag.” -Robert Howard, “George Bush Jr. and the Number 13” http://web.archive.org/web/20010925165917/hardtruth.topcities.com/george_bushjr_13.htm Fritz Springmeier, David Icke and others have documented there are 13 main Illuminati bloodlines. Fritz Springmeier, in his book “Bloodlines of the Illuminati” lists the 13 leading Illuminati families as: Astor, Bundy, Collings, Dupont, Freeman, Kennedy, Li, Onassis, Reynolds, Rockefeller, Rothschild, Russell and Van Duyn. Other researchers differ on which 13 families are atop the pyramid. Some say for example the Disney, Oppenheimer, Payseur, Warburg or Windsor families are top 13, but all researchers agree on families like the Rockefellers and Rothschilds. Using gematria, each letter of the alphabet encodes a number from 1-26, A = 1, B = 2 and so on. A word or anagram becomes numerologically significant when it can be mathematically manipulated into sacred numbers. For instance America Online is called AOL, A = 1, O = 15, and L = 12. These numbers can easily generate and thus resonate sacred 13 through simple means. 1+15-1-2 = 13 CBS (Columbian Broadcasting Systems) – 3, 2, 19 = 32-19 = 13 NBC (National Broadcasting Company) – 14, 2, 3 = 1+4x2+3 = 13 CNN (Cable News Network) – 3, 14, 14 = 3+1+4+1+4 = 13 TBN – 20, 2, 14 = 20-2-1-4 = 13 CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) – 3, 9, 1 = 3+9+1 = 13 DHS (Department of Homeland Security) – 4, 8, 19 = 4x8-19 = 13 FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) – 6, 2, 9 = 6-2+9 =13 FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) – 6, 5, 13, 1 = 6-5+13-1 = 13 EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) – 5, 16, 1 = 5+1+6+1 = 13 MI6 (Military Intelligence 6) – 13, 9, F = 1+3+9 = 13F (Freemasonry?) WHO (World Health Organization) – 23, 8, 15 = 2x3-8+15 = 13 NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) – 14, 1, 6, 20, 1 = 1x20+6+1-14 = 13 USA (United States of America) – 21, 19, 1 = 2x1+1+9+1 = 13 NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) – 14, 1, 20, 15 = 14-1-20-1-5 = Negative 13 NSA (National Security Agency) – 14, 19, 1 = 1+4-19+1 = Negative 13 “They’re the ones in the government. They’re the ones behind professional sports. The owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers is a Knight of Malta. The owner of the Detroit Lions is a Knight of Malta. All your top owners of these ball clubs, for the most part, are Knights of Malta, getting the people whooped up in this hoopla over games and sports, while they’re busy creating a tyranny. So, that was one of the things in the Protocols—that they would create ‘amusements’. Another one they used was Walt Disney, 33rd-degree Freemason - Disneyworld, Disneyland. Another one was Milton Hershey, with Hershey Park. They create all of these amusements and games and pastimes to get the people drunk with pleasure, while they’re busy overthrowing the Protestant form of government.” -Robert Howard, “13 and 33 The Freemason’s Signature” (http://www.whale.to/b/howard1.html) NFL (National Football League) – 14, 6, 12 = 12+6-4-1 = 13 NBA (National Basketball Association) – 14, 2, 1 = 14-2+1 = 13 NHL (National Hockey League) – 14, 8, 12 = 1x4+8-1+2 = 13 MLB (Major League Baseball) – 13, 12, 2 = 13x1+2-2 = 13 PGA (Professional Golfers Association) – 16, 7, 1 = 1x6+7x1 = 13 NASCAR (National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing) – 14, 1, 19, 3, 1, 18 = 14+1+19-18-3x1 = 13 These numerological equivalents may seem forced or too contrived to be consciously created, and it is possible that some of these 13s are coincidental, but highly implausible that they all are. The Brotherhood has shown time and again their obsession with these codes and numbers. Take 3 or 4 random letters and see if you can reduce them numerologically to 13. The numbers can only be manipulated a limited number of ways. “Many movies have the number 13 in the title. 13 Frightened Girls (1963), 13 East Street (1952), 13 Floors (1991), 13 West Street (1962), 13 Fighting Men (1960), 13 Ghosts (1960), 13 Lead Soldiers (1948), 13 Men and a Gun (1938), Apollo 13 (1995). We even have a rating for movies PG-13. In case you didn't know it, Hollywood is owned by the masons. Obvious isn't it. John Wayne was a mason. How many of us played cowboys and Indians? No one wanted to be the Indian. Indians got killed we all knew that. This was Hollywood's way of glorifying the mass murder of a race of people - Same way in Germany. The kids played Nazi SS and Jews. Every kid wanted to be a Nazi, never the Jew or Christian. Gene Rodenberry creator of Star Trek series was a mason. Even the name Vulcan was the name of a false Roman god. The communicator is a pyramid. By the way Star Trek was created to get us ready for a fake alien invasion to usher in the New World Order.” -Robert Howard, “13 and 33 The Freemason’s Signature” (http://www.whale.to/b/howard1.html) Buy The Atlantean Conspiracy Now Posted by Eric, where can I find that dvd you have pictured as your first graphic on this post?? And would you recommend it? Thanks,Brian Someone's put it up on YouTube. I haven't seen it yet either, watching now:13 Masonic Secrets any prediction for 11/11/11? All very interesting, but how about addressing the question of how we respond to evil from a place of love? As the great poet and activist Audre Lord said, "The Master's tools will never dismantle the Master's house." If we succumb to fear, hatred, and other forms of violence in the face of such information, we are poisoning ourselves--this only serves those who love power as we have known it for the past several thousand years. Good points. How do you suggest people can learn to respond to evil from a place of love? Eric,Thanks for the confirmations - my mind has been awakening to the truths about illuminati manipulation and control for a while now, and the power of 13 that's been kept from us. I suggest we usurp their own symbols of power and innundate them with love and the intention to create a harmonious and fair world. We should consider 2012 to be the year of awakening. Create (meditate & focus on)calm, love and compassion for 13 minutes on the thirteenth day of every month, and for as long as possible on 21-12. Create your own rituals or use the ones you believe already have power of their own to bring in a vibe that resonates with right thought and intent. This process could culminate in a world-wide mediation on 5-8-13, a date with powerful numerical energy. This is the first time I've put this thought out there, but I feel that this could work if enough people join in. What do you think? Cheers, Anet Sounds good to me Anet. Every minute people spend meditating is a minute longer they spend not killing each other, not watching TV, not consuming the world's resources, and doing other such destructive things. I never regret a minute of my day that I spend meditating and always feel better the longer I sit. Peace Id think 1/13/2013 would be more powerful? You know... Double 13s, the double 11s... goskinsgo great post except i bust out laughing at the oceans 13 reference since oceans 11 and 12 came first... and there were 11 people in the group that helped mr.ocean... maybe a more significant reference to the number 13 and its sacred symbology would be metatrons cube. 12 circles around 1 making other gemotric shapes including the pentagram seen on the great seal of the us dollar bill. Who is Arran Edmonstone? What Do Star Wars and Stefan Molyneux Have in Comm... The Numeric Language of Secret Societies Occult Symbolism Politely Policing the Political Policy Enforcers The Truth About Freemasonry The Masons are Trying to Co-opt Me Charlie Veitch and The Shill Police - Everything I...
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You no longer follow P. Giorgio OK You now follow P. Giorgio OK P. Giorgio Illinois | Member Since 2001 940 titles in library Evidence: An Alex Delaware Novel Jonathan Kellerman Narrated by John Rubinstein By Jonathan Kellerman In the half-built skeleton of a monstrously vulgar mansion in one of L.A.'s toniest neighborhoods, a watchman stumbles on the bodies of a young couple - murdered in flagrante and left in a gruesome postmortem embrace. Though he's cracked some of the city's worst slayings, veteran homicide cop Milo Sturgis is still shocked at the grisly sight: a twisted crime that only Milo's killer instincts - and psychologist Alex Delaware's keen insights - can hope to solve. P. Giorgio says: "Good book... but" Not the best Kellerman. While it has Milo and Alex together, there is so little personal interaction between both men and their significant others, that it is purely an evidence chase. Not enough of the guys' personalities and various problems and pecadillos as in others. It's good, especially if you know the history. For someone reading this series for the first time, this is not the one to start with. Seth Hubbard is a wealthy man dying of lung cancer. He trusts no one. Before he hangs himself from a sycamore tree, Hubbard leaves a new, handwritten, will. It is an act that drags his adult children, his black maid, and Jake into a conflict as riveting and dramatic as the murder trial that made Brigance one of Ford County's most notorious citizens, just three years earlier. The second will raises far more questions than it answers. Why would Hubbard leave nearly all of his fortune to his maid? Had chemotherapy and painkillers affected his ability to think clearly? Brock says: "Grisham at his best (again)" "Excellent, well researched and engaging." Not one complaint except an unanswered question... Who was Burt and what was the secret that Sylvester had promised to never reveal? Or did I miss it? Beyond that, it was a very, satisfying, educational and rich in character and setting. Very well worth reading. The Spoils of Poynton Narrated by Maureen O'Brien By Henry James Mrs Gereth is convinced that Fleda Vetch would make the perfect daughter-in-law. Only the dreamy, highly-strung young woman can genuinely appreciate, and perhaps eventually share, Mrs Gereth's passion for her 'things' - the antique treasures she has amassed at Poynton Park in the south of England. Owen Gereth, however, has inconveniently become engaged to the uncultured Mona Brigstock. "Outstanding" "A classic but longer than necessary" I read this for a class in Brit Lit. Simply because it's Henry James, it's not the worst of the bunch. It is rather long winded for the outcome. The psychological portraits seem apt. The legal stuff a tad unbelievable, but probably true. To me it all rests in one idea. Mrs. Gareth's son does not have the kind of adoration a son should have for his mother, so she is being ousted by the despicable woman he wants to marry. The woman Mrs.Gareth wants him to marry is too morally sound to do what must be done to displace the fiance, so much chaos ensues. The ending is troubling for an absence of explanation. I like a cliffhanger, but I feel there was not enough information in the characters to give me even a guess at the perpetrator of the final act. It's almost as if James threw up his hands in disgust at his characters and took action with his pen to free them from a final decision.Anyway, it's worth the credit; though it lacks humor, sustained tension and, except for a final action by Owen and a last page event, it also lacks surprise. Narrated by John McDonough Martin Arrowsmith is fascinated by science and medicine. As a boy, he immerses himself in Gray’s Anatomy. In medical school, he soaks up knowledge from his mentor, a renowned bacteriologist. But soon he is urged to focus on politics and promotions rather than his research. Even as Martin progresses from doctor to public health official and noted pathologist, he still yearns to devote his time to pure science. "Arrowsmith - The Classic Book, Not the Band" "Boring but readable" So this kid from the hinterlands decides to become a doctor. He goes through the trials and tribs of youth, early love, rejection. He hitches his academic wagon to the wrong stars on occasion. He finds the right woman who supports him and his quest for a medical degree and a position to work in science. He fails miserably more than once. He capitulates to corporate greed, the woman's parents, the expectations of society all before he wakes up --too late-- and has to start all over again.If this was a jab at the education of a medical professional, it seems weak today. The writing was strong, the characters well defined, their foibles and power well explored and delineated. Poor Martin Arrowsmith, however, was drawn without much spine, and less imagination than his costars. Not sure why this is a "classic" except for its year, and the fact that Sinclair Lewis also wrote Elmer Gantry, but it is an adequate portrait of early 20th century, pre-WWII America. There are some attacks at militarism, at corporate medical practices, at academia, etc., but it's not a diatribe and it is also not a deep read. I am taking on Elmer Gantry later, but I feel I've already seen into that book through Lewis' sweep of American immorality in this book. Elmer Gantry SHOULD be preachy; Arrowsmith was as well. "Adequate entry into the series." I think it is about average for the series. There is much repetition, seemingly filler. There is no real "suspense" to speak of, no twists or turns. These books are getting too soft, too nicey-nicey and not enough bad behavior. Mikey Haller is despicable, he lies, cheats and pretty much bends the law to his needs, which is not only not appealing, but a little ridiculous. Connelley gives the judges much better standards of behavior, *always* belittles the prosecutors and generally makes the women characters very likeable. I think he is being a little too PC, it feels contrived. His client is claiming innocence of the murder, which is Mickey's case in this book, but the client is not someone I would root for--not because he is into bad stuff but because he's a wuss and I couldn't have cared less if he died in jail. Of all the characters, I think I liked Sly Sr. the most. He was the most authentic, but even he caved to Mickey's brilliant wheeling and dealing. The plot to this one took some brain mapping. I don't know why, but I had a difficult time believing the tie-in between the (at least) three separate crimes. Like I said, no surprises, no tears of sadness or joy, no real threats to anyone -- twice Mickey ignores the judge's admonition to quit running her courtroom and doesn't get in trouble. Mickey spends a good deal of time pinpointing his main juror, but it didn't matter anyway... why plant that seed? Bad use of red herring. Anyway, I'm a fan of the series and of Connelley's past performances, so I am an eternal optimist. Maybe in the next installment he should kill off Mickey, so we don't expect more of a good thing that apparently is not forthcoming? I have run into this syndrome in the past, favored authors' series and characters growing stale. It could be a matter of boredom by the author who may have publishing contracts to fulfill. Lee Child may be approaching this milestone, Jonathan Kellerman has gotten close too. Even Preston & Child's Pendergast series is getting a little predictable -- except that they have strong stories and AXP Pendergast is generally very much alive on the page and remains as likeable as a rock star. It's kind of like knowing when to leave the party. I think it's time for Mickey Haller to pack up his boring self, his bad fathering, his womanizing, his self-pity and his tricky courtroom hijinks and drink himself to death. Narrated by Deaver Brown By Sherwood Anderson Winesburg, Ohio has the most memorable cast of characters in 20th-century fiction. Listeners will remember at least a few stories and their characters for the rest of their lives. Each of the 23 stories stands on its own. And each is also interwoven into the fabric of the book. "Hilariously bad" "Had to get a different version" The worst narrator in the world. Voice was bad, and there was an audible "click" like to a tape machine every several minutes... I am downloading another version, because I know the book is great... This should be removed from the list. The Yearling Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings By Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Young Jody lives with his ma and pa on a farm in backwoods Florida. Life is hard there: cutting wood, planting fields, hauling water from a distant sinkhole. It is dangerous: wolves and bears roam the night. It’s also lonely for a young boy. One spring day, Jody’s pa kills a deer for meat. When Jody sees her spotted fawn in the brush, he convinces his father they should bring the fawn home. Thus begins a year when deer and boy are never far from each other. But the day will come when Jody must make a terrible choice between his beloved pet and his family’s survival. "Gorgeous" Wonderful book, good story, some predictable elements, but the "twist" was unexpected. I expected a whole different reason for the "big decision." This was better. Warm, authentic and suitable for all ages, cultures and interests. Narrator very good. Recommended -- in fact, should be required reading for students of the human community. Tolerance, humor, survival, family, fathers and sons.... just great. Bel Canto Narrated by Anna Fields By Ann Patchett Somewhere in South America at the home of the country's vice president, a lavish birthday party is being held in honor of Mr. Hosokawa, a powerful Japanese businessman. Roxanne Coss, opera's most revered soprano, has mesmerized the guests with her singing. It is a perfect evening, until a band of terrorists breaks in, taking the entire party hostage. "Surprisingly engrossing" "Perfect except for the final pairing" Loved it on every level. Liked that there were no "hidden" messages, but outright connections and links to events and personal psychology of the hostages. Loved that so many characters could be so individually present and unique. Loved the "love" relationship of the two couples, adored the Russian's profession of adoration based on a (long) short story of the man's early years. Yes, these are archetypal characters.. we've seen them all before in one scenario or another, but the twists are subtle and sufficient enough to make it a page turner, though the pages turned gently, for it was a sweet book, a book of hope.Throughout the story, the narrator tells us things like "later he would think..." so that we knew certainly the future of that particular character. The suspense was in my own longing that the couples could be coupled after the takeover. Yet the tragedy and the glory of the situation grow from the impossibility of the situation. If the set was too comfortable, too well fed, housed in a mansion and not in a thatched roof hut in a forest, who cares? The story was about captivity, language, voice, independence and dependence. The Opera motif fit perfectly the drama of the setting, the largeness of the characters, and voice, voice was key here. A translator is not allowed to interpret or choose what is meant to be said, eventually the Traductor stepped out of his role. A terrorist is not supposed to waver; the generals eventually tired. Child terrorists should be obedient or they would be punished, this scruffy lot was hungry for the outside world and confined to the VP's mansion were things they would never have seen, heard or felt. It was about acceptance and letting go. Someone mentioned that the language came right of an MFA platter of perfect English. I agree, and that's what made it so readable. The sentences were almost invisible, unless you don't like your English well done. The language carried the story without intrusion and that is a trait of greatness.I have one complaint, and that complaint cost this the 4th star. The ending, a bit abrupt, was "unfair," regarding the terrorists, and it seemed rushed. But beyond that, what we learn in the Epilogue about the survivors broke the spell for me. I did not care at all for the way Roxanne and Gen ended up. It is too flimsy to say that because each lost the love of their individual lives (as formed in captivity), that they should assume the roles of the lost ones. Mr. Hosokawa and Carmen go down together by a single bullet.. ghastly and too melodramatic. Gen and Roxanne’s final pairing made no sense, and while I was ready to "sell" the book to anyone who would listen to me, it ruined the spell for me. Of course, Edith and Simon Thibault made sense together… Simon’s adoration of his wife was never questioned.Narrator Anna Fields was splendid... O Pioneers! Narrated by Barbara McCulloh By Willa Cather "Lifted and carried lightly by some one very strong" "Well intended, but a minor effort: 2.5*" Limited in scope, a "feel-good" story written in simple prose, with nothing of substance to support it. Rather stock characters, though some more interesting than others. Religious "lessons" in the actions/punishments of wayward people. Basically a Christian look at a hard life, about forgiveness, tolerance, and learning to be satisfied with what one has.If this was meant to contain any "feminist" threads, they were slim. Strong female protag who is successful in most of her endeavors, but waits till forever to marry. A few conflicts which could have proved interesting but didn't Narrator fine; story -- good for 10-12 year olds; older kids would find it dull and unrealistic. Lots of scenery, love of the land, etc. etc.Read The Yearling if you like books about making it in the rough, about rising to overcome adversity and about growing up to be a "good" human being.2.5 - 3*, because it is the first of a fairly good trilogy. My Antonia (the 3rd) is far better than this one; with more grit and real emotion, perhaps because by then Cather had matured as a writer. 0 of 0 people found this review helpful "May be the best one yet!" From the opening words to the final scene, the story was flawless. Not too many "silly" coincidences, but a few for good humor. Not too unlikely a scenario, but enough to make it riveting. I especially loved the first "escape" scenario -- a bit out there, but not for Reacher. As usual there is a good measure of but just enough philosophy, sociology, child psychology and scientific fact. The romancing was maybe a bit light, its power being in afterthoughts and not in present/action. Would have liked a bit more eroticism; seemed like a "task" to get done and over with the first time; the second time being described in retrospect, passively and without ardor. The plot: Loved, loved, loved the Claughtons, believable, funny and a little caricatured. Believable except for the 1 vs. 8 "honor among thieves" episode. My favorite parts were in Reacher's musings on Sam Dayton, the way phrases goaded him forward, and in his recountings of his childhood, the way phrases explained his particular kind of thinking.If there is a weak point, and this is probably only my problem, it is the ending. The end was good in that it tied up and explained everything. But the all-around forgiveness was hard to accept. I DID like the way Jack and Susan ended the book. Logical, predictable, and I wouldn't have had it any other way. God forbid there would be commitment.The book began and ended with Reacher as he is: affected but not altered by his recent episode and encounters. It was good to watch him "feel" for another person. His feelings went well beyond righting wrongs. It went to his core. If the Samantha Dayton story had worked out differently, we would have had a kinder, gentler Reacher, who might have begun building picket fences. Instead, I wait for the next one, and a year is entirely too long. By Cormac McCarthy Cormac McCarthy, best-selling author of National Book Award winner All the Pretty Horses, delivers his first new novel in seven years. Written in muscular prose, No Country for Old Men is a powerful tale of the West that moves at a blistering pace. "Great story!" "Exceptional, engrossing, frightening." This is one of the best books I have ever read in my life. It is riveting, it is complete, it is complex, it demands much from the reader; it requires re-reading of some sections. Every single character is "sympathetic." You like them all. You want each of them to achieve their goals.. the good guys and the bad guys. As the murder victims added up, I felt so sad, so sorry for them. The characters are so strong that I will never forget them. Throughout the book, I kept asking myself "whose story is this?" It comes clear late in the book. It is in parts 7 and 8 that the whole thing begins to stick together. Still, the end was a little disappointing. There is at least one "missing person," one unexplained death, and it is so much meditation on very "heavy" subjects. I think I wish McCarthy had put some of that spiritual searching earlier in the book; following so much action, it's a little bottom heavy with stream-of-consciousness, moralizing. The questions are all apt to the story; they provoke deep thought. There is very little but some politicizing ... some grandstanding by the author, but it was light and it did not feel like a "big statement."At any rate it is among my all time favorites, right up there with the Classics, the Russians and the Moderns. It is atypical of these post-modern times. The book is old- fashioned in that it tells a real story. It is new-fashioned in that it has a strange approach to dialect -- including phonetic punctuation. It does become comfortable quickly. There are point of view switches that are not always clear until well into each new section's opening paragraphs. Sometimes you don't know whose story we are in, and then you do know because each character is so distinguishable. Fabulous.
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> European Literature SAMPLE PLAY AUDIO SAMPLE http%3A%2F%2Fsamples.audible.com%2Fbk%2Freco%2F005471%2Fbk_reco_005471_sample.mp3+flashcontent0QPQZQ4TP6S97PNRAA9C0 The Metamorphosis and Other Stories Written by: Franz Kafka Narrated by: George Guidall Recorded Books 4.00 (30 ratings) In the bizarre world of Franz Kafka, salesmen turn into giant bugs, apes give lectures at college academies, and nightmares probe the mysteries of modern humanity’s unhappiness. More than any other modern writer in world literature, Kafka captures the loneliness and misery that fill the lives of 20th-century humanity. A land-surveyor, known only as K., arrives at a small village permanently covered in snow and dominated by a castle to which access seems permanently denied. K.'s attempts to discover why he has been called constantly run up against the peasant villagers, who are in thrall to the absurd bureaucracy that keeps the castle shut, and the rigid hierarchy of power among the self-serving bureaucrats themselves. "A masculine and coquettish reading" The Best of Franz Kafka's Short Stories Narrated By Lotte Lenya Lotte Lenya reads "Up In The Gallery", "The Cares of a Family Man", "The Bucket Rider", "A Hunger Artist", and "A Fratricide." Camilo says: "Grandiloquent" By Franz Kafka, Mike Mitchell (translator) One of the great works of the 20th century, Kafka's The Trial has been read as a study of political power, a pessimistic religious parable, or a crime novel where the accused man is himself the problem. In it, a man wakes up one morning to find himself under arrest for an offence which is never explained. Faced with this ambiguous but threatening situation, Josef K. gradually succumbs to its psychological pressure. "Not happy with this story" If Max Brod had obeyed Franz Kafka's dying request, Kafka's unpublished manuscripts would have been burned, unread. Fortunately, Brod ignored his friend's wishes and published The Trial, which became the author's most famous work. Now Kafka's enigmatic novel regains its humor and stylistic elegance in a new translation based on the restored original manuscript. Snorre says: Kafka in 90 Minutes A handsome recluse, plagued by indecision and hypochondria, Franz Kafka nonetheless exhibited an extraordinary strength. He developed the uncanny ability to observe himself with cool objectivity, and he cultivated this ability in his writing, where it appeared in increasingly original metaphorical form. His works became among the greatest of the twentieth century, and his influence permeated far and wide, transcending literature. Amerika: The Missing Person: A New Translation by Mark Harman Based on the Restored Text A Brilliant new translation of the great writer's least Kafkaesque novel, based on a German-language text that was produced by a team of international scholars and that is more faithful to Kafka's original manuscript than anything we have had before. With the same expert balance of precision and nuance that marked his translation of Kafka's The Castle, the award-winning translator Mark Harman now restores the humor and particularity of language to Amerika. "ha ha ha this is terrific" By Antoine-Francois Prevost d'Exiles Narrated By Walter Covell Manon is just about to enter a convent when she meets the young Chevalier des Grieux, a philosophy student. They flee to Paris together, where they live extravagantly off the money the Chevalier makes cheating at cards, until they are robbed of their possessions. Manon becomes mistress to a wealthy nobleman, and she and the Chevalier steal his money. They are captured and sent to a penal colony in Louisiana. By Albert Camus Albert Camus' The Stranger is one of the most widely read novels in the world, with millions of copies sold. It stands as perhaps the greatest existentialist tale ever conceived, and is certainly one of the most important and influential books ever produced. Now, for the first time, this revered masterpiece is available as an unabridged audio production. S. Allen says: "Classic book, excellent audiobook" Phenomenology of Spirit By G. W. F. Hegel, A. V. Miller (translator), J. N. Findlay Narrated By David DeVries Perhaps one of the most revolutionary works of philosophy ever presented, The Phenomenology of Spirit is Hegel's 1807 work that is in numerous ways extraordinary. A myriad of topics are discussed, and explained in such a harmoniously complex way that the method has been termed Hegelian dialectic. Ultimately, the work as a whole is a remarkable study of the mind's growth from its direct awareness to scientific philosophy, proving to be a difficult yet highly influential and enduring work. Jaded Buddha says: "I've got some good news and some bad news" Collected Fictions HIGHLIGHTS (5 hrs and 17 mins) By Jorge Luis Borges, Andrew Hurley (translator) From his 1935 debut with "The Universal History of Iniquity", through his immensely influential collections Ficciones and The Aleph, these enigmatic, elaborate, imaginative inventions display Borges' talent for turning fiction on its head by playing with form and genre and toying with language. "Highlights of Collected Fictions = Uncollected" On his deathbed, Franz Kafka asked that all his unpublished manuscripts be burned. Fortunately, his request was ignored, allowing such works as The Trial to earn recognition among the literary masterpieces of the 20th century. This brilliant new translation of The Castle captures comedic elements and visual imagery that earlier interpretations missed. "Obscure, enigmatic, and not for everyone" The Charterhouse of Parma By Henri Beyle Stendhal Narrated By Edoardo Ballerini In the coming-of-age story, we follow a young Italian nobleman, Fabrizio Valserra, Marchesino del Dongo, on many adventures, including his experiences at the Battle of Waterloo, and romantic intrigues. Grant says: "Amazing novel finally available on audio!" A Sentimental Education By Gustave Flaubert Narrated By Jonathan Fried Frederic Moreau is a law student returning home to Normandy from Paris when he first notices Mme. Arnoux, a slender, dark woman several years older than himself. It is the beginning of an infatuation that will last a lifetime. He befriends her husband, an influential businessman, and their paths cross and re-cross over the years. Through financial upheaval, political turmoil, and countless affairs, Mme. Arnoux remains the constant, unattainable love of Moreau's life. The Tremendous World I Have Inside My Head: Kafka: A Biographical Essay By Louis Begley Narrated By Dave Giorgio Kafkaesque: the very word evokes tortuous bureaucracy, crushing self-doubt, and an almost unbearable inadequacy in the face of higher powers. After Kafka, it can be said, literature was not the same. In the few novels and short stories he left behind, he distilled the horrors of the new age. Kafka's is the voice of the outsider - that is, the voice of each one of us, at once defined by its affiliations and completely, utterly alone. The Birth of Tragedy Out of the Spirit of Music By Friedrich Nietzsche Narrated By Duncan Steen One of Nietzsche’s earliest works, The Birth of Tragedy (1872) is a remarkable source of inspiration. It is here that the philosopher expresses his frustration with the contemporary world and urges man to embrace Dionysian energy once more. He refutes European culture since the time of Socrates, arguing that it is one-sidedly Apollonian and prevents man from living in optimistic harmony with the sufferings of life. The Will to Power: The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche Narrated By Professor Kathleen M. Higgins, Professor Robert C. Solomon Who was Friedrich Nietzsche? This lonely and chronically ill, yet passionate, daring, and complex man is perhaps the most mysterious and least understood of all contemporary philosophers. Why are his brilliant insights so relevant for today? How did he become the most misinterpreted and unfairly maligned intellectual figure of the last two centuries? "Engaging Course" By Hermann Hesse Narrated By Peter Weller Harry Haller is a sad and lonely figure, a reclusive intellectual for whom life holds no joy. He struggles to reconcile the wild primeval wolf and the rational man within himself without surrendering to the bourgeois values he despises. His life changes dramatically when he meets a woman who is his opposite, the carefree and elusive Hermine. "Save this Hesse novel for your midlife crisis." Narrated By Alex Jennings, Roy McMillan Continuing where Thus Spoke Zarathustra left off, Nietzsche's controversial work Beyond Good and Evil is one of the most influential philosophical texts of the 19th century and one of the most controversial works of ideology ever written. Attacking the notion of morality as nothing more than institutionalised weakness, Nietzsche criticises past philosophers for their unquestioning acceptance of moral precepts. Nietzsche tried to formulate what he called "the philosophy of the future". Diverse says: "Great Book, great Audio Narration" In the bizarre world of Franz Kafka, salesmen turn into giant bugs, apes give lectures at college academies, and nightmares probe the mysteries of modern humanity’s unhappiness. More than any other modern writer in world literature, Kafka captures the loneliness and misery that fill the lives of 20th-century humanity. The Metamorphosis and Other Stories reveals the author’s extraordinary talent in a variety of forms—prose poems, short stories, sketches, allegories, and novelettes—and showcases the straight–faced humor, startling psychological insight, and haunting imagination for which he is revered as a modern master. In this brilliant new translation, prize–winning translator Joachim Neugroschel preserves the delicate balance, rich timbre, and wondrous language of Kafka’s original works. In addition to "The Metamorphosis", this collection includes "Early Stories", "Contemplation", "The Judgement", "The Stoker", "In the Penal Colony", and "A Country Doctor". Public Domain (P)1995 Recorded Books, LLC Hidden Empire: The Saga of Seven Suns, Book 1 (Unabridged) The Gunslinger (Unabridged) The Golem and the Jinni "Excellent Translation, Excellent Narration!" Would you listen to The Metamorphosis and Other Stories again? Why? Of course! I return to this book again and again when other fiction is not satisfying. Kafka has such a unique voice and such a masterful ability to entrance the reader. Joachim Neugroschel's translation captures Kafka's dark humor (and ability to maintain the fictional dream) much better than the Muir's translations did. Any additional comments? "A Country Doctor" and "In the Penal Colony" are the best james g standing "kafka" What did you love best about The Metamorphosis and Other Stories? The reader was excellent. We really enjoyed the pre- lecture regarding the language and nationalism and judism. We recommend both the reader and the book. We also had never read or listened to the short stories, which were a bonus. gregor - he fought to maintain his human-ness. Have you listened to any of George Guidall’s other performances before? How does this one compare? Yes, oh yes. We pick books that are unknown and read by him based solely on his narration. He was excellent reading Kafka.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5689
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SAMPLE PLAY AUDIO SAMPLE http%3A%2F%2Fsamples.audible.com%2Fbk%2Ftant%2F000313%2Fbk_tant_000313_sample.mp3+flashcontent11R6RCA91K7FSK90C2A90 The God Delusion Written by: Richard Dawkins Narrated by: Richard Dawkins, Lalla Ward 4.20 (4172 ratings) Discover magazine recently called Richard Dawkins "Darwin's Rottweiler" for his fierce and effective defense of evolution. Prospect magazine voted him among the top three public intellectuals in the world (along with Umberto Eco and Noam Chomsky). Now Dawkins turns his considerable intellect on religion, denouncing its faulty logic and the suffering it causes. God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything Narrated By Christopher Hitchens In the tradition of Bertrand Russell's Why I Am Not a Christian and Sam Harris' recent best-seller, The End of Faith, Christopher Hitchens makes the ultimate case against religion. With a close and erudite reading of the major religious texts, he documents the ways in which religion is a man-made wish, a cause of dangerous sexual repression, and a distortion of our origins in the cosmos. ben capozzi says: "...Though Hitchens Is!" George Carlin Reads to You: An Audio Collection Including Grammy Winners 'Braindroppings' and 'Napalm & Silly Putty' By George Carlin Narrated By George Carlin If one George Carlin audio is funny, then two are funnier and three must be funniest, right? That's our thinking behind this new collection. t's a HighBridge library of laugh-out-loud, award-winning recordings featuring George himself performing many of his best bits. "Like a Cast of Thousands" The Story of Earth: The First 4.5 Billion Years, from Stardust to Living Planet By Robert M. Hazen Earth evolves. From first atom to molecule, mineral to magma, granite crust to single cell to verdant living landscape, ours is a planet constantly in flux. In this radical new approach to Earth’s biography, senior Carnegie Institution researcher and national best-selling author Robert M. Hazen reveals how the co-evolution of the geosphere and biosphere - of rocks and living matter - has shaped our planet into the only one of its kind in the Solar System, if not the entire cosmos. "Makes minerals interesting" The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives In this irreverent and illuminating audiobook, acclaimed writer and scientist Leonard Mlodinow shows us how randomness, chance, and probability reveal a tremendous amount about our daily lives, and how we misunderstand the significance of everything from a casual conversation to a major financial setback. As a result, successes and failures in life are often attributed to clear and obvious causes, when in actuality they are more profoundly influenced by chance. Joshua Kim says: "Very Very Smart" The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design The Blind Watchmaker, knowledgably narrated by author Richard Dawkins, is as prescient and timely a book as ever. The watchmaker belongs to the 18th-century theologian William Paley, who argued that just as a watch is too complicated and functional to have sprung into existence by accident, so too must all living things, with their far greater complexity, be purposefully designed. Charles Darwin's brilliant discovery challenged the creationist arguments; but only Richard Dawkins could have written this elegant riposte. "Challenging textbook more than an enjoyable listen" By Arthur C. Clarke Narrated By Eric Michael Summerer, Robert J. Sawyer The Overlords appeared suddenly over every city - intellectually, technologically, and militarily superior to humankind. Benevolent, they made few demands: unify earth, eliminate poverty, and end war. With little rebellion, humankind agreed, and a golden age began. "Food for Thought" Pearl Harbor: FDR Leads the Nation into War Franklin D. Roosevelt famously called December 7, 1941, "a date which will live in infamy." History would prove him correct; the events of that day - when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor - ended the Great Depression, changed the course of FDR's presidency, and swept America into World War II. In Pearl Harbor, acclaimed historian Steven M. Gillon provides a vivid, minute-by-minute account of Roosevelt's skillful leadership in the wake of the most devastating military assault in American history. FDR proved both decisive and deceptive, inspiring the nation.... William Milz says: "Great Summary of December 7th" By Sam Harris Narrated By Brian Emerson Here is an impassioned plea for reason in a world divided by faith. This important and timely work delivers a startling analysis of the clash of faith and reason in today's world. Harris offers a vivid historical tour of mankind's willingness to suspend reason in favor of religious beliefs, even when those beliefs are used to justify harmful behavior and sometimes heinous crimes. "Good book, bad narrator" The Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry Narrated By Jon Ronson The Psychopath Test is a fascinating journey through the minds of madness. Jon Ronson's exploration of a potential hoax being played on the world's top neurologists takes him, unexpectedly, into the heart of the madness industry. An influential psychologist who is convinced that many important CEOs and politicians are, in fact, psychopaths teaches Ronson how to spot these high-flying individuals by looking out for little telltale verbal and nonverbal clues. "Interesting but wandering" By Charles Portis Narrated By Donna Tartt Mattie Ross, a 14-year-old girl from Dardanelle, Arkansas, sets out to avenge her Daddy who was shot to death by a no-good outlaw. Mattie convinces one-eyed "Rooster" Cogburn, the meanest U.S. marshal in the land, to ride along with her. In True Grit, we have a true American classic, as young Mattie, as vital as she is innocent, outdickers and outmaneuvers the hard-bitten men of the trail in a legend that will last through the ages. Tommygaus says: "So worth it!" The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution The Greatest Show on Earth is a stunning counterattack on advocates of "Intelligent Design," explaining the evidence for evolution while exposing the absurdities of the creationist "argument". Dawkins sifts through rich layers of scientific evidence: from living examples of natural selection to clues in the fossil record; from natural clocks that mark the vast epochs wherein evolution ran its course to the intricacies of developing embryos; from plate tectonics to molecular genetics. "Well read, well explained, scientific." By Vikas Swarup Narrated By Christopher Simpson Vikas Swarup's spectacular debut novel, the inspiration for the award-winning film, opens in a jail cell in Mumbai, where Ram Mohammad Thomas is being held after correctly answering all 12 questions on India's biggest quiz show, Who Will Win a Billion? It is hard to believe that a poor orphan who has never gone to school could win such a contest. But through a series of exhilarating tales, Ram explains to his lawyer how episodes in his life gave him the answer to each question. J. Wigfall says: The Sociopath Next Door By Martha Stout Narrated By Shelly Frasier We are accustomed to think of sociopaths as violent criminals, but in The Sociopath Next Door, Harvard psychologist Martha Stout reveals that a shocking 4 percent of ordinary people, one in 25, has an often undetected mental disorder, the chief symptom of which is that that person possesses no conscience. He or she has no ability whatsoever to feel shame, guilt, or remorse. One in 25 everyday Americans, therefore, is secretly a sociopath. Taryn says: "Reinforces what you have already known" Animals Make Us Human By Temple Grandin Narrated By Andrea Gallo From renowned scientist and animal welfare advocate Temple Grandin, this groundbreaking book is a clarion call to awareness of the inner lives of humankind's far-too-often mistreated and neglected companions. Based on research spanning over 30 years, these stunning insights into the very real emotions and thoughts of animals are sure to be a source of fascination and inspiration. Debra says: "Interesting in general, but repetitive" The Tao of Pooh By Benjamin Hoff Author Benjamin Hoff shows that the philosophy of Winnie-the-Pooh is amazingly consistent with the principles of Taoism and demonstrates how you can use these principles in your daily life. Is there such thing as a Western Taoist? Benjamin Hoff says there is, and this Taoist's favorite food is honey. Gavin says: "Simply Pooh" At the Mountains of Madness [Blackstone Edition] By H. P. Lovecraft This Lovecraft classic is a must-have for every fan of classic terror. When a geologist leads an expedition to the Antarctic plateau, his aim is to find rock and plant specimens from deep within the continent. The barren landscape offers no evidence of any life form - until they stumble upon the ruins of a lost civilization. Strange fossils of creatures unknown to man lead the team deeper, where they find carved stones dating back millions of years. But it is their discovery of the terrifying city of the Old Ones that leads them to an encounter with an untold menace. Jeffrey says: "Not for everyone" To the Lighthouse is a landmark work of English fiction. Virginia Woolf explores perception and meaning in some of the most beautiful prose ever written, minutely detailing the characters thoughts and impressions. This unabridged version is read by Juliet Stevenson. Jefferson says: "A Stark Tower on a Bare Rock, or a Hanging Garden?" Narrated By Jordan Bridges "Forty-four percent of the American population is convinced that Jesus will return to judge the living and the dead sometime in the next 50 years," writes Sam Harris. "Imagine the consequences if any significant component of the U.S. government actually believed that the world was about to end and that its ending would be glorious. The fact that nearly half of the American population apparently believes this...should be considered a moral and intellectual emergency." Stanley says: "the examined life" The Charisma Myth: How Anyone Can Master the Art and Science of Personal Magnetism By Olivia Fox Cabane Narrated By Lisa Cordileione What if charisma could be taught? For the first time, science and technology have taken charisma apart, figured it out and turned it into an applied science: In controlled laboratory experiments, researchers could raise or lower people's level of charisma as if they were turning a dial. What you'll find here is practical magic: unique knowledge, drawn from a variety of sciences, revealing what charisma really is and how it works. You'll get both the insights and the techniques you need to apply this knowledge. The world will become your lab, and every person you meet, a chance to experiment. Chlo-bell says: "An excellent treatment of a fascinating topic." By John Scalzi Narrated By Wil Wheaton, John Scalzi In John Scalzi's re-imagining of H. Beam Piper's 1962 sci-fi classic Little Fuzzy, written with the full cooperation of the Piper Estate, Jack Holloway works alone for reasons he doesnt care to talk about. Hundreds of miles from ZaraCorps headquarters on planet, 178 light-years from the corporations headquarters on Earth, Jack is content as an independent contractor, prospecting and surveying at his own pace. As for his past, thats not up for discussion. Samuel Montgomery-Blinn says: "Short, sweet, and satisfying storytelling." God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater Eliot Rosewater, a drunk volunteer fireman and president of the fabulously rich Rosewater Foundation, is about to attempt a noble experiment with human nature, with a little help from writer Kilgore Trout. The result is Kurt Vonnegut's funniest satire, an etched-in-acid portrayal of the greed, hypocrisy, and follies of the flesh we are all heir to. "Please listen." Imperial Life in the Emerald City By Rajiv Chandrasekaran The Washington Post's former Baghdad bureau chief, Rajiv Chandrasekaran, takes us into the Green Zone, headquarters for the American occupation in Iraq. In this bubble separated from wartime realities, the task of reconstructing Iraq is in the hands of 20-somethings chosen for their Republican Party loyalty. They pursue irrelevant neoconservative solutions and pie-in-the-sky policies instead of rebuilding looted buildings and restoring electricity, angering the locals and fueling the insurgency. Rick Grant says: "A stunning work and performance" The Year of Magical Thinking By Joan Didion Narrated By Barbara Caruso "Life changes fast....You sit down to dinner and life as you know it ends." These were among the first words Joan Didion wrote in January 2004. Her daughter was lying unconscious in an intensive care unit, a victim of pneumonia and septic shock. Her husband, John Gregory Dunne, was dead. The night before New Year's Eve, while they were sitting down to dinner, he suffered a massive and fatal coronary. The two had lived and worked side by side for nearly 40 years. "Sharp, sometimes funny, but always clear & precise" Why You Should Download This Audiobook: Richard Dawkins invites you to imagine a world where New York's Twin Towers still stand, where Arabs and Israelis live in peace, where the Crusades—events directly responsible for the deaths of an estimated 1.2 million persons—never happened. In short, he invites you to imagine a world that would have been, and could be, without religion. That is not to say that he wishes to discard religion only because of its historical relationship to violence. This extensive, powerfully argued examination of why we believe, and the imperative of turning from Faith to Reason, has become an international best seller. It could change your life. Discover magazine recently called Richard Dawkins "Darwin's Rottweiler" for his fierce and effective defense of evolution. Prospect magazine voted him among the top three public intellectuals in the world (along with Umberto Eco and Noam Chomsky). Now Dawkins turns his considerable intellect on religion, denouncing its faulty logic and the suffering it causes. He critiques God in all his forms, from the sex-obsessed tyrant of the Old Testament to the more benign (but still illogical) Celestial Watchmaker favored by some Enlightenment thinkers. He eviscerates the major arguments for religion and demonstrates the supreme improbability of a supreme being. He shows how religion fuels war, foments bigotry, and abuses children, buttressing his points with historical and contemporary evidence. In so doing, he makes a compelling case that belief in God is not just irrational, but potentially deadly. Dawkins has fashioned an impassioned, rigorous rebuttal to religion, to be embraced by anyone who sputters at the inconsistencies and cruelties that riddle the Bible, bristles at the inanity of "intelligent design", or agonizes over fundamentalism in the Middle East or Middle America. ©2006 Richard Dawkins; (P)2006 Tantor Media, Inc. "Richard Dawkins is the leading soothsayer of our time....The God Delusion continues his thought-provoking tradition." (J. Craig Venter, decoder of the human genome) "The God Delusion is smart, compassionate, and true....If this book doesn't change the world, we're all screwed." (Penn & Teller) "The world needs...passionate rationalists....Richard Dawkins so stands out through the cutting intelligence of The God Delusion." (James D. Watson, co-discoverer of DNA, author of The Double Helix) The Blind Watchmaker (Unabridged) The Blind Watchmaker Rick Just If you've read much Dawkins, (The Blind Watchmaker, The Selfish Gene, Climbing Mount Improbable, and others) it will come as no surprise to you that he is no fan of religion. What is new in The God Delusion is that the evolutionary biologist goes beyond rational disagreement with those who believe, and argues that religion is dangerous and should be opposed on nearly every front. He recognizes that religion has been an important force in art and literature, but gives it credit for little else in the realm of good. Dawkins makes no distinction between radical evangelical Christianity, the Taliban and Jihadist Muslims. The worldview of each is equally intolerant of any other belief, and so ultimately equally dangerous. Dawkins spends about half the book examining historical and philosophical arguments for the existence of God. In doing so, he takes apart the reasoning of many men, noble and ignoble, most of whom are dead. In a historical review such of this, arguing with the dead is unavoidable. Dawkins spends a bit too much time arguing with the more recently dead Stephen Jay Gould, a fellow evolutionary biologist and sometimes nemesis, than is strictly necessary. One thing that particularly rankles Dawkins is the concept of children being born into a religion. They grow up, typically, thinking that their parents' religion is the one true faith. How lucky for them. Dawkins seethes at calling a four-year-old a Catholic or Muslim child. We do not call them a Democrat or a Republican based on their parents' convictions. They are allowed to make that choice for themselves when they mature. Religion should be a matter of choice, not indoctrination, according to Dawkins. Of all his contentions in this particularly contentious book, this may be the least likely to gain traction. Because religion in its multitude of forms is so widely practiced, Dawkins assertions will seem radical. They will not, however, seem irrational. More Less Madison, Alabama United States Old soldier. Gentleman farmer. Ex-northerner, I hate snow. Ubuntu user. Democrat, but only because the other party is marginally worse. "Wow, I can come out of the closet!" This book was a life-changing experience for me. I always knew I was not a believer, but I never could articulate what I was. I owe a debt of gratitude to Richard Dawkins for his rational, elegant, and passionate dissection of the intellectual fraud we call revealed religion. You could say that Dawkins gave me the courage to come out of the closet and put my HL Mencken quotes up on the wall for all to see. Perhaps the best thing about this book is the moral outrage it no doubt causes among believers, so many of whom probably haven't read (listened) to it. Once I started listening to this book, I could not stop until the last word was spoken. This is the only audiobook I've listened to twice. "Good book; basic arguments - some good some lame" My Atheist friends find this book much more convincing than I, as a believer. A good book, nonetheless, but many arguments presented are not strong enough. Would you be willing to try another book from Richard Dawkins? Why or why not? I probably would, but would prefer a condensed version of several of his books to this one. Have you listened to any of Richard Dawkins and Lalla Ward ’s other performances before? How does this one compare? Dawkins' performance was excellent, but Ward's came off as condescending and trying too hard to force opinion. Changing the tone of voice to make a statement come off as ridiculous may sway some, but not an intellectual looking for a solid argument. Could you see The God Delusion being made into a movie or a TV series? Who should the stars be? YouTube Mr. Deity (there is an even funnier cartoon series but I cannot remember the name) Bottom line - if you're already a non-believer then this book can give you some extra debating points. If you are already a believer this book doesn't have the solid evidence required, unless you are truly looking deep down for a reason to change.This book is the opposite of The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel, whose book, although the arguments are much better presented, doesn't contain the evidence required to make one believe. However, just as in Dawkins' book, if you deep down want to believe what the book is trying to sell you already, then the book may be all that is needed to convince you. Haltom City, TX, USA "A good read but it won't sway your mind." I've read a couple of Richard Dawkin's works: The Blind Watchmaker and The God Delusion. First of all, let me praise Mr. Dawkins, and Lalla Ward for a captivating reading of his work. They make a good oratory team, very pleasant listening. I was hoping for a bit more "meat" to chew on in God Delusion but to me, Richard simply sets up straw men then slays them magnificently. Like a skilled surgeon, he seeks out the most tumorous examples of mankind's failures in the name of religion then portrays them as an evil perpetrated by faith in God. I share his disgust for religion as we know it, having been corrupted by corrupt men, but that comparrison is just as useless as blaming a firearm for murdering someone. From a more positive perspective, Christians, especially church leaders and clergy, should read TGD, not so much for what it reveals about atheism but for what it reveals about how religion is perceived by non-believers. It is to their shame the message of The Cross is lost in the cacophony of religious infighting and corruption. A reasonable counterbalance to TGD is Ravi Zacharias' Can Man Live Without God?, a collection of speeches given by Mr. Zacharias. Ravi sets up his own straw men for battle and does an eloquent job of doing so. Of course, he's coming from the perspective of one who believes in an almighty Creator so he manages to raise questions that Mr. Dawkins didn't seem to think of. Where Dawkins attempts to appeal to logic, Ravi focuses more on the philosophical aspects of the state of mankind. My personal, and totally biased opinion, is that Zacharias gets a head start in the debate simply because he addresses the heart of man, rather than the mere mind of man. To those who are convinced in their positions, whether it be for or against God, neither of these orators will sway you from your stance. If you're genuinely on the fence, read both books. Athens, GA, United States "Must have book...in print" If you could sum up The God Delusion in three words, what would they be? Informative and justified What do you think the narrator could have done better? There was a lot of switching between female and male narrator which was annoyingly distractive. I could understand if it was a dialogue and it was necessary to switch between the narrators, but here it sounded as if you were reading bullet points with one bullet in red and the next in blue. No. This book is very factual and dry to be read in one sitting Don't get me wrong. I loved the book. It helped me clear up a lot of things about my own convictions. My criticism is aimed solely on the literary appeal of the book. The book constantly refers to statements or points that would be cleared up sometime in the future chapters so you just have to trust the author to clarify his statements later and take it now as is. Same thing happens often about past statements and with an audio book you cant go back and check what explanation the author had given or check cross-reference anything (given how unsynchronized the chapter number are on the app and on the audio itself). I think buying an audio book was a mistake and I plan to buy the print version. brenty "well worth your time" i am a christian, and i found this book to be brilliant (with the exception of the section on memes, which i found to be pedantic)... i believe that anyone -- religious or non-religious, young or old -- should read this book... whether you agree with the conclusions Dawkins draws, these are important questions that have bearing on all of humanity, and this is a very well considered, cohesive, and enjoyable treatise on matters of origin and existence... its a bit slow at times, but on the whole i cannot recommend this highly enough... La Grande, OR, USA "Every Word is Perfect" I am in agreement with many of the reviewers here who really appreciated this book. I just have a few additional comments: 1) The two-narrator format seemed odd to me at first until I realized it was like a two-person play. Then I really enjoyed listening to the narrators play off each other. 2) Richard Dawkins is a superb reader of his own work, which is not something you can say for everyone. 3) This book is NOT a rant, as others have said. We always accuse others of ranting when we cannot answer their arguments. 4) It is not absurd to say that raising a child to be religious is a kind of child abuse. Many people wonder about this, especially those in the particularly guilt-inducing varieties of religion. I've known many folks over the years who wonder what damage they may be doing to their kids. 5) Dawkins makes it clear at the beginning that he does not expect to win over true believers. He is instead giving people permission to be atheists. This is an important distinction and is based on his experience with readers and students over the years. I teach about human evolution and can verify that many people don't even realize they have a choice when it comes to the ways they think and live in the world. 6) Dawkins is right that so many people who are anti-evolution do not understand how it works. He is also right that really understanding evolution is a life-transforming, consciousness-raising experience. 7) This book is very witty and in some parts, downright funny. But it is also compassionate and nurturing in many ways. Highly recommended! More Less M. McClure Pelham, AL USA damack1 "Look reality in the eye" This is an engaging and enjoyable book that makes a strong case for abandoning the wishful thinking of religious belief and embracing reality to the best of our ability. I found it bracing and thought-provoking. The two-reader format was bit distracting. At first I thought the female voice (Lalla Ward) was reading only quoted passages, while Dawkins was reading the bulk of the text. However, it turns out that the readers change apparently at random intervals. Ward, though a clear reader, often took a somewhat disdainful tone that wasn't so apparent in Dawkins's voice. However, this is a minor niggle that did not detract much from my overall enjoyment of the book. Looking back on my own conversion to atheism and how difficult it was to abandon my religious upbringing, I hope this book will make the struggle easier for those who are just starting down that path. The book makes clear the fact that, by opening our eyes to reality, we see a universe much more awe-inspiring than what is allowed by religious mythology. More Less "The idea of religion" I am reading a lot of books about the negative effect of religion these days. I started out with no intention to read any of them, but first tackled Sam Harris’ The End of Faith because an online discussion was just too interesting not to participate. I found the Harris book an eye opener. The number one idea I took away from it was that it doesn’t make sense to exempt religious ideas from any sort of logical argument. Our culture tacitly agrees that anyone can believe anything they want and the result is often that once someone interjects a religious sentiment into the argument or discussion, the debaters silently slink off, whether they agree or not, on the theory that the person is “entitled to his belief”. Believe it or not it had not occurred to me that that practice was not exactly correct. It was tolerant and humane. Harris convinced me it was also dangerous. I think he also convinced me that religion was dangerous when it was “moderate”. Then I read Kevin Phillips’ American Theocracy which was notable primarily for the statistics on the numbers of Americans who believe literally in the Bible and the growth of fundamentalist believers and churches—at the expense of the mainline protestant denominations like the one I was raised in. In the interim I read several articles and speeches such as the one by Bill Moyers on why Christians in thrall to The Rapture don’t care about conservation because they expect the world to end soon anyway. (I see he’s even published a short book on the subject called Welcome to Doomsday). The God Delusion is my third read on this topic in less than a year, despite the fact that I would not say that religion is one of my priority topics. I must say that while my response to Dawkins’ book was a series of "buts", in all honesty I must stay that he had anticipated my responses and gave answers that satisfied me. Which is not the same thing as saying I loved the book. More Less "Accolades for" In "The God Delusion", Richard Dawkins is witty, poignant, and inspiring. I have listened to most of it in a very short amount of time because I have a hard time putting it down. If you're looking for proof that belief in a personal God is irrational or an explanation to why so many people believe in God, this book will do the job. Dawkins' book is thought provoking, eye opening, and enjoyable to listen to. I'd love to see more of his books (and books like it) on this site. It is now one of my favorites.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5690
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> Teens SAMPLE PLAY AUDIO SAMPLE http%3A%2F%2Fsamples.audible.com%2Fbk%2Fharp%2F002489%2Fbk_harp_002489_sample.mp3+flashcontent0N4SSF9DBRPQPQCVPT3D0 Divergent Written by: Veronica Roth Narrated by: Emma Galvin Length: 11 hrs and 11 mins Series: Divergent, Book 1 Harper Audio 4.30 (11363 ratings) In Beatrice Prior's dystopian Chicago, society is divided into five factions, each dedicated to the cultivation of a particular virtue - Candor (the honest), Abnegation (the selfless), Dauntless (the brave), Amity (the peaceful), and Erudite (the intelligent). On an appointed day of every year, all sixteen-year-olds must select the faction to which they will devote the rest of their lives. For Beatrice, the decision is between staying with her family and being who she really is - she can't have both. So she makes a choice that surprises everyone, including herself. Insurgent: Divergent, Book 2 Narrated By Emma Galvin One choice can transform you - or it can destroy you. But every choice has consequences, and as unrest surges in the factions all around her, Tris Prior must continue trying to save those she loves - and herself - while grappling with haunting questions of grief and forgiveness, identity and loyalty, politics and love. C. Mings says: "Oh, Tris....get over it!" Allegiant: Divergent Trilogy, Book 3 Narrated By Emma Galvin, Aaron Stanford What if your whole world was a lie? What if a single revelation - like a single choice - changed everything? What if love and loyalty made you do things you never expected? The explosive conclusion to Veronica Roth's #1 New York Times best-selling Divergent trilogy reveals the secrets of the dystopian world that has captivated millions of listeners in Divergent and Insurgent. Teddy says: "I hate it when this happens" The Transfer: A Divergent Story Narrated By Aaron Stanford Fans of the Divergent series by No. 1 New York Times best-selling author Veronica Roth will be thrilled by The Transfer , the first of four new short stories told from Four’s perspective. Each brief story explores the world of the Divergent series through the eyes of the mysterious but charismatic Tobias Eaton, revealing previously unknown facets of his personality, backstory and relationships. tammy says: "PLEASE! DO NOT WASTE YOUR MONEY!" By Markus Zusak It's just a small story really, about, among other things, a girl, some words, an accordionist, some fanatical Germans, a Jewish fist-fighter, and quite a lot of thievery. Set during World War II in Germany, Markus Zusak's groundbreaking new novel is the story of Liesel Meminger, a foster girl living outside of Munich. Liesel scratches out a meager existence for herself by stealing when she encounters something she can't resist: books. "Word Thief" Mockingjay: The Final Book of The Hunger Games By Suzanne Collins Narrated By Carolyn McCormick Against all odds, Katniss Everdeen has survived the Hunger Games twice. But now that she's made it out of the bloody arena live, she's still not safe. The Capitol is angry. The Capitol wants revenge.... Sue Schreiber says: "A very satisfying ending" By John Green Narrated By Kate Rudd Despite the tumor-shrinking medical miracle that has bought her a few years, Hazel has never been anything but terminal, her final chapter inscribed upon diagnosis. But when a gorgeous plot twist named Augustus Waters suddenly appears at Cancer Kid Support Group, Hazel’s story is about to be completely rewritten. Insightful, bold, irreverent, and raw, The Fault in Our Stars is award-winning-author John Green’s most ambitious and heartbreaking work yet, brilliantly exploring the funny, thrilling, and tragic business of being alive and in love. RaisinNut says: "A story about LIFE, not death..." It is a very rare thing to witness the beginning of a writer’s career and know without a doubt that the first little book is going to launch a worldwide craze, a la J.K. Rowling or Stephenie Meyer. Such is the terrifying yet enviable position of Veronica Roth, who sold this debut novel to a HarperCollins imprint before she even finished college. She also sold the film rights to Summit Entertainment, owner of the Twilight film saga, on the strength of pre-publication buzz alone. The first in a planned series, Divergent is beyond question the best thing to happen to young adult literature in a very long time. More realistic than Harry Potter and less moony-eyed than Twilight, Roth has crafted a world and a protagonist that are easily engrossing and definitely worthy of our long-term attention.Part of the credit for such charm belongs to narrator Emma Galvin, herself somewhat a newcomer. The young upstart has already garnered praise for her interpretations of Winter’s Bone, the first book spin-off from the Glee television series, and Stephenie Meyer’s recent novella. Galvin is genuinely edgy and emotive, not a trace of sugar to be found in the dialogue or her rendering of it. She captures the bold but conflicted spirit of the main character, Tris, with convincing personality and a real sensibility for the fast-pacing learning curve into which Tris launches the year she turns 16. After being raised in a clan whose primary characteristic is its devotion to selflessness, Tris defects, choosing a life of bravery from among the five factions that comprise her dystopic Chicago. She must pledge the faction, and go through several rounds of training eliminations before becoming a true Dauntless.Tris is a complex, down-to-earth character with a lot of soul searching to do — in a clan where hobbies include jumping from moving trains and tossing knives at small objects resting on the heads of friends, and there are no second chances. Veronica Roth has built a remarkable situation with strong potential for a longevity that will remain fresher than the sum of its parts, and Emma Galvin has this bull of a new series firmly by the horns. This book is confidently going places far beyond the fanatical mindlessness of young adult marketing, and in a hot minute, grownups will not have to feel one iota of shame for having fallen in love with it alongside their less discerning teenagers. —Megan Volpert In Beatrice Prior's dystopian Chicago, society is divided into five factions, each dedicated to the cultivation of a particular virtue - Candor (the honest), Abnegation (the selfless), Dauntless (the brave), Amity (the peaceful), and Erudite (the intelligent). On an appointed day of every year, all sixteen-year-olds must select the faction to which they will devote the rest of their lives. For Beatrice, the decision is between staying with her family and being who she really is - she can't have both. So she makes a choice that surprises everyone, including herself.During the highly competitive initiation that follows, Beatrice renames herself Tris and struggles to determine who her friends really are - and where, exactly, a romance with a sometimes fascinating, sometimes infuriating boy fits into the life she's chosen. But Tris also has a secret, one she's kept hidden from everyone because she's been warned it can mean death. And as she discovers a growing conflict that threatens to unravel her seemingly perfect society, she also learns that her secret might help her save those she loves.... or it might destroy her.Debut author Veronica Roth bursts onto the literary scene with the first book in the Divergent series - dystopian thrillers filled with electrifying decisions, heartbreaking betrayals, stunning consequences, and unexpected romance. ©2011 Veronica Roth (P)2011 HarperCollins Publishers "Though Galvin’s narration is concentrated on giving Tris the perfect voice, she never neglects the secondary characters. Poignant moments with Tris’s mother and Four, her leader and love, are subtly nuanced to let listeners hear the terror Tris often hides.... listeners will hold their breath waiting to see if she can survive the day." (AudioFile) (Unabridged) Allegiant NANTUCKET, MA, United States "It's not for me. Loved it anyway." Closet 50-year old-white-male fan here. The only reason I did not give it five stars is because there's a little too much teenage lip-meeting, hand-holding and waist-caressing going on for my taste. But the overall premise and storytelling is great. I devoured the second book right after I cruised through this one. Want. Third. Book. Now. More Less Cinnamon Brown "Emma Galvin is fantastic" My to-read pile is astronomically high. In fact, it takes up a whole bookshelf at home. Funny thing about accepting books for review, oftentimes your own books tend to get less priority. Now that I've taken to listen to audiobooks in my driving and walking time, however, I find that I'm actually able to get to some of the books I've heard so much about and experience them for myself. DIVERGENT by Veronica Roth was such a book.DIVERGENT popped to the top of my list after a friend finished reading The Host by Stephenie Meyer and was looking for another post-apocalyptic type dystopian. Everything we could find suggested trying DIVERGENT next. I thought the cover looked pretty (you know me) so I suggested it to my friend. A few days later she had finished DIVERGENT and the second in the trilogy Insurgent and just wouldn't stop raving about it. I sighed and traded an Audible credit in for the book mainly to get my friend off my case.Holy buckets! DIVERGENT is an excellent read/listen!Beatrice Prior has just turned 16 and as such will get to take part in the Choosing Day - the day that she chooses a faction to spend the rest of her life in. There are five factions (learning about them is half the fun of the first part of the book), each with their own guiding principles. Beatrice starts as Abnegation - a selfless faction who believe in viewing and doing for others before themselves. But, is Beatrice really Abnegation? Can she spend the rest of her life living selflessly, never thinking about herself, and always putting the needs of others first? DIVERGENT follows Beatrice as she struggles to make a decision, makes that decision, and then struggles through the consequences that her decision entails. While this is all happening, Beatrice learns that her perfect society may not be as perfect as it claims. Something dangerous is approaching and it seems to be tied to the Divergent.I'll have to admit, I came into DIVERGENT expecting a light read with some neat dystopian elements. I was surprised by how real Roth made the story. Beatrice's emotions are the real emotions I would expect from a girl in her situation, with her actions staying fairly true to the actions I would expect her to take. Just because this is a young adult novel doesn't mean that Roth spares us the pain and difficulties that come from living in parts of this society. She doesn't glaze over the terrors that some of the characters have to live through, instead putting them out in the open and letting us experience the world right along side Beatrice. This is probably the one thing I loved most about DIVERGENT. With some great action sequences, a fantastic storyline, and really good drama and tension, DIVERGENT is an excellent read for anyone looking to escape for a while. This won't be a walk in the park, but I can pretty much guarantee that once you've finished it, you'll be clamoring for the next book in the series. Katheryne Busy mom who loves to read but doesn't always have the time. I enjoy YA, Romance and the occasional Best Seller. "I loved this book! It's NOT the Hunger Games" I almost didn't get this book due to all the reviews that compared it to the Hunger Games. Thankfully I didn't think it was anything like HG. Yes it's a YA book about a Dystopian society with a female lead, but to me that's where the similarities end. Don't get me wrong, I loved the Hunger Games too but I didn't want to listen to another cheap rip-off. I thought the story was interesting, fast paced, unique, well written and thought provoking. I was also happy to learn it didn't involve another love triangle. (thank you Veronica Roth)I'm looking forward to the 2nd and 3rd book in this series. "Another great young adult book" I'm not sure what it says about me as a 32-year-old, but I have really enjoyed quite a few young adult books in the last few years. This is another one that's worth the read no matter what age you are. I always love to see a strong female lead and this book fits the bill. I've read a lot of dystopian books, but this one still manages to be unique. The book reminds me of the Hunger Games series in many ways, but the book is different enough that it's not derivative. If you read the Hunger Games and liked it, just go ahead and get this one, you'll almost certainly like it, too. I can't wait for future installments of the series to come out. Bronx, NY, United States "A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one." - Jojen Reed. #ADanceWithDragons "Very much enjoyed this!" While simply perusing the website I found this gem. I can see why there are so many positive reviews for this book because it was done exceptionally well if you’re into this genre. This book is simply a darker version of “The Hunger Games” if you ask me with a stronger female lead. The similarities between this book and “The Hunger Games” are startling I must say. The narrator did justice to the title itself and coupled with the story had you gripping the edge. There are some parts of this book that literally gets your mouth to drop and your eyes to widen. Also, when the action picks up, the action really picks up and the author creates such interesting imageries that left me quite impressed. This is just a fun listen if you ask me, with the right combination of poignant moments and fun, light moments.If you enjoyed "The Hunger Games" or books within that genre you will simply love this book... if you didn't enjoy "The Hunger Games" though, I suggest you pass on this on.OF NOTE: I listened to this book just AFTER I listened to “Einstein’s Relativity” (which I thought was just plain painful to listen to) so my review might be a bit skewered (positively) because the thought of that other book is fresh in my mind…. More Less "Need a Hunger Games fix?" What did you love best about Divergent? I'm a middle school teacher, and I chose this book because I had seen some of my students reading it. Soon I was gripped by all that Tris and her friends were going through, guessing some plot turns, surprised by others, but so involved that I had scarcely finished Divergent before I had to purchase the sequel (Insurgent). Like Hunger Games, it has a female protagonist who must prove herself as a fighter, who is wracked with strong emotions, who must cope with the changes that come because of love, and who is in the middle of a world ripe for revolution.I found Tris to be likeable, complex, and believable, and the situation her society is in more interesting than the one in Katniss' world because the evil is more insidious. It is easy to see why the enemy leader believes in a particular cause and why the various forces choose as they do. Sometimes, I grew a little weary of the problems that could have been easily solved if people had not kept secrets from one another, but the world Tris grew up in has trained her to accept the idea of dangerous secrets. I also found the way the different elements of society were leveraging power to be a compelling plot element. What other book might you compare Divergent to and why? I think anyone who liked Hunger Games should be all over this series as their next fix. However, I actually l liked this better than Hunger Games in many ways. There are more interesting characters, and the various elements of society are less black and white in their motivations and alliances. The puzzles Tris must solve is complex and so are her strategies for solving them.Although there is violence and some of it is very cruel, I found it less disturbing than some of the Hunger Games violence, which was often sadistic and bizarre. What about Emma Galvin’s performance did you like? I found her completely believable and engaging. Tris being a relatively small girl, she needed a voice with some child-like elements, but Galvin was also believable as Tris developed into a leader. I did not want to stop listening! The minute it was over, I bought the sequel. More Less Lake Dallas, TX Say something about yourself! "Couldn't Put It Down" This was an awesome book. I stayed up way too late listening to this book and plowed through quickly. There never seemed to be down time or slow moving part of the book. Many people compare it to The Hunger Games and I can understand why: Strong female lead, dystopian setting, a single forced choice that changes the life of main character, combat and quarrel. If you enjoyed the first book of The Hunger Games it is worth picking this book up.I have nothing but praise for the narrator, she did an excellent job and was a good choice for this novel. Chris - Audible Newark, NJ, United States I'm an Audible editor, and I think this quote sums it up: "A voice is such a deep, personal reflection of character." - Daniel Day-Lewis "Ender's Game meets The Hunger Games..." ...…but way better than both. This book was recommended to me by a fellow editor shortly after I finished The Hunger Games series, and I was skeptical. Could I deal with another YA dystopian fiction? Will this teen protagonist waver and worry and be as clueless as the last one? As it turns out, I COULD deal with it, and our heroine, Tris, is one that I’d prefer to have on my side when the government finally takes over.Apart from the obligatory love story (Yeah I know: it’s YA, I should have expected it), Divergent is a solid dystopian adventure story. There is a lot of action and violence, which keeps things interesting. Tris is generally a good person who sometimes lets her emotions take over, which strikes a good balance. My favorite thing about her is that when she sees a problem, she acts; she has a lot of courage, and she’s not afraid to put it on display. The world they inhabit (a divided, worn-down Chicago of the future) is very interesting and well-drawn, though a lot is left mysterious, which I'm sure is all set-up for the remaining books in the trilogy. The narrator is good, but she could have been a bit more dynamic in terms of voicing different characters. I thought this was a great first entry in the series, and I’m looking forward to starting the sequel soon. FanB14 Rockville, VA, United States Short, Simple, No Spoilers "Another Dystopian YA Entry" The world is divided into personality-type factions and at age 16, Triss must choose to stay in her family's sector, or venture on her own path. Action-centered drama unfolds with teen love story and fight to save the world. Not as good as the Hunger Games, but better than "Matched," by Condie.Narrator, Emma Galvin is fantastic. Sounds 16, has confident, strong voice and nice inflection with changing tone.In Comparison with other Dystopian YA Novels:Hunger Games: ADivergent: B- (action)Matched: C- (girly)The Giver: D (creepy) "Not for me..." This book wasn’t for you, but who do you think might enjoy it more? Someone who enjoys a plot and storyline involving a good deal of violence, anger and unpleasant subject matter...nothing genuinely uplifting here. What was most disappointing about Veronica Roth’s story? Overall story too depressing and very few redeeming qualities in the story and characters. What three words best describe Emma Galvin’s voice? Slightly raspy...definitely her narrating emphasized and heightened the negative, unpleasant and angry qualities of this story, the protagonist and many of the characters...so it was true to the nature of the story, I suppose. What reaction did this book spark in you? Anger, sadness, disappointment? Hopelessness, Irritation, etc Any additional comments? I continued and finished the entire audiobook hoping for more redeeming, hopeful elements to arise in the story. A few did occur, though I emphasize few. The idea and initial premise of the book sounded and was initially interesting, I just found the book to be a downer for the vast majority of the story. This book certainly appeals to quite a few people since there are many high scores in the reviews here...just not appealing to me. The story is demonstrating how this girl is finding herself and her place in a very disturbed world and I can see how the plot would capture and maintain the attention and fascination of many listeners...I simply prefer stories with more uplifting and positive qualities and messages. Unfortunately, I feel it was mostly a poor use of my time (and $) in listening...I kept hoping for it to improve and display more glimmers of hopefulness than actually occurred. Póvoa de Varzim, Portugal "Suprisingly good!" Young Adult books nowadays usually leave me with a longing for more Harry Potter :). Suprisingly this one didn't. I really enjoyed it, and I will wait for the second one with eager antecipation. It's good to know that there are new writters with potential out there! It's light enough for your readers, the story is well thought, and the characters, specially the main ones, are likeable and believable. If you're looking for some light fiction, this might be it. Miss Victoria Hicks "One of my favourite dystopian works." I love Divergent and have it in paperback, kindle e-book & Audible audiobook.The writing is well developed and the story gripping. The characters are very easy to identify with and you find yourself wanting to learn more about them.I know i am stating the obvious here but this is a Young Adult/Teen genre. It is light enough for the younger teens but deals with some very important social issues such as bullying, domestic violence, As many people have said there are similarities to The Hunger Games, such as segmented society within a city, but they are their own stories.Being the first part of a trilogy, this book sets the scene in this dystopian world and establishes the characters, political issues and power struggles from the outset.The reader/listener is kept guessing throughout the story with just enough revealed to fill in the gaps and solidify the story by the end, but leaves enough questions to keep you guessing and wanting more.This book is very well narrated by Emma Galvin, i think she would be suited to many other YA stories and if she had narrated the twilight audiobooks i would have bought them too.Highly recommended. "Potential that was never fulfulled" This book had such wonderful reviews that I dared hope for a brilliant new series. Not a chance! The characters remained flat and unconvincing. The challenges they faced were not real but in simulations and dreams and these unreal experiences fell flat and sounded fake. I don't understand why the Dauntless faction was considered the brave, if all they ever did to prove their bravery is jump on trains, get tattoos and go through simulations and imaginary challenges. All in all, even though the book had a couple of promising ideas, overall it sounded hollow and extremely disappointing. I will not be bothering with the second book of the series, despite the fact that many questions remained unanswered. Gavle, Sweden "Ends with the beginning" Well, I must start by telling you that I'm probably one of the few who has NOT yet read the Hunger Games trilogy (I'm working on it...) Even so, I understand that there is quite a few similarities. A young girl trying to figure out Who she is. In doing so, finding hidden strengths (both physical and mental) within her which is good since she needs all of them in the initiation process she's going thru. I listened to the novel vary well narrated by Emma Galvin and I listened as soon as I had a chance (in the car, walking the dog, cleaning the kitchen). It is well written, the characters are plausible and easy to like (or hate). The main character Beatrice, later Tris, is someone you want to get to know and learn more about. But, to me it seems that this, the first in a series of three, is very much an introduction to the rest. I don't know if I'm right, but there is something missing. There is a lot of questions you don't get answers to. Why has the society changed into this very rigid form? What has happened to the world? For me this lack of background made it difficult to understand and accept Tris'and the other initiates change and behaviour. Non the less it's a good read. Love, hate, good, evil, morality. I do hope to find some answers in the next book. I would have given it one more star if I've gotten some more answers from the start. The story ends with the beginning... 3 of 5 people found this review helpful V. Clouston Orkney, UK "Excellent listen" What did you like most about Divergent? Divergent is an original, clever story. Great characters and performed brilliantly by Emma Galvin. My favourite character is Four. An intriguing individual with a great backstory. What about Emma Galvin’s performance did you like? Emma Galvin does a great job reading this. She gives a very believable performance and is very easy to listen to. When Tris learns more about her mother's past and the dramatic climax ( no spoilers!). Wirral, United Kingdom "Stand aside here comes the DIVERGENT" Where does Divergent rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far? I have listened to better but listened to much much worse ... the fact taht the narrator is in a constant state of fear allertness terror means that you do not get a rest from this frantic drama. But She does a good job of making your heat thud. What other book might you compare Divergent to, and why? The Hunger games is the same type of book and this is a compliment. Tris is not the same she is harder and less confident than Catness however the story is edgier in my opinion. Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you? When Tris was saved from the other transfers by 4. 0 of 0 people found this review helpful D. M. E. Davies "Quite an enjoyable listen" I was looking forward to reading this, the initial blurb seemed good, but at the end I felt a little disappointed. There are lots of unanswered questions, but I know there are two sequels to come which I assume will tie up these questions. However, the lack of any information about the history of Chicago, and how this society came to be this way, means that questions are continually popping into my head - for example, who are Dauntless protecting their society against?Overall a good story, and reasonably well performed - Emma Galvin has a pleasing voice, though at times it was difficult to distinguish which of the characters were speaking initially. The characters were whole and rounded, Tris was brave and curious, Four moody and deep, and all the requisite baddies were in force. What is a little disappointing though is for the continual presence of strong similarities between this and books such as The Hunger Games and The Host. Maybe most stories set in a dystopian future will have similar themes, that echo over and over again, but I would have appreciated some original twists to distinguish one from another. Poole, United Kingdom "A great new writer to the fantasy pantheon" I welcome her to the list of fantasy and science fiction writer that I really like. Robin Hobb, Orson Scott Card, George R.R. Martin and Diana Wynne Jones to name a few. The story is told in first person and we are given the perception of the protaganist to the strange surreal environment she finds herself in. We are all brought up in the belief systems of our families and Tris is no exception to this. The five faction construct is obviously just that, a strange construct. I was worried that this would be another Hunger Games pseudo reality story, but I was very pleased it did not turn out like this. The world is very like a computer game with real players and not avatars. I look forward to Veronica Roth honing her craft and producing more wonderful stories in the future. David L. Davies Cheshire UK "Excellent story, but average performance" The story is imaginative and enthralling. A bit too much Mills and Boon at times but overall very good. Performance is not the best, difficult to distinguish between the different characters. Newry, United Kingdom "A have to listen to audiobook!" I haven't listened to many but it would rank about 3rd or so.. What was one of the most memorable moments of Divergent? SPOILER!! When she lets her blood drip onto the coal, the tension that is built up in that scene is amazing! Was good, used different tone of voice for different people. There many different parts where I smiled, laughed and have to admit cried! The book is written and spoken so well that you feel like you are with Tris on her journey, you experience what she experiences! That is one of the things I love about this book you feel involved! I read the book before I bought the audiobook, and suggest that you read the book as well as you remember alot more, its more exciting, I think to read it and its just a totally different experience altogether when you read the book!
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5691
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Home > Foundation > Evan Carrow Fund Avera Marshall Regional Medical Center 300 S. Bruce St. Marshall, MN 56258 507-532-9661 info@averamarshall.org Evan Carrow Fund Tribute to Evan Evan Daniel Carrow February 11, 1991 – September 9, 2008 Since he was a little boy, Evan Carrow’s parents referred to him as “our Evan from heaven.” “We always felt he was given to us from God and he was truly a special gift,” his parents Dan and Shannon said. Those closest to Evan saw him frequently reach out to help others, often trying to absorb their pain and troubles if that meant that they would be happy. Even at a young age, he could pick up on others’ emotions just by the way they carried themselves or their facial expressions. If they seemed unhappy he tried to do something for them to make them happy or just to see them smile. Evan wrote an extensive collection of poetry and short stories, often using his writings as a way to express his feelings. He also wrote for the high school paper, The Tiger Tracker, as part of journalism class. He was well-versed on current events and enjoyed following politics. A self-taught guitar player, The RoomBy Evan CarrowThe room is filled with darkness. I am the light. The room is old, cold and almost empty but I will fill it with radiance. There is a rotten wood chair directly in the center of the room. I wonder who has sat in it before me. The room is covered in old wallpaper that is very much torn. Below that, wooden trim separates the paper from the floor. The room was abandoned at one point in its life, but I am here to restore it. The light within me shall fill this room with eternal love. he loved music, especially rock and roll from the 1970s. He worked part-time at K-Mart and was named the first employee of the month at the Marshall store. He was kind, compassionate, sensitive, talented, intelligent and popular. Known for his smile, his quick wit and the way he touched others’ lives, he had just started his senior year at Marshall High School. Tragically, Evan took his own life on September 9, 2008. Evan’s absence has left his family and friends wondering what they can do to make a difference. “By raising awareness of teen depression and suicide maybe other families can be spared the pain we are feeling,” they said. “We want to tell people to notice changes in their child, student or friend. Know the signs of depression, take it seriously and get help.” The Carrow family established a fund in Evan’s honor through the Avera Marshall Foundation to raise awareness and understanding of teen depression. Dollars raised through this fund are used to assist in crisis intervention and education efforts in the community. The goal is for mental health professionals, clergy and educators to join together to develop ongoing, sustainable programs to educate youth, parents and the community about the risk factors associated with depression and suicide. “We’re looking for some purpose in what’s happened. We want people to know how quickly depression can lead to thoughts of suicide. Evan had so much potential, but he just forgot what he had,” his mom said. Latest statistics show that in Minnesota suicide is the second leading cause of death in those ages 15-34 years old. With the increasing pressures on young people today, statistically this number is on the rise. With your support, the Carrow family will find comfort in knowing that other families will be helped and may be spared the heartache of this tragic loss. Donate online to the Tribute to Evan Carrow Fund. Choose the Behavioral Health fund and designate your donation in memory of Evan Carrow. Or you can send a donation by mail to: Avera Marshall Foundation 300 S. Bruce StreetMarshall MN 56258 For more information, contact Marty Seifert or call 507-537-9145 or view Born to Be Alive. Where to Call if You Need Help If you or a family member or friend are experiencing depression and thoughts of suicide, please seek help. 24-hour Toll Free Crisis Lines: South Central Minnesota National Crisis Line 1-800-SUICIDE Western Mental Health Center Marshall, MN Avera Marshall Regional Medical CenterGeneral Information: (507) 532-9661 | Privacy Statement
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5692
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You are here: Home > Templates & Software > Templates > Dividers > Index Maker Dividers > Index Maker Easy Apply Dividers, 5 Tab, DOC file for Microsoft Word all versions Index Maker Easy Apply Dividers, 5 Tab, DOC file for Microsoft Word all versions Avery Blank Templates Customize clear labels for a professional appearance. Label all divider tabs at once with the Easy Apply label sheet. 11406, 11408, 11410, 11412, 11414, 11416, 11418, 11421, 11423, 11431, 11436, 11438, 11440, 11443, 11446, 11449, 11451, 11452, 11556, 11580, 11625, 11629, 11700, 11990, 11992, 11994, 11998, 12449, 12451, 12452, 16059
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JetBlue Airways Reports December Traffic Created: January 18, 2011 JetBlue Airways Reports December Traffic font-family:"Arial"; color:black... NEW YORK, Jan. 18, 2011 NEW YORK, Jan. 18, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- JetBlue Airways Corporation (Nasdaq: JBLU) reported its preliminary traffic results for December 2010. Traffic in December increased 3.7 percent from December 2009, on a capacity increase of 1.1 percent. Load factor for December 2010 was 82.1 percent, an increase of 2.1 points from December 2009. JetBlue's preliminary completion factor was 91.5 percent and its on-time (1) performance was 58.6 percent. "JetBlue's operating performance was adversely impacted by snowstorms in the Northeast during the last week of December, resulting in the cancellation of approximately 1,400 flights over a five-day period," said Dave Barger, JetBlue's CEO. "Due to high load factors over the peak holiday travel period, we were unable to re-accommodate many customers on other flights and recapture revenue. Despite these challenges, JetBlue's crewmembers did an excellent job of taking care of our customers." JetBlue's preliminary passenger revenue per available seat mile (PRASM) for the month of December increased three percent year over year and was primarily impacted by two items. The severe weather in the Northeast reduced JetBlue's passenger revenue by approximately $30 million, which is included in the December PRASM estimate, and reduced operating income for the fourth quarter by about $25 million. JetBlue previously disclosed that it expected to record approximately $15 million of non-cash revenue in December, related to the expiration of TrueBlue points resulting from the migration to a new customer loyalty program. Upon further review, and as discussed in JetBlue's Current Report on Form 8-K issued earlier today, $12 million of this TrueBlue revenue will now be recorded in the period from 2006 through 2009, during which the points expired. JetBlue now estimates that approximately $6 million in expired TrueBlue points will be included in December 2010 passenger revenue. Pending completion of its review, JetBlue has excluded the revenue impact of expiring TrueBlue points from the year over year December 2010 PRASM estimate. JETBLUE AIRWAYS TRAFFIC RESULTS Revenue passenger miles (000) Available seat miles (000) Load factor 2.1 pts. Revenue passengers Average stage length (0.5)% Y-T-D 2010 (1) The U.S. Department of Transportation considers on-time arrivals to be those domestic flights arriving within 14 minutes of schedule. New York-based JetBlue Airways has created a new airline category based on value, service and style. In 2010, the carrier ranked "Highest in Customer Satisfaction Among Low-Cost Carriers in North America" by J.D. Power and Associates, a customer satisfaction recognition received for the sixth year in a row. Known for its award-winning service and free TV as much as its low fares, JetBlue offers the most legroom in coach of any U.S. airline (based on average fleet-wide seat pitch) and super-spacious Even More Legroom seats. JetBlue is also America's first and only airline to offer its own Customer Bill of Rights, with meaningful and specific compensation for customers inconvenienced by service disruptions within JetBlue's control. Visit www.jetblue.com/promise for details. JetBlue serves 63 cities with 600 daily flights. The airline intends to serve Providenciales, Turks & Caicos Islands in February 2011 and Anchorage, Alaska in May 2011. With JetBlue, all seats are assigned, all fares are one-way, and an overnight stay is never required. For information or reservations call 1-800-JET-BLUE (1-800-538-2583), TTY/TDD 1-800-336-5530 or visit www.jetblue.com. This press release contains statements of a forward-looking nature which represent our management's beliefs and assumptions concerning future events. When used in this document and in documents incorporated herein by reference, the words "expects," "plans," "anticipates," "indicates," "believes," "forecast," "guidance," "outlook," "may," "will," "should," "seeks," "targets" and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions, and are based on information currently available to us. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements due to many factors, including, without limitation, our extremely competitive industry; volatility in financial and credit markets which could affect our ability to obtain debt and/or lease financing or to raise funds through debt or equity issuances; increases in fuel prices, maintenance costs and interest rates; our ability to implement our growth strategy, including the ability to operate reliably the EMBRAER 190 aircraft and our new terminal at JFK; our significant fixed obligations; our ability to attract and retain qualified personnel and maintain our culture as we grow; our reliance on high daily aircraft utilization; our dependence on the New York metropolitan market and the effect of increased congestion in this market; our reliance on automated systems and technology; our being subject to potential unionization; our reliance on a limited number of suppliers; changes in or additional government regulation; changes in our industry due to other airlines' financial condition; a continuance of the economic recessionary conditions in the U.S. or a further economic downturn leading to a continuing or accelerated decrease in demand for domestic and business air travel; and external geopolitical events and conditions. Further information concerning these and other factors is contained in JetBlue's Securities and Exchange Commission filings, including but not limited to, JetBlue's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2009 and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that may arise after the date of this release. SOURCE JetBlue Airways Corporation JetBlue Airways Reports July Traffic NEW YORK, Aug. 10 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- JetBlue Airways Corporation (Nasdaq: JBLU) reported its preliminary traffic results for July 2010. Traffic in July increased 8.3 percent from July 2009... JetBlue Announces First Quarter Results NEW YORK, April 28 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- JetBlue Airways Corporation (Nasdaq: JBLU) today reported its results for the first quarter 2010: -- Operating income for the quarter was... JetBlue Announces 9.3% Operating Margin; First Profit in the First Quarter Since 2005 NEW YORK , April 23 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- JetBlue Airways Corporation (Nasdaq: JBLU) today reported its results for the first quarter 2009: -- Operating income for the... JetBlue Unveils an Even More Rewarding TrueBlue Customer Loyalty Program NEW YORK, Aug. 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- JetBlue Airways (Nasdaq: JBLU) set out to bring humanity back to air travel when it launched service nearly a decade ago, and this fall the airline plans...
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Opinion: FAA Must Act On Rules For Small UASBy John LangfordSource: Aviation Week & Space TechnologyEmailPrintShare: text sizeAAAOctober 28, 2013 It is rare that industries come to Washington begging for more regulation. But that is how we in the unmanned systems business find ourselves with respect to small unmanned aerial systems (SUAS). A notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) has been on the shelf for years. We need to move forward before a serious accident occurs. The issue of how to safely integrate the myriad sizes and classes of UAS into the national airspace is complex. But it is clear that in at least one category, small UAS (under 55 lb.), we have a good idea how to start. The FAA convened a SUAS Aviation Rulemaking Committee, which had broad participation from many communities and completed its work in 2009. Many of us expected an expedited release of draft regulations. We are still waiting. These regulations would impact three distinct communities. First are hobbyists, whose interests are represented by the Academy of Model Aeronautics. Since 1936, the AMA has set voluntary safety standards for models under which hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts have flown millions of flight hours with an admirable safety record. The AMA takes the not unreasonable position that voluntary standards have worked so far, so modelers should be exempted from FAA regulations. They convinced Congress to include language to this effect in the FAA's 2012 reauthorization bill. The second category is the “do-it-yourself drone” community, which comes more from computer and robotics enthusiasts than traditional aeromodelers. Chris Anderson, a former editor at Wired, estimates there are thousands of do-it-yourself drones in operation. Unlike traditional models, which are either free-flight or controlled by radio within the pilot's line of sight, these computer-driven aircraft literally have minds of their own. The third category comprises aerospace and defense companies, which includes everything from the industrial giants to garage startups. Models fly under the FAA's Advisory Circular 91-57, issued in 1981. Everyone else needs either a special airworthiness certificate (experimental ticket), or a certificate of authorization (available only to public entities), or must fly in restricted airspace. The effect of this is that commercial UAS users—and by commercial, we basically mean anyone in the private sector who is being paid to do this—are prohibited from operating UAS in the National Airspace. This covers everything from aerial photography and surveying to news reporting to communications relay to cargo delivery. The effect is that professional aerospace companies—which arguably have the most to lose from lax standards, and who are mostly likely to have established safety procedures, to follow the rules and to carry good insurance—are being punished, while amateurs operating on the fringes are allowed to operate more or less with impunity. The public, of course, cannot tell the difference. This is a recipe for disaster. The current situation effectively encourages people to fly in quasi-legal activities, without uniform standards and with little or no enforcement. This is not the way aviation has achieved its enviable safety record. Furthermore, the absence of FAA rulemaking encourages others to fill the vacuum and preempt the FAA. Dozens of states are either considering or have already promulgated rules impacting SUAS—a morass that the FAA will have to untangle when it finally steps up to its leadership role. Many of us in the business find ourselves in the paradoxical situation: An airplane we operate in our day jobs is essentially illegal, but is perfectly fine if we head off to the local schoolyard as modelers and fly for fun. Activities should be judged on objective standards of safety, not on whether someone is being paid to do it. 12Next Page Comments On Articles ADVERTISEMENT Related Articles FAA Under The Gun To Issue SUAS Rule FAA Aims For Civil-UAS Airspace Framework By 2015 Europe Makes New Bid To Cooperate On UAS FAA Picks Operators For Six UAS Test Sites FAA UAS Test Sites Begin Search For Funding Premium news, data and analytics in an intergrated online tool (Subscription required).
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Phoenix police officer shot six times describes ordeal by Natalie Brand | Email | Follow: @NatalieBrand azfamily.com Bond set at $1M for man who allegedly shot Phoenix copadd to reading list Wounded Phoenix police officer out of surgery, suspect's identity releasedadd to reading list Arpaio using drug money to arm deputies with automatic weaponsadd to reading list Man accused of shooting cop refuses to show up for courtadd to reading list Man accused of shooting officer enters not guilty pleaadd to reading list MCSO to order semi-automatic assault rifles for deputiesadd to reading list PHOENIX -- Less than 48 hours after Phoenix police Officer Peter "Chris" Bennett was shot six times in the line of duty, he was walking and talking about what saved him Sunday night. "I think one of the best things I heard in the academy was if someone shoots you, you’re already dead," Bennett said. "It’s what you do from that point that decides whether you live or not." Bennett credits his training and mental preparation for how he reacted in the moments after the shooting. The four-year veteran was by himself when he tried to stop a suspect later identified as Brandon McCabe. Investigators say the suspect tried to run but fell to the ground, then pulled out a gun and opened fire. Three bullets hit the officer’s vest, another went through his hip area and remains lodged in his back, a fifth bullet grazed his arm, and a sixth bullet went through his jaw. "When I sustained the facial gunshot wound, my first thought was the end," Bennett said. "I truly believed I may have died at that point." Bennett said he immediately thought of his family, which includes two young children. He managed to radio for help and gave responding officers a detailed suspect description. ".. If this person was willing to do this to me, he was willing to do it to someone else," Bennett said. Police say the suspect, who was also injured when Bennett returned fire, will eventually face charges of attempted murder of a police officer, as well as a weapons violation. The suspect, Brandon McCabe, has a criminal history and served time for burglary and trafficking in stolen property. He should not have had a gun in the first place, according to police. Bennett was not allowed to talk details about the case during Tuesday’s news conference at St. Joseph’s Trauma Center. However, he did share the most important lesson he learned from the traumatic ordeal. "No matter how hard a situation gets, you can get through it," Bennett said. The officer still has recovery ahead of him, but says he hopes to return to the force as soon as possible. "I actually feel pretty amazing, all things considered," he said. His attitude and healing has left colleagues and hospital staff in awe. "Someone was watching over him, a higher power, and that’s why he’s with us," said Dr. Raymond Shamos, the trauma surgeon who treated Bennett. Bennett thanked everyone involved in his treatment, his family, his colleagues and the public for their outpouring of support. However, he urged everyone to extend their prayers to Deputy Ruben Garcia with the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office, who was shot in the line of duty Monday night. "I hope all thoughts and prayers can go out to him, his family, all those who love him," Bennett said.
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As the name would suggest, Terra Nova is committed to breaking “new ground” in its development of incredibly lightweight tents, packs and other gear. Having gained a reputation for quality, reliability and technical expertise, Terra Nova aims to continually extend its horizons and outdoor product range to achieve its mission to be “Best in Class”.Backcountry Edge is proud to be an authorized Terra Nova dealer. Click here to visit the official Terra Nova website. (Note: you will be leaving Backcountry Edge.)
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Badmovies.org Forum | Other Topics | Off Topic Discussion | Weird News Stories | 4 Women Glue Cheating Man's Penis to Stomach... « previous next » Topic: 4 Women Glue Cheating Man's Penis to Stomach... (Read 2390 times) Re: 4 Women Glue Cheating Man's Penis to Stomach... « Reply #15 on: August 21, 2009, 05:47:01 PM » No, it's not an acceptable response. I just don't think he has any business complaining when his chickens come home to roost, so to speak. Mind you, with everything he has done, I admit calling him a hypocrite or unsportsmanlike would be kind of absurd. I just miss the days when the cops might have said, "serves you right" then given the ladies a warning and that would have been that, except for the retelling of the story among cops for years to come. Don't think I'm saying laws shouldn't be applied consistently. It was just nice in the days when the cop on the street had some leeway to decide the guy got what was coming to him. The charges are just petty retaliation at taxpayers' expense. « Last Edit: August 21, 2009, 10:45:19 PM by AndyC » I think he might have gotten off lightly...what iof they had stapled it? Logged Quote from: Jim H on August 21, 2009, 04:36:08 PMI don't really feel much sympathy for either side in this case.Isn't that a sign that it all worked out even in the end? Logged Quote from: ghouck on August 21, 2009, 09:55:54 PMQuote from: Jim H on August 21, 2009, 04:36:08 PMI don't really feel much sympathy for either side in this case.Isn't that a sign that it all worked out even in the end? Heh, guess so! Logged
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27/05/2012 - MLB Picks baseballhun Colorado vs. Cincinnati, 05/27/2012 13:10 Tampa Bay vs. Boston, 05/27/2012 13:35 San Diego vs. NY Mets, 05/27/2012 13:10 NY Mets -141 San Francisco vs. Miami, 05/27/2012 13:10 Chi Cubs vs. Pittsburgh, 05/27/2012 13:35 Over 10/-120 Detroit vs. Minnesota, 05/27/2012 14:10 Minnesota +1½/-160 Minnesota -101 Philadelphia vs. St. Louis, 05/27/2012 14:15 Cleveland vs. Chi White Sox, 05/27/2012 14:10 To see more of baseballhun's plays click here. GL with the card baseballhun Women are Angels. LA Angels vs. Seattle, 05/27/2012 16:10 LA Angels -147 NY Yankees vs. Oakland, 05/27/2012 16:05 Milwaukee vs. Arizona, 05/27/2012 16:10 Houston vs. LA Dodgers, 05/27/2012 16:10
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5699
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Tennessee vs. Tampa Bay, 08/17/2012 19:30 Buffalo vs. Minnesota, 08/17/2012 20:00 Buffalo +120 Detroit vs. Baltimore, 08/17/2012 20:00 Baltimore -140 Jacksonville vs. New Orleans, 08/17/2012 20:00 New Orleans -290 Miami vs. Carolina, 08/17/2012 20:00 Carolina -190 Oakland vs. Arizona, 08/17/2012 22:00 Baltimore vs. Detroit, 08/17/2012 19:05 Boston vs. NY Yankees, 08/17/2012 19:05 NY Mets vs. Washington, 08/17/2012 19:05 Texas vs. Toronto, 08/17/2012 19:07 Chi Cubs vs. Cincinnati, 08/17/2012 19:10 LA Dodgers vs. Atlanta, 08/17/2012 19:35 Arizona vs. Houston, 08/17/2012 20:05 Chi White Sox vs. Kansas City, 08/17/2012 20:10 Philadelphia vs. Milwaukee, 08/17/2012 20:10 Philadelphia +142 Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, 08/17/2012 20:15 St. Louis -162 Miami vs. Colorado, 08/17/2012 20:40 Cleveland vs. Oakland, 08/17/2012 22:05 Oakland -134 San Francisco vs. San Diego, 08/17/2012 22:05 Tampa Bay vs. LA Angels, 08/17/2012 22:05 Tampa Bay +139 Minnesota vs. Seattle, 08/17/2012 22:10 Seattle -130
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5700
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You Fix The Budget Posted By Jim On 11/16/2010 @ 12:47 pm In Government | 18 Comments Tweet [1]Email [2]A lot of the political rhetoric during the mid-term elections focused on reducing government spending and reducing the deficit (I found it a little hypocritical considering the average household credit card debt [3] was in the thousands of dollars). That likely prompted the New York Times to put together a little “game” in which you get to fix the budget [4]. Today, you’re in charge of the nation’s finances. Some of your options have more short-term savings and some have more long-term savings. When you have closed the budget gaps for both 2015 and 2030, you are done. Make your own plan, then share it online. You get a list of programs with estimated savings to the deficit (out to 2015 and 2030), and you’re charged with saving $418 billion by 2015 and $1,355 billion by 2030. The sources of those estimates come from a litany of organizations, many of which you’ve probably seen referred to in other articles, and I’m inclined to take their savings estimates at face value. By playing this game, you start to appreciate how difficult it is to cut the deficit (despite out easy it is to put “fiscal responsibility” on political “to do” list) especially after the reaction to the draft Bowles-Simpson Plan [5]. URL to article: http://www.bargaineering.com/articles/fix-budget.html URLs in this post:[1] Tweet: http://twitter.com/share[2] Email: mailto:?subject=http://www.bargaineering.com/articles/fix-budget.html[3] average household credit card debt: http://www.bargaineering.com/articles/what-is-the-average-household-credit-card-debt.html[4] you get to fix the budget: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinreview/deficits-graphic.html[5] Bowles-Simpson Plan: http://www.fiscalcommission.gov/sites/fiscalcommission.gov/files/documents/CoChair_Draft.pdf
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Proposed Roads to Freedom by Overview Bertrand Russell, 3rd Earl Russell (1872 - 1970) was a British philosopher, logician, mathematician, political activist and Nobel laureate. He led the British "revolt against idealism" in the early 1900s and is considered one of the founders of analytic philosophy along with his predecessor Gottlob Frege and his protégé Ludwig Wittgenstein. In this book, written in 1918, he offers his assessment of three competing streams in the thought of the political left: Marxian socialism, ...
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Pigalle Barneys New York
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5703
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> Hershey and Barry Callebaut build primary school in cocoa-growing region of Côte d’Ivoire Hershey and Barry Callebaut build primary school in cocoa-growing region of Côte d’Ivoire Barry Callebaut's image gallery Rural school will provide educational facilities and nutrition and health support for more than 150 children Cocoa farmers to receive training to raise family incomes ABOKRO, Côte d’Ivoire, Sept. 18, 2013 ― Addressing a critical community need in the western cocoa-growing region of Côte d’Ivoire, The Hershey Company (NYSE: HSY) and Barry Callebaut announced today the completion of a primary school, community and farmer training center. Located in the Abokro, Gabiadji, Bas-Sassandra region of Côte d’Ivoire, the school and community center will be fully operational for the 2013-14 school year. Approximately 150 primary-school-age children from 24 nearby hamlets and villages are enrolled in the new school. The project is a joint community partnership between Hershey and Barry Callebaut. The rural regions of Côte d’Ivoire suffer from a lack of modern primary school buildings and the new Abokro school will address a long-standing community development need. The Hershey Learn to Grow Abokro school includes three furnished classrooms equipped with solar-powered lighting fixtures, a solar-powered water well, an infirmary, a school canteen at which subsidized meals will be offered, as well as housing for professional teachers and medical staff. Barry Callebaut has previously constructed a medical facility in Goh and the company processes large volumes of cocoa at its nearby San Pedro facility. Hershey Learn to Grow The Hershey Learn to Grow initiative exemplifies Hershey’s commitment to serving communities in cocoa growing regions. It modernizes cocoa farming techniques, increases the yield of cocoa production, and thus improves the livelihoods of cocoa farmers and their families. Hershey Learn to Grow features farmer and community projects in Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana and Nigeria. In Côte d’Ivoire, the Hershey Learn to Grow program will focus on primary education through the Abokro school project, but will also include cocoa farmer training in partnership with Barry Callebaut’s Cocoa Horizons program. “This modern school will make primary education far more accessible for the children of Abokro who today face many challenges,” Mike Wege, Hershey’s Senior Vice President Chief Growth Officer. “Through this innovative project, children will receive a meal at midday, good medical care and instruction from professional teachers. Both our companies are committed to giving back to cocoa communities and the new Abokro school is a great example of what we can achieve together.” The Abokro primary school is a registered public school and its operation will be managed by the Ministry of Education. The infirmary will be staffed and operated by a professional health worker assigned by the Ministry of Health. Barry Callebaut's local subsidiary SACO will liaise, on behalf of Barry Callebaut and Hershey, with a school committee regarding future development activities. The school committee will be comprised of teachers and community members, including representatives of the Cooperative Agricole de Glibeadji (COOPAGLI). COOPAGLI, a cocoa-growing cooperative and beneficiary of the project, is a member of the Union des Cooperatives Agricoles (UCAS) in Côte d’Ivoire. The Cooperative consists of nearly 900 farmers, and is one of 20 co-ops in the UCAS union. The union has long been engaged in Barry Callebaut’s Quality Partner Program and projects to improve the income and livelihoods of cocoa farmers. “The Abokro project is the result of a unique collaboration between Hershey, Barry Callebaut and the farmers of COOPAGLY, and it illustrates our holistic approach in working with cocoa farming communities under the Cocoa Horizons framework,” said Paul De Petter, Vice President Cocoa Africa at Barry Callebaut. “The project integrates agricultural training, which gives farmers the knowledge to increase crops yields and income, and it provides access to education, water and basic healthcare, which improves the livelihoods of farmers and their families.” Focus on Community The Hershey Company has developed innovative sustainability programs in West Africa, including its mobile phone program CocoaLink, which will be launched in Côte d’Ivoire next month. These initiatives are part of Hershey’s 21st Century Cocoa Sustainability Strategy, a comprehensive plan to improve the livelihoods of cocoa farmers and communities dependent on cocoa. Through better agricultural practices, West African farmers will realize greater crop yields that will increase family income. Cocoa Horizons is Barry Callebaut’s global initiative to ensure sustainable cocoa production by working with farmers to enhance yields and quality, training the next generation of cocoa farmers, and improving access to clean water and basic healthcare for cocoa framers and their families. Both companies believe the development of these programs is essential for both the livelihoods of the cocoa farming community and their families as well as business growth. Barry Callebaut: With annual sales of about CHF 4.8 billion (EUR 4.0 billion / USD 5.2 billion) in fiscal year 2011/12, Zurich-based Barry Callebaut is the world’s leading manufacturer of high-quality cocoa and chocolate products – from sourcing and transforming cocoa beans to producing the finest chocolate, including chocolate fillings, decorations and compounds. Combined with the recently acquired cocoa ingredients business from Petra Foods, Barry Callebaut generates estimated annual sales of CHF 6 billion (EUR 4.9 billion / USD 6.4 billion), runs around 50 production facilities worldwide, sells its products in over 100 countries and employs a diverse and dedicated workforce of more than 8,000 people. Barry Callebaut serves the entire food industry, from industrial food manufacturers to artisanal and professional users of chocolate, such as chocolatiers, pastry chefs, bakers, hotels, restaurants or caterers. The two global brands catering to the specific needs of these customers are Callebaut® and Cacao Barry®. The Hershey Company (NYSE: HSY) is the largest producer of quality chocolate in North America and a global leader in chocolate and sugar confectionery. Headquartered in Hershey, Pa., The Hershey Company has operations throughout the world and approximately 14,000 employees. With revenues of more than $6.6 billion, Hershey offers confectionery products under more than 80 brand names, including such iconic brands as Hershey's, Reese's, Hershey's Kisses, Hershey's Bliss, Hershey's Special Dark, Kit Kat, Twizzlers, Jolly Rancher and Ice Breakers. The company is focused on growing its presence in key international markets such as China, Mexico and Brazil while continuing to build its competitive advantage in the United States and Canada. For more than 100 years, The Hershey Company has been a leader in making a positive difference in the communities where its employees live, work and do business. Corporate Social Responsibility is an integral part of the company’s global business strategy, which includes goals and priorities focused on fair and ethical business dealings, environmental stewardship, fostering a desirable workplace for employees, and positively impacting society and local communities. Milton Hershey School, established in 1909 by the company's founder and funded by a trust administered by Hershey Trust Company, provides a quality education, housing, and medical care at no cost to children in social and financial need. Students of Milton Hershey School are direct beneficiaries of The Hershey Company's success. Contact at Hershey Media Contacts: Jeff Beckman jbeckman@hersheys.com Contacts at Barry Callebaut Investor and financial analyst contact: Evelyn Nassar Head of Investor Relations evelyn_nassar@barry-callebaut.com Jens Rupp Head CSR Communications jens_rupp@barry-callebaut.com
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Barry UniversityIntercollegiate AthleticsSykora Named Women's Golf Head Coach Sykora Named Women's Golf Head Coach Sykora Named Women's Golf Head CoachPosted On : March 11, 2013ShareTweetShareShareSend to a FriendxShare via Email Copy meEmail addresses will be used for mail delivery only. The information about the page will apear after your message:Sykora Named Women's Golf Head Coach Buccaneers to play Thursday-Friday in Daytona Beach Shannon Sykora officially takes over as head coach of the women's golf program after serving in an acting head coach role since June. Photo by Joel AuerbachMIAMI SHORES, Fla. – Shannon Sykora was named head coach of Barry University women’s golf team Monday. Sykora previously held the title of acting head coach, serving in that capacity since last June.“I feel fortunate to be taking over the women’s golf program, and I look forward to building on our past success,” Sykora said. “I’m grateful to the university for giving me the opportunity to continue fostering success in the classroom and on the golf course.”Sykora spent the previous two seasons as the men’s and women’s golf teams’ assistant coach. Last year, he helped the Buccaneers women’s program to a fourth place finish at the NCAA Championships in Louisville. The men’s team finished tied for fifth after advancing to the quarterfinals of match play.Prior to arriving at Barry, Sykora was first assistant golf professional at Teton Pines Country Club in Jackson, Wyo. There, he was the lead junior instructor.Sykora played professionally for 12 years, competing in two PGA Tour tournaments. He made the cut at the B.C. Open in Endicott, N.Y. He won 11 tournaments on the North Atlantic Tour, and was named the 1998 NAT Player of the Year. He also was the leading money winner on the tour that season.The Buccaneers will compete Thursday and Friday in the Southwest Minnesota State Spring Invite at International Legends Course in Daytona Beach.
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Reference > Anatomy of the Human Body > XI. Splanchnology > 1. The Respiratory Apparatus NEXT CONTENTS · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD · ILLUSTRATIONS · SUBJECT INDEX Henry Gray (1821–1865). Anatomy of the Human Body. 1918. XI. Splanchnology UNDER this heading are included the respiratory, digestive, and urogenital organs, and the ductless glands. 1 1. The Respiratory Apparatus (Apparatus Respiratorius; Respiratory System)The respiratory apparatus consists of the larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs, and pleuræ. 2 into contact with one another and with the back of the epiglottis, and the entrance to the larynx assumes the form of a T-shaped cleft, the margins of the cleft adhere to one another and the laryngeal entrance is for a time occluded. The mesodermal wall of the tube becomes condensed to form the cartilages of the larynx and trachea. The arytenoid swellings are differentiated into the arytenoid and corniculate cartilages, and the folds joining them to the epiglottis form the aryepiglottic folds in which the cuneiform cartilages are developed as derivatives of the epiglottis. The thyroid cartilage appears as two lateral plates, each chondrified from two centers and united in the mid-ventral line by membrane in which an additional center of chondrification develops. The cricoid cartilage arises from two cartilaginous centers, which soon unite ventrally and gradually extend and ultimately fuse on the dorsal aspect of the tube. 3 J. Ernest Frazer 156 has made an important investigation on the development of the larynx and the following are his main conclusions: 4 The opening of the pulmonary diverticulum lies between the two fifth arch masses and behind a “central mass” in the middle line—the proximal end of the diverticulum is compressed between the fifth arch masses. The fifth arch is joined by the fourth to form a “lateral mass” on each side of the opening, and these “lateral masses” grow forward and overlap the central mass and so form a secondary transverse cavity, which is really a part of the cavity of the pharynx. The two parts of the cavity of the larynx are separated in the adult by a line drawn back along the vocal fold and then upward along the border of the arytenoid eminence to the interarytenoid notch. The arytenoid and cricoid are developed in the fifth arch mass. The thyroid is primarily a fourth arch derivative, and if it has a fifth arch element this is a later addition. The epiglottis is derived from the “central mass,” and has a third arch element in its oral and upper aspect; the arch value of the “central mass” is doubtful. 5 Note 156. Journal of Anatomy and Physiology, vol. xliv. [back] CONTENTS · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD · ILLUSTRATIONS · SUBJECT INDEX
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Skip to content Login Degree Works eRoster Faculty E-mail Alumni News Home Honors & Rankings Baruch in the Media Baruch Business Report Podcast This Week @ Baruch / Calendar Digital Media Library Is It Warm In Here? Baruch Psychologist David Sitt Makes RateMyProfessor.com's Top Ten Hottest Profs Baruch's David Sitt ('99) was ranked the ninth hottest professor in the nation, according to users of Ratemyprofessors.com. -- Photo by Jerry Speier New York, NY, Dec. 11 -- David Sitt, lecturer in the Department of Psychology, says he finds RateMyProfessors.com, the Internet site “very helpful,” as a source of student feedback on his teaching. He must be doing something right. The hugely popular survey site, which claims to have generated its 2008 rankings from a database of more than 7.5 million student ratings of over 1,000,000 college professors, just ranked Sitt among its top ten "hottest" professors. (He came in at #8). No definition of “hot” is provided, but just ask any undergraduate – hot is, well, hot. So, why did he make the list? "I’m young, dynamic and I have a five o’clock shadow," he says with a grin, noting that he made the top ten even though the Psychology Department’s web site provides no photo. Sitt, who does clinical work with people diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), is a Baruch alumnus (1995-99) who did his graduate work at Yeshiva and now finds himself teaching alongside his former mentors. "Susan Locke was a major influence on my life," he says of the psychology professor and longtime director of the Baruch Honors program. He is, Sitt says, primarily a teacher, one who has no qualms about taking on PYS 1001, the monster-sized Introduction to Psychology course that draws hundreds of students. "I try to speak with students, not to students," he says, adding that he is "very proud" of his teacher ratings. Glenn Albright, chairman of the Psychology Department, agrees. "We’re very fortunate to have such an engaging and committed teacher," Albright says. "He puts his students above all." Zane Berzins
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For a better experience on your device, try our mobile site. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. We also use cookies to ensure we show you advertising that is relevant to you. If you continue without changing your settings, we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the BBC website. However, if you would like to, you can change your cookie settings at any time. Continue Find out more ]]> Accessibility links Skip to content Skip to local navigation Accessibility Help BBC navigation News Sport Weather Capital Future Shop TV Radio More… Search term: Scotland Oscars 2013: Brave wins best animated feature film Brave depicts a pre-historic Scottish kingdom Day-Lewis makes Oscars history As it happened: Oscars 2013 Oscars 2013: Full list of winners Brave has followed its success at the Baftas and Golden Globes by winning an Oscar for best animated feature film. Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond hailed the achievement of the film, which was set in the Scottish Highlands. He said: "To win the Oscar for best animated film is a massive achievement. "It is absolutely fantastic to see Merida and the gang continue to fly the flag for Scotland in Hollywood." I am certain that winning the top prize in the movie business will now mean it is seen and enjoyed by even more people right across the world” First Minister Brave, which tells the story of headstrong Highland princess Merida, is set in a pre-historic Scottish kingdom where magic holds sway in the forests. It topped the US box office on its release in June, taking in an estimated £42.27m on its opening weekend. Its Oscar success comes after it was named best animated feature film awards at the Baftas and the Golden Globes. A host of Scottish talent provides the voices for the Disney-Pixar production, including Kelly Macdonald, Robbie Coltrane, Billy Connolly and Craig Ferguson. Mr Salmond said the film was a "wonderful depiction" of Scotland, adding: "I am certain that winning the top prize in the movie business will now mean it is seen and enjoyed by even more people right across the world." Mike Cantlay, chairman of VisitScotland, was delighted to see Brave beat strong competition from Wreck-it Ralph, Frankenweenie, ParaNorman and The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! "I would like to congratulate everyone at Disney-Pixar involved in the making of Brave on this magnificent achievement after they recreated Scotland so beautifully on the silver screen," he said. "Following the film's success at the Golden Globes and the Baftas, winning an Oscar really the icing on the cake for everyone involved in this fantastic movie." Meanwhile, organisers of Glasgow Film Festival said this had been its most successful year to date, with record-breaking ticket sales. In total, the festival had 39,106 admissions over the 10-day programme, the highest in its nine-year history and up 12% on last year. The UK premiere of Joss Whedon's Much Ado about Nothing, a film adaptation of the William Shakespeare play, closed the festival on Sunday evening Co-director Allan Hunter said: "We are so thrilled and humbled that audiences responded in such record-breaking numbers to our most ambitious programme ever." 25 FEBRUARY 2013, ENTERTAINMENT & ARTS As it happened: Oscars 2013 25 FEBRUARY 2013, ENTERTAINMENT & ARTS Oscars 2013: Full list of winners 25 FEBRUARY 2013, ENTERTAINMENT & ARTS Oscars 2013: Ceremony and winners 25 FEBRUARY 2013, ENTERTAINMENT & ARTS Share this page More Scotland stories RSS Scottish unemployment rises by 3,000 Unemployment in Scotland rose by 3,000 to 179,000 between December and February 2014, according to official figures. Liberton High School set to reopen 8: The spooky world of the 'numbers stations' 10: Man faces female doctors spy charge Video/Audio 5: Football: A game of three halves? Watch 7: Urban skiers hit cities not slopes Watch
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» Current Edition » Business Digest Business Digest Business Digest December 7, 2012 December 7, 2012 OPENINGSSpirit Hounds LLC opened Spirit Hound Distillers at 4196 Ute Highway, east of Lyons. It is making and bottling small batches of gin, whiskey and vodka on a still made by Craig Engelhorn, the company’s distiller. Spirit Hound features a tasting room with seating for 40 and bar and cocktail service featuring distillery products.Owner Hilarie Kavanagh opened Medicare Resource Center for Health Insurance Plans at 1373 Forest Park Circle, Suite 102, in Lafayette. Phone is 303-665-5851.Brainfood Bookstore has opened inside the Old Town Marketplace, 332 Main St., in Longmont. The store, which deals primarily with local and independent authors, is owned by John Haworth and managed by Kimberly Longhofer.Oskar Blues Brewery LLC will open Chuburger, Feb. 1, at 1225 Ken Pratt Blvd., Longmont.. The 3,500-square-foot “fast-craft-casual” eatery is Oskar Blues fourth restaurant in Colorado. The space previously housed a Cajun restaurant, Catfish Curly’s. Chuburger will feature locally grown food, including beef from cows raised by Oskar Blues at its Hops & Heifers Farm. The restaurant shares part of its name with Old Chub, a Scottish style ale brewed by Oskar Blues.BRIEFSAmericans spent a record $451 million on sports, fitness and recreation-related products and services in October, according to Boulder-based Leisure Trends Group LLC, an outdoor research firm. The monthly total was 7 percent higher than October 2011.Boulder-based 8030 Companies entered a joint venture with Juhl Wind Inc. to buy wind farms and other clean-energy assets. The agreement between 8030 and Pipestone, Minnesota-based Juhl Wind Inc. (OTCQB: JUHL) helps Juhl expand outside of its current Midwest market. Financial terms of the joint venture were not disclosed. The two companies have been working together since 2011 and are looking to buy wind farms that generate less than 100 megawatts of power.Broomfield-based Accera Inc. has launched a clinical trial to look at the effects of the research drug AC-1204 on patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Accera plans to enroll 400 Alzheimer’s patients at 60 locations around the nation to participate in the six-month trial, according to a press statement. AC-1204 is designed to improve cognitive function in patients with mild to moderate forms of Alzheimer’s disease, a degenerative brain disease, the company said in the press statement.The Creative Alliance, based in Lafayette, designed an aviation safety poster for its client Global Aerospace Inc. of Parsippany, New Jersey, a provider of aerospace insurance products and services.An athlete hanging by his feet from a line strung across a Utah canyon may be the image that takes a new online video viral from adventure sport company Gibbon Slacklines. The video received 7,000 hits in its first day posted on YouTube, said Emilio Torres, vice president for sales and marketing at Boulder-based Canaima Outdoor Inc., doing business as Gibbon Slacklines. Athletes in the lifestyle video walk a slackline — a tightrope-looking product — strung across a canyon near Salt Lake City. They compare falling off the slackline to the setbacks people face in life. Gibbon Slacklines plans to use the video for a 2013 advertising campaign.A $1.7 million insider-trading case filed against seven Celgene Corp. employees started when the biotechnology company purchased Boulder-based pharmaceutical company Pharmion Corp. in 2008, according to federal documents. Pharmion (former Nasdaq symbol: PHRM) was sold to Summit, New Jersey-based Celgene Corp. (Nasdaq: CELG) for $2.9 billion in cash and stock in November 2008. John Lazorchak, 42, and several of his high school friends used non-public information to make money in stock trades in the Pharmion purchase and other more recent Celgene purchases, according to a federal complaint filed Nov. 19 in U.S. District Court in New Jersey. Former Pharmion chief executive Patrick Mahaffy started Clovis Oncology Inc. (Nasdaq: CLVS) in Boulder in 2009 with other former Pharmion executives.The city of Longmont’s sales- and use-tax collections increased 0.5 percent in October, compared with the same period a year ago, according to the city finance department’s latest report. Longmont collected $4,166,626 in October, compared with $4,147,620 in October 2011. The collection in October represents sales made in September. Sales-tax collections increased by 4.8 percent from the same month the year before, and use-tax collections increased by 5.4 percent. Total sales- and use-tax collections for the year to date increased 3.5 percent compared with the same period in 2011, according to the report.Longmont-based Dot Hill Systems Corp. (Nasdaq: HILL), a provider of SAN storage solutions, was reappointment to the National Server and Storage Agreement, a university and college procurement framework. . Introduced by the Southern Universities Purchasing Consortium, the framework offers all universities, HE/FE colleges, and affiliated member institutions the opportunity to procure from accredited suppliers, which have already pre-tendered in the knowledge that pricing is competitive and without the requirement to go through time-consuming international EU tendering processes.EARNINGSSoy beverage company WhiteWave Foods Co. reported a 13 percent increase in revenue in its quarterly earnings report, driven by sales of products such as Silk PureAlmond soy milk. Net sales at Broomfield-based WhiteWave Foods Co. (NYSE: WWAV) rose to $575 million in the quarter ending Sept. 30, compared with $510 million for the same quarter a year earlier. At the same time, income declined 10 percent to $43 million from $48 million a year earlier, because of higher operating costs and expenses.CONTRACTSBoulder-based Comer & Associates LLC has been retained by Alternative Home Health Care of Fort Lauderdale, Florida to assess and improve marketing and sales systems. AHHC is a supplier of home health-care services in Broward and Miami-Dade counties. Comer & Associates provides management solutions.GRANTSThe National Renewable Energy Laboratory, University of Colorado-Boulder and Colorado State University in Fort Collins each will receive a grant from the Department of Energy to pursue research projects that have the potential to produce game-changing breakthroughs in energy technology. CSU will receive more than $2 million to develop a system to rapidly introduce new genetic traits into crops that cannot be engineered currently. NREL in Golden will receive $800,000 to develop a new approach to enhance the efficiency of low-cost plastic solar cells using specially engineered photonic structures to capture a larger part of the solar spectrum. NREL also will receive $890,000 to develop a solar thermal electric generator to directly convert heat from concentrated sunlight to electricity using a new generation of thermoelectric materials that can operate at higher temperatures and efficiencies. CU-Boulder will receive $380,000 to use nanotechnology to improve the structure of gas-to-liquids catalysts, increasing surface area and improving heat transfer compared with current catalysts.MERGERS & ACQUISITIONSKevin and Chanel Peed acquired the Great Harvest Bread Co. shop at The Village shopping center in Boulder from Scott and Sally Screevy, who owned the shop for 29 years.Synergy Resources Corp. plans to wrap up its purchase of Greeley-based Orr Energy LLC in early December after putting together an expanded $47 million line of credit from local banks, the company said. Platteville-based oil and gas exploration and production company Synergy (NYSE MKT: SYRG) can borrow up to $150 million under terms of a new agreement with Denver-based Community Banks of Colorado and Colorado Business Bank and Houston-based Amegy Bank National Association, the company said in a press statement. Synergy plans to use the money to buy Orr Energy in Greeley, and to fund part of its 2013 capital budget, the company said. Synergy plans to pay $42 million – $30 million in cash and $12 million in stock – for Orr Energy.Orr Energy has 36 wells producing oil and gas in the Watternburg Field of the Denver-Julesburg Basin, which spans across Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas and Nebraska. Deadline to submit items for Business Digest is three weeks prior to publication of each biweekly issue. Mail to Editor, Boulder County Business Report, 3180 Sterling Circle, Suite 201, Boulder, CO 80301-2338; fax to 303-440-8954; or email to news@bcbr.com with Business Digest in the subject line. Photos submitted will not be returned. What follows is a compilation of recent news reported online in the Northern Colorado Business Report and Boulder County Business Report. Find the full stories at ncbr.com or bcbr.com by using the search window at the top of the MORE OPENINGS Digital-media marketing company Pyxl Inc. has opened an office in Boulder. Three people will occupy the office at 1942 Broadway, MORE OPENINGSJacksonville, Florida-based EverCheck, a provider of professional license monitoring verification software for the health-care industry, opened an office at The Impact Hub, 1877 Broadway in Boulder. MORE Business Digest - 01/31/2014 OPENINGSMark Van Grack, owner of The Hapa Group Inc., plans to open Motomaki, a build-your-own sushi roll restaurant, at 1600 28th St., Suite1216, in the Twenty-Ninth Street shopping district in Boulder this April. Customers will MORE Business Digest December 20, 2013 Business Digest November 22, 2013 Business Digest November 8, 2013
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What's Up at EAS? I just received notice that EAS has cancelled speakers, Dee Lusby, Erik Osterlund, and myself. They claim not to have any money for speaker support. Afraid of the recession. Hmmm. given that the theme is supposed to be keeping bees without chemicals, one wonders how many speakers they will have that actually have experience keeping bees without chemicals (post mite) vs. how many are "experts" on the topic of keeping bees without chemicals. Jack Grimshaw After all ,the venue is a resort.I can't afford to stay there. I would have enjoyed meeting Dee and Erik but I also can see the cost involved. Some of us are camping. http://www.reserveamerica.com/campin...e=NY&parkId=31 I hope this does'nt keep you from attending. Jack, you are in luck. We also decided that we wanted to hear these speakers, so we invited them, are flying them in to Massachusetts, and paying them to speak (after all, taking time off from beekeeping in July/August certainly costs the beekeeper something...not to mention travel, food, and lodging). We feel it's important for such a conference to be "sustainable" (that it's not a huge cost for the speakers to be there). After all, it's the speakers that would otherwise be busiest that are the most valuable to have speak. Details are in the "meetings" forum, or on our website: http://BeeUntoOthers.com/ sqkcrk Originally Posted by Michael Palmer But you'll probably still be there, won't you Mike? Since it's in NY I'm going to make an effort to be there too. I won't be able to make it this year. I'm really busy at that time of year. Just finishing up my queen rearing/nuc making for the year. Not that I wouldn't love to go, and spend countless hours talking bees. But, I don't really take vacations at that time of year. Now, If I had something to do there...some service to the beekeeping community like a workshop, or seminar talking, then I'd make the time. I e-mailed Joseph K. Are you going to have queens to sell? When do you predict having them available?
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BSU News - on Campus Optivation offering social media strategist certification training Beginning in May, Optivation, the custom college and training program at Bemidji State University and Northwest Technical College, will be offering an online preparatory course for the National Institute for Social Media�s Social Media Strategist certification examination. The preparatory course, taught by institute president Eric Mills, will be offered completely via asynchronous online delivery from May 13-June 23. The course carries a registration fee of $595; advance registration is encouraged as the course requires a minimum number of participants. As social media networks such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest and dozens of others have become dominant forms of communication for millions of people, the importance of those networks in the workplace has grown as well. Social media is becoming a vital way for businesses to promote themselves and their products, increase their visibility and recruit new clients. Many businesses are hiring dedicated social media managers to fill this need. Research shows social media manager jobs have increased dramatically over the last year, with dozens of openings for these positions in Minnesota alone. Social Media Strategist certification through the Minneapolis-based National Institute of Social Media is the first of its kind in the industry. The certificate course to prepare for the certification exam will be taught by institute president Eric Mills. Participants will gain the knowledge and skills to take the institutes�s Social Media Strategist exam and earn certification validating the foundational skills needed to strategically operate social networks in a business environment and to open new employment opportunities. �We work with an independent board of subject-matter experts in field of social media to make sure we are examining the skills of professionals operating in the industry to make sure they are meeting all of the standards true professionals are expected to achieve,� Mills says. �This kind of certification is a new industry, something that has never been attempted. We are excited to work with Bemidji State and get this training out to the public.� NISM has offered this training in person in the past, but its partnership with Optivation will mark the first opportunity for the certification training course to be completed online. �We are hoping that anybody who takes this course realizes the value of certification and of passing the exam,� Mills says. �We think there�s a big value to it.� For more information, contact Optivation at optivation.org, optivation@bemidjistate.edu, (218) 755-2998. About Eric Mills Eric is the president of the National Institute for Social Media (NISM). He led the charge in forming an independent committee of subject matter experts in the field of social media and guided this committee in the development of the NISM Social Media Strategist certification examination � the first certification examination for professional practitioners in the social media industry. About the National Institute for Social Media The National Institute for Social Media is dedicated to social media education and certification for professional social media practitioners. Its mission is to provide premier, vendor-neutral public education and resources related to social media. In addition, its Industry Advisory Committee defines and supports certification and continuing education standards for social media professionals in a manner that upholds industry standards for competent practice. The institute also challenges those who meet these standards to commit to engaging in lifelong learning. The institute has continuing education opportunities available in an effort to help our certified professionals keep up with the rapid changes that are occurring in our world. � National Institute for Social Media � Online registration for social media certification preparatory course For further information about the University, visit http://www.bemidjistate.edu. Become a fan of Bemidji State University on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/BemidjiState or follow us on Twitter at @BemidjiState.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5711
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Oscar de la Renta : Clustered Crystal Drop Earrings, Red DetailsRichly colored crystals are beautifully embedded in a warm 24-karat gold plate setting. Whether you're wearing a soft, silky blouse and skinny jeans or an evening gown, these Oscar de la Renta earrings are a fresh finishing touch.24-karat yellow gold-plated pewter and brass.Geometric-cut garnet red hand poured resin.Approximately 3 1/4"L x 1"W.Clip backs.Made in USA.DesignerAbout Oscar de la Renta:After apprenticing at Balenciaga in Spain and at Lanvin in Paris, Dominican designer Oscar de la Renta launched his own eponymous line in 1965. His refined, ladylike looks have garnered many awards, including one in 1990 for Lifetime Achievement. In 1998, he launched a successful line of lingerie and his momentum shows no signs of waning with the collections of eyewear, fragrance, home decor, handbags, and shoes. more DetailsRichly colored crystals are beautifully embedded in a warm 24-karat gold plate setting. Whether you're wearing a soft, silky blouse and skinny jeans or an evening gown, these Oscar de la Renta earrings are a fresh finishing touch.24-karat yellow gold-plated pewter and brass.Geometric-cut garnet red hand poured resin.Approximately 3 1/4"L x 1"W.Clip backs.Made in USA.DesignerAbout Oscar de la Renta:After apprenticing at Balenciaga in Spain and at Lanvin in Paris, Dominican designer Oscar de la Renta launched his own eponymous line in 1965. His refined, ladylike looks have garnered many awards, including one in 1990 for Lifetime Achievement. In 1998, he launched a successful line of lingerie and his momentum shows no signs of waning with the collections of eyewear, fragrance, home decor, handbags, and shoes. Oscar de la Renta BGS13_Y10M7 This item is not available. This item will be shipped from the Bergdorf Goodman store, and unfortunately cannot be shipped to Canada. BG CREDIT CARD
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5712
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ECLECTIC RANT: US Government Continues to Neglect Returning War Veterans By Ralph E. Stone Friday June 01, 2012 - 07:27:00 AM On Monday, the nation observed Memorial Day, an annual federal holiday observed in the United States on the last Monday of May. Memorial Day is a day to remember the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. Armed Forces. I am a Vietnam veteran who luckily survived my tour with both mind and body intact. But on this day of remembrance for the dead, shouldn’t we also remember the veterans living among us in poverty, homelessness, and suffering from post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a condition that has led to an upswing in suicide rates? We send our soldiers off to fight in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. Yet, once the troops become veterans, too often they are woefully neglected. According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development , veterans make up less than 8 percent of the total U.S. population, but represent about 16 percent of adults who experienced homelessness on a single night in January 2009. Of the 75,609 homeless veterans counted that night, more than half were living in emergency shelters or transitional housing; the others lived on the street, in abandoned buildings, or in other places not meant for human habitation. Between October 1, 2008 and September 30, 2009, 136,334 veterans spent at least one night in an emergency shelter or a transitional housing facility. Female veterans are at greater risk of homelessness than male veterans and are two to three times more likely to be homeless. Rates of homelessness are higher for Hispanic, African American, and Native American veterans than for non-minority veterans, especially among those who are poor. Veterans between the ages of 18 and 30 are twice as likely as adults in the general population to be homeless, and the risk of homelessness increases significantly among young veterans who are poor. In addition, the National Alliance to End Homelessness (www.endhomelessness.org/files/1839_file_Vital_Mission_Final.pdf) estimates that 89,553 to 467,877 veterans are at risk of homelessness, meaning that they are below the poverty level and pay more than 50 percent of household income for rent. Homelessness is rising among veterans because of high living costs, the lack of adequate funds, and many are struggling with the effects of PTSD and substance abuse, exacerbated by a lack of adequately-funded support systems. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (www.bls.gov/news.release/vet.nr0.htm), the unemployment rate for veterans who served on active duty in the U.S. military at any time since September 2001 – a group referred to as the Gulf War-era II veterans – was 12.1 percent. The unemployment rate for all veterans was 8.3 percent. As of April 2012, the total unemployment rate in the U.S. was 8.1 percent. Twenty-six percent of Gulf War-era II veterans reported having a service-connected disability in August 2011, compared with about 14 percent for all veterans. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has been severely criticized for the diagnoses of wounded veterans with a personality disorder, instead of PTSD, thus denying them disability pay and medical benefits. More than 22,500 soldiers have been suspiciously dismissed with personality disorders, rather than PTSD. By doing so, the military saves money in disability pay and medical care over the lifetimes of veterans. How many homeless veterans, discharged for personality disorders rather than PTSD, would be off the homeless roles if they had disability pay and VA medical care? In response, in 2010 the VA has issued new regulations liberalizing the evidentiary standard for veterans claiming service-connected PTSD (. The new liberalized regulations may allow the VA finally to reach its stated goal “to provide excellence in patient care, veterans’ benefits and customer satisfaction.” As a matter of political reality, this administration, Congress, or the courts, have not established a right to housing, not even for a specific subgroup such as veterans. Even if there was such a right, the underlying root of homelessness needs to be addressed, that is, the de-funding of federal affordable housing programs since the early 1980s. The federal government’s housing assistance for veterans has largely been limited to guaranteeing home mortgage loans but, realistically, homeownership is still too expensive for many veterans, especially in the San Francisco Bay Area. Despite cries of “support our troops,” it is shameful that the U.S. can spend $1.3 trillion and counting in our Iraq and Afghanistan wars, but neglect our veterans at home. (If you want to understand the reason for this country’s housing mess, I highly recommend the 2010 Update of “Without Housing – Decades of Federal Housing Cutbacks, Massive Homelessness and Policy Failures” by the Western Regional Advocacy Project. It can be downloaded at its website . The 2010 Update focuses public attention back on the #1 reason for our housing mess: the Federal Government’s divestment in affordable housing programs and deregulation of the housing market. It comes at a critical juncture for housing policy in this country as millions of Americans are homeless and tens of millions more are on the brink of economic collapse. Most importantly, it helps people understand the complex issues fueling the crisis and provides a framework for turning the situation around).
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They have two games in hand on the Merseysiders, one of which will be played against Sunderland, but even if they were to win both, the Citizens would still be one point worse off than the leaders. However, if they are to keep pace with Liverpool with a victory over the Black Cats at the Etihad Stadium, they will have to do so without the services of midfielder Yaya Toure.Everton v Crystal PalaceThe Toffees, under the management of Roberto Martinez, have won their last seven matches - a feat that they have not achieved since they lifted the Division One trophy back in 1987. Next up is a home encounter with Crystal Palace at Goodison Park, which could see Kevin Mirallas and Ross Barkley recalled to the starting lineup, having started the 1-0 victory over Sunderland on Saturday among the substitutes.This outcome is currently suspendedThis Event will be going Live In PlayLicensed and regulated by the Isle of Man Gambling Supervision Commission,issued under the Online Gambling Regulation Act 2001 on 31st August 2012SportsIn PlayLive CasinoCasinoGamesPokerPromosCorporate InfoAffiliatesResponsible Gamingbetinternet is a registered trade mark ©2014, betinternet.com, Viking House, Nelson Street, Douglas, Isle of Man, IM1 2AH. | Call: +44 1624 652590 | Email: info@betinternet.com
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20 Favs Photography Contest Second Place Walking on the beach Description: Lens: 70-300mm at 210mm, 1/640 sec, F/6.3 Uploaded on 8/3/2004 10:26:48 PM Made with Nikon D70 Digital SLR Camera
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CategoriesLuxury Goods & Duty Free Invesco study predicts increased global competition for sovereign wealth fund assets Source: Invesco Asset Management , Author: Posted by BI-ME staff UAE. Major sovereign governments and sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) in the Middle East are investing less internationally than they have done at any point in the last three years, according to the third annual Invesco Middle East Asset Management Study(1). Invesco opened its Dubai office in 2005, and has been working with GCC clients for decades, offering financial institutions and investment professionals access to global investment expertise. Invesco’s study, which is the only in depth report of its kind, has analysed sovereign revenues and defined the investment behaviours of major SWFs in the Gulf Cooperation Council region (GCC). These SWFs account for 35 per cent of global SWF flows, representing 1.6 trillion(2), a huge market which major global economies, including the UK, rely on for investment. The study has revealed that the international flow of money directly from GCC sovereign governments and from SWFs has changed considerably in light of the current unrest, with large commodity-linked surpluses in these regions increasingly being put to use locally. (See Fig 1) Fig 1- GCC SWF funding chain and local pressures Sovereign surplus reducing despite oil price risingThe available surplus, or investable assets, of governments in the GCC region is forecast to reduce by 9% in 2012 (when compared to 2011) and surplus forecasts have been revised downwards since the Arab Spring(3). This is illustrated by the fact that forecast funding rates for the recipient SWFs have declined this year. According to Invesco’s study, in 2011 funding rates grew at 13% compared to an increase in GCC government revenue of 25%(4), this year funding rates rose just 8%, despite GCC government revenue increasing by 31%(5). Funding for sovereign pension funds on the other hand rose from 8% growth in 2011 to 13% growth in 2012(6). There is an expectation that spending will continue to increase over time potentially outstripping commodity prices and shrinking surpluses further. (see Fig 2) Fig 2- Government spending estimates Sovereign wealth funds investing more locallyOf the sovereign surplus that is available for SWFs, those with local objectives are expected to benefit. Invesco forecasts SWF assets invested in benchmark driven SWFs who prioritise international asset manager products or ETFs have fallen by 1% since the beginning of the ‘Arab Spring’ in 2011. At the same time sovereign wealth fund assets allocated to SWFs investing locally, in infrastructure for example, have risen by 10%(7), which illustrates a major shift (see Fig 3). Fig 3- Competition for sovereign assets Nick Tolchard, Head of Invesco Middle East commented: “It’s clear that sovereign states are redirecting revenues and SWF assets from international investments back into the Middle East. The most common change across the region is money into local wage inflation, with healthcare and education a real focus for Saudi Arabia and Oman. Major infrastructure is a focus for Qatar due to the World Cup, and there are significant developments taking place in Abu Dhabi as it seeks to grow and set up as a major financial centre. He added: “Western governments, including the UK, have approached SWFs from the Middle East to help with economic recovery, but many will fight a losing battle. There is certainly less money to invest internationally so the stakes are higher. Those courting GCC money from outside the region will only win with a deep understanding of what is driving the thinking of SWFs, and a long term commitment to building bi-lateral relationships which add value to their investment policy.” Last year, Invesco created the first ever framework that categorises the core objectives of SWFs and revealed the drivers behind the investment strategy and preferences of these huge investment funds. (see Fig 4). Fig 4- Invesco framwork for classifying investor profiles Sovereign wealth funds were categorised as: Development Agencies’: SWFs focused on local development projects and investments. ‘Policy Supporters’: SWFs that use international investments to drive foreign or local policy outcomes. ‘Diversification Vehicles’: SWFs that invest internationally typically referencing a global benchmark for asset and geographic allocations. ‘Asset Managers’: SWFs that are purely focused on risk-adjusted investment returns, typically with broad scope to invest across assets and regions. Last year, the study revealed that traditional investment SWFs – diversification vehicles and asset managers – appeared to be favouring developed markets, with around 54% of GCC SWF assets held in this region with the highest exposure to North America (29%) and to Western Europe (19%). Investment in North America is now down this year at 14% and Continental Europe down at 4%, as a result of the Eurozone crisis(8). The clear shift in terms of geographic allocation of investment money has been towards the local region. Investment in assets related to the GCC moved up from 33% to 56%, with local bonds seeing a rise from 6% of SWF investable assets to 14%(9). Property and infrastructure have also take a large proportion of the investable assets from these SWFs, 13% and 14% respectively(10). Nick Tolchard commented: “The story this year is that it is no longer a given that large sovereign governments are going to direct their oil revenue surpluses around the globe, pumping cash into other global economies. There will be high profile, strategic investments like the proposed RBS deal, or indeed other large trophy assets, but it’s a changed market. There will be contestable assets for fund managers in core relevant markets but with more money being deployed into the local economies it is likely to be a much more competitive landscape as long as the unrest continues.” (1). This is Invesco’s third asset management study of the GCC region (comprising the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman). Invesco worked with independent strategy consultants NMG to conduct an in-depth market study based on over 100 face-to-face interviews on retail and institutional investor preferences across the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council). The insight into sovereign capital flow is just one theme from this detailed study. For more information and to access the full report, please visit www.invesco.ae/imeams (2) According to the CityUK SWF Report in February 2012(3-5) According to IMF data and forecasts in September 2011(6-10) According to data received from participants in the study About Invesco Invesco is part of Invesco Ltd, a leading independent global investment management company, dedicated to helping people worldwide build their financial security. By delivering the combined power of our distinctive worldwide investment management capabilities, including Invesco AIM, Atlantic Trust, Invesco, Invesco Perpetual, Invesco PowerShares, Invesco Trimark, and WL Ross, Invesco Ltd provides a comprehensive array of enduring investment solutions for retail, institutional and high net worth clients around the world. Operating in more than 20 countries, the company is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol IVZ. Additional information is available at www.invesco.com.
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Asbury Bible Commentary Part II: The Old Testament II. The Book And Its Writing II. The Book And Its Writing The oracles of the book are dated with such precision that there is no debate as to the time of the ministry of Haggai. Each is dated to the second year of Darius, 520 b.c. The book was prepared either by the prophet himself or one close to him no later than 500 b.c. and maybe as early as 515 b.c. as part of the liturgy for the dedication of the temple. ^ Go to the top of the page
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Our LibraryCommentariesJohn Gill's Exposition of the BibleLukeLuke 1Luke 1:80 Luke 1:80 And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit That is, John, the son of Zacharias and Elisabeth, grew in stature of body, and increased in wisdom and knowledge, and fortitude in his soul: and was in the deserts; or "desert", as the Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions read; not in the wilderness of Judea, where he came preaching, but either of Ziph or Maon, which were near to Hebron; see ( 1 Samuel 23:14 1 Samuel 23:24 1 Samuel 23:25 ) ( Joshua 15:54 Joshua 15:55 ) he was not brought up in the schools of the prophets, nor in the academies of the Jews, or at the feet of any of their Rabbins and doctors; that it might appear he was not taught and sent of men, but of God: nor did he dwell in any of the cities, or larger towns, but in deserts; partly that he might be fitted for that gravity and austerity of life, he was to appear in; and that it might be clear he had no knowledge of, nor correspondence with Jesus, whose forerunner he was, and of whom he was to bear testimony, till such time he did it; and in this solitude he remained, till the day of his showing unto Israel; either till the time came that he was to appear before, and be examined by the sanhedrim, that judged of persons fitness and qualifications for the priesthood, in order to be admitted to it; which should have been when he was thirty years of age, but that he was designed for other service; or rather therefore till he appeared in his prophetic office, and showed himself to the people of Israel; to whom he came preaching the doctrine of repentance and remission of sins, administering the ordinance of baptism, giving notice of the near approach of the Messiah, and pointing him out unto the people. < Luke 1:79 Read Luke 1:80
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Home > In Focus > In Focus Texas Student Athlete Spotlight: Imani McGee-Stafford By Elissa SchneidermanBig 12 Campus Correspondent It's hard to imagine a family more steeped in basketball talent than Texas freshman Imani McGee-Stafford's. McGee-Stafford's mother is Pamela McGee--a woman who owns two NCAA titles and an Olympic gold medal. The national championships came from her days at Southern California. There, she also played alongside her twin sister Paula. After winning gold at the 1984 Olympics, Pamela then embarked on a professional career overseas, before becoming the second overall pick in the inaugural WNBA draft and playing for two seasons in the league. Another aunt of McGee-Stafford's, Trish Stafford-Odom, played basketball at California, before a professional career that also included time overseas and two seasons in the WNBA. But McGee-Stafford has close ties to Longhorn basketball, as well. Her cousin is Annette Smith-Knight, a member of UT's 1986 national championship team and Texas' all-time leading scorer. For those keeping score, that's a total of four close family members with a combined five national championship rings, and we've only covered McGee Stafford's female relatives. Her father, Kevin Stafford played in college and professionally overseas. McGee-Stafford's brother, JaVale McGee, was selected 18th overall by the Washington Wizards in 2008 and presently plays center for the Denver Nuggets. The upshot of growing up in a family of elite basketball players is that McGee-Stafford has been immersed in the game since birth and has developed a keen basketball intellect. "Imani can literally breakdown every play for you, tell you what everybody did wrong and tell you what she was supposed to do," McGee-Stafford's teammate Nneka Enemkpali said. "She understands the concept of the game." While McGee-Stafford's mind is certainly in the game, it is taking her some time to adjust to the highly competitive level of play in college basketball, as well as her new role as a physical center in the paint. In high school, the 6-foot-7 McGee-Stafford played forward, which allowed her to showcase her jump-shot. But at UT, she is being asked to play down low and battle toe-to-toe with the Big 12's toughest centers, including Baylor's Brittney Griner. And McGee-Stafford's new role is a big one. In conference play, she is averaging 28.1 minutes per game, as well as 9.6 rebounds, 10.7 points and 2.2 blocks per game. She has registered a total of 11 double-doubles, including six in Big 12 contests. McGee-Stafford said that despite posting huge rookie statistics, she struggles with consistency. She pointed, in particular, to the Longhorns' matchup with Iowa State on Feb. 6, where she tallied only five points and seven rebounds in 30 minutes. Three days later, UT hosted Baylor and McGee-Stafford earned 13 points, 18 rebounds and two blocks. "Honestly, I don't know the difference preparation-wise between the Iowa State and Baylor game," McGee-Stafford said. "That's something you learn as a freshman--how to prepare so that you're consistently playing the same way every game." McGee-Stafford explained that her game flows from her brain first. She asks a lot of questions in practice and utilizes her sharp basketball IQ to figure out exactly what she needs to accomplish in each play. The challenge, she said, is physically doing it, but she believes this will come with time and repetition. "The more you play, the more your thoughts and actions meet," McGee-Stafford said. "I'm always caught thinking too much when I'm playing, but once you do it enough, you don't have to think about it and it becomes instinctual." After all, McGee-Stafford has only been playing basketball seriously for about five years now. Of course, growing up in a basketball family meant she often played with her relatives, but she didn't compete seriously until her freshman year of high school. Her parents were careful not to push her into the game. "My dad wanted me to love basketball and he didn't want me to feel pressured to play because of who I am," McGee-Stafford said. "I actually had to beg him to play." As high school graduation neared, McGee-Stafford decided to pursue college athletics. She was recruited as both a basketball and volleyball player. In fact, she said that USC--her mother's alma mater--offered her the opportunity to play both. She chose Texas, however, to gain a little distance from her family and to focus on basketball. "When you go to college, you should be pressured and pushed and forced to rely on yourself," McGee-Stafford said. "I felt that if I went to USC, they weren't really going to challenge me because I'm Pamela McGee's daughter. I wanted to be challenged and forced to get better." Nevertheless, McGee-Stafford's teammates in Austin have high expectations for her and they are enthusiastic about her future in burnt orange. "For Imani, the sky is her limit," Enemkpali said. "I'm excited to watch her grow. She's going to be one of those all-time Texas players that will be remembered."
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Justin Blackmon explodes for breakout game vs. Texans @AdamBCC Bob Levey The rookie receiver became only the third rookie to ever eclipse 230 yards receiving in a game, joining Jerry Rice and Jerry Butler. Prior to Sunday's game, the Jaguars' first round draft pick, Justin Blackmon, had just 250 yards receiving through nine games and was on pace to finish the season with fewer than 500 yards receiving. However, with 236 yards against the Texans, the rookie is now on pace to finish 2012 with 778 yards; a respectable number for a rookie receiver. In fact, following his explosive game in Week 11, Blackmon is now the leader among rookies in receiving yards. Just how explosive was his day? It was the third most receiving yards recorded by a rookie in NFL history, and just 19 yards away from the rookie record set by Jerry Butler in 1979. The only other receiver to eclipse 230 yards in a game as a rookie was Hall of Fame receiver Jerry Rice in 1985. The game came after much criticism for the rookie who struggled in his first nine games in the NFL, and he even drew the ire of some fans on Sunday for not securing a catch in the end zone early. However, in the remainder of the game, which included an 81-yard touchdown that featured a catch in traffic and broken tackles to break free, Blackmon showed the qualities that caused the Jaguars to select the Oklahoma State receiver at fifth overall.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5720
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