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Dozens killed in Venezuelan prison clashes By William Neuman Girish Gupta Sunday January 27, 2013 11:09 AM CARACAS, Venezuela — Dozens of people have been killed in clashes between inmates and national guard soldiers at a Venezuelan prison, local media accounts said yesterday.It was the latest in a series of bloody riots during the past year in overcrowded Venezuelan prisons, where guns and drugs abound and inmates control many aspects of prison life.Newspapers reported that more than 60 people, mostly prisoners, had been killed at the Uribana prison in Barquisimeto, citing the director of a hospital where the wounded and the dead were taken. More than 120 people had been injured, the reports said.The minister of prisons, Iris Varela, said the violence broke out Friday when troops entered the prison to search for weapons and establish order.The situation remained chaotic yesterday.The episode represented a new test for the government as President Hugo Chavez remains in Cuba, where he has been undergoing treatment for cancer. Favorite
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Bob Hunter commentary | Rumblings: OSU freshman Elliott making bigger impact than Michigan’s touted Green Blogging the Buckeyes Marvin Lewis says safer tackling and blocking -- not schemes -- are key to football's future Hoops Scoops Blog Buckeyes add 7-foot transfer OSU Women's Basketball Blog Stollings in line for Minnesota job By Bob Hunter • Friday November 29, 2013 5:26 AM Some recruiting analysts were perplexed a year ago when Ohio State got a commitment from running back Ezekiel Elliott and then backed off in its pursuit of the more highly touted Derrick Green. Green subsequently signed with Michigan. Now look, as the first regular season nears the end for both on Saturday in The Game in Ann Arbor. Elliott, from St. Louis, has emerged as the primary backup to OSU senior starter and 1,000-yard rusher Carlos Hyde. Although he has seen little primary duty, Elliott has made the most of his chances, rushing for 262 yards on 30 carries, averaging. 8.7 per lug, usually behind a backup offensive line. >> Follow BuckeyeXtra.com on Twitter at @buckeyextra for Ohio State updates, facts, snarkisms, links, etc. Green, from Richmond, Va., and considered a power back, has been pressed into more of a regular role the past few weeks because of nagging injuries to starter Fitzgerald Toussaint. Green has had 70 carries, for 218 yards, averaging 3.1 behind a struggling offensive line. Ohio State fans spend a lot more time talking about Michigan during rivalry week than vice versa, according to an analysis of tweets conducted by Emory Sports Marketing Analytics at Emory University. Analysts wrote that they used “geo-coded data from Twitter to serve as a proxy for fan conversation … the Monday before the rivalry game in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013.” (They also collected data on Auburn and Alabama.) Then they calculated the percentage of tweets in that city that were about the opposing school’s football team, giving them “a metric for how much of the conversation in a city was about the rival team.” The result? “We found that in the past four years, regardless of where the game is played, or who won the previous year, the percentage of conversation in Columbus regarding Michigan football is at least twice the percentage of conversation in Ann Arbor regarding Ohio State football,” the report said. “It should be noted that 7 percent of the population of Columbus are Ohio State students (57,466 out of 809,798) while 37 percent of the population of Ann Arbor are Michigan students (43,426 out of 116,121).” The study found that the level of conversation about Auburn and Alabama was more level and, unlike the OSU-Michigan study, percentages tended to be higher in the market of the home team. As it turns out, new Crew coach and sporting director Gregg Berhalter apparently doesn’t have many changes in store for the team’s roster. It stands at 22 players of a maximum of 30, and all of them are tied to the previous regime. The Crew signed Waylon Francis, 23, who made 65 appearances with CS Herediano in Costa Rica’s first division, this week. Berhalter said the work was primarily done by outgoing technical director Brian Bliss, but he liked what he saw of Francis on video. Goalkeeper Andy Gruenebaum and forward/midfielder Dominic Oduro still are out of contract, but one or both could sign, which could leave only six open roster spots. That means that Berhalter and his new staff essentially could have the same roster that went 8-13-5 under Robert Warzycha and 4-4 under interim coach Bliss, which could make for an interesting basis of comparison. Berhalter didn’t bring back six players, three of them for salary-cap reasons. He also decided not to bring back assistant Mike Lapper, who was the last holdover from the old coaching staff. The Cincinnati Reds reportedly are one of eight teams interested in St. Louis Cardinals free-agent outfielder Carlos Beltran. According to a report in Primera Hora, a newspaper in Puerto Rico, Cincinnati contacted Beltran’s agent, Dan Lozano. The author of that report told C. Trent Rosecrans of TheCincinnati Enquirer in an email that Beltran said Lozano had informed him of the Reds’ interest. The New York Yankees reportedly have made Beltran, 36, their top target in free agency, so at this stage, the Reds would seem to be a long shot. The Detroit Tigers, Texas Rangers, Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, Seattle Mariners and Kansas City Royals also are reportedly interested in him. Beltran, a switch-hitter, is looking for a three-year contract. He played mostly right field in each of the last two seasons with the Cardinals, but would likely move to left field if the Reds signed him. Former Ohio State star Evan Turner is averaging 21.4 points per game for the Philadelphia 76ers, a dramatic leap from the 10.1 the former No. 2 overall pick put up the previous three seasons. He told Hoopsworld that a lot of it has to do with opportunity. “I’m able to work myself out of bad starts,” Turner said. “The last few years, I was on teams that had such good scorers, if I wasn’t really getting it going, I didn’t have the opportunity to work myself out of it. I don’t have to look over my shoulder.” Turner also doesn’t have to worry about all of the bad press he got as a draft bust the past few seasons. “I didn’t read it, but I was told a million times,” Turner said. “I really didn’t think much of it. I knew you still had to play the games and compete, and I always feel like when I step on the court, I’ve got a good opportunity to win, no matter the team I have. “It’s all about the atmosphere you’re in and how you’re publicized. Sometimes in our situation, especially as the Philadelphia 76ers, you hear about the negatives before you hear about the positives. That’s just how things go sometimes in this city.” Jabrill Peppers, a five-star cornerback who sent a tremor through Ann Arbor this week by saying that he would make some official visits elsewhere despite being committed to Michigan, told ESPN.com’s Tom VanHaaren why. “I am still 100 percent committed to the University of Michigan, and that is the place where I want to go to college,” Peppers said. “With the rumors about Coach (Brady) Hoke possibly not being there, I need to make sure that I have options and have seen other places. “For the sake of my future, I need to make sure I have other options. No need to look into it any further. Go Blue, and beat TDS (Team Down South).” The Buckeyes apparently made believers out of Penn State coach Bill O’Brien with their 63-14 victory over his Nittany Lions last month. O’Brien told CBSSports.com that he doesn’t understand how Ohio State can be left out of the Bowl Championship Series title game. “If they win out, how can they not compete for a national championship? It makes no sense to me,” O'Brien said. “The perception is the Big Ten is down, and until we start winning on the field against the SEC, it’s going to be the SEC on the top of the hill. But we’ve got great coaches in this league, great players, and this conference will be back.” After Jared Sullinger hit two shots from beyond the arch on Wednesday night against Memphis, Celtics coach Brad Stevens said he would like his low-post scorer to take more threes if they are available. “He constantly tells me to take the open shot,” Sullinger told the Boston Herald. “He's always in my ear about shooting the ball.” Sullinger, a 6-foot-9 former Ohio State and Northland star, had 23 points for the Celtics in a 100-93 loss to the Grizzlies. Woody Hayes liked to patrol the sideline without a jacket on cold days, so maybe we shouldn’t be surprised when Michigan coach Brady Hoke walks into his weekly news conference from the frozen tundra that is Ann Arbor without any socks. “Brady, it’s like 8 degrees out. No socks?” a Dispatch reporter said. Hoke didn’t break stride. “I never wear ’em,” he said. Bob Hunter is a sports columnist for the Dispatch. bhunter@dispatch.com @dailyhunter Favorite
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Search Results17 images with subject Navigation. "CHANGING WATCH." From Life on the Mississippi. "DO YOU SEE THAT STUMP?" From Life on the Mississippi. "IF YOU LOVE ME, BACK HER." From Life on the Mississippi. "THIS IS NINE-MILE POINT." From Life on the Mississippi. "LEARNING THE RIVER." From Life on the Mississippi. MR. B. STEPPED INTO VIEW. From Life on the Mississippi. "THE PHANTOM ASSUMED THE WHEEL." From Life on the Mississippi. "PULL HER DOWN!" From Life on the Mississippi. "SCARED TO DEATH." From Life on the Mississippi. "SET HER BACK." From Life on the Mississippi. "SOUNDING." From Life on the Mississippi. "STAND BY, NOW!" From Life on the Mississippi. "THAT 'S A REEF." From Life on the Mississippi. "VERY BRIEF AUTHORITY." From Life on the Mississippi. "WEARING A TOOTHPICK." From Life on the Mississippi. "WENT TO WHISTLING." From Life on the Mississippi. "WHERE IS MR. BIXBY?" From Life on the Mississippi. Contact Us | FAQ | Home URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/global/result.html?tgm=Navigation.&projid=2 Last updated April 16, 2014
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CIBER, Inc.: SWOT Analysis & Company Profile CIBER, Inc.: SWOT Analysis & Company Reference code: BRTC231CP10-Q4 Published: Jun 2010 John Carpenter House 7 Carmelite Street London EC4Y 0BS CIBER, Inc. - SWOT Profile Page 1 CIBER, Inc. - Company Overview CIBER, Inc. (CIBER) is a global information technology consulting, services and outsourcing company. It is engaged in providing diversified system integration and information technology consulting services to its clients around the world. CIBER's service offerings include application development and management, ERP implementation, project management, change management, infrastructure management, systems integration and end-user computing, as well as strategic business and technology consulting. It serves various clients which include governmental agencies and Fortune 1000 and middle market companies across major industries from 14 global solution centers and 70 local offices in 18 countries throughout Asia/ Pacific, North America and Europe regions. CIBER is headquartered in Greenwood Village (Colorado), the US. The company reported revenues of (U.S. Dollars) USD 1,037.70 million during the fiscal year ended December 2009, a decrease of 12.91% from 2008. The operating profit of the company was USD 27.76 million during the fiscal year 2009, a decrease of 48.54% from 2008. The net profit of the company was USD 14.96 million during the fiscal year 2009, a decrease of 44.36% from 2008. CIBER, Inc. - Key Facts CIBER, Inc., Key Facts 5251 DTC Parkway, Greenwood Village, Colorado (CO), 80111, Ticker Symbol, Stock CBR (New York Stock Exchange Exchange) Telephone + 1 303 2200100 No. of Employees 8,000 Fax + 1 303 2207100 Financial Year End December URL www.ciber.com Revenue (in USD Million) 1,037.70 Technology and Australia, China, India, New Zealand, Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Locations Netherlands, Norway, Russian Federation, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, Canada, United States Source: Annual Report, Company Website, Primary and Secondary Research CIBER, Inc. - SWOT Profile Page 2 CIBER, Inc. - Business Description CIBER, Inc. (CIBER) is one of the leading providers of system integration and Information Technology services. The company provides value-priced services for both private and government sector clients. CIBER’s services are offered on project or strategic staffing basis, in both custom and enterprise resource planning (ERP) package environments, and across all technology platforms, operating systems, and infrastructures. It employs about 8,000 people. The company's services find their applications in various sectors including communications, energy and utilities, financial services, food and beverage, government, healthcare, education, manufacturing, service and retail, technology, transportation, and travel and hospitality. CIBER has classified its operations into five reportable segments, namely, IT Outsourcing, International, Custom Solutions, Federal, and U.S. ERP Solutions. The company's Custom Solutions segment is engaged in providing IT project solutions and IT staffing in custom- developed software environments, including application development and maintenance, outsourcing and staffing services primarily to US commercial customers. It also provides full range of application portfolio management support including analysis, design, development, testing, implementation and maintenance of business applications. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009, Custom Solutions segment contributed 36% to the company’ total net sales. International segment of the company is engaged in providing a wide range of business and technical consulting services such as package implementation, application development, systems integration and support services as well as its own Customer Relationship Management software products. CIBER, through its International segment has presence in the Netherlands, the UK, Germany and the Scandinavian region consisting of Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland. During the fiscal year 2009, International segment contributed 34% to the company’ total net sales. CIBER’s IT Outsourcing segment provides a wide range of solutions including the entire spectrum of IT infrastructure and IT operations services. Its solutions are ranging from help desks and hosting, to software rollouts and security monitoring, and server virtualization in data centers. Its data centers are located in the US, the UK, the Netherlands, and Spain, and its global support centers are located in the US, the UK, and India. During the fiscal year 2009, Custom Solutions segment contributed 7% to the company’ total net sales. CIBER's Federal segment is engaged in providing custom IT services and support to the US Federal government projects such as security assessments, legacy modernization services, specialized strategic staffing, data warehousing solutions and help desk support. It also provides custom solutions to defense and civilian agencies of the US Federal Government. CIBER operates as both a prime vendor and a subcontractor within this segment. During the fiscal year 2009, Federal segment contributed 11% to the company’ total net sales. The company's U.S. ERP segment is engaged in providing consulting services to support multi-package ERP solutions for customers in the US. These services are provides from vendors including SAP, Oracle (including PeopleSoft and JD Edwards) and Lawson. During the fiscal year 2009, U.S. ERP segment contributed 12% to the company’ total net sales. The company has 14 global solution centers and 70 local offices in 18 countries across Asia/ Pacific, North America and Europe regions. Recently, the company acquired the assets of Denmark based SAP consulting company Segmenta A/S. It also signed a partnership with CNL Software, Inc., one of the leaders in developing Physical Security Information Management (PSIM) software to provide its clients with an unmatched command and control solution to meet their needs for security integration and management software. CIBER, Inc. - SWOT Profile Page 3 CIBER, Inc. - Major Products and Services CIBER, Inc. is an international system integration and IT consultancy services provider. Its key services include the CIBER, Inc., Major Products and Services Application Development & Management: Global Solution Centers IT Security Solutions Physical Security Solution ERP / Package Solutions: Lawson Solutions Microsoft Solutions Oracle E-Business Solutions Oracle JD Edwards Solutions Oracle PeopleSoft Solutions Oracle Solutions SAP Solutions Supply Chain Solutions Government Solutions: State & Local Government CIBER, Inc. - SWOT Profile Page 4 CIBER, Inc. - History CIBER, Inc., History Year Event type Description 2009 Acquisitions/Mergers/Takeovers CIBER acquired India- BusinessReview Categories: CIBER, Inc. Company Overview, CIBER, Inc. Key Facts, CIBER, Inc. Business Description, CIBER, Inc. Major Products and Services, CIBER, Inc. History, CIBER, Inc. SWOT Analysis, CIBER, Inc. Strengths, CIBER, Inc. Weaknesses, CIBER, Inc. Opportunities, CIBER, Inc. Threats, CIBER, Inc. Key Competitors, CIBER, Inc. Key Employees, CIBER, Inc. Key Employee Biographies, CIBER, Inc. Company Statement, CIBER, Inc. Locations and Subsidiaries, CIBER, Inc. Financial Ratios, CIBER, Inc. Capital Market Ratios language:Albanian Business Review’s CIBER, Inc. contains a company overview, key facts, locations and subsidiaries, news and events as well as a SWOT analysis of the company.
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Doctors Lounge - Gastroenterology Answers Back to Gastroenterology Answers List Gastroenterology Topics Question: Sharp pain below waistline BH - Fri Nov 05, 2004 8:28 am I am a 22yo male and from time to time I get severe pain below my waist but above my genitalia. It doesn't seem to be on any particular side and does not spread to my back. I looked through the postings for something similar to what I am experiencing, the closest was this thread. However I don't get light-headed and have never vomitted. I get the pain very irregularly, anywhere from twice in one week to months apart. I have never been able to ascribe it to a certain food, it seems almost independent of what I eat or drink. (Unless it was due to a lack of something, which is harder for me to track.) The pain is always accompanied by loose stool/diarrhea. It seems to me it often has a filmy muccus-like quality, but I'm not authorized to make that judgment. The pain can last several hours and I always feel better after I can pass stool, which is not always right away. I have had this condition for years. I have only been to a doctor once for it when I was much younger, but it wasn't during one of the episodes. He basically said he wasn't sure what it was. Because the pain can be so rare at times and because I don't have much money, I haven't seen another doctor about it since. Any help you can provide would be appreciated. Dr. Tamer Fouad - Sun Nov 07, 2004 4:38 am Its very difficult to diagnose pain in the nature you described over the internet. One thing that helps a physician reach a diagnosis is the associated symptoms. You have indicated that there seems to be some relationship to the passage of loose stools. This could indicate colonic pain. Is this pain colicky in nature? Have you tried taking antispasmodics to releave it? BH - Sun Nov 07, 2004 10:11 am I guess it very well might be. Are there some over-the-counter drugs I could try? Dr. Tamer Fouad - Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:42 am Unfortunately, I am not authorized to advise you to take a particular medication without a direct, formal examination. It would be unethical, even if this medication is sold over the counter. Best regards, | Check a doctor's response to similar questions
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Category: Pediatrics | News Back to Health News Babies May Be Smarter Than You Think Last Updated: February 15, 2012. Word comprehension is evident at 6 or 9 months, study finds Word comprehension is evident at 6 or 9 months, study finds. WEDNESDAY, Feb. 15 (HealthDay News) -- Babies can understand many words sooner than they can actually say them, a new study indicates. Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania say 6- to 9-month old babies learn the meaning of the words for certain foods and body parts through their daily exposure to language. They said most psychologists don't think this type of word comprehension is possible until a child is closer to 1 year. "I think it's surprising in the sense that the kids at this age aren't saying anything, they're not pointing, they're not walking," said the study's co-author, Elika Bergelson, a doctoral student in Penn's department of psychology, in a university news release. "But actually, under the surface, they're trying to put together the things in the world with the words that go with them." In conducting the study, researchers had 33 babies between 6 and 9 months old view a screen with a picture of a food and a body part while sitting with their parents. The parents were given phrases to say to the child, asking them to find the apple, for instance. An eye-tracking device revealed the babies' responses to the phrases. In a second test, the children went through the same process but saw pictures of typical food scenes and a whole person, not just body parts. After taking into account possible reasons for errors or distraction among the babies, the researchers compared the responses of the 6- to 9-month-old infants with those of 50 other babies ranging from 10 to 20 months of age. In both tests, the researchers found the 6- to 9-month-olds looked more often at the picture that was named than any other images. The researchers argued this was a sign that they knew what the word meant. "There had been a few demonstrations of understanding before, involving words like 'mommy' and 'daddy,'" study co-author, Daniel Swingley, an associate professor in the psychology department, said in the news release. "Our study is different in looking at more generic words, words that refer to categories." Bergelson added, "We're testing things that look different every time you see them. There's some variety in apples and noses, and 'nose' doesn't just mean your nose; it could mean anybody's nose. This is one of the things that makes word learning complicated: Words often refer to categories, not just individuals." The study's authors said babies at 8 and 9 months performed no better than 6- and 7-month-old infants. They said no significant improvement was seen until the children reached about 14 months of age. They could not explain exactly why performance did not improve for so long. "I think this study presents a great message to parents: You can talk to your babies and they're going to understand a bit of what you're saying," Swingley concluded. "They're not going to give us back witty repartee, but they understand some of it. And the more they know, the more they can build on what they know." Their study was published online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The U.S. National Institutes of Health provides more information on infant development. SOURCE: University of Pennsylvania, news release, Feb. 13, 2012 Previous: Health Highlights: Feb. 15, 2012 Next: Respiratory Virus Killed 8 Military Recruits After Vaccination Program Halted
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Home » Board of Education Information Management School Finance Public Meetings Board Members Objectives / Action Plan Standards of Quality Standards of Accreditation Education Legislation Veterans Honorary Diploma Standards of Learning (SOL) Code of Virginia State records management - Library of Virginia VDOE Strategic Plan Full Report VDOE Strategic Plan Report Menu Information on this page is provided by the Office of Board Relations. Staff Contacts Virginia Board of Education The vision of the Board of Education and Superintendent of Public Instruction, in cooperation with their partners, is to create an excellent statewide system of public education that derives strength from our diversity and that ensures equality of opportunity for each student in a safe and healthy learning environment that prepares all students to be capable, responsible, and self-reliant citizens in the global society. The mission of the Board of Education and Superintendent of Public Instruction, in cooperation with their partners, is to develop policies and provide leadership that improve student achievement and prepare students to succeed in postsecondary education and the workplace. The main duties of the Board of Education include: Setting statewide curriculum standards; Establishing high school graduation requirements; Determining qualifications for classroom teachers, principals, and other education personnel; Establishing state testing and assessment programs; Establishing standards for accreditation of local school divisions and preparation programs for teachers and administrators; Implementing the No Child Left Behind Act and administering federal assistance programs; and Developing rules and regulations for the administration of state programs. The Board of Education consists of nine members appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the General Assembly. Members are appointed to serve a term of four years. No member shall be appointed to more than two consecutive four-year terms. Goals for Public Education in Virginia: 2012-2017 Goal 1: Accountability for Student Learning The Board of Education will support accountability for all public schools by establishing policies that help schools increase the academic success of all students, especially those who are at-risk or in underperforming school systems. Incorporating student academic progress and narrowing of achievement gaps into the accountability system will provide for a more comprehensive identification of student achievement at each school. Goal 2: Rigorous Standards to Promote College and Career Readiness The Board of Education will continue to raise the bar on academic performance standards to ensure global competitiveness. Our schools will lead the nation in rigor and quality, and our students will excel in postsecondary education and/or in the global workplace. Building on the success of the Standards of Learning (SOL) program, more rigorous and relevant expectations will continue to be implemented that meet or exceed national and international benchmarks for college and career readiness. Particular emphasis will be placed on supporting the attainment of literacy and mathematics skills for all students, pre-K through grade 12. Goal 3: Expanded Opportunities to Learn The Board of Education will put in place policies and initiatives that expand learning opportunities for all children. These policies and initiatives will include high-quality charter schools, college partnership laboratory schools, online learning programs, and Governor’s Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) academies. Such learning opportunities provide options for parents and students while allowing communities and educators to create innovative instructional programs that can be replicated elsewhere in the public school system. Goal 4: Nurturing Young Learners The Board of Education will work cooperatively with partners to promote new and innovative partnerships that help to ensure that all children enter kindergarten with the skills they need for success in school. Goal 5: Highly Qualified and Effective Educators The Board of Education will establish policies and standards that strengthen the preparation, recruitment, and retention of the best and brightest educators, including meaningful and ongoing professional development, especially in teacher shortage areas and in hard-to-staff schools. Goal 6: Sound Policies for Student Success The Board of Education will provide leadership to implement the provisions of state and federal laws and regulations in effective and efficient ways that expand opportunities for all of Virginia’s school children to excel academically. Goal 7: Safe and Secure Schools The Board of Education will provide leadership to create safe and secure school environments. To contact a member of the Virginia Board of Education, please email BOE@doe.virginia.gov. Top of Page Virginia Department of Education © Commonwealth of Virginia, 2012 | View VDOE's Expenses | Staff Contacts
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HomeThe RaceThe IAFPilot LoungeThank You! Iditarod ‘98 By Joe Pendergrass This document is an accounting of the impressions and experiences of the author, and is not intended to tell the complete story of the ‘98 Iditarod sled dog race. It is told from the perspective of a pilot who is flying his first Iditarod. To fly with the Iditarod Air Force is something I had been looking forward to for 20 years. I met Eric and Linda Johnson in the early 90’s when we were all involved with the Birchwood Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol. In more recent years, they have both been very active in the Iditarod Air Force (IAF), Eric as the Chief Pilot and Linda as the author of the Pilot’s handbook and as a dispatcher for the pilots. Eric cleared the way for my acceptance by this elite group of volunteers. These pilots spend many hours and many dollars of their own money, to maintain pilot proficiency and to keep their airplanes in top condition. Two of the more obvious reasons; to support the last great race and of course for the love of flying. A series of meetings were held at the Regal Alaskan hotel on the shores of Lake Hood in Anchorage. The meetings were to introduce the pilots to each other, meet race officials, and spell out the rules, expectations, dos and don’ts of the job at hand. John Norris and Bill Kramer are this years chief pilots and will split the work load. Eric will work this years race as a pilot only, taking a much deserved break from the burdens of being Chief Pilot. There are 22 pilots signed up this year, three of which are rookies to the IAF. Myself, Frank Pinkerton and Diana Moroney are first year pilots for the IAF. I fly a 1955 Cessna 180 on Fly-Lit 3000 hydraulic wheel skis. Frank is flying a Cessna 172 which has been converted to a tail dragger with straight Landis skis. Diana is flying a Piper Archer (low wing) on wheels. The 19 others are flying 185s, 180s, Super Cubs, and an Aeronica Sedan. Some are on wheels, some penetration wheel skis, some hydraulic wheel skis and some on straight skis. At least two of the pilots are veteran Iditarod mushers, Diana and Bruce Moroney each have mushed to Nome, Diana eight times and Bruce once. Diana’s team is being mushed this year by veteran IAF pilot, Sam Maxwell. The Pilots come from all walks of life. Of the ones I know of, we have two doctors, a lawyer, construction workers, business owners, professional pilots, executives, retired people, and an aircraft mechanic. Months were spent in preparing for this long awaited flying opportunity. I picked the brains of veteran pilots like Eric, Jim Kintz, and Danny Davidson for suggestions and read Linda’s handbook three times. I had wanted wheel skis for many years but had never got around to buying any. Not until, that is, it looked like I was going to fly the Iditarod. I located a pair in Kalispell, Montana. After a few phone calls, and sending pictures, etc. we reached an agreement and I got my wheel skis. My 180 had never been fitted for skis and therefore a great deal of work had to be completed first. Lifting eyes were installed, a P-Ponk kit to reinforce the gear was installed, brackets, bushings and all the hydraulic lines, pump and reservoir were installed. A smaller set of tires and wheels were necessary before the installation could take place. Finally in January, it was complete and ready for a test. After the first flight, one of the cables used to activate the ski’s retractable tail wheel had broken due to improper tension. The cable was replaced and I was off and running. I’ve parked in a hangar since 1985, and therefore didn’t own any of the covers that would be required for the trail. I didn’t have an engine heater, dog tie downs, an adequate cargo net, or even sufficient maps needed to get to Nome. I bought a new set of covers to include; engine cover, wing covers with spoilers, a cover for the horizontal stabilizer and one for the windshield. A 150 watt engine heater was added to the oil pan and two cables, for tying the dogs to, were attached to the floorboards. The cargo net was taken from my suburban and adapted to fit the airplane. The carpet was replaced with cardboard. A one hundred foot extension cord was purchased and a catalytic heater was borrowed. A one and a half amp battery charger was affixed to the battery box. Two maps were purchased from the local vendor and after inputting all the waypoints in the Global Positioning System (GPS), I was ready to go. Although the race didn’t begin until March 7th, the flying began on Feb. 21st and was staged out of Merrill Field in Anchorage. The mission was to haul supplies to all checkpoints on the south side of the Alaska Range. We were to begin about 9:00 a.m. and would be dispatched from Spernak Airways. The dispatcher is Lin Perry-Plake who has been doing this for several years and is highly regarded in this capacity. Feb. 21st - Day one I woke up early from a restless nights sleep in anticipation of the long awaited excitement of flying the Iditarod. After checking the weather, and filing a flight plan to Merrill Field, I departed Anderson Lake (between Palmer and Wasilla) at 7:45 Am.. Since it was early on a Saturday morning, I decided to take off in a westerly direction from the lake. There was little or no wind, which is unusual for this area, and this direction of flight would cause less noise over the residential area surrounding the lake. Arriving 25 minutes later at Merrill, I taxied up to Spernak’s where I met other volunteers who had arrived early. Unloading, sorting and stacking supplies, these dedicated volunteers were working hard to prepare the shipments for distribution to the remote checkpoints. A number of other pilots were there also, Mike Petrie, Jim Kintz, Bill Kramer, Danny Davidson, and Ken Moon were all there. I went inside and met Lin, the dispatcher, and Jack Niggemyer who is the race manager. Having never flown into most of these checkpoints, I was assigned to follow Mike and Bill into Puntilla Lake (Rainy Pass Checkpoint) with 300 lbs. of dog food. My load was smaller than the others so I could get familiar with the surroundings and so the officials could check out my abilities in a relatively safe manner. The weather is great VFR, (good visibility) with only a slight breeze. We left Merrill Field with a "ship creek" departure and set the GPS for Puntilla Lake. After an uneventful flight past the Sleeping Lady (Mt. Susitna) and Beluga Mountain, up the Skwentna and Happy Rivers, there it was. Puntilla Lake is 113 air miles northwest of Anchorage and sits on the south side of the valley. It has a steep hill that rises on the northwest end of the lake. Rainy Pass lodge is perched on the north bank of the lake along with several cabins and buildings. It is a beautiful setting at about 1900 feet above sea level. The runway has been packed by snow machines with a drag or groomer to make it smooth and sits in a northwest and southeast direction. It is quite long and has an intersection near the center leading to the lodge and drop off point. As we approach the landing area, we each circled the lake to assess any traffic on or around the lake. Each pilot then calls on the common use frequency to announce his intentions. "Puntilla traffic, this is Cessna 3311 Delta. I’m on a left downwind for landing to the northwest." --------- "Puntilla traffic, this is 11 Delta. I’m on left base turning final for landing to the northwest." After a soft touchdown, I taxied to the intersection and pulled up behind Mike and Bill who were already unloading their cargo. The supplies are off-loaded and distributed to the appropriate area. The dog teams will be bedded down on the southeast end of the lake near the runway. The dog food will be taken there for the musher whose name is marked on the package. There are volunteer handlers, checkers and trail breakers, all who help unload and distribute the cargo. After a few pleasantries, we taxied to the intersection and took off to the southeast, the opposite way we came in. The climb out in this direction is much preferred due to the hill on the northwest end of the lake. There was no wind to contend with so the choice was easy. I made another trip from Merrill Field into Puntilla carrying straw, dog food, and lathing. The lathing is a thin wooden stake about three feet long used to mark the trail. They are placed, by the trail breakers riding snow machines, in locations that will be easily seen by the mushers. Dispatcher Lin then gave me an assignment to carry a load of straw to Finger Lake. I loaded 5 bales of straw into my 180 finding that it fit better by standing each on end. The passenger seat, along with the rear seat, had been removed for today’s flying due to the fact that we were not scheduled to carry any passengers. I followed Ken Moon on this 92 air mile flight. We over flew the lake for a quick "look see" and entered left downwind for landing to the northeast. The runway is in excellent condition, although somewhat narrow. There was a huge circle carved in the snow to taxi up to the lodge. The runway and taxi ways were marked by spruce boughs stuck in the snow along each side. The turn was gradual enough so that a plane on skis could negotiate the corner rather easily. The lodge caretaker met us to help unload and introduced himself as Omer. He and his wife Jeanie take care of the lodge and cabins during the winter months and will leave right after the Iditarod is over. The lodge is closed during the winter but was opened up this morning to prepare it for use as an Iditarod checkpoint. Omer and Jeanie live in one of the small cabins that is easier to heat during the winter. Having never been here before, Ken suggested that I go up and take a look at the lodge. I walked up the snowmachine trail to a beautiful log building with huge windows that look out over the lake. I knocked on the door and entered. I introduced myself to Jeanie and said I’d like to see the lodge. She welcomed me in and began to show me around. The kitchen/dining room is large with lots of tables for the guests. The stove had just been fired up this morning so there is still a slight chill in the place. The front room is gorgeous. Lots of fine wood work has been done and it is much nicer than you would expect of such a remote place. It has a very cozy atmosphere, a place where one could just relax and enjoy both the indoors and the outdoors. I thanked my hosts for the tour and was again on my way. I taxied out to the southwest end of the runway planning a take-off to the northeast. As I attempted to turn around, it was soon obvious that I hadn’t allowed enough space to turn and line up with the runway. A plane on hydraulic wheel skis doesn’t turn as sharp as one on penetration wheel skis where you can apply one brake to create drag. So I applied some power and taxied out into the deep snow hoping that I would not get stuck. The snow conditions were good and I made a large circle to the right coming around for another attempt at hitting the narrow runway. This time I lined up perfectly with the runway, applied full power and lifted off gently for the one hour flight back to Anchorage. At Spernak’s, there are cookies, brownies, cake, doughnuts, hot dogs, chili, and lots of hot coffee. This is all provided by the great folks at Spernak’s and is very welcome indeed. The next load was dog food to Skwentna. Apparently, the warm weather has thawed some of the food and it sure does smell bad. The dogs will probably love it. I landed on the plowed runway at Skwentna and unloaded the cargo. A snow machine pulling two sleds approaches and parked next to the dog food. The driver introduced himself as Joe Delia and explained that his house is the Skwentna checkpoint. He is very well known in Iditarod circles and is proud to say that the Iditarod is close to his heart. He isn’t as happy that snow machines are everywhere now and has ruined his trap line more than once. He has lived here over 50 years and carved the trap lines out of the wilderness, on foot, using snow shoes before the snow machine was ever used. He is a pleasant, friendly man though and is very proud of Skwentna and the "Skwentna Sweeties", a group of women who come out for the Iditarod to do the cooking, cleaning, checking and whatever else needs doing. Sounds like they have a good time in Skwentna. It was getting late and this was my last haul for the day so I returned directly to Anderson Lake. After landing on the ice, I taxied up the hill onto the strip and down to the hangar. I logged a full eight hours of flight time and I was tired. I put the plane to bed and went home. It was a great first day; good weather, good flying, good food and good people. This is a wonderful life. Feb. 22 - Day two Since this will be another day of hauling freight only, the passenger seat, as well as the back seat remain stored in the hangar. I took off from Anderson Lake at 8:10 a.m. in order to meet the 9:00 o-clock schedule. Mike left Birchwood just prior to my flying over and I followed him into Merrill Field. We were cleared for a "straight in" on runway 24. We loaded bales of straw and boxes of (people) food for Finger Lake checkpoint. Upon landing at Finger, we were met by a couple of the trail breakers who were on their way through. They helped us unload and we were off again. This time, I hit the runway on the first attempt as we took off to the northeast. As we climb out from Finger Lake and clear the first hill, Mt. McKinley appears larger than life, in front of us. And although it is 85 miles away, the tallest mountain in North America, appears much closer. At 20,320 feet high, its majesty begs us to take its picture. The weather agrees and I take advantage of the opportunity. Later, some 70 miles to the south while flying over Flathorn Lake, I encountered some icing conditions. Rime ice is a rough frost that sometimes builds on the surface of the airplane, including the windshield and can be very dangerous. In certain conditions, it can build quite rapidly and disrupt the airflow over the wings and restrict the visibility through the windshield. In this particular case, it was very mild and melted off after a few minutes. While crossing the Knik Arm at 2200 feet, a huge military transport flew directly beneath me. He was on an approach to Elmendorf Air Force base and as he flew below me, it occurred to me how glad I was that I wasn’t beneath him. His wake turbulence could turn me upside down, yet I’m sure he won’t even feel mine. Skwentna is located at the confluence of the Yentna and the Skwentna Rivers 70 air miles from Anchorage. It is the second remote checkpoint along the trail and is my next destination. The runway is hard packed snow and plowed all year around. It can accommodate planes on either wheels or skis. Being fairly close to Anchorage, it gets a great deal of air traffic during the Iditarod, especially in good weather. The FAA (Federal Aviation Agency) sets up a temporary control tower at Skwentna every year during the Iditarod. This is to accommodate the increased air traffic and to ensure the safety of the flying public who follow the race. This trip, I’m carrying boxes of food and other supplies needed for the volunteers. Joe Delia, who monitors the common use frequency, knows what time I will arrive and plans his arrival at the airport to coincide with mine. We load the supplies into his sleds and talk for a few minutes. The race weather is forecast to be good this year, so he expects Skwentna to have a lot of air traffic and lots of people from the press. The checkpoints farthest away from Anchorage (south of the range) are supplied first, just in case the weather does go bad. Puntilla Lake, Finger Lake and Skwentna have now been completed. The last one, which is the closest one to Anchorage, is Yentna Station. It is 45 air miles from Anchorage and is located on the bank of the Yentna River. The runway is located on the river itself, and is even smoother than all the others. The owner of the lodge is reportedly afraid of flying and makes sure that he has a very good runway. His name is Dan and he and his family have lived there for 17 years. They are well known for making a good hamburger and welcomes all comers. I followed Bill Kramer in with a supply of straw. The straw is used for the dogs to bed down in as they stop at each checkpoint. The musher, after signing in, will decide whether to feed the dogs and rest at the checkpoint or merely pick up their food and proceed up the trail. Some mushers prefer to rest at the checkpoints and others, if there are a lot of teams or a lot of people there, may decide to rest farther up the trail where it’s not so hectic. John Norris landed a short time later and we all decided to take a few minutes and watch the "Iron Dog" racers go by. They are on snow machines and are racing from Anchorage to Nome two weeks before the Iditarod begins. One of the racers, I found out later, is also one of the IAF pilots. His name is Phil Morgan and he is a professional pilot with one of the major carriers. The winners of this race will travel over 1000 miles on a snow machine in about 28 hours of riding time. Awesome!! We walked up the bank to the lodge just as a dog team was about to depart. They were on a training run for the Iditarod and the musher had just pulled anchor but the team got all tangled up. There were 29 dogs in the team and two sleds hooked in tandem. This is an extra large team for training purposes only. During the race, they are restricted to 16 dogs. There was a man on the first sled and a woman, who seemed to be the coach, on the trailing sled. We helped untangle the dogs and they pulled anchor again. The lead dogs refused the command and turned around as the rest of the team leaped forward. The result was again a tangled up team. The woman was getting a bit agitated and finally went to the front of the team to switch the place of some of the dogs. "NO SCREWING" she yelled. It seems a couple of females were in heat and the male lead dogs had other things beside leading on their minds. When the females were put in the lead, the whole team was glad to follow and they were on their way. It wasn’t until some weeks later when I met Diana Moroney, that I realized she was the woman musher who was giving some tips to mushing rookie Sam Maxwell in training for his first Iditarod. While obtaining a clearance to land at Merrill Field, I learned that the north/south runway was closed. That could mean several things but on a Sunday, it was not likely due to maintenance. The controller then cleared a fire truck to cross the runway and as I taxied up to Spernak's, I could see an airplane with its tail sticking straight up in the air. Fortunately, no one was hurt, except in pride and pocket book and it was no one that I knew. The fire engine was there as a precautionary but no fire developed. As they say: Stuff happens. After making one more round trip to Yentna Station, our flying was done for now. I made a straight out departure on 06 for the trip back to Anderson Lake. Making a close inspection of the plane, I discovered the other ski’s tail wheel cable was badly frayed and a spring was broken. It was then obvious that the ski’s retractable tail wheels were not going to work the way the previous owner had them rigged. Today, I logged 6.2 hours of flight and decided to put the plane away. In the next two weeks, I removed the retractable portion of the ski’s tail wheels and mounted them on a fixed axle. On the first test, it worked fine until I landed on bare ice and the weight of the airplane bent the 1/2 inch axle, sheared off the cotter pins on one side and popped the rivets out of the tunnel of the ski. So I was back to the drawing board. I straightened the axle and welded a nut on one end of it to replace the cotter pin and installed cherry max rivets to replace the softer ones. I also restricted my landings on all hard surfaces to a "skis up" position. As long as the skis are in a "down" position, there must be a soft enough surface for the ski’s tail wheel to sink in. That did it and would prove successful for the entire Iditarod. In the days ahead, it will be determined by race officials what day the checkers will be flown into their respective checkpoints. It depends on the weather. If the weather permits the planes to fly, the checkers need merely to be at their stations the day before the race begins. If, on the other hand, the weather is marginal, we will begin several days ahead of the race to ensure the checkers are in place when the race begins. If, for whatever reason, the checkers are not in place, the race cannot start. The mushers and dog teams can run in much worse weather that the planes can fly, so we must plan ahead. This year, the weather is perfect for flying. Clear and unlimited visibility as race day approaches. Flying the checkers in will begin Friday, March 6th. March 6 - Day three The Iditarod headquarters are at the Regal Alaskan Hotel and that will be our staging area during the race. Generally, the personnel flying to the checkpoints, to include judges, communications people, checkers, etc. will meet us there. All dogs that are dropped on the south side of the range will be flown back to the Regal. I’m off Anderson Lake at 7:45 A.M. enroute to Lake Hood. I’ve never flown into Lake Hood before so some pre planning was necessary. I studied the Anchorage sectional, the terminal area pilot bulletin and talked to other pilots. Mike Petrie gave me some pointers that were very helpful. The common reporting point, when arriving from the north is the "boat hull" that sits on the north side of the Knik Arm. The Anchorage airspace is very complex and can be intimidating to those not used to flying in controlled airspace. Within its boundaries are two Military bases, Merrill Field, Lake Hood (lake and strip), International Airport, Campbell Lake, Campbell Airstrip, Sky Harbor, Rabbit Creek, and the Flying Crown. Therefore, flying in the right place at the right altitude is critical to having a safe flight. Lake Hood is noted as the largest base in the world for float planes. Many of the planes are stored during the winter and only fly in the summer. However, there is quite a bit of traffic on skis, particularly during the Iditarod. The traffic areas for Merrill Field, International Airport, Elmendorf Air Force Base and Lake Hood (lake and strip) all cross Cook Inlet and therefore require different altitudes to maintain separation of aircraft. These aircraft range in size from a two seater J-3 to 747s and jet fighters. The radio frequency and altitude depend on the direction of flight and your location usually determines when you change frequencies from Approach Control to the Control Tower. I flew down the coast of the Knik Arm while talking to Approach Control and was planning an "East Route" arrival. The instructions are to report at the boat hull and fly across the Arm at or below 700 feet above mean sea level (MSL). This means that I would land on the frozen, snow covered lake in an easterly direction. I requested and was granted a clearance to "land long" and taxied up in front of the Regal Alaskan Hotel which sits on the east shore. After parking the airplane, I found my way up to the pilot room, # 4002. Lin was preparing for a day of dispatching as the checkers and other race officials began to arrive. Yesterday was Lin’s birthday, so she brought in a birthday cake to share with everyone. My assignment was to take two checkers to their respective checkpoints. Cindy Fritts was going to Skwentna and Sally Hanim to Finger Lake. We loaded the plane with people and their gear for a westerly take off. After listening to the ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) to obtain the traffic, wind and any other pertinent information, we got clearance to take off. We climbed to 700 MSL, crossed Knik Arm and then climbed to 1400 until clearing the class C airspace that surrounds the Anchorage area. We then climbed to about 2000 feet for the direct flight to Skwentna. Cindy rode in the front passenger seat where we can talk via intercom. I don’t have an intercom connected for the back seat passengers so in order to talk to them, we have to yell. Cindy is a volunteer who lives in Chugiak and owns a gift shop specializing in stained glass. She has been coming to Skwentna for several years as a checker and used to live there. She is one of the "Skwentna Sweeties". After dropping Cindy off, Sally moved to the front seat for the short flight to Finger Lake. The weather is beautiful with sunny skies and only a slight breeze. As we flew along the trail, the sun reflected off the markers placed by the trail breakers. They appeared as bright lights coming through the woods and highlighted the trail, even from the air. Returning to Anchorage for another assignment I was running low on fuel. Merrill Field has an easier access to the fuel pumps so I went to Spernak's to "top it off". The flight from Merrill to Lake Hood is very short, yet busy. I was cleared to take off from runway 15 for a direct flight to Lake Hood. Immediately after take off, I receive permission to change frequencies to the Lake Hood Tower. At the same time, I’m pumping the skis down for a landing on the snow covered lake. "Lake Hood Tower, this is Cessna 3311 Delta" --- "3311 Delta, this is Lake Hood Tower" --- "11 Delta on a direct from Merrill, request landing West Route" --- "11 Delta, cleared to land as requested" --- "Lake Hood ground, 11 Delta request permission to taxi to the Regal" --- "11 Delta, taxi to the Regal" There is quite a few pilots flying today so the people are moved quickly and efficiently. There is only one more flight today and it’s a pick up in Wasilla at 3:00 o-clock. There will be 6 people and all their gear going to Yentna Station. Bill Kramer, Bill Meyer and I are dispatched to meet them. Since there is still several hours before we are scheduled to be in Wasilla, I decided to fly to the Palmer Elks Lodge for a cup of coffee. Bill Davis, the secretary is the only one there but he always has the coffee on. I pumped the skis up for a landing on wheels since there is no snow on Finger Lake (different Finger Lake than the checkpoint). After touchdown, I taxied up to the dock. Arrived at Wasilla Airport at 2:50 P.M. and as I entered the pattern, I heard my friend, John Glass on the radio. I landed and taxied up to where he was parked and we visited for a few minutes. He was flying the State Trooper’s Cub and was about to depart for the Shell Lake area. Our passengers arrived and there are only 5 but they have a lot of gear. We distributed the people and the gear and took off. I had two passengers, Bill Kramer had two passengers, and Bill Meyer had one passenger and the gear. Renee and her daughter, Cindy were with me for the 28 minute flight to Yentna Station. They thanked me for the ride and commented on what a great ride it was. Returned to Anderson Lake and was home by 4:45 P.M. This was another great day of flying and I accumulated 4.2 hours of flight time today. March 7th - The Race Begins On start day, the activities (for the mushers, dogs and the public) begin on 4th Avenue in Anchorage. The start is largely ceremonial with lots of picture taking opportunities, and even a chance to buy a dog sled ride. The teams mush to Eagle River and then load up in trucks to be transported to the "Restart". The restart is held in Wasilla when there is a sufficient amount of snow. This year, however, there is not enough snow in Wasilla and therefore, the restart is scheduled to be held in Willow. Today, my flying began at 7:10 A.M. as I departed Anderson Lake enroute to Merrill. I needed fuel and after touching down on runway 24, taxied up to Spernak’s. They don’t normally open until 8:00 and I arrived at 7:30. So, after waiting for about 15 minutes, Mike came in and graciously offered to fuel me up. And I was off to Lake Hood. The customary busy flight takes place lasting about 3 or 4 minutes. The skis are pumped down (by hand) for landing on snow, frequencies changed, clearance obtained, while maintaining traffic separation and flying the airplane. I found my way to the Pilot room, only to discover that I was early and no one else was there. After wandering around the lobby and having a cup of coffee, the others began to drift in. By 9:00 o-clock, the schedule had been developed to take four people and lots of gear to Finger Lake. There were 3 airplanes and pilots ready to go, Frank Pinkerton, Mike Petrie and me. On paper, the people and cargo had been divided up for loading into the 3 aircraft. By flight time, the fourth person had not arrived and the loads had to be redistributed. I was given a load of two people and Mike would take the third person and all the gear. Frank was reassigned to take some one else on to Rainy Pass instead. We loaded up and took off for what would be a beautiful, smooth flight to the Finger Lake checkpoint. Howard is a big man who works in the communications area. He carries a lot of gear, to include antennas, radios, receivers and I don’t know what else. He is well over six feet tall and sits in the front passenger seat. Kathy is a veterinarian and is much smaller and therefore sits in the back seat. The heavier passenger is placed in the front for the best weight and balance of the airplane. The vets also carry a lot of gear that is necessary for their work with the dogs. On this trip, only the passengers are in my plane and their gear is in Mikes. We dropped off our passengers and unloaded their gear. The weather, again is spectacular with little or no wind. We returned to Lake Hood and I decided not to refuel since I could make another round trip to either Skwentna or Yentna Station and be able to carry a little more weight. A trip to Skwentna was scheduled to take a checker and some supplies. Susan Westland, the checker, invited me to the checkpoint for some coffee. I agreed and Joe Delia arrived on his Skandic wide track, pulling his sleds. We loaded the freight into the sleds, Susan got on the snow machine behind Joe and I got on the back of the trailing sled. The ride to his house is about 1/4 mile to the other side of the river. There are several houses perched high on the bank of the river and one is the Post office, and two belong to Joe and Norma Delia. One is the their old house and the checkpoint, and the other is their new house. We went into the checkpoint where many people were congregated. The coffee was to the left as we entered and I was invited to help myself. Susan introduced me to the others, some of whom I had also flown to Skwentna. There were vets and checkers and of course, some were also members of the Skwentna Sweeties. Norma is a very pleasant woman who seems to have everything organized. I poured a cup of coffee and put in some powdered creamer, it seemed to curdle. I took a small sip and it had a very sweet, sickening taste. I slowly wandered toward the sink while not saying anything about the coffee. At an opportune moment, I dumped it out and went back to try again. This time, I didn’t put any creamer in it and took a taste. It was just as bad as the first one. About that time, one of the vets came through the door and said, "I smell vinegar". Someone else said "Yes, I’m cleaning the coffee pot" and everyone turned and looked at me as if to say "and you’re drinking it?". I was very relieved and explained that I didn’t want to say what BAD coffee they had. Everyone had a good laugh as I was directed to the other house for a good cup of coffee. At the other house, the coffee was great and I swiped a cookie too. I thanked the Delia’s and caught a ride back to the airport. After landing long on the West Route at Hood, I taxied up to the Public ramp for fuel. To get the fuel truck to come out requires the pilot to contact Signature Flight Support on 122.95. It took them about 30 minutes to arrive and then I had to move the airplane in order for the driver to reach the plane with the fuel hose. I also discovered that if I begin to raise the wheel skis, one will always retract before the other. By allowing one tire to be in the snow and the other on the ski only, makes turning in a tight circle a breeze. With re-fueling complete, I taxied back to the other end of the lake and the Regal Alaskan Hotel. Met Glen Hanson and Roger Sires for coffee before checking with Lin. The flying is finished for the day and we are to be back at 8:30 tomorrow. Flew to Crystal Lake where my brother, John and his wife, Sharon have a cabin. I landed only to find they were not there and were out playing on their snow machines. I left a note and returned to Anderson Lake after compiling 4.8 hours of flight time. Had a great day, met lots of people, the weather was beautiful and I thoroughly enjoyed myself. March 8th - Day Five - restart at Willow A "Peanut Farm" arrival brought me into Lake Hood landing in a westerly direction and I taxied up to the Regal. My passengers hadn’t arrived yet so put the engine cover on the plane to hold in the engine’s heat. The wind was blowing from the north about 10 knots and would rob the heat very quickly without the cover. The gas tanks were about 3/4 full (adequate) as my passengers got on board. Larry Carroll and Ian Ives were both checkers who were scheduled to work the Rainy Pass check point. We checked ATIS (automatic terminal information service) and got clearance for a west route departure. We took off and turned north just past the Lake Hood strip and prior to International runway 32, climbed to 700 feet and crossed Turnagain Arm. We set the GPS for Puntilla Lake and after crossing the Arm, climbed to 1400 feet until we cleared the Class C airspace surrounding the Anchorage area. Another climb brought us to 4500 feet for a smooth flight to PTI. One hour and one minute from departure, we touched down at the Rainy Pass Lodge. The passengers got out and I took off to the east and pumped the skis up for a little more speed back to Merrill. Approach control handed me off to Merrill tower and I was instructed to report over West High. I complied and was cleared to land on runway 33. Spernak’s filled the plane with fuel and I checked the oil, it was OK and I was ready for a direct flight to Lake Hood. My next assignment wouldn’t be until the restart at Willow was finished. Lin said I was then to find Andy Anderson, a race judge, and take him to Rainy Pass. The restart was scheduled to begin at 11:00 A.M. and it was now 11:30. There were 63 teams to begin at 3 minute intervals and that would take about 3 hours. So I flew to Willow to watch some of the restart. There were people everywhere, around the starting chute, in the pits, all over the lake, and down the trail. I looked for a landing spot on the lake in order to get closer to the starting chute, but with snow machines, people and a helicopter on the lake, I decided to land at the airport instead. It was quite a walk to the chute but there was plenty of time and it was a lot safer. The airport was crowded with airplanes, people and cars. After landing on 13, I taxied to the parking and walked down to the pits. There were lots of food vendors set up to accommodate the hungry. I bought a Mexican dinner and headed toward the chute. Joe Garnie was just leaving as I approached the starting chute. As the last team departed, I found my passenger in the gate. He hadn’t eaten lunch yet and it was now about 1:10 P.M. We agreed to meet at the airport at 2:00. Since I had nearly an hour to kill, I decided to walk back to the airport. The rush was on and the crowd was now trying to leave all at the same time. There were people walking, snow machines and four wheelers hauling others and vehicle traffic was moving at a snails pace. Back at the airport, I met three other I-rod pilots, each who were waiting for their next trip. Glen Hanson was to take two people to Finger Lake, Roger Sires was picking up the race marshal, and George Murphy was off duty today. Andy met me right on time and we took off for Puntilla Lake. The crowds were somewhat thinned out by now in Willow as the action moved on down the trail. We landed west on Puntilla Lake and having plenty of time, I decided to walk up to the lodge with Andy. The lodge is very nice with a prow front overlooking the lake. A beautiful Moose head and a full body mount of a Mountain Goat adorn the front room. The caretaker, Brian and his wife are very nice people and the cook, Linda is loving Alaska. She plans to move here from the southern 48 real soon. On the return trip the excitement is building below as the teams race up the Yentna River. As I fly over Yentna Station, there are about 30 airplanes parked on the river with people crowded along the trail to watch as the race progresses. There are snow machines running along side of some of the teams and that’s not likely popular with the mushers. It occurred to me as I flew over at 3,000 feet how glad I was not to have to fight that crowd for airspace. After the trip home, it was time to change oil. Parked in the hangar and put the drain hose and bucket in place. I opened the spigot to let it drain over night and went home after another great day on the Iditarod. March 9th - Day six Had to wait for Glacier Air-parts to open in order to get a new oil filter. With fresh oil and a new filter, I left Anderson Lake at about 8:35 enroute to Merrill. Topped off the fuel and on to Lake Hood. By this time, the teams were all through Yentna Station and the mission was to clear out the people we had taken there only a short time ago. My job was to take all five people and their gear back to Wasilla. It took three trips to complete and I was somewhat surprised that each time I landed on the river, I had to walk to the lodge to collect the people. I thought they would hear me coming and be ready, but out there, no one’s in a hurry. Just relax and enjoy the time, I told myself and that I did. Back to Merrill for fuel and on to Hood. I’m done for the day and Lin said to call in the morning and I could be dispatched directly from Anderson Lake. There will likely be dogs to pick up at Finger Lake and the plane is full of go juice and I’ll be ready to go. March 10th - Day seven At 6:00 A.M., I’m out of bed and had time to watch a little news and scan the paper. The race leaders are out of Rohn and may be in Nikolai by now. Called Lin and was dispatched directly to Puntilla Lake to pick up 9 dogs. This is exciting because I’ve never hauled dogs and haven’t yet come out of PTI loaded. Going into the checkpoints with a load is one thing, but coming out is a whole different story. The runways, while being in excellent condition, do offer a bit of concern when you have a full load and everyone watching. The International press is there taking pictures of everything and everyone. This is not the place to have something go wrong, the whole world is watching. The focus is on the dog teams but a mishap could cause a change very quickly in what’s considered newsworthy . Eric and Linda assured me that all the I-rod pilots will also be watching the new kid to ensure the safety of all parties involved. Each dog must have the appropriate paper to accompany them on the trip home. The Vets complete the paperwork and include any special instructions required for the dog’s health and safety. A dog with a red collar has top priority for transportation as it’s life may be in jeopardy. The blue collar is next and may require medication. The rest are usually just tired and in need of a trip home. I was met by Vets, checkers and dog handlers. There were people taking pictures and several mushers were there resting their teams. I loaded nine dogs and clipped them each to the cable attached to the floor board of the plane. In order to get the full use of the runway, I taxied to the west end for an easterly departure. Half way down the runway, we lifted off gently and were on our way for the one hour trip back to Anchorage. The dogs mostly just slept on the trip and there was no fighting or stirring at all. Back at Lake Hood, we were met by dog handlers whose job it is to tend to the dogs until they are transported to the Hiland Mountain Correctional Center. Once at HMCC, the dogs are cared for by the prisoners until they can be picked up by either their owner or handler. Some will stay there until after the race is over and the musher gets back to Anchorage. So the joke is that if a dog can’t cut it in the race, they have to go to jail. But they are well cared for and the prisoners enjoy the change of pace. I learned that Signature would come to the Regal with their fuel truck if they were called. That proved to be much more convenient for me since it required no additional taxi and wait time. Next trip was also to PTI to pick up Linda, the cook and some gear. After arriving, I was met by Bob Elliot, another I-rod pilot. He asked to change passengers with me since his weighed 270 lbs. Bob’s plane is a 180 on Landis 3600 penetration wheel skis which have quite a lot of drag. He did have the tail wheels removed from the skis for maximum performance. I agreed and watched as he departed with the smaller passenger. He appeared to struggle, even with the lighter load. He told me later that he almost aborted the take off because he was using up a lot of the strip. I then taxied out for take off with Mark, his gear and some Vet gear. I was confident since I had just hauled out nine dogs with no trouble. I applied full throttle with two notches of flaps (recommended with the Sportsman STOL kit) and again lifted off with no trouble at all. I like this airplane, these skis and the STOL kit. My plane is an early model, which is lighter than Bob’s, has a float plane prop, and along with the STOL (Short Take Off and Landing) kit and skis with less drag, all help make it a very good performer. I climbed up high for a straight flight over the mountains back to Anchorage and thought maybe I could catch up and pass Bob. But, although his plane has more drag on the ground, it goes through the air faster than mine and he still beat me flying the slightly longer route around the mountains. The next trip was to Finger Lake to pick up trash. I wasn’t sure if it would be obvious what was supposed to be picked up. Danny Davidson was on his way from there with some trash already so I asked Lin to find out if I would have any trouble locating it. He answered on the radio by saying "Stevie Wonder could find that trash". We got the message, and I realized how much he reminds me of my brother-in-law, Jerry Ellis. He is really a funny guy as well as being the longest Iditarod pilot. No need to re-fuel since I figured that I would have an hours worth left upon my return. The passenger seat was removed to allow as much room as possible. As predicted, I had no trouble locating the trash. It was four very large bags and a smaller one. They had to be literally stuffed into the plane. It was a good thing that I had also removed the yoke from the passenger’s side as the bags were pushed right up to the instrument panel. By my calculations, I had plenty of fuel left and the weather was not a factor. However, the fuel gauges read dangerously close to the "E" and I don’t like that very much. I remained at 2500 feet as I crossed Turnagain Arm and asked for a "straight in" on runway 06 at Merrill. It was granted with no questions asked and I taxied up to Spernak’s. It took 46 gallons which meant that there was nine gallons left of useable fuel. That’s a lot more than was indicated by the gauges. The book says I can go 4 1/2 hours before needing fuel, but after about 3 1/2, the gauges make me nervous. It seems that every time the gauges get close to "E", I have to fly over a large body of water before getting to the pumps, so that adds to my anxiety. But each time I’ve done that, I find out there was more fuel left than I thought. Flew direct to Hood to drop off the trash and pick up my passenger seat. It was getting late and I landed at Anderson Lake just as darkness was settling in. Another good day. March 11th - Day eight Today’s first assignment was to go to Rohn and pick up 7 dogs for the trip to Anchorage. I had never been into Rohn and it has a poor reputation. They say that the wind blows the opposite way at each end of the runway. One of the pilots has already broken a tail wheel there this year and another 180 is parked there after being wrecked a couple weeks ago. I climbed to 6500 feet for a direct flight to Rohn. The weather is sunny with very little wind on this side of the range. The flight was through Rainy Pass and it was the first time I’d ever flown through there where I could tell for sure where the pass was. The trail was easy to see where the dog teams had been through on the way to the Dalzell Gorge. I dropped down after crossing Rainy and approached the Rohn river runway. The wind appeared to be blowing about 6 knots from the southeast. After circling twice to get the lay of the land, I set up for approach. The runway was hard packed and I bounced three times on landing. The only airplane there was the damaged one parked off in the trees. The runway is narrow and sits among tall trees on all sides, somewhat similar to Anderson Lake’s gravel strip. The wind burbling over the trees makes the approach turbulent, again like Anderson Lake. The parking area is small and is difficult to get the plane off the runway. Shortly after landing and parking my plane, Dave Mersereau landed. He said my plane was too close to the runway and I should move it. I explained that I tried but needed help to push it. With his help and a couple from the checkpoint, I finally got it pushed back far enough. A few days earlier at Rohn, another pilot had his plane too close to the runway for another’s comfort. After a few harsh words were exchanged a scuffle ensued between the two. Tim Skala ended up with a few scrapes and a bruised ego. Not sure who the other one was, Tim didn’t get his name. Two more planes landed from McGrath, to break down the checkpoint. Reagan, Dave and Frank came in much the same as I did, with three bounces. Al, Jasper and Lisa were working there in one capacity or another. Seven dogs were brought from the checkpoint, which is down the trail in the woods, and clipped to my ski cables. Al laid the clipboard with the paperwork on it, down on the right ski while taking care of other things. When he went to retrieve it, we saw that one of the dogs had peed all over the ski and the paperwork as well. Another lesson learned. It reminded me of the time when Martin Buser was presented the winners trophy at the awards banquet in Nome. He brought his lead dog to the banquet, which is customary, and had placed the trophy on the floor. The lead dog then proceeded to hike his leg and peed all over the trophy right in front of the audience. A real Kodak moment. We loaded the dogs and took off to the east. While on the ground, the dogs were growling and snarling at one another but seemed to settle down once we were airborne. I decided to circle once to grab some altitude before crossing the pass. I did have to "float" my passengers a couple times during the flight to settle them down. When the dogs get unruly or begin to fight, a quick push and pull on the control yoke will cause them to float for a second, in the air. It worked well until we were on the ground at Hood when they began to act up again. They didn’t fight but looked like they were getting close. Got them unloaded OK and that was the last load of dogs out of Rohn. All the checkpoints are closed now on the south side of the range. The one flight today was three hours by the time I got home. Tomorrow, it’s off to Unalakleet. March 12th - Day nine I was up at 6:00 a.m. and had my morning coffee. After packing what I think I’ll need in Unalakleet (UNK), I drove to the hangar and installed a new oil filter on the plane. Called Lin about 8:10 to see if she needed me to haul anything with me when I go north. She said to call back later, so went to the 7-11 for another cup of coffee and a doughnut. Called her again 45 minutes later. She said I would be going alone but since I planned a stop in McGrath, to see Linda Johnson for any further instructions. I finished loading the plane and took off for McGrath. I climbed to 9,500 feet to get over the clouds that were covering much of the Alaska Range and its passes. Once on the other side, the clouds dispersed and it was clear sailing on to McGrath. I landed on runway 07 and taxied to Woods’ for fuel. There was no-one there, so went to the bunkhouse-cafe-pilot room to find someone to give me some gas. Also found Linda Johnson and met several others there. Jim Kintz, Roger Sires, Jack Niggemyer, Frank Pinkerton, Tim Skala, and others were there. Linda asked if I could haul some gear to Ruby and I said "Sure". Roger had some equipment that he couldn’t carry in the cub, so I loaded it into the 180. There were also some Vet supplies that needed to go. I loaded it all into my Cessna and took off on runway 25. The tower operator called and chewed me out for taking off too early. It seems that, although I had passed all the airplanes parked on the side of the field before taking off, I was supposed to wait until I passed the intersection. I apologized and said that it wouldn’t happen again, while hoping that Grant (FAA) wasn’t watching. I didn’t go back and never heard about it again. After flying direct to Ruby, I circled a couple times to check things out. Several other planes were parked on the (Yukon) River in front of the village, so I decided that looked pretty good and landed up river and parked behind two others. One of the trail breakers helped unload the gear and put it in his sled. I got on behind him and we hauled it up the hill to the checkpoint. The checkpoint is at the community center that lies in the middle of the village. Met several other volunteers, had a sandwich and a cup of coffee. Caught a ride back down the hill to the river and was asked if I could haul some lathing to Galena. Since it was on my way to UNK and I had plenty of time before dark, I agreed. We loaded the two bundles of lathing and I took off for the 44 mile flight to Galena. The trail breaker had said that I could land on the river in front of the checkpoint in Galena. After making several low passes over the village, I think I found the checkpoint but the river close by, did not look like any place I wanted to land. So I went to the far end of the village and found a place on the river that looked a lot more user friendly, and landed. I walked about a mile and a half into the village and got directions to the checkpoint. Met several people who were very happy to help and took me back to the plane in a pick-up. They loaded the bundles of lathing into their pick-up and I was again on my way to UNK. Headed down river to Nulato and turned toward Kaltag. After passing Kaltag, I followed the trail past Old Woman cabin and on to Unalakleet. The wind was blowing hard and I circled a couple of times while waiting for Penn Air and Bering Air to land. After watching which way the dust blew upon their landings, I decided to follow Bering in on runway 08. Phil Morgan met me and directed me where to park. He had already made arrangements for the IAF tie downs and electric hook-ups. He also got us a pick-up truck to use to haul our gear to the "Shafter House" where we were to stay. Shortly after I got my plane all tucked in, Tim arrived and we tied him down and he rode with us to the Shafter house. Jack Niggemyer came into the bunk house and took us all to dinner at the cafe. Jack is planning to ride with the trail breakers on from here to Nome. Diana Moroney came in later, while we were eating and is also one of the I-Rod pilots. Our room at the bunk house has six beds in it and right now there is only one left. Tomorrow, there will likely be people sleeping on the floor. Another great day with great people in a great land. March 13th - Day ten Had a good nights sleep in spite of Jack and Tim snoring all night. Woke up at 6:00 A.M. and couldn’t go back to sleep so got up and decided to make some coffee. The coffee pot was brand new and still in the box, complete with directions. But how complicated can a coffee pot be? I put an ample supply of grounds in, filled it with water and turned it on. Nothing. Tried again. Nothing. My Dad always said, "when all else fails, read the directions." I hate it when that happens but the coffee pot had won and I was now nearly out of coffee grounds. So, I read the directions, followed them carefully and it worked just fine. Although the coffee was a bit on the weak side, it will do. After downing a cup of the weak stuff, got on my gear and headed for the airport. I found the plane had fared very well. Last night, I had plugged it in and put the engine cover on. The battery charger and engine oil pan heater are wired into one plug that seemed to work well. The engine is warm and the battery is fully charged. It started easily and I taxied over to fill it with fuel. The Fixed Base Operator has a large fuel tank on a trailer that we fuel our planes from. Got my first assignment for the day, 30 cases of HEET and two bags of dog food for Elim. Took off on runway 08 into a direct head wind and was airborne before reaching the intersection. It was a bit bumpy as I turned north and set the GPS (Global Positioning System) for a direct flight to Shaktoolik. A straight flight to Elim would have taken me over the open water of Norton Sound, so I decided to fly the coast instead. However, much of the Sound is covered with sea ice beneath a layer of snow. It is therefore very difficult to determine exactly where the sea ends and the coast begins. Hence, the GPS. This wonderful invention, with its moving map, actually shows a picture of the coast with a depiction of the airplane and its exact location on that map. Shaktoolik sits in, what appears to be, the middle of nowhere. It has snow and ice surrounding it with no vegetation what so ever. The village sits on the coast in two long rows of houses. The airport is at the northwest end of the village and is blown completely free of snow. A slough runs parallel to the rows of houses on the north and is the preferred landing spot for the IAF. I passed over Shaktoolik and proceeded to the north. After swinging around to the east in order to follow the actual coast, I arrived over Koyuk, which lies on the northeast corner of Norton Sound. It sits on the side of a hill covered with trees and has a runway perched on a hill above the village. However, there is what appears to be about a two mile runway plowed out on the sea ice to accommodate larger aircraft. Now turning to a westerly heading, I proceed to Moses Point. This is an abandoned village or maybe just a summer fish camp with no winter activity at all. The snow is blown from the north and is drifted high on the south sides of all the houses and is undisturbed by man or machine. There is a VOR (VHF Omni Range) navigation site here that is still in use. Then on to Elim which sits higher on the hill and has a large, nice runway. I landed on runway 01 and taxied up to the apron. A man who works for the FAA had just arrived on an Arctic Cat snow machine. He works at Moses Point on the VOR site as a technician and was hoping to catch a ride to Nome. He made some calls for me to notify the people at the checkpoint that I was dropping off their supplies at the airport. They said to just leave them there and they would be along to pick them up after lunch. I unloaded the HEET and dog food and was again on my way. I flew the reverse route in about one hour and 8 minutes. Crossing over Koyuk, I noticed a DC 6 parked on the sea ice in front of the village. Apparently there are some advantages to landing on the sea ice as opposed to the runway. Maybe the runway wasn’t long enough or the wind wasn’t favorable. In any case, its cargo was much closer to the main part of the village than it would have been had he landed on the runway. Landed at UNK and the wind there had not let up. Apparently it seldom does. Fueled the plane up and installed the engine cover. There were no more assignments today, so plugged the plane in and put it to bed. Upon returning to the Shafter house, I discovered that a lot more volunteers had arrived today. Met John Berdner, Jill Kramer, and Jennifer. They are all dog handlers and work hard at getting things set up, the food put away and Jill and Jennifer even cooked lunch and dinner. Of course, there are no dogs here yet. Dee Dee Jonrow got into Galena today at 6:15 P.M. so should be here in Unalakleet early Sunday morning. The mushers seem to prefer to run at night in the cooler temperatures. During the day, lately, it has been in the 30’s (above 0). The sky has been clear and no hint of a storm so far, at least not before the leaders are likely to get to Nome. Walked around the village with Roger after dinner. There are lots of 4 wheelers, snow machines, and pick-up trucks here. The roads are all gravel and there is a lot of huge snow drifts in town. There is a lot of wind and the people are very friendly. Another great day on the last great race in the great land. March 14th - Day eleven Woke up at 5:30 and took a shower and shaved. These are nice accommodations compared to where I stayed while working for AVEC in the villages. All the niceties of home. Kathy got up at 6:30 and began cooking breakfast. We had sausage and blueberry pancakes. The food is great, I’m not going to lose weight here. The first flight today was set after Penn Air arrived with people to distribute to the various check points. Put my rear seat back in to carry passengers. My assignment was to take Catrina Jackson to Shaktoolik and Jan Polosky to Koyuk. Spoke to Tim about landing at Shak and he said the wind usually favors the slough and it’s closer to the checkpoint. He is landing there on wheels in the slough. I loaded up my passengers and their gear and took off for Shaktoolik. After circling the area to scope it out and assess the wind, I set up to land on the hard packed snow in the slough. I had my skis pumped up to land on the wheels and as I touched down, soon realized that skis would have been a better option. The tires dug in a bit as I applied power and kept the flaps extended. After turning around and unloading my passenger and her gear, decided to pump the skis down for take off. That worked much better and would be the choice for me on all future slough landings. Up the coast at Koyuk, we landed on the sea ice in front of the village. Upon landing, an Eskimo met us riding a snow machine and pulling a dog sled. After loading all of Jan’s gear into the sled and instructing her to stand on the back of it, he drove away toward the village. I took off for UNK for another assignment. My next job was to go to Galena to pick up Stu Nelson and two dogs. After the one hour and 25 minute flight, I found Stu sleeping next to the fence close to several dogs. Stu, the chief veterinarian, is a big man who has a lot of gear. We loaded his gear and the dogs into the plane and buckled up ourselves. It was a heavy load actually but the plane didn’t seem to mind and we had a good flight along the trail to UNK. We flew down low in order for him to view the trail and the mushers. The two dogs we brought with us were a red tag and a blue tag. Both are in need of medical attention, the red being more severe. The weather, so far, for the entire race has been spectacular. However while flying from Galena to UNK, the setting sun did make it difficult to see at times. Got in 4.3 hours of flight time today. Had fried chicken with mashed potatoes for dinner and a beer. Had red wine the other night. Unalakleet is a damp village, meaning you can bring alcohol in but cannot sell it. Don’t know who had it but they shared. March 15th - Day twelve Slept until 6:35 this morning, had breakfast and got my first assignment. I was assigned to haul 40 gallons of snow machine fuel to Koyuk. However, we could only find 20 gallons, so John Norris decided I should take it and go. I landed in a northeast direction on the sea ice at Koyuk and taxied up toward the village. A man by the name of "Ray" met me on his snow machine pulling a freight sled and picked up the gas. I guess the trail breakers needed the gas pretty bad. On the return trip to UNK, I saw two dog teams about a mile apart. They were about 15 miles out of UNK and should be Dee Dee Jonrow and Jeff King. I couldn’t tell who was who though. I saw Dee Dee last night in UNK and she sure did look tired. She is holding onto the lead, so far. There are about 10 or 11 teams that are way out ahead of everyone else. Next, I was dispatched to Nulato to pick up five dogs and a race judge. The dogs were to be brought back to UNK and the judge was to be dropped off at Kaltag. Someone recommended that I land on the river at Nulato in order to be closer to the village. One dog was reported to be red tag, two blue tags and two white tags. After over-flying the village and the river, I found a suitable landing spot on the north side of the village. The landing spot was right on the Iditarod trail as it heads down the Yukon river. I landed and waited but no one showed up. I walked down the trail and met a skier who didn’t know where the checkpoint was (and didn’t seem to care). I went back to the plane and decided to fly up to the airport and see if anyone was waiting there. The runway sits high on a hill about two or three miles from the village. There was no one there either, so I waited and waited. After sitting there about 10 minutes, I figured if I had to walk into the village to find the checkpoint, it would be shorter to start from the river. I took off from the runway and landed on the river south of the village, this time, and began walking. Soon I was approached by two people on a snow machine pulling a sled. The driver said "this is your ride, come on, I’ll take you to the checkpoint." I got in the sled and we proceeded to wind our way through the village to the north end toward the airport. We finally arrived at the checkpoint where I met the judge, Terry Hensley. The dog handlers told me to fly to the runway and they would deliver the dogs and judge to me there. Now there is six dogs as one more has been dropped. So I caught a ride back to the river. I took off, pumped my skis up and landed on the gravel runway, again. This time everything went smooth as the truck pulled right up to my plane. We loaded the dogs, the judge got in and we took off for Kaltag. Terry wanted to land on the river in front of the checkpoint at Kaltag so he wouldn’t have to walk so far. I agreed to check it out. After flying down low to assess the landing conditions on the river at Kaltag, I discovered that there was a direct crosswind to the best landing spot. I told Terry he would have to get out at the airport. The weather was sunny and warm so didn’t feel bad at dropping him there and making him walk. The dogs and I took off enroute to UNK. The dispatcher here in UNK is Dorothea Taylor. We try to keep her up to date on our location and time of arrival. She can then arrange to have Dog Drop John meet us at the airport to pick up the dogs. I was not able to contact her via radio. I unloaded the dogs and tied them to the cables attached to my skis. After locating Dog Drop, they were loaded into the pick up for the drive into town and the comforts of those much caring handlers. John’s services are called upon for many functions, not the least of which is to provide transportation back and forth between the airport, the Shafter house and the checkpoint. Put the plane away since there are no more assignments for today. The snow is melting and there are puddles everywhere. Walked around the village and down to the slough where the ski planes park. The snow drifts are 8 to 10 feet high and are getting soft with the warm weather. It is now a mix of rain and snow falling, making sloppy conditions throughout the area. The slough is where the mushers enter the village on the way to the checkpoint. The checkpoint is located downstairs in the old gym. Outside the gym is where the "Dodge Lodge" is set up. The Dodge Lodge is a temporary structure made of vinyl stretched over a steel frame in a Quonset hut shape. (Sponsored by Anchorage Dodge) It serves as the doggy hospital where those needing the most care are taken. The dog handlers and vets pull around the clock shifts to provide the best care possible for any injured or sick dogs. There are lots of tourists who hire pilots to fly them along the Iditarod trail. They follow the race progress and they come from all over the world. There are domestic and foreign film crews as well who provide coverage for the world wide media. The veterinarians mostly come from the lower 48 with a few from other countries. "John and Barbara Dog Drop" (as they are referred to) come from Grass Valley, Ca. They come up every year to help co-ordinate the handling of the dropped dogs in McGrath, Unalakleet and Nome. Dorothea Taylor is from Willow and her significant other is George Murphy. George flies paying customers along the trail and often has time to fly for the IAF, as well. Kathy is the camp cook and is also from Willow. Her husband is one of the mushers and her son plans to race next year, too. The weather is supposed to drop tonight with a storm coming in, but the locals say it won’t be much to worry about. They are usually pretty good at forecasting the weather. Today was another good day of flying, did have to buy 2 quarts of oil at $5.25 each, but that‘s OK, I had fun again. I love this stuff. March 16th - Day thirteen .It seems that I sleep later each day I’m here. Got up at about 6:45 this morning. We all had a scheduled flight and left pretty much together. We planned to pick up dropped dogs at Ruby, Galena, Nulato and Kaltag. We also had people (vets, checkers and communication people) to pick up and move up the trail. We headed east toward Kaltag as the weather began to deteriorate. Tim Skala was the "penguin" and would scope out the conditions ahead of us and let us know what to expect. He was flying low and Bob Elliot was second and a bit higher. The ceilings were low and it was snowing. The forward visibility was poor for Tim as he kept us advised from his observation point. Bob went IFR (instrument flight rules) and climbed to 3500 feet and headed back toward UNK. Tim turned around and advised us to do the same. Bob broke out into clear skies after several minutes in the soup. John Norris, Phil Morgan, Dave Mersereau, Diana Moroney and I all turned around and returned to UNK By 3:30 in the afternoon, the weather had improved significantly and we all launched again. Four planes were sent to Galena, two (including me) were sent to Ruby, and one to Nulato. The 1.3 hour flight to Ruby was uneventful and I landed on the river. John Norris opted for the runway and we both picked up dogs. I caught a ride on a snow machine going up the hill to the checkpoint. We loaded my 5 dogs into a pickup truck and hauled them toward the river. The native man who was driving the truck gave me a quick tour of the village explaining, with obvious pride, his contributions to the changes that have taken place in the village. He told me to bring the plane down to the lower end and we could load the dogs right from the truck. I moved the plane as he suggested and introduced myself. He said "I’m Emit Peters". I hadn’t recognized him but he was the 1976 winner of the Iditarod sled dog race and I was very pleased to meet him. We loaded the dogs and I took off in a northeast direction and turned back toward the west. I flew a direct route until passing Kaltag, where I flew low along the right side of the trail. There were two teams parked at Old Woman cabin and four more between there and UNK. We (the IAF planes) all landed fairly close together and unloaded our dogs. There are now about 70 dogs that have been either brought in or dropped here. Tomorrow, there will be 60 of them sent to Anchorage on Northwest Cargo. There are now eight teams resting here in UNK. I met an elderly white man who has lived here for 40 years. He was sent here in the Navy, met his wife to be and has lived here ever since. His name is Hogi Bear (nick name) and he owns a trucking company. He is about 70 years old and enjoys helping the Iditarod Trail Committee. It’s nearly 11:00 p.m. so I’m ready to hit the sack. March 17th - Day fourteen Happy St. Patrick’s Day. I had breakfast and checked the weather. It calls for low ceilings, snow and lots of wind and turbulence. However, we did get in the air after noon and I went to Nulato to pick up two people and some gear. Steve is a checker and Lee is a vet. I landed on the airstrip right behind Bob Elliot. I didn’t have room for all the gear but Phil will stop on his way back from Galena and pick up the rest of it. I left two boxes and some vet gear. As it turned out, Phil couldn’t get it all either so Diana was sent back to Nulato for the remainder. Tim found a fuel leak in his plane and took it into a hangar for repair. After taking the cowling off, they also found two cracks in the exhaust system. They fixed it all up but the day was shot for him and he didn’t get to fly. Dee Dee Jonrow, who was many peoples favorite, arrived in Nome in 2nd place today after Jeff King’s 1st place. This is Jeff’s 3rd Iditarod win and is now tied with Martin Buser. Only Susan Butcher and Rick Swensen have more wins. Susan with four and Rick with five. Only flew for 2.1 hours today but it was a good flight to Nulato and back to UNK. There were 60 dogs sent out this morning on Northwest Cargo and another 60 will probably go out tomorrow. Jill and Jennifer are two of the hardest working people I’ve ever seen. No matter what time I go by the dog drop area, they are both there taking care of the dogs. Others seem to drift in and out but these two are always there. Always pleasant and cheerful, they seem to really like what they are doing. March 18th - Day fifteen Woke up at 3:30 A.M. so got up and took a shower while there was no competition for the bathroom. I shaved and went back to bed and slept until 6:35. Had a light breakfast and launched at 8:15 for Kaltag. Followed Tim through the pass, although he left right after me (His plane is much faster than mine). The visibility got real bad, I was down to minimums and the windscreen was picking up a lot of ice. Tim radioed to say he was on the ground at Kaltag as the rain turned to snow. I began making shallow S turns in order to see where I was going. Thank goodness for the GPS. Suddenly, a light appeared next to a large clearing. It was the runway. I buzzed the town to make sure they knew we were there and landed at the airport. A rider drove up on a snow machine, pulling an empty sled. We told him to bring the passengers with their gear to the runway because when the window of opportunity opened, we wanted to launch right away. The ceiling then came down and it was snowing heavy. We couldn’t even see across the runway. Our passengers arrived and by the time we loaded everyone and everything into the planes, it was time to go. I was transporting Matt Hall and his gear. The pass was now wide open and we took off. We shot through the pass with a tail wind and before we got to Old Woman cabin, the ceiling had come down. I was again flying in marginal conditions and it was snowing heavy. Then suddenly up above, there was blue sky and from Old Woman cabin all the way to UNK, it was CAVU (clear and visibility unlimited). We flew over a herd of about 25 Caribou that were right on the trail. I landed on runway 08 and put the plane away. That was my only flight for the day. The last musher should be in tomorrow and then we can pick up and go to Nome. Tim and Diana were sent on to Nome today while John, Dave and I stayed here. Dave is planning one trip to Nome tomorrow and then will go home to Anchorage. Mike Petrie and Reagan Russey stopped today at UNK to refuel enroute to Anchorage. However, they came back due to weather. Al Lewis and Rob also came back after being unable to get through to Anchorage. So the evening we expected to be very quiet turned out to be full of people. Bob Elliot, Ken Moon, Mike Petrie, and Dave Mersereau all plan to head for Anchorage tomorrow along with Al Lewis (not with IAF) and Rob (also not with IAF). The weather is forecast to be IFR but will just have to wait and see. March 19th - Day Sixteen Got up and had a light breakfast, one sausage and one waffle. Went to the airport to remove the back seat since my assignment was to get dogs from Shaktoolik. The flight over was a bit rough due to high winds. The wind was blowing right down the slough so landed to the east. Was supposed to pick up 4 dogs but one was given away to someone in the village, so returned with the other three. Took off to the east, the snow is soft due to the warm temperatures. Another rough ride back to UNK but otherwise uneventful. Took the route over the Blueberry Hills which wasn’t quite as bad as along the cliffs next to the sea ice. When I got back and landed, the battery was dead and the engine wouldn’t start. I was supposed to make two more trips to Shak but John Norris had to take them for me. I took over the dispatcher duties as Dorothea has already gone to Nome and John has been the dispatcher. Vern, a native mechanic at ATS checked out the generator and said it needs to be replaced. The battery is also old having been installed in 1990. John Norris ordered a new generator from Anchorage and I hope it’s the right one. The generator was new two years ago, I think. I’ve had a lot of trouble with the generator over the years. Have the battery charging and if necessary, will fly to Nome without the generator working. Should be able to get it fixed there. Went back to the bunk house, washed clothes and took a shower. Dave, Mike, Reagan, Ken and Bob all left today for Anchorage. I hope they have a good flight and all get home safe. March 20th - Day seventeen Got up this morning and realized that John Norris wasn’t here. First we looked all through the Shafter house and we came to the conclusion that he hadn’t come in last night. We looked at the airport to see if his plane was still there. It was. We looked at the cafe, the checkpoint and the dog drop area. He was no where to be found and we started to worry. Had he met with some traumatic fate? Was he hurt and unable to contact us? We asked around at the airport and someone remembered he was talking computers with one of the employees last night. He called the employee’s house and sure enough, they had talked into the night and John had spent the night there. All is well that ends well. These folks do watch out for one another. Later in the day, John and Barbara Dog Drop, John Norris and I are the only ones left in UNK with the IAF. I charged my battery all night so it should get us to Nome. The other generator hasn’t come in yet and it’s time to go. My assignment was to take John and Barbara along with their gear to Nome. We loaded everything in around Barbara who sat in the back. She was packed in pretty tight. There were boxes behind her, back packs beside her, other gear under her feet and a rolled up sleeping bag in her lap. John sat in comfort in the right front passenger’s seat. And of course, I had plenty of room to manipulate the controls so we were ready to roll. We rolled out on runway 08 for take off. As usual, the wind was blowing right down the runway and we lifted off easily and turned north. We followed the coast over Shaktoolik and then kind of cut the corner across Norton Sound over the sea ice to Moses Point. On west to Elim, Golovin, White Mountain, Safety and on into Nome. The flight was uneventful and lasted 1 hour and 42 minutes. We landed on runway 09 at 11:44 and taxied through the mud to Olson’s Air Terminal. I located the generator that had been sent from Anchorage and found a mechanic. He installed it and polarized the regulator. I hope it stays working now. It has been raining apparently for the last several days and it is a mess. There is mud and slush everywhere. Front street is mostly just wet pavement until you arrive at the finish line. The chute (finish line) is packed with about two feet of snow under the burled arches. The siren just sounded signaling that a musher is on front street --- got to go!! Went to front street to see two mushers arrive. There was a large turn out and the Mayor was there, as he is when every musher comes in. Sam Maxwell arrived first as people had come out of all the business to welcome whoever it was that was coming in. The officials were there to check his cargo to ensure he had all the required items and the news media is there taking pictures as the announcer reads off his official time to complete the race. The Mayor, John Handeland was accompanied by a large busted woman with lots of cleavage showing. She had a bottle of whiskey lodged right in the middle of her cleavage and the Mayor retrieved it, removed the cap and handed it to Sam Maxwell. Sam took a healthy swig, put the cap back on it and returned it to where the mayor got it. There was a huge roar and lots of applause from the crowd. 45 minutes later, Kim Marie Hanson arrived under the arches, the youngest one yet to finish the Iditarod. Kim is the daughter of Bert and niece of Glenn Hanson, both of whom are pilots for the IAF. Also learned that Bert had mushed to Nome some years back during a previous Iditarod. Walked through town and had a drink at the Nugget Inn and a beer at the Board of Trade. Went to the headquarters and bought a Van Zyle print since it is honoring the Iditarod air force this year. Maybe I’ll have all the pilots autograph it. We are being housed at the Methodist Church and the upstairs room is wall to wall people. It reminds me of a homeless shelter with cots and couches and chairs, all with someone sleeping on them. There are others who weren’t so lucky and are sleeping on the floor. I was lucky and got there early enough to get a cot. March 21st - Day eighteen While checking in with Iditarod headquarters, I was dispatched to Koyuk to pick up two passengers. There was a lot of freezing rain last night and therefore, upon arriving at Olson’s Air, discovered all the planes were covered with ice. We made a deal with Olson’s to pull several planes into their hangar to de-ice them. This project took about an hour to accomplish and we were ready to go. The conditions were VFR at Nome as I took off and headed east, along the coast. Around the Solomon area, the weather went to crap with low ceilings, poor visibility and freezing rain. The windshield began to accumulate enough ice that I couldn’t see straight ahead, so decided to turn around and go back. I got back to Safety and met Roger, Monty and Glen heading east. The weather at Safety was much better and I decided to follow them and turned around again. We carefully picked our way toward Rocky Point out over the sea ice while following the coast. When the adjacent land is flat and at the same level as the frozen, snow covered sea, it is difficult to determine where the coast is. The GPS however, with its moving map, shows it very clearly. Farther east, the cliffs punctuate the coastline and provide a good visual reference. I had all my lights on in order to be seen easier by the others. Then my radio quit. My battery was not charging, the new generator had failed. I had passed Roger in his super cub a little ways back but now I had to turn again, back toward Nome. I think Monty and Glen got to Golovin and landed. As I flew past Roger on my return trip, I called him with my intentions but don’t know if he heard me. Now I’ve got to save enough battery to call Nome when I get close enough, for permission to land. I turned off everything except the GPS which uses very little juice. The weather is lousy, I’m flying low above the sea ice and there is occasional rime ice on the windshield. The engine is running fine and the heater works good. As I approach Nome, I turned the radio on and called in, "Nome Flight Service, this is Cessna 3311 Delta" --- "3311 Delta, this is Nome Flight Service, your signal is very weak" --- "11 Delta is 5 miles east for landing" --- "11 Delta, wind calm, ceiling below minimums, special in effect, cleared to land" I landed and taxied up to Olson’s, parked and shut it off. My battery was now totally dead and I couldn’t find a mechanic, guess they don’t work on Saturdays. Put the covers on the plane, plugged it in and called headquarters. Mike (the driver) is on his way to pick me up but is real busy right now taking care of everyone’s transportation needs, so it will take a while. I have plenty of time. Have called Fred and Jenny Kramer (friends who live in Nome) twice since I’ve been here. The kids answered but said they couldn’t come to the phone either time. Don’t think I’ll call again. March 22nd - Day nineteen Did not fly today due to lousy weather, it was blowing and snowing all day. I did change the oil in the wind and put on a new filter. Walked around town and ate lunch at Fat Freddys. Decided to go by headquarters and see what’s going on. As I was about to walk in, out walked the Lt. Governor, Fran Ulmer with an assistant. She recognized my face but didn’t remember my name, as usual. (I’ve met her several times before and she never remembers my name) We spoke for a few minutes and she assured me that next time, she will remember. I thought to myself "sure you will". Saturday night is the first mushers banquet and I have a ticket. Every musher that finishes the race, gets a banquet. This year is the first year, ever, that all mushers have arrived in time to attend the first banquet. Therefore, there will be only one this year. It was very well attended and I sat with John and Barbara Dog Drop and one of the mushers. A new one and I don’t remember his name. I also ran into an accountant who lives in Nome, that I had met last year in Gambell while I was working for AVEC... but that’s another story. I got into one of the chow lines, (a buffet) and was working my way slowly toward the food. Both lines were parallel to each other and right opposite me, in the other line, was Fran Ulmer. I said to her "this is a quiz". She said "what?" I said " what is my name?" She said "your name is Joe Pendergrass, and you retired from Corrections" I told her she passed and she assured me she would, from now on, remember my name. While I was pleased to hear that, I fully expect that with the number of people she meets, that is actually asking quite a lot. After the banquet, I went with a bunch of other volunteers to the "Bearing Sea" bar for a few drinks. Most of the others were veterinarians who seem to like to buy the drinks. I never got to buy one. John Baker (musher) and his girlfriend (Eva) sat with our group. I also met Tim who is the operations manager at the Red Dog mine, north of Kotzebue. The vets are Caroline Griffiths, Catrina Jackson, Eric ?, Jackie ? and one of the race judges named Jack. It was 1:30 in the morning before I got back to the church and hit the cot. March 23rd - Day twenty Got up this morning and met Mike, the driver. He had an errand to run taking passengers to the Alaska Airlines terminal, so decided to tag along. While waiting for Mike to take care of business, I ran into Margaret Pugh (Corrections Commissioner), who was with Senator Al Adams. Margaret greeted me with a hug and introduced me to the Senator. They had just arrived from Anchorage and were to meet with Fran Ulmer and some folks from Nome regarding the establishing of a half-way house here. While we were talking, up walked Joyce Shea, Superintendent of the Anvil Mountain Correctional Center, in Nome. She was just leaving as she is on TDY, running the Pt. Mackenzie prison farm. Joyce said if she had known that I was here, I could have stayed at her house since no one was using it. She had just come home for the week-end. Wish I had known cause I’m sure it would beat the church. Although the race is over for the mushers and most of the volunteers, it’s not over for the IAF until all checkpoints have been cleared out and everyone is home, safe and sound. Went back to the com center (headquarters) and decided to attempt a departure for White Mountain. My battery was fully charged now and I can make it there and back by only using the battery when I have to. There are 6 people and 4 dogs that remain and then, all the work is done. The weather has lifted in Nome and we should be able to make it fine. We loaded into the truck and Mike took us out to the City air strip where George Murphy is parked. The plan was for John Norris, George and Me to each pick up two people and Roger Sires would pick up the dogs. As we approached George’s plane, we drove through several snow drifts and finally got stuck. It was right up to the axles and the truck was high centered. After about an hour of digging and finally finding a state DOT truck to pull us out, we were again on our way. George took off and got as far as Safety and had to turn back due to weather. By this time, I had gotten out to my plane at the other airport and the weather was now IFR. John Norris did get through and told me to wait until he made a pirep (pilot report). So I waited and waited and waited. I finally decided to call Lin at the com center and she relayed the pirep and said John was at White Mountain. I decided to go for it. I obtained a "Special VFR" clearance and took off on runway 20 (two zero). I turned left out over the sea ice and headed down the coast. The ceiling at Nome was low and that was the best I would see all day. I flew out over the sea ice and was still low as I passed Safety . On past Solomon toward Rocky Point the ceiling was still low but had raised a little bit. I could see over the land mass toward Golovin but couldn’t see the coast that I knew was there. Rocky Point is at the end of a peninsula that can be avoided if you can get over the hills and fly direct toward Golovin. There was adequate clearance between the hills and the clouds as I scooted through. On the other side, there was marginally adequate ceilings but not being able to see the coast, I had to rely on the GPS and the map. I followed the GPS coarse directly toward White Mountain. When it indicated that I was about 1 mile away, I became concerned because I still could not see the village. The poor weather and rising terrain were obscuring my visibility. As I rounded a corner in the river, all of a sudden, there it was. I love this GPS. George told me that the river was a good landing spot and it is much closer to the check point. Since time was of the essence, I circled the village and set up an approach to land on the river. There were a lot of snowmobile tracks and it appeared to be a good landing spot right in front of the village. As I touched down on the surface, it was immediately obvious that I was in overflow. I kept the speed up as I taxied though it without stopping . The slush splashed up and got all over the airplane. The temperature was about 20 degrees above zero and the slush immediately froze as it came into contact with the surface of the airplane. I kept going until I had come to dry snow, stopped and shut off the engine. Howard, an Eskimo volunteer, arrived within minutes on his snow machine, pulling a dog sled. He explained that I should have landed on the other side of the trail markers. Of course, by this time, I was well aware of that. After discussing the passengers, their gear and the river, I decided to take off and land at the airport before loading up. Howard then returned to the checkpoint to pick up my passengers and their gear and take them up to the airport. The airport at White Mountain sits on top of a ridge overlooking the village. I took off down river and circled the village as I pumped the skis up for a landing on the gravel runway. The runway was in good condition and was plenty long. I taxied up to the apron, shut the engine off and got out. A few minutes went by before Howard arrived with my load. Two vets by the names of Nee Nee and Kathleen, along with their gear, were packed into his sled and on his snow machine. I put them to work and with plastic credit cards, we began scraping ice from the airplane. There was ice on the under side of the fuselage, wings, tail and of course, all over the skies and landing gear. The job took about 30 minutes as the ice came off rather easily. Soon, we were ready and loaded up. Since I had now shut the engine off two times and restarted it since leaving Nome with a fully charged battery, I was very aware of the possibility that it didn’t have much life left in it. However, it started once again and we taxied down to the far end of the runway. My load was fairly heavy, so I wanted all the runway at my disposal. I had my map, folded to the appropriate location, placed in my lap. I firewalled it (pushed the throttle all the way in) and we rolled up the runway. We soon lifted off and I began pumping the skis back down. I prefer to cruise with the skis down in the event I have to make an emergency landing, that’s one less thing to worry about while looking for a place to land. As we flew over the village, my electric system failed and I lost all navigational instruments to include the GPS. As we flew toward the coast, that I couldn’t see without the GPS, I handed the map to Nee Nee who was in the seat beside me. I told her that her job was to follow on the map with her finger and keep track of where we were. I pointed to the spot where we were at and showed her where we wanted to go. She said "OK, I’m good at following maps." I didn’t really feel that I needed her to do that but wanted to have something for her to do while I looked for the short cut back across the hills. There were several spots that looked like it could be the one where I had come through about a hour before. I picked one and figured that if it wasn’t it, there was still plenty of room to turn around and find the next one. We got just about as far as I dared go when suddenly, I saw through to the coast. We sailed through and dropped down over the sea ice with lots of room to the ceiling. We flew along at a low altitude for a while and then were forced lower as the weather deteriorated. The visibility was poor and the ceiling getting lower. Now we are flying along and the cliffs on our right are the only reference point. As we approached the Solomon area, the cliffs gave way to the flat low terrain where you cannot tell the land from the sea ice. We held a steady compass course toward Safety as we picked up the trail markers and followed them from Topkok to Cape Nome. As we crossed over Safety, I picked out several spots that looked like we could land right on the Iditarod trail if necessary. After passing Cape Nome and figuring we were about seven miles from Nome, I turned the radio back on and called the Flight Service. The weather was worse now than when I left and I worried that they would not hear my request for a Special VFR clearance to land. I got good news and bad news. They had heard my call but they said: "11 Delta, do not enter the airport traffic area due to arriving IFR traffic." I entered a holding pattern and hoped that my battery would last a little longer. South of Nome, there are several steel towers that are more than two hundred feet high. We were doing a holding pattern out over the sea ice. As we turned toward the sea, all ground reference was lost. As we turned back toward land, we could see houses on shore and when in closer, we could see all the towers. We made one full circle in the holding pattern when the Flight Service operator came back on the radio. "11 Delta, you are cleared to enter the airport traffic area and land on the runway of your choice." We followed the edge of town until the runway was in sight. Landing that day on 09, Nome never looked so good. I don’t think my passengers knew how nervous I was on that trip. We unloaded everything and everyone and put the plane to bed. This was the last trip hauling passengers and supplies for the ‘98 Iditarod. Jack Niggemyer was there with transportation for everyone. John Norris showed up with one of the volunteers, and they took off for Anchorage. Everyone was gone from the church now as I gathered my things together. Mark Nordman (Race Marshall) decided that Roger and I should have a room. He rented one for us at the Nugget Inn. It’s great, a TV, shower, phone and two real beds. We’re livin’ good. A day that ends well, is a great day indeed. March 24th - Day twenty one Woke up this morning at 6:00 A.M. and had breakfast at Fat Freddy’s with Roger. We had trouble locating Diana and finally, she came into the com center. We wanted to all leave together for the trip back to Anchorage. Roger, Diana, Mike (who wanted to ride along), and I all decided to leave about 10:00 o-clock with the first stop at Unalakleet. The plan was to then go on to McGrath and back to the Anchorage area. We would need to check the weather in the passes along the way to determine whether to go through Rainy via McGrath or through Windy via Fairbanks. Diana is flying on a ferry permit which allows a passenger to go along, only if they are also a pilot. Mike is not a pilot and therefore will ride with me. Diana damaged her prop shortly after arriving at Nome while taxiing through the mud near Olson’s Air Service. They shipped a new prop in but, a prop strike requires further checking of the crankshaft before it can be restored to airworthiness status. Hence, the ferry permit. Roger, in his Super Cub, left about an hour before we did since it flies so much slower. Diana and I left about 10:50 A.M. after filing flight plans, and doing all the other essential things. The weather had lifted and no "Special" clearances were required. We bucked head winds all the way down the coast. Upon reaching Moses Point, I decided that I would cut across the frozen sea ice and shave about 15 minutes off my flight. I later learned that Diana had done the same thing. Roger cut straight across from Nome over the open water and still only arrived in UNK about 30 minutes ahead of us. Personally, I don’t like the open water for long distances and usually stay within reach of land, or at least, frozen water. We landed for fuel in Unalakleet and I picked up the gear that I had left there. The plan, after checking the weather again, was to get to the Yukon River via a pass to Eagle Island and then fly direct to McGrath. Diana, whose plane is the fastest, left first followed by me and then Roger, who is the slowest. By leaving in that order, no one had to worry about passing someone in poor visibility. We talked to each other as needed, but I kept my transmitting to a minimum, in order to save my battery. I had all my lights turned off and we could hear Roger and Diana talk about the "stealth 180" that was between them. As we entered the pass, the forward visibility was adequate but the ceiling was low. I lost sight of Diana and did not see which valley she went into and they were all very narrow. The visibility and ceiling was deteriorating very fast. Instead of entering any valleys, I decided to circle and wait for a report from Diana and I told her and Roger of my intentions. She soon turned around, which I was glad to see since I didn’t see any valley that I wanted to go into. Roger also turned around and we all headed back to the big valley and up toward Kaltag. About 20 miles from Kaltag, the weather was again on the ground. Diana checked up high while I checked another valley in hopes of getting through to the Yukon. All efforts failed and we returned to UNK. We landed, refueled and parked. The weather looked like we were going to have to stay the night at UNK and Diana and Mike had to get home. They decided to take the Penn Air flight to Anchorage and Diana will return later to get her plane. Her husband is an airline pilot and she has worked for several air services and can fly "jump seat". Mike had to buy a ticket. Roger and I neither have a deadline to be home and didn’t like the idea of leaving our planes here so we got a room at the Unalakleet Lodge. So... here we sit waiting for weather. We flew for 3.4 hours today and only got from Nome to UNK. But, that’s life in the Alaska Bush and a great life it is. We each called home to give an up-date, as we settled in for the night. March 25th - Day twenty two Took off at 7:50 A.M. from UNK and climbed to 3500 feet for a straight shot to Galena. Rainy Pass is reported to be MVFR and occasionally IFR, so we opted for Fairbanks and Windy Pass. Roger arrived at Galena about half an hour after me and we refueled. He said not to wait for him since he would take an hour longer to fly to Fairbanks. I climbed to 5500 feet and plotted a course direct to Fairbanks. It took 2.4 hours and arrived with my battery nearly dead. While approaching Fairbanks, I was looking at the Eielson Air Force Base runway when I realized that I was nearly on top of the Fairbanks Airport. I had been talking to Fairbanks, while looking at Eielson. I was cleared (by Fairbanks) to land on runway 19L and taxied to Northland Aviation for fuel. I plugged in the battery charger while I filled the fuel tanks and put in a quart of oil. The weather was CAVU, so far, and I was cleared for take off. Just after lifting off, I heard 9528 Bravo (John Norris) receive a take-off clearance. I tried several time to contact him on 120.6 but apparently my transmission was too weak, for he never answered. I once again climbed to 5500 feet and flew a direct route to Healy. The weather was real good all the way past Healy, McKinley Park and through Windy Pass. As I approached Igloo, I could see a wall of weather that appeared to touch the ground. As I got closer, it seemed to be thinner on the west side, so I deviated in that direction. Had to fly quite a bit lower and to the west, but was able to scoot right on through with only a few drops of rain and snow mixed. As I passed over Talkeetna, I heard John on the radio once again. He was "getting the numbers" for a landing. Climbed back up to 5200 feet and shot a straight course to Anderson Lake. Landed at 3:30 P.M. and taxied onto the taxiway only to find it filled with mud. The unseasonably warm weather had thawed the ground and it was very soft. I parked the plane in front of a neighbor’s hangar and walked down to mine. Got into my truck and went home... Iditarod ‘98 is over. March 26th The plane’s battery was dead since I didn’t have anywhere to plug it in last night. The ground is frozen in the early morning hours and now I can travel down to my hangar without leaving ruts in the ground and spraying mud all over the plane. I pulled the plane into the hangar with the truck and ... all is well... that ends well. I had a wonderful time and hope to do it all again next year. Some modifications that I plan to make on the airplane are as follows: (1) convert to an alternator. (2) Change the airspeed indicator to one that reads in knots as well as miles per hour. (3) Install a pull handle in the tail. (4) Install a set of Atlee Dodge jump seats in the rear. (5) Install an extended baggage compartment. (6) Install a new digital exhaust gas temperature gauge. (7) Purchase an insulated prop cover. And (8) Install a new cylinder head temperature gauge. It only takes money!! Iditarod Air Force - Going to the Dogs since 1978.
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Contact Name: Adriano Llosa or Jesse Lawder Phone Number: (202) 693-4686 or x4659 Email: llosa.adriano@dol.gov or Lawder.Jesse@dol.gov US Labor Department's OSHA working with agriculture community to promote safety education during Farm Safety Week, Sept. 15-22 Agriculture industry records highest fatality rates of any industry WASHINGTON — The agriculture sector accounted for 475 deaths in 2012. With a fatality rate of 21.2 per 100,000 full-time equivalent workers, agriculture recorded the highest fatality rate of any industry sector. Additionally, 48,300 injuries were recorded in 2011, the last year for which statistics are available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This sector employs more than 2 million people in the United States. The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration is supporting the National Education Center for Agricultural Safety's National Farm Safety & Health Week, Sept. 15-21, by emphasizing the importance of worker safety in the agricultural industry. The theme for this year's National Farm Safety & Health Week is "Working Together for Safety in Agriculture." "By working together to protect agricultural workers from job hazards and assuring that workers have the right to safety training, we can all make a positive impact on the lives of agricultural workers," said
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5929
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November 28, 2006 ETA REGIONAL INFORMATION ALERT NO. 028-07 ORIGINATING OFFICE: Region 5 SUBJECT: Request for Comments - Reporting and Performance Standards System for Migrant and Seasonal Farmworker Program; OMB Number 1205-0425. PROGRAMS: MSFW 1. Purpose. To transmit a request for public comment on an Information Collection Request (ICR), which has been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget for review and approval, concerning the proposed extension of the reporting and performance standards system for the migrant and seasonal farmworker programs. 2. References. Federal Register Vol. 71, No. 228, November 28, 2006, pp. 68838-68839; Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 [44 U.S.C. Chapter 35, Pub.L. 104-13]; Workforce Investment Act (WIA), Title I, Section 167. 3. Links. This Alert is in the Regional website Resource page at: http://www.doleta.gov/regions/regionalresources/ Link to the Federal Register attachment (.pdf) 4. Action. Program administrators are requested to share this Information Alert with appropriate staff and other agencies, and are invited to comment, on or before December 20th to: Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs 202.395.7316 (voice) A copy of the ICR will be available on-line or by contacting Ira Mills on 202.693.4122. 5. Contact. Questions and comments about the ICR may be directed to Ira Mills on 202.693.4122. Questions or comments about the format of this Alert may be directed to Robert Rainault on 312.596.5416. 6. Expiration Date. December 27, 2006 7. Attachment. Federal Register, Vol. 71, No. 228, November 28, 2006, pp. 68838-68839.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5930
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SUBJECT: Maximum Per Diem Rates for the States of California, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, South Carolina, Utah and Wyoming 1. Purpose. To transmit notice of Per Diem Bulletin 07-03, revised continental United States (CONUS) per diem rates. 2. References. Federal Register, Vol. 72, No. 57, March 26, 2007, pp. 14110-14111; 71 FR 43772; Per Diem Bulletin 07-03. 4. Substance. The General Services Administration has reviewed the lodging as well as meals and incidental expenses (M&IE) rates for certain area of the States listed above. This notice is effective March 30, 2007 and applies to travel performed on or after March 30, 2007. The per diem rates prescribed in Per Bulletin 07-03 may be found at: http://www.gsa.gov/perdiem 5. Action. Program administrators are invited to share this Information Alert with appropriate staff and other agencies. 6. Contact. Questions and comments about this Alert may be directed to Cy Greenidge on 202.219.2349. Questions or comments about the format of this Alert may be directed to Robert Rainault on 312.596.5416. 8. Attachment. Federal Register, Vol. 72, No. 57, March 26, 2007, pp. 14110-14111.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5931
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Forums Index -> Night of the Living Newbie -> Hey DC'ers! Wed Jun 21, 2006 11:02 pm Joined: 20 Jun 2006 Hey Sin! It's good to have you back. I have missed seeing you around._________________"When our darkest dreams become real...reality becomes a nightmare" mtrekster Location: bogs of Wv, sneaking among the critters and other things hey nice to see a fellow horror nut here *hug*_________________Weve lost control: kill everyone (28 weeks later) Sinderella Thu Jun 22, 2006 12:03 am Joined: 21 Jun 2006 _________________word -> Night of the Living Newbie
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5932
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MPs call for eurozone collapse plan (From Droitwich Advertiser) Business DailyBusiness Blogs Business Daily » MPs call for eurozone collapse plan 9:11am Thursday 8th March 2012 in Business Daily MINISTERS should draw up plans to deal with a collapse of the eurozone "as a matter of urgency", a high-powered committee of MPs and peers has warned. The joint committee on the Government's National Security Strategy (NSS) described the full or partial collapse of the single currency area as a "plausible scenario". The consequences, it said, could include the outbreak of "domestic social or political unrest" and a surge of economic migrants within the European Union. Further international economic instability could even leave the UK "unable to afford to defend itself", with governments across the EU forced to slash defence spending, it added. In a wide-ranging report, the committee - whose members include former MI5 director general Baroness Manningham-Buller - said Britain may have to re-think its relationship with the United States, as Washington realigned its strategic priorities. While the committee welcomed the Government's decision to publish the NSS alongside the 2010 Strategic Defence and Security Review, it said that it had so far failed to produce "a clear over-arching strategy". It dismissed the assertion in the NSS that the UK did not face any loss of power or influence as global economic activity shifted to Asia and Latin America as "wholly unrealistic".
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Jon Spencer Blues Explosion Shout! Factory FOLLOW NICK NEYLAND FOLLOW JON SPENCER BLUES EXPLOSION Entering the world of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion can be perplexing for the uninitiated. The band’s roughshod feeding of rock and soul signifiers through a gnarly punk filter manages to pitch them somewhere in between pastiche and sincerity, where plastic showmanship and achingly indebted riffage is chained to buckets of sweat and a James Brown-like desire to entertain a crowd. Naturally, this is all best experienced in a live setting, although Spencer and his group have never had too much trouble translating their frenetic showmanship to vinyl, where they sensibly make up for the lack of physical presence by widening the Blues Explosion’s scope to include string sections, brass, female backing vocals, and guest rappers. Now, the Shove! label has issued a set of the band’s earliest works over the space of six CDs, which are packed with extra tracks, lavish packing, extensive liner notes, and all the Jon Spencer ephemera you could ever want in your life. Year One: If the aforementioned addendums to the Blues Explosion sound made for a more palatable transition from the live arena to the studio, the band hadn’t realised it yet at this early stage in their career. This is the nascent sound of Jon Spencer, Judah Bauer and Russell Simins sketching out the Blues Explosion aesthetic, where stodgy rock riffs are piled high and Spencer hollers wildly over the top. It gets a little monochromatic over the space of 38 tracks, but most of the songs are mercifully brief, and there are dashes of the trademark humour that would surface on later recordings. It’s hard to resist an intro that goes: “Some of you ever been up to Wisconsin? They got a lot of cheese.” and devolves into Spencer caught in the childlike throes of trying to count as fast as he can (from ’40 Lb of Cheese’). The standout tracks here were mostly recorded with Steve Albini, notably on the sludge heavy riffing and discordant sax squall of ‘Water Main’, which demonstrates how Spencer can turn his feral rock howl to almost any topic and make it sound convincing. (7/10) Extra Width/Mo’ Width: This is the point where Spencer and his cohorts widened the scope of the band, perhaps realising there was little point in trying to capture the live fury of the group in the studio and instead looking to bolster the sound in other ways. The highlights on Extra Width come thick and fast, from the chainsaw guitar solo on ‘Afro’ to the soulful organ stabs of ‘History of Lies’ to the campy throb of ‘Backslider’. Both that album and ’Mo’ Width were recorded at Easley Studios in Memphis, and it's not hard to see that city’s twin soul and rock histories bearing down hard on the Blues Explosion—even the titles reflect it (‘Soul Typecast’, ‘Soul Letter’, and the Elvis nod of ‘Jailhouse Blues’). The extraneous material on Mo’ Width is far from essential, but it matters little because Extra Width is their joint finest moment, where all of the band’s rock excesses are shaved down to the bone and expertly entwined with their blues, hip-hop, and soul fandom. (8/10) Orange: Originally released in 1994, Orange remains the Blues Explosion’s most confident recording. This is the sound of a band that has tirelessly worked itself into the ground in venues all across the world, giving Spencer ample time to work on 'Jon Spencer', the larger-than-life rock presence fronting the band, who is in marked contrast to the reticent figure he becomes off-stage. It’s also the point where they sound most comfortable assimilating all their influences, from the Isaac Hayes strings of ‘Bellbottoms’ to the ton of hip-hop beats that Simins was clearly gorging on and transporting to his drumming over this period. Beck’s phoned in rap on ‘Flavor’ is one of the many highlights, although the extra tracks — which look appetising, considering the involvement of the RZA and Mike D — are the weakest in this bunch of reissues. But that might just be because the imperious riffing on tracks like ‘Ditch’ and the back-and-forth between Spencer and his backing vocalists on ‘Blues X Man’ are damn nigh impossible to resist going back to time and time again. (9/10) Now I Got Worry/Controversial Negro: It must have been difficult to know where to go after two releases that firmly nailed the Blues Explosion’s colours to the mast. Now I Got Worry was the band’s first release for Mute in the UK, and pretty much carried on from where Orange left off. There’s the howling punk of ‘Identify’, the soul-funk tributary of ‘Wail’, an assimilation of lo-fi disco moves on the Dub Narcotic cover ‘Fuck Shit Up’, and an unwelcome move toward stultifying blues authenticity by getting RL Burnside to guest on ‘Chicken Dog’. It’s not a bad album, but there’s a sense of the brakes being put on, of the band finding its comfort zone and resolutely sticking to it rather than evolving as they had done in the past. Far better is the live album Controversial Negro, which is a well recorded artifact from the same era that was set to tape at the Hotel Congress in Tucson, and goes some way to capturing the sheer block-of-noise fury of the Blues Explosion on stage. (6/10)(7/10) Acme: The principal difference between Acme and the other reissues in this programme is the lack of ease felt within it. A number of producers were drafted in (Albini again, Calvin Johnson, Dan the Automator) and a more experimental approach was deemed necessary. Perhaps they were wary of treading water on Now I Got Worry and were keen to evolve the core Blues Explosion sound once again, but the band lost its fervent commitment to tightness here and tried loosening out the sound, with distinctly mixed results. There’s a huge old school hip-hop influence at work (‘Calvin’, ‘Talk About the Blues’) but many of the sounds feel tired and have been tirelessly picked over already on countless other records, and the more straightforward blues-rock numbers (‘I Wanna Make It All Right’, ‘High Gear’) are desperately lacking the panache and invention Spencer previously poured into his work. A few tracks stand out—‘Magical Colors’ remains one of their strongest singles—but there’s not much here that will stunt that itch to return to Extra Width or Orange. (6/10) KC Accidental Captured Anthems for an Empty Bathtub/Anthems for the Could've Bin Pills Leftfield at Brixton Academy, Lambeth, Fri 03 Dec
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The Crookes Chasing After Ghosts FOLLOW THE CROOKES As was pointed out in a recent Drowned in Sheffield column, The Crookes are one of the few bands from the city that have actually managed to build up a following beyond South Yorkshire. The support of Richard Hawley has given them kudos locally, while Steve Lamacq’s fandom has given them the national exposure that alludes so many. So what’s so different about The Crookes? They are a break from what much of the music industry assumes the sound of Sheffield to be. The Crookes favour romanticism over gritty realism, they dress in foppish shirtsleeves rather than polo shirts and trainers and they make you wonder why they’re slumming it playing students’ unions rather than writing poetry in Parisian cafes. They’re admittedly old-fashioned and (consciously or not) unequivocally middle-class. That’s what’s different – they don’t look, sound or feel like any other band that’s come out of Sheffield over the last few years. You might argue that that’s because they’re not from Sheffield at all, having only moved here for university. But then they’re different again because after graduation, they stuck around, when most Yorkshire-born-and-bred musicians would have moved to London to seek their fortune. They’re even named after one of the city’s suburbs. In short, Chasing After Ghosts isn’t a rehash of Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not. It’s full of sad, sorry stories and confused, tragic characters all the same, but not the sort that you’ll find stumbling out of Wetherspoons on a Saturday night. It’s an album that treats situations more sensitively and intellectually than that. Clearly, The Smiths are an obvious influence, making The Crookes sound like close cousins of those other fey pop poets, Frankie & The Heartstrings. But these are pop songs that feel a little bit as though they’re trying not to be. Two of the best choruses on Chasing After Ghostscome towards the end of the album. On ‘I Remember Moonlight’, George Waite’s weepy vocals become dryer and raspier with each repetition as his agony starts to overwhelm him. It’s a theatrical trick that pulls you in, but the rhythm seems to stomp uncertainly instead of crashing with matching emotion. The Housemartinsey ‘Bloodshot Days’ is paced more quickly, making it much easier to cement in your memory, with sweet “ba ba ba” backing vocals. But the catchy vocal hook isn’t supported by an extra surge of energy from the rest of the band. This isn’t a problem on ‘Chorus Of Fools’, which uses clever guitar playing that gradually complicates to build intricate verses. Rapid punches of jangling chords makes the chorus jump out properly. But ultimately, there isn’t a track on Chasing After Ghoststhat has the elegant enthusiasm of an early single like ‘Backstreet Lovers’ to makes this a great pop album. It has to be said though, this does feel like nitpicking. The Crookes deserve credit for making an album which, while it doesn’t have any obvious chart-topping cuts, seems very much like the album they wanted to make. It is eloquently coherent, with themes of youthful frustration and heartache constantly present, but never in a way that is embarrassingly gushing or childishly simplistic. It is frequently charming and beautiful, when it isn’t being cheery and uplifting. The Crookes pay for their intellectualisation with a lack of anthemic immediacy, but it’s nice to know that there’s a place for poetry in contemporary pop. 7 Robert Cooke's Score Micachu and the Shapes and the London Sinfonietta Chopped & Screwed
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5935
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Sort : ( alphabetically | popularity ) 08/01 Extreme Highs and Lows Friday, March 03, 2006, 12:43:32 pm CST Number of Replies : 1257 Last reply on : Wednesday, July 30, 2008, 05:28:19 pm CDT 08/02 "I Love Myself!" Thursday, April 13, 2006, 01:18:17 pm CDT Last reply on : Wednesday, April 30, 2008, 12:26:39 pm CDT 08/03 Teen Wake-Up Calls Friday, April 21, 2006, 10:17:02 am CDT Number of Replies : 251 Last reply on : Friday, September 05, 2008, 12:01:09 pm CDT 08/04 Biggest Parenting Problems Friday, November 18, 2005, 03:49:00 pm CST Last reply on : Wednesday, August 23, 2006, 01:15:36 pm CDT 08/07 Big Burden Last reply on : Sunday, June 03, 2007, 07:51:47 am CDT 08/08 Cheaters Friday, February 24, 2006, 11:27:05 am CST Last reply on : Thursday, February 19, 2009, 07:30:05 pm CST 08/09 A Mother's Rage Friday, May 05, 2006, 06:58:58 am CDT Last reply on : Thursday, December 11, 2008, 10:35:04 pm CST 08/10 Abandoned Last reply on : Wednesday, November 19, 2008, 05:57:24 am CST 08/11 Conned by a Con Artist Friday, December 09, 2005, 03:59:23 pm CST Last reply on : Monday, May 11, 2009, 09:27:04 pm CDT 08/14 Trouble in the Spotlight Friday, February 10, 2006, 12:49:43 pm CST Last reply on : Saturday, August 11, 2007, 10:13:59 am CDT 08/15 "You're Not Hot Enough" Last reply on : Tuesday, April 07, 2009, 03:02:17 pm CDT 08/16 The Hunt for Amanda 08/17 Dr. Phil's Road Show: Newlywed Challenge Last reply on : Tuesday, September 12, 2006, 10:01:20 am CDT 08/18 Dr. Phil's Road Show: Newlywed Challenge, Part 2 Number of Replies : 99 Last reply on : Monday, August 21, 2006, 12:04:05 am CDT 08/21 Ask Dr. Phil & Robin with JCPenney Jam Last reply on : Friday, September 01, 2006, 03:39:55 am CDT 08/22 Unforgettable Weight Stories Wednesday, December 28, 2005, 12:05:16 pm CST Last reply on : Wednesday, October 18, 2006, 09:47:02 pm CDT 08/23 My Fiancé is a Stalker Last reply on : Friday, May 11, 2007, 02:38:25 am CDT 08/24 The Family Cult Friday, September 30, 2005, 03:30:22 pm CDT Last reply on : Tuesday, March 10, 2009, 02:22:57 pm CDT 08/25 Extreme Food Obsessions Friday, October 28, 2005, 02:17:57 pm CDT Last reply on : Friday, July 18, 2008, 08:30:49 am CDT 08/28 Hurricane Katrina: One Year Later Friday, August 25, 2006, 10:13:32 am CDT Last reply on : Tuesday, October 24, 2006, 02:09:51 pm CDT First Page | Previous Page | 1 | Next | Last Recent Shows:
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5936
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Replies to 'I Want to Adopt'
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5937
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General Programs Certificate of Biblical and Theological Studies Certificate of Biblical and Theological Studies (CBTS) This certificate program provides a flexible course of study for: Christian laypersons who desire a short program of seminary studies to equip them for effective ministry in the local church or elsewhere those who wish to begin seminary studies on a trial basis to help them determine if they desire to pursue a degree program Christian workers with limited time available for seminary studies (Those who intend to enter a professional ministry are encouraged to apply for admission to one of the master's-level degree programs.) missionary candidates who anticipate service in nonprofessional ministries whose mission board requires graduate study in Bible and theology college graduates who want a year of seminary studies as a supplement to their undergraduate work spouses of current DTS students who want to complete a program of graduate seminary studies To enable students to: demonstrate a general knowledge of the Bible evidence a general knowledge of premillennial theology and an ability to support their theological views. Spiritual Goal To enable students to evidence an increasing likeness to Christ as manifested in love for God, love for others, and the fruit of the Spirit. Ministry Goal To enable students to evidence an interest and involvement in the local church or other ministries with which they are associated. Admission requirements and application procedures for the Certificate of Biblical and Theological Studies program are the same as for all programs of study at the Seminary. Thirty hours of coursework are required, consisting of 9 hours in Bible Exposition, 9 hours in Systematic Theology, 2 hours in Pastoral Ministries, and 10 hours of electives. Students are able to take up to 6 additional hours beyond the designated 30 hours without needing to apply to a degree program. Flexibility in the Bible and theology courses and in the 10 hours of electives allows students to select courses suited to their particular interests and needs. Many, if not all, of these courses may be completed online. Contact the Admissions office or Registrar’s office for more information. Transfer of up to six credit hours from accredited graduate theological schools is allowed toward the Certificate of Biblical and Theological Studies. Students must normally have earned a grade of C or better (2.0 on a 4.0 scale) in order to be eligible to transfer a course from another institution to Dallas Theological Seminary. Transferability of credits earned at this institution and transferred to another is at the discretion of the receiving institution. Consult the Registrar’s Office for further information. General ProgramsCertificate of Biblical and Theological Studies Master of Biblical Studies Master of Sacred Theology
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Dundjinni Mapping Software - Forums : Questions Topic: How to buy Dundjinni? VzadHireling Joined: 11/04/2010Location: ChinaPosts: 1 I want to buy Dundjinni, but the store page shows: There are no items marked for home display. The store seems to be closed for a long time. Welcome aboard Vzad Unfortunately that's true. And we have no idea when the Store will be open again. We are trying to reach the owner of DJ Enterprises, but sofar that has failed. The whole site has been moved to a new host a while ago and although the forums have been restored, the Store has not (yet).__________________You can never have enough vines - Vines are good - Vines help you - Vines are cool ... Back to Top NailHenchman Joined: 11/25/2010Posts: 1 this is not good because I cannot export maps with the demmo...... what do we do? Welcome aboard Nail Mindy has indicated that Store should be open again this week. I don't have an exact date.__________________You can never have enough vines - Vines are good - Vines help you - Vines are cool ... Back to Top Swifty13Henchman Joined: 01/24/2011Location: United StatesPosts: 1 And yet the store still hasn't opened? Any new word on when it will open up again? I have been trying to get this program for over a year now. I haven't heard, not sure if Kepli has.__________________Check out my DeviantArt Gallery http://bogie-dj.deviantart.com/gallery/ Back to Top Nope, but we should hear more about it around the end of the month.__________________You can never have enough vines - Vines are good - Vines help you - Vines are cool ... Back to Top Mr_AK_JHenchman I too am trying to but a copy, I bought one a few years ago, but I see a new version is out. If you still have your purchase information Mr_AK_J, send it to me and I can provide you with the update dundjinni version. __________________You can never have enough vines - Vines are good - Vines help you - Vines are cool ... Back to Top MobiusHenchman Joined: 03/11/2011Location: United KingdomPosts: 1 any news on the store? if it not going to be open for a while is there anywhere else i can purchase the software?
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Mean Streets (Special Edition) Warner Bros. // R // $19.97 // August 17, 2004 Review by Gil Jawetz | posted August 16, 2004 DVD Talk Collector Series NOTE: The Martin Scorsese Collection boxed set can be found HERE. It contains Mean Streets, GoodFellas, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, After Hours and Who's That Knocking At My Door. So. Mean Streets. It's almost hard to really look at Mean Streets on its own terms any more. Everything about it, the characters, the situations, the camera work, the dialog, the atmosphere, has been appropriated hundreds, probably thousands, of times during the course of the past three decades of film history. Without exaggeration, you could make an argument for Mean Streets being the most influential film of the last fifty years. It's not just the countless blatant imitators who sometimes added to the legacy and sometimes merely cribbed its style (films are varied as Boyz N The Hood, Laws of Gravity, Gravesend, Menace II Society, Federal Hill, and La Haine are all practically remakes) but the way it shaped the character dynamics and pacing of nearly all modern filmmaking. An entire generation of filmmakers has owed their careers to Martin Scorsese, of course, but specifically to this little film. Spike Lee, David Fincher, Kevin Smith, Quentin Tarantino, Peter Jackson, Wes Anderson, Darren Aronofsky, Guy Ritchie and Abel Ferrara all have drawn from the inventiveness (or creative influence peddling) in Scorsese's gritty street opera. Goodfellas may be what's bringing buyers to the new Scorsese boxed set, but it's Mean Streets that anchors the films they'll find within. But what will first-time viewers make of this off-kilter masterpiece? Certainly they'll feel deja vu all over again as scene after scene rings familiar thanks to the knock-offs they've been watching their whole lives. It's hard to say how Mean Streets, with all its quaint sets and locations, rough edges and editing experiments will play to a DVD generation. I suspect that at the very least those who love Goodfellas (not to mention Reservoir Dogs and Fight Club) w
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Dynamic Chiropractic – March 26, 2007, Vol. 25, Issue 07 Share By Stephen M. Perle, DC, MS It is only within the past 100 years that the concept of informed consent has appeared in health care. For a long time, the doctor just told the patient what they were going to do and then did it. In that sense, the doctor's relationship with a patient was a paternalistic one. The doctor would make the pronouncement of what would be done, much as a parent would tell a child, "Eat your broccoli because I said so." One had faith in the doctor - credat emptor1 - because one trusted that the doctor was a professional who made decisions based on the patient's best interest. But keep in mind that it was the doctor who determined what was in the patient's best interest. They didn't inquire about what the patient considered important. The doctor might make a decision that was completely contrary to what the patient would have decided. For example, a patient who preferred a better quality of life over quantity of life may have had a doctor working to extend their life, no matter what the quality became. It was not until 1914 that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a patient had the right to determine what was done to their body. "Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without the patient's consent commits an assault for which he is liable to damages," Justice Benjamin Cordoza wrote in Schloendorf v New York Hospital. Obviously, we are not surgeons, and I am sure that for many of you reading this, informed consent was never discussed when you were students. It wasn't discussed when I was a student at Texas Chiropractic College, class of 1983. The patients we saw in clinic were never given any kind of informed consent. So, when I first taught ethics at the University of Bridgeport College of Chiropractic, I thought: Why would we ever tell patients about the risks from manipulation when they are so very rare? Then in the early 1990s, I was recruited to help lead a team to revise guidelines on informed consent as part of the process to revise the Canadian Chiropractic Association's practice guidelines. The whole process was aborted after we had completed our work. Nevertheless, I read quite a bit of Canadian case law. In 1980, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in Reibl v Hughes that patients must be told about "material risks" of a procedure. In 1986, it was the Mason v Forgie case that concerned chiropractic. The court wrote: "Even if a certain risk is a mere possibility that ordinarily need not be disclosed, yet if its occurrence carries serious consequences, as for example paralysis or even death, it should be regarded as a material risk requirement disclosure." Reading this made me realize that no matter how rare the risk is and no matter how tenuous or strong the cause-and-effect relationship is between manipulation and stroke, the patient has the right to know. While it might be a legal right, I see now it is also an ethical right. I believe that this is true of the other side effects that have been reported in the literature. As chiropractors, we may have personally decided that the benefits far outweigh the risks, but that doesn't mean all of our patients will decide the same. As previously discussed, the patient has the right to choose quality over quantity of life; the right to control what happens to their body. If one is going to control what happens to their body, one needs to have enough information to make an informed decision; thus to provide informed consent. Informed consent is not mandated in all states; however, it just makes for good practice from a risk-management standpoint. If informed consent is done correctly, it may neutralize the malpractice plaintiff's claim that the chiropractor violated the standard of care by not giving the patient informed consent. This is now a common allegation. What Is Informed Consent? From speaking with colleagues to reading the NBCE Job Analysis of Chiropractic,2 I think many do not understand what informed consent is. Too often, it seems the perception is that informed consent is giving a patient a piece of paper to sign. And while a signed form may be valuable, if the patient didn't read or understand it, the patient will contend they never really were informed, despite the signature. A simple mnemonic to remember the consent process from an ethical standpoint is PARQ: Procedures: Explain to the patient the procedures one intends to provide. Alternative: Talk about alternative treatments that could be performed. Keep in mind one alternative that should be discussed is no treatment at all. Material Risks: Talk about the material risks, that is, the side effects and complications of the recommended procedures, and discuss alternatives, which include no treatment at all. Questions: Answer all of the patient's questions. The results of this process should be written down and acknowledged by the patient. For an easier option, Cevantive University3 has put together software that makes the process uniform, so all patients get to hear the same information. It even asks the patient if they have questions and provides detail as to what was explained. It also notes what questions the patient had and if they were answered to their satisfaction. Giving patients informed consent makes sense from both an ethical and legal standpoint. Please be sure to get the advice of an attorney to ensure that your informed consent process complies with local rules and regulations. References Perle SM. Credat Emptor. Dynamic Chiropractic, Jan. 1, 2003. www.chiroweb.com/archives/21/01/16.html. Christensen MG, Kollasch MW. Job Analysis of Chiropractic. Greeley, Colo.: National Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 2005. www.cevantive.com. Click here for more information about Stephen M. Perle, DC, MS.
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Eric Sideri Conviction in pizza shop assault thrown out Ruling could allow for Sideri's release from prison By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com Wed Feb 05, 2014, 12:17 AM EST NORTH ANDOVER — The state’s appeals court has tossed out the most serious conviction against a North Andover man convicted two years ago of a bloody baseball bat beating of his pizza shop employee in Tyngsboro.Eric Sideri, 51, was sentenced to four to five years in state prison after he was found guilty on Feb. 13, 2012, of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.Since the charge has been reversed by the appeals court, his attorney, Rosemary Curran Scapicchio of Boston, said she will ask a judge to set bail for Sideri, allowing his release from prison.The Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted the case, has 28 days to appeal the Massachusetts Appeals Court decision issued on Jan. 29.The victim, an assistant manager at Sideri’s restaurant, Angela’s Coal Fired Pizza in Tyngsboro, was working on March 21, 2009, when shortly after midnight Sideri allegedly attacked him with a baseball bat and accused him of stealing $21,000 from the restaurant.Following his jury trial conviction, Middlesex Superior Court Judge Sandra Hamlin sentenced Sideri to four to five years in state prison on the assault and battery with a dangerous weapon charge and three years probation on charges of assault and battery and use of a motor vehicle without authority. The jury acquitted Sideri on kidnapping, threats and two additional counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.The appeal’s court ruled that over the objection of Sideri’s defense at trial, the judge did not instruct the jury to consider convicting Sideri of a lesser assault and battery charge.“The jury had a rational basis for convicting the defendant of a lesser included offense,” according to the decision.Sideri “testified that he used his fists in the altercation with the victim. He also testified he had not touched a baseball bat in 25 years. Furthermore, an expert witness testified that the victim’s injuries could have been caused by a fist, a table, or a fall. The testimony gave the jury a rational basis to believe the altercation constituted an assault and battery but not one using a dangerous weapon.”
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Featured Download - FREE Gailarda Composer: Mudarra, Alonso Sample >> | Free Download >> Premium Samples We have featured 4 premium quality samples. Click here to listen >> Home | About Us | Instrument Gallery | FAQ |Help | Testimonials | Newsletter | Instruments For Sale Broadwood Restoration Dear EnthisiastMarch 2005 Happy Backs Birthday On March 21! In honour of the event we would like to give our subscribers a free download of Bach's music. There are several pieces or suites available; a duo which we transcribed from Trio Sonata # 5, Prelude, Fugue and Allegro for baroque lute, and French Suite #5 for harpsichord. Just e-mail us with your choice and we'll send you the link. This offer is open until April 15, 2005. If you are not familiar with downloading, there are detailed instructions in 'Help'. Clive's Contribution: Happy Bach's Birthday! To celebrate, we have a few personal memories and a free download offer. Enjoying his music is much easier that playing it in a concert, as you'll certainly appreciate after reading this: In Franz Kafka's "The Castle", a person whose name we never learn seeks entry to a local landmark, high on a hill overlooking the town. He is endlessly thwarted by bureaucrats. Kafka never finished the book. It was our habit to present annual concerts of Bach's music on or about his birthay, March 21, the first day of spring. We continued this tradition for many years. On one occasion in Calgary, I was asked to appear on a local television show to talk about the lute, play a piece and promote the concert. It tells you something about the times that I was asked to play the lute on television to publicize a concert. The station was high on "Broadcast Hill", above the prairie city, with a tower to beam the powerful radio and TV signal to most of the southern area of the province. (Rabbit ears ears came before cable.) This station was reached by a winding road that began at the bottom of a steep hill. In March the winds blow cold in Alberta, and finger storms come out of the mountains onto the plains, depositing large amounts of snow in whirling blizzards one day, followed by brilliant sunshine and rapid melting the next. On the day that I was to play on television, such a storm blanketed the city in at least 30 cm. of snow in a few hours. Underneath the snow, melting produced such slippery conditions that it became impossible to drive up this hill. So everyone who wanted to get to the station had to walk. I left my car at the bottom, collected my baroque lute from the hatch, and began a hike up the hill. The badly-balanced lute case banged relentlessly against my knee. By the time I reached the station, I was cold, soaked with sweat, wet-footed and exhausted. I was cordially greeted by the staff, and shown into the green room of the studio. Anyone looking on the calendar will notice, as I had on previous occasions, that a festival of another kind is also celebrated at about this time--St. Patrick's day. St. Patrick brought the church to the tribes of Ireland, and was supposed to have driven out the snakes, though of course we now know that no snakes inhabited Ireland in the early middle ages. But the strong influence of the Irish in North America is felt every year by the celebration of this day, on which green beer is drunk, and everybody is Irish, even in Calgary. The local television program was hosted by a charming and voluble woman named Marie Hohtanz, of German origin, a dialect version of "Hoftanz", manor-house dance . The titles flashed on the screen--Marie O' Hohtanz. Everyone and everything was treated to this amusing corruption. And that, needless to say, included me and the name of the composer: Johann Sebastian O' Bach. I played the piece, the C minor Lute prelude, did my spiel, and ceded the floor to the Irish. Oh well, we commiserated later, Bach probably wanted to be Irish. That is when he wasn't wanting to be French as Jean Sebastien Bach, or Italian as Giovanni Baptista Bach. That was not the only time that I realized that St. Patrick's Day coincided with Bach's birthday. Invited to publicize another Bach's Birthday in Vancouver, I was asked by Co-op radio to come to the studio, play a piece and talk about my work. As befits the humble status of Co-op radio, which is staffed mostly by volunteers, the station operated out of a mildewed old warren near Pigeon Park at the edge of Vancouver's notorious downtown East side. This is a strip famous for destitute indigents, alcoholism, drug dealing and prostitution. They really needed Bach. Through the condom and syringe-littered park, big enough for one tree and one bench, I wended my way, lute case still banging against my knee, up to the fourth floor of the dingy building. Having whipped through the Sarabande and Bour�e of the E minor suite BWV 996, I gave an interview, and was greeted by the next radio guests, a group of Dublin emigr� poets, swilling Jameson's Irish whisky, my dear old dad's favorite, from coffee mugs. Would I like to join in. Yes. Yes, I answered Yes. Yes. The very first Bach's Birthday concert was a chance to try some of the tricks that have sustained every musician who has ever mounted concerts: putting up posters. I am a person who cannot find simple answers to problems. I must always do things the hardest way I can think of. First I had to learn how write in Gothic Blackletter in order to design a poster. I used pages of the autograph of the Well-Tempered Clavier as a background. I had the posters expensively printed on card stock, 150 of them. Those posters were works of art; some of them were "collected", I later learned. Not just anyone was going to have one, only the really special people on my well-established route, through all the stereo and music stores, book stores and the odd florist. These people were by now well known to me, the people who can appreciate what it means to be part of community and to support the arts. Just try putting a poster up in a shopping mall. "We have a no-poster policy", they sneer. Franchisees, it appears, are actively discouraged from having anything to do with the community or support of the arts. Hockey OK, Bach, no. To the dedicated self-presenter, it's not good enought to stick the poster at the back, on a bulletin board. It has to be in the window or on the door. One guy, the terse proprietor of a TV and stereo (do they still have those?) repair shop always used to ask, "Does it have anything to do with politics, sex or religion?". A yes would disqualify. Around I went with the posters, making absolutely sure that each and every one counted. My bag of posters, stapler, two kinds of tape and some coffee money dwindled to nothing. In the ensuing days, I watched every poster like a hawk to be sure they were still there. This was to be our last concert before returning to Switzerland for another year of monk-like seclusion and study of our trade, the dark art of early music. Our audience of hometown fans was large by then, the theatre full. It seems a small thing now, but after I finished playing the tortuous and difficult fugue which is the centrepiece of the BWV 997 Suite, the audience interrupted the quiet with an outburst of enthusiastic applause such as I have never experienced again. It was one of the most satisfying concerts I ever gave. Days later, even the young man who packed my groceries recognized me from the concert. I guess the posters worked. Many of the Bach tablatures on our website came about as a result of these challenging concerts. When it comes to Bach, just like Kafka's supplicant I am unlikely to gain access to the castle, I will never finish the book. And a vignette from Bach's early days: It is well-known that the Bach family were beer lovers. Recent musicology has shown that one of Bach's sons, Wilhelm Friedemann, died of his need for alcohol. Perhaps it was the difficulty of mastering the Two Part Inventions and Three Part Sinfonias that his father wrote expressly for him that drove him to drink. Anyway, one day J. S. (known to his drinking buddies as "Jay") was in the bar (coffee-houses came later) and his ol' pal Fritz Lauterbach was baiting him. A traditional Thuringian bar game was the subject of the argument. How many beers can you slide to very end of the bar without spilling any? The more you spill, the more you have to pay for the other guy's swilling. Fritz was in a testy mood. "You're too drunk to do this," he taunted. Insulted and angry, Bach vaulted onto the bar, and kicked a couple of steins full of beer, almost to the end, without spilling a drop. "Do that again, I dare you," said Fritz. Bach did, this time with three of the heavy clay pots. His eyes twinkled as he sneered down at his tormentor: "I'll show you who's best when it comes to two and three pint counter punt!" From Susan's studio: As a young piano student I played the usual favourites from the Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach but when I discovered the first Prelude from the Well-Tempered Clavichord, as it was called in a five-flavours book of Great Piano Solos, I realized that this music was really fascinating. At that point I had some dim idea of a clavichord as a keyboard instrument, and I had no notion of what 'well-tempered' meant except that the instrument in question possibly had a nice personality. But it didn't really matter. This was unlike anything I had played before. There was no obvious melody, just a moving texture of wonderful harmonies which changed slowly. I loved to bling through the piece over and over, with Lots of Pedal. I was hooked. Bach's work has been part of my life since that time. Piano studies led to the harpsichord, opening up new (old) possibilities of colour and texture to bring out the strong architecture and inventiveness of the music. It's not always rosy; staring down the barrel of an all-Bach recital at ten minutes to eight can lead one to comtemplate deep analysis. But I can rely on the brilliant composition to sustain the listener's concentration, in spite of the usual distractions which occur in concerts. Among these we have had; a mouse running under my bench, two seven-year-old boys conducting a mini-war in the front row, a loudspeaker announcing that someone had left their car lights on, and a giant potato bug creaking inexorably across the stage. Playing a complex piece of Bach is about the most fat-free fun you can have. I'm still hooked. To quote an old friend, "Bach's music goes on and on, but it is never boring." Send this Page to Friend Early Music Studio info@earlymusicstudio.com Kelowna, British Columbia Canada (250) 769-2884 Copyright © 2005. This site is provided by the Society of Friends of the Early Music Studio, registered in British Columbia, Canada Website design, hosting, SEO marketing at Spincaster
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President Obama: GOP Holding Middle-Class Tax Cuts ‘Hostage’ Posted on July 25, 2012by ABC Digital JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/GettyImages(NEW ORLEANS) -- Just hours after the Senate voted to extend tax cuts for the middle class, President Obama accused House Republicans of holding the tax cuts “hostage” until the nation agrees to spend $1 trillion on tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans.Speaking to supporters at the House of Blues, the president praised the Senate for moving forward with his plan to extend the Bush-era tax rate for families earning less than $250,000 a year and to let the rate expire for higher earners.“This is something I deeply believe in, because the middle class is still struggling, recovering from this recession. You don’t need your taxes to go up and we could give you certainty right now,” he said.When it comes to House Republicans, however, the president said their desire to preserve the tax rate for all earners “makes no sense.”“If Congress doesn’t act, the typical middle-class family is going to see their tax bill go up about $2,200. Small businesses will also see their taxes go up,” he said. “But so far, they don’t see it that way. Gov. Romney doesn’t see it that way.”The president cast the dueling tax plans as indicative of the broader economic visions at stake in the election."They believe in top-down economics," he said of Republicans. “Their plan is to cut more taxes for the wealthy, cut more regulations on banks and corporations, cut more investments in things like education, job training, science, research -- all with the thought that somehow that’s going to help us create jobs. That’s what Mitt Romney believes. That’s what Washington Republicans believe.”“That’s not what I believe. That’s not what you believe. That’s not what most Americans believe. We believe not in top-down economics; we believe in middle-class-out economics. We believe in bottom-up economics. That’s what we’re fighting for,” he said.The president spoke before about 400 supporters who’d paid at least $250 each to attend the event, one of two fundraisers Obama attended in the Big Easy Wednesday night.In shirt-sleeves and a loose tie, a relaxed Obama said it was good to be back in New Orleans.“I’ve got to admit I was thinking about just blowing everything off and going and getting something to eat,” he joked. “The next time I come down, drinks are on me.”Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio Home
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Les Roopanarine Most popular at the top Harry Redknapp - The Biographyby Les RoopanarineJohn Blake Publishing 2011; US$ 8.47 Harry Redknapp is one of the biggest and best-loved characters in English football. From West Ham to Bournemouth, Portsmouth to Tottenham, legions of fans regard him as one of the game?s true legends.? Harry?s long career has been packed with twists and turns and plenty of controversy. Signing for West Ham as a 17 year-old, Harry Redknapp made 149... more...Add to my wish listAdd to cartHarry Redknappby Les RoopanarineJohn Blake 2012; US$ 9.99 Harry Redknapp is one of the biggest and best-loved characters in English football. From West Ham to Bournemouth, Portsmouth to Tottenham, legions of fans regard him as one of the game's true legends. Signing for West Ham United as a 17-year-old in 1964, Redknapp went on to make 149 top-flight appearances for the club. In 1972 he moved to Bournemouth... more...Add to my wish listAdd to cart
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Home town honour for Giles Ashley Giles © Getty Images England spinner Ashley Giles is to be honoured by his home town in recognition of his contribution to England’s Ashes victory.The Mayor of Droitwich Spa in Worcestershire, Richard Morris, has decided to make the Warwickshire bowler the town’s first ever honorary citizen.Mr Morris said Giles seemed to be “very happy” when told of the honour, which will be formally awarded at a private ceremony on October 14.Droitwich, which is famous for its brine baths and was mentioned in the Domesday Book, does have a title of honorary freeman, although that award is reserved for those who have served the local community rather than starred on the global sporting stage.Mr Morris said: “Ashley did a great job in helping to win the Ashes. He played a key part, hitting the winning runs at Trent Bridge and taking key wickets in key Tests.“The title of honorary citizen will recognise a resident of Droitwich Spa who has achieved success at an international level.“Many local people became tied up in the Ashes series as it was so riveting, it was superb to watch.” Ashes win means everything Bevan to build on Ashes success England players relax after the Ashes - photos Giles: Memories will last forever Buy the limited edition Ashes Programmes Box Set
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Our cookie policy has changed. Review our cookies policy for more details and to change your cookie preferences. By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Xi Jinping The man who must change China Xi Jinping will soon be named as China’s next president. He must be ready to break with the past JUST after the 18th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party, which starts in Beijing on November 8th, a short line of dark-suited men, and perhaps one woman, will step onto a red carpet in a room in the Great Hall of the People and meet the world’s press. At their head will be Xi Jinping, the newly anointed party chief, who in March will also take over as president of China. Behind him will file the new members of the Politburo Standing Committee, China’s supreme body. The smiles will be wooden, the backs ramrod straight. Yet the stage-management could hardly be more different from the tempestuous uncertainties of actually governing. As ruler of the world’s new economic powerhouse, Mr Xi will follow his recent predecessors in trying to combine economic growth with political stability. Yet this task is proving increasingly difficult. A slowing economy, corruption and myriad social problems are causing growing frustration among China’s people and worry among its officials. In this sectionThe man who must change China Towards a better land A deficit of common sense Make it tolerant Powering a cure Asia-Pacific politics In coping with these tensions, Mr Xi can continue to clamp down on discontent, or he can start to loosen the party’s control. China’s future will be determined by the answer to this question: does Mr Xi have the courage and vision to see that assuring his country’s prosperity and stability in the future requires him to break with the past? Who’s Xi? To the rich world, labouring under debt and political dysfunction, Chinese self-doubt might seem incongruous. Deng Xiaoping’s relaunch of economic reforms in 1992 has resulted in two decades of extraordinary growth. In the past ten years under the current leader, Hu Jintao, the economy has quadrupled in size in dollar terms. A new (though rudimentary) social safety net provides 95% of all Chinese with some kind of health coverage, up from just 15% in 2000. Across the world, China is seen as second in status and influence only to America. Until recently, the Chinese were getting richer so fast that most of them had better things to worry about than how they were governed. But today China faces a set of threats that an official journal describes as “interlocked like dog’s teeth” (see article). The poor chafe at inequality, corruption, environmental ruin and land-grabs by officials. The middle class fret about contaminated food and many protect their savings by sending money abroad and signing up for foreign passports (see article). The rich and powerful fight over the economy’s vast wealth. Scholars at a recent government conference summed it up well: China is “unstable at the grass roots, dejected at the middle strata and out of control at the top”. Once, the party could bottle up dissent. But ordinary people today protest in public. They write books on previously taboo subjects (see article) and comment on everything in real time through China’s vibrant new social media. Complaints that would once have remained local are now debated nationwide. If China’s leaders mishandle the discontent, one senior economist warned in a secret report, it could cause “a chain reaction that results in social turmoil or violent revolution”. But, you don’t need to think that China is on the brink of revolution to believe that it must use the next decade to change. The departing prime minister, Wen Jiabao, has more than once called China’s development “unbalanced, unco-ordinated and unsustainable”. Last week Qiushi , the party’s main theoretical journal, called on the government to “press ahead with restructuring of the political system”. Mr Xi portrays himself as a man of the people and the party still says it represents the masses, but it is not the meritocracy that some Western observers claim (see article). Those without connections, are often stuck at the bottom of the pile. Having long since lost ideological legitimacy, and with slower growth sapping its economic legitimacy, the party needs a new claim on the loyalty of China’s citizens. Mr Xi could start by giving a little more power to China’s people. Rural land, now collectively owned, should be privatised and given to the peasants; the judicial system should offer people an answer to their grievances; the household-registration, or hukou, system should be phased out to allow families of rural migrants access to properly funded health care and education in cities. At the same time, he should start to loosen the party’s grip. China’s cosseted state-owned banks should be exposed to the rigours of competition; financial markets should respond to economic signals, not official controls; a free press would be a vital ally in the battle against corruption. Such a path would be too much for those on the Chinese “left”, who look scornfully at the West and insist on the Communist Party’s claim—its duty, even—to keep the monopoly of power. Even many on the liberal “right”, who call for change, would contemplate nothing more radical than Singapore-style one-party dominance. But Mr Xi should go much further. To restore his citizens’ faith in government, he also needs to venture deep into political reform. That might sound implausible, but in the 1980s no less a man than Deng spoke of China having a directly elected central leadership after 2050—and he cannot have imagined the transformation that his country would go on to enjoy. Zhu Rongji, Mr Wen’s predecessor, said that competitive elections should be extended to higher levels, “the sooner the better”. Although the party has since made political change harder by restricting the growth of civil society, those who think it is impossible could look to Taiwan, which went through something similar, albeit under the anti-Communist Kuomintang. Ultimately, this newspaper hopes, political reform would make the party answerable to the courts and, as the purest expression of this, free political prisoners. It would scrap party-membership requirements for official positions and abolish party committees in ministries. It would curb the power of the propaganda department to impose censorship and scrap the central military commission, which commits the People’s Liberation Army to defend the party, not just the country. No doubt Mr Xi would balk at that. Even so, a great man would be bold. Independent candidates should be encouraged to stand for people’s congresses, the local parliaments that operate at all levels of government, and they should have the freedom to let voters know what they think. A timetable should also be set for directly electing government leaders, starting with townships in the countryside and districts in the cities, perhaps allowing five years for those experiments to settle in, before taking direct elections up to the county level in rural areas, then prefectures and later provinces, leading all the way to competitive elections for national leaders. The Chinese Communist Party has a powerful story to tell. Despite its many faults, it has created wealth and hope that an older generation would have found unimaginable. Bold reform would create a surge of popular goodwill towards the party from ordinary Chinese people. Mr Xi comes at a crucial moment for China, when hardliners still deny the need for political change and insist that the state can put down dissent with force. For everyone else, too, Mr Xi’s choice will weigh heavily. The world has much more to fear from a weak, unstable China than from a strong one. From the print edition: Leaders Recommend1216 Next in ChinaXBanyanEmbarrassed meritocratsWesterners who laud a Chinese meritocracy continue to miss the point
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Front Page » April 12, 2005 » Obituaries » Obituaries Robert Lyle Nelson PRICE-Robert Lyle Nelson, age 57, passed away April 4, 2005 in Price after a long illness. He was born July 19, 1947 in Price to Lyle and Gladys Stevenson Nelson. Robert Married Beverly Jean Clark April 14, 1973 in Provo, where their marriage was later solemnized in the Provo LDS Temple. Robert always loved computers, scrap-booking, and doing genealogy. He passed many happy hours watching NASCAR. He loved spending time reading to his grandchildren (Thomas the Train, his own version, being the favorite). He enjoyed swapping stories about the good old days with his two brothers, who were very dear to him. He was a wonderful example of how to deal with trials and tribulations with a positive attitude. Though burdened with Fabrys disease, he proudly served four years in the US Navy. He is survived by his wife Beverly of Price and children: Kimberly and Jared Patterson and Ryan Nelson, all of Price; and three grandchildren, Sierra, Katie and Tristan. Also survived by his brother Randy and his wife Tonya, of Elmo. Preceded in death by his parents and two brothers, Steven and Roger. Funeral services were held Fri. April 8, 2005 at 11 a.m. in the Price Sixth Ward LDS Chapel, 300 West 500 South. Burial was in the Cliff View Cemetery in Price. Melissa Fadra Jones Iwasawa"Lissa Lou" Melissa Fadra Jones Iwasawa, "Lissa Lou", left this earth April 2, 2005, to ascend to heaven into the arms of God, after a lifetime of constant courage, living on a dialysis machine, climbing mountains, healing animals and humans alike. She was born March 4, 1974 in Salt Lake City to Audrey and Kyle Jones. She was preceded in death by her grandparents Ray and Billie Davis; Uncle "Skeeter"; cousin Ricky; and Grandpa Klell Mecham. She is survived by her two beautiful daughters Kylie and Maya; her two brothers Waylon and Ely; Grandma Fern; her parents Kyle Jones and Audrey (Phil) Jones, and all of Phil's loving and caring family; her aunt Robyn Davis, also Don Pasborg; aunts and uncles on her daddy's side, Ben and Myrna Mead, Hall and Ravenna Firth, Larell and Carol Jones, Reggie Jones and Kathy, Randy Jones and Aunt Betsy Terrill; Masa Iwasawa, Nicholas Rich; along with many, many friends. Memorial service, where family and friends may attend, will be held at Pioneer Park, 100 East 550 North, Price, Wed. April 13, 2005, from 2-4 p.m. Dennis Grange MURRAY-Dennis William Grange, 34, passed away April 4, 2005 in Murray. He was born July 17, 1970 in Price to Ferris and Mary Bea Jones Grange. Dennis enjoyed watching NASCAR and riding and racing motorcycles. He loved his family and friends, taking delight in "giving them a hard time" and helping them out whenever he could. He is survived by three daughters, Teaira, Ashtin and Keely, who are the loves of his life. Also survived by sisters Pam and Jim Anderson of Huntington, Kimberly and Glenn Huff of Price; brothers, Gale and Claudia Grange of Highland, Richard and Elaine Grange of Sandy, Ralph and Karen Grange of Magna, Jeff and Teri Grange of Huntington, Gordon and Kay Grange of Sandy, and Darin and Deanna Grange of Sandy. Preceded in death by parents and brother Michael. We will miss you. Funeral services were held Sat. April 9, 2005 at noon in the Huntington First/Fifth Ward Chapel, 115, South 400 East, where friends called one hour prior to services. Burial was in the Huntington Cemetery under the direction of Fausett Mortuary. Nolan Richard Curtis "Will Be Missed" Nolan R. Curtis passed away on April 8, 2005 in Grand Junction Colo., after suffering a fall due to Parkinson's Disease. This beloved husband, father, grandfather, brother, and friend began his turn on earth March 12, 1920, the ninth child of Wallace and Amanda Curtis in Green River. He married Mazel Duncan, July 3,1938, and their marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He served in the U.S. Navy during WWII and then settled back with his family in Green River in November 1945. He was a life-long member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and held many callings. A highlight of his church service were the two years he and Mazel served on a mission in the Manti Temple from 1979-1981. His mother introduced him to square dancing as a youth and he grew to love it and made it an active part of his life. He received the Walt Cole award for promoting and enjoying over 50 years of square dancing. He worked in the gas and oil distribution business most of his life. He was part owner in the Curtis & Durrant Oil Company until 1979. After that, his heart went into raising melons at Curtis Island, which he and his wife enjoyed for several years, delivering melons to market. He loved sports and missed few games of BYU and the Jazz. He and his wife traveled on several BYU Cougar Club trips to Hawaii and Japan. He was a great fan and supported the local basketball teams. He loved to watch the young people play sports. He was honored and received the Super Fan Award from the Utah High School Activities Association in 1998. He believed in community service and served as a councilman, on the school board, and as a volunteer fireman for many years. After 59 years of marriage, Nolan lost his beloved wife. In December 1997, he married Laura Faye Marsing Thompson in the Salt Lake Temple for time. They have enjoyed spending the winters in Arizona. He loved people and touched the lives of many. He never met a stranger or was never too busy to stop and say "Hi and how are you?" His greatest joy was his family and friends; he dearly loved them. He was a kind and gentle and loving man to everyone he met. These are the words Nolan spoke to his wife, "I encourage those that I call family to embrace the gospel of Jesus Christ with all your heart. Be a true Christian one with another. I leave my blessing, my love, my faith in God, and hope for each of you, my children and grandchildren." He is survived by his wife, Laura Faye; children Kenneth (Ruth), Moab, Ward (Karen), Sandy, Deanna (Randy) Mecham, Hanksville, Lowell (Cheryl), Riverton, Marsha (Jim) Borchert, Ft. Morgan, Colo., Monte (Lucy), Moab, Debbie Thomas, Grand Junction, Colo.; three step-children Jeannie (Mark) Watterson, Saratoga Springs, Gayle Thompson, Grand Junction, Colo., and Audrey Grisham, Holliday; 35 grandchildren; 71 great-grandchildren; two sisters Verla (Norman) Lowe, Clella (Darrell) Ross; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents, wife, four brothers, three sisters, and one great-granddaughter. Funeral services will be Fri., April 15, 2005 at noon at the Green River LDS church. A viewing will be Thursday from 6-8 p.m. at the Green River LDS church and Friday 10:30-11:45 a.m. also at the church. Interment will be in Elgin Cemetery. Darrel Price CLAWSON-Darrel Fame Price passed away peacefully in his home on April 9, 2005 surrounded by his loving family. Darrel was born June 20, 1933 in Provo, to Fame and Tressie Price. He married his childhood sweetheart Helen Louise Blackburn July 12, 1951 (later solemnized in the Manti LDS Temple.) They were married 53 years. He served in the Korean War from 1951-1954 after returning home he worked as a coalminer for 40 years. He served in many positions in the LDS church including bishop and high councilman. He also fulfilled a church service mission with his wife at the Bishop's Storehouse. Darrel loved camping, gardening, playing his guitar and mandolin with friends and his sons. He loved visiting with people and was an accomplished storyteller blessed with the gift of gab. He loved his family and being around them. He considered them one of his greatest accomplishments and will be dearly missed by all that knew him. Darrel is survived by his wife Helen Louise Blackburn, his five "no good Sears� kids" Bob (Doris) Price of Ferron; Jean (Randy) Smith of Nephi; Kim (Wade) Riley of Clawson; Gary (Shaunnie) Price of Clawson; Stephen (Chantel) Price of Ferron. His brothers Bud (Maria) Price of St. George; Johnny Binder of Washington, and his sisters LaRue Remington of West Valley City and Betty (Keith) Eatough of Arizona. He also leaves behind 19 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren who will forever remember his laughter, love and stories. He was preceded in death by his parents Fame and Tressie Price. A viewing will be held Tues. April 12, at the Fausett Mortuary in Castle Dale from 6-8 p.m. Funeral services will be Wed. April 13, at 11 a.m. with a viewing one hour prior to services at the Blue Hills ward LDS church house, 35 West 200 North in Ferron. Grampa always said "Love ya, be sure and come back ya hear," and we will. Que Sorensen "Paradise Rancher" Que Sorensen, age 91, passed away, after a long and fulfilling life on April 4, 2005 in Ferron due to natural causes. Born July 18, 1913 in Emery to Andrew M. and Johanna Christina Larsen Sorensen. He married the love of his life Jessie Lewis on Dec. 2, 1948 in Orangeville. The marriage was later solemnized on June 29, 1953 in the Manti LDS Temple. Que was an active member of the LDS Church and served as a high priest. He was a loving husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather. He was an accomplished rancher, heavy equipment operator and person overall. He was truly liked by everyone he met. He was a member of the Emery Riding Club and was owner of the Sorensen Mercantile in Emery for many years before he and Jessie moved to Murray and lived in the home they dearly loved. He was a member of the Good Sam Club where his CB handle was "Paradise Rancher," named after his favorite place on Earth, with the LK Antelopes. He and Jessie enjoyed many trips and social functions with their beloved Good Samers. He worked for Menlove Construction and retired from the Murray City Road Department where he drove the sweeper he dearly enjoyed. He later went to work for Allied Development where he formed many dear friendships. Que worked hard but had a lot of good times with his family, leaving us with many, many wonderful memories. Survived by his wife; son, Keith (Donna), Ferron; daughters, Roma (Kell) Blackham, St. George; Jeannette (Ken) Hadean, Tooele, and Susanne (Fred) Babcock, Mesquite, Nev.; 11 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren. Preceded in death by his grandson, William Gary Babcock, granddaughter, Sherrie Ann Babcock, seven brothers and one sister. Funeral services were held Sat. April 9, 2005 at Memorial Estates Redwood. Interment, Memorial Estates Redwood, 6500 South Redwood Road, Salt Lake City. Print PageEmail PageShareGet Reprints Melissa Fadra Jones Iwasawa"Lissa Lou" Dennis Grange Beverly S. Curtis
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Cardamom - Ground, Organic Cardamom Elettaria cardamomum - aka cardamon, is from the dried ground fruit pods of an aromatic plant of the ginger family. It is native to India, Nepal, Bhutan, Guatemala, and Sri Lanka. It is traditionally used in Indian curries and in bean and rice dishes. It is the world's third most expensive spice, only surpassed by saffron and vanilla. It imparts a very intense aromatic, fruity, warm flavor and is especially delightful with sweet dishes, such as caramel. In Scandinavian countries it is often used to flavor bread dough, Danish pastries, coffee cakes, and pies. In Indian cardamom is added to spicy chai tea and in Middle Eastern countries it is brewed with coffee for an aromatic flair. It is most frequently used in making curry powder blends along with cinnamon, cumin, coriander, cloves, chilies, turmeric, pepper, fenugreek, and other tropical spices. Organically grown in Guatemala. Protective amber glass jar. kosher pareve Size: 1.834 oz / 52 gUPC: 024182182903 Ingredients:Organic Ground Cardomom Seed (Elettaria cardamomum) Click on the boxes below to learn more about what each term means. ©2014 Eden Foods, Inc.
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Home > SchoolFinder > Nebraska > Hastings > Hawthorne Elementary School Community Rating Hawthorne Elementary School Public School | Grades PK-5 | Hastings Public Schools Email 2200 West 9th St Hawthorne Elementary School is located in Hastings, NE and is one of 6 elementary schools in Hastings Public Schools School District. It is a public school that serves 405 students in grades PK-5. See Hawthorne Elementary School's test results to learn more about school performance. In 2011, Hawthorne Elementary School had 17 students for every full-time equivalent teacher. The Nebraska average is 13 students per full-time equivalent teacher. In 2010, the Hastings Public Schools School District spent $8,717 per student. In 2010 the district spent 67% on instruction, 28% on support services, and 5% on other services. School-based Teacher-led Assessment and Reporting System (STARS)--MATH Results Hawthorne Elementary School Reviews Hawthorne Elementary School Photos About the STARS The School-Based Teacher-Led Assessment and Reporting System (STARS) are annual tests used to measure a student's mastery of the state's grade-level academic standards. Students are assessed in reading, writing and math grades 3 through 8 and 11. Students are scored at four levels: beginning, progressing, proficient and advanced. The goal is for students to score at or above the proficient level. Students are assessed in writing in grades 4, 8, and 11. The Education.com TestRating is a number (1-10) calculated by Education.com that provides an overview of a school’s test performance for a given year, by comparing the school’s state standardized test results to those of other schools in the same state. For Nebraska, the TestRating is calculated using a school's 2009 School-based Teacher-led Assessment and Reporting System (STARS)--MATH Results and School-based Teacher-led Assessment and Reporting System (STARS)--READING Results for all subjects tested. See all TestRatings in Hastings Public Schools School District 2200 West 9th St, Hastings, NE 68901 (402) 461-7540 Hastings Public Schools Morton Elementary School 0.6 miles St Michael's Elementary School 0.7 miles Raymond A Watson Elementary School 0.7 miles Longfellow Elementary School 1.2 miles Adams County 15 Elementary School 1.4 miles All Schools in Hastings Public Schools School District Top Ranked Schools in Hastings
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Home | Campus Life | What's Happening Specialized Academics Center for Mark Twain Studies The EC Experience Freshman Writing Term III SEE EC Part-Time & Graduate Studies Schedules and Resources Presidential Lecture Series Reinstein Symposium Trouble Begins at 8 Mark Twain Quadrennial Conference Anita B Ogden Symposium Women's History Month Lecture Series Lecture Series in the Sciences PRIDE Symposium Arts Alive Events College Bulletin Tours & Interviews Day Visits & Overnights Part-Time Admissions For High School Counselors Tuition & Financial Aid Understanding Aid Scholarships & Other Aid Forms & Codes Paying for EC Entering Students Tips for First Year Students Share in a Tradition The Story of Elmira College The Octagon New Health Sciences Center Intramurals and Recreation The Elmira Area Sports Insurance Athletics Alumni Weekend Purple & Gold Golf Outing Support EC Gift of Securities Request an EC Decal The President's Report Octagon Fair Presidential Lecture Series Purple and Gold Golf Outing Refer a Prospective Student Class Officers Student Alumni Council Student Wins Norton Anthology Recitation Contest — Friday, December 21, 2012 W.W. Norton & Co recently held the Norton Anthology 2012 Student Recitation Contest, and an Elmira College student was honored as one of the six contest winners. Amy Schmidt ’15 of Batavia, NY is an International Studies major with a... Elmira College Students Raise More Than $3,400 for Hurricane Sandy Relief — Wednesday, December 19, 2012 On December 8, 2012, Elmira College students held a “Restore the Shore” event and raised $3,416.96 to donate to the American Red Cross to aid the victims of Hurricane Sandy. The event started as an idea of Mollyrose Jensen... Elmira College Featured on Holiday Card — Monday, December 17, 2012 Elmira College has been featured on the Commission for Independent Colleges and University 2012 holiday card. Every year the institute picks a different theme and has colleges submit photos according to the theme. This year, the holiday card... Elmira College Students and Faculty Partner with C TRAN to Create Photography Exhibit — Monday, December 10, 2012 Elmira College students Desiree Caballero ’13 and Renee Bonacci ’13, under the direction of photography professor Jan Kather, are involved in a public art exhibit entitled “Moving Portraits.” The opening... Elmira College Professor's One Act Play Performed — Friday, December 07, 2012 Elmira College Director of Theatre John Kelly recently wrote a one act play entitled Mandala. The play received its premier performances October 29th as part of a series of community awareness programs at Seaside High School in Port Orange,... Students Selected as Finalists for Norton Anthology Contest — Friday, November 30, 2012 Three Elmira College Students have been chosen as finalists by W. W. Norton & Co editors for The Norton Anthology Student Recitation Contest 2012. These students, Katie Gaskin ’15, Nicole Gentile ’16, and Amy Schmidt... Elmira College Students to Host “Restore the Shore” Fundraiser — Monday, November 19, 2012 Elmira College students are hosting a “Restore the Shore” fundraiser on Saturday December 8th from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Campus Center Dining Hall and Tifft Lounge. The “Restore the Shore” project is being... Elmira College Mathematics Students Predict Election Outcome — Monday, November 19, 2012 On Election Day, three EC mathematics courses participated in a lab to predict the outcomes of the Presidential Election. The students were split into groups and using various sets of polling information, each group predicted the election outcome.... Elmira College Professor Provides Political Commentary on Election — Monday, November 19, 2012 During the recent election cycle, Dr. Jim Twombly, Associate Professor of Political Science, maintained a busy schedule. After each of the presidential debates, Dr. Twombly appeared either on Twin Tiers Tonight Late Edition on WENY or Good Morning... Professor Emeritus of Elmira College Published in Oxford University Publication — Thursday, November 08, 2012 Gerald Parkhouse, Corning Glass Professor Emeritus of Elmira College, was recently published in Oxford University's termly publication Christ Church Matters. The article is entitled “New Light on the Early Days of the Christ Church Boat... Elmira College Selected as a Top Military-Friendly College — Thursday, November 08, 2012 Elmira College has been selected as a G.I. Jobs Magazine Top Military-Friendly College. The College will be recognized in the 2013 issue of G.I. Jobs Guide to Military Friendly Schools for its effort to make it easier for men and women in uniform... Professor and Student to be Published in Journal of Energy and Development — Monday, November 05, 2012 Dr. Amarendra Sharma, Assistant Professor of Economics, and EC student Cassondra Bruce ’14, have co-authored a paper that will be published as the feature article in volume 38 of the Journal of Energy and Development. The paper is... Elmira College Professor to Co-Chair Museum of Jewish Heritage Event — Friday, November 02, 2012 Elmira College Professor of Art Marc Dennis has been named an Honorary Co-Chair at an upcoming event at The Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York City, on Thursday, November 8th, 2012 at 6:30 p.m. The event "Into The Light" is a program that... Douglas Blackiston Presents for EC Lecture Series in the Sciences — Friday, November 02, 2012 Dr. Douglas Blackiston, a researcher at Tufts University, gave a lecture entitled Plasticity of the Vertebrate Nervous System: The Brain's Response to Novel Sensory Information on October 23, 2012, as part of Elmira College’s Lecture... Elmira College Hosts Mathematical Association of America Conference — Wednesday, October 31, 2012 On October 19-20, 2012, Elmira College hosted the Fall Meeting of the Seaway Section of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA). The meeting brought in mathematics faculty and undergraduate students from throughout upstate and western New... Elmira College Professor Recognized for Community Contributions — Friday, October 26, 2012 Elmira College Art Professor Chris Longwell was honored last week by Catholic Charities as Advocate of the Year for his dedication to the organization over the last seven years. The even more significant honor was that Catholic Charities decided... Bryan Karazsia Presents for EC Lecture Series in the Sciences — Wednesday, October 24, 2012 Bryan Karazsia, an assistant professor of psychology at the College of Wooster, gave a talk to the EC community on October 18, "Happy Fish and Suicidal Shrimp: Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Solutions to the Presence of Antidepressants in... Elmira College Introduces Women’s and Gender Studies Program — Thursday, October 18, 2012 Elmira College is proud to announce that the Women’s Studies Program at Elmira College is changing its name to the Women’s and Gender Studies Program (WAGS). “This name reflects a new sense of mission to better serve... Elmira College to Hold Lecture Series in the Sciences — Friday, October 12, 2012 Elmira College is holding a Lecture Series in the Sciences. This series will run throughout the fall and is free and open to the public. All of the lectures will take place in the Kolker Lecture Hall at Elmira College. Bryan Karazisia, Ph.D., The... Elmira College Donates to Community Kitchen and Food Bank of the Southern Tier — Friday, October 05, 2012 Elmira College students and faculty once again exemplified the College tradition of community service. At the end of the academic year, students and faculty have the option to donate the remaining money on their meal cards to the Elmira Community... Elmira College’s chapter of Phi Beta Kappa held public lecture by Dr. Sarah L. Keller — Friday, October 05, 2012 Dr. Sarah L. Keller, a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar from the University of Washington, gave a lecture on Thursday, October 4, 2012 at 4:30 P.M. in the Kolker Lecture Hall at Elmira College. The lecture was entitled “How Playing with... Professor Chris Longwell and Heroes Your Mom Threw Out Comic Shop to Receive 2012 Arts Partnership Awards — Tuesday, September 25, 2012 The ARTS Council of the Southern Finger Lakes (The ARTS Council) is proud to recognize Chris Longwell of Elmira and Heroes Your Mom Threw Out Comic Shop (Jared Aiosa, proprietor) of Elmira Heights as this year's recipients of The ARTS Council's... Elmira College Key Winners Honored at Luncheon — Friday, September 21, 2012 Thirty-three members of the Legendary Class of 2016 who are winners of the Elmira College Key were honored at a luncheon in Hamilton Great Hall. Honorees were congratulated by faculty, administrators, past Key winners, and members of the Elmira... Top Scholars Recognizes at Convocation — Friday, September 21, 2012 More than two hundred and fifty top academic scholars in the Legendary Class of 2016 were honored at Fall Convocation in Gibson Theatre. Convocation is one of the College’s time-honored traditions, recognizing the best and brightest of... Student Science Group Receives National Recognition — Wednesday, September 19, 2012 The Elmira College American Chemical Society (ACS) Student Affiliate group was awarded a Commendable Chapter Award by the ACS. The ACS gives out three different awards, Outstanding, Commendable, and Honorable Mention, and it is a huge success that... Professor Recognized for Testing Accommodations Research — Tuesday, September 18, 2012 Dr. Ben Lovett, Assistant Professor of Psychology, is currently co-authoring a book, Testing Accommodations for Students with Disabilities: Research-Based Practice, which is under contract with the American Psychological Association press.... Elmira College’s Octagon Fair 2012 — Tuesday, September 18, 2012 Elmira College invites the public to the 45th annual Octagon Fair on Saturday, September 22, 2012 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the Elmira College campus. This year’s theme is Circus! Student clubs and organizations will display... Elmira College Ranks No. 7 in US News & World Report’s 2013 “America’s Best Colleges” Edition — Friday, September 14, 2012 USNews & World Report announced its 2013 “America's Best Colleges” rankings and Elmira College was ranked seventh in its category. Elmira College was ranked seventh in the “Best Regional College -... Elmira College Welcomes the Legendary Class of 2016 — Thursday, August 30, 2012 Elmira College’s President, Dr. Ronald Champagne, welcomed 376 freshmen to the College today on the portico of historic Cowles Hall during the College’s nationally recognized Orientation program. On Friday, 44 transfer students... Elmira College Hosts Congressman Tom Reed’s Academic Roundtable — Thursday, August 23, 2012 Elmira College hosted Congressman Tom Reed and for a roundtable discussion with the Presidents and other academic administrators for the colleges and universities in his district.Dr. Ronald Champagne, EC President, welcomed the Congressman and the... Pat Thompson ’75 Appointed First Vice President of Empire 8 — Wednesday, July 18, 2012 Rochester, NY: The Empire 8 Athletic Conference is proud to announce new officers for the next two years, effective July 1, 2012. Pat Thompson, the Director of Athletics at Elmira College will commence a two-year term as first Vice President,... Elmira CollegeOne Park PlaceElmira, New York, 14901P: (800) 935-6472 Our MissionCampus Conduct HotlineWebmailAngelCampusWebGraphic Identity StandardsElmira Cloud
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Home> Insights >> Programmer's Toolbox Classic Crenshaw: All about vectors Jack Crenshaw September 26, 2012 JackCrens-September 26, 2012 Understanding the intimate relationship between vectors and reality means means understanding vectors, their properties, and how to manipulate them. Sharp-eyed readers may have noticed that I've been AWOL in these pages for several months. I've already given my mea culpas so I won't repeat them here, except to reaffirm just how much I hate Microsoft in general, Windows 7 in particular, and Office 2010 in summa particular. Lately it seems I spend most of my time just getting my computer to behave tonight, the way it did this morning. The AWOL-ness is particularly frustrating because I was interrupted in the middle of a series of columns on state estimation theory, building up to the justifiably famous Kalman Filter. I'll get back to that series soon, I promise. But for this month I'd like to make a new start. Think of it as me dipping my metaphorical toe in the shallow waters, before wading out again into the deep stuff again. I've been writing the Programmer's Toolbox column for over 20 years now. Each month, it gets harder to say what I have to say, without repeating myself. I like to think I know a little bit about a lot of things, but I don't know about many that I haven't already told you about, somewhere down the line, On the other hand, the passage of those 20+ years mean that a whole new generation of readers has come on line – readers who haven't seen the old stuff, but could benefit from it. To enlighten them, I've proposed to my editors a new sub-column called something like Crenshaw Classics. In it, I'm hoping to polish up, refresh, and update some of my more popular columns of yesteryear. Understand, I'm not proposing to just present Xerox copies of the old columns. I'd write them from scratch, using new and more modern tools and technologies. But I'd still base them on the more popular topics of the past. I don't intend to limit myself just to past columns, either. It's my intent to drag in stuff from old conference papers, my book (Math Toolkit for Real-Time Programming), and its two companion volumes that never got published. This column represents the first in that series. If you like the idea, please don't be shy about letting us know. What goes around . . . As most of you know, the majority of my experience with embedded systems has come from the world of Aerospace, building flight software for spacecraft and missiles, and the simulation and analysis software needed to design and test the flight stuff. Those kinds of applications tend to be very heavy on math algorithms, including vector and matrix algebra and numerical calculus. That's the reason my columns have tended to emphasize such topics. But time moves on, and lately it seems that the term "embedded systems" has come to mean smart phones, smart tablets, and game consoles. I don't mind telling you, there have been times when I felt that this particular parade had passed me by. But time moves further on, and sometimes things come full circle. I'm sure you've heard that the flight computer in Apollo 11 had less computing power than your average $19.99 digital watch. In the same way, the navigation systems that we used to sell to for six-figure prices have found their way into everything from model helicopters to Wii wands to game consoles to smart phones and tablets. Likewise, the super-accurate simulations that we used to develop for simulating missile trajectories have found their way into video games, complete with exquisite 3-d graphics that we would have killed for. Suddenly, the embedded world needs vectors and matrices again. Vector math We've got your vector, Victor -- Air traffic controller in Airplane Long-term readers of Embedded Systems Design and Embedded.com know that I'm particularly enamored with the use of vector and matrix math in computer models--almost to the point of an obsession. Perhaps it's only a matter of the baby duck syndrome; my first Fortran II code was a library of vector subroutines. But I like to think my reason goes a little deeper than that. I like to use vectors because vector and matrix math makes life so much easier for us analysts and programmers. And I'm all for easy. The first time I wrote about vectors was around 1988; the last was in 2007, when I presented a C++ library. In that most recent series, I talked a lot about how to implement the vector and matrix operators, but I didn't say anything at all about why they make things easy. When we're interfacing with the real world, we like to use vector and matrix math precisely because the universe uses them. Even if we'd never heard of vectors before, we'd soon find them to be essential, because they're written right into the laws of nature. In this column, I'll be talking about vectors, their properties, and how to manipulate them. But mostly, my focus will be on that intimate relationship between vectors and reality. Draw me a map Let's begin at the beginning. Imagine you live in a particularly boring city like Manhattan, where the streets are laid out mostly in a grid pattern, as in Figure 1. Streets run east and west; avenues, north and south (well, Ok, in Manhattan they don't actually align with compass points. Manhattan is actually askew, like many of its residents. Just work with me here). Now suppose I want to give you directions from your place to mine. I could just say, "I'm on the corner of 3rd Avenue and 8th Street," or even "3rd and 8th." (We won't even discuss the notion of "East 8th Street North"; it brings back too many painful memories of a blind date that never happened.) In the vernacular of computer science, the term "3rd and 8th" would be my absolute address. Anyone in the city could find me there. Extend that concept a little bit, and I could give you my GPS coordinates: latitude and longitude. Then anyone in the world could find me. But there's another way to give you directions, and anyone who's ever used Mapquest or Tomtom knows it: I could give you my relative address, in the form of a set of navigation instructions. I could say, "Go eight blocks east, turn left, then go three blocks north." You could find me that way, even if all the street signs had been blown down. The path you need to follow is the red path in Figure 1. Of course, it's not the only possible path. You don't need to follow my directions to the letter. If you decide to take the scenic route, or avoid that rough neighborhood in the Lower East Side, you might prefer to meander along the blue path. If your goal is to get to my place, it really doesn't matter which path you follow; only that you end up having gone those eight blocks to the East, three blocks to the North. No doubt, you've recognized Figure 1 as nothing more than a Cartesian coordinate system in disguise. I could have left out the cute pictures of blocks and streets, and just shown the coordinate system, as I have in Figure 2. What's more, I don't even need to show you a route. If I want to keep things bone simple, I only need to give you that relative address. You're free to figure out the route for yourself. In the map, that relative address is embodied in the red arrow. It's the way you'd go from your place to mine, if you could fly. Scalars and vectors and tensors, oh my In grade school, they taught me all about numbers. A number could take on some value, like 1, 2, 3/4, or 1.235. Later I learned about irrational numbers like π or , and even later, imaginary and complex numbers. But still, in the end, just numbers. Physicists see numbers a little differently. We use them to represent things in the real world; things whose values we can measure with a meter of some sort. To a physicist, a number can represent a voltage, pressure, temperature, mass, or weight (not the same thing!). What's more, in physics numbers tend to have units like volts, amperes, kilograms, kilometers, or kilogauss. The mathematical entity that can be represented by a single number is called a scalar. It has a magnitude, and it may have units, but still a single number, It's pretty obvious that the red arrow in Figure 2 is not a scalar. I can't just give you its length (which happens to be blocks). You also need to know which direction to go; which heading, if you're Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. A thing that has both magnitude and direction is called a vector, and that's what's represented in Figure 2. By convention, we typically represent it as a line with an arrowhead on one end. Physics is full of vectors. You can hardly walk through a physics class without tripping over one. The relative position of Figure 2 is an example. Other vectors include velocity and acceleration (which are the first and second time derivatives of position), force, or magnetic field strength. Now, we physicists are a lazy lot. We like to write things in the most concise way possible, boiling the information down to its essence. We like to use single-digit names for variables, and compact representations instead of wordy ones. If I want to give you the directions from your house to mine in the most concise way possible, I only need to give you the two numbers, 8 and 3. As long as we agree which number represents eastward, and which northward, that's all you need to know. So I can give you my relative position as: Or even more concisely, (8,3) or . All the forms are equivalent; we only need to agree as to the rules. In general, we can describe the vector as: Note the use of boldface font for the name of the vector. That's the convention for vectors and matrices. We used to write things like , , or , but that's only because our pencils didn't have a boldface setting. Nowadays, boldface fonts are the way to go. Where are you in this figure? Why, you're at the origin, , of course. Your location, relative to yourself, is a vector of length zero. And what's the path from me to you? It's -r. To display -r, we only need to reverse the direction of the arrowhead. As fundamental as all this seems, we've already defined one mathematical operation on a vector. It's the negation operator. If , then: In other words, we change the sign of both components. Adding vectors Let's change the situation a bit. Suppose that, on your way to my place, you plan to stop by Bill's house to borrow his new video game. Now your route gets slightly more complicated. Now you need two vectors: One from your place to Bill's, another from there to my place. Figure 3 depicts your new route. Here I've shown the two legs of your journey as r1 and r2. When the trip is over, the end result--the resultant--is our original red arrow. It's pretty obvious that on this new route, you still have to traverse the same eight blocks east, and three north. In other words, the two x-components of r1 and r2 must add up to eight. Likewise for the y-components. Mathematically, we can write: (4) Or, in vector form: Or simply: Now we see the rule for adding vectors: you simply add each set of components. Would it surprise you to learn that to subtract one vector, you subtract each set of components? Probably not. As simple as all this stuff is, a mathematician should be happy because we've established a couple of fundamental properties: (Did you catch the boldface font on the zero? It's still a vector, but it's a vector of zero length.) Now that we know how to add and subtract vectors, there is nothing to keep us from adding more than two of them. At any given instant of time, my position vector is the sum of my position at this desk, plus the position of the desk in the room, the room in the house, the house on the lot, the lot in the city, etc., etc., all the way out to the center of the universe (wherever that is). All the usual rules of commutative operators apply, because all the operators end up operating on the scalar components of the vectors. Vectors can be scaled. If r is a vector, and can be represented as an arrow, what do you suppose 2r is? Why yes, of course, it's an arrow having the same direction as r, but twice as long. Mathematically: So what is 0r? It's 0, of course. Linear combinations If we can add and scale vectors, we can also generate new vectors from them. The best way for me to show you this is to change notation a bit. Suppose that a and b are vectors. Then I can define a new vector: A special case occurs when a and b are collinear: they have the same direction. In that case, we can write: And so: In this special case, the only vectors we can generate are those that are also collinear with a. On the other hand, if a and b are not collinear, they are said to be linearly independent. This opens up whole new vistas, because now c can be any vector, anywhere in the space defined as the x-y plane. Basis vectors This concept leads us to another useful one. Suppose I want to define some primitive vectors that I can guarantee will be linearly independent? I can't do much better than to pick two vectors aligned with the two coordinate axes. While I'm at it, I might as well make them unit vectors, having length 1 (no units, please). In other words, let: Yes, I know, using i as one of the symbols seems risky, because we also traditionally use i to denote . Hey, I didn't invent the tradition; I'm only reporting it. Sometimes, to emphasize that the vectors are unit vectors, you might see people put a "hat" over them, as in and . Personally, I try to avoid extra bric-a-brac in my equations, where I can. Your mileage may vary. Given these two unit vectors, we can write the vector r as: Polar coordinates Before we leave the subject of maps and routes, take one last look at Figure 2. Did you notice how I sneaked in that angle, θ? That's the angle the vector r makes with the x-axis. As we've seen, It takes two numbers to specify the vector. But there's no law that says that the two have to be coordinates x and y on the Cartesian axes. I could just as easily use that "magnitude and direction" notion, and give you the scalar length of the vector and its orientation as given by θ. Engineers like brevity too, and often give the two polar numbers as . Traditionally, the length of r is also denoted by r, but without the boldface. That is: If you remember your trigonometry, you remember the conversion formulas: Conversely, (16) Sharp-eyed mathematicians will note that the arctangent becomes indeterminate when x = y = 0. Fortunately, the folks who design programming languages were kind enough to give us the function atan2( ), which is the four-quadrant arctangent function. In any decent implementation, atan2(0,0) should return 0, which is as good an angle as any other. Polar coordinates have their uses, especially if you're an airline pilot like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, or a radar operator. In their vernacular, the numbers are called range and azimuth. Even so, we still prefer to use Cartesian vectors when possible, to avoid those expensive trig functions. My advice: Use the polar coordinates only for input and output. The Z-axis So far in this discussion, I've limited my examples to the two-dimensional Flatland of the x-y plane. But that was only so I could keep my figures on the page, instead of sticking out of it. In reality, of course, the universe has three spatial dimensions. When I give you the directions to my place, I could also give a floor number, or the altitude part of my GPS location. Everything we've done so far is easily extensible to three dimensions, including the addition of a new basis vector, k, aligned with the z-axis. Of course, in this case polar coordinates must now become spherical polar coordinates, and the conversion math gets quite a bit more complicated. See Figure 4. The conversion equations are: And conversely: As before, we should use atan2( ) to avoid problems when r = 0. What good are they? Early in this column, I promised to show you how and why vectors are so useful in the laws of physics. So far, however, I've talked mostly about their mathematical properties. Let me fix that now. Newton's law of gravitation says that the gravitational force between two masses obeys an inverse-square law. In scalar arithmetic: Where m1 and m2 are the masses, and r is the scalar distance between them. Throwing in the proportionality constant, we can write: Here G is the universal gravitational constant. In SI units, it is: (Yes, Virginia, it has units!) But Newton's law doesn't just tell us the magnitude of the force; it tells us the direction. The force is always directed along the line between the two masses. But that line is simply the relative position vector we've been talking about. If one of those masses were you, and the other me, you'd be attracted to me (watch it!) by the vector force: Politely following Newton's third law of motion, I'd be attracted to you by an equal and opposite force. Note that, to get the vector force, we simply multiply its scalar value by the unit vector: Coulomb's law is another inverse-square law, giving the force between two charged particles. It is: Where ε3 is called the permittivity of free space, and is given by: (25) The direction of the force is a little tricky because, unlike mass, an electric charge can be positive or negative. In parallel with our convention established in Figures 1 and 2, the force in Equation 24 is the force acting on you. We need the minus sign to get the direction right. There are a lot more areas in physics where vectors simplify the problem, but for some of them, we need to talk about derivatives. I'm talking about the derivative with respect to time. If you've ever driven a car, you know about derivatives. As you motor down the road, your odometer gives you the distance you've traveled since the car was built. Your trip odometer gives the distance since you last reset it. You have another instrument on your dashboard, which shows the time derivative of the distance. We call that instrument a speedometer. Mathematically, You have two controls on your floorboard. The name of one of them--the accelerator--gives you a hint as to its function. It controls acceleration, which is the time derivative of speed: Both equations work beautifully for vector as well as scalar measurements: I hate to give you yet another notation, but as I told you, we physicists are a lazy lot. Eventually we got tired of writing down all those fraction-looking thingies. So we devised yet another shorthand notation, which is to replace the time derivative with a simple (and sometimes nearly invisible) dot over the parameter. So: What follows next should blow your mind. Newton's second law--the one on which all of the math of dynamics is based, becomes simply: Lately, I've been working on trajectories to the Moon. Combining Newton's laws of gravitation and motion, I can write: Where M is the mass of the Earth (or Moon, as the case may be). Even more simply, I can write: Where µ = GM. You've just seen an equation containing four characters and some jots and tittles, that is the basis for all of Celestial Mechanics. Now, that's what I call applied math at its best. I'll just mention, in passing, that the momentum of a body is: The law of conservation of momentum is one of the most profound and inviolate laws of nature, second only to the law of conservation of energy. At this point, you might think that we've pretty well exhausted the uses of vectors in physics. Silly you. We've hardly gotten started yet. So far, I've only told you about three operations: +, -, and the unary minus. There are more. One of them is not the division operator. The expression makes no sense, and doesn't exist. But as if making up for this shortcoming, vector math gives us two--count 'em, two--product operators. I can show you their math derivations, but first I want to show you how they appear in the laws of physics, whether we want them or not. There's a concept in physics called work. It has units of energy, and represents the amount of energy we might expend moving something around against a resisting force. Another concept is power, which is the rate at which work is done: It's important, however, to recognize that, just as in life, you get no credit for doing work that is unproductive. If the thing you're pushing--or pulling--against doesn't move, you may feel tired, but you've done no work. The only work you get credit for is the work you did in the direction you were pulling. See Figure 5. Here I've shown a block sliding along on a horizontal surface. I'm tugging on a rope, with a force F, and the block is moving with velocity v. But remember, I don't get credit for all that force I'm exerting; just the component of the force that's parallel to v. I hope you can see that the magnitude of that component is equal to F cos θ (note, no boldface on the F). Using this value, the power I'm applying to the job is equal to: (35) Now I'm going to assert that this equation is the very definition of the inner, or scalar, vector product. As the name implies, the result of the scalar product is … um … a scalar. For any two vectors a and b, the scalar, or dot product, is given by: Using this definition, the power I'm generating in Figure 5 is simply: It's important that you see the relationship between the dot product and the physical world. Other folks would show you how to calculate it, as I've done many times. But in this case, I've shown you the definition of the dot product first, to emphasize that the definition of the operator comes from the physics, and not the other way round. The cross productWe have one more product to define, and again, its mathematical definition is going to seem crazy to you, until you see that it has to be that way to fit the physics. Take a look at the Figure 6. Screens everywhere make a GUI dilemma References vs. Pointers Learning Linux for embedded systems Microchip’s PIC16(L)F170X The future of Linux in embedded and IoT systems Where’s the CPU? Classic Crenshaw: All about vectors Completing the vector class The vector class 10.22.2010 | Source Code SimpleVec2.txt Who needs matrices?
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5952
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Lectures Bariatric Surgery Information The Bariatric Surgery Information will be held at the Annenberg Center for Health Sciences on Saturday, September 07 2013 from 10:00AM to 12:00PM.Join Dr. Bhasker-Rao for in-depth information about bariatric surgery, including: The health benefits of weight loss surgery Factors that make a person a likely surgical candidate An overview of surgical options for weight loss and weight loss expectations General insurance and financial information Dr. Bhasker-Rao was the first to perform a robotic-assisted bariatric surgery case in Southern California and has performed more robotic-assisted bariatric cases than any other physician in Southern California. He has also trained other physicians on the use of the robotic system. His extensive experience also includes General Surgery procedures.Speakers for this event include; Bobby Bhaskar-Rao, MD. Bobby Bhaskar-Rao, MD is Board Certified in General Surgery.Registration for this event has closed. 82
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Which emirates.com country or region would you like to visit Italy (English) or United States (English). See all countries and languages.
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Discrete Dynamics in Nature and SocietyVolume 3 (1999), Issue 4, Pages 297-306doi:10.1155/S102602269900031X On the fractality of the biological tree-like structures Jaan Kalda Institute of Cybernetics, Akadeemia tee 21, Tallinn EEO026, Estonia Received 1 March 1999 Copyright © 1999 Jaan Kalda. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. AbstractThe fractal tree-like structures can be divided into three classes, according to the value of the similarity dimension Ds:Ds<D,Ds=D and Ds>D, where D is the topological dimension of the embedding space. It is argued that most of the physiological tree-like structures have Ds≥D. The notion of the self-overlapping exponent is introduced to characterise the trees with Ds>D. A model of the human blood-vessel system is proposed. The model is consistent with the processes governing the growth of the blood-vessels and yields Ds=3.4. The model is used to analyse the transport of passive component by blood.
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Home › Shows Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve Music Shows & Variety Shows/Specials About This ShowFrom Wikipedia:The program has typically consisted of live video of Dick Clark in Times Square in New York City, counting down until the New Year ball comes down. Since 2005, Ryan Seacrest has been hosting the show outdoors at Times Square while Dick Clark offers comments from a studio. After the ball drops, the focus of the program switches to pre-taped musical segments taped in Hollywood (December 31, 1972-December 31, 1998; December 31, 2000-December 31, 2008) or Las Vegas (December 31, 2009). The segments from Times Square are broadcast live in the Eastern Standard Time zone, and it is delayed for the other time zones so that they can ring in the new year with Clark when midnight strikes in their area. It first aired on NBC in 1972 and 1973, then it moved to ABC in 1974 and has aired there every year since, except on New Year's Eve 1999 into New Year's Day of 2000. In the three and a half decades it has been on the air, the show has become a mainstay in American New Year's celebrations. Watching the ball drop on Clark's show is considered an annual cultural tradition for the New Year's holiday. Since Sunday, December 31, 2000, a pre-show, Dick Clark's Primetime New Year's Rockin' Eve has aired live from 10:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. The hour-long program features live reports on the festivities in Times Square, as well as various performances. From 11:00 to 11:35 p.m. ET/PT, the show pauses for local newscasts from ABC's affiliates (stations in Central and Mountain Time Zones may have additional local programming before the show resumes at 11:30 p.m. local time). Despite the name, Dick Clark has not actually appeared in the prime time show since 2003.Before Rockin' Eve Before Dick Clark, the best-known New Year's Eve shows on radio and then television were hosted by bandleader Guy Lombardo, who hosted 21 consecutive New Year's Eve shows from 1956 to 1976 on CBS, and for a time in syndication. Lombardo's first radio broadcast on New Year's Eve was heard on December 31, 1928 over CBS Radio, and for a time he even split hosting duties by broadcasting on CBS Radio before 12 Midnight EST and on NBC Radio after Midnight. Lombardo would host 48 straight New Year's Eve broadcasts until his death in 1977, and famously performed "Auld Lang Syne" by his Royal Canadians as the clock struck 12 Midnight, ushering in the start of a New Year. Once the Lombardo orchestra began their annual television shows, there would be a live segment from Times Square, which was (and still is) the focal point of the nation's largest New Year's celebration. In the early years of Lombardo's television specials, Robert Trout reported on and counted down to Midnight in New York's Times Square; but for most of Lombardo's years on television, another legendary newsman, Ben Grauer, had the honor. (Grauer, by the way, also reported from Times Square for NBC Radio on celebrations following the surrender of Japan on August 14, 1945. The first New Year's Eve special on television was broadcast on December 31, 1941 on WNBT New York, and consisted of entertainment broadcast from the Rainbow Room, atop the RCA Building in New York's Rockefeller Center.[3] Due to World War II, there would be no more New Year's Eve specials on television until December 31, 1945. WNBT produced a remote broadcast of festivities in Times Square. While NBC had begun to feed programs to WRGB is the Albany area and WPTZ in Philadelphia, information is unavailable as to whether either or both of these stations broadcast the program, or if it was seen just locally in New York.[4] Unless New Year's Eve fell on a weekend, NBC would carry a special New Year's version of "The Tonight Show" each year beginning in 1954, including coverage of the arrival of the New Year in Times Square. Dick Clark himself had actually emceed one New Year's Eve TV special prior to 1972; on December 31, 1959, he emceed a 90-minute New Year's special on ABC. One of the guests was Frankie Avalon. But it would be the last time Clark would do a New Year's Eve television special for the next thirteen years.The early years of Rockin' Eve By the 1970s, Lombardo's big band music skewed to an older generation, so Dick Clark started his telecast in 1972 to compete. The first show, Three Dog Night's Year's Rockin' Eve 1973, on NBC, was hosted by Three Dog Night and also featured Blood, Sweat & Tears, Helen Reddy and Al Green.Who Talked About This ShowDick Clark Hector Ramirez Featured ContentVideo: New Year's Rockin' Eve 2001 Embeddable interview clip: Dick Clark on Dick Clark's Rockin New Year's Eve YouTube video player - HTML5 compatible. HighlightsAll Interviewee clips on this showHighlightsDick Clark on the genesis of New Years Rockin' EveClip begins at: 24:51, Duration: 03m 01s Regis Philbin on filling in for Dick Clark on 2004's New Year's Rockin' EveClip begins at: 20:41, Duration: 00m 59s Dick Clark on the secret of producing live television showsClip begins at: 04:57, Duration: 01m 54s All Interviewee clips on this showDick ClarkDick Clark on the genesis of New Years Rockin' EveClip begins at: 24:46, Duration: 03m 06s Regis PhilbinRegis Philbin on filling in for Dick Clark on 2004's New Year's Rockin' EveClip begins at: 20:41, Duration: 00m 59s Hector RamirezHector Ramirez on being a camera operator for Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' EveClip begins at: 16:54, Duration: 01m 53s SHARE THIS PAGE Tweet Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 2012-01-02 04:58. I LOVE Dick Clark!!!!..{).:) Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 2011-12-27 07:44. WATCHED IT IN 1973 NOW MAYBE THIS YEAR I WONT BE RUNNING AROUND SO MUCH TO SEE CLIPS FROM THE FEW FIRST NEW YEAR SHOWS
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Encyclopedia Virginia A Publication of Virginia Foundation for the Humanitites In partnership with Library of Virginia Browse the Map My Virginia Log in to My Virginia. Need an account? Register. Robert Carter (1728–1804) Contributed by John R. Barden and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography Robert Carter, also known as Robert Carter III and Councillor Carter, was a member of Virginia's Council of State (1758–1776) who, after a religious conversion, emancipated more than five hundred of his enslaved African Americans. Heir to a fortune in land and slaves built by his grandfather, Robert "King" Carter, Carter studied law in London before returning to Virginia in 1751. His contemporaries remarked on his lack of learning and social grace, and he twice ran unsuccessfully for the House of Burgesses, receiving only a handful of votes each time. Through the influence of his wife's uncle, Carter was appointed to the Council. In 1763, he served on the Virginia Committee of Correspondence, and in 1766 drafted the Council's response to the Stamp Act. In 1777, he converted to evangelical Christianity, aligning himself with the Baptists. In 1788, he converted again, this time to the teachings of the Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg. On August 1, 1791, he took the legal steps to gradually emancipate more than 500 of his slaves, the largest individual emancipation before 1860. After the death of his wife, Carter moved to Baltimore, Maryland, where he died in 1804. MORE... In This Entry Councillor Carter Religion and Emancipation Map This EntryPlot this entry's geographic highlights on a map. Map it>>Share Itadd to My Virginia Carter was the son of Robert Carter and Priscilla Churchhill Carter and was born on February 9, 1728, probably at Corotoman, the Lancaster County plantation of his paternal grandfather. Both of his grandfathers, the land baron Robert "King" Carter and William Churchhill, of Middlesex County, served on the governor's Council. He has often been referred to as Councillor Robert Carter to distinguish him from his father, grandfather, and other near relatives of the same name, among whom only his grandfather served on the Council. Until sometime after his father's death in May 1732 he lived at the family plantation in Westmoreland County. Because Carter's father died before his grandfather, it was necessary for his guardians to obtain a special act of assembly to enable him to inherit the portion of his grandfather's estate intended for his father. The law of October 1734 entitled him to receive more than 65,000 acres of land and several hundred slaves when he reached age twenty-one. Following his mother's marriage to John Lewis sometime during the winter of 1734–1735, Carter lived at his stepfather's Warner Hall plantation in Gloucester County until about 1737, when he entered the grammar school of the College of William and Mary. Little else is known about his youth until February 1749, when he received his patrimony and sailed for London. On December 1, 1749, Carter was admitted to the Inner Temple to study law, but he returned to Virginia in June 1751 without being admitted to the bar. An elegant portrait by Thomas Hudson dating from this period and depicting a poised young courtier attired for a costume ball does not reflect what his contemporaries saw when he arrived in Williamsburg. Several of them commented unfavorably on his lack of learning and social grace. Frances Tasker Carter Carter moved into Nomony Hall (as he nearly always wrote its name, although it is usually spelled "Nomini" or "Nominy"), the Westmoreland County mansion he had inherited from his father. He learned the business of a tobacco planter and until the 1770s thereafter exported to England as many as a hundred hogsheads each year. On April 2, 1754, Carter married Frances Tasker, of Annapolis, daughter of Benjamin Tasker, longtime president of the Council of Maryland. Of their thirteen daughters and four sons, eight daughters and all four sons reached adulthood. In April 1752 Carter was appointed to the Westmoreland County Court. That same year and again in 1754 he ran for vacant seats in the House of Burgesses, but he received the smallest number of votes each time. Through the influence of his wife's uncle, Thomas Bladen, who had served in Parliament, Carter received an appointment from the king on April 7, 1758, to serve on the governor's Council. He took his seat on October 18 of that year. During his first three years on the Council, Carter attended only about a third of the recorded meetings. In 1761 he purchased a large frame house near the Governor's Palace on the green in Williamsburg and moved there with his family. For the next fourteen years he regularly participated in Council proceedings. Carter was frequently a member of committees drafting responses to the governor's speeches to the assembly, considering amendments to proposed legislation, or examining accounts of the treasurer or the journals of the Council. He accompanied Lieutenant Governor Francis Fauquier to New York in 1761 to discuss Indian affairs and to Georgia two years later to discuss relations with the southern Indian tribes. In 1763 Carter served on the Virginia Committee of Correspondence, and in 1766 he drafted the Council's response to the king following the repeal of the Stamp Act. Evidently trusted by both sides during the tense years preceding the American Revolution (1775–1783), Carter joined Richard Corbin in representing the Council early in June 1775 when it officially expressed to the royal governor its concern about rumors that British marines were to be stationed in Williamsburg. As a member of the Council, Carter was also a judge of the General Court, but because of the loss of most of the court's records little is known of his service, except that he was in the minority in 1764 when he voted to uphold John Camm's complaint against the Two Penny Act. Norborne Berkeley, Baron de BotetourtCarter's residence in Williamsburg brought him into frequent contact with the colony's intellectual, political, and social leaders and smoothed off some of his rough edges. He developed close friendships with such educated men as Fauquier and his successor, Governor Norborne Berkeley, baron de Botetourt, as well as William Small, who taught at the College of William and Mary, and George Wythe. Carter shared with Fauquier and Wythe's law student, Thomas Jefferson, a love for instrumental music, and Fauquier named Carter one of his executors in Virginia. Carter did not form the same bond with Botetourt's successor, John Murray, fourth earl of Dunmore, and in 1772, not long after Dunmore took office, he moved his family back to Nomony Hall. Carter still traveled to Williamsburg on Council business but focused more on the management of his estate. He diversified crops and added manufactures such as milling, spinning, and weaving. About 1770 he purchased a one-fifth stake in a large Baltimore ironworks that his father-in-law had helped found. In 1773 and 1774 the tutor Philip Vickers Fithian recorded a fascinating intimate picture of the Carter household in the diary he kept at the plantation, and he copied into his journal a catalog of Carter's extensive library. The Revolution concluded Carter's service on the Council, which ceased to exist in July 1776. The following summer he took an oath of loyalty to the new Commonwealth of Virginia but held no public office. British ships raided his plantations near the Potomac River, and he was plagued in the postwar period by heavy plantation expenses and a shortage of cash in a stymied economy. Carter campaigned for a seat in the Virginia Convention of 1788 as a supporter of the proposed constitution of the United States but was not elected. Baptism in Schuylkill RiverA member of the Church of England from childhood, Carter became a vestryman of Cople Parish in Westmoreland County in November 1752. In June 1777 he announced his conversion to evangelical Christianity and soon allied himself with the Baptists. The next year Carter was baptized by immersion and joined Morattico Baptist Church. He regularly attended prayer meetings, provided financial support for numerous evangelical preachers, and became one of the denomination's most influential adherents in Virginia. Carter's household was then shrinking. His daughters were marrying and leaving home, his eldest son died in 1779, and his wife died on October 31, 1787, and was buried in the garden at Nomony Hall. He sent his two younger sons to school in Rhode Island, where they could be educated free from the taint of slavery. Although Carter inherited and owned hundreds of slaves, his growing opposition to the institution echoed the antislavery sentiments of many Baptists in the 1780s. On August 1, 1791, he executed a deed of emancipation for more than 500 of his enslaved African Americans. It was probably the largest emancipation by an individual person in the United States before 1860. Because of Virginia's restrictive laws, the emancipation was gradual, and the young slaves received their freedom when they reached adulthood. Carter spent his remaining years working out the details and schedule, an effort that embroiled his agents and executors well into the nineteenth century. In January 1788 Carter discovered and quickly embraced the theology of the Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg and switched his allegiance from the Baptists to the Church of the New Jerusalem. Carter caused several of Swedenborg's writings to be reprinted in America and wrote the preface for the first American edition of The Liturgy of the New Church, published in Baltimore in 1792. Carter moved with two of his younger daughters to Baltimore in 1793 in order to be closer to a center of Swedenborgian worship, and three years later he divided his Virginia estate among his surviving children and grandchildren, who drew lots for their portions. He spent his last years managing his investments. Carter died suddenly in Baltimore on March 11, 1804, and was buried in the garden at Nomony Hall in Westmoreland County. - Robert Carter is born the son of Robert Carter and Priscilla Churchhill Carter, probably at Corotoman, the Lancaster County plantation of his paternal grandfather. - Following the death of Robert Carter II, but before the death of Robert "King" Carter, the General Assembly passes special legislation entitling six-year-old Robert Carter III to receive his inheritance, more than 65,000 acres of land and several hundred slaves, when he reaches age twenty-one. - Robert Carter III enters the grammar school of the College of William and Mary. - Robert Carter III receives his inheritance of more than 65,000 acres of land in Virginia and several hundred slaves, and sails for London, England. - In London, England, Robert Carter III is admitted to the Inner Temple to study law. - After studying law in London, Robert Carter III returns to his Virginia plantation, Nomony Hall, without being admitted to the bar. His contemporaries remark on his lack of learning and social grace. - Robert Carter III runs for a vacant seat in the House of Burgesses and finishes last out of three candidates, receiving thirty-four votes, or less than five percent of the poll. - Robert Carter III is appointed to the Westmoreland County Court. - Robert Carter III becomes a vestryman of Cople Parish in Westmoreland County. - For a second time, Robert Carter III runs for a vacant seat in the House of Burgesses and again loses, this time receiving even fewer votes: seven. - Robert Carter III marries Frances Tasker, of Annapolis, Maryland, daughter of Benjamin Tasker, longtime president of the Council of Maryland. - Through the influence of his wife's uncle, Thomas Bladen, who served in Parliament, Robert Carter III receives an appointment from the king to serve on the governor's Council. - Robert Carter III takes his seat on the governor's Council. During his first three years, he attends only about a third of the Council's meetings. - Councillor Robert Carter III purchases a large frame house near the Governor's Palace on the green in Williamsburg and moves there with his family. For the next fourteen years he more regularly participates in the Virginia Council's proceedings. - Robert Carter III accompanies Virginia lieutenant governor Francis Fauquier to New York to discuss Indian affairs. Two years later, the two travel to Georgia to discuss relations with the southern Indian tribes. - Robert Carter III serves on the Virginia Committee of Correspondence. - As a judge of the General Court, Robert Carter III is in the minority when he votes to uphold the Reverend John Camm's complaint against the Two Penny Act, which fixes Anglican ministers' salaries at two pennies per pound of tobacco. - Robert Carter III drafts the Council's response to the king following the repeal of the Stamp Act. - Robert Carter III purchases a one-fifth stake in a large Baltimore ironworks that his father-in-law helped to found. - Robert Carter III moves his family from Williamsburg back to the family estate Nomony Hall. - Robert Carter III joins Richard Corbin in representing the Council when it officially expresses to the royal governor its concern about rumors that British marines are to be stationed in Williamsburg. - During the summer, former Council member Robert Carter III takes an oath of loyalty to the new Commonwealth of Virginia but holds no public office. - Robert Carter III announces his conversion to evangelical Christianity and soon allies himself with the Baptists. - Robert Carter III joins Morattico Baptist Church. He regularly attends prayer meetings, provides financial support, and becomes one of the denomination's most influential adherents in Virginia. - Frances Tasker Carter, wife of Robert Carter III, dies and is buried in the garden at the family estate Nomony Hall. - Robert Carter III campaigns for a seat in the Virginia Convention as a supporter of the proposed constitution of the United States but is not elected. - Robert Carter III discovers and quickly embraces the theology of the Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg and switches his allegiance from the Baptists to the Church of the New Jerusalem. - Robert Carter III executes a deed of emancipation for more than 500 of his enslaved African Americans. It is probably the largest emancipation by an individual person in the United States before 1860. - Robert Carter III, a member of the Church of the New Jerusalem, writes the preface for the first American edition of The Liturgy of the New Church, which is published in Baltimore. - Robert Carter III moves with two of his younger daughters to Baltimore to be closer to the center of the Church of the New Jerusalem, based on the teachings of the Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg. - Robert Carter III dies suddenly in Baltimore and is buried in the garden of his family estate Nomony Hall in Westmoreland County. Colonial History (ca. 1560–1763) Revolution and Early Republic (1763–1823) Barden, John R. "Carter, Robert." In The Dictionary of Virginia Biography, Vol. 3, edited by John T. Kneebone, J. Jefferson Looney, Brent Tarter, and Sandra Gioia Treadway, 86–88. Richmond: Library of Virginia, 2006.Levy, Andrew. The First Emancipator: The Forgotten Story of Robert Carter, the Founding Father Who Freed His Slaves. New York: Random House, 2005.Morton, Louis. Robert Carter of Nomini Hall: A Virginia Tobacco Planter of the Eighteenth Century. Charlottesville: Dominion Books, a division of the University Press of Virginia, 1964.Cite This EntryAPA Citation:Barden, J. R., & the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Robert Carter (1728–1804). (2013, November 21). In Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved from http://www.EncyclopediaVirginia.org/Carter_Robert_1728-1804. MLA Citation:Barden, John R. and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. "Robert Carter (1728–1804)." Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, 21 Nov. 2013. Web. READ_DATE. First published: April 28, 2010 | Last modified: November 21, 2013Contributed by John R. Barden and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. 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TOP STORIES BLOGTOP STORIESSUSTAINABILITYSPANISHENN ORIGINAL NEWSENVIRONMENTAL POLICYCLIMATEENERGYGREEN BUILDINGPOLLUTIONECOSYSTEMSWILDLIFEAGRICULTURESCI/TECHHEALTH Where am I? > Home > Wildlife > Invasive Aquarium Fish Sign Up for Free NewsLetter Email Address From: Andy Soos, ENN Published January 10, 2013 01:23 PM Invasive Aquarium Fish NOAA Solution to Lionfish Invasion, eat them!August 8, 2010 10:28 AM The Spread of Lionfish in the AtlanticMarch 17, 2011 12:16 PM Lionfish Invasion Comes to Rhode IslandAugust 8, 2011 08:21 AM Spreading Lionfish Invasion Threatens BahamasAugust 10, 2009 09:38 AM Home tropical fish aquariums are home to a number of pretty fish and seaweeds. Perfectly harmless right? Not in the wrong environment. It is surprising how hardy some of them can be if let loose in the wild. In a report released today to the California Ocean Protection Council, lead author Susan Williams, an evolution and ecology professor with the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory, found that more than 11 million non-native ornamental marine individuals — such as tropical fish, seaweed and snails bound for aquariums — representing at least 102 species are being imported annually through California’s ports of San Francisco and Los Angeles, primarily from Indonesia and the Philippines. And 13 of those species have been introduced to California marine waters — presumably after being released from aquariums. ADVERTISEMENT While that number seems low, the report cautions that 69 percent of the introduced species established themselves successfully in California, signaling a potential threat to marine ecosystems. Some non-native, invasive species can rapidly spread and out compete native species for food and habitat."Although relatively few aquarium species have been introduced compared to species in other pathways, such as ballast water, they are highly successful because they’re grown to be hardy and robust," Williams said. "They have to be tough to survive in the trade."The aquarium trade represents a $1 billion a year global industry and a popular home hobby, second only to photography, the report said. It has also introduced some of the world’s worst invasive species, such as the seaweed Caulerpa, the killer algae that infected two lagoons in Southern California in 2000 and cost California more than $6 million to eradicate. Caulerpa taxifolia is a species of seaweed, an alga of the genus Caulerpa. Native to the Indian Ocean, it has been widely used ornamentally in aquariums.Another invader is the highly predatory lionfish, which regularly enters the state’s ports through the aquarium trade — 20 lionfish were imported into San Francisco International Airport on a single day, the report said. Introduced to Florida in 1999, it spread rapidly throughout the Caribbean Sea and along the East Coast by 2010. Lionfish have not been reported in California waters, but the fish is able to withstand cooler temperatures. If released, a lionfish could establish itself as far north as San Francisco Bay and, even farther, as oceans continue to warm, the report said.Lionfish have successfully pioneered the coastal waters of the Atlantic in less than a decade and pose a major threat to reef ecological systems in these areas. A study published in 2006 comparing their abundance from Florida to North Carolina with several species of groupers found that they were second only to the native scamp grouper and equally abundant to the graysby, gag, and rock hind. Although the lionfish has not expanded to a population size that is currently causing major ecological problems, their invasion in the United States coastal waters could lead to serious problems in the future. One likely ecological impact caused by Pterois could be their impact on prey population numbers by directly affecting food web relationships. Studies show that lionfish could be decreasing Atlantic reef diversity by up to 80%. In July 2011, lionfish were reported for the first time in the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary off the coast of Louisiana. While the report highlighted lionfish and Caulerpa as species of special concern, it identified at least 34 other species deemed able to tolerate California’s current marine climate.The report is one of six that the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory coordinated for the state, each exploring a different vector, or pathway, through which invasive species can enter California ocean waters. The other pathways include aquaculture, live seafood, live bait, fishing vessels and recreation vessels. Williams said it makes sense to focus on invasive threats from the aquarium trade because they can be managed primarily through public education, with minimal regulatory action or expensive measures."Aquarium hobbyists can follow some simple practices — like Don’t dump your aquarium — to avoid releasing aquarium species into natural water where they can become an expensive and harmful pest." Williams said that people who no longer want an aquarium species can contact the vendor from which the species came or the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (formerly called California Department of Fish and Game) to learn how to dispose of or return it responsibly."From the hobbyist or industry side, it is really hard to figure out the rules and regulations for holding live organisms in the state — for importing, possessing and trading them," said Williams. "So one of our conclusions is that a more centralized information and permitting system would benefit the regulators, industry and hobbyists, and enable scientists to collect more information and better assess the risk."For further information see Aquarium.Lionfish image via Wikipedia. Tweet
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Drugs of abuse have in common the ability to alter our level of consciousness. Could... surfer3 | Valedictorian Posted June 6, 2012 at 1:32 AM via web Drugs of abuse have in common the ability to alter our level of consciousness. Could altered consciousness be rewarding enough to lead to substance abuse without euphoria/elevated mood, and how would you test this hypothesis? Tagged with altered consciousness, biological psychology, reward, social sciences, social studies 1 Answer | Add Yours dftbap (Level 1) Associate Educator Posted August 6, 2012 at 10:49 AM (Answer #1) dislike Humans begin altering their minds and reality from an early age. An example of this is a child on a tire swing, who wants more, more, more, throws up, and then gets back on the swing. The reward center in the brain is activated enough that the pleasure of the altered state is greater than the consequence of riding on the swing again. Addiction may be defined as a habit that has gotten out of control. When obtaining a substance becomes so important that one begins to have negative consequences in their life, physically, emotionally, legally, or socially, one must rule out substance abuse from substance dependency. “After chronic alcohol consumption, the drinker often develops tolerance to at least some of alcohol's effects. Tolerance means that after continued drinking, consumption of a constant amount of alcohol produces a lesser effect or increasing amounts of alcohol are necessary to produce the same effect” Many chemical substances act on the pleasure pathways in the brain such that they require more and more of the same substance to reach an altered state. This is an example of tolerance. There can become the situation where the individual no longer, becomes altered or high from a substance, but rather will become sick if they do not ingest the addictive substance. There are numerous studies available about the pleasure pathways and how alcohol works in this area. There are studies using other drugs as well (cigarettes).One could do a replication study using the same controls as one of these studies and test the strength and validity of the study. Sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Institute_on_Alcoho... http://pubs.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/aa28.htm
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Biography Critical Essays ▻ Analysis Wallace, Edgar Edgar Wallace Essay - Wallace, Edgar Wallace, Edgar ▻ Edgar Wallace 1875-1932 (Full name Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace) English novelist, playwright, journalist, screenwriter, and short story writer. Wallace was a prolific writer of crime thrillers, detective stories, and stage plays based on his books. His works are noted for their fast-paced narratives and accurate depiction of English working-class life. Born in Greenwich to an unmarried actor and actress, Wallace was adopted and raised by foster parents in the town of Billingsgate. As a teenager he worked at a succession of factories and unskilled jobs before enlisting in the British army in 1893. Wallace spent six years in the military, the last three of which he served as a member of the Medical Staff Corps in South Africa. While stationed there, he began writing poetry and made the acquaintance of Rudyard Kipling, who, after reading some of Wallace's early work, encouraged him to pursue writing as a career. Wallace bought his army discharge in 1899, but remained in South Africa as a news correspondent during the Boer War. He continued his journalistic career upon returning to England, and worked as a reporter and editor for most of his adult life. It was not until the age of forty that Wallace became known as a writer of fiction. In the last decade of his life he wrote books that sold millions of copies. At one point during his prolific career it was estimated that one out of every four books sold in England was written by Edgar Wallace. He died in 1932. During his lifetime Wallace wrote numerous plays and film scripts and produced over one hundred seventy novels. His first novel, The Four Just Men, a thriller published at his own expense in 1906, marked the beginning of his career as a popular writer. Though he wrote in a wide variety of genres, Wallace is best known for his thrillers and detective stories, including The Crimson Circle, The Clue of the New Pin, The Fellowship of the Frog, and The Mind of Mr. J. G. Reeder. He was also well known for a series of short stories set in colonial Africa featuring the fictional Commissioner Sanders. In addition, Wallace wrote science fiction and social satire, and completed a ten-volume history of World War I. At the time of his death he was working on the script for the film King Kong. During his lifetime, Wallace was widely read and generally well-received by critics as a provider of entertainment. In addition to selling well in England and America, his books were extremely popular in translation in Germany. While some modern critics dismiss Wallace as a producer of mere pulp, others credit him with helping to create an audience for the modern thriller. Many commentators praise Wallace's gift for fast-paced plots, accurate depictions of the British working class, and authentic portrayals of criminals. Commentators also continue to praise his Commissioner Sanders stories for their evocations of colonial Africa. The Mission That Failed! A Tale of the Raid, and Other Poems (poetry) 1898 Writ in Barracks (poetry) 1900 The Four Just Men (novel) 1906 Sanders of the River (short stories) 1911 The Melody of Death (novel) 1915 The Tomb of T'sin (novel) 1916 Lieutenant Bones (short stories) 1918 Captains of Souls (novel) 1922 The Crimson Circle (novel) 1922 The Clue of the New Pin (novel) 1923 Double Dan (novel) 1924; also published as Diana of Kara-Kara, 1924 Educated Evans (short stories) 1924 The Fellowship of the Frog (novel) 1925 The Mind of Mr. J. G. Reeder (short stories) 1925; also published as The Murder Book of Mr. J. G. Reeder, 1929 The Door with Seven Locks (novel) 1926 * The Ringer (drama) 1926 The Man Who Was Nobody (novel) 1927 The Squeaker (novel) 1927; also published as The Squealer, 1928 The India-Rubber Men (novel) 1929 Planetoid 127 (novel) 1929 Red Aces (screenplay) 1929 On the Spot (drama) 1930 The Frightened Lady (novel) 1932 ** King Kong (screenplay) 1933 * This drama is an adaptation of the novel The Gaunt Stranger. ** This work was completed by James Creelman and Ruth Rose. The New York Times Book Review (essay date 1922) ▻ SOURCE: A review of The Angel of Terror, in The New York Times Book Review, April 12, 1922, p. 11. [In the following review, the critic praises Wallace's inventiveness in portraying a female villain in The Angel of Terror.] The author of [The Angel of Terror] has devised something new in fiction. He has reversed all the conventional methods of dealing with pretty girls and presents us with a heroine—or, to be accurate, a co-heroine—who is something very different in the heroine line. She is exquisitely beautiful, but her beauty is, indeed, only skin deep and it camouflages more sublimated essence of Satan than could be condensed out of a thousand ordinary heroines. Mr. Wallace's originality has gone even further than the usual endeavors of fiction writers to provide something a bit wicked in their feminine creations, for they are usually content to allow their wicked women to be bad merely in the way of getting what they want by exploiting their sex. But Mr. Wallace's Jean Briggerland is very proper in her behavior toward men. She is a thoroughgoing criminal, well endowed with intelligence and using it all for criminal purposes. She is quite devoid of all ethical sense and her standard of judgment for her actions is whether they enable her to succeed in some criminal enterprise. At the beginning of the story a man who has been somewhat attentive to her is shot and... SOURCE: A review of The Clue of the New Pin, in The New York Times Book Review, April 15, 1923, pp. 22, 24. [In the following review, the critic notes Wallace's flair for plotting, suspense, and humor in The Clue of the New Pin.] Fiction mystery stories have a marked advantage over those of real life. The reader knows that eventually the criminal will be found out, the tangled skein unraveled. No matter how exciting the opening columns of a newspaper murder report or great gem robbery may be, it profiteth little if in a few days the perplexed police give out the statement that "the department is still working on the crime, but does not expect to have anything further to report for some time." Disillusioned by the fact, the reader may well turn to fiction, with its always obliging last chapters. To meet such a presumed contingency, Edgar Wallace has written The Clue of the New Pin. Germs and robbery, murder and sudden death, all play their part in this intricate story. Mr. Wallace's recipe for plotmaking includes many of the most delectable ingredients. The story has its roots in an Oriental past. Once bring in the "heathen Chinee" and anything may happen. Then there is a house with a subterranean and secret vault, to which there is but one key. True to form, likewise, are some of the persons involved. Meet the miser, Jesse Trasmere. He hoards his lucre... SOURCE: "The Head Hunter," in The New York Times Book Review, July 19, 1925, p. 13. [In the following review, the critic finds Wallace's The Hairy Arm to be an entertaining suspense novel.] In The Hairy Arm, Edgar Wallace, one of England's most prolific writers of mystery stories, has added another to his already long list of thrillers. Edgar Allan Poe's most famous murder tale undoubtedly supplied the germ idea of the book, but the story has its own ingenious complications. The denouement is totally unexpected when it does come, though all the while the master clue was as prominently displayed as is the warning semaphore arm over a railroad track.... SOURCE: "London Dope Runners," in The New York Times Book Review, January 24, 1926, p. 9. [In the following review, the critic notes Wallace's skill as a craftsman of the suspense novel.] One of the most remarkable aspects of the writers of the modern American popular fiction is their amazing fruitfulness. These facile craftsmen turn out countless novels year after year without ever seeming to run dry. For a month or two their books are displayed on the shelves and in the windows of the Booksellers and then are seen no more. In theme these pleasant ephemers of the fiction world cover a wide variety of subjects. They include tales of the sea, the Far West, murder... Louis J. McQuilland (essay date 1926) ▻ SOURCE: "The Bookman Gallery: Edgar Wallace," in The Bookman, London, Vol. LXIX, No. 414, March, 1926, pp. 301-04. [In the following essay, McQuilland discusses Wallace's writing process and gives an overall assessment of his books.] Big sales in novels are viewed with contempt by many writers and readers outside the range of the lucky publisher and the almost equally lucky author and his personal friends. So far has this contempt progressed that it is now generally assumed that because a novel sells in considerable quantities, it must be a piece of bad art. I recently heard a clever woman, herself a novelist of capacity, declare that The Constant Nymph, because... SOURCE: "A Girl Detective," in The New York Times Book Review, June 19, 1927, p. 24. [In the following essay, the critic gives a favorable review of Wallace's The Girl from Scotland Yard, but faults Wallace for using "questionable" plot devices.] A past master of the mystery novel, with some thirty-odd volumes to his credit, has assembled in his latest thriller [A Girl Detective] a collection of characters precisely like those of many another yarn except for the fact that they are practically all women. Leslie Maughan the sleuth who solves the riddle, is the only girl detective at Scotland Yard. The villain—a very evil and sinister villain—is also a... Desmond MacCarthy (essay date 1930) ▻ SOURCE: "Very Much On the Spot" in New Statesman, Vol. XXXV, No. 890, May 17, 1930, pp. 180-82. [MacCarthy was one of the foremost English literary and drama critics of the twentieth century. He served for many years on the staff of the New Statesman and edited Life and Letters. A member of the Bloomsbury group, which also included Leonard and Virginia Woolf, John Maynard Keynes, E. M. Forster, and Lytton Strachey among its number, MacCarthy was guided by their primary tenet that "one' sprime objects in life were love, the creation and enjoyment of aesthetic experience, and the pursuit of knowledge." MacCarthy brought to his work a wide range of reading, serious... H. Douglas Thomson (essay date 1931) ▻ SOURCE: "The Thriller," in his Masters of Mystery: A Study of the Detective Story, W. Collins & Co. Ltd., 1931, pp. 212-37. [In the following excerpt, Thomson analyzes the themes and patterns that recur in Wallace's novels.] To many people detective fiction is nowadays synonymous with the novels of Mr. Edgar Wallace. Born in 1875, Mr. Wallace has had a varied career. He has served as a private soldier, been a miner, war correspondent, journalist on the staff of at least two London daily papers, and has experimented in numerous other occupations. Then three or four years ago his detective stories suddenly became popular; now he is one of the world's celebrities. If... Francis D. Grierson (essay date 1932) ▻ SOURCE: "Edgar Wallace: The Passing of a Great Personality," in The Bookman, London, Vol. LXXXI, No. 486, March, 1932, pp. 3101. [Grierson was an English-born author best known for his crime novels and nonfiction works on crime detection. In the following excerpt, he praises Wallace as a pioneer of the thriller genre and highlights the novelist's accurate depiction of the London underworld.] Edgar Wallace is dead. The world has lost a great man. For Wallace was great—not merely because he wrote some one hundred and fifty novels and thirty plays, and film scenarios, pen-pictures and newspaper articles by the score; but... E. C. Bentley (essay date 1932) ▻ SOURCE: "Edgar Wallace: The Great Storyteller," in The English Review, Vol. LIV, March, 1932, pp. 3114. [Bentley was an English-born journalist and author best known for his detective novel Trent's Last Case (1913). In the following essay, Bentley praises Wallace's storytelling techniques, rendering of dialect, and knowledge of the British working classes] When Edgar Wallace died last month, it was not only the obituary-men and the social diarists who told and annotated the story of his amazing life. The leader-writers, from the Times downwards, swelled the chorus. The chorus of what? Hardly of pure admiration for his literary talent—though that, and... George Jean Nathan (essay date 1935) ▻ SOURCE: "Several Writers for the Theatre—and Miss Stein" in his Passing Judgements, Alfred A. Knopf, 1935, pp. 140-76. [Nathan has been called the most learned and influential drama critic the United States has yet produced. During the early decades of the twentieth century, he was greatly responsible for shifting the emphasis of the American theatre from light entertainment to serious drama and for introducing audiences and producers to the work of Eugene O'Neill, Henrik Ibsen, and Bernard Shaw, among others. Nathan was a contributing editor to H. L. Mencken's magazine the American Mercury and coeditor of the Smart Set. With Mencken, Nathan belonged to an iconoclastic... Colin Watson (essay date 1971) ▻ SOURCE: "King Edgar, and How He Got His Crown," in his Snobbery with Violence: Crime Stories and Their Audience, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1971, pp. 73-84. [Watson was an English journalist and novelist who was known for his detective novels. In the following essay, he speculates that the wide popularity of Wallace's novels was due to predictable plots and characters, as well as the author's refusal to question middle-class tastes and morality.] From the analysis of the method and content of Wallace's work which Margaret Lane has offered in her book, Edgar Wallace: Biography of a Phenomenon, the picture emerges of a writer supremely adept in an 'off-the-cuff'... Armin Arnold (essay date 1976) ▻ SOURCE: "Friedrich Dürrenmatt and Edgar Wallace," in The International Fiction Review, Vol. 3, No. 2, July, 1976, pp. 142-44. [In the following essay, Arnold compares the plot elements of Wallace's The Four Just Men to those in a novel by German writer Friedrich Dürrenmatt.] In 1959, Siegfried M. Pistorius interviewed Friedrich Dürrenmatt in the latter's home above Neuchatel and found that Durrenmatt had complete sets of the novels by Edgar Wallace, Georges Simenon, and Agatha Christie on the shelves. In his book on Diirrenmatt's prose works, Peter Spycher mentions this fact, but says nothing concrete about influences from these authors on Diirrenmatt's...
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Frank Baum Essay - Critical Essays Baum, Frank ▻ Frank Baum 1856-1919 (Full name Lyman Frank Baum; also wrote under the pseudonyms Louis F. Baum, Schuyler Staunton, Floyd Akers, Laura Bancroft, John Estes Cooke, Edith Van Dyne, Captain Hugh Fitzgerald, and Suzanne Metcalf) American novelist, short story writer, playwright, journalist, and librettist. The following entry provides criticism on Baum's works from 1984 through 1998. For criticism prior to 1984, see TCLC, Volume 7. Baum was a prolific author who achieved lasting fame with through his Land of Oz fantasy-adventure series. The series' first book, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), is considered a classic of children's literature; its sequels, though uneven in quality, are popular favorites. The Land of Oz also appeals to adults who enjoy Baum's unsentimental and mildly satiric approach to his characters and their dilemmas. Oz so captivated the public's fancy that a succession of writers continued the series long after Baum's death. Baum was born in Chittenango, New York, on May 15, 1856, to Benjamin Ward and Cynthia Stanton Baum. He was privately tutored at home as a child, and later attended Peekskill Military Academy and Syracuse Classical School. Baum assumed a number of professions before becoming a children's writer. As an actor he toured the eastern states in several productions, including his own play The Maid of Arran (1881). Upon his marriage to Maud Gage in 1882, Baum left the theater and embarked on a series of business ventures that proved unsuccessful. In connection with these enterprises he traveled throughout the United States, and his impressions of his country's varied landscapes and lifestyles are recorded in his Land of Oz books. Baum eventually settled in Chicago, where he worked as a reporter and salesman, and founded the National Association of Window Trimmers, whose trade magazine, The Show Window, he edited and published. But his earnings did not meet the needs of his growing family. To further supplement his income, Baum, whose flair for storytelling was then admired only by friends and family, wrote Mother Goose in Prose (1897). This book and its sequel, Father Goose (1899), attempt to decipher the nonsense verse of nursery rhymes. Both books were well received, but their success did not prepare the author for the response to his next effort, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. In 1902 Baum adapted The Wonderful Wizard of Oz for the stage. The production, which took liberties with Baum's original characters and plot, included astonishing technical effects for its time and ran for a record 293 performances. Baum never intended The Wonderful Wizard of Oz to be the first of a series, but he was induced by popular demand and financial difficulties to write its sequel, The Marvelous Land of Oz (1904). In 1910 Baum moved with his family to Hollywood, California, to work on the The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays, a combination slide and motion picture presentation about Oz in which he invested in 1908. Baum tried to end the Oz series in 1910 with the publication of The Emerald City of Oz, but circumstances intervened; in 1911, Baum declared bankruptcy. By 1913 he had resigned himself to producing a new Oz book each year. Living in Hollywood, Baum became involved in the infant motion picture industry. With some friends he formed the Oz Film Manufacturing Company and produced several films based on his Oz books and some of his other books. While they featured impressive special effects, most of the films were not commercially successful, and the company failed in 1915. Although Baum had not invested his own money in the venture, ill health impeded any other projects he might have taken on. Complications from surgery left him bedridden for the last year of his life. Baum died on May 6, 1919. Baum's intent, stated in his introduction to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, was to create “a modernized fairy tale,” a children's story without “the horrible and blood-curdling incidents” or the didactic themes in the tales of such writers as Hans Christian Andersen and the Brothers Grimm. Nevertheless, Baum's stories contain a number of moral lessons as well as gruesome episodes. His real achievement was in creating a fantasy land that is recognizably American in psychology and setting: the virtues of home and family are stressed, and the characters are self-reliant, forthright individuals full of optimism and the pioneer spirit. In addition, the topographical features of Oz parallel those of the United States, and the magic in Oz is generally produced by science and technology rather than by spells and witchcraft. Moreover, Baum did not people his tales with genies, ogres, and fairies. Rather, he fashioned his characters, such as the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman, and Jack Pumpkinhead, out of real and familiar materials. A recurring theme of the Oz books—to find happiness look no farther than your own backyard—is exemplified by the characters' search for qualities they already possess. The Cowardly Lion, for example, acts bravely throughout the journey to Oz, yet he asks the Wizard for courage; the inordinately kind and compassionate Tin Woodman requests a heart; and the Scarecrow, who manifests wit and intelligence, is seeking a brain. Throughout the series, Baum emphasizes tolerant, selfless, and humble behavior. His villains and the objects of his satire are pseudo-intellectuals, the military, and figures who show greed or conceit. Despite the wild popularity of the Oz books, and Baum's self-designation as the “Royal Historian of Oz,” critics and educators virtually ignored Baum's achievements for nearly thirty years. They deemed his humorous, sometimes irreverent, approach “unwholesome” and considered his work insignificant in comparison to children's classics like Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Edward Wagenknecht, in a study published ten years after Baum's death, was the first critic to argue that such comparisons were inappropriate. He and later critics contend that Baum's Oz books are important, for they represent “the first distinctive attempt to construct a fairyland out of American materials” and because they convey a uniquely American concept of Utopia. More recent criticism of the Land of Oz books has focused on some of the darker aspects of Oz. Some commentators have argued that the theme of the primacy of home and family usually attributed to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz actually comes from the 1939 film based on the book. These critics point out the rather grim description in the book of Dorothy's home, which Baum depicts as being desperately lonely and tedious. Still other critics have observed political allusions in the Oz books, contending in particular that the Yellow Brick Road symbolizes the debate over the gold standard in American politics of the time. Most critics believe that Baum should have heeded his instincts and discontinued the series when he first planned. They note that the later books, such as The Lost Princess of Oz (1917) and The Magic of Oz (1919), appear hastily written and lack structure, style, and humor. But commentators agree that at his best Baum was an original and innovative writer who created the most popular and imitated children's story of the century. The Maid of Arran [as Louis F. Baum] (play) 1881 Mother Goose in Prose (fairy tales) 1897 By the Candelabra's Glare (poetry) 1898 Father Goose (fairy tales) 1899 The Art of Decorating Dry Goods Windows and Interiors (juvenile fiction) 1900 The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1900; also published as The Wizard of Oz, 1939 American Fairy Tales (fairy tales) 1901 The Master Key (juvenile fiction) 1901 The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus (fairy tales) 1902 The Wizard of Oz (libretto) 1902 The Surprising Adventures of the Magical Monarch of Mo (juvenile fiction) 1903 The Marvelous Land of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1904 Queen Zixi of Ix (juvenile fiction) 1905 The Woggle-Bug Book (play) 1905 Daughters of Destiny [as Schuyler Staunton] (novel) 1906 John Dough and the Cherub (juvenile fiction) 1906 Twinkle Tales (fairy tales) 1906 Ozma of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1907 Policeman Bluejay (fairy tales) 1907 Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz (juvenile fiction) 1908 The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays (screenplay) 1908 The Road to Oz (juvenile fiction) 1909 The Emerald City of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1910 Sky Island (juvenile fiction) 1912 The Patchwork Girl of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1913 Tik-Tok of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1914 The Scarecrow of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1915 Rinkitink in Oz (juvenile fiction) 1916 The Lost Princess of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1917 The Tin Woodman of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1918 The Magic of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1919 Glinda of Oz (juvenile fiction) 1920 Our Landlady (satirical sketches) 1941 Animal Fairy Tales (fairy tales) 1969 Douglas Street (essay date summer 1984) ▻ SOURCE: Street, Douglas. “The Wonderful Wiz That Was: The Curious Transformation of The Wizard of Oz.” Kansas Quarterly 16, no. 3 (summer 1984): 91-8. [In the following essay, Street discusses Baum's intent to create a uniquely American fairy-tale, distinct from the European tradition, in which a sense of reality was paramount, and then examines the reasons why the story was transformed back into pure fantasy for the film version.] L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is perhaps America's best remembered children's fantasy—or is it? After forty-five years the 1939 MGM cinematic adaptation of this tale has so saturated generations of Americans... Douglas J. McReynolds and Barbara J. Lips (essay date spring 1986) ▻ SOURCE: McReynolds, Douglas J., and Barbara J. Lips. “A Girl in the Game: The Wizard of Oz as Analog for the Female Experience in America.” North Dakota Quarterly 54, no. 2 (spring 1986): 87-93. [In the following essay, McReynolds and Lips argue that Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is one of the few examples in American literature depicting a nontragic adventurous female protagonist, who exemplifies the true experience of women on the American frontier.] When Leslie Fiedler suggested that American literature is essentially children's literature,1 he seemed to give legitimacy to what readers of American books had sensed for some time... Celia Catlett Anderson (essay date winter 1986-87) ▻ SOURCE: Anderson, Celia Catlett. “The Comedians of Oz.” Studies in American Humor 5, no. 4 (winter 1986-87): 229-42. [In the following essay, Anderson explores humor in Baum's Oz books.] L. Frank Baum was a humorist. Most readers agree with Russel B. Nye that “Oz is a land of laughter” (164),1 but commentators show less agreement about the nature of Baum's humor. Those most interested in the sociological underpinnings of Oz emphasize satire and parody as main ingredients. Those comparing him to Lewis Carroll or Edward Lear discuss the quantity and quality of Baum's reversals, incongruities, and wordplay. Those concerned with the connections between... Jerry Griswold (essay date fall 1987) ▻ SOURCE: Griswold, Jerry. “There's No Place but Home: The Wizard of Oz.” Antioch Review 45, no. 4 (fall 1987): 462-75. [In the following essay, Griswold discusses parallels between Oz and the social state of America at the time Baum wrote his Oz books.] “Is it real or is it a dream?” This question has been raised over and over again about the land of Oz. In the 1939 MGM movie The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy is hit on the head during the cyclone and dreams up the magical land. Nothing like this happens in L. Frank Baum's book. Judy Garland may wish to go “Somewhere over the Rainbow,” but in the book the cyclone takes Dorothy there against her wishes... Stuart Culver (essay date winter 1988) ▻ SOURCE: Culver, Stuart. “What Manikins Want: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and The Art of Decorating Dry Goods Windows.” Representations, no. 21 (winter 1988): 97-116. [In the following essay, Culver examines Baum's depiction of the emerging consumerist culture of his time in both The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and The Art of Decorating Dry Goods Windows, which Baum wrote simultaneously.] The lower animals keep all their limbs at home in their bodies, but many of man's are loose, and lie about detached, now here and now there, in various parts of the world. —Samuel Butler, Erewhon... Edward W. Hudlin (essay date fall 1989) ▻ SOURCE: Hudlin, Edward. “The Mythology of Oz: An Interpretation.” Papers on Language and Literature 25, no. 4 (fall 1989): 443-62. [In the following essay, Hudlin analyzes The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in terms of the structure of Joseph Campbell's heroic myth.] L. Frank Baum's masterpiece, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, has been the subject of psychoanalytical, sociological, political, and even economic analyses. Few critics, however, have attempted to examine it from a truly mythological or philosophical perspective. Lacking such a perspective, some critics have found Baum's writings too episodic, while others have been more concerned with what... Richard Tuerk (essay date autumn 1990) ▻ SOURCE: Tuerk, Richard. “Dorothy's Timeless Quest.” Mythlore 17, no. 63 (autumn 1990): 20-4. [In the following essay, Tuerk finds that, despite Baum's assertions that his book differed from the pattern of European fairy-tales, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is in fact structured as a monomyth.] In the preface to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz L. Frank Baum calls his book “a modernized fairy tale, in which the wonderment and joy are retained and the heart-aches and nightmares are left out.” He tried, he writes, to eliminate from it “the stereotyped genie, dwarf and fairy …, together with all the horrible and blood-curdling incident devised by … [the]... Joel D. Chaston (essay date December 1994) ▻ SOURCE: Chaston, Joel D. “If I Ever Go Looking for My Heart's Desire: ‘Home’ in Baum's ‘Oz’ Books.” Lion and the Unicorn 18, no. 2 (December 1994): 209-19. [In the following essay, Chaston traces Baum's portrayal of the notion of “home” in his Oz books from the best possible place to a place of confinement and destruction.] At the conclusion of the 1939 MGM motion picture version of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Dorothy Gale makes a statement that sums up one of the film's major themes. “Oh, but anyway, Toto,” she exclaims, “we're home—home! And this is my room—and you're all here—and I'm not going to leave here ever again, because I... J. Karl Franson (essay date 1995) ▻ SOURCE: Franson, J. Karl. “From Vanity Fair to Emerald City: Baum's Debt to Bunyan.” Children's Literature 23 (1995): 91-114. [In the following essay, Franson discusses the possible influence of John Bunyan's allegory Pilgrim's Progress on Baum's writing of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.] My interest in a possible “confluence of reminiscences” affecting the creation of L. Frank Baum's Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) began (like the curiosity of Lowes regarding Coleridge's imaginative vision) with “a strange footprint caught sight of accidentally just off the beaten track” that became “an absorbing adventure along the ways which the imagination... Todd S. Gilman (essay date winter 1995-96) ▻ SOURCE: Gilman, Todd S. “‘Aunt Em: Hate You! Hate Kansas! Taking the Dog. Dorothy’: Conscious and Unconscious Desire in The Wizard of Oz.” Children's Literature Association Quarterly 20, no. 4 (winter 1995-96): 161-67. [In the following essay, Gilman addresses Dorothy's possible unconscious desires in the film version of The Wizard of Oz and the fact that in Baum's Oz books Dorothy's desire to leave home rather than return is more explicit.] The quotation in my title—taken from a T-shirt popular in queer culture—bitchily suggests that in Victor Fleming's 1939 film adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, the rosy resolution we are left with... Richard Flynn (essay date June 1996) ▻ SOURCE: Flynn, Richard. “Imitation of Oz: The Sequel as Commodity.” The Lion and the Unicorn 20, no. 1 (June 1996): 121-31. [In the following essay, Flynn examines the Oz books as a consumerist boom.] … that which withers in the age of mechanical reproduction is the aura of the work of art. (Walter Benjamin, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” Illuminations 221) Oz was first visited upon a kindly man who wanted to set children free from fear. Oz grew out of Alice in Wonderland, and out of Kansas and the people who settled there, and... Michael O. Riley (essay date 1997) ▻ SOURCE: Riley, Michael O. “Concentration on Oz: 1907-1910.” In Oz and Beyond: The Fantasy World of L. Frank Baum, pp. 128-67. Lawrence, Kans.: University Press of Kansas, 1997. [In the following excerpt, Riley focuses on Baum's numerous Oz sequels.] To have pleased you, to have interested you, to have won your friendship, and perhaps your love, through my stories, is to my mind as great an achievement as to become President of the United States. Indeed, I would much rather be your story-teller, under these conditions, than to be the President. So you have helped me to fulfill my life's ambition, and I am more grateful to you, my dears, than I can... SOURCE: Riley, Michael O. “Resolution of Conflict: 1917-1919.” In Oz and Beyond: The Fantasy World of L. Frank Baum, pp. 202-29. Lawrence, Kans.: University Press of Kansas, 1997. [In the following excerpt, Riley discusses the last four Oz books and their significance to Baum's development of his fairyland Oz.] For, after all, dear reader, these stories of Oz are just yours and mine, and we are partners. As long as you care to read them I shall try to write them. —L. Frank Baum, “To My Readers” in The Lost Princess of Oz (1917) L. Frank Baum's life was an unusually eventful one... Tim Ziaukas (essay date fall 1998) ▻ SOURCE: Ziaukas, Tim. “Baum's Wizard of Oz as Gilded Age Public Relations.” Public Relations Quarterly 43, no. 3 (fall 1998): 7-11. [In the following essay, Ziaukas interprets The Wonderful Wizard of Oz as propaganda for the gold and silver standard in United States economics at the turn of the twentieth century.] “You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.” —from William Jennings Bryan's Cross of Gold Speech, 1896 “The Wicked Witch … looked down at Dorothy's feet,...
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Tales of the Night by Peter Høeg Tales of the Night Analysis Tales of the Night (Critical Survey of Contemporary Fiction) ▻ The Danish novelist, Peter Hoeg, has won critical acclaim in the English-speaking world with such startling novels as SMILLA’S SENSE OF SNOW (1993), BORDERLINERS (1994), and THE WOMAN AND THE APE (1996). The collection, TALES OF THE NIGHT, was first published in Denmark in 1990. It must be assumed that it took the critical success of Hoeg’s novels in English translation before it was felt that TALES OF THE NIGHT would find its own English-speaking audience. While the stories do not distinguish themselves to the same dazzling degree as Hoeg’s novels do, each story is intriguing and provocative in its own right. The collection opens with “Journey into a Dark Heart.” The story finds a young Danish mathematician traveling with Joseph Conrad on a train through the Congo. Hoeg uses this imagined encounter as an entry point into the seemingly inevitable confrontations that occur between Western and non-Western cultures. When reading these stories, the reader may reflect on classic stories written by Joseph Conrad, Isak Dinesen, or even Franz Kafka. There is an ominous cloud that hovers above each of these tales. In “Pity for the Children of Vaden,” the Danish town of Vaden seals itself off from the rest of Danish society in order to protect itself from a deadly plague. A group of traveling performers do make their way into the town and the idea that everything that is harmful can be kept away from the town and its inhabitants is challenged. Never less than thought-provoking, TALES OF THE NIGHT shows Hoeg as a young writer in the process of perfecting his craft. Smilla's Sense of Snow Peter Høeg Journey into a Dark Heart Borderliners The Woman and the Ape
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New Referral Communities, New Matching Site, New Games, and More in Today’s Roundup by John Zappe and Todd Raphael Jan 6, 2012, 9:41 am ET Here’s a collection of odds and ends about startups, new features, and other bits and bytes of useful info. You may remember CodeEval from a year ago, and from an update we did when part of its service became free. The company has opened up its database for searching by employers. So if you want to look up one of the thousands of developers who’ve solved programming challenges, you can view their solutions, and contact info. It’s $500 a month, though you can search free to see how many matches you get, before spending the money to get identifying information. CareerBuilder says the staffing industry is in for a strong few months as companies ramp-up their temporary hiring. A survey commissioned by the careers publisher found 36 percent of companies plan to hire temp or contract workers this year. The first quarter may well be the easiest, as 27 percent of companies say they’ll be adding temp staff in the first three months of the year. Speaking of matchmaking, would you believe there’s another new site aimed at matching employer and employee online profiles? This one’s called StreetID, and it’s focused on financial careers. SelectMinds has announced something called “Referral Communities.” Basically this is an addition to SelectMinds’ product which we have mentioned before, called TalentVine. Referral Communities allows referred job candidates to get into a talent community if they’re not ready to apply for a job or not ready to send in a resume; with the old system, the person your employees referred would need to go through the full Taleo application process. Clients like eBay and McGraw-Hill can use the system to “drip market” to job candidates who have been referred employees have referred. Google is always looking for the best and the brightest coming out of colleges and universities around the world. To encourage interest (and this extends all the way to high schoolers), it has Google Student Blog. It’s about as soft a sell as you’ll see. Of course, career information is among the potpourri of offerings. Next week begins a series of video chats (on Googe+ Hangouts, naturally) with lead engineering recruiter Jeff Moore. He just wrapped up a Recruiter Tips & Tricks series. You can use Hangouts for your own recruiting chats. Anthony Knierim, who works for Aon Hewitt’s outsourcing business and used to be with Accenture’s outsourcing business, is starting a company called RadMatter, which he says is a “social gaming place” launching this quarter. It’s going to do a free or low-cost beta with 10 companies (it already has five “yesses” and one “maybe”; he told us some of the beta companies and they are well-known). He says a couple of them are “gaga” over the tool, which will first focus on games to engage college or early-career job candidates. Companies will buy licenses that will allow them to host 5, 10, or 30 challenges annually. Venture capitalists are approaching RadMatter, Kneirim says, but right now it’s holding off on giving up control to a big VC firm, particularly to a firm, he says, that doesn’t understand the recruiting industry and might not realize how big gaming, challenges, and similar assessments can be in attracting people. RadMatter also will offer two-hour workshops for business leaders on the power of games and on best practices with games in the workplace and in recruiting, for about $7,500 for up to 12 participants (and is doing an abbreviated one this January 23 in Milwaukee for more than 30 C-level executives). In addition, it’ll offer three-week, $75,000 “culture audits” for companies on “readiness and recommendations for engaging Millenials.” tags: social media, staffing, survey rss | trackback Anthony Knierim Jan 6, 2012 at 3:00 pm Thanks for the great post! Just to clarify, I am part of the founding team which also includes our CEO Katherine Von Jan (http://www.linkedin.com/pub/katherine-von-jan/0/20/917) and our COO Vincent Ponzo (http://www.linkedin.com/in/vponzo). Keep up with us at RadMatter as we are having a lot of exciting updates coming in the next couple of weeks! SelectMinds Gets More Social … and Other ERE Expo News - ERE.net Mar 29, 2012 at 5:24 pm [...] deeper into the employee referral world” a couple of years ago and then into the “talent communities” competition, today is launching what it calls the “first-of-its-kind software to [...] John Zappe writes for ERE, and consults with digital content operations, focusing on the advertising side. Todd Raphael works on ERE's website, conferences, awards, community, and more. More articles from John Zappe and Todd Raphael »
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A View From the Road: The Subscription Equation Pages PREV 1 2 3 NEXT Thread IndexSearch ForumsPosting GuidelinesContact Moderatorsdaviejjd 36 POSTED: 8 Sep 2009 07:41 I just don't see why people even play wow, i tried it and thought it terrible!Also, playing a game for 1/6 of your total time seems silly NewClassic 37 POSTED: 8 Sep 2009 08:10 I'm not sure what to make if this article, if only because it's particularly weighted for subjectivity. For another mode of comparison, my current MMORPG would be Phantasy Star Universe for the PC, a game I have a total of, I want to say, 212 hours on over the space of roughly two years. In the past week alone, I've played the title Mass Effect for about 25 hours. Looking at a cost-to-result ratio, that means:PSU: $240, across 212 hours, is very roughly $1.30 per hour of play.Mass Effect: $60, across 25 hours of play, $2.20 per hour. The difference there is practically negligible, especially considering the comparative time I've had to play both titles. Once I finish Mass Effect, I suspect I'll have put around 32-35 hours into it for a single playthrough. Given my history with both Jade Empire and KotOR, it won't be limited to a single playthrough. The end result is probably a comparable $1-1.20 per hour of play at the far end result for both the MMO and non-MMO. From a cost-perspective, it's really about how much the end user enjoys the game they're playing. For an FPS buff that could sink 5-10 hours a day on their game of choice, it is cost ineffective to pay for a subscription fee for something they'll rarely play. For someone like my friend, who sinks roughly 6-8 hours a day in WoW (given the proper time allowances), it is very cost effective to pay for the subscription fee. It all depends on the user. A good article to serve as a counter-point for serious users, but there's way too much subjectivity to make it accurate across the board. MajoraPersona 38 POSTED: 8 Sep 2009 09:08 Clashero:The thing is, as much as you Americans love to complain about your economy, you're doing really well. $15 may not be much for you, but that translates to about $58, give or take, Argentine pesos. That's a load of money here, a country in which the economy truly is atrocious. lol, an opinion other than "zomg I only have 80k$ (dollar sign purposely put on the wrong side of the number, well, for English anyway) with which to buy my house, pay my bills, and feed my cats!" ^That's my opinion of rich or upper-middle class people who live in large cities. Though, I myself am at worst lower-middle class, have a room filled with books, games, dvd's, toys, statues from my trip to Greece, possibly 2000 Yu-Gi-Oh cards, an 18 or 22 inch flatscreen monitor (with an apparently appalling dead pixel), two flashlights, a speaker set with a subwoofer, and $80 cash right in front of me. So, really, I have no right to judge. BUT I WILL. I know full well that I'm a selfish bastard who indulges in everything put near me. I'm quite inclined to feel it's a natural reaction, derived from the fact that human beings historically didn't have this much shit lying around and needed to fight for every scrap. But I'm fully aware that the 'recession' is next to nothing in comparison to the rest of the world. Though, I'm from Canada, and I think our recession ended a month ago or something. I have more stuff in my room than some people twice my age will ever see. And I'm 19, almost 20. I'm weak, overweight, and have no skills to contribute to society. Society needs to take a step back and wonder exactly what the fuck it's doing here. Sorry for the psycho-rant, but that's another part of the kind of person that evolves from a society of plenty. Not that I plan to
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Environmental Science and Engineering Caltech Names Ninth President Thomas F. Rosenbaum has been named the ninth president of Caltech. Dr. Rosenbaum, is currently the John T. Wilson Distinguished Service Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago, where he has served as the university's provost for the past seven years. Also joining Caltech and the EAS Division will be Dr. Rosenbaum's spouse, Katherine T. Faber, the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern University. Professor Faber's research focuses on understanding stress fractures in ceramics, as well as on the fabrication of ceramic materials with controlled porosity, which are important as thermal and environmental barrier coatings for engine components. She is also the codirector of the Northwestern University-Art Institute of Chicago Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts (NU-ACCESS), which employs advanced materials science techniques for art history and restoration. [Caltech Release] Tags: Thomas Rosenbaum Katherine Faber APhMS Otis Booth Leadership Chair Established at Caltech With a $10 million gift, the Los Angeles–based Otis Booth Foundation has created and endowed the Otis Booth Leadership Chair for the Division of Engineering and Applied Science (EAS) at Caltech. "The first funds from the endowment will support time-sensitive research that is too high risk for most traditional grants," says Chair Ares Rosakis, the inaugural holder of the Booth Leadership Chair. "I am excited to see what inventions and ideas become realities as Dr. Rosakis and his successors at the helm of EAS use this endowment now and far into the future," says Lynn Booth, president of the Otis Booth Foundation, a Caltech trustee, and a prominent Los Angeles philanthropist. [Caltech Release] Tags: Ares Rosakis Lynn Booth 119th Commencement Ceremony Caltech's 119th Commencement Ceremony was held on Friday, June 14th, 2013 celebrated the accomplishments of 588 graduates, awarding 256 bachelor's degrees, 96 master's degrees, 2 engineer degrees, and 236 doctoral degrees. The graduates were addressed by the University of Michigan president Mary Sue Coleman. She used the life and career of Caltech alumnus Frank Robert Capra, one of America's most powerful directors during the 1930s and the directory of It's a Wonderful Life (1946), to inspire the graduating students. She emphasized the main message of the movie "that each of us touches more than we can appreciate". [Facts about the class of 2013] Tags: Commencement Professor Seinfeld Elected to the National Academy of Sciences Professor John H. Seinfeld has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences in recognition of his distinguished and continuing achievements in original research. His research has revealed the role of organic species in aerosols and the process by which vapor molecules become incorporated into particles. Currently his work focuses on the effects of aerosols on cloud formation and Earth's climate. [Caltech Release] Tags: John Seinfeld International Scholarship Focused on Engineering Global Challenges Announced The Caltech Division of Engineering and Applied Science and the USC Viterbi School of Engineering have established a new scholarship program, named after outgoing National Academy of Engineering (NAE) president Charles M. Vest at their institutions, along with six other universities around the country. "The Vest Scholarship is a superb opportunity for high-powered international graduate students to work with faculty and researchers who are international leaders in their engineering disciplines," says Chair Ares Rosakis. "At Caltech, due to its small size and strong interdisciplinary philosophy, the students will have the opportunity to work closely with not only these international leaders in engineering research, but also with their collaborators in all areas of science and technology." [Caltech Release] [Application Information] Tags: NAE Caltech Engineering Ranks Very High on U.S. News Best Grad Schools List 03-14-13 Caltech’s graduate program in engineering has been ranked fourth in the country by U.S. News & World Report, up from fifth last year and seventh the previous year. Engineering specialties at Caltech also ranked very well with first in aerospace / aeronautical / astronautical, third in mechanical, fifth in electrical / electronic / communications, seventh in materials, and ninth in environmental / environmental health. [Caltech Release] Tags: Graduate school rankings Professor Clauser Passes Away Francis H. Clauser, Clark Blanchard Millikan Professor of Engineering, Emeritus, passed away on Sunday, March 3, at 99 years of age. Professor Clauser, a Caltech alumnus (PhD '37), served as Chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science from 1969 to 1974. Upon stepping down as Chair he remained the Millikan Professor until his retirement. Although he retired in 1980, he maintained a vital presence on the Caltech campus, particularly at the Athenaeum round table, until shortly before he passed. [Caltech Release] Tags: Francis Clauser EAS Division Welcomes New Deputy Chair Peter Schröder, Professor of Computer Science and Applied and Computational Mathematics, is the new Deputy Chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science. "I look forward to working with Peter over the next several years as we continue with our quest to remain a unique collaborative community of isolated singularities that sets a compelling model as a research and teaching institution," says Chair Ares Rosakis. Tags: Peter Schröder Clean-Energy Research Accelerates Caltech clean-energy research is accelerating thanks to the renovation of the Earle M. Jorgensen Laboratory. Transformed into a cutting-edge facility for energy science, the lab unites two powerhouse programs: the Resnick Sustainability Institute and the Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis (JCAP). "Our researchers are working with Caltech's chemists and chemical engineers to challenge the status quo and translate scientific discovery into clean-energy innovations that will directly benefit society for generations to come," says Chair Ares Rosakis. [Caltech Release] Tags: Jorgensen Renovation Caltech infrastructure Number One Engineering and Technology University 10-04-12 For the third year the Times Higher Education world university rankings has ranked Caltech as number one in engineering and technology. [View Rankings] [Caltech Feature] Tags: CMS GALCIT Graduate school rankings California Institute of Technology EASGPSCCE Aerospace (GALCIT) Researchers & Visitors Qualifying Exams Environmental Analysis Center Linde Center JPL Center for Climate Sciences
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5965
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Jennings: Bears need 'that one big spark' December, 6, 2013 By Michael C. Wright | ESPN.com LAKE FOREST, Ill. -- The situation looks dire, but Chicago Bears cornerback Tim Jennings says “he’s seen it done before” and “if we get that one spark,” perhaps the club’s dying postseason hopes can spring back to life. That’s the mentality the Bears take into Monday night’s game against the Dallas Cowboys. “This month of December, that’s when it really starts counting. That’s when teams catch fire,” Jennings said. “We’ve got to continue with an upbeat attitude and realize we just need that one big spark. I think it’s going to start Monday with a prime-time game.” That could wind up being the case, but the club’s recent history doesn’t inspire much optimism about the last four games of the season. The Bears clearly own the home-field advantage for Monday’s game, but the club hasn’t won a home contest in the month of December since the day after Christmas in 2010, when it defeated the New York Jets. Let’s not forget the Bears blew a 7-3 start in 2011 and lost five of six down the stretch when quarterback Jay Cutler suffered a broken thumb that knocked him out for the last month and a half of the season. Then in 2012 the Bears cruised to a 7-1 start before losing five of the final eight. This time around, perhaps it’s better to be at the bottom looking up than in the advantageous spots the Bears found themselves in the two prior seasons. “We set our goal that we've got one game to play, and that's on Monday night,” coach Marc Trestman said. “It's a prime-time game. We've done very well in prime time this year. We did it against Pittsburgh. We did it against Green Bay, and we did it against the Giants.” The truth is the Bears "did it" against three teams with a combined record of 15-20-1. “I really can’t speak for anyone else’s emotions, and I try not to,” tight end Martellus Bennett said. “But for me, I’m super-excited about this week’s challenge, and you never know what’s going to happen. It takes a lot for us to be able to get to where we need to be. But the only thing we can do is take care of what we have to take care of, and that’s win the games that we have to win one game at a time, and see what happens then. Sometimes you have to travel the road and see where you end up.” Michael C. WrightESPN Chicago Bears reporterFollowArchiveJoined ESPN in 2010 Previously covered Jaguars and Redskins Played college football at West Texas A&M Tags:Chicago Bears, NFC North, NFL, Michael Wright, Marc Trestman, Martellus Bennett, Chicago Bears, Tim Jennings, Marc Trestman, Martellus Bennett Previous PostAround the Horns: Locke fixes shaky startNext PostMailbag: Cutler's future with Bears
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Late Night Reboot: Jeff Garlin, Tig Notaro & More on the Shows They'd Host By The Editors on May 6, 2013 The world of late night is shifting. Jimmy Fallon will be taking over for Jay Leno next year, which means someone will be taking over for Jimmy Fallon. Meanwhile, cable networks like Comedy Central, which has just given comedian Chris Hardwick his own midnight talk show, are trying to find new ways into a format long dominated by the major networks. Which means everything, essentially, is up for grabs. And there are some people we'd like to see more on late night TV. So we asked them to tell us what kind of show they'd host: who'd be on it, what they'd do with Lindsay Lohan for fun, the jokes they'd tell, what they'd do differently from all the other shows, and the things you'd learn. Because, to be honest, late night TV could use some tweaking. This would be a pretty great start. The Host: Jeff Garlin The Show: By the Way "I don't want to do a late night talk show. I'd like to do a weekly, like on a Sunday night. Would love to do that. A daily talk show? No, thank you. But if I had to do one then I would just make conversation with interesting people, and no matter who it is I would just be very honest and in the moment. If I had to interview somebody who I was like, 'Oh, geez,' about — a creation of the media — I would be very honest and ask them what they do and how they feel. I'd just be really, crazy honest. There'd be no bullshit whatsoever. There'd be no pre-interviews, which I can't stand as a guest of shows, and it'd be a lot of conversation. "I wouldn't go out of my way to be mean, but if a guest said something stupid, I would be in the moment and say, 'What does that mean?' And if they couldn't handle themselves, then they couldn't handle themselves. The reason that the interviews are rote is because of people like that. I think the audience would welcome that challenge. The audience wants real; the audience doesn't want contrived. I think ratings would go up on any show that approached it that way. "That's not saying that the other late night shows are bad. They just do something different than what I would do. Letterman could stop Paris Hilton from being on, and he doesn't. I mean, Letterman is one of my heroes, and with what's-her-name — the other night he was totally in the moment and sincere. What the hell is her name, the nutbag? Lindsay Lohan. But I'm just saying though that there's an inherent falseness to any late night talk show. "Why wouldn't I want to have people on my show who I want to like me and who I want to spend time with? They have this whole thing about these shows, like when you do a show you can't go on for three months, six months. If Lena Dunham wanted to be on my show every night, I'd let her be on my show every night. Same with Zach Galifianakis. Anyone who is wonderful and funny, come on my show every night. How lucky am I to have you? I'd love to have Woody Allen on. I'd love to have Albert Brooks on. There are people that are so ridiculously fascinating, like Mick Jagger or Keith Richards. I would love to just sit and have a conversation with Keith Richards. "All I want to do is make really fun small talk. I'm doing what I want to see. Talk shows used to be like having a cup of coffee with somebody. The change is this: Late night talk shows used to be 90 minutes, and it was about having raconteurs on and interesting people. And then, at some point, it became project-driven. And it wasn't all about promoting before. People would go on The Tonight Show just to hang out with Johnny and smoke cigarettes and just chill out. Then they turned into this other thing." --Jeff Garlin's podcast By the Way is available on iTunes and Earwolf, and his film Dealing with Idiots, costarring Christopher Guest, Bob Odenkirk, and JB Smoove, is in theaters July 12. The Host: Tig Notaro The Show: Tig Has Friends "I shot a talk show pilot a few years ago and it did not get picked up, but God that was a good show. So what I would do with a late night show would be similar: spending time getting to know the artists that come in on a personal level and exploring their hidden talents. Anyone who comes on has to show a hidden talent, whether it is whistling or tap-dancing, or playing the ukulele. When I did the show at Largo, the audience ate it up so much, because the guest is doing this weird thing that you've never seen or they haven't talked about. Leaving the show, you feel like you know them in a personal way other people don't. "There would have to be one theme tying everyone together, but it could be anything: the entire cast of a TV show, or musicians, or all of my old roommates. I had the cast of Mad Men on my pilot, and they demonstrated their talents. Jon Hamm has the ability to seduce anyone he wants, Jared Harris did a scene from Mad Men as different actors he could impersonate like Christopher Walken, and Rich Sommer is great at playing that bar game where there is a split screen of identical pictures, and you need to point out the subtle differences in each, so a blown-up live version of that was created for him. He really is quite good. "At the end of the show I would have an interactive Q&A where I would bring the guests out as a group and then interview each of them with a question like, 'Cheryl Hines, my father left when I was six months old. What was your most embarrassing moment?' "I want my show to end similarly to old variety shows, where they sing at the end, but I have a really bad voice. So I would earnestly sing goodnight to the audience with the song that my sidekick Kyle Dunnigan wrote with my voice going off the rails. I'd grab somebody's chin and sing to them and then go out in the audience and tussle someone's hair. People would think, Oh Gosh, she must be a little nervous, her voice isn't sounding so great. But then it never gets better." --Tig Notaro hosts the weekly podcast Professor Blastoff and her album Live is available on iTunes. The Host: Bruce Campbell The Show: Last Call with Bruce Campbell "My level of interest is shockingly high. It's time. It's time for a real talk show. I would like to do a modern-day Lawrence Welk show, where you wear groovy clothes. A little kitschy, and with modern acts that people don't usually see. As an actor, I would love interviewing actors. I would torment them. I can get into their brain, because I know how they think and I know everything they don't want to be asked. Real personal and uncomfortable stuff, but funny. "I would bring in low-budget B-movie actors, because their careers are just as valid. I would find actors who haven't worked in, like, forty years, and bring them on. I'd talk to former child stars and see what they're doing now. I'd talk to lottery winners ten years later. Because talking to celebrities is a bore. They all have programed answers. I want to bring in real people that are interesting. And I'd take Lindsay Lohan roller-skating. We'd go on field trips. "I'd change up the whole format. I might do the monologue last. Actually, talk show would be the wrong word. It would be a variety show. And I would make sure it wouldn't be anyone you could see anywhere else, so if the guest was being brought on any other talk show, I wouldn't have them on. So I'd have a bunch of grateful guests. "My show would either be canceled after an hour, or it would run for 25 years, depending on what happens when they see the sequence of me and Lindsay Lohan going to Magic Mountain. It would just be the best show ever. And it would be a hell of an hour." --Bruce Campbell is the star of such movies as The Evil Dead and Army of Darkness. He currently stars in Burn Notice and was a producer of this year's Evil Dead remake.. The Host: Julie Klausner The Show: Late Night with Maya Angelou "I grew up with late night. I grew up wanting to be Larry Sanders, even though he was a fictional character. But I very much remember being an adolescent when the late shift was at its height. It's different now. I think the Internet has changed comedy, how it's used and how it's made. I think Fallon definitely tapped into that big variety-show feel that comes along with having an amazing already established band, and his talent lends itself to different forms: He sings, he does impressions. It's very old-school Hollywood in a way people appreciate. "I think the future of the talk show is specificity. What you see on Watch What Happens Live or even on a show like Talking Dead — you see programming that is almost very Internet-y, and that is very, very specific. If I were going to have a talk show, I would want to do some facsimile about what I do on my podcast, which is talking to experts about topics. I would want interviews to be topical, not general, almost like The Daily Show or Colbert Report. I don't think anybody cares about an actress's cute story that she's using to promote the film that's coming out that weekend. I love talking to authors. I love talking to people who make documentaries. "But it's not just a question of choosing guests. It's choosing what they do and what they talk about. A big part of what Fallon does is apply the quantifiable success of the Internet to his show. He'll play beer pong with Betty White or do things with celebrities that are SEO-friendly. I would absolutely take what I learned from making and developing videos for Vulture over the last so many years and apply it to what works on TV. We always have an activity or an angle so it's not just a straight interview with Jackie Collins. We'll play a game. "Whatever happens, I really hope they pick a woman, or someone of color. And I know that's a quasi-political thing to say, but that would be nice. Maybe Maya Angelou. It's a bold choice, but she's a bold woman. She's got a lot of life in her, and it would be nice to see someone beyond the clique." --Julie Klausner hosts the podcast How Was Your Week, available on iTunes. The Hosts: John Lutz and Scott Adsit The Show: The Show? "We would both be sidekicks — there would be no host, just an empty desk. And we would sit on the ends of the couch, and the guests would come in and sit next to us. They'd pretty much be on their own. Instead of a monologue, it would just be us laughing hysterically during a long silence while we look at a spotlight. "The only kind of guest we would have are people who hate the project they're promoting, like when Bill Cosby went on Carson and just talked about how awful Leonard Part 6 was. We would get people who are really embarrassed about the work they've done to come out and trash it. Curmudgeons we admire. "We would have Scott's 8th-grade geometry teacher on to have him explain what the problem he has with Scott is. And John could ask the musical director from his parents' church to come by. She's been doing it for, like, thirty years, so there's got to be some good stories. John's father is a Lutheran preacher, and every week he'll come on and see if he can save us. "There would definitely be a recurring segment where we eat sandwiches or something that we made earlier. And we don't give anything to our guests, that's just when we have our dinner. "Neither of us is a big drinker, so I think we would just have angel dust backstage. Our dealer would be there, and the twist is that he's really just a drug dealer. He's always ready to run from the police or anything, and he runs faster than anybody because he's on angel dust the whole time. And he's in a bear costume. "Carson Daly is going to be after Late Night, always. He'll just go deeper and deeper until eventually he's after The Today Show." --Former 30 Rock costars John Lutz and Scott Adsit frequently perform at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York City. Adsit will appear in the upcoming film A Case of You with Peter Dinklage, Sam Rockwell, and Vince Vaughn. The Host: Chris Gethard The Show: The Chris Gethard Show "I've thought about this a lot, and I would want it to be based in New York, just because to me I feel like there's so much New York has with music. I'd want the show to feel like one of those dive shows in Brooklyn. I would can the monologue. People who want that type of show have a place for it already. I'd want my show to be really interactive, really innovative in that way. "Young people consume entertainment in a way that is different from even 10 years ago. They're used to comments. They're used to shaping things that are subpar. For me, I'd love to do something that's highly interactive. I have a vision of a late night show that puts Internet and TV together, whereas now they're so often in competition. I'd love to do a live show because I feel, especially with the Internet, giving feedback becomes important. "I feel like I see more often people don't necessarily stay up late to watch late night. They watch it online the next day. And I love late night. Conan was everything when I was coming up in New York comedy. My first gig in comedy was dressing up as characters on Conan. So I think late night is an area where there's historically been a lot of innovation. I don't know if it's a revolutionary thought, and I certainly hope it's not an antagonistic one, because I love Fallon and the others. But Letterman was the last real innovator in late night and everything else is kind of patterned off that. "A world that would let me bring The Human Fish on late night would be a very good world. You know, we're on public access television, so when people say, 'Some of the stuff you do on there is insane,' I'm like, 'We're working on a platform that allows us to be insane.' I'll play by the rules wherever we go. The Human Fish is a guy in swim trunks and goggles. But people love interacting with him. They love calling in and saying, 'I want to ask The Human Fish a question.' And that's another thing I'd love to see on TV — this is what the show pitches, and we need you guys, the audience, to round it out and let us know how it goes. "For me, my dream lineup would be somebody who's pretty normal and willing to come on and do something the audience isn't expecting. Something beyond, 'This is my movie, watch me be charming.' I'd rather, 'What's your thing? Playing Magic the Gathering? Well, let's play Magic the Gathering.' And then the second guest would be someone from the world of entertainment, an up-and-comer. And for the third guest, I'd really go out of my way to get some bands that are indicative of New York's local talent. You know, bands that might never go on TV if not for our show. That's the great thing about being in New York — I go to a lot of local shows, and there's some weird stuff out there, really unique and original and innovative. "I really love Fallon playing games with the guests. In an ideal show, there'd be a way for the audience to be involved. I'd love to get celebrity involved and see a celebrity let their guard down for the audience. I love to think of my show now as a video game in which I'm the main character, and the audience calls in and says, 'Do this next.' I'm getting excited just talking about it." --Chris Gethard is in this year's The Heat and hosts The Chris Gethard Show. —Interviewed by Anna Peele, Matt Kitchen, and Julia Carpenter All photos via Getty Images Excerpt: Jim Gaffigan's Dad is Fat Jim Gaffigan: Dad is Fat chris gethard , comics , Julie Klausner , bruce campbell , john lutz , late night , scott adsit , comedy , jeff garlin , tig notaro , comedians
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The concept for Exodus was initiated in the 1970s by a group of inmates at Greenhaven Correctional Facility who realized that prison life was not adequately preparing them to succeed on the outside. In the early 1990’s, Julio Medina, one of the members of the Exodus group, began to realize that the work that Exodus was doing behind prison walls was not enough. Time and again he would see recidivism plague the most well-intentioned individuals – men whose only dreams were to make an honest living, reconnect with their children, and even pay taxes. The story remained constant. Their inability to find and maintain employment made them feel like they were a burden to their families. Despair and hopelessness set in − leading to drugs, crime, and back to prison. After receiving his Masters Degree in Divinity while serving a 12-year sentence at Sing Sing, Julio vowed to work to break the cycle of recidivism by bringing Exodus to the outside to help formerly incarcerated individuals find employment. However, after leaving prison, he saw the other side of the problem. The inmates he knew on the inside were different after their release. Attitudes they developed as defense mechanisms inside prison were making it difficult to assimilate into society. He even saw this in himself noting that it was only because of an understanding supervisor that he kept his first job as a case manager at an AIDS service organization. In 1999, after working out many of his own reintegration issues, Julio opened Exodus Transitional Community in East Harlem to help formerly incarcerated individuals secure the employment and develop the attitudes they need to succeed at their jobs, reconnect with their families, and fully integrate into mainstream society. Exodus’s success at meeting the needs of formerly incarcerated individuals has led to us receiving national attention and becoming the signature program for the White House faith based post-release initiatives. In fact, Julio Medina was invited to be First Lady Laura Bush’s guest at the 2004 State of the Union Address. 2271 Third Avenue New York, New York 10035 - Telephone: 917.492.0990 - Fax: 212.722.6669 - Email us: Info@etcny.org
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Etiquette School is in session! > "Why would I want to do that?" What do you mean by that? Felica: I put this here because it's closest to the title of this section.This phrase has always gotten good results for me, when I remember to use it. When someone says something that I percieve as a subtle insult, or a backhanded compliment, looking at them like I'm confused and saying "What do you mean by that?" either illicits sputters because they've been put on the spot to elaborate the fact that they've said something nasty, or they rearrange it, it they're quick enough, to mean something nice or unoffensive. And occasionally, it clarifies that I've taken something the wrong way, and they really were trying to be nice. The downside to it is that a few times I've said it to someone who really thinks they are 'helping' by saying something I find offensive, and this phrase gives them an opening to 'preach' on the greatness of their advice or opinion. So you do have to be careful sometimes. If someone isn't alert enough to realize they've said an offensive thing, you might find yourself listening to a lecture.Anyone else used it? What results did you get? I actually have used this line!I was at a restaurant with my family when my grandpa noticed a very large man seated across the room. I could kind of see what was coming (Gpa likes to make comments about my mom's blouses doubling as tents for the rest of us >:(). Gpa leans over to me and gestures toward the man, "Now that's what you call a wide load!" (laughing) :o I asked "What do you mean?" And he just looked at me like I was stupid and went back to eating. Schmoopie3928: What a coincidence! I used that line on my grandmother! Years ago my best friend and my family went to FL to stay w/my grandma. My BF and I were talking about her Homosexual Brother that came up HIV positive. The real bummer is, he gave it to a friend of ours before he came "out". So we were talking about what a shame it was that this had to happen (this was before the "cocktail" was discovered. about 15 years ago.) My Gma freaked out and began to rant that HIV will never have anything to do with her or her family and we shouldn't be discussing it in her house. Well, I asked her what she meant by that, and she <gulp> made some very horrific anti gay and Racist remarks that I will not repeat. Unfortunately the line didn't work, but when I looked her in the eye and said "Gma, what if one day I have to have a blood transfusion or something and I get Aids?" Well, that Shut her up, and she walked out of the room.Score 1 me, 2,000,000 for Gma. (She's a Snarky old lady)
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5969
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I'm the Social Committee rep for my floor in the company, and I often sell raffle tickets and whatnot on behalf of the committee. These tickets are usually $1 or $3, some small amount. I've lost count of the number of people who try to give me a twenty and then look bewildered when I say "Um, I don't have enough change, can you please find something smaller?" I'm not sure where they got the idea that I have a cash drawer hidden at my desk. Quote from: Shoo on June 17, 2013, 10:27:55 AMRe: $100 bills and garage salesI, personally, would never accept a $100 bill from anyone at a garage sale, even if I had lots of change. Or even if I were selling something on Craigslist. In fact, when I place ads on Craigslist for things, I always write, "Cash only. No $100's."$100's are the most counterfeited bills out there. I'd be extremely suspicious of someone trying to pay for a small item with one of them. "No bills larger than $20."I agree that using a $100 to pay for a small price item is a warning sign that they're trying to pass a counterfeit bill. It's exactly the kind of anonymous transaction that can help hide the counterfeiter. It would be interesting to see the reaction if someone said "Sure, I'll take that $100. I'd like to see a photo ID, please." Quote from: magicdomino on June 17, 2013, 11:24:42 AMQuote from: Shoo on June 17, 2013, 10:27:55 AMRe: $100 bills and garage salesI, personally, would never accept a $100 bill from anyone at a garage sale, even if I had lots of change. Or even if I were selling something on Craigslist. In fact, when I place ads on Craigslist for things, I always write, "Cash only. No $100's."$100's are the most counterfeited bills out there. I'd be extremely suspicious of someone trying to pay for a small item with one of them. That was my first thought. POD. When I last held a yard sale I would not accept $100 bills no matter how much you were buying. 2 people tried it. Lady handed me it for a $20 bookcase and I said "There is a grocery store exactly 2 miles straight down the street (one block over) - you can't miss it. " I held it for her for 1/2 hour and she came back with a $20. Later a young couple came wanting to buy around $25 worth of stuff. I gave them the same line and they never came back. LadyClaire wrote:"Well, I'd turned my text tone off when I went to bed the other night..only to be jolted awake by my phone ringing at 12:15 a.m. It was co-worker...because I "hadn't answered her texts" that she'd sent me at 11:30 p.m. These were not work related texts, BTW, and nothing important."I'd block her number entirely. If anyone at work complained, I would simply tell them that she keeps sending non-work related texts and calls at late hours.artk2002 wrote:"It would be interesting to see the reaction if someone said "Sure, I'll take that $100. I'd like to see a photo ID, please.""The fridge logic in this is that someone who's knowingly passing counterfeit currency is probably skilled enough to have a fake ID that would pass muster. I'd rather just say no and not have to deal with any issues.Virg Quote from: Virg on June 17, 2013, 12:48:32 PMLadyClaire wrote:"Well, I'd turned my text tone off when I went to bed the other night..only to be jolted awake by my phone ringing at 12:15 a.m. It was co-worker...because I "hadn't answered her texts" that she'd sent me at 11:30 p.m. These were not work related texts, BTW, and nothing important."I'd block her number entirely. If anyone at work complained, I would simply tell them that she keeps sending non-work related texts and calls at late hours.Absolutely. Or assign a silent ringtone to that number. Quote from: jedikaiti on June 17, 2013, 12:50:09 PMQuote from: Virg on June 17, 2013, 12:48:32 PMLadyClaire wrote:"Well, I'd turned my text tone off when I went to bed the other night..only to be jolted awake by my phone ringing at 12:15 a.m. It was co-worker...because I "hadn't answered her texts" that she'd sent me at 11:30 p.m. These were not work related texts, BTW, and nothing important."I'd block her number entirely. If anyone at work complained, I would simply tell them that she keeps sending non-work related texts and calls at late hours.Absolutely. Or assign a silent ringtone to that number.I did that the next morning, as soon as my head was clear enough to figure it out. Logged Well, in a store you would expect to be able to get change for a large bill. But asking at a yard sale or a craft fair or a flea market if they have change for $100, first thing in the morning? Either SS or someone trying to pass off a counterfeit. You might lose a sale if it's just SSness, but you'll lose a lot more, all day long, when you don't have change for $5. « Last Edit: June 17, 2013, 01:14:25 PM by Elfmama » But even stores might not have enough if it is just opened, or late at night- "we carry no large bills past 10pm" some places post.Banks and credit unions are truly the best places to get the proper cash. my fave yard sales are the "moving, everything must go!" where they practically pay YOU to take their stuff away!Although, there was one time, just last month, when I happened upon a huge yardsale, on a weekday, and I just had to stop and look around, even though I had little cash.I found a lovely item, a work of art, way above an amount I had on me. I mentioned where and how it could be used, for educational purposes at a specific location, and the owner said, "that school? For that age and teacher? Ya know waht, I bet we can just do a donation on that one!"So I gave them my card and even more details on where it would be going.I did a write up on the back and presented it to the teacher a few days later. The item now has a place of honor in her classroom, and the kids were very happy to receive it.So, yes, I got it for free, but all the people involved were extra happy about it! Quote from: Army Mom on June 17, 2013, 10:37:48 AMQuote from: Shoo on June 17, 2013, 10:27:55 AMRe: $100 bills and garage salesI, personally, would never accept a $100 bill from anyone at a garage sale, even if I had lots of change. Or even if I were selling something on Craigslist. In fact, when I place ads on Craigslist for things, I always write, "Cash only. No $100's."$100's are the most counterfeited bills out there. I'd be extremely suspicious of someone trying to pay for a small item with one of them. I agree! I sold a car on Craigslist once and when the buyer showed up with 100s, I'm sure they thought I was the SS since I insisted on testing all the bills with a special marker.There is a way to fool the pens; hairspray. The pen ink won't hit the paper, so it doesn't change.This lists some things to look for: http://www.secretservice.gov/money_detect.shtmlAlso, the ink never dries. You should be able to rub a bill on white paper and see the green ink on the paper. This works well for new bills that haven't gone through the washer in someone's pocket. wonderfullyanonymous A short PSA...When testing any money for authenticity, even with the marker, always check the watermark.Make sure the face on the bill matches the face on the watermark. That money, if it was originally a 1 or a 10, and has been bleached to a 100 or a 5 bleached to a 50, the marker will show it as authentic, when in fact it is counterfit. Also, because counterfitters are using cotton when they are making their fake money, those markers will also not work on them. Always, always, always, check for that water mark. Logged RE late calling coworker: I have my phone set so that between certain hours or while I have certain apps running, only a few select numbers will get through and all the rest go straight to voicemail without ever alerting me. Last Wednesday, I had a SS at the DMV. BG: It is summer, and it is extremely busy here. The busiest time of the year, with wait times averaging at least an hour.At one point in the afternoon, a 3 year old starts screaming. Blood curdling screams. Coworkers said that I visibly started every time she let one loose. I didn't say anything although I did notice that the mother was ignoring her (the child would periodically run over to her to scream about her siblings). I was just trying to work as fast as I could to get everyone out.Finally, my lead worker asked the mother to please take her child out into the foyer. Lead worker explained that we would notify her when it was her turn, but that we had people attempting to take driving tests and her child was too disruptive.The mother's response was that it was our fault: we should set up a play area for children (where? we have no room) with crayons and coloring books and toys (and who pays for this?) so her children could play.Another customer yelled: "This isn't day care, lady!" That made her angrier. When it was her turn, she pitched a tantrum that put her child to shame.The next day, I had customers return (they couldn't take the noise any more) to complete their business. One test taker came back with ear plugs. Quote from: Bluenomi on June 17, 2013, 01:37:49 AMQuote from: Sirius on June 16, 2013, 08:04:01 PMQuote from: Snooks on May 18, 2013, 10:43:09 AMAside from the awfulness of what she said, why do all stories about SS waiting to see obstetricians always involve them declaring "I'm pregnant" in a room full of pregnant women? I suppose being a SS makes them totally blind to all the other bumps in the room because no-one else features in their world.Exactly why I turned down a transfer to OB/GYN. I was also offered one to Pediatrics; not going there, either. (I found out that after I resigned from my job and moved out of state the job I'd been doing was eliminated. That's why I was getting all these offers for lateral transfers. But they couldn't pay me enough to work for either OB/GYN or Pediatrics. People who work in both of those places and love it are very special, but I don't work well with the public and even less well with Special Snowflakes.)I tihnk that is a wise move. Some of the things I've seen in my OB's office are very SS like. Thankfully he has awesome reception staff who are very good at making it clear that his clients in labour come first while still being polite and calm.And you know the woman who demand their appointment be on time and that the OB should leave the birth he is attending for it are also the ones who will expect him to be at their side every minute of their labour!My Mom always maintained that the only doctors she would wait for were OB's, Cardiologists, and Trauma Doctors. The others needed to schedule in such a way they could stay on time. Our Pediatrician was old fashioned. We rarely if ever had to wait for him. He also kept open times in his schedule so that he could handle emergencies. There was one exam room off to the side away from the main ones. I was put in there immediately if I was having a follow up after an allergic reaction - because medication to suppress an full on reaction actually suppress your immune system. That room kept kids like me away from the sick kids. I remember hearing the nurses explain that no I wasn't cutting, I just couldn't be in the waiting room. (Mom usually gave a fuller explanation if the other parents were nice to the nurse - she saw it as an opportunity to educate people) Logged Quote from: Miss March on June 16, 2013, 08:51:26 PMCousin Jason showed up for the wedding and had a blast at the reception. He was the life of the party, drinking and dancing. As the evening wore down, he acknowledged that he was in no shape to drive. So he started to ask around, trying to find other guests at the wedding who had booked a room at the hotel for the evening, hoping he could crash with them. Most of the couples he spoke to turned him down and gently suggested that he go book a room, himself- as the hotel still had several available. But Cousin Jason didn't want to pay for his own room at this point- he just wanted someone else to put him up for free. As the couples all turned in for the night, he became increasingly vocal about how he needed some place to crash.And this is how Cousin Jason ended up sleeping on the pull out couch in the bridal suite-- crashing in the room the bride and groom had booked for their honeymoon night. Ugh. What a lovely memory for the happy couple. Waking up on their first morning as man and wife, and having a relation sprawled out asleep just across the room. That's horrifying, but the happy(?) couple should have maintained their spines. Logged mumma to KMC Quote from: pierrotlunaire0 on June 17, 2013, 03:33:01 PMsnipThe mother's response was that it was our fault: we should set up a play area for children (where? we have no room) with crayons and coloring books and toys (and who pays for this?) so her children could play.As a mother of five (yes they are all mine) I make sure we take crayons (or colored pencils), coloring books or blank paper, and a book or two for reading when we venture out to places where there might be a wait. I don't expect anyone else to "entertain" my children That being said, if we go to a place that has a designated kid area, they are not allowed to touch anything b/c I'm kind of a germaphobe! Logged
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5970
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From E-Hell Blog: Do People Listen To The Lyrics? Pages: 1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 [17] Go Down Topic: From E-Hell Blog: Do People Listen To The Lyrics? (Read 82636 times) Auryn Grigori Re: From E-Hell Blog: Do People Listen To The Lyrics? One of the weirdest songs I have ever hear for a wedding (this one in Glee, and the show has a habit of inappropriate songs) was Bruno Mars' "I Think I Wanna Marry You." To me, a song about getting married because you have nothing better to do is a bit odd. "It's a beautiful night, we're looking for something dumb to do, hey baby, I think I want to marry you." What every woman wants to hear as a proposal. Logged WolfWay They burnt down my house... They ate my tailor! Quote from: Auryn Grigori on October 11, 2013, 03:42:36 AMQuote from: lollylegs on July 14, 2013, 02:15:44 AMQuote from: Bethczar on July 13, 2013, 03:29:33 PMQuote from: lollylegs on July 10, 2013, 11:03:21 PMMy cousin and his wife chose 'Baby Got Back' for their first dance because, to use their words, it was a song that followed them throughout their relationship - it was playing the first time they met, when my cousin asked her out, in the car on their first date. It was fun watching them try to slow dance to it!There is a mellow, slow version of it - can't remember who sings it. I heard it one night as background music at a bar/restaurant. I kind of like it. Jonathon Coulton. He is awesome. He also did a song called "I'm Your Moon." It was based on the whole Pluto not being a planet thing, with Charon consoling the no longer planetThat sounds really great! I'll have to look that one up, thanks.If you like unusual cover versions of songs, John Cheese does lounge singer covers of alternative/rock/rap/metal songs. They are... odd. Logged It's best to love your family as you would a Siberian Tiger - from a distance, preferably separated by bars . -- Pearls Before Swine (16-May-2009) lollylegs Quote from: Auryn Grigori on October 11, 2013, 03:47:15 AMOne of the weirdest songs I have ever hear for a wedding (this one in Glee, and the show has a habit of inappropriate songs) was Bruno Mars' "I Think I Wanna Marry You." To me, a song about getting married because you have nothing better to do is a bit odd. "It's a beautiful night, we're looking for something dumb to do, hey baby, I think I want to marry you." What every woman wants to hear as a proposal. There was an 90s R&B song called Let's Get Married that was similar. I remember dancing to it at school discos and not really paying attention to the lyrics, then I heard the chorus properly on the radio one day - 'Meet me at the altar in your white dress/We aint getting no younger girl so we might as well do it' - and was shocked! When a cousin of DH's got married, his bride chose the song "Phantom of the Opera" to walk down the aisle! It was played by a string trio, so at least it wasn't immediately identifiable, but it felt a little weird. I mean, it's Phantom of the Opera! The songs are beautiful and awesome and I love them, but not as wedding music. Of course, some people thought I had weird songs playing before the wedding actually started, as people were being seated. My grandmother had made a joking comment a few months prior to my wedding that she was surprised I wasn't trying to incorporate Singin' in the Rain or Seven Brides for Seven Brothers in my wedding (those being two of my favorite movies of all time, and being love stories). I found copies of piano sheet music for some of the songs from those movies and asked our pianist to play them as people were being seated. My grandmother tells me she almost fell off her pew from laughing upon hearing "Singin' in the Rain" and "Bless Yore Beautiful Hide" as people were coming in! We had karaoke at our reception, and I heard comments about the appropriateness of a couple songs DH and I chose to sing:DH: Sit On My Face (Monty Python)Me: Underneath Your Clothes (Shakira)FWIW, DH was singing "Sit On My Face" with several of his buddies the night we met, and I think "Underneath Your Clothes" is very sweet, if a few of the lyrics are suggestive. When my best friend decided on the music for her wedding ceremony, at first she was adamant she wanted Lionel Richie's "Easy". English isn't our first language, but both she and I speak it fluently, and still it took me pointing out that the lyrics weren't exactly appropriate for a wedding (you know... "I just can't stand the pain", "I'm leaving you tomorrow" and so on) to change her mind...Then again, I may have committed a similar blunder when I sang the Good Charlotte song "Dancefloor Anthem", which is basically about breaking up, to a karaoke bar full of hen night participants Logged A friend of mine threatened to walk down the aisle to The Rains of Castermere. She didn't, but all the couple's sf friends (ie, pretty much everyone) appreciated the joke. Logged Quote from: Sirius on July 25, 2011, 01:23:31 PMOur friend who is an operatic baritone sang at our wedding, and he sang "Sunrise, Sunset" from Fiddler on the Roof, "Ave Maria" (probably the first time "Ave Maria" has been sung in a Baptist church) and a song our worship band had performed, "Family Worship Song." By the time he and I talked music I was so stressed I didn't care if he got up there and sang the ABC Song, but I knew I wanted "Family Worship Song." In fact, I knew it from the first time we'd sung it, even before Mr. Sirius joined our band.Really? Why would you say that? Quote from: katycoo on November 24, 2013, 06:25:48 PMQuote from: Sirius on July 25, 2011, 01:23:31 PMOur friend who is an operatic baritone sang at our wedding, and he sang "Sunrise, Sunset" from Fiddler on the Roof, "Ave Maria" (probably the first time "Ave Maria" has been sung in a Baptist church) and a song our worship band had performed, "Family Worship Song." By the time he and I talked music I was so stressed I didn't care if he got up there and sang the ABC Song, but I knew I wanted "Family Worship Song." In fact, I knew it from the first time we'd sung it, even before Mr. Sirius joined our band.Really? Why would you say that?I would guess because it is the Catholic prayer "Hail Mary" which is a prayer that has not been embraced by Protestants. Baptists are not commonly big Maryists. Pages: 1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 [17] Go Up
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Your own personal mysteries. Topic: Your own personal mysteries. (Read 244255 times) tiff019 Re: Your own personal mysteries. Quote from: blue2000 on February 06, 2013, 08:50:38 PMI don't know if I have posted this one before, as it has been bothering me for a while, but...What the heck kind of time portal is in the neighbourhood next to me??I have a plaza with Grocery Store A about six blocks from me one way. Store B is six blocks the other way. It is open 24 hrs, so I go there quite often when Store A is closed. Google maps says it is 30 minutes walk to Store A, and 18 minutes walk to Store B from my house. It takes me about 20 or 30 minutes to walk to Store A, and about 1 and 1/2 hrs to walk to Store B!I briefly thought about videotaping the walk, and then nixed that idea - there is a graveyard along one street and it is weird as heck at night. I don't want to videotape that. It would be nice to know why this happens, though.Are the blocks different lengths or do you have to cross more streets to get to Store B? perhaps there are more lights that delay crossing? I don't know that that would explain an hour's difference in the walk, but it could account for some of the difference. Quote from: tiff019 on February 07, 2013, 12:59:27 PMQuote from: blue2000 on February 06, 2013, 08:50:38 PMI don't know if I have posted this one before, as it has been bothering me for a while, but...What the heck kind of time portal is in the neighbourhood next to me??I have a plaza with Grocery Store A about six blocks from me one way. Store B is six blocks the other way. It is open 24 hrs, so I go there quite often when Store A is closed. Google maps says it is 30 minutes walk to Store A, and 18 minutes walk to Store B from my house. It takes me about 20 or 30 minutes to walk to Store A, and about 1 and 1/2 hrs to walk to Store B!I briefly thought about videotaping the walk, and then nixed that idea - there is a graveyard along one street and it is weird as heck at night. I don't want to videotape that. It would be nice to know why this happens, though.Are the blocks different lengths or do you have to cross more streets to get to Store B? perhaps there are more lights that delay crossing? I don't know that that would explain an hour's difference in the walk, but it could account for some of the difference.There are actually more lights and traffic going to Store A. Most of the streets along the route to Store B are very quiet, and almost deserted at night. Quote from: blue2000 on February 07, 2013, 03:54:20 PMQuote from: tiff019 on February 07, 2013, 12:59:27 PMQuote from: blue2000 on February 06, 2013, 08:50:38 PMI don't know if I have posted this one before, as it has been bothering me for a while, but...What the heck kind of time portal is in the neighbourhood next to me??I have a plaza with Grocery Store A about six blocks from me one way. Store B is six blocks the other way. It is open 24 hrs, so I go there quite often when Store A is closed. Google maps says it is 30 minutes walk to Store A, and 18 minutes walk to Store B from my house. It takes me about 20 or 30 minutes to walk to Store A, and about 1 and 1/2 hrs to walk to Store B!I briefly thought about videotaping the walk, and then nixed that idea - there is a graveyard along one street and it is weird as heck at night. I don't want to videotape that. It would be nice to know why this happens, though.Are the blocks different lengths or do you have to cross more streets to get to Store B? perhaps there are more lights that delay crossing? I don't know that that would explain an hour's difference in the walk, but it could account for some of the difference.There are actually more lights and traffic going to Store A. Most of the streets along the route to Store B are very quiet, and almost deserted at night.Videotape it during the daytime, curious people wanna see? New story, this one actually happened a few months back and I feel like posting it now.BG: Sometime, late last year, my BF went on a trip across country. I live in California, he was visiting family in Ohio. We're both on spectrum (he's an Aspie, I'm PDD-NOS.) We both get on tangents and sometimes we annoy each other with them. This also leads to all kinds of fun with us missing social cues.We were talking over the computer and he got it in his head he wanted to convince me of something. I kept trying to change the subject, and after a while, kind of got frustrated and blew up at him, instead of just taking a break outside. Whoops. I went on a couple minute tirade, and after it, he reported his phone was missing. He told me in chat that his phone just vibrated and vanished out of his pocket.Both of us kind of panicky, he needed the phone incase anything happened on the flight home, we both start looking. He looked through his aunt's couch twice, around the room, under the couch, etc. No where it'd logically be. It was a WinPhone at the time, so I suggested using Microsoft's phone location service. It came up with nothing, and eventually we reached a limit for trying to contact it in a few short hours. As far as we could tell, it went to Narnia, or, more nerdy, Dominaria.I did PM a kind person who said they would try to help us get it back. Thank you to you, if you're reading. BF checked the couch against, for the fifth time, the next day and it was under a cushion. Where he checked four times before.Now, talking to him, BF isn't mad at me that I A) made his phone vanish, and B) blew up at him. Apparently, he thinks its much cooler that I showed him supernatural powers exist. Go figure. The mystery in all this? Where did the phone go. As far as we can tell, it was either:1) Not in a place with a cell tower, I.E. the Bermuda Triangle, Hy-Brasil or Thule2) Not on Earth « Last Edit: February 07, 2013, 04:44:48 PM by Kaora » Quote from: Kaora on February 07, 2013, 04:38:46 PMNew story, this one actually happened a few months back and I feel like posting it now.BG: Sometime, late last year, my BF went on a trip across country. I live in California, he was visiting family in Ohio. We're both on spectrum (he's an Aspie, I'm PDD-NOS.) We both get on tangents and sometimes we annoy each other with them. This also leads to all kinds of fun with us missing social cues.We were talking over the computer and he got it in his head he wanted to convince me of something. I kept trying to change the subject, and after a while, kind of got frustrated and blew up at him, instead of just taking a break outside. Whoops. I went on a couple minute tirade, and after it, he reported his phone was missing. He told me in chat that his phone just vibrated and vanished out of his pocket.Both of us kind of panicky, he needed the phone incase anything happened on the flight home, we both start looking. He looked through his aunt's couch twice, around the room, under the couch, etc. No where it'd logically be. It was a WinPhone at the time, so I suggested using Microsoft's phone location service. It came up with nothing, and eventually we reached a limit for trying to contact it in a few short hours. As far as we could tell, it went to Narnia, or, more nerdy, Dominaria.I did PM a kind person who said they would try to help us get it back. Thank you to you, if you're reading. BF checked the couch against, for the fifth time, the next day and it was under a cushion. Where he checked four times before.Now, talking to him, BF isn't mad at me that I A) made his phone vanish, and B) blew up at him. Apparently, he thinks its much cooler that I showed him supernatural powers exist. Go figure. The mystery in all this? Where did the phone go. As far as we can tell, it was either:1) Not in a place with a cell tower, I.E. the Bermuda Triangle, Hy-Brasil or Thule2) Not on Earth Theory #3 - the couch got a long (private) phone call from a relative, ducked into another dimension to take the call, and came back. Solution? Don't give out your number to your furniture. Seriously - that's very odd! But if you could make someone's ringing phone vanish in a theatre, you'd be quite popular! snappylt OK, this one is from my young adult son, but here goes:A few weeks ago my son "Ron" mentioned that he had an odd cell phone experience. He had a "missed call" from a particular local phone number he didn't recognize, and there was a voice message left at that time (from a voice he didn't recognize) saying "Ron, give me a call back when you can" without leaving a callback number.Well, my son told me that when he called the "missed call" number back it turned out to be the cell phone of a man who answered the phone as "Detective _____". The supposed detective said he had never called Ron and had not left a message for him. When Ron asked him, he identified himself as being a county detective with our county's district attorney. Ron explained to the man about the voice mail and the missed call number and they both ended up laughing it off.I think it is very strange. Ron told me he's not involved in anything the county would be investigating... and besides, if they were investigating someone they wouldn't leave a weird message like that, would they? Ron mentioned that he thinks he may have gone to high school with a boy who may be the detective's son. (It was an unusual family name.) But Ron says he never had any interactions with that boy, so he couldn't imagine that kid using his dad's phone for a prank call to Ron.No big deal - I guess it's just an unsolved mystery - unless readers her can offer possible solutions. Quote from: Kaora on February 07, 2013, 04:38:46 PMNew story, this one actually happened a few months back and I feel like posting it now.BG: Sometime, late last year, my BF went on a trip across country. I live in California, he was visiting family in Ohio. We're both on spectrum (he's an Aspie, I'm PDD-NOS.) We both get on tangents and sometimes we annoy each other with them. This also leads to all kinds of fun with us missing social cues.We were talking over the computer and he got it in his head he wanted to convince me of something. I kept trying to change the subject, and after a while, kind of got frustrated and blew up at him, instead of just taking a break outside. Whoops. I went on a couple minute tirade, and after it, he reported his phone was missing. He told me in chat that his phone just vibrated and vanished out of his pocket.Both of us kind of panicky, he needed the phone incase anything happened on the flight home, we both start looking. He looked through his aunt's couch twice, around the room, under the couch, etc. No where it'd logically be. It was a WinPhone at the time, so I suggested using Microsoft's phone location service. It came up with nothing, and eventually we reached a limit for trying to contact it in a few short hours. As far as we could tell, it went to Narnia, or, more nerdy, Dominaria.I did PM a kind person who said they would try to help us get it back. Thank you to you, if you're reading. BF checked the couch against, for the fifth time, the next day and it was under a cushion. Where he checked four times before.Now, talking to him, BF isn't mad at me that I A) made his phone vanish, and B) blew up at him. Apparently, he thinks its much cooler that I showed him supernatural powers exist. Go figure. The mystery in all this? Where did the phone go. As far as we can tell, it was either:1) Not in a place with a cell tower, I.E. the Bermuda Triangle, Hy-Brasil or Thule2) Not on Earth You're welcome I'm just glad it's happened to someone else besides me.For those of you interested, sub a PO'd me, my ex's wallet or keys for the phone in this story and later find them in the freezer/sofa/shoe, in a house we hadn't been to that day.Bizarre Quote from: blue2000 on February 07, 2013, 05:18:17 PMQuote from: snappylt on February 07, 2013, 06:42:08 PMOK, this one is from my young adult son, but here goes:A few weeks ago my son "Ron" mentioned that he had an odd cell phone experience. He had a "missed call" from a particular local phone number he didn't recognize, and there was a voice message left at that time (from a voice he didn't recognize) saying "Ron, give me a call back when you can" without leaving a callback number.Well, my son told me that when he called the "missed call" number back it turned out to be the cell phone of a man who answered the phone as "Detective _____". The supposed detective said he had never called Ron and had not left a message for him. When Ron asked him, he identified himself as being a county detective with our county's district attorney. Ron explained to the man about the voice mail and the missed call number and they both ended up laughing it off.I think it is very strange. Ron told me he's not involved in anything the county would be investigating... and besides, if they were investigating someone they wouldn't leave a weird message like that, would they? Ron mentioned that he thinks he may have gone to high school with a boy who may be the detective's son. (It was an unusual family name.) But Ron says he never had any interactions with that boy, so he couldn't imagine that kid using his dad's phone for a prank call to Ron.No big deal - I guess it's just an unsolved mystery - unless readers her can offer possible solutions.Maybe someone was looking for a Ron and got the wrong name? It'd be the only way I could make sense of it. Could have been a prank, too, with someone spoofing a number. It's possible. Quote from: Kaora on February 07, 2013, 04:38:46 PM*snip*Theory #3 - the couch got a long (private) phone call from a relative, ducked into another dimension to take the call, and came back. Solution? Don't give out your number to your furniture. Seriously - that's very odd! But if you could make someone's ringing phone vanish in a theatre, you'd be quite popular!*snerk* It'd only happen if the person was truly annoying, unfortunately. It just happens with strong emotions. (From past experience, I've killed a CD player go dead because I got too sad around it. It revived itself in a week. )And yeah, thanks again Dazi. It's not an ex-phone because I killed it on its trip to Elsewhere, but because he dropped and cracked the screen earlier in the trip. He now has an Android phone. Hope they have the same find a phone service... Quote from: Kaora on February 07, 2013, 09:53:52 PMAnd yeah, thanks again Dazi. It's not an ex-phone because I killed it on its trip to Elsewhere, but because he dropped and cracked the screen earlier in the trip. He now has an Android phone. Hope they have the same find a phone service...Lookout Mobile Security app - antivirus, safe browsing, backups, locator, alarm noise (triggered via the website), extinction burst (when the battery is about to die, it emails you the last known location), and now, if someone enters the wrong passcode to unlock your phone 3 times, it takes a pic of them (assuming you have a front-facing camera on the phone) and sends it to you. :-) Quote from: jedikaiti on February 08, 2013, 01:10:25 AMQuote from: Kaora on February 07, 2013, 09:53:52 PMAnd yeah, thanks again Dazi. It's not an ex-phone because I killed it on its trip to Elsewhere, but because he dropped and cracked the screen earlier in the trip. He now has an Android phone. Hope they have the same find a phone service...Lookout Mobile Security app - antivirus, safe browsing, backups, locator, alarm noise (triggered via the website), extinction burst (when the battery is about to die, it emails you the last known location), and now, if someone enters the wrong passcode to unlock your phone 3 times, it takes a pic of them (assuming you have a front-facing camera on the phone) and sends it to you. :-)Ooh, nice! Thanks! Downloading for my tablet now! Logged Some years ago, we were going to fly west for a family gathering. As I always did, I left my office ID and keys at home. After all, I didn't want to lose them. I'm almost certain I left them on the dining room table. When we got home, they were nowhere to be found. We turned the house upside down several times but they remain missing to this day.Maybe we had a visit from Bob the Ghost. Logged m2kbug Quote from: snappylt on February 07, 2013, 06:42:08 PMOK, this one is from my young adult son, but here goes:A few weeks ago my son "Ron" mentioned that he had an odd cell phone experience. He had a "missed call" from a particular local phone number he didn't recognize, and there was a voice message left at that time (from a voice he didn't recognize) saying "Ron, give me a call back when you can" without leaving a callback number.Well, my son told me that when he called the "missed call" number back it turned out to be the cell phone of a man who answered the phone as "Detective _____". The supposed detective said he had never called Ron and had not left a message for him. When Ron asked him, he identified himself as being a county detective with our county's district attorney. Ron explained to the man about the voice mail and the missed call number and they both ended up laughing it off.I think it is very strange. Ron told me he's not involved in anything the county would be investigating... and besides, if they were investigating someone they wouldn't leave a weird message like that, would they? Ron mentioned that he thinks he may have gone to high school with a boy who may be the detective's son. (It was an unusual family name.) But Ron says he never had any interactions with that boy, so he couldn't imagine that kid using his dad's phone for a prank call to Ron.No big deal - I guess it's just an unsolved mystery - unless readers her can offer possible solutions.It could be the numbers were very similar. I had an uncle who's number was exactly one digit off from my sister's cell phone number. When I called and got a male voice, I thought at first it was sister's husband, though it didn't sound like him. It turned out to be uncle's number. This was also during a very tumultuous family experiences, so this also raised questions of the conspiracy variety. Logged I have lost, I kid you not, FOUR garage door openers. I took it off the visor and from there it disappeared. I don't usually carry a purse, so there's little chance it made its way indoors. I grabbed the second one. Dissappeared. I replaced them. Again, the clicker was removed from the visor (lesson not learned), and it got lost. I didn't have time to search, so grabbed the spare. That got lost. I went to clean out the car and find them. I checked under the seats and in crevices...gone...four of them, FOUR! Quote from: m2kbug on February 08, 2013, 01:36:15 PMI have lost, I kid you not, FOUR garage door openers. I took it off the visor and from there it disappeared. I don't usually carry a purse, so there's little chance it made its way indoors. I grabbed the second one. Dissappeared. I replaced them. Again, the clicker was removed from the visor (lesson not learned), and it got lost. I didn't have time to search, so grabbed the spare. That got lost. I went to clean out the car and find them. I checked under the seats and in crevices...gone...four of them, FOUR!Mom lost her bite plate when it fell out of their car in a parking lot (she found that out because they stopped at the same hamburger place on their way home & found it - it was repairable). I wonder if the garage door openers got kicked out of the car or took a dive out the door to explore the world? Quote from: VorFemme on February 08, 2013, 05:48:12 PMQuote from: m2kbug on February 08, 2013, 01:36:15 PMI have lost, I kid you not, FOUR garage door openers. I took it off the visor and from there it disappeared. I don't usually carry a purse, so there's little chance it made its way indoors. I grabbed the second one. Dissappeared. I replaced them. Again, the clicker was removed from the visor (lesson not learned), and it got lost. I didn't have time to search, so grabbed the spare. That got lost. I went to clean out the car and find them. I checked under the seats and in crevices...gone...four of them, FOUR!Mom lost her bite plate when it fell out of their car in a parking lot (she found that out because they stopped at the same hamburger place on their way home & found it - it was repairable). I wonder if the garage door openers got kicked out of the car or took a dive out the door to explore the world?The only thing I can think of is the clicker got removed when doing a quick clean and stuffing everything into a box or bucket to get to later, but when cleaning out the box, the clicker never turned up. It's a reasonable explanation for one, but FOUR? As far as I know, the clicker never left the car, it just evaporated. All four of them evaporated. I am usually very aware of things falling out, what with kids, a messy car, and losing things you put on top, you sort of learn to pay attention to these things . Sure, it's possible they got lost in a parking lot somewhere, but I really don't think so. I remember it being on the passenger seat, and you hit the brakes a little hard and things slide off to the floor. Upon retreiving the items from the floor, the clicker is gone. Four times. Evaporated. Logged cutejellybeen a few weeks ago I got a text message from someone on the other side of the country asking why I'd called them. Having no idea what they were talking about I asked who they were. Turn out neither of us know the other, and they had a call from my line, that didnt show up on my iphone as an outgoing call. Just strange. Nothing odd on my bill either. Logged
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Harrogate Agenda Brexit Brexit: the IEA's "Ratner" moment Booker: the end of the EU's imperial dream The EU debate: Clegg's seven percent lie IEA Brexit prize: a challenge That debate: a victory against a weak opponent IEA Brexit prize: of the other five Brexit: prize-winner announcement UKIP: Farage has blown it Flexcit: how we would actually leave the EU Ukraine: on the edges of failure Carrie Foreword Dealing With Bailiffs Bailiff Baiting Bloody Hell Dell How to be a complete bastard Contrary2belief Nerds of a Feather Katabasis Your Freedom & Ours bristolandwestdigital EU politics: acrimony is good Richard North, 10/11/2012 At first sight, this is another squabble about the EU budget – except that this is not about the budget – the one that that nice Mr Cameron is getting worked up about. No, this is not about the multi-annual budget negotiations. It's about the annual budgets (plural) for 2012 and 2013. The BBC piece tells us that the EU parliament and the council are having difficulty in establishing an "agreed position", where the EU commission is after another €9 billion (approx) in "emergency funding" to add to the already agreed €129.1 billion for 2012. The problem here is that this brings the 2013 budget up to just over €137 billion – representing a 6.8 percent increase on the previous year. That is all fine and dandy except that the Council has already decided on its "common position" and it has gone for €132 billion – a 2.79 percent increase. The need for this was flagged up a little while ago and what we are looking at here is a continuation of the budget procedure – where the EU parliament has the final say. As it stands, with two different "common positions" - the EU parliament supporting the commission - the two parties have gone to conciliation. But these talks have now stalled. If the parties do not agree, or the EU parliament as a whole does not agree the final deal, then the budget falls. The commission has to start over, with a new proposal. In the meantime, the "colleagues" are running to the wire – it is November and the new budget must be in place by the end of the year. If it isn't, the EU goes onto a fixed formula, which is basically this year's budget, paid in equal parts a month at a time. What makes this doubly interesting is that the annual budget procedure is time-limited and, according to Süddeutsche, the conciliation procedure must be concluded by Tuesday. The standard allowance is 14 days. Reuters seems to be enjoying the drama and it tells us that the commission is not getting a lot of sympathy from member states. This, then, is really about which institution is going to blink first, the EU parliament or the council. The commission is just a spectator in this particular process. Anything which adds dissent and confusion to our enemies, however, is all good fun, especially as a second report from Reuters refers to the talks collapsing "in acrimony". This I like, although I suspect the "colleagues" may not be too happy. When it comes to the EU, acrimony is good.
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Contact: Simon Jenkins S.Jenkins@leeds.ac.uk New evidence on the role of climate in Neanderthal extinction THE mystery of what killed the Neanderthals has moved a step closer to resolution after an international study led by the University of Leeds has ruled out one of the competing theories � catastrophic climate change � as the most likely cause. The bones of more than 400 Neanderthals have been found since the first discoveries were made in the early 19th century. The finds suggest the Neanderthals, named after the Neander Valley near D�sseldorf, where they were first recognized as an extinct kind of archaic humans, inhabited Europe and parts of western Asia for more than 100,000 years. The causes of their extinction have puzzled scientists for years � with some believing it was due to competition with modern humans, while others blamed deteriorating climatic conditions. But a new study published today in Nature has shown that the Neanderthal extinction did not coincide with any of the extreme climate events that punctuated the last glacial period. The research was led by Professor Chronis Tzedakis, a palaeoecologist at the University of Leeds, who explained: �Until now, there have been three limitations to understanding the role of climate in the Neanderthal extinction: uncertainty over the exact timing of their disappearance; uncertainties in converting radiocarbon dates to actual calendar years; and the chronological imprecision of the ancient climate record.� The team�s novel method � mapping radiocarbon dates of interest directly onto a well-dated palaeoclimate archive � circumvented the last two problems, providing a much more detailed picture of the climate at the possible times of the Neanderthal disappearance. The researchers applied the new method to three alternative sets of dates for the timing of the Neanderthal extinction from Gorham�s Cave, Gibraltar, a site which is thought to have been occupied by some of the latest surviving Neanderthals: a set of generally accepted but older dates (around 30-32,000 radiocarbon years ago) newly-suggested younger dates (around 28,000 radiocarbon years ago) more contentious dates (around 24,000 radiocarbon years ago). The team showed that during the first two sets of dates, Europe was experiencing conditions similar to the general climatic instability of the last glacial period � conditions the Neanderthals had already proved able to survive. The much more controversial date of around 24,000 radiocarbon years ago placed the last Neanderthals just before a large expansion of ice sheets and the onset of cold conditions in northern Europe. �But at that time, Gibraltar�s climate remained relatively unaffected, perhaps as a result of warm water from the subtropical Atlantic entering the western Mediterranean,� explained palaeoceanographer Isabel Cacho of the University of Barcelona. �Our findings suggest that there was no single climatic event that caused the extinction of the Neanderthals,� concludes palaeonthropologist Katerina Harvati of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. �Only the controversial date of 24,000 radiocarbon years for their disappearance, if proven correct, coincides with a major environmental shift. Even in this case, however, the role of climate would have been indirect, by promoting competition with other human groups.� The work also has wider implications for other studies, as paleoclimatologist Konrad Hughen of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution explained: �Our approach offers the huge potential to unravel the role of climate in critical events of the recent fossil record as it can be applied to any radiocarbon date from any deposit.� The article Placing late Neanderthals in a climatic context (Tzedakis, P.C., Hughen, K.A., Cacho, I. & Harvati, K) is published in Nature on September 13. A full copy of the paper is available on request. The study was conducted by Chronis Tzedakis (University of Leeds); Konrad Hughen (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution); Isabel Cacho (University of Barcelona); Katerina Harvati (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology). More about Prof Chronis Tzedakis can be found here: www.geography.leeds.ac.uk/people/c.tzedakis/ The University of Leeds is acclaimed for the quality of its teaching and research. One of the largest universities in the UK, Leeds is also the most popular among students applying for undergraduate courses. An emphasis on innovative research and investment in high-quality facilities and first-rate infrastructure means that no fewer than 35 departments are rated internationally or nationally 'excellent'. More about the University can be found here: http://www.leeds.ac.uk/ Rated 'excellent' in the Teaching Quality Assessment by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), the School of Geography is one of the leading research departments in the UK. Further information about the school can be found here http://www.geography.leeds.ac.uk Prof Chronis Tzedakis is available for interview about his work. To arrange an interview please contact the University of Leeds press office on +44 113 3435764.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5974
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Contact: Kevin Jiang kevin.jiang@uchospitals.edu Staphylococcus aureus bacteria turns immune system against itself Around 20 percent of all humans are persistently colonized with Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, a leading cause of skin infections and one of the major sources of hospital-acquired infections, including the antibiotic-resistant strain MRSA. University of Chicago scientists have recently discovered one of the keys to the immense success of S. aureus�the ability to hijack a primary human immune defense mechanism and use it to destroy white blood cells. The study was published Nov 15 in Science. "These bacteria have endowed themselves with weapons to not only anticipate every immune defense, but turn these immune defenses against the host as well," said Olaf Schneewind, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the Department of Microbiology at the University of Chicago and senior author of the paper. One of the first lines of defense in the human immune response are neutrophils, a type of white blood cell that ensnares invaders in neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), a web-like structure of DNA and proteins. Captured bacteria are then destroyed by amoeba-like white blood cells known as macrophages. However, S. aureus infection sites are often marked by an absence of macrophages, indicating the bacteria somehow defend themselves against the immune system. To reveal how these bacteria circumvent the human immune response, Schneewind and his team screened a series of S. aureus possessing mutations that shut down genes thought to play a role in infection. They looked to see how these mutated bacteria behaved in live tissue, and identified two strains that were unable to avoid macrophage attack. When these mutations�to the staphylococcal nuclease (nuc) and adenosine synthase A (adsA) genes respectively�were reversed, infection sites were free of macrophages again. Looking for a mechanism of action, the researchers grew S. aureus in a laboratory dish alongside neutrophils and macrophages. The white blood cells were healthy in this environment and could clear bacteria. But the addition of a chemical to stimulate NET formation triggered macrophage death. Realizing that a toxic product was being generated by S. aureus in response to NETs, the team used high performance liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry techniques to isolate the molecule. They discovered that S. aureus were converting NETs into 2'-deoxyadenosine (dAdo), a molecule which is toxic to macrophages. This effectively turned NETs into a weapon against the immune system. "Sooner or later almost every human gets some form of S. aureus infection. Our work describes for the first time the mechanism that these bacteria use to exclude macrophages from infected sites," Schneewind said. "Coupled with previously known mechanisms that suppress the adaptive immune response, the success of these organisms is almost guaranteed." S. aureus bacteria are found on the skin or in the respiratory tracts of colonized humans and commonly cause skin infections in the form of abscesses or boils. Normally not dangerous, severe issues arise when the bacteria enter the bloodstream, where they can cause diseases such as sepsis and meningitis. Antibiotic-resistant strains, such as methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), are difficult to treat and have plagued healthcare systems around the world. Schneewind and his team hope to leverage their findings toward therapies against S. aureus infections. But both genes and the dAdo molecule are closely related to important human physiological mechanisms, and Schneewind believes targeting these in bacteria, without harming human function, could be difficult. "In theory you could build inhibitors of these bacterial enzymes or remove them," Schneewind said. "But these are untested waters and the pursuit of such goal requires a lot more study." The study, "Staphylococcus aureus Degrades Neutrophil Extracellular Traps to Promote Immune Cell Death," was supported the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the American Heart Association. Additional authors include Vilasack Thammavongsa and Dominique M. Missiakas,
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Rancho Cucamonga Events | Eventbrite Rancho Cucamonga Events Copyright (c) 2014 Eventbrite. All Rights Reserved. Use subject to terms of use: http://www.eventbrite.com/tos Collins College Spring Social 2014 Begins: May 30, 2014 at 6:00 PM Ends: May 30, 2014 at 10:00 PM Where: 9240 Archibald Ave Organized by: Hospitality Management Council and the Spring Social Committee http://www.eventbrite.
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Everest 2007: Learning without Limits Everest Expedition Manuel Pizarro Founder and co-leader of Climb High Expeditions, was born in Valparaiso, Chile. His first language is Spanish and after immigrating to Canada in 1973, he learned to speak French and English as well. As a young man, �Manny� joined The Royal Canadian Air Cadets. It was in this environment that he learned his first skills as an outdoors enthusiast. Paramilitary requirements of being a pilot in this organization equipped him with reliable, essential, and practical experience with summer and winter survival skills. In 1985, Manny started his climbing career on the smooth slopes of Mount Washington, New Hampshire. During these years, he merged his paramilitary knowledge with his ski mountaineering skills. His experience as an extreme alpine skier and ice climber gave him the confidence to challenge Mt. Aconcagua in Argentina. It was during this expedition that he met Jim Albert and both men became fast friends. Jim and Manny reached the summit on January 20th and 21st, 1995. Manny has since logged two more climbs to Aconcagua and is soon returning for a fourth time with clients from Montr�al, Qu�bec. In 1998, Manny reached the summit of Surya Peak in Nepal (17,800 ft). He also participated in several high altitude treks in the Everest region, where he familiarized himself with the Base Camp and Kala Pattar Peak (18,445 ft). During this trip, Manny was commended for his assistance in retrieving the body of fellow climber Luther Jerstad who was part of the 1963 �All American Expedition� to Mt. Everest. Mr. Jerstad unfortunately passed away from heart failure during the trek to Everest Base Camp accompanied by his grandson. Dr. Cameron Bangs, a leading expert in frostbite research, was present during the ordeal and personally thanked Manny for his efforts. Throughout the last decade, Manny has been leading expeditionary teams to some of the tallest mountains in the world. In 2000, he reached the summit of Mt. McKinley in Alaska (20,320 ft). In April of 2002, he reached the summit of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Africa (19,450 ft). Altogether, he has logged over five thousand hours of expedition style climbing experience in several parts of the world. With Manny and Jimmy, safety comes first. As they matured as humans and climbers, they began to see and feel the amazing parallels between climbing mountains and life itself. Although these endeavours are extremely demanding on the body and mind, Manny truly believes that they teach human beings the true meaning of determination, perseverance, teamwork, and conflict resolution, and above all, the value of learning from our mistakes. Painful lessons have taught them that to reach a state of glory, we must sometimes fall from grace, rebuild, and start all over again. And at times, Mother Nature was relentless with Manny and his teammates forcing them to retreat from their summit bids as the only way to survive. We embark on these projects because we love climbing and because we truly believe that our expeditions help people look beyond the limitations of their distinctive challenge, be it physical, mental, or educational. We aim to evoke imagination, courage and, perseverance in our clients. While it is true that we want to quench our own thirst for personal adventure, we also want others to benefit from our dreams in realizing their own. Dispatches
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how_far_to_lincoln_city_from_beverly_beach How old is Christopher Daniels? Who was us president in the year 1916? 133 pound is how many stone 200lbs in st How tall is Tobin Bell in feet and inches? Height Daisy Lowe Paul Bettany birthplace You asked: How far to lincoln city from beverly beach? 915.732955454 kilometers the height 915.732955454 kilometers Vote or Vote How far to lincoln city from beverly beach? How do we know? How far is it from Lincoln City, the unincorporated community in Carter Township, Spencer County in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Indiana to Beverley Beach, the unincorporated community in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States? 38°07'15"N is the latitude of Lincoln City, Indiana Beverly Beach, Maryland 86°59'54"W is the longitude of By calculation (generator: ["distance_between3@trueknowledge.com"]) I know that: is the distance between Lincoln City, Indiana and Beverly Beach, Maryland 38°07'15"N is the latitude of Lincoln City, Indiana 38°52'31"N is the latitude of Beverly Beach, Maryland 86°59'54"W is the longitude of Lincoln City, Indiana 76°30'29"W is the longitude of Beverly Beach, Maryland Assuming you meant Lincoln City, the unincorporated community in Carter Township, Spencer County in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Indiana and Beverly Beach, the unincorporated community in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States Lincoln City, the place in Spencer County, Indiana, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Flagler County, Florida, USA Lincoln City, the city in Lincoln County, Oregon, United States and Beverly Beach, the unincorporated community in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States, Lincoln City, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA Lincoln City, the place in Spencer County, Indiana, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA Lincoln City, the place in Spencer County, Indiana, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Island County, Washington, USA Lincoln City, the place in Spencer County, Indiana, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA Lincoln City, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Flagler County, Florida, USA Lincoln City, the place in Clark County, Nevada, USA and Beverly Beach, the unincorporated community in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States, Lincoln City, the place in Clark County, Nevada, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA Lincoln City, the place in Clark County, Nevada, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Flagler County, Florida, USA Lincoln City, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Island County, Washington, USA Lincoln City, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA Lincoln City, the place in Clark County, Nevada, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Lincoln County, Oregon, USA Lincoln City, the place in Clark County, Nevada, USA and Beverly Beach, the place in Island County, Washington, USA
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5978
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Kate Upton hates her big, beautiful breasts Kate Upton's boobs have served her well in the modeling industry, but like any girl … Christina Hendricks says "No, thanks!" to kids Christina Hendricks has been married to husband Geoffrey Arend since 2009, so everyone wants to … Snow White and Prince Charming got married! It was only about six months ago that Once Upon a Time's Ginnifer Goodwin and … Tori Spelling can't give Dean McDermott enough sex Tori Spelling and husband Dean McDermott have been having some drama... and by "drama", I … Johnny Depp is testifying in a bizarre murder trial This is a bit of a weird one. Johnny Depp was subpoenaed this week to … Did Beyoncé Photoshop herself a thigh gap? Celebrities Photoshopping their pictures - even their "candid" Instagram images - is nothing new and … 0Jason Segel and Michelle Williams Were All Over Each Other at a Movie Premiere From People: Michelle Williams and Jason Segel had plenty to feel giddy about Wednesday night, as the new couple attended the premiere of his movie The Five-Year Engagement at the Tribeca Film Festival – and snuggled together at the afterparty. They were affectionate throughout the night. As the movie ended, he gave her a little kiss on the cheek, as she took off and he stayed in New York’s Ziegfeld Theater to chat with friends and well-wishers. They were practically inseparable at the afterparty in the Museum of Modern Art. Segel held Williams’s hand and took her around to tables, whispering in her ear. They looked very new and very happy. At one point, he pulled her behind a curtain and she came back out and pointed at him jokingly. Williams, 31, left before Segel, 32 – she leaned in, kissed his cheek, said something quickly in his ear, rubbed his back and dipped out through the curtain. So they’ve gone public, then, I guess, huh? I’m just nuts over these two. They seem like they’re definitely the real thing, and if Michelle is going as far as to appear in public with him—in front of both his and her peers—then there’s something serious, brewing, you mark my words. I’d say give it another six to eight months, and we’ll be hearing about an engagement. Forget that there’s already floating around because Jason‘s talking like, oh, I don’t know, this about his new movie, The Five-Year Engagement: “My plan is to get her to marry me as quickly as possible before she finds out who I really am,” he said with a laugh. “I’ll do it romantic, but I’ll do it like over a three-day weekend. We’ll meet on Friday, have our first date on Saturday, engaged on Sunday and married on Monday.” Yes, this is what Jason had to say about his movie, and I’m completely sure that it had nothing at all to do with his current girlfriend. Six to eight months, guys. Jot it down. April 19, 2012 at 5:30 pm by Sarah Filed Under: Jason Segel, Michelle Williams 6Stars Without Makeup: Mila Kunis You know who’s supposedly not dating Ashton Kutcher? This girl. Mila Kunis. Yeah, after their “day-long” date the other day, sources are saying that Ashton’s forcing Mila to make statements with words like “friends for years,” and “casual friends,” and “dinner with friends.” Because why? I don’t know. I really don’t. Ashton can look no better (and no worse) in the public eye than he already does, so why bother with the damage control, you know? Anyway, this is Mila Kunis sans fards. No makeup. And she looks pretty good, right? Makes you kind of wonder why some celebrities even really bother with the fanfare of getting all glitzed up and glammed out to go to the damned grocery store, when you have gals like this who are completely content and confident in who they are and how they look that they appear like this out in public. I give girlfriend credit, because she’s easily been one of the most sought-after chicks in Hollywood over the past year or so, and it apparently hasn’t gone to her head. I guess the only advice I have for Mila is just don’t mess around with Ashton, girl. I’m sure it happened on the set of That 70′s Show, but it was like you were an entirely different girl back then. You’ve grown, and so has your career. Don’t go intermingling with douchebags that’ll only bring you down, OK? April 19, 2012 at 4:30 pm by Sarah Filed Under: Mila Kunis, Stars Without Makeup 1Jennifer Love Hewitt Has “King Kong” Boobs Did you guys catch Jennifer Love Hewitt on Jimmy Kimmel earlier this week, or were you too busy watching shows with people who aren’t relevant for a crappy Lifetime series? I know I was busy—there were new episodes of the Octonauts that aired earlier this week, so I’m not gonna lie: I was rapt. Jennifer was on Jimmy’s show in order to promote her new show, The Client List, which is garnering some OK reviews. I haven’t watched it, so I can’t tell you first-hand, but if there are those of you reading right now who actually have sat down at taken a gander at what girlfriend’s doing on television these days, please share. I’d like some objective opinions, you know? During the interview, Jimmy tells Jennifer that there are several huge-assed billboards that were taken out by Lifetime, featuring her ample cleavage, and he proceeds to bring in a massive piece into the studio. From there, all hell breaks loose. Watch the video, OK? The bad things about Jenny Love: —Her hair extensions are mad crappy. Mad crappy. And because she flat-ironed the hell out of her hair, they’re really, really obvious. —How delighted she is at the prospect of sending a piece of her billboard tits to her grandma in Texas, because at first, she’s all, “Oh! No! My grandma would be scandalized!” but when it looks like she might get another inch of discussion out of it, she’s all for it. —The constant crinkly-eyed smiley-ness that seems just plastered on. Does she have Vaseline on her teeth? The good things about Jenny Love: —Her left boob. —Her right boob. —She’s actually not all that pathetic-sounding during interviews as she is in random sound bites. Can the boobs actually cancel out the desperate bids for attention? Well, yes. They can pretty much redeem her from all socially-awkward faux pas. Can they overcome those ratty hair extension, as well? No. They absolutely cannot, and I’m not even going to pretend that it’s possible. April 19, 2012 at 3:30 pm by Sarah Filed Under: Jennifer Love Hewitt 2Dead People Giving Concerts Are All The Rage This Season This whole mess started when my beloved Tupac was resurrected in the form of a hologram to perform at Coachella this past weekend. It was weird and awkward, and I don’t know why it happened. As much as I love Tupac, which is a whole lot, I wouldn’t want to see him perform. Because he’s dead. And if I were Snoop Dogg, I don’t think I’d want to perform with my friend that, you know, has been dead for 16 years. Is that a hard thing to understand? Apparently it is, because Tupac’s probably going on tour: “This is just the beginning,” Digital Domain’s chief creative officer, Ed Ulbrich,told the Journal Monday. “[Dr.] Dre has a massive vision for this.” Spokespersons for Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg have declined to comment, but Dr. Dre’s production team first approached Digital Domain a year ago about creating a virtual Tupac. The team started focusing on the Coachella performance around four months ago, according to the newspaper. The months of creative and technical planning aside, a stadium tour is feasible, or possibly smaller arenas, to bring in the talents of Eminem, 50 Cent and Wiz Khalifa. But wait, the madness doesn’t stop with Tupac! No, it looks like Michael Jackson could be gearing up to go on the road one more time as well: The late music legend’s brothers Jermaine, Jackie, Tito and Marlon just announced that they are joining together for Unity Tour 2012, a 27-city jaunt that kicks off June 18 in Louisville. It marks the first time they’ve toured together since the Victory Tour in 1984. “I just wish Michael was here with us, but I’m sure his spirit will be in the house,” Jackie exclusively told me this morning. And he may be with them afterall. Jackie said a Michael hologram could very well be part of a bigger tour they’re planning for next year after they release a new album with their recently reunited record label Motown. “It could have Michael—absolutely,” he said. “Wouldn’t that be wonderful? As a matter of fact, we had that idea two years ago for Michael’s Cirque du Soleil show.” The brothers are still working on the set list for Unity. “There are so many songs,” Jackie said. “That’s the hardest part because we want to include all the favorites and not leave anything out. We’re going to sing some of Michael’s stuff, too. We’re going to honor him on the stage. He’d want us to do our thing to the best of our ability.” Wow, sounds super! But hey, you know who I’d really like to see in concert? Someone who’s been dead for much, much longer. Can you help me out, Dr. Dre? Jimmy Hendrix and Marvin Gaye? Sounds like a blast, Dre, but holler when you can get me someone like Billie Holiday or John Phillip Sousa, someone who’s been dead for a real substantial amount of time. If we’re going to do this thing, let’s do it right. I’ll see you guys at Bonnaroo, I hear Mozart is going to do some sweet mash-ups with Skrillex, and Jesus is going to be the MC. April 19, 2012 at 2:30 pm by Emily Filed Under: Tupac, Tupac Shakur 6Josh Hutcherson Is Amazing You guys. You guys. Josh Hutcherson is the best thing that’s ever happened to Hollywood. Josh Hutcherson is the best thing that ever happened to the world. I know it’s a little sudden, but I’m starting to think that Josh Hutcherson might be to me what Adrien Brody is to Sarah. He’s headed in that direction, at least. It’s a big deal. But why is he so amazing, you might be wondering. Don’t worry, I’ll fill you in, because I found not one, but two stories about Josh today that absolutely warmed my heart. Here’s the first one: did you know that Josh Hutcherson is a huge supporter of gay rights? This weekend at the GLAAD Media Awards he’ll receive the Vanguard Award, which is presented to a person in the entertainment industry who has done a significant amount of work in promoting equal rights. He’s also the youngest recipient of the award at 19 years old. He does a lot of work with a group called Straight But Not Narrow, whose mission is to help influence younger people, primarily, that any sexuality at all is ok. Here‘s a little from Josh about that: “My mom has always been a big advocate, especially in the gay, lesbian, transsexual and bisexual community so for me it’s always been a part of my soul,” Hutcherson says. He recalls a letter that Straight But Not Narrow received from a 14-year-old high school freshman in Florida. “He was in this very right wing and religious sort of area and he sent a letter saying how SBNN changed his life and how he was able to feel more comfortable coming out to his friends,” Hutcherson says. “I was almost bawling reading it. That makes all our work worth it.” He also reveals that two of his uncles died from AIDS right around the time he was born, and that they have a little bit to do with his passion: “This is what my family is most proud of and the same for me,” Hutcherson says. “Acting is one thing, but actually trying to change the world and the way people think to make people’s lives better? That’s the stuff I’m most proud of.” When I ask if he thinks his uncles are looking down at him, Hutcherson says, “I’m not a religious person in that sense. But at the same time I do believe in some sort of something, just not sure exactly. But yeah, I’d like to think that they see what I’m doing and that they’re proud of me.” And here’s the second story: he adopted a puppy! The dog is a pit bull, and probably came from a rough environment, because Josh couldn’t adopt him until he had surgery for a broken femur, and he’s also missing a few toes. But Josh says that “He’s incredible. He’s doing great,” and that “His eyes are like that grey, silvery-blue pit eyes. They’re so beautiful.” And here’s the picture: See what I mean? Amazing, right? April 19, 2012 at 12:30 pm by Emily Filed Under: Josh Hutcherson 4Marina and The Diamonds Did A Justin Bieber Cover You remember Justin Bieber‘s latest hit, “Boyfriend,” don’t you? It was a song that featured a little bit of rapping, a little bit of romance, and a whole lot of swag. You couldn’t possibly forget it. But you might when you hear one of my very favorites, Marina and the Diamonds, covering the song. It’s really a little bit more of a reworking of the song than it is a cover – where Justin’s song is all about “if I was your boyfriend,” Marina’s version is all about “when you were my boyfriend” – but it’s absolutely lovely. She made this shitty, shitty song by Justin Bieber into something magical, and that’s why I love her so much. To be fair though, she did cut out a couple of parts, one of them being my favorite line from the original song (“swag, swag, swag on you, chillin’ by the fire while we eatin’ fondue”), so maybe that had something to do with it? No, Marina’s just awesome like that. A couple of years ago, she took a song by 3OH!3, which I love for different reasons, and redid it in a similar way. Here’s the original song: And Marina’s outstanding cover: April 19, 2012 at 11:30 am by Emily Filed Under: Marina and the Diamonds Prev.
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It Is More Blessed To Give Than To Receive Sebastian Vazhakala, MC Co-founder with Blessed Mother Teresa of the Missionaries of Charity Contemplative A tribute to Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta on the anniversary of her death, 5 September We all have witnessed something extraordinary happening around the world since the night of 5 September 1997, when Mother Teresa's soul abandoned her frail body to quench once and for all the infinite thirst of her Lord and Saviour that she tried to quench with every fibre of her being, on the streets of Calcutta and of the world. Although it is hard for us to accept the reality of her not being with us, the fact is that she returned to the Source of Love and Grace from where she will continue to shower many graces. On the other hand it is absolutely necessary for us to accept the "Kairos of God", the divine hour of God's visitation for which she was always ready. So our beloved Mother whom we all loved and who loved us all so dearly disappeared from the visible horizons of our lives to be totally united to Jesus, like a piece of iron stuck to the magnet and never to be separated. Already from a distance she might have heard the words of the Master: "Come, blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world". We can imagine that there in heaven waiting to welcome her was a long line of the Missionaries of Charity (M.C.) Community, with Sr Agnes and Sr Sylvia in front, as well as an endless line of the poorest of the poor whom Mother Teresa fed, clothed, sheltered, visited and buried; those in thousands who have lived like animals on the street but have died like angels with dignity, loved and cared by her and the members of the M.C. Family in the homes of the dying destitute, and the many lepers and AIDS patients. I wonder if there has ever been such a reception in heaven or a funeral of the same sort for any person of any time or place. For her, everything was so unique and unprecedented. Never before has any religious had a State and Catholic funeral at the same time. Moving on from all these unique privileges that our Beloved Mother received both in life and at her death � not only from her beloved daughters and sons of the Family of the Missionaries of Charity but also from the whole world � we now proceed to some of the principal teachings of our "Little Mahatma", Mother Teresa. If Calcutta can be taken as a cesspool, especially in the 1940s, Mother Teresa can be seen as the Lotus. Immediately after the World War, India became independent from the British but not from problems. There was a continual exodus of millions � especially from East Pakistan � the majority of whom found their home on the sidewalks and in the old, unused buildings of Calcutta. Many
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Touched by an Angel: Healing with Marisa Moris See alsoGeneral Beauty Marisa Moris: Radiant and Illuminating Marisa MorisMarisa Moris: Radiant and Illuminating Marisa Moris Marjorie Hope RothsteinLA Spa Treatments Examiner Subscribe Now you can discover your Intuition ~ by Healing the Mind & Body with Spirit As a seeker of wisdom and truth, my passion is connecting with leading edge healing and emerging trends of energetic based modalities. After decades of writing about gifted healers in my columns, there seems to be a trend in the access of new energies on the planet, including the more ancient healing systems such as Reiki. I was first introduced to Reiki in the early ‘80‘s by a woman I met in my sculpture studio. I just moved to Los Angeles (from a more conservative New York lifestyle) and discovered that many people were into all kinds of ‘new age’ stuff that seemed a bit out of this world to me. When you decide to live in Los Angeles, the When in Rome concept becomes a motto. Now, after thirty years of being indoctrinated into the world beyond conventional wisdom, I have found that most of these healing modalities make sense, especially since they are based upon ancient eastern philosophies and wisdom. However, stress has become the buzzword for the root of most disease, therefore it makes perfect sense as a complementary, alternative and integrative approach. Many people have had miraculous results while others still raise an eyebrow if you mention this as a credible approach. “Reiki is a Japanese technique for stress reduction and relaxation that also promotes healing. It is administered by "laying on hands" and is based on the idea that an unseen "life force energy" flows through us and is what causes us to be alive. If one's "life force energy" is low, then we are more likely to get sick or feel stress, and if it is high, we are more capable of being happy and healthy.” With the use of the internet and skype, it is not unusual for a Reiki practitioner to pass on their healing energies over the airwaves and still be effective. In search of the best of the best in healing, I have recently been led to a younger lady (mid-thirties) who had a near fatal car accident in 2008. During the accident she had an out of body experience and saw herself drowning in her new Mercedes after hitting a fire hydrant. As she saw herself drowning from above the accident, she realized ‘this girl’s in trouble’ and didn’t want to come back. Her life was changed forever. Moris was a successful mortgage broker with a high octane career, financial success and the toys to go with it. After her out of body experience she was told to come back and share her healing gifts and wisdom that she was given. She did not want to come back but was told her work was too important to leave at the time. Marisa Moris shared her incredible story with me, “I had an out of body experience and watched the accident from above. I met my higher self and my guide while I was out of body. This incident caused me to have a spiritual awakening that led me on a journey where I was guided to my own personal healing path today.” Once I discovered her energetic and lovely presence online, I was lucky to be able to interview her immediately. (She is booked until July 2014 in person but available on Skype.) Moris has a unique, pure essence without the hype of many others in the field of mystical healing. I was amazed at her vivacious, bubbly effervescence which comes across the skype screen with a magnetic force, and I immediately felt more uplifted and encouraged in our first few minutes. She has generously demonstrated some of her healing techniques with me. I have been moving through some very challenging times and Moris was able to pick up on the forces around me that have been blocking me from moving forward. It seems that if you are experiencing a life altering challenge and get caught in the undertow of negativity, you end up in a downward spiral that sometimes feels as if you will never get out. It’s like a living hell where you are not able to find an anchor to ground yourself, and everything seems to fall apart all around you. I was temporarily living in a beautiful rock star home, which was on the market and was housesitting for the owner. My energy brought more light into the home and with the smell of home made bread in the oven, fresh flowers and clear feminine energies. the place became more homey for a prospective buyer. However, when the house did not move quickly enough, he decided to use the home as a location for movies. Suffice it to say that the kind of movies that were being shot at the home did not have the best energy and Marisa was the first to pick up on it. She immediately did a reading for me and said it was absolutely dark and disgusting. While she moved most of the darkness away from me, I felt an immediate release from the pressures and unpleasantness. Yet I had to face the fact that I would be moving out from what once was a very comforting environment, with a spectacular view. I was amazed that she picked up on what was going on in this home. In the first half hour she had me lay down, rest and open up to her powerful intuition. We were doing this remotely (from another town) and I could feel her presence and the release of the darkness. For the past 6 years Moris has been mastering Reiki, yet she also has unique modalities that she discovered through her guides. After a couple of intense clearing sessions with her, there was a measurable difference in my energy. With exceptional accuracy she is able to clear things that have been blocking me from moving forward. Her gifts surpass most of the people I have experienced. She has just co-written a book with her father, who is a Christian and at first did not accept her newly founded healing. He was concerned in the beginning that whatever guides she was in touch with may not have been positive energies. When he finally allowed her to work with him, he was astounded by her newly found healing abilities. As a Christian he was against anything that was not allowed by the church. Now he is her biggest supporter. Here is her website http://www.discoverintuition.com And a link to her newly published book, Answers: Heaven Speaks http://spiritualbutnotreligious.weebly.com Here's a quick overview of the book: “Through 100's of hours of channeled recordings a Christian father, Joseph Moris, and his Spiritually Intuitive daughter, Marisa Moris, bring you the answers that they have been given by the "other side" to questions that we have all had at one time or another in our life.” The foundation of this book, Answers; Bridging the gap between Christianity and Spirituality, comes from the hundreds of hours of channelled sessions with the "other side." Marisa resides in Carlsbad and Joseph in Encinitas, both in North Coastal San Diego County, California. Many of us are going through challenging times and are seeking answers beyond conventional wisdom. We may be in the midst of discovering special gifts and talents that were lying dormant and are now surfacing in this unique time a place in our awakening. If you are seeking answers to questions you have not been able to understand, or healing places inside you that have been stuck or in pain, Maris Moris has the kind of talent and gifts that may be able to access these chords of negativity. Discover the power of your intuition with the help of a master, so that you can release negative patterns and blocks. Moris will direct you to access your own spirit to heal your mind and body. As a reiki master, she leads classes to help strengthen self-healing as well as assist others on their path to wholeness. http://www.discoverintuition.com https://www.facebook.com/pages/Intuition/213278748693471 Next Article Top Secret to Grow Back Longer and Thicker Eyelashes Naturally Truth behind those white spots on your nails, and what do they really mean? 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Running on Fumes Clinton, Obama both mislead with ads promising gas price relief. Posted on May 5, 2008 Summary Late-inning ads by both Clinton and Obama in the run-up to the Democratic primaries in Indiana and North Carolina focus on Clinton’s gas tax holiday proposal. But the ads are also misleading. Clinton’s ad claims motorists would save $8 billion during her summer "holiday," not mentioning that no economists agree with her. She herself didn’t name one when asked in a weekend tv interview. Obama’s ad accuses Clinton of "pandering" to voters, then ticks through the elements of his plan — leaving aside the fact that Clinton’s plan includes each of those elements as well. Obama’s $1,000 tax credit for families is made to sound as though it was designed to offset rising gas prices. It actually dates back to last fall, when he proposed it as part of his tax plan. Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama go down to the wire fighting about her "gas tax holiday" plan as Indiana and North Carolina voters prepare to cast their ballots. A little correcting and contextualizing is called for. [TET ] Hillary Clinton 2008 Ad: "Gas Tax" Female: Gas prices are so high. Male: It’s hard to decide between a gallon of milk and a gallon of gas. Narrator: Hillary’s fighting to use the windfall profits of big oil to pay to suspend the gas tax this summer and save families $8 billion. Narrator: Barack Obama says that’s just pennies. He’d make you keep paying that tax instead of big oil. On screen graphic: Obama would make you keep paying that tax. WSJ.com, 4/21/08 Narrator: Hillary will make the oil companies invest in clean energy and bring gas prices down for good. Relief for today. Bold solutions for tomorrow. Clinton: I’m Hillary Clinton and I approved this message. [/TET] Don’t Pack Your Bags Just Yet In the Clinton ad "Gas Tax," two hard-pressed motorists bemoan the high cost of gasoline. Enter Clinton the fighter: She wants to use the "windfall profits of big oil" to give families a break from the gas tax, saving them $8 billion over the summer, the narrator says. He tells us Obama calls that "just pennies" and would "make you" keep paying the tax. Then we hear a bit of the long-term: Clinton would "make" the oil companies invest in clean energy, which will bring oil prices down for good. It’s true that the federal gas tax brings in as much as $8.5 billion in revenue over three months. If prices really went down by 18.4 cents per gallon (24.4 cents for diesel), the average driver could save $28 — or $56 for families with two vehicles (Clinton’s team says it would be $70 per motorist, but we’ve been unable to find any support for that). Families that do a lot of driving could save more, of course, and reduced fuel costs might translate into slightly lower prices for food and other goods that have to be trucked or flown to their destination markets. Meanwhile Clinton would make up the funds that went missing in the federal treasury by, she says, taxing the oil companies’ windfall profits. But as we pointed out last week, economists say that Clinton’s plan isn’t likely to save any money at all. Lower gasoline prices would simply trigger demand, but since refineries are already working at full capacity in the summer months, the supply of gasoline (at least in the short term) is pretty much already fixed. Any price reductions that might appear initially would quickly be wiped out by the increased demand that would lead consumers to bid up the price of gas until prices returned to their pre-tax holiday levels. That means that the 18.4 cents per gallon that drivers currently pay in federal taxes would instead be transferred to the pockets of oil companies. Clinton then proposes to tax that profit to pay for the gas tax holiday. We and other journalists have tried, unsuccessfully, to find any economists who think Clinton’s holiday will actually give drivers relief. The Clinton campaign itself hasn’t produced one, either. When pressed to name a single economist who supported her plan during her May 4 appearance on This Week, Clinton responded: Clinton (May 4): Well, I’ll tell you what, I’m not going to put my lot in with economists, because I know if we get it right, if we actually did it right, if we had a president who used all the tools of the presidency, we would design it in such a way that it would be implemented effectively. The president’s toolkit is admittedly impressive, but we’re skeptical that it includes a gizmo for suspending the laws of supply and demand. As for making the oil companies invest in clean energy, we’d note that the companies are already doing just that. They may not be doing enough of it to satisfy Clinton, and some have seen the handwriting on the wall more clearly than others, but at a hearing last month on Capitol Hill the Big Five oil companies — ConocoPhillips, Exxon, BP, Chevron and Shell — all described their efforts on alternative energy, some of which are significant. Haven’t We Seen That Somewhere Before? Barack Obama pushed back with an ad of his own, accusing Clinton of "political pandering" with "poll-driven gimmickry." The ad goes on to explain that Obama has a plan to tackle price gouging, tax windfall profits, invest in alternative energy and give a $1000 tax cut to "working families." But Obama’s ad manages to squeeze in some misrepresentation and pandering of its own all while falsely implying that his plan is significantly different from Clinton’s. [TET ] Barack Obama 2008 Ad: "Pennies" Narrator: Another negative ad from Hillary Clinton. But here’s what she’s not saying. Narrator: USA Today calls her three-month gas tax holiday “political pandering.” On screen graphic: “political pandering” USA Today, 4/29/2008 Narrator: It’s an election-year gimmick that would save Carolinians just pennies a day. On screen graphic: “poll-driven gimmickry,” Wall Street Journal, 4/16/2008 Narrator: Barack Obama’s plan? Take on price gouging by oil companies. Tax their windfall profits. Invest in alternative energy. Give working families a permanent $1000 tax cut to help with rising costs. That’s change we can believe in. Obama: I’m Barack Obama and I approved this message. [/TET] The biggest distortion in Obama’s ad is his pledge to “give working families a permanent $1,000 tax cut to help with rising costs” of gas. It’s true that Obama is offering to offset payroll taxes on the first $8,100 of each family’s income. That credit could be worth as much as $1,000 per family. But Obama is wrong to imply that this cut is designed specifically to “help with rising costs” of energy. The proposal is part of a tax plan that Obama unveiled in September 2007. In fact, because Obama is proposing a tax credit, Americans wouldn’t see any money until they file their 2008 taxes – something that won’t happen until January 2009. Clinton is not proposing a similar broad-based tax cut, but she has called for a whole range of other middle-class tax cuts. Obama also promises to "take on price gouging." The claim that oil companies are manipulating gas prices is popular on the campaign trail: Clinton has similarly called on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to investigate "market manipulation in wholesale oil prices" so that oil companies are not "ripping off consumers." But what Obama doesn’t mention is that the FTC has conducted price-gouging investigations before, most notably in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The FTC found "no instances of illegal market manipulation" and concluded that the price increases "were approximately what would be predicted by the standard supply-and-demand model of a market performing competitively." That’s not to say that market manipulation (or price-gouging) is impossible. And the FTC, as well as state attorneys general, may well be conducting further probes even as we write this (they’re generally supposed to be confidential until they’re completed). But most economists say that gasoline prices have more to do with market forces than with oil company shenanigans. Obama’s plans to tax on oil company windfall profits and invest $150 billion in alternative energy research are as advertised. What he doesn’t mention is that Clinton’s energy plan calls for spending an identical $150 billion in alternative energy research. One-third of the money would go into a $50 billion "Strategic Energy Fund," which would be funded by a "windfall profits fee" on oil companies. We’ve said before that there is very little in the way of substantive policy daylight between Clinton and Obama. The Washington Post found that the two senators voted the same way 93.8 percent of the time, and interest groups across the political spectrum awarded them similar scores. In a nutshell, Clinton and Obama are offering nearly identical energy plans. Both imply that price gouging is partially responsible for rising prices without providing adequate proof that price gouging is actually occurring and both want oil companies to help fund research into alternative energy. And neither candidate has a short-term plan that will, in fact, help families cope with rising gas costs. The gas tax holiday is one of the few areas of real disagreement between the two candidates. Economists score that one for Obama. -by Joe Miller, with Viveca Novak, Emi Kolawole, Jess Henig and D’Angelo Gore Barack Obama. "Barack Obama’s Plan to Make America an Energy Leader." May 2007. Barack Obama: Issues. 5 May 2008. Barack Obama. "Family." 2007 2008. Barack Obama: Issues. 8 May 2008. Barack Obama. "Obama on Gas Tax Holiday: A Gimmick Instead of a Real Solution." 29 April 2008. Barack Obama: News and Speeches. 5 May 2008. Federal Trade Commission. "FTC Releases Report on its “Investigation of Gasoline Price Manipulation and Post-Katrina Gasoline Price Increases." 22 May 2006. Federal Trade Commission. 5 May 2008. Hillary Clinton. "Clinton Offers Relief for Record Gas Prices." 14 March 2008. Hillary Clinton: Press Releases. 5 May 2008. Hillary Clinton. "Clinton Outlines Tax Cuts For Pennsylvania Families On Fourth Day of Economic Tour." 31 March 2008. Hillary Clinton: Press Releases. 5 May 2008. Hillary Clinton. "Powering America’s Future: Hillary Clinton’s Plan to Address the Energy and Climate Crisis." February 2007. Hillary Clinton: Issues. 5 May 2008. House Select Energy Independence and Global Warming Committee Hearings. "Drilling for Answers on Oil and Gas Prices, Profits, and Alternatives." 1 Apr. 2008. Categories: ArticlesPeople: Hillary Clinton and President ObamaIssues: 2008 elections and gasoline tax Previous story Gas Price Fixes That Won’t Next story Gunning for Obama
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Fostering a Fortune? December 10, 2010 Q: Does Illinois pay a grandmother $1,500 per month per child to be the foster parent to her eight grandchildren? A: No. State officials have no record of such a case, and state law would not allow it. This second-hand story spread by a Danville urologist isn’t true. FULL QUESTION Below is an e-mail that has circulated in the past few weeks. I would like to determine what, if any, of these assertions are true. Bread Winner… Making Babies! I was speaking to an emergency room physician this morning. He told me that a woman in her 20s came to the ER with her 8th pregnancy. She stated, "my momma told me that I am the breadwinner for the family." ⬐ Click to expand/collapse the full text ⬏ He asked her to explain. She said that she can make babies and babies get money for the family. The scam goes like this: The grandma calls the Department of Child and Family Services and states that the unemployed daughter is not capable of caring for these children. DCFS agrees and states that the child or children will need to go to foster care. The grandma then volunteers to be the foster parent, and thus receives a check for $1500 per child per month in Illinois. Total yearly income: $144,000 tax-free, not to mention free healthcare (Medicaid) plus a monthly card entitling her to free groceries, etc, and a voucher for 250 free cell phone minutes per month. This does not even include WIC and other welfare programs. Indeed, grandma was correct in that her fertile daughter is the "breadwinner" for the family. This is how the ruling class spends our tax dollars. Sebastian J. Ciancio, M.D. Urologist, Danville Polyclinic, LTD And these will be eight more votes for a liberal government! FULL ANSWER The e-mail was written by Dr. Sebastian J. Ciancio, a urologist who practices in Danville, Ill. He told us he wrote it sometime in July to conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh based on a second-hand report from an emergency-room physician he declined to name. "I really only know what the patient told the ER physician as reported to me through that physician," Ciancio said in an e-mail to us. We asked to speak with the doctor, and Ciancio told us he passed along our request. But we have not heard from this physician. In his e-mail to Limbaugh, Ciancio relays the story of a grandmother in Illinois who he claims is the foster parent to her eight grandchildren and receives $1,500 per child per month for a total of $144,000 a year. The story is simply false. Illinois Department of Children and Family Services spokesman Jimmie Whitelow told us that no such case exists in the state’s system. Whitelow, Dec. 7: Under the parameters under which he made the assertion, the Department has no such case. We don’t have a family like that. We don’t have anything that looks remotely like what he described. Foster Care Payments First, the e-mail makes the false claim that a foster parent “receives $1,500 per child per month in Illinois.” That’s not true. No individual in Illinois can receive that much money per child. In the case of a grandmother serving as a foster parent to her grandchildren, Whitelow said that situation would be classified as "relative home care." The grandmother could be unlicensed or licensed, but both payment rates are significantly below $1,500. The typical monthly payment rates for licensed relative home care range from $384 to $471, depending on the age of the child. The monthly payment rates for unlicensed relative home care range from $286 to $310, depending on the county. This money includes board, clothing and allowance. Foster parents may also receive “one-time only payments to assist the foster parent with fees that may be imposed,” Whitelow explained. Such fees could be for school supplies ($50 per year) or camp fees ($260.35 maximum). This DCFS chart shows the monthly payment rates for licensed relative home care: This is the DCFS chart detailing the monthly payment rates for unlicensed relative home care: There are exceptions to these payment procedures if a child requires specialized care. In such cases, Whitelow said, additional money is awarded on a case-by-case basis. The process involves a physician’s recommendation as well as a DCFS committee’s approval and a judge’s consent. But the extra money doesn’t simply pad the foster parent’s pockets. Whitelow wrote in an e-mail to us that "the medical professionals are paid through separate billing. All monies received for specialized needs are for any additional professional service needs." The bottom line: The most a foster family could possibly receive directly from the state for eight foster children is $45,216 for the year — not $144,000. And that’s true only if the state allows so many children to be living in one house. Foster Child Limit DCFS has a procedure in place that generally limits the number of foster children to no more than six children in a single house — two fewer than the eight claimed in the e-mail. The policy allows for exceptions. The rules say, for example, that a foster home can house more children if the children are from the same parent — which would have been the case in this situation described by Ciancio. SECTION 402.15 Number and Ages of Children Served: Based on the ages of children in the home, the ability of applicants to provide care, and the space available, determine that the license capacity for a foster home is six children, unless all of the foster children are of common parentage (see definition) or a waiver of the maximum has been granted. However, Whitelow said he checked department records and found there is no family in the state’s foster care system such as the one described by Ciancio. There is also a more restrictive limit on the number of children in a foster home with special-needs children. A home with one child who requires specialized care can only have up to five total foster children. A home with two special-needs children can only have up to four total foster children. There are exceptions to this rule as well, and a family could conceivably have up to four children who require specialized care (for a total of four children), if they receive the "approval of the manager of clinical services and the licensing supervisor." Follow-Up E-mail When we contacted Ciancio, he forwarded us two e-mails he had sent to Limbaugh: the original e-mail that is circulating on the Internet, and then a follow-up e-mail in which he clarifies the record — to a point. This is the full text of the follow-up e-mail: Ciancio: Last week I sent a letter about an ER patient claiming that her children’s foster parent (who is her mother) gets $1500 per child per month, or $144,000 per year for 8 children (see below).I called Illinois Department of Health and Human Services and Illinois Department of Children and Family Services to get some numbers. I was told that a typical foster parent would be paid approximately $360-445 per month per child depending on age. However, the payment may be as high as $2,000 per month per child under special circumstances. I asked what those circumstances might be. The social worker explained that there could be 2 possible circumstances: special needs or if the social worker lobbied hard for that particular child, he/she could obtain a higher amount of funding than is normally permitted. The “special circumstances” Ciancio mentions are not possible. We’ve established that relatives who are foster parents receive between $286 and $471 per month per child, and that any additional money for special-needs children is paid directly to the health care providers. Whitelow told us that a social worker cannot lobby for more money for a particular child, as the e-mail maintains. Whitelow explained that extra payments for children with special needs are provided on an individual basis. He could not give us a range of expected extra payments. Regardless, the additional money does not go to the foster parents. Other Social Programs The e-mail is largely correct when it refers to other social programs available to poor families in Illinois — including free health care, food stamps and free cell phone service. All of these are actual available benefits, but only the health care services relate to an individual’s status as a foster parent. We don’t know if the family described in this e-mail would qualify for all of the other benefits. In addition, the e-mail’s inclusion of the free cell phone service could mislead readers into thinking that is a taxpayer-funded government program, when it is not. Illinois offers several health care programs, including one for children in foster care that provides free medical care. Illinois also offers the Illinois Link Card, an electronic card available to those who receive cash benefits or Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, commonly known as food stamps. The card is used like a debit card. A family of nine would most likely qualify for SNAP if it has a gross monthly income below $4,416. The family would receive $1,352 in benefits per month. There is also a program in place for individuals to receive a free cell phone and a limited amount of free cell phone minutes. We confirmed the program can, under certain circumstances, provide "a voucher for 250 free cell phone minutes per month," as the e-mail claims. But the program is funded by telecommunication companies, not tax dollars, as we have written before. (SafeLink Wireless is the program offered in Illinois.) Eligibility is based on whether an individual has already qualified for other government benefits, such as Medicaid. Even Chain E-mails Get Distorted The very nature of chain e-mails allows for further distortions as messages are forwarded along. We compared a copy of the original e-mail that we received from Ciancio with the one we received from a reader, and found two alterations. The chain e-mail from our reader featured a photo of a large black family with many young children. Neither e-mail mentions the race of the supposed family. Ciancio told us in an e-mail that “there was never a picture attached” to his missive to Limbaugh. The chain e-mail also included a title ("Bread Winner… Making Babies!") and a closing sentence ("And these will be eight more votes for a liberal government!") that Ciancio said he did not write. – by Michael Morse, with Eugene Kiely Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. "Procedures 359 : Authorized Child Care Payments." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. "Procedures 402, Section 402.15: Number and Ages of Children Served." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. "Rules 402 : Licensing Standards for Foster Family Homes." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. State of Illinois Family Care. "Health Coverage for Parents." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. Illinois Department of Human Services. "Illinois Link Card." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. Illinois Department of Human Services. "Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. Bank, Justin. "The Obama Phone?" FactCheck.org. 29 Oct 2009. SafeLink Wireless. "Lifeline/SafeLink Fact Sheet." Undated, accessed 8 Dec 2010. Ciancio, Sebastian J. E-mails sent to FactCheck.org. 3, 7 and 8 Dec 2010. Ciancio, Sebastian J. Interview with FactCheck.org. 3 Dec 2010. Whitelow, Jimmie, spokesman, Department of Children and Family Services. Interview with FactCheck.org. 3 and 7 Dec 2010. Whitelow, Jimmie, spokesman, Department of Children and Family Services. E-mail sent to FactCheck.org. 8 Dec 2010. Categories: Ask FactCheckTags: chain emailsIssues: foster care, medicaid, and welfare Previous story Health Care Law Waivers Next story TSA Not to Blame for This Obama & Naval Academy swords Retribution Fabrication Homeland Security Adviser? Oklahoma’s Conservativism
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« Harvey P. Larson Robert L. Petersen» Paul M. Hallstrom Save | FAIRMONT - Paul M. Hallstrom, age 84, of Fairmont, passed away the morning of Dec. 1, 2012, at Valley Vue Nursing Home in Armstrong, Iowa. Visitation will be 4-7 p.m. this evening, Dec. 4, at Red Rock Center for the Arts. Funeral services will be held 11 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, at Lakeview Funeral Home in Fairmont, and burial will be at the East Chain Evangelical Free Church Cemetery. Paul Milton Hallstrom was born April 5, 1928, in Silver Lake Township to William and Ruth (nee Larson - Ackerson) Hallstrom. He attended school at Spires Country School and graduated from Fairmont High School in 1948. Paul served in the U.S. Army during the Korean conflict from 1951-1953. In 1956, he married Sandra Bennett at Bethel Evangelical Free Church. They lived in East Chain, Minn., for several years before moving back to his family farm. Paul and Sandy celebrated 56 years together in November 2012. From a young age, it was Paul's desire to farm. He loved getting up early in the morning and going to the barn to do chores to surprise his father. Later, he was honored to farm the land on which he was born. He took great pride in his work and being a steward of the land. In any endeavor he undertook, he always did his very best. Paul was a man of few words but his actions spoke for him. He believed it was a privilege to serve; whether it was his Lord, his country, or his neighbors. Paul taught Sunday school, served as a church trustee, enjoyed singing in the choir, was past chairman of the East Chain Veterans Association, served as chair for the East Chain Evangelical Free Church's parsonage building committee and was a volunteer at Red Rock Center for the Arts. Paul is survived by his loving wife, Sandra. He was a devoted father and grandfather who was proud of his four daughters; Deborah Johns (Ron) of Anaconda, Mont.; Jacquelyn Plunkett of Spring Park, Minn.; Ingrid Marshall (Jonathan), of Excelsior, Minn.; and Jennifer Finlay (Lee), of Minnetonka, Minn.; and delighted in his eight grandchildren; Ryan and Andrew Kopp, Alexander Plunkett, Paul Johns (Jamie), Carly Johns, Benjamin and Aidan Marshall, and Luca Finlay; and one great grandson, Roman Johns. Other survivors include his sister and brother-in-law, Elna and Arnold Sexe, of Worthington, Minn., and their sons Dean Leonard (Beverly), and David Hallstrom (Miki); brothers in law, Robert "Bud" Bennett, Wayne Bennett (Carol), David Bennett, and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins. Paul was preceded in death by his parents, William and Ruth Hallstrom. Memorials are preferred to the Red Rock Center for the Arts in Fairmont. www.lakeviewfuneralhome.net Save | Subscribe to Fairmont Sentinel Fairmont Weather Forecast, MN
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The blog for Mets fans who like to read ABOUT US Faith and Fear in Flushing made its debut on Feb. 16, 2005, the brainchild of two longtime friends and lifelong Met fans. Greg Prince discovered the Mets when he was 6, during the magical summer of 1969. He is a Long Island-based writer, editor and communications consultant. Contact him here. Jason Fry is a Brooklyn writer whose first memories include his mom leaping up and down cheering for Rusty Staub. Check out his other writing here. Got something to say? Leave a comment, or email us at faithandfear@gmail.com. Need our RSS feed? It's here. Visit our Facebook page, or drop by the personal pages for Greg and Jason. Or follow us on Twitter: Here's Greg, and here's Jason. And So We Came to the End by Jason Fry on 21 July 2011 11:28 pm Nevertheless, we will tire of Carlos Beltran. Let me be the first to welcome him to Flushing and show him the door. Not for at least five years, I hope, but it’ll happen. He or his swing will slow down. The strange breezes and thunderous flight path to LaGuardia will get to him. He won’t [...] 15 comments - (Comments closed) | | Print This Post | Carlos Beltran, Fans Angel Pagan's Proper Goodbye by Greg Prince on 21 July 2011 2:36 am I like hellos. I appreciate goodbyes. Those are the two interpersonal ceremonies I stand on. Hellos aren’t hard to come by. You’re seeing somebody as planned, you say hello. You’re seeing somebody for the first time in a long time, you say hello. You’re meeting somebody for the first time ever, you say hello. Granted, you [...] 8 comments - (Comments closed) | | Print This Post | Angel Pagan, Societal Niceties GET THE SHIRT! The Faith and Fear in Flushing "numbers" shirt has been seen from Verona, N.J., to Venice. You can get yours right here -- price about as cheap as we can make it. GET THE BOOK! Faith and Fear in Flushing: An Intense Personal History by Greg Prince (foreword by Jason Fry), is available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other online booksellers. THE HAPPIEST RECAP Volume I of The Happiest Recap: 50+ Years of the New York Mets As Told in 500+ Amazin' Wins by Greg Prince is available in print and for Kindle on Amazon. Order a personally inscribed copy from the Team Recap Store on eBay. RECENT ENTRIES Getcha Clobber On! Dangers In The Outfield The Sunday of 14-2 2:04 in the Morning Came Without a Warning You Never See It Coming ARCHIVES Select Month April 2014 March 2014 February 2014 January 2014 December 2013 November 2013 October 2013 September 2013 August 2013 July 2013 June 2013 May 2013 April 2013 March 2013 February 2013 January 2013 December 2012 November 2012 October 2012 September 2012 August 2012 July 2012 June 2012 May 2012 April 2012 March 2012 February 2012 January 2012 December 2011 November 2011 October 2011 September 2011 August 2011 July 2011 June 2011 May 2011 April 2011 March 2011 February 2011 January 2011 December 2010 November 2010 October 2010 September 2010 August 2010 July 2010 June 2010 May 2010 April 2010 March 2010 February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 December 2006 November 2006 October 2006 September 2006 August 2006 July 2006 June 2006 May 2006 April 2006 March 2006 February 2006 January 2006 December 2005 November 2005 October 2005 September 2005 August 2005 July 2005 June 2005 May 2005 April 2005 March 2005 February 2005 Copyright © 2014 Faith and Fear in Flushing - All Rights ReservedPowered by WordPress & the Atahualpa Theme by BytesForAll. Discuss on our WP Forum
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Topic: Write an INSPIRATIONAL or DEVOTIONAL piece (04/26/07) TITLE: STUBBED TOES By Paul Potenza STUBBED TOES I KNOW that you're out there. I KNOW that you feel like you can't go on. I also know that you feel like you are being beaten unjustly by the very God that you have committed yourself to serve. Every day is torture...or worse...dull routine. You find yourself screaming at God and then HATING yourself because you know that He loves you but you're just so A N G R Y that He let this happen to you. What's even worse is that the little things seems to amplify the situation. You stub your toe in the middle of the night when you get up to get a drink of water and you suddenly become a raving madman...shouting at the sky "WHY???? WAS THAT REALLY NECESSARY??? DID YOU N E E D me to endure this PAIN when ALL I WANTED was a simple glass of WATER???" Listen... A lot of things have happened to me in my life over the last few years. I don't know if this will help or not but I feel compelled to say it. On this trip that we take through our lives, there are going to be a LOT of stubbed toes. We're going to have rotten jobs and jerky bosses and unfulfilled dreams and cancer and the murder of VERY dear friends and the unexplainable evil that penetrates our TV every night and shows up again in the morning paper under our first cup of coffee. But you know what ELSE we get? We get to listen to the birds sing as we get up in the morning. We get to take our old dog out at night and walk in the garden, and watch as he commits unspeakable acts on our freshly mown lawn. We get to listen to the preacher that we love, as he faltingly cracks a joke. We get the unending peace that comes from hugging our Bible close to our chest as we slowly drift off to sleep knowing that all really is well with the world because we've read the end of our Bible and we know that we WIN. So I know that you're out there...and I FEEL you...and I know that you might want to give up. But DON'T. In my Bible Study this morning I have happened upon JOB. If ANYONE ever "stubbed his toe", this guy did. But he never gave up. Go ahead and read it. Feel the despair in the early chapters and the relief in the later ones and know that this was a person like you and me who had every chance to give up but didn't. Whattaya say? Wanna risk ONE MORE TOE??? PREVIOUS ENTRY | NEXT ENTRY julie wood05/03/07I really enjoyed this devotional--great use of humor and vivid descriptions of specific frustrations I can relate to--including stubbed toes! This was good for me to read right now as with a close friend in the hospital I've been recently struggling with those kinds of questions. Thanks for sharing!Jacquelyn Horne05/07/07Good pov. Life happens. Learn to deal with it. A stubbed toe can sometimes send us over the top. We need to learn to move on.Jan Ackerson 05/07/07I really like your voice here--your conversational tone. I felt as if you were talking to me; a nice effect. The capitalized words were a bit distracting, and not really necessary, as your word choice and your writing style did a great job of suggesting the importance of certain words and phrases. I don't know if I'm saying this right--it's a compliment, believe me--so I'll try again: You're a very good writer, and you don't need to "bop" your readers with the extra emphasis. One of my favorites on this level.Sharlyn Guthrie05/07/07I enjoyed your approach, the voice of a friend gently chiding and cheering me on. Nice job.Benjamin Graber05/08/07Great job with this one - you shared real wisdom and advice in a light, fun tone.Marilyn Schnepp 05/10/07Wow! What a fantastic lift to my day! First of all, Congratulations for being acknowledged; secondly, thanks for making my day much lighter, brighter and saner. Tears popped out of my eyes as I read your devotional. Thanks Pauly, you're tops! Nobody could have said it better..."Get up, dust yourself off, and Try again!" Great job, my friend!Mo 05/10/07I liked this. Good job!Denise Pienaar05/11/07Congratulations! This is a truly WONDERFUL piece of writing. In the last 2 years all three of my sons and my husband have lost very close friends, and I have cried out to God along with them. WHY??? I am sure they will be as encouraged and inspired by your message as I have been. I look forward to reading more of your work. Home | My Account | What's New | Site Map | Contact Us | Help | Blog
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TEDsucks TEDsucks's Comments Posted Thursday September 20, 2012, About: Tarkenton: Brady, Manning 'are getting old' THAT IS NO WOMAN.......THAT IS A COW!!!!!!! with no teeth.....lmao wow otis we got all on u poor entitled **** democrats! [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0AOZ38UNMw[/youtube] [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0AOZ38UNMw&[/youtube] [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUpLi1DBmh0[/youtube]Thanks Dolemite! [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUpLi1DBmh0&feature=player_detailpa ge#t=12s[/youtube] [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUpLi1DBmh0&feature=player_detailpa ge[/youtube] Ted Thompson had a True leader in Brett Favre, and he traded him away. Teddy was left with an arrogant overrated punk of a QB!!!!! Ted Thompson ia a vampire Ted Thompson Sucks Sooooooooooooooooooooo Posted Sunday September 16, 2012, About: Jason Witten wanted to punch Sean Payton Ted Thompson is a vampire
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CLA-2 RR:CR:TE 966703 SG CATEGORY: CLASSIFICATION TARIFF NO.: 9820.11.06 Mr. Bruce Schiller Vice President, Customs Brokerage & Compliance Excel Global Logistics, Inc. 10205 N.W. 19 Street, suite 101 RE: Classification of Men's Coveralls; U.S.-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act; Reflective Tape; Emblems; Findings and Trimmings Dear Mr. Schiller: This is in further reference to your letter dated August 15, 2003, on behalf of the Reed Manufacturing Company, requesting a binding ruling on whether reflective tape and emblems on men's coveralls (style no. 547CTX) are considered to be "findings and trimmings" under the United States-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA). We note that New York Ruling (NY) J87205, dated September 3, 2003, was issued in response to the portion of your August 15, 2003, letter requesting a binding ruling on the classification of these coveralls. The sample, style 547CTX, is a men's coveralls constructed of woven 65 percent polyester, 35 percent cotton fabric. The coveralls feature long sleeves, a collar, a full front left over right placket with a three snap closure and an inner zipper closure. The garment has one chest patch pocket, two side slash pockets below the waist, two rear patch pockets, and two small leg pockets. In addition, the garment has a partially elasticized waist with six-inch long side seam slash openings that allow the wearer to reach garments worn underneath. The garment has sewn-on reflective tape on the arms, legs, chest, and shoulder area, an approximately 3-inch diameter circular emblem sewn on the left chest, and an approximately 7-inch by 10-inch rectangular emblem on the back of the garment. We are advised that the garment will be produced (fabric cut to a pattern and completely assembled) in the Dominican Republic with thread that will be imported from the United States. The fabric used in the construction of the garment (with the exception of the woven label in the center of the neck of the garment), the band lining and the elastic fabric are all of U.S. origin, produced and finished in the U.S., using yarns of U.S. origin. The reflective tape and small emblem are manufactured in the U.S. We have been provided with no information as to where the small woven label in the neck is produced, however, the "cost value statement" appears to indicate that it is manufactured in the Dominican Republic. You specifically request a ruling as to whether the reflective tape and emblems are considered "trim and findings" or "fabric parts" for purposes of the CBPTA. Whether the reflective tape and emblems on the sample are "findings and trimmings" under the CBTPA? LAW AND ANALYSIS: The United States-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA) provides certain specified trade benefits for countries of the Caribbean region. The Act extends North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) duty treatment standards to non-textile articles that previously were ineligible for preferential treatment under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA) and provides for duty-free and quota-free treatment for certain textile and apparel articles which mee
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Other Gov Docs ||| FAS Note: The following memorandum of understanding between the Energy and Defense Departments builds on prior, largely fruitless discussions concerning "higher security fences" for certain sensitive nuclear weapons information, as reflected in this December 1999 letter. JOINT POLICY GROUP FOR THE PROTECTION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS DESIGN AND USE CONTROL INFORMATION PURPOSE: The protection of nuclear weapon-related information is crucial to maintaining the security of the United States. Since both the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Department of Defense (DoD) are responsible for the security of such information, corresponding programs are needed at both agencies to ensure continuity and standardization where practical. Such continuity and standardization enhance the protection of nuclear weapon-related information across the Government and benefit the American taxpayer by establishing a more efficient and effective program. To that end, the Joint Policy Group for the Protection of Nuclear Weapons Design and Use Control Information (Joint Policy Group) has been established to determine how best to enhance the protection of Restricted Data (RD) constituting the most sensitive nuclear weapon-related information. Such information is a subset of all nuclear weapon design and use control information. To accomplish this task, the Joint Policy Group will (1) study current DoD and DOE policies for the classification and protection of nuclear weapon design and use control information, (2) evaluate the effectiveness of these policies, and (3) recommend whether and how these policies may be improved. BACKGROUND: Under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended (the Act), the DOE establishes the Government-wide identification, protection, and personnel security programs for RD. Also under the Act, the DoD, which possesses the bulk of all RD outside the DOE, establishes its own internal personnel security program for RD under its control. Since both Departments have policy roles with respect to RD, and also have the overwhelming majority of all RD in the government, cooperation in this study is imperative. Formation of the Joint Policy Group to study the protection of nuclear weapons design and use control information is not without precedent. In 1995, the DOE and DoD embarked on the Fundamental Classification Policy Review (FCPR), a joint effort to comprehensively review nuclear weapons-related classification policy to determine which information no longer warranted protection in the post-Cold War era. The FCPR also identified a number of specific nuclear weapons-related subject areas as being particularly sensitive. This aspect of the FCPR is a starting point for the Joint Policy Group to identify what, if any, information warrants enhanced protection. OBJECTIVE: The objectives of the Joint Policy Group are to identify (1) any nuclear weapon design and use control information requiring enhanced protection, (2) possible methods to provide such protection, and (3) recommendations based on the threat, cost and operational impact of those methods. PROCESS: The Joint Policy Group may form and task subgroups, if needed. These subgroups will be staffed by both DoD and DOE employees and contractors. PRODUCT: The Joint Policy Group will provide a report containing the results of its study and recommendations concerning the protection of nuclear weapons design and use control information to the Director, Security and Emergency Operations, DOE and to the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (Intelligence), DoD. Ultimately, although not a direct product of the Joint Policy Group, agency and national publications may require changes to incorporate the accepted Joint Policy Group recommendations. DURATION: The Joint Policy Group will produce its final report and disband by December 1, 2000. Department of Energy Security and Emergency Operations Staff Office of Nuclear and National Security Information staff Office of the Chief, Defense Nuclear Security (NA-3) Military Departments ASD(C3I) ATSD(NCB) USD(P) [signed] [signed] General Eugene E. Habiger, USAF (Retired) Arthur L. Money Director, Office of Security and Assistant Secretary of Defense Emergency Operations Command, Control, Communications U.S. Department of Energy and Intelligence
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Appointments Login Logout Why Choose Fox Chase? Cancer Genome Institute Prevention, Risk and Screening Research at Fox Chase Partner Hospitals Giving and Volunteering Temple Health Temple University School of Medicine News &Publications News HomeNews ReleasesPublicationsBackgroundersVideosSocial MediaContactsFranklin HokeVice Presidentfor Communications215-728-2700215-475-2888 (cell phone)Franklin.Hoke@fccc.eduDiana QuattroneDirector of Media Relations215-728-7784215-815-7828 (cell phone)Diana.Quattrone@fccc.eduCommunications Staff News Fox Chase Cancer Center Offers New Study For Lung Cancer Treatment PHILADELPHIA (February 20, 2002) -- Fox Chase Cancer Center is offering a new clinical trial for the treatment of small cell lung cancer which compares a standard therapy with a new treatment combination that may have additional benefits. Corey J. Langer, M.D., director of thoracic medical oncology at Fox Chase is the principal investigator of the study.The Phase III study will investigate the effect of Irinotecan in combination with cisplatin, compared with the current standard treatment of etoposide and cisplatin for patients with extensive small-cell lung cancer. The study will determine whether this combination can improve disease control and survival.To enroll in the study at Fox Chase Cancer Center, participants must be 18 years of age or older, diagnosed with extensive-disease, small-cell lung cancer, and have had no prior chemotherapy, unless it was given for a different type of cancer. Other inclusion criteria should be discussed with a physician at Fox Chase Cancer Center.According to the American Cancer Society, lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States and is the second most common type of cancer overall, accounting for 14 percent of all cancer diagnoses and 28 percent of all cancer deaths. It is estimated that 169,500 new cases of lung cancer will be diagnosed and that 157,400 people will die from the disease in the United States this year. Approximately 15 to 25 percent of all lung cancer is classified as small-cell.Fox Chase Cancer Center, one of the nation's first comprehensive cancer centers designated by the National Cancer Institute in 1974, conducts basic and clinical research; programs of prevention, detection and treatment of cancer; and community outreach. For more information about Fox Chase activities, visit the Center's web site at www.fccc.edu. Fox Chase Cancer Center, part of the Temple University Health System, is one of the leading cancer research and treatment centers in the United States. Founded in 1904 in Philadelphia as one of the nation’s first cancer hospitals, Fox Chase was also among the first institutions to be designated a National Cancer Institute Comprehensive Cancer Center in 1974. Fox Chase researchers have won the highest awards in their fields, including two Nobel Prizes. Fox Chase physicians are also routinely recognized in national rankings, and the Center’s nursing program has received the Magnet recognition for excellence four consecutive times. Today, Fox Chase conducts a broad array of nationally competitive basic, translational, and clinical research, with special programs in cancer prevention, detection, survivorship, and community outreach. For more information, call 1-888-FOX CHASE or (1-888-369-2427). More 2002 News Releases » Connect with Fox Chase Fox Chase Cancer Center, 333 Cottman Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19111-2497 | 1-888-FOX-CHASE (1-888-369-2427) Jobs | Directions | Refer a Patient | Terms of Use | Patient Rights | Privacy & Non-Discrimination Notices | All Policies | Site Map An NCI-designated PATIENTS AND CAREGIVERS Postdoctoral Research Program Talbot Research Library Program Consulting Disclaimer: Temple University Health System (TUHS) neither provides nor controls the provision of health care. All health care is provided by its member organizations or independent health care providers affiliated with TUHS member organizations. Each TUHS member organization is owned and operated pursuant to its governing documents. Temple Health refers to the health, education and research activities carried out by the affiliates of Temple University Health System and by Temple University School of Medicine. © 2014 Temple University Health System, Inc., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. All rights reserved.
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FOR INFORMATION ON WHATSREALLY GOING ON AT FCGOA PRESS HEREDepartment of JusticeOffice of Public AffairsFounder and Treasurer of Washington D.C. Security Guard Labor Union Charged with Stealing Pension Funds for Personal Use, Violating a Court Order and Obstructing Investigation Formerly an SPFPA RepresentativeFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEFriday, April 1, 2011 SEE http://www.eyeoncaleb.org/ also see NLPC ReportWASHINGTON – The founder and treasurer of the National Association of Special Police and Security Officers (NASPSO) was charged today in a superseding indictment with mail fraud, theft from a labor organization, obstruction of justice, criminal contempt and various recordkeeping offenses related to his operation of a pension plan for NASPSO members. NASPSO is a labor union representing private security guards assigned to protect federal buildings in the Washington, D.C., metro area. The charges were announced by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division; Mabel Capolongo, Director of the Philadelphia Regional Office of the Employee Benefits Security Administration of the Department of Labor; Robert L. Panella, Special Agent in Charge of the Office of Inspector General, Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations of the Washington, D.C. Regional Office, and Mark Wheeler, Director of the Washington District Office of the Office of Labor Management Standards.Caleb Gray-Burriss, 60, of Washington, D.C., will be arraigned on April 4, 2011, in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Gray-Burriss originally was charged in June 2010 with four counts of mail fraud.According to the superseding indictment, from approximately June 2004 through February 2011, Gray-Burriss wrote numerous checks to himself or to other third parties from the checking account where he had placed funds intended for the NASPSO pension plan. The superseding indictment alleges that Gray-Burriss spent more than $100,000 of the pension plan funds in this way, while at the same time falsely maintaining that it was an operational fund that he was properly administering and that was providing benefits to the beneficiaries. Gray-Burriss previously settled a civil suit which, in part, addressed his unlawful conduct with respect to NASPSO-sponsored health and benefit plans. The superseding indictment charges Gray-Burriss with criminal contempt of a court order after he allegedly stole money from the NASPSO treasury to pay his personal fines due in the civil settlement. The superseding indictment also alleges that Gray-Burriss resumed his involvement with NASPSO-sponsored health and pension plans after the civil lawsuit was settled, even though he was prohibited by court order from doing so.In addition, the superseding indictment charges that Gray-Burriss, while an officer and employee of NASPSO, stole more than $115,000 in NASPSO funds through unauthorized salary increases and bonuses to himself, cash withdrawals from ATMs, reimbursement for unauthorized vacations and trips to casinos, personal dental work, and other goods and services. Gray-Burriss also allegedly unlawfully used NASPSO funds to pay his parking tickets and personal fines in a civil lawsuit. Finally, the superseding indictment charges Gray-Burriss with two counts of obstructive of justice for concealing and/or destroying NASPSO records and attempting to induce a witness to withhold testimony and records during the grand jury investigation.An indictment is merely an allegation, and a defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.Gray-Burriss faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine on each of the mail fraud and obstruction of justice charges. The theft from a labor organization charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Gray-Burriss also faces additional penalties if convicted of the criminal contempt and recordkeeping charges.The investigation leading to the superseding indictment of Gray-Burriss was conducted by investigators from three agencies of the U.S. Department of Labor – the Employee Benefits Security Administration, the Office of Labor Management Standards and the Office of Inspector General, Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Vincent Falvo of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Racketeering Section.Criminal DivisionSourceOn August 16, 2012, in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, a second superseding indictment was returned charging Caleb Gray-Burriss, President of the National Association of Special Police and Security Officers (NASPSO), located in Washington, D.C., on multiple counts. The superseding indictment charges Gray-Burriss with two additional counts of embezzlement from a labor organization, in violation of 29 U.S.C. 501(c), for embezzling $68,374.99 from the union and one count of conspiracy to embezzle, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 371. Gray-Burriss was previously indicted on four counts of embezzlement from a labor organization totaling more than $116,000, six counts of mail fraud totaling more than $102,000, one count of criminal contempt; two counts of tampering with a witness by corrupt persuasion; one count of failure to file reports required by the LMRDA; one count of falsification of reports required by the LMRDA; and one count of failure to maintain records in sufficient detail required by the LMRDA. The indictment follows a joint investigation by the OLMS Washington District Office, the Employee Benefits Security Administration, and the Department of Labor’s Office of the Inspector General. UPDATEDepartment of JusticeOffice of Public AffairsFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEWednesday, December 5, 2012Founder and President of Labor Union Convicted in Washington for Stealing from Union’s Treasury and Pension Fund, Related CrimesWASHINGTON – The founder and president of the National Association of Special Police and Security Officers (NASPSO) – which represents private security guards assigned to protect federal buildings in the metropolitan Washington area – was convicted yesterday in Washington federal court, following a jury trial, of 18 counts related to his theft of union treasury and pension funds, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division.Caleb Gray-Burriss, 62, of Washington, was convicted on six counts of mail fraud, seven counts of theft from a labor organization, one count each of obstruction of justice and criminal contempt, and three counts of union recordkeeping offenses. Joining in the announcement of the verdict were Marc I. Machiz, Director of the Philadelphia Regional Office of the Employee Benefits Security Administration of the Department of Labor; Michael S. Barcus, Special Agent in Charge of the Washington Regional Office of the Department of Labor, Office of the Inspector General, Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations; and District Director Mark Wheeler, of the Department of Labor’s Washington District Office of the Office of Labor-Management Standards.In June 2010, Mr. Gray-Burriss was charged with four counts of mail fraud in connection with his operation of a pension plan for members of NASPSO. A grand jury returned two superseding indictments in April 2011 and August 2012, which also charged offenses committed by Gray-Burriss while he was released on bail.According to the evidence at trial, from approximately June 2004 through February 2011, Gray-Burriss wrote numerous checks to himself or to other third parties from the NASPSO pension plan checking account. The evidence also showed that Gray-Burriss spent more than $100,000 of the pension plan funds in this way, while falsely maintaining it was an operational fund that he was properly administering and that was providing benefits to the beneficiaries. The evidence further showed that Gray-Burriss committed criminal contempt of a court order addressing his prior misappropriation of pension and health plan funds after Gray-Burriss resumed his scheme in 2009 to defraud employers and NASPSO members of pension funds.In addition, the evidence presented at trial showed that Gray-Burriss, while an officer and employee of NASPSO, stole over $150,000 in NASPSO funds consisting of cash withdrawals to himself, unauthorized salary increases and bonuses to himself and another person, fraudulently drawn checks to himself – purportedly for employment taxes on behalf of NASPSO – and unlawfully used NASPSO funds to pay his personal fines in a civil lawsuit.The jury also found that Gray-Burriss committed obstruction of justice by destroying or concealing NASPSO financial records during a grand jury investigation; failing to file required annual reports on behalf of NASPSO, falsifying those reports, and failing to maintain properly the records of NASPSO.At sentencing, which is currently scheduled for Feb. 28, 2013, Gray-Burris faces a maximum potential penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine on each of the mail fraud counts, five years in prison and a $10,000 fine on each of the theft from a labor organization and conspiracy counts; five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on the criminal contempt count; 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine on the obstruction count, and a year in prison and a $10,000 fine for the recordkeeping offenses.The investigation was conducted by agents and investigators of the U.S. Department of Labor. Trial Attorney Vincent J. Falvo of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section and Trial Attorney Tracee Plowell, of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section prosecuted the case.This website is independently owned and operated and All Opinions About Guy James is Based on Personal Experiences in Dealing With Guy JamesGuy JamesFCGOA Guy "The Rat" James a Name You Cannot Trust!
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5991
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Creativity: The Meeting of Apollo and Dionysus F. David Peat A text only version of this essay is available to download. To take a one week course with David Peat Talk given at a conference in Brussels In this talk I want to say something about creativity and why it is so important for our modern world. In particular, I am going to touch on the idea of creativity as something that bubbles up out of the matter of the cosmos and how it can be found within the very substance of our bodies. Although my background is that of a physicist, over the last years I have been talking to artists and composers and I will be drawing upon examples of the way in which their particular creativity emerges out of the body. Another influence has been my contact with Native Americans - particularly the Blackfoot who live just east of the Rocky Mountains and the Mohawk who live south of the St Lawrence river. Through dialogue circles they taught me a different way of seeing the world so that I have been able to look at our European or Western ways of thinking in a fresh light. I suppose that is an example of creativity! In part, my talk is going to be about the importance of healing. There is certainly a great need for healing in a world torn apart by war and conflict, violence in society, the breakdown of inner cities and the pollution of our natural environment. Healing, I believe, requires a new way of being in the world, a transformation of human consciousness and a new sense of shared meaning. It seems to me that we are sense a lack of shared meaning in our world and grounding to the earth and human society in general. This leads people to explore alternative religions, shamanism and all manner of experiences in their agonized search for an answer, a ground to their life. Yet when people seek the transcendental out of a sense of desperation they leave themselves open to all manner of forces. For Native Americans this phenomenon of "soul loss" can be very real. If you happen to be a Blackfoot then you are part of a profound shared meaning. Many Natives speak of having "A Map in the Head". This is something learned in childhood as you sit around the fire at night and listen to the songs and stories of the elders, you learn it by watching the animals, by coming to know the land in which you live, by talking to rocks and trees, by participating in ceremonies and by entering into a wider reality within dreams. This Map in the Head is a connection to the time of creation, a guide to the world of powers and energies and also a protection. But what do we, in our modern world, have to contain the powers and forces the psyche may encounter? We are like those chemists and physicists in the first decades of this century who played around with radio-active materials without using any protection. Or like someone who wanders into a high voltage laboratory and begins to touch the apparatus. Moreover, the danger is not just to individuals but to our whole society which is in danger of losing its collective soul. Connected to this is the danger of inflation. Economic inflation is bad enough but psychic is even worse! But our psychic inflation is expressed in our desire to escape from the body, from the world of matter, from human society, from nature and into the world of the spirit. Our world also has great difficulties in dealing with what Jungians call the shadow, that dark area within ourselves which we to deny by projecting it onto others. The events of our century has been so terrible that we cannot face what our species is capable to doing. The British composer, Michael Tippett's answer to the holocaust is contained in his opera "A Child of our Time" and the words "I must know my shadow and my light and then I will become whole". Resolution comes in the Oratorio though the use of Negro spirituals that express the aching soul. We cannot afford to continue this destructive cycle of denial of the earth and our bodies though inflation of the psyche. We can no longer deny our collective shadow. We have to face ourselves and this requires a new form of action which is essentially creative. Blocks to Creativity When I use that word "creativity" I am thinking of four main areas, areas which I will explore a little later in my talk. These are Creativity as: An Act of Renewal A state of openness, active listening and willingness to change. In the conventional sense, of making something new, original and unexpected. The art of healing, which, I believe, combines the other three forms of creativity.... It is an enormously creative act to watch and listen, to stay with something, to suspend action. It is enormously creative even to allow our children to grow up. It is creative because the natural reaction of our Western minds is to exert control. We want to analyze, to reduce things to problems and then immediately to seek a solution - some way of predicting, manipulating and controlling the world. This can work quite well when it comes to practical issues, but in other cases it may be more important to suspend action, to look, to listen and then to attempt some act which flows harmoniously out of the whole meaning, movement and essence of the situation. Think of a doctor who arrives at the scene of a traffic accident and does nothing. First the doctor looks and the injured person, and only after making a primary assessment does he touch the patient in order to make a physical examination and then, finally, attempt some medical intervention. We are constantly striving, constantly making an effort, constantly trying to anticipate the future and control its outcome, constantly asking how we can become more creative. But what if creativity is an inevitable as breathing and what we are really doing most of the time is blocking this natural force? I say that this force is perfectly natural because it is an essential part of nature. If we don't see this immediately then maybe it is because our vision is still blocked by what could be called the Newtonian paradigm. This was of a world of independent objects in motion. Change only took place though the application of force and the transfer of energy. Leibniz criticized Newton on the grounds that Newton's god wound his watch at the moment of creation and then left the stage. It was a mechanical universe with no room for the spirit of creativity. And before the Darwinian revolution even plant and animal species were fixed and eternal, as was society with its particular levels for the rich and the poor. All that has changed. Physicists have a new vision of the world - but the problem is that it has yet to change our everyday thinking. Ilya Prigogine speaks of the transformation of our vision from that of Being to that of Becoming. No longer do we see fixed objects but rather emergent structures, new forms not anticipated from the levels below. Systems are open to their environments, they are aware of changing contexts and strike a balance between internal stability and openness to transformation. Creativity is ubiquitous. It streams through the firmament. The physicist David Bohm pictured the electron, as well as other elementary particles, not as a object but as a process, an action that is constantly collapsing inwards from the entire universe and then scattering outward again. Or as an unfolding out of a ground of ceaseless movement -the implicate order - and then enfolding again. For Bohm matter is in a constant state of coming into manifestation and then unmanifesting. Matter of its very essence is therefore creative. Creativity is inherent in each star and in each particle of dust. Creativity is the essence of our physical bodies. My own vision is of each piece of matter as an inexhaustible inscape, an inner song of authenticity, an endless process of renewal. How close all this is to the Vedic image of the universe as a constant breathing, a coming into existence followed by an exhalation into the ground of all being. All this repeated over and over again. Likewise, for the Blackfoot, everything that is not creatively renewed will be swallowed up by the eternal flux. Even the cosmos would not exist where it not for a continuous creative act of renewal - an act that involves all of life, from the spirits, powers and keepers of the animals, to the ceremonies of the Blackfoot society, the singing of the birds. Maybe even rocks participate in the song of creation. This creativity is like a spring of water bubbling out of a rock, it is not ego-bound, there is no striving, no effort in it. We are part of this, our very essence of being is unconditioned creativity. Now what do we mean by creativity? Not simply producing something new. Creativity goes far deeper than that. I am thinking of it as Renewal; Openness; Novelty and Healing. Let's begin with renewal. I once knew a baker with mystical leanings! Each morning I would buy a fresh, warm loaf of bread. Day after day, month after month the bread looked the same, it weighed the same, it contained the same ingredients yet it was created afresh. It was made new. The baker once told me he made the bread with love and with all the creativity he had. When parents tell the same bedtime story night after night they are also giving birth to something new. A pianist performs the same concerto in different cities. Many times it is "assez bien" but there are those occasions when, with the help of the active participation of the audience, something totally fresh is created - exactly the same notes are played but they are heard as if for the very first time. The icon painter is confined to use formal gestures and a preordained colour scheme yet he is creating something new, a container for the spiritual. Creativity is the activity of listening on the part of the therapist. The ceremonies of Native Americans are done for the whole of creation. The goal of Islamic alchemy was not so much to produce gold, or even a personal transformation but to enter into relationship with the original moment of creation, the naming of all things by Allah and in this way to assist in the renewal of all creation. The second area, or aspect, or side of creativity is openness, unconditioned listening. Life seeks stability, but it must also remain open and flexible to the world outside. This requires enormous creativity. The world is flux, things pass away, contexts change, people grow and age, organizations flourish or atrophy. To remain healthy means being able to accept change. It means supporting change in others - ones children, a partner, the profession in which one is engaged. It means facing the fear inside, coming to terms with the shadow. Not clinging onto the past. It is a harmony between the need to renew and foster what is important and be open to that which must die and be replaced. Creativity is a willingness to accept endings, to discard, to sacrifice. It is the goddess Khali who must destroy in order to create. Native American metaphysics sees society as a living thing, an expression of the consciousness of the people and the original compacts made by the ancestors with the spirits of the world. But societies only live on because they are actively renewed. They tell me that the great vanished civilizations of the past - the Olmec, Mayan, Anasazi were not destroyed by natural forces, nor by external invasion. Rather the people decided that contexts had changed and it was no longer appropriate to perform acts of renewal. The people stayed where they were. It was the civilization, a particular order, that vanished. The third area reflects the American poet, Ezra Pound's dictum, "Make it New": Creativity as making things that are different, original, like noting seen before. The paradigm is Picasso who seemed to produce something new and different every day of his life. Or Mozart whose creativity was a pure, unconditioned outpouring of spirit. There is a time for creative renewal and a time for creative change, for destruction of what already exists and replacement by the new. Byzantine art, which enjoyed renewal for so long, was no longer fulfilling to a painter like Giotto, or Ciambue, and so new, more humanistic modes of expression were developed. Enormous energy is needed to break apart the old paradigm. Ways of thinking are held onto deeply and unconsciously. Here is the creativity of a Picasso and a Mozart but also that of an Einstein and a Cezanne who both sought radical changes to the existing order. Cezanne spent his whole life struggling to "realize his sensations" before nature and to create a new order to painting. Einstein spent his time reading the philosophers Kant and Hume, he had to reach down deeply into his own thought processes in order to produce a revolution in our concepts of space and time. Finally there is creativity as the synthesis of the previous three overall types - renewal, openness and radical change. I think of this form of creativity as healing, making whole, bringing back into balance, restoring harmony. It is the natural creativity of the human body which at every moment is assaulted by radiation, bacteria, viruses, poisons and other trauma yet constantly repairs and sustains itself. Creativity is healing of the body, society and, indeed, the entire planet. Healing is also an act of sacrifice for the healer must support inner tensions and paradoxes within the body, tensions which can often make a person ill. I believe that our present society is placing enormous demands upon the healer. Healers are not necessarily doctors and therapists for composers, artists, writers, actors and filmstars are also called upon to perform the role of shamans. They are often made physically ill by the internal tensions they must hold. Some societies are wiser, so that the act of healing is undertaken by the entire society. For the !Kung of the Kalahari, the healer dance in order to invoke and raise the temperature of the sacred Num that can burn and destroy. Once filled with the Num the healer is able to see within and to heal. It is the responsibility of the society to protect the healer by removing some of the Num when it gets too hot and cooling down the healer. Mystery of Matter I have suggested that creativity is perfectly natural and present in each one of us, in the very matter of our bodies. Now I want to look a little closer at matter. To the Sufi mystic every tree, flower and grain of dust sings the glory of Allah. In the West, and despite centuries of science the inner essence of matter remains a mystery. To contemporary physicist matter has been transformed from an object to a process. The physicist David Bohm argued that quantum reality is so very different from our everyday large scale experience that it requires a new language for its discussion. Our Indo-European languages are strongly noun based and subject-object structured. For Bohm they represent a barrier to deeper understanding. The essence of the quantum world is flux, movement, transformation, symmetry and relationship rather than individual objects in interaction. For Bohm the essence of such a reality requires a verb-based, process-based language - probably one very close to that still spoken by the Blackfoot. The physicist Wolfgang Pauli, who was involved in many discussions a collaborator of Carl Jung, pictured atomic reality as a battle between symmetry and antisymmetry. Pauli had consulted Jung during a crisis in his life and his long series of dreams are discussed in Jung's Psychology and Alchemy. They also collaborated on "The Nature and Structure of the Psyche" which includes Jung's exploration of the phenomenon of synchronicity. Pauli argued that just as Jung had discovered the objective side to the unconscious - that is the collective consciousness which transcends the individual, personal history, of repressed experiences - so too physics must uncover the "subjective in matter". In particular he felt that science must come to terms with what he termed "the irrational in matter". To take an example, quantum theory can offer no account for the disintegration of an radioactive nucleus or predict when this will occur. For Pauli it was an irrational act. Another example would be the way in which, when a quantum measurement is made, a large number of different potentialities collapse into a single actuality. The processes is totally discontinuous and lies outside the power of quantum theory to explain. Jung was concerned with synchronicity - what he termed an "acausal connecting principle". Pauli for his part believed that abstract mathematical symmetries were the key to the cosmos. He even pictured the duality between symmetry and antisymmetry as a battle between God and the Devil. Now symmetries do not appear to be tangible things, they are not objects that can be grasped or directly observed. They come very close to what Jung called archetypes. Yet it is the guiding role of antisymmetry, for example, that gives structure to the material world. Without antisymmetry, also called Pauli's exclusion principle, all the electrons in an atom could collapse into the same state and the chemical elements would loose their distinct properties. In terms of electrons this means that there is an ordering principle, a connecting principle, that has nothing to do with interactions or forces or causality. At the level of quantum physics it is a true "acausal connecting principle", a true synchronicity between the material and something non-material. Pauli, from the perspective of physics, and Jung from that of depth psychology were both approaching the "psychoid", that deep level where the unconscious merges into matter. The psychoid is variously described as "neither matter or mind, and both". Or by the metaphor of the speculum that reflects one world into an other while, at the same time, transcending them. In one way of looking the psychoid is material and it is also mental. In another it transcends these categories which, after all, are only the distinctions created by thought. We have already seen that as we approach the atomic level the only world of causality and of independent physical objects in interaction with each other dissolves away and leaves a world of abstract symmetries, processes, transformations, flux and Pauli's "the irrational". It is a world in which matter is constantly coming into being and fading away. This subatomic level is one of pure creativity. Thus must also the nature of the psychoid which lies beyond the distinctions of matter and spirit. Creativity is to be found at the level of this psychoid. It bubbles up into the manifest world where it expresses itself mentally and physically. In this sense creativity is a synchronistic since its origins lie in the deep ground beyond matter and mind. Its metaphor is that of the artist who requires both the mental image or intention, and the material substrate. These are then brought together in the creative act which leaves both matter and consciousness transformed and renewed. Creativity is deeply connected to this mystery of matter. It is the meeting of Apollo and Dionysius - the world of Platonic order and abstraction incarnating into the flux and chaos of the world. It is a divine encounter Apollo is forced to acknowledge the contingency that lies within the grain of the world. Likewise the drunken ecstasy of Dionysius is bound by the chains of harmony and abstraction. Appolo and Dionysius, matter and spirit, each is transformed by the other. A continuous act of sustained creation is present within each one of us. We contain within us the primordial ocean out of which all life evolved. The atoms of our bodies were created in nuclear syntheses within the heart of the stars. The elementary particles out of which these atoms are composed were formed out of the Big Bang. And if physicists like Bohm are to believed, our body is a constant process of renewal, each elementary particle being a process that unfolds out of the entire universe and folds back again. It is also a fact of physics that each of us literally stands at the very centre of the universe. The cosmos was created in a singularity of space time, a point in space that began to expand in an explosive fashion. Today each point in space is a fossil of that primordial explosion. Each point is that point at which creation began. The middle ages saw the human body as a microcosm of the macrocosm - "as above so below". This was also the conviction of David Bohm who felt that because his body contained the same matter out of which the universe is created, then within him could also be found the deepest understanding of the nature of matter, its order and laws. Something very similar was said by the Philosopher Bergson who argued that reality is ultimately unknowable through the mind yet, since this same reality is the stuff of our bodies, it can be known within the body. In Bohm's case, he was aware of certain interior sensations, muscular dispositions, and acts of proprioception. On one occasion when thinking about physics he had a particular sensation. This was joined by a second sensation. Then the two combined to produce something quite different. This was directly related to a mathematical result about quantum theory, one that turns out to be very counter-intuitive. Einstein told Bohm that he too "thought" by means of subtle muscular tensions. His work on non-linear field equations of space-time was helped by the movements he sensed within his arm as he squeeze a rubber ball. What is curious in Bohm's case is that mathematical results came to him out of the body- without the various logical and deductive steps needed to derive a result. Conscious work was something that came later - having to sit down and work out a proof for what had unfolded out of his body in a very different way. What we take as the experience of mind and consciousness is only a small part of something much larger that is distributed within the entire body. It takes place at the muscular, visceral, biochemical levels. It is at this material level that much of our natural creativity is to be found. To give one example, there is evidence from brain scans that during performance a professional musician suppresses the active listening region of the brain. What is being produced in performance appears to emerges out of an orchestrated vocabulary of inner muscular gestures, each of which seems to be specifically related to feelings and emotions. In this sense the music is emerging out of the very physicality of the body. Of course conscious study of the musical score has earlier been involved but the act of performance may be quite different. There is a wonderful anecdote about the Canadian pianist, Glenn Gould, who was practicing a particular piece by Bach and could not produce what he felt inside because the sound he was making on the piano had become too distracting. In the end, he put two radios on top of the piano, turned them up to full volume and went on practicing! The pianist, Alan Rowlands, told me that despite intense study and practice he had difficulty understanding a particular passage in one of Beethoven's late piano sonatas. As he put it, the passage was musically ungrammatical, it was as if something had been left out. It did not seem to make sense. Then, on one occasion, he had a very strong sense of the presence of the audience, breathing with him and supporting him. As he approached it, the passage simply played itself. Only later, on reflection, he was able to come to terms with what he had played and to realize the inevitability of its inner logic. In this case creativity transcended the boundaries of the individual and became a ritual of the entire group - audience and performer. The Dark Space of the Body The significance of the body and its role in creativity is the subject several contemporary artists such as the sculptors Anthony Gormley and Anish Kapoor as well as the performance artist, Maria Abramovich. In making his work, which is based upon his own body, Gormley speaks of entering the dark space within the body. It is a place rarely visited in our own age, the place in which the body has its existence, a space beyond ego, beyond history, beyond space and time. As Gormley puts it, this space is beyond good and evil, although it may contain both good and evil. This is the space of pure potentiality and creativity. As far as Anish Kapoor is concerned a pure act of creativity, which transcends the personal and biographical can induce in his material - in the stone and pigment - what he terms an alchemical transformation. Again something that lies beyond mere causality and the action of one object on another. Michael Tippett and Healing When art brings us to a dark internal space it exercises a healing function. The idea of the artist or musician as a shamanic figure is an ancient one. Orpheus tamed the wild beasts with his music. Within many Indigenous cultures songs have healing properties. Indeed, songs are considered to be living beings in their own right. What is important is not so much the act of the healer who sings, as the song that sings itself, that makes itself manifest through the medium of the singer's body. In doing so, the song heals the sickness within person. The sickness itself may have a spiritual origin and the song restores wholeness to the body and to the meaning to a life. People, who are still suffer from a particular disease or wound, may therefore speak about having experienced a "Good Healing". Michael Tippett The function of the shamanic singer/healer is very much in evidence with the British composer Sir Michael Tippett. Tippett has spoken to me about being possessed during the act of composition - enthused and possessed by a god. His task was to hold within his body, over an extended period of composition that lasted several years, the tensions and forces that would later emerge in the music. The result made him profoundly ill. In this he could identify with other composers such as Berlioz when composing the opera Les Troyens, or Beethoven of the last works. Again, by sitting with the inner tensions of the body, by containing them to the point of sickness, the shaman is able to create and act of healing for others. But here let me add a note of caution. Shamanic figures can also be disruptive, self-destructive, anti-social and sometimes violent. In the case of artists I wonder if it is because they are allowing themselves to remain open to what Pauli called, "the irrational in matter". There are times when the artist may help to renew meaning within a society and times when he must break that meaning apart in his search for new forms. It is interesting to note the degree to which art can still shock and offend. Although they don't seem all that eager to talk about it I get the sense, from Native American friends that there are healers one would be happy to see and others who are best avoided except at times of severe crisis when their special powers are required. In our own culture the bubbling creativity of Picasso did not preclude his callous and brutal attitude to women. Or Cezanne his extreme rudeness and defensiveness. And think of the outstanding writers of the United States and try to list those who were not alcoholic. There is always a price to pay and the brighter the light burns the darker is the shadow. Cezanne and Time The creativity which emerges out of the body demands its own time. This is not the psychological time of anticipation and expectation, but something more organic and material. It is the time taken for a seed to germinate, for fruit to ripen, for food to digest, for the alchemical workings within the athanor. It is time that must be accepted and lived with. It is the time of listening as the therapist sits with a patient. For Tippett, although the process made him ill, he knew intuitively this was the time demanded by his very organism. As the Native Americans insist, a ceremony can only be performed when "the time is right". To be creative one must allow this organic, visceral experience to "take its time". Parents provides a safe and secure environment for a child's growth. They listen and watch without attempting to hang on to what is passing away or to reach forward to what may be. This essence of creativity is contained with a remark the poet Rilke relates about the painter Cezanne. Cezanne sat before the motif "like a dog, just looking, without any nervousness, without any ulterior motive". At the time Cezanne was doing something radical, he was discovering an entirely new order for painting. But the only way he could do this was by containing the inner sensations of his body and allowing them to manifest on the canvas in their own time. His portrait of Vollard took over 140 sittings and was left incomplete - the best Cezanne could say was that parts of the waistcoat were not bad. He was still painting a still life long after the fruit had rotted in the bowl. Again and again he returned to Mount St Victor. He once said he could spend his life in front of the motive - now sitting a little to the left and now to the right. Cezanne would sit and eventually he would make a mark - small parallel brush strokes of orange in this place, and over there another cluster of orange marks. Days later he may cool the orange with blue - pushing it further back into the landscape. Here he makes a mark of green. It is deliberately ambiguous. It could be part of the foliage of a tree in the foreground, or the green of bushes in the middle ground. But, as Rikle said, the miracle is that -I quote - "It is as if every place knew about all the others" Another painter observed "here is something he knew and now he's saying it; right next to it there's an empty space, because that was something he did not know yet." The act of painting for Cezanne was pure physicality, the realization of sensations within his body. Towards the end of his life Cezanne felt that all he had were his "little sensations". But they took him into a world that lies beyond conscious thought and emotion. Rikle realized that it lay even beyond love. I quote "While it may be natural to love each one of those things in the landscape if one shows this, one makes it less well; one judges it instead of saying it". In Cezanne's own words "le paysage se reflete, s'humanise, se pense en moi. Je l'objective, le projette, le fixe sur ma toile...je serait la conscience subjective de ce paysage, comme ma toile en serait la conscience objective." I find that passage quite remarkable because it sums up so much of what I want I have been trying to understand about creativity. And here I'd like to interject something purely personal. I have struggled for a long time with Cezanne, more than with any other painter. I spent a long time in front of his paintings. I can't say that I like or dislike them. That simply does not come into it. It is more that he engages me in a way that goes beyond analysis or reason. And so I would read what art critics say about Cezanne and then go back to look at a painting. Yes, I could see the way he created a new perspective out of color. Yes, I could see how he analyzed the picture into a variety of planes. Yes, I could go on and on with this. Yet, in the end, none of that seemed to be to the point. Then, earlier this year, the big Cezanne exhibition opened at the Tate gallery in London and I visited day after day, each time seeing something new. Finally, one day, I stood in front of a particular painting and asked myself "what is really going on"? Finally an answer came. I had always been aware of sensations within my body when I looked at Cezanne - inner movements, tensions, sensations of orientation and so on. Now I paid more attention to these inner sensations and the way they seemed to be orchestrated. It wasn't about looking any more but about feelings and experiencing. I was hit with an intuition, a firm conviction, that these were the sensations Cezanne himself had experienced as he sat before the same motif. I rushed to the library and sure enough I discovered that quotation above - "je serait la conscience subjective de ce paysage, comme ma toile en serait la conscience objective". The new order Cezanne created for painting involved simultaneously an order of gestures and colors upon the flat canvas and, at the same time a reading of these gestures in terms of depth, movement and so on. As a counterpoint to the order of flatness there is the order of a multiplicity of planes, area and regions in perceptual space which form a dramatic counterpoint with what we expect to see - thus the foreground should be closer that the trunk of a pine yet it is simultaneously further away and patch of green shares both in the immediate foreground and the distant plane in the background. What I now saw is the way in which this is informed by, and recreates such an intense symphony of internal sensations and movements. Again, as with the composer Tippett, there is such tension in this, this holding onto the feelings. I quote Cezanne again - "always with me the realization of my sensations is always painful. I cannot attain the intensity that is unfolded before my senses." This recalls a letter I had from the English painter, David Andrew. He felt that nature "looked him", that is, looks at itself through him so that "art is nature in action." The art of painting for him was an act of dreaming where, in a series of paintings, forms emerge, shift, transform and crystalize. The environment "knows" him and paints itself though him. and here I should add this is work is not purely representational since he is not so much responding to external object but to, I quote, "the vibration of related bodily sensations". Projective Identification Likewise nature thought itself through Cezanne and his painting became the objective expression of the "sensations" he experienced. I, in turn, standing before his painting experience those sensations, the same sense of the motif becoming conscious and thinking itself. This invites me what to explore what psychotherapists call "projective identification". Mental projections are normally spoken of as taking place onto a blank screen. Something within the therapist triggers a projection in which the supposedly objective therapist is now perceived as the patient's father or some other figure from childhood. The perceptive therapist must contain the transference and use its energy in the patient's process of healing. Over recent years I have talked to therapists about their experiences of projective identification often they will tell me about that one case which stuck them deeply and posessed some numinous, troubling or inexplicable element. The accounts they gave me suggested the actual projection of certain contents of consciousness, an aspect of the self with all its memories, feelings, intentions and so on, from one mind to the other. In such instances they had direct access to bizarre feelings, memories, knowledge and attitudes - either in dreams or during a therapeutic session. On later reflection they realize these lay beyond their own experience and could only have come from the patient. Probably "projection" is not the correct word for what is happening in such cases. It does appear as if, for a short period of time, consciousness is shared and that the duality between matter and mind is transcended. Although its origins may like in neurosis I wonder if it is a profoundly creative act. Let me give you a metaphor. In chemistry there are certain reactions - such as the combination of oxygen and hydrogen to form water - that cannot take place at room temperature. The reason is that a barrier of energy must be first overcome in order for the molecules to rearrange their geometry before they can react. This energy barrier can be overcome if a catalyst is used. Molecules adsorb on the surface of a catalyst, such as platinum, where they temporarily borrow a little energy, rearranging themselves until they interact. When they leave the catalyst they pay this energy back. Another role played by the surface of the catalyst is to slow things down and give the molecules time to meet and interact. Suppose something has become fixed in a person's life, they are unable to move, unable to increase the dimension of their life. They are closed and stunted in their growth. By themselves they do not have sufficient energy to bring about a restructuring of the psyche. But suppose that such contents can be projected onto or shared with the mind of the therapist. The therapist is temporarily possessed by this sub-personality but in such a contained way that it can, for the first time, be observed in a dispassionate manner by the patient. In this manner the patient and therapist generate the energy necessary to being about a transformation of the psychic material to the point where it an be reabsorbed by the patient and structured a new and more flexible way. I speculate that this process is far more universal than we may belive. It happens not only at the level of pure psyche but also with matter. It is what is present in Cezanne's paintings and in what Anish Kapoor felt as an actual physical alchemical transformation of pigment and stone in truly successful work. It is as if mind, sensation, consciousness - call it what you will - enter the material realm and cause it to transform. I think here of alchemy in the Sufi tradition, at least as conveyed to me by the Islamic scholar William Chiddick. The great work of renewal takes place within the womb of matter. It moves though the long processes of purification, separation, distillation and so on. It involves the use of fire and the containment within the athanor. As Carl Jung realized, the operations of alchemy have a metaphorical relationship to those of individuation of the psyche. Islamic mystics speak of polishing the mirror, that organ of perception within the heart that must be cleaned until it perfectly reflects the light of creation. Thus the goal of alchemy is not so much to produce gold but to bring about an inner transformation in which the mirror is finally cleansed and the world is seen for what it truly is - pure gold. Carl Jung stopped at this point but the alchemical mystics went further. They realized that at the deepest level matter and spirit, body and soul, can never be separated. Thus, if the inner world transforms then so must the outer. The external, physical transformation of base metal into gold becomes as real, as actual, as the inner transformation of the psyche. Now I am aware that all this may sound a little crazy. Producing actual gold. Paintings that contain consciousness. The matter of the world changing spirit. Have I fallen victim to inflation? Have I been spending too much time in that mountain top village in Italy? Is my mind filled with fairy stories? It is perfectly possible to explain all this without ever leaving the world Cartesian duality. One could talk about the connection between inner muscular tensions and emotional states, and their representation in terms of gestures on a canvas. In this sense states of consciousness could indeed be encoded within a painting and available for others to "read". Now I happen to think that this is quite true, that complex internal states can indeed be encoded within art and music as gestures, forms and so on. But that may not be the total story. After all if a dream, in Freudian theory, is overdetermined and capable of many different readings, all of them in a sense valid, then why not reality itself? As the Spanish playwright Calderon put it, "life is a dream". The symbolist Albert Aurier wrote "isn't a literature of a dream a literature of true life"; or the philosopher Hippolyte Taine "Our external perception is an internal dream which is found in harmony with external things....instead of saying that hallucination is false external perception, it is necessary to say that external perception is true hallucination". For David Andrew an aspect of this hallucination that is reality is the act of painting, an active dreaming in which nature come to know him "my loves, my fears, my joys, my sorrows" and to express its essence through him. Art, for him, is nature in action. Shakespeare dumped them all together "the lunatic, the lover and the poet", all slightly mad yet all operating with a heightened perception that can be curiously infectious, enabling us to see the world, reality, in new ways. The painter Patrick Heron argues that the function of painting is to enable us to see the world and that someone like Cezanne allows us to see the world in a new way. "The actual 'objective' appearance of things is something that does not exist - or rather, it exists as data that is literally infinite in its complexity and subtlety, in the variety and multiplicity of its configurations". He goes on to say that the mind injects order into that amorphous cloud of visual stimuli and that the origin of this order lies in painting. I would go further all the arts - and this goes back to societies in which there was no distinction between religion and ritual and theatre, song, dance and decoration - all create the order in which we can live, the sense of meaning that we can all share. At times the artist must renew this order, at other times transform it. This order, I believe, fundamentally exists in a realm that transcends our distinctions between matter and mind, body and spirit. And so I will allow painting, music and all such acts of creation and renewal to be overdetermined and containing within them a multiplicity of levels of meaning and being. Nature perceives itself, it comes to know the artist and the artist manifests this act of feeling though the transformation of matter. Creativity is the marriage of matter and spirit, a mutual inner transformation in which the individual, society, nature and matter at times become renewed and at times take on new meanings and structures. I am sure that if a hard nosed physicist where listening he would reject what I am saying. But he would also be forced to acknowledge that the germs of such ideas are already in the air - an germs he would certainly think they are! The biologist Rupert Sheldrake has long been offending orthodoxy with his notion of morphogenetic fields that guide everything from the growth of crystals to the instincts of animals and the structure of human languages. Wile I may have some problems with the specifics of Sheldrake's proposal I do think that there is something very interesting in what he says - particularly in that these fields transcend the traditional divisions between what is considered to be matter and what is considered to be mind, memory and behaviour There was also the physicist David Bohm who proposed the notion of what he termed "Active Information". According to Bohm the electron, or any other elementary particle, is guided by a field of information. Guided in the sense that an ocean liner, powered by great engines, will change its direction under the influence of the tiny amount of energy inherent in a radar signal. For Bohm Information is not simply a passive record of facts but a physical activity within nature. It is a field of information about the structure and configuration of the universe. In turn the activity of this information gives form to - literally "in-forms: the processes and movements of matter. Bohm developed such ideas at the quantum level but believed that the concept extended to all levels. It is as if a new principle has been added to physics. Once there was matter and energy. Now there is matter, energy and information. There is a field of information, or meaning, the human body in health. There is even a field of information for human society. Other researchers have proposed related ideas. As far as I am concerned as scientific notions they remain only half formed. A great deal more thought and investigation is needed before a really significant break though can be attempted. But I do believe that this cloud of ideas probably contains a significant insight. It suggests that science is about to enter a new region in which it must learn to face Pauli's "subjective side to matter." At all events such ideas are in the air and, if the Native Americans, are to be believed then ideas are beings; being just waiting for someone to have make them incarnate. Or, as they said in the Middle Ages "the angels love to sing to us. We simply have to learn to be silent in order to hear their song." For me the angel's song can be found both within the world of spirit and deep within the inscape of the natural world. Art & Science | Carl Jung | Native American | Spirit Top | Books | Essays | Documentaries | Fiction | Home | Ideas Contact F. David Peat This site designed and maintained by Marcel Gordon
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at such other addresses as may be hereafter furnished by one party to the other party in writing. Shipper: Caprock: (Statements & Payments) Caprock Pipeline Company ATTN: GAS ACCOUNTING 333 Clay Street, Suite 2000 (Other Correspondence) ATTN: CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Agreement is executed as of the date first hereinabove written. "Caprock" By: __________________________________ Its: __________________________________ "Shipper"
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Brandon Saine, RB, N/A Tags: Brandon Saine, N/A, Free Agent
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5994
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- Glass Dynamics of Reentrant Tachycardia Leon GlassMcGill University of a lecture given at the Fields Institute on December 12, 2003 as part of the Workshop on Bifurcation Theory and Spatio-Temporal Pattern Formation.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/5995
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TUF heavyweight clash Dec. 5! The live finale of The Ultimate Fighter®: Heavyweights on Spike TV will include two bouts showcasing four of the UFC’s rising stars. Emanating from The Pearl at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, NV on Saturday, Dec. 5 at 9:00 PM ET, the co-features announced today include a light heavyweight bout between Jon Jones and Matt Hamill and a lightweight matchup pitting Frankie Edgar against Kurt Pellegrino. Tickets for The Ultimate Fighter® 10 Finale are $500, $350 and $250, plus any additional box office or service fees, and go on-sale Saturday, Oct. 17 at 12pm PT. Please visit any Ticketmaster location, call 800-745-3000 or visit www.ticketmaster.com to purchase tickets. UFC® Fight Club™ members will have the opportunity to purchase tickets to The Ultimate Fighter® 10 Finale Thursday, Oct. 15 at 10 a.m. PT via the website UFCFIGHTCLUB.com. A special Internet ticket pre-sale will be available to UFC newsletter subscribers Friday, Oct. 16 starting at 10 a.m. PT. To access this presale, users must register for the UFC newsletter through UFC.com. Despite being one of the youngest fighters in the UFC, the 22 year-old Jones has emerged as one of the fastest rising talents in the sport of mixed martial arts. The Endicott, NY resident has a perfect 9-0 professional record, with his last three victories coming inside the UFC Octagon™, the most notable of which was a unanimous decision over Stephan Bonnar at UFC 94 in January. Hamill (8-2) gained national attention as a standout performer on season three of The Ultimate Fighter. The three-time NCAA wrestling champion with a devastating ground game has won his last two bouts in the UFC, including a knockout of Mark Munoz in the first round of their contest at UFC 96 in March. This light heavyweight bout will also be a battle for bragging rights in upstate New York, as Hamill trains in Utica. Coming off an impressive victory over Sean Sherk at UFC 98 in May, Edgar (10-1) now ranks amongst the top 155 lb fighters in the UFC. To continue his quest for BJ Penn’s lightweight crown, the Toms River, NJ product must defeat fellow New Jersey resident, Kurt Pellegrino. The pride of Point Pleasant, NJ, Pellegrino (20-4) is coming off the biggest win of his career, a three-round decision victory over Josh Neer at UFC 101 in August. His third consecutive win in the Octagon put him in the upper echelon of the 155 lb division, and a victory against Edgar would move him ever-closer to a title shot. Other bouts, including the finals of “The Ultimate Fighter: Heavyweights,” will be announced at a later date. The two finalists will be competing for a six-figure contract with the preeminent mixed martial arts organization in the world, The Ultimate Fighting Championship®.
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Find all Masons in: • Rockwell Cemetery • Dunnellon Birth: 1725Death: Oct. 7, 1792Influential American Patriot who helped gain support for the American Revolution and helped write the Constitution of the United States. Born in Virginia in 1725, the son of George and Ann Thomson Mason. When he was ten years old, his father died, and his uncle, John Mercer, raised him. His education was profoundly influenced by his uncle's 1500 volume library, of which nearly one third were about the law. Mason inherited Gunston Hall, one of the richest plantations in colonial Virginia. In 1750, he married Anna Eilbeck, and together they had five sons and four daughters. In 1752, he acquired an interest in the Ohio Company, an organization that speculated in western lands by outfitting settlers and accepting a portion of their crops and fur trappings as payment on the loans. In 1773, the British crown revoked the rights of colonists to settle in Ohio, reserving these lands to the Indians and instantly destroying the wealth of the Ohio Company. Mason, the company treasurer, wrote his first major state paper, "Extracts from the Virginia Charter" attempting to regain the rights to settlement in Ohio. In 1754, he became a justice of the Fairfax County court, and in 1759, he became a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses (one of the first colonial parliaments). In 1765, he opposed the Stamp Act, and wrote an open letter explaining the colonist's position to a committee of London merchants, trying to obtain their support. In 1774, he assisted in the drawing up of the Fairfax Resolves, a document that outlined colonial objections to the closing of Boston Harbor (the closing was in retribution to the Boston Tea Party). In 1775, he helped write Virginia's Declaration of Rights, which was used in part by Thomas Jefferson to write the Declaration of Independence, and was later used as the basis for the Constitution's Bill of Rights (the first ten amendments to the Constitution). His influence is seen in the 1783 Peace Treaty with Great Britain, which established the American/British Boundary at the Great Lakes, instead of the Ohio River. After independence, Mason wrote the plan for Virginia's cession of its claim to western lands. In 1780, he remarried after the death of his first wife, to Sarah Brent. In 1787, he was a delegate and frequent speaker at the Constitution Convention, exerting great influence, especially in the later drafting of the Bill of Rights, a document that protected individual rights. He believed in the separation of church and state, and was a strong proponent of individual rights over the power of the government. He favored popular elections of government officials, unrestricted admission of new western states, and a three-part government. Although a slaveholder, he was appalled by the institution, feeling that "every slave master is born a petty tyrant." He favored abolition of slavery, as soon as economically feasible, and supported a halt to future importation of slaves into America. Although initially a leader of the Anti-Federalists (those opposed to the Constitution), he changed his mind and supported the Constitution after the Bill of Rights was adopted. In recognition to his dedication to his principles during the Age of Reason, he was called the American Manifestation of the Enlightenment. Mason died in Virginia on 7 October 1792, and was buried on the grounds of Gunston Hall. (bio by: Kit and Morgan Benson) Family links: Parents: George Mason (1690 - 1735) Ann Thomson Mason (1699 - 1762) Spouse: Anna Eilbeck Mason (1734 - 1773) Children: Sarah Eilbeck Mason McCarty (1760 - 1823)* John Mason (1766 - 1849)* Sibling: George Mason (1725 - 1792) Mary Thomson Mason Seldon (1731 - 1758)* *Calculated relationship Burial: Rockwell Cemetery DunnellonMarion CountyFlorida, USA Maintained by: Find A GraveRecord added: Jan 01, 2001 Find A Grave Memorial# 681 Added by: Ron Williams There are 2 more photos not showing...Click here to view all images...Photos may be scaled.Click on image for full size. May GOD Bless you as you have blessed us kin all so very well!- Jonathan Robert De Mallie Added: Mar. 7, 2014 - chevydelray55 Added: Feb. 18, 2014
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Miami Marlins History This Day in Marlins History: Happy birthday, Kevin Millar! By Rob Willer On this day in Marlins History Kevin Millar turns 42 years old. Millar spent the early part of his career with the Marlins and now is the co-host of Intentional Talk on MLB Network. Share with Marlins friends + On this date in Marlins history, September 24th, 2013, former Marlin Kevin Millar turns 42 years old. Millar began his professional career with the St. Paul Saints of the Northern League, who are a part of the American Association, an independent minor league baseball league. Finally on September 20, 1993, Millar was purchased by the Florida Marlins. He finally got his shot in the big leagues at the age of 26, when he had a short stint with the Fish. Millar went on to play five major league seasons with the Marlins from 1998 to 2002. During that five-year stretch, Millar would go on to have arguably the best stretch of his career, excluding his MVP-like season in 2003 with the Red Sox. His greatest season with the Marlins was 2001 where his slash line was .314/.374/.557, good for a .931 OPS. After five years with the Marlins, Millar became too expensive for the Marlins, as he was due for a new contract. Millar then took to Japan after he was sold to the Chunichi Dragons and signed a two-year contract for $6.2 million. During his five-week stint, Millar had second thoughts about leaving Major League Baseball and was determined to make his return. The Red Sox broke an unwritten rule on a waiver claim of Millar but MLB still awarded him to the Red Sox. They agreed to pay the fee for Millar's termination of his contract with the Dragons. Ironically, he would leave the eventual World Series champion Marlins of 2003 but would get his revenge in 2004. In the 2004 LCS against the Yankees, MIllar earned the pivotal walk to set the stage for Bill Mueller's game-tying single against Mariano Rivera. After winning the World Series with Red Sox in 2004 he would play with two more clubs the Baltimore Orioles and Toronto Blue Jays in the final four years of his career. Millar announced his retirement on April 21, 2010 from the Major Leagues. On May 20, 2010, Millar also joined New England Sports Network (NESN) as a pre-game and post-game analyst. On May 22, 2010, Millar made his debut for Fox Sports and its MLB on Fox Saturday telecasts. He served as a pre-game, game break, and post-game analyst for its primetime games in the studio, as well as a fill-in color analyst for select games during the season. Currently Millar has switched over to the MLB Network and has joined forces with Chris Rose who co-host the show Intentional Talk. To one of the Marlins greats we wish him a happy birthday from our community here at Fish Stripes!
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| Archive Center View All Archives | Printable Version NOTICE OF WORK SESSION AND SPECIAL EXECUTIVE SESSION OF THE FLAGSTAFF CITY COUNCIL PURSUANT TO A.R.S. §38-431.02, as amended, NOTICE IS HEREBY given to the general public that the Flagstaff City Council will hold a Special Work Session open to the public on Tuesday, September 6, 2011, at 3:30 p.m. The meeting will be held in either the Council Chambers (First Floor) or the Staff Conference Room (Second Floor) at CITY HALL which is located at 211 West Aspen Avenue, Flagstaff, Arizona. The Council at that time will decide whether to hold an Executive Session at said time and location as authorized by A.R.S. §38-431.03(A). Should the Council convene into Executive Session, that meeting will be closed to the public. THE FOLLOWING IS THE AGENDA FOR THE MEETING: Call to Order. Roll Call: PRESLER , BABBOTT, BAROTZ, BREWSTER, EVANS, OVERTON, AND WHITE, One or more Councilmembers may be in attendance telephonically or by other technological means. Consideration of Convening into Executive Session Pursuant to Authority Under: A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(1) (PERSONNEL) A.R.S. § (EXEMPT RECORDS) X (LEGAL ADVICE) X (LITIGATION; CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS) A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(5) (EMPLOYEE NEGOTIATIONS) A.R.S. § (INTERNATIONAL/INTERSTATE NEGOTIATIONS) X (PROPERTY NEGOTIATIONS) SESSION AGENDA Discussion or Consultation with the City's Attorneys for Legal Advice Concerning an Employment Claim: A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(3) (Legal Advice) and A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(4)(Litigation). the City’s Attorneys for Legal Advice Regarding the Presidio in the Pines Homeowner’s Complaint; and Bankruptcy Matters Related Public Improvements, Performance Bonds, and Proposed Surety Completion Agreement: A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(3) (Legal Advice) and A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(4) (Litigation, Contract the City’s Attorneys and Discussion or Consultation with the City’s Representatives in Order to Consider its Position and give Instruction in Regard to Negotiations for a Ground Lease Agreement of Real Property for the Community Land Trust Program in the 400 Block of Butler Avenue: A.R.S. § 38-431.03(A)(3) (Legal Advice) and A.R.S. 38-431.03(A)(7) (Property Negotiations). Dated this day of 1st day of
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News Slices: 2009 FCAT Reading, Math and Science Results Highlight Increases in Student Achievement Summer Reading List Encourages Exploration of Florida�s State Parks Literacy Program Seeking Volunteers Sudanese �Lost Boy� Graduates From Pasco-Hernando Community College Seminole Community College Nursing Program To Improve Training in Gerontology Florida Virtual School Launches First-Ever Complete Online Game-Based High School Course Education Secretary Arne Duncan Earmarks Education Grant For Displaced Workers Seeds of Success: Statewide Reading Leader Awards Santa Rosa County Elementary School Recognized as HealthierUS Challenge School Three Florida Students Receive Vocational Youth Exchange Scholarships Branching Out: 2009 SACS CASI Summer Conference Florida Reading Association 47th Annual Conference Florida School Counselor Association 2009 Annual Convention Leadership of Mathematics & Science Curriculum, Instruction & Assessment Statewide Conference Vol. 3, Issue 11 News Slices 2009 FCAT Reading, Math and Science Results Highlight Increases in Student Achievement A greater percentage of Florida students are performing at or above grade level in reading and mathematics compared to all test years since 2001, according to the 2009 Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) results released. Additionally, more students in grades 5 and 8 are performing at or above grade level in science compared with previous years. The results also indicate a closing of the achievement gap between minority and White students in elementary reading, as well as middle and high school math. To learn more, visit http://www.fldoe.org/news/2009/2009_05_28.asp. Summer Reading List Encourages Exploration of Florida�s State Parks In celebration of World Environment Day June 5, the Florida Department of Education (DOE) and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) announced a recommended summer reading list that promotes the beauty and adventure found in many of Florida�s natural wonders. Selections in the list provide a focus on Florida�s State Parks but also offer information about other unique ecological settings. To view the reading list or to learn more about Florida�s State Parks, visit www.fldoe.org. Literacy Program Seeking Volunteers Great Shape! Inc. is currently recruiting educators to volunteer in rural schools in Jamaica. SuperKids is a literacy empowerment program aimed at helping thousands of Jamaican children learn how to read at an appropriate level. The project dates are Nov. 7- 22, 2009. Last year, SuperKids improved literacy in seven schools in the Ocho Rios area. To learn more about this opportunity, visit http://www.gsjamaica.org/. Sudanese �Lost Boy� Graduates From Pasco-Hernando Community College Life has taken David Ghai from a burning village in war-torn Sudan to a refugee camp, and eventually to the United States. Now after four years of study, he has graduated from Pasco-Hernando Community College. Ghai arrived in the Tampa Bay area in his early 20s when he arrived in 2003 with the second wave of Sudanese Lost Boys. The �Lost Boys� of Sudan are composed of thousands of boys who were displaced or orphaned during the Second Sudanese Civil War. Seminole Community College Nursing Program To Improve Training in Gerontology Seminole Community College�s (SCC) Nursing Program has been selected to help improve students� knowledge in the care of older adults. Two SCC faculty members, Sheron Rowe, and Leslie Lorette, will join a panel of experts recruited by Community College of Philadelphia, which has partnered with the National League for Nursing, to develop a set of standards for enhancing student expertise in geriatric care. The three-year effort is being funded by a $600,000 grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation. Florida Virtual School Launches First-Ever Complete Online Game-Based High School Course Students who struggle to stay engaged in the traditional classroom will welcome the release of Conspiracy Code, the first-ever series of online game-based courses, released by Florida Virtual School and 360Ed, Inc., an education game development company. These new courses, presented in 3D, combine instructional practices and academic content with the latest in online gaming tools to produce an active learning environment for high school students. The first Conspiracy Code course to be released is for American History. This complete high school-level course fulfills a full credit of history and will be available in June 2009. Those interested in arranging a detailed demonstration of the American History course should e-mail to Erik Sand at esand@360Ed.com. The federal government is launching a $7 million grant program to help kick-start training to prepare laid-off autoworkers and other unemployed people for a second career, Education Secretary Arne Duncan said. The grants will provide initial funds for community colleges and other organizations that help adults develop new career skills. The programs will provide services such as tutoring, academic and career counseling, or may remove financial constraints for adults returning to school. Duncan said, for community colleges or other educational groups to secure a grant, they'll have to show the ability to collaborate and establish programs that will last after the grant expires. The Education Department will take applications immediately and plans to award 28 grants by mid-September. More information about the grant will be published in the Federal Register at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/. Seeds of Success Statewide Reading Leader Awards The Florida Department of Education congratulates the state winners for the 2009 Just Read, Florida! Literacy Leader, Reading Teacher, Reading Coach, and Reading Leadership Team of the Year for district, elementary, middle, and high schools. All winners were honored by Just Read, Florida! staff at special ceremonies at their district or schools throughout the month of May. To see the winners, visit http://www.fldoe.org/SuccessStories/2008/07-15.asp. Santa Rosa County Elementary School Recognized as HealthierUS Challenge School The Food Service Department of W.H. Rhodes Elementary School in Santa Rosa County has received the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Silver HealthierUS School Challenge award. The USDA established the HealthierUS School Challenge as a way to recognize exceptional elementary schools that are creating healthier school environments through innovative menu planning and the promotion of good nutrition and physical activity. For the full story, visit http://www.fldoe.org/SuccessStories/2009/05-26.asp. Three graduating high school seniors from Florida will have an opportunity to live in Germany as part of the Congress-Bundestag Vocational Youth Exchange Program. Students Ryan Kelly and Christopher Szczerba, Jr., both from Titusville High School, and Austin S. Miles from Melbourne High School, will live with a host family to learn more about the German language and culture. Additionally, these students will gain hands-on work experience through an internship with a German company. To learn more about the program, visit http://www.fldoe.org/SuccessStories/2009/05-28.asp. 2009 SACS CASI Summer Conference The Florida Hotel & Conference Center The 2009 Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Council on Accreditation and School Improvement (SACS CASI) Summer Conference will be held June 15-16, 2009 at the Florida Hotel & Conference Center in Orlando, Fla. Participants will have an opportunity to learn more about school improvement, accreditation Processes, preparation for the SACS CASI Quality Assurance Review (QAR) team visit, and qualifying for a QAR team. To register or to learn more, visit www.advanc-ed.org/florida. Florida Reading Association 47th Annual Conference Shingle Creek Resort The Florida Reading Association�s 47th Annual Conference, Reading: Rockets You to the Future will be held Sept. 10-13, 2009, at the Shingle Creek Resort in Orlando, Fla. Topic areas will span PreK-12 grade and will cover all aspects of literacy. Literacy leaders such as Dr. Janet Allen, Dr. Richard Gentry, Dr. Judith Irvin, and Dr. Dorothy Strickland will be presenting sessions. To learn more, visit www.flreads.org. Florida School Counselor Association 2009 Annual Convention: Oct. 29 - 31, 2009 Renaissance Orlando Resort at SeaWorld The most focused program in school counseling in Florida, the 2009 Florida School Counselor Association Convention will be delivered by thoughtful leaders from Florida and throughout the United States. The hottest and most relevant topics will be explored by leading industry advocates, state officials, counselor educators and, most importantly, professional school counselors. To learn more or to reserve your hotel, visit http://www.fla-schoolcounselor.org/. Leadership of Mathematics & Science Curriculum, Instruction & Assessment Statewide Conference Oct. 20-22, 2009 Schultz Center for Teaching and Learning Jacksonville, Fla The Florida Center for Research in Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (FCR-STEM) has teamed up with the Duval County School District to host a three-day statewide conference for district instructional leaders, school principals/assistant principals, and district mathematics/science coordinators. The Leadership of Mathematics & Science Curriculum, Instruction & Assessment Statewide Conference will be held Oct. 20-22, 2009, in Jacksonville, Fla. To learn more, or to register, visit http://www.lsi.fsu.edu/. To subscribe or unsubscribe to The Core, click here. For more information on this electronic newsletter, please e-mail thecore@fldoe.org.
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Media Center | Employee Directory | Publications | Consumer | Education | Research | Home > Education > K-12 > EnergyWhiz Olympics > B.A.T. Mobile Challenge > Rules B.A.T. Mobile Challenge The B.A.T. Mobile Challenge consists of two parts–design judging and a double elimination race. Design Judging Car Design Judging Each team must submit their BAT Mobile to FSEC the day of the event. The car will remain impounded until the scheduled time when the racing begins. During impoundment, selected judges will review each car for its quality, precision, durability, design concept, and safety. Design Document Judging Each team must provide a Design Document for their car before being allowed to compete. The Design Document is not a daily journal. it is an engineering schematic. The Design Document must include: team member names specifications of final vehicle (size, weight, wheel size, gear ratio, etc.) component list--all parts purchased for your vehicle (including the name of the supplier and the price of the part) design and assembly process greatest obstacles (issues and problems encountered and modifications made) any non team member assistance The Design Document might include: design drawings electrical schematics formulas and calculations used photos taken periodically during construction process anything else the team wants to include for the design judges The Design Document must be printed or written; no electronic copies will be accepted or printed out the day of the event. These documents will not be returned. (Sample judging score sheet) The competition is a time trial followed by an 8-car double elimination. The racetrack is 20 meters long and set up on a hard, flat, smooth surface such as a tennis court and a non-slick vinyl surface is used for the track lanes. Time Trials: During the time trial phase of the race, teams have the opportunity to attempt to have their vehicle drive down the track (a run) up to three times. After each run, the vehicle’s time will be recorded. A ‘DNF’ or ‘Did Not Finish’ will be recorded for vehicles that lose their salt canister, drive off the track, cross into another lane, do not cross the finish line, or are otherwise disqualified. Time trials will be offered every 30 seconds for a given period of time. It is a team’s responsibility to line up and run their vehicle (up to three times) within the time allotted. Any teams in line when the end of the time trial event is called by the judges will not be allowed to run. When ‘Go’ is called, vehicles that do not start moving before the other vehicle reaches the finish will be given a DNF and must be removed from the track immediately. If neither vehicle moves, the teams will be given 20 seconds after ‘Go’ is called before DNF’s are given to both vehicles. Vehicles are then to be promptly removed. The eight teams with the fasted individual run times will move to the head-to-head competition. Head-to-Head Competition: The head-to-head competition is an eight-team, double elimination event. This means that a team must lose twice before being eliminated from the competition. Teams will race against other teams to determine the first, second, and third place winners. The B.A.T. Mobile Challenge ‘kit’ (as distributed by FSEC) contains a lithium ion battery, motor, wiring harness, battery connector, battery recharger, and an A/C adapter. No other batteries motors or wiring harnesses may be used in the competition. Students must use the unaltered battery, wire harness and motor as the only method of powering the car. Motors may not be re-wound or disassembled. Only one battery and one motor is allowed per car. The rest of the car design and components will be up to the creativity and ingenuity of the students. All cars must be designed and built only by the students with limited assistance from the coach, parents, mentors or other non-team student members. The vehicle cannot exceed the following dimensions: 20 cm wide, 40 cm in length, and 20 cm in height. A 3 x 3 cm space must be left for the assigned car number (provided by the Florida Solar Energy Center at event check-in) to be applied and visible from the side, top or front of the body of the car. The vehicle must be designed with a compartment to carry a payload of 1 full salt box (i.e. Morton salt 26oz). The salt box may not be part of the vehicle’s structure. Velcro, tape, or any other adhesive cannot be used to secure the container, however you may use zip ties, rubber bands or string to hold the container on the chassis. The salt box will be supplied at check-in the day of the event, and must remain unaltered. The container can either stand up or lay on its side, however it must remain in the vehicle for the entire race. If the container falls from the vehicle during the race, this will result in a Did Not Finish (DNF). The lithium ion battery can only be recharged with the battery charger provided in the car kit. Electricity to plug in the battery rechargers will be available the day of the event. However teams are encouraged to arrive race day with a full charge. A guide wire attachment, referred to as an eyelet, must be attached to the car. Examples of possible designs are shown below. A 1/16" stainless steel guide wire will be no more than 1.5 cm from the surface of the track. This guide wire will go through the attached eyelet on the car, serving as the steering mechanism, and keeping the car in its lane. The vehicle must be easily removed from the guide wire without disconnecting the guide wire. This is the only allowable method of steering the car. No radio control is permitted in the cars. The eyelet must be used for steering only and must be directly hooked onto the guide wire. Any guide wire attachment or eyelet used should not support the vehicle (such as a grooved spool located on top of the car guiding the car down the track). All wheels must be in contact with the track. The guide wire must be attached to the car throughout the course of the race. If the car disengages from the guide wire, this will result in a DNF. An on/off switch must be present on the vehicle. This switch may be of any design. At race time, the vehicle will be placed behind the starting line and all wheels must be in contact with the ground. An early start or push start will result in a DNF. One team member must wait at the finish line to catch the vehicle upon completion. Team members may not accompany or touch the vehicle after the start has been called. Vehicles stalled on the track may be retrieved after the end of the race has been declared by the judges. Students must not walk on the track. Any car that does not finish in 20 seconds will be considered DNF. Repairs may be made to vehicles as necessary between heats. However, no extra time will be given for repairs, and the race will not be paused for repairs to be completed. Judges may inspect cars at any time before, during or after heats. Modified 11/14/2013 Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Legal Notices
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← Jeffrey A. Bekiares, Constitutional Law: Ratifying Suspicionless Canine Sniffs: Dog Days on the Highways Heidi Kitrosser, Containing Unprotected Speech → Michael W. Carroll, The Struggle for Music Copyright Posted on January 23, 2010 by zhyman 57 Fla. L. Rev. 907 (2005) | | | | INTRODUCTION :: For intellectual property lawyers, the first decade of the twenty-first century is a period of history-in-the-making. This perception is reinforced on a daily basis by rapidly changing digital and biomedical technologies, an increasingly globalized economy, and growing public debate about the appropriate subject matter, scope, and duration of intellectual property rights. In copyright law, the issues generating the most heated debate continue to be those pertaining to the law’s division of rights between producers, distributors, and consumers of music. Indeed, music copyright owners, together with members of the motion picture industry, are the vanguard pushing for unprecedented expansion in the scope of copyright, and these owners are on the offensive on the Internet, in the courts, and in Congress. Notably, the dispute at the heart of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. was instigated by the tens of millions of Internet users exchanging primarily music files over peer-to-peer networks. These copyright-owner initiatives have drawn passionate opposition from a broad coalition of technology companies, consumer activists, and artists’ groups. The coalition argues that, to promote the progress of science, copyright law should be forward-looking and should not be designed to preserve the legacy business models of publishers and other distributors. Moreover, the argument goes, even if incumbent distributors deserve special consideration, they cannot be trusted to know what legal regime would best serve their long-term interests. Exhibit A for both of these arguments is the 1980s dispute over the VCR, culminating in the Supreme Court’s decision in Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc. As is well known, film and television publishers considered the VCR to pose a dire threat to their revenues. Jack Valenti, then-Chairman of the Motion Picture Association of America, famously pronounced, “[t]he VCR is to the motion picture industry and the American public . . . what the Boston strangler is to the woman alone.” As is equally well known, the studios’ predictions about the economic effects of the VCR were drastically wrong. This Article focuses on a similar episode in the evolution of copyright law in which incumbent distributors resisted a legal change that ultimately inured to their benefit. For, ironically, although music copyright owners are among the most aggressive groups seeking to expand the concept of copyright today, their forbears in England resisted the very idea that copyright should apply to music. As this Article relates, music became copyrightable in England primarily through litigation brought by professional composers against music publishers during the eighteenth century. The capstone case was brought by the most famous composer in London at the time, Johann Christian Bach, youngest son of Johann Sebastian Bach and one of the important musical influences for young Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Nearly seventy years after copyright had been invented in England, the Court of King’s Bench ruled that musical compositions also were subject to copyright protection. Within legal scholarship, the struggle for composer’s copyright has been underreported and understudied. Attention to the genesis of music copyright reminds us that copyright was invented to solve a particular problem for book publishers in eighteenth-century England and that the subsequent expansion of copyright’s domain has been neither natural nor inevitable. The concept of author’s rights embodied in copyright law need not extend to all forms of expression. Rather, periodic expansion of the subject matter, scope, or duration of rights under copyright represents outcomes of specific legal and political contests in which the interests of those seeking to broaden copyright generally have prevailed. Current contests, as well as past outcomes, should be evaluated in light of current circumstances, with due attention given to those who gain and lose from the law’s expansion. There are two other reasons why developing a better understanding of music copyright’s evolution matters. A central question for how the law should respond to music copyright owners’ initiatives is whether to focus on the future of copyright law generally or on the future of music copyright more specifically. History is relevant to how this question should be answered. Those engaged in contemporary debates about music copyright often assume that because digital technologies affect the distribution and creation of many kinds of copyrighted works, music is merely the canary in the coal mine for copyright law. On this view, any changes in the law brought about by music disputes should apply uniformly to all forms of expression. Rights in music implicate a wide variety of interests, and copyright law has been tailored time and again to allocate rights in response to particular conditions prevailing in the music business. For that reason, under current U.S. law, the most complex and ornate portions of the Copyright Act are those that apply to music. An understanding of this history supports arguments that current disputes concerning music copyright may be better resolved with tailored solutions rather than through broad changes in copyright law as a whole. History also supplies authority for arguments about how copyright has evolved and should evolve. The importance of an accurate understanding of copyright history was brought into stark relief in the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Eldred v. Ashcroft, in which the Court relied almost entirely on its telling of copyright history to interpret the constitutional provision empowering Congress to create federal copyright law. Rather than address the petitioners’ structural arguments, the Court invoked a Holmesian quip-”a page of history is worth a volume of logic” to hold that Congress’ “unbroken” practice of retrospectively extending the term of copyright rendered that practice constitutional. Importantly, the Eldred Court signaled that copyright history would continue to supply relevant authority in future cases, particularly with respect to any limits the First Amendment might place on rights under copyright. Since disputes about music copyright rank among the most pressing issues of the day in contemporary intellectual property law, it is time that the nuances of music copyright’s evolution be better understood. If the question presented in future cases entails copyright’s governance of music, copyright law’s traditional contours should be ascertained with acknowledgment and understanding of the distinct evolution of music copyright. This Article begins to close the gap in the legal literature concerning the origins and evolution of music copyright by investigating three deceptively simple questions: (1) when did copyright law first apply to music; (2) how did this change in the law occur; and (3) why did it occur. The inquiry proceeds as follows. Section II supplies a brief, theoretical framework for this history and explains the methodology used in gathering the historical data. Economic theory plays an important role in contemporary copyright discussions, and economic theories of how property rights evolve often are explicitly or implicitly relied upon in these conversations. These theories are functionalist and materialist in orientation, and this Article focuses on the relation between changing material circumstances and music copyright’s evolution. While economic theories may partially explain relevant developments, I argue that the methodologies and focus of intellectual history also are deeply relevant to understanding how music became copyrightable subject matter. Section III revisits the invention of copyright in England in 1710 and the struggle for music copyright between professional composers and music publishers during the course of the eighteenth century. A series of unheralded equity cases led to Bach v. Longman, in which the Court of King’s Bench held that printed music was within the first copyright law, the Statute of Anne. Finally, Section IV briefly analyzes certain aspects of the struggle for composer’s copyright and relates these to contemporary debates about music copyright. This entry was posted in Copyright Law, Intellectual Property, Uncategorized and tagged Bach, Bach v. Longman, Carroll, copyright law, eldred v. Ashcroft, globalized economy, Holmesian quip, intellectual property, internet users, Jack Valenti, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc v. Grokster, Motion Picture Association of America, Music Copyright, Musical Compositions, peer to peer networks, Technological development, VCR. Bookmark the permalink. Tweet Filed In: Copyright Law, Intellectual Property, Uncategorized Tags: Bach, Bach v. Longman, Carroll, copyright law, eldred v. Ashcroft, globalized economy, Holmesian quip, intellectual property, internet users, Jack Valenti, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc v. Grokster, Motion Picture Association of America, Music Copyright, Musical Compositions, peer to peer networks, Technological development, VCR
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Florida Trend Icon - Don Francisco - Florida Trend Florida Icon Icon: Don Francisco Mario Kreutzberger/Don Francisco, 65, TV host, Miami-based Mike Vogel | 6/1/2006 I was a big fan of Johnny Carson. I did documentaries in 168 countries during the 40 years. I had the opportunity to interview Golda Meier, Bush, the other Bush, Indira Gandhi, big people in politics, in Hollywood. I do a telethon for handicapped children. We've built 11 hospitals, and we have raised over $250 million in 40 years. I got the idea for the telethon from Jerry Lewis. When you're 45, you think you're going to end at 50. When you reach that time, you like to stretch it. It's not a money question. It's being happy. It's feeling that you can do something, right? The audience, they retire you. When your program doesn't appeal to the majority of the audience, then they tell you, 'My friend, that's it.' You have to be prepared for that, but you're never prepared. In my 44 years, I was not in the show only one time, when my mother passed away. I have Type 2 diabetes. I try to control that. This is a work that's 24 hours a day, every day. It's not that you have to work always, but you have to think, you have to be creative, you have to find always new segments. I'm Jewish. I was in a Jewish club. I was doing an impression of a Jewish guy that couldn't speak Spanish well. I had a big stomach -- they put me with feathers like a pillow here -- and I was telling jokes. That was Don Francisco. I went one day to a contestant program, and they asked me what's my name? 'My name is Mario Kreutzberger.' That's a very difficult pronunciation in Spanish. The host said, 'You don't have another name?' And I said, 'Don Francisco.' That night I won, and I'm very superstitious. I'm a quiet person. Tags: Florida Icon, Around Florida In case you missed it: Lucy Morgan is a 'Florida Icon' Donald Goodman is a 'Florida Icon' Ed Droste is a 'Florida Icon' Ray Ferrero Jr. - Florida Icon
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General Question Would you be more relaxed if you did your work from home? Asked by Zacky (793 A job can be very stressful for everyone. Makes sense that a person can work from home to rid themselves of that stress. Share Question No. The lack of face to face social interactions would make me go a bit loopy. I hire a lot of people who have the option of either working at home or working in our office. You’d be surprised how many of them either refuse to work from home, or try it out, then come back. Others really love it, but the majority prefer working in our office. juwhite1 Flag as… Many people also experience a much more difficult time creating a work-life balance when work is at home.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/6005
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FMU hosts NanYa international lectures, featuring State Department representative, foreign dignitaries, and FMU professors FLORENCE -- Francis Marion University will host the NanYa International Lecture Series April 5, 7 and 8 to focus on world population pressure issues and implications of the Pacific Rim’s rise as a new global power center. The series will begin Monday, April 5, with visiting U.S. State Department foreign dignitaries meeting with students in various FMU classes. Suzanne Petroni, a U.S. State Department representative, accompanied by foreign dignitaries from Mexico, India and Nigeria will be present at a luncheon on April 5 and will participate in discussions regarding the world’s rising population and related issues. The group will meet with selected area businessmen, faculty and students at a dinner at 6 p.m. in the Ervin Dining Hall and a panel discussion on population issues will begin at 7 p.m. The lecture series was made possible by a gift from NanYa Plastics Corp. Nine foreign dignitaries are visiting three sites in the United States through a U.S. Information Agency (USIA) two-week program. The program is designed to share U.S. perspectives with representatives of non-governmental, community-based organizations. The representatives visiting the U.S. were chosen from among delegates who are attending the 32nd session of the United Nations Commission on Population and Development March 24-31. Groups of three dignitaries are traveling to Columbia and Florence; Des Moines, Iowa; and Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz. during April 4-7. The visitors are to visit health clinics serving the disadvantaged and to learn about and contribute to academic perspectives and approaches to population and development issues. Visiting South Carolina are Nirupama Sarma of India, a representative of the Center for Development and Population Activities; Maria Antonieta Alcalde of Mexico, a representative of Elige, a youth network for sexual and reproductive rights; and Patrick Odin of Nigeria, a representative of the Association for Reproductive and Family Health. On Wednesday, April 7, the evening’s lecture and panel discussions will focus on Taiwan. A reception will be held at 5 p.m. in the Cauthen Education Media Center (CEMC) Lecture Hall - Reception Area, and a panel discussion will follow in the lecture hall at 6:30 p.m., featuring FMU faculty. Panelists will discuss business, economic, scientific, and technological implications of the rise of the Pacific Rim as a new global power center. At 8 p.m., a cultural celebration focusing on Taiwan will be held in the Lecture Hall. On Thursday, April 8 the evening lecture and panel discussions will focus on Japan. Again, the evening will begin with a 5 p.m. reception in the CEMC Lecture Hall - Reception Area, and a panel discussion by FMU faculty will follow at 6:30 p.m. in the CEMC Lecture Hall. Panelists will discuss political, military, societal, and cultural implications of the rising power of the Pacific Rim countries and at 8 p.m. a cultural celebration focusing on Japan will be held. Moderator for the panel discussions will be Ed Freedman, associate professor of mass communication at FMU. FMU faculty panelists discussing business and economic implications of the Pacific Rim’s rise as a global power will be Barry O’Brien, associate professor of economics; and Ash Dhir, assistant professor of management. Panelists discussing scientific and technological implications will be Peter King, assistant professor of biology, and David Peterson, professor of physics. FMU faculty panelists discussing political and military implications for the area’s rise to power will be John Britton, Suzanne Lucas and Benjamin Pratt Gasque Professor of History; and David Xu, assistant professor of history. Panelists discussing societal and cultural implications will be Mark Scarbecz, associate professor of sociology; Kevin Lasher, assistant professor of political science; and Ken Autry, associate professor of English. Events are open to FMU students, faculty & staff, and the general public. Please telephone Professor Dhir for more information about the International Lecture Series at 843-661-1417. Discussions will be taped for later viewing on the Time Warner Cable Access Channel 11. #238 / 3.99 Last Published: June 25, 2004 7:19 AM
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/6006
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DuRant Athletic Scholarship Established at FMU FLORENCE, S.C. – Francis Marion University athletic officials have announced the establishment of the Joseph B. DuRant Athletic Scholarship, honoring the late Florence philanthropist. A $50,000 donation by the DuRant family will endow the scholarship, which will assist a student-athlete at FMU. Preference will be given to student-athletes from Florence County who have attained a grade point average of 2.5 or higher. Repeat awards will be available for a recipient who meets the scholarship criteria. The amount of the scholarship will vary. The FMU athletic program sponsors 14 intercollegiate sports, seven each for men and women. The recipient may be a member of any of the 14 squads. The university also named its annual intercollegiate volleyball tournament in honor of DuRant, as well as placing signage honoring the Lake City native in the Smith University Center. DuRant died in February 2003 at the age of 96. A graduate of Furman University, he taught in Florence area schools. He later became a contractor and developer. He was presented with the Order of the Palmetto in 1997, and was awarded the key to the city of Florence. DuRant previously made several other donations to Francis Marion, including an endowed academic scholarship and real estate. His donations also supported many Florence area organizations. “The Patriot athletic program will greatly benefit from the generosity of the DuRant family,” said FMU athletic director Murray Hartzler. “He supported the university in many different ways, and we are grateful that he decided to extend his giving to the athletic program. Gifts like this allow us to be competitive on the NCAA Division II national level.” #27/10-1-04 Last Published: December 16, 2004 9:23 AM
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/6007
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Cheez-It Baked Snack Crackers (9 oz) Found In: Snack Foods » Crackers/Bites Brand: Cheez-It Manufactured by: Kellogg Company Allergens: Flour Enriched (Wheat Flour, Niacin, Iron Reduced, Thiamine Mononitrate (Vitamin B1), Vitamin B1, Riboflavin (Vitamin B2), Vitamin B2, Folic Acid (Vitamin aB)) , Soybean(s) Oil, Palm Oil, TBHQ, Cheese Skim Milk (Milk Skim, Whey Protein, Cheese Cultures, Salt, Enzyme(s), Annatto Extract Color) , Salt Contains 2% or less of the Following: (, Paprika, Yeast, Paprika Oleoresin color(s), Soy Lecithin Ingredient Color Key: Serving Size: 27 Crackers Generally considered non-toxic if under 75mg daily. Higher doses can cause abdominal cramps, vomiting & diarrhea. Severe overdoses of iron can be fatal.Ingredient InformationThiamine Mononitrate (Vitamin B1)Vitamin B-1, Perfectly safe, despite adding minuscule amounts of nitrate to our food.Ingredient InformationVitamin B1 Vitamin B1 is also known as thiamine, thiamin and aneurin. Thiamine is the currently accepted name for vitamin B1 in the US. Aneurin is still widely used in Europe, especially in the United Kingdom. Necessary for proper metabolism of sugar and starch to provide energy. Maintains a healthy nervous system as well as aiding proper function of the heart and other muscles. Stress increases the need for B-1 and all B vitamins. Ingredient InformationRiboflavin (Vitamin B2)Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is required to complete several reactions in the energy cycle. Reddening of the lips with cracks at the corners of the mouth, inflammation of the tongue, and a greasy, scaly inflammation of the skin are common symptoms of deficiency.Riboflavin (B2)- Classic riboflavin deficiency involves the lips, tongue, eyes, skin and nervous system. Vision changes, cheliosis (tiny lesions in the mouth or cracks in the corners of the mouth) tongue inflammation and discomfort eating or swallowing. Riboflavin?s role in the body involves the metabolism of fats and proteins. Enzymes influenced by riboflavin are absolutely necessary to transport oxygen to the cells. A decrease in this vitamin can result in fatigue. New research indicates that migraine headache sufferers may benefit by riboflavin. 400mgs.day have been shown to lessen the incidence of migraines. Required for red blood cell formation, antibody production, cell respiration and growth. Important for good muscle tone. Involved in metabolism of protein, protein fats, and carbohydrates. Necessary for good vision, skin, hair and nails. Ingredient InformationVitamin B2Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is required to complete several reactions in the energy cycle. Reddening of the lips with cracks at the corners of the mouth, inflammation of the tongue, and a greasy, scaly inflammation of the skin are common symptoms of deficiency.Riboflavin (B2)- Classic riboflavin deficiency involves the lips, tongue, eyes, skin and nervous system. Vision changes, cheliosis (tiny lesions in the mouth or cracks in the corners of the mouth) tongue inflammation and discomfort eating or swallowing. Riboflavin?s role in the body involves the metabolism of fats and proteins. Enzymes influenced by riboflavin are absolutely necessary to transport oxygen to the cells. A decrease in this vitamin can result in fatigue. New research indicates that migraine headache sufferers may benefit by riboflavin. 400mgs.day have been shown to lessen the incidence of migraines. Ingredient InformationSoybean(s) OilA A A There are over 1,000 varieties of this nutritious LEGUME, ranging in size from as small as a pea to as large as a cherry. Soybean pods, which are covered with a fine tawny to gray fuzz, range in color from tan to black. The beans themselves come in various combinations of red, yellow, green, brown and black. Their flavor is generally quite bland, which may explain why they weren't embraced by Western cultures until their nutritive value was discovered. Unlike other legumes, the soybean is low in carbohydrates and high in protein and desirable oil. Because they're inexpensive and nutrition-packed, soybeans are used to produce a wide variety of products Certain fatty fish, like salmon and tuna, contain the best source of heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids. But certain plant foods, like flaxseed and soybeans, also contain these fatty acids. Soybeans are one of the best non-fish sources of essential omega-3 fatty acids, which may help reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. Compared to other beans like pinto beans and navy beans, soybeans have a higher fat content, but this fat contains these heart-healthy omega-3's. Ingredient InformationPalm OilA A A The palm fruit develops in dense bunches weighing 10 kilograms (kg) or more and containing more than a thousand individual fruits similar in size to a small plum. Palm oil is obtained from the flesh of the fruit and probably formed part of the food supply of the indigenous populations long before recorded history. It may also have been traded overland, since archaeological evidence indicates that palm oil was most likely available in ancient Egypt. The orange oil taken from the pulp of the fruit of the African palm. It's extremely high in saturated fat (over 75%) and has a distinctive flavor that is popular in West African and South American cooking. Palm-kernel oil, is a different oil extracted from the nut or kernel of palms. It's a yellowish color and has a pleasantly mild flavor. Palm-kernel oil is used in the making of margarine and some cosmetics. It's mostly listed on labels simply as "palm oil."Ingredient InformationTBHQA A A TBHQ Tertiary Butylhydroquinone (TBHQ) is an antioxidant approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a preservative. TBHQ is derived from animals and in fats or oils. It is most commonly found in fast foods, crackers, and chips. However, TBHQ is also used in pet foods, cosmetics, baby skin care products, varnish, lacquers, and resins. The purpose of using TBHQ is to stabilize possibly explosive compounds. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) put a limit of .02% maximum of TBHQ in the food product. Ingestion of 5 grams can cause death, while only 1 gram can cause alarming symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, tinnitus (ringing in the ears), delirium, etc. TBHQ is butane based, a main component of lighter fluid. Botes, Shona. "TBHQ - Why This Preservative Should Be Avoided." Independent News on Natural Health, Nutrition and More. 14 Feb. 2011. Web. 17 May 2011. . "TBHQ (Mixed Feelings) : Molecule of the Day." ScienceBlogs. 29 Mar. 2007. Web. 17 May 2011. Ingredient InformationMilk SkimMilk from which the cream has been removed Skim milk contains more calcium than whole milk. Most of the calcium in milk is not contained in the fat that is removed when 'skimming' the milk. But rather in the water content of the milk. Removing the part of the milk with a lower percentage of calcium, increases the relative percentage of calcium in the remaining milk. Ingredient InformationWhey ProteinWhey or milk plasma is the liquid remaining after milk has been curdled and strained; it is a by-product of the manufacture of cheese or casein and has several commercial uses. Whey is used to produce ricotta and gjetost cheeses and many other products for human consumption. It is used as an additive in many processed foods, including breads, crackers and commercial pastry. In addition, whey is used as an animal feed. Whey proteins mainly consist of a-lactalbumin and ß-lactoglobulin. Depending on the method of manufacture, it may also contain glycomacropeptides (GMP). Source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WheyIngredient InformationCheese CulturesCheese is a solid food made from the milk of cows, goats, sheep, and other mammals. Cheese is made by curdling milk using some combination of rennet (or rennet substitutes) and acidification. Bacteria acidify the milk and play a role in defining the texture and flavor of most cheeses. Some cheeses also feature molds, either on the outer rind or throughout. There are hundreds of types of cheese produced all over the world. Different styles and flavors of cheese are the result of using milk from various mammals or with different butterfat contents, employing particular species of bacteria and molds, and varying the length of aging and other processing treatments. Other factors include animal diet and the addition of flavoring agents such as herbs, spices, or wood smoke. Whether the milk is pasteurized may also affect the flavor. The yellow to red coloring of many cheeses is a result of adding annatto. Cheeses are eaten both on their own and cooked as part of various dishes; most cheeses melt when heated. For a few cheeses, the milk is curdled by adding acids such as vinegar or lemon juice. Most cheeses, however, are acidified to a lesser degree by bacteria, which turn milk sugars into lactic acid, followed by the addition of rennet to complete the curdling. Rennet is an enzyme mixture traditionally obtained from the stomach lining of young cattle, but now also laboratory produced. Vegetarian alternatives to rennet are available; most are produced by fermentation of the fungus Mucor miehei, but others have been extracted from various species of the Cynara thistle family. Source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CheeseIngredient InformationSaltSalt is one of the most ubiquitous food ingredients around. Those who think of salt only as something used to perk up flavor might wonder what could possibly give this ingredient the level of importance it has gained through the ages. In reality, there is much more to this crystalline cube than first meets the eye. Americans typically consume 4,000-8,000 mg each day, well above their daily needs. A goal for moderation for all adults, (including pregnancy and lactation) is approximately 2,400 mg of sodium per day.Ingredient InformationEnzyme(s)Natural food enzymes that, when taken with gassy foods, help reduce flatulence-sometimes even stopping it before it begins. Gas-producing foods like beans, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, grains and onions cause trouble because they contain hard- or impossible-to-digest complex sugars (see CARBOHYDRATE) that ferment in the large intestine. Digestive enzymes help break down these complex sugars into simple sugars that are more easily digestible. Proteins produced by the cells that are crucial in chemical reactions and in building up or synthesizing most compounds in the body. Each enzyme has a specific function. The two classes of enzymes are metabolic and digestive. Metabolic enzymes catalyze the many chemical reactions in the body. Digestive enzymes are responsible for breaking down food into smaller absorbable units. There are specific enzymes that break down protein, fat and carbohydrate; these are protease, amylase and lipase respectively. Ingredient InformationAnnatto Extract ColorAnnatto are native to South America, and are currently mostly in use as a flavouring and food colouring in Central and Northern South America. In the Caribbean, the seeds are usually fried in (animal or vegetable) fat; after discarding the seeds, the then golden-yellow fat is used to fry vegetables or meat. By this procedure, a golden yellow to golden brown colour is achieved. Mexican cooks often use a paste (achiote) of annatto seeds with some preservatices (acetic acid) that dissolves completely in hot fat; it is easy to use and can also be added to marinades and sauces to improve the colour. Similar use is found in South America, namely, Perú and Bolivia. The distilled or evaporated oils of foods or plants (such as nuts, seeds, fruits, vegetables, herbs, spices, bark, buds, roots, leaves, meat, poultry, seafood, fish, dairy foods, or eggs) that are dissolved in an alcohol base or allowed to dry to be used as a flavoring. Food extracts as they are often labeled, are used to add a concentrated flavor to many food dishes, especially baked goods and desserts, without adding additional volume. Available in solid (cubes, granules or powdered), liquid or jelled form, extracts may be labeled as pure, natural or artificial. Pure and natural extracts are governed by laws in many countries that require compliance with procedures that take the extract ingredients directly from the named flavor, such as extracting oils directly from the vanilla bean to make pure or natural vanilla extract. Artificial extracts are flavors that do not necessarily use any ingredients directly from a source named for the extract but instead used combinations of ingredients to arrive at a flavor representative of the named food extract, such as artificial lemon extract. Some of the most widely used extracts include vanilla, almond, anise, maple, peppermint, and numerous solid or jelled extracts such as beef and chicken bouillon or meat demi-glaces. As an example of how the pure and natural extract is made, vanilla extract is created by soaking vanilla beans in water and an alcohol-based solution where it ages for several months, during which time the vanilla flavor is extracted from the bean. Anise extract, a sweet licorice tasting flavoring, is produced by dissolving the oil of anise seeds into alcohol. Grape extract is produced to assist with the wine making process. Compounds from the skin of grapes are extracted and added to the wine in order to impart tannin, color, and body into a wine. The characteristics of the wine can be changed dramatically by the amount of time the wine is in contact with the skins. If the grapes are in contact for too long, the resulting wine may be too potent, or what is sometimes called “over-extracted”. Juices of fruits and vegetables are often extracted as juice extracts to be used similar to other food extracts, as a flavoring when preparing foods. A common utensil for the purpose of extracting lemon juice is available to assist with home recipes requiring a lemon flavoring. Ingredient InformationCheese Skim MilkA A A Cheese is a solid food made from the milk of cows, goats, sheep, and other mammals. Cheese is made by curdling milk using some combination of rennet (or rennet substitutes) and acidification. Bacteria acidify the milk and play a role in defining the texture and flavor of most cheeses. Some cheeses also feature molds, either on the outer rind or throughout. Source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CheeseIngredient InformationSalt Contains 2% or less of the Following: (A A A Ingredient InformationPaprikaA A A Used as a seasoning and garnish for a plethora of savory dishes, paprika is a powder made by grinding aromatic sweet red pepper pods. The pods are quite tough, so several grindings are necessary to produce the proper texture. The flavor of paprika can range from mild to pungent and hot, the color from bright orange-red to deep blood-red. Most commercial paprika comes from Spain, South America, California and Hungary, with the Hungarian variety considered by many to be superior. Indeed, Hungarian cuisine has long used paprika as a mainstay flavoring rather than simply as a garnish. All supermarkets carry mild paprikas, while ethnic markets must be searched out for the more pungent varieties. As with all herbs and SPICES, paprika should be stored in a cool, dark place for no more than 6 months.Ingredient InformationYeastA A A Yeast is a living, microscopic, single-cell organism that, as it grows, converts its food (through a process known as fermentation) into alcohol and carbon dioxide. This trait is what endears yeast to winemakers, brewmasters and breadbakers. In the making of wine and BEER, the yeast's manufacture of alcohol is desired and necessary for the final product; and carbon dioxide is what makes BEER and CHAMPAGNE effervescent. The art of breadmaking needs the carbon dioxide produced by yeast in order for certain doughs to rise. To multiply and grow, all yeast needs is the right environment, which includes moisture, food (in the form of sugar or starch) and a warm, nurturing temperature (70° to 85°F is best).Ingredient InformationPaprika Oleoresin color(s)A A A Ingredient InformationSoy LecithinA A A Soy lecithin is a mixture of fatty substances that are derived from the processing of soybeans. Lecithin is separated from soybean oil by the addition of water and centrifugation (rapid spinning) and purified for use as a food additive. Its chemical name is phosphatidylcholine, which identifies its major components of choline, phosphoric acid, glycerin, and fatty acids. Lecithin is used widely in foods as an emulsifier, stabilizer, and antioxidant. Studies show most soy-allergic individual can safely eat products containing soy lecithin without experiencing any allergic reactions. While the controversy may seem confusing to the consumer giving it casual consideration, a careful review of the science behind the rule reveals a strict divide between what FDA allows as a health claim based on solid scientific research and related issues that go well beyond the approved statements about health benefits of soy protein. Source:http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2000/300_soy.html Member Benefits
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/6008
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Kellogg's Eggo Nutri-Grain Whole Wheat Waffles (12.3 oz.) Found In: Breakfast Foods » Toaster Prepared Brand: Kellogg's Eggo Manufactured by: Kellogg Company Allergens: Flour Enriched (Wheat Flour, Niacin, Iron Reduced, Thiamine Mononitrate (Vitamin B1) [Vitamin B1] , Riboflavin (Vitamin B2) [Vitamin B2] , Folic Acid (Vitamin aB)) , Water, Wheat Flour Whole, Vegetable(s) Oil (Soybean(s) Oil, Palm Oil and, Palm Kernel Oil, with TBHQ and, Citric Acid To Preserve Freshness) , Egg(s) Whites, Wheat Bran, Sugar, Leavening (Baking Soda, Sodium Aluminum Phosphate, Monocalcium Phosphate) , Salt, Calcium Carbonate, Flavoring Malt, Whey, Soy Lecithin, Vitamin A Palmitate, Niacinamide (Vitamin aB), Iron Reduced, Thiamin Hydrochloride (Vitamin B1), Pyridoxine Hydrochloride (HCL) (Vitamin B6) , Riboflavin (Vitamin B2) (Vitamin B2) , Calcium Pantothenate, Folic Acid (Vitamin aB), Vitamin B12 Ingredient Color Key: Serving Size: 2 waffles (70g) Total Calories 850Total Calories from Fat 250 Potassium 95.0 mg3%3,500 mg Sugars 3.0 g Protein 4.0 g Vitamin A 20.0% Vitamin B6 20.0% Vitamin B12 20.0% Folic Acid 8.0% Niacin 20.0% Phosphorus 20.0% Riboflavin 20.0% Contains Fiber Contains both naturally occuring and added vitaminsExcellent source of Vitamin AExcellent source of Vitamin B6Excellent source of Vitamin B12Great source of CalciumExcellent source of IronExcellent source of NiacinExcellent source of PhosphorusExcellent source of RiboflavinExcellent source of Thiamin Controversial ingredients This product contains a controversial ingredient Contains added sugar(s) Generally considered non-toxic if under 75mg daily. Higher doses can cause abdominal cramps, vomiting & diarrhea. Severe overdoses of iron can be fatal.Ingredient InformationVitamin B1 Vitamin B1 is also known as thiamine, thiamin and aneurin. Thiamine is the currently accepted name for vitamin B1 in the US. Aneurin is still widely used in Europe, especially in the United Kingdom. Necessary for proper metabolism of sugar and starch to provide energy. Maintains a healthy nervous system as well as aiding proper function of the heart and other muscles. Stress increases the need for B-1 and all B vitamins. Ingredient InformationThiamine Mononitrate (Vitamin B1)Vitamin B-1, Perfectly safe, despite adding minuscule amounts of nitrate to our food.Ingredient InformationVitamin B2Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is required to complete several reactions in the energy cycle. Reddening of the lips with cracks at the corners of the mouth, inflammation of the tongue, and a greasy, scaly inflammation of the skin are common symptoms of deficiency.Riboflavin (B2)- Classic riboflavin deficiency involves the lips, tongue, eyes, skin and nervous system. Vision changes, cheliosis (tiny lesions in the mouth or cracks in the corners of the mouth) tongue inflammation and discomfort eating or swallowing. Riboflavin?s role in the body involves the metabolism of fats and proteins. Enzymes influenced by riboflavin are absolutely necessary to transport oxygen to the cells. A decrease in this vitamin can result in fatigue. New research indicates that migraine headache sufferers may benefit by riboflavin. 400mgs.day have been shown to lessen the incidence of migraines. Required for red blood cell formation, antibody production, cell respiration and growth. Important for good muscle tone. Involved in metabolism of protein, protein fats, and carbohydrates. Necessary for good vision, skin, hair and nails. Ingredient InformationRiboflavin (Vitamin B2)Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is required to complete several reactions in the energy cycle. Reddening of the lips with cracks at the corners of the mouth, inflammation of the tongue, and a greasy, scaly inflammation of the skin are common symptoms of deficiency.Riboflavin (B2)- Classic riboflavin deficiency involves the lips, tongue, eyes, skin and nervous system. Vision changes, cheliosis (tiny lesions in the mouth or cracks in the corners of the mouth) tongue inflammation and discomfort eating or swallowing. Riboflavin?s role in the body involves the metabolism of fats and proteins. Enzymes influenced by riboflavin are absolutely necessary to transport oxygen to the cells. A decrease in this vitamin can result in fatigue. New research indicates that migraine headache sufferers may benefit by riboflavin. 400mgs.day have been shown to lessen the incidence of migraines. Bottled Water: Some types of bottled water are not subject to the same regulations as tap water. These are regulated as food products, and their regulations are largely related to sanitary food handling and processing practices. Bottled water manufacturers will provide a detailed report on the quality of their product to consumers who call to request it.Ingredient InformationWheat Flour WholeA A A Whole-Wheat Flour - A coarse-textured flour ground from the entire wheat kernel. It contains the bran, germ and endosperm. The presence of bran reduces gluten development, so baked products made from whole-wheat flour tend to be heavier and denser than those made from white flour. In most recipes, whole-wheat flour can be mixed half-and-half with white flour.Ingredient InformationSoybean(s) OilThere are over 1,000 varieties of this nutritious LEGUME, ranging in size from as small as a pea to as large as a cherry. Soybean pods, which are covered with a fine tawny to gray fuzz, range in color from tan to black. The beans themselves come in various combinations of red, yellow, green, brown and black. Their flavor is generally quite bland, which may explain why they weren't embraced by Western cultures until their nutritive value was discovered. Unlike other legumes, the soybean is low in carbohydrates and high in protein and desirable oil. Because they're inexpensive and nutrition-packed, soybeans are used to produce a wide variety of products Certain fatty fish, like salmon and tuna, contain the best source of heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids. But certain plant foods, like flaxseed and soybeans, also contain these fatty acids. Soybeans are one of the best non-fish sources of essential omega-3 fatty acids, which may help reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. Compared to other beans like pinto beans and navy beans, soybeans have a higher fat content, but this fat contains these heart-healthy omega-3's. Ingredient InformationPalm Oilanda common leavening agent used in baked goods. Used for fireproofing, in baking powder, and as an antirheumaticalso used as a fire retardant and in fertilizers.Ingredient InformationPalm Kernel OilPalm-kernel oil, though also high in saturated fat, is a different oil extracted from the nut or kernel of palms. It's a yellowish-white color and has a pleasantly mild flavor. Palm-kernel oil is used in the manufacture of margarine and cosmetics. It's usually listed on labels simply as "palm oil."Ingredient InformationwithTBHQanda common leavening agent used in baked goods. Used for fireproofing, in baking powder, and as an antirheumaticalso used as a fire retardant and in fertilizers.Ingredient InformationCitric AcidTo Preserve FreshnessIngredient InformationVegetable(s) OilA A A Any of various edible oils made from a plant source, such as vegetables, nuts or seeds. See also ALMOND OIL; CANOLA OIL; CORN OIL; COTTONSEED OIL; FATS AND OILS; GRAPESEED OIL; HAZELNUT OIL; OLIVE OIL; PEANUT OIL; PUMPKIN SEED OIL; SAFFLOWER OIL; SESAME OIL; SOYBEAN OIL; SUNFLOWER SEED OIL; WALNUT OILIngredient InformationEgg(s) WhitesA A A Basic Egg Facts Air Cell Ingredient InformationWheat BranA A A The outer layer of grains (such as wheat or oats) that is removed during milling. Bran is a good source of carbohydrates, calcium, phosphorus and fiber. It's found in cereals and baked goods and can be purchased at health-food stores and most supermarkets. Wheat is the most important cereal crop in the world and ubiquitous in our culture. Bread, pasta, bagels, crackers, cakes, muffins and other wheat containing products line our supermarket shelves and fill our grocery baskets. It is luck for us that this popular grain is available throughout the year. Classes used in the United States are Ingredient InformationSugarA A A Any of a class of sweet,Soluble Carbohydrate,as sucrose,glucose,sucrose from sugar cane and sugar beets. We get our energy from the nutrients in food. The main sources of energy are carbohydrates (starches and sugars), fats and proteins. The body can be compared to an engine that converts the energy in food into the energy we need to live. Sugars and starches are forms of carbohydrate. Nutritionists recommend that about half of our energy should be supplied by carbohydrates. The majority of this should be from starchy foods like cereals, rice, potatoes, pasta or bread, with the remainder coming from sugars. During digestion (the process by which we break down food substances ready for absorption and use by the body) complex starchy foods are broken down into sugars.Ingredient InformationBaking SodaAlso known as bicarbonate of soda, baking soda is used as a LEAVENER in baked goods. When combined with an acid ingredient such as buttermilk, yogurt or molasses, baking soda produces carbon dioxide gas bubbles, thereby causing a dough or batter to rise. Because it reacts immediately when moistened, it should always be mixed with the other dry ingredients before adding any liquid; the resulting batter should be placed in the oven immediately. At one time, baking soda was used in the cooking water of green vegetables to preserve their color. That practice was discontinued, however, when it was discovered that baking soda destroys the vitamin C content of vegetables. Baking Soda, a sodium bicarbonate, is a naturally occurring substance that is present in all living things--it helps living things maintain the pH balance necessary for life. Baking Soda is made from soda ash, also known as sodium carbonate. The soda ash is obtained in one of two ways: it can be manufactured by passing carbon dioxide and ammonia through a concentrated solution of sodium chloride (table salt). Whether the soda ash is mined or processed, it is dissolved into a solution through which carbon dioxide is bubbled, and sodium bicarbonate precipitates out, forming Baking SodaIngredient InformationSodium Aluminum PhosphateThe main use for SODIUM ALUMINUM PHOSPHATE, is as a leavening agent or acid for mixing baking powders, this is a new product in the baking industry. The SODIUM ALUMINUM PHOSPHATE, has a different performance profile than other leavening agents; it reacts slowly with the Sodium Bicarbonate in the mixing stage, there is only a 20 to 30 % Carbon Dioxide delivery from available. The difference is released during the oven stage. It also has an excellent buffering action for flour mixes, enhancing the properties of the formula ingredients Ingredient InformationMonocalcium PhosphateBased on its histroy of use no food safety problems have been shown to occur with this chemical at the levels commonly used in foods. It is used in bread, rolls, and buns, artifically sweetened fruit jelly, canned potatoes, canned sweet peppers, canned tomatoes and as a jelling agent. In the canned products it provides calcium which has been shown to maintain the firmness of friuts and vegetables during the canning process.It also provides a source of calcium which aids in the jelling of artifically sweetened friut jellies. It acts as a dough conditioner in bakery products.Ingredient InformationLeaveningA A A Agents that are used to lighten the texture and increase the volume of baked goods such as breads, cakes and cookies. Baking powder, baking soda and yeast are the most common leaveners used today. When mixed with a liquid they form carbon dioxide gas bubbles, which cause a batter or dough to rise during (and sometimes before) the baking process. Some foods, such as ANGEL FOOD CAKE and SPONGE CAKE, are leavened by the air beaten into egg whites. When heated, the egg whites cook and set, trapping the air inside and creating a light, airy cake.Ingredient InformationSaltA A A Salt is one of the most ubiquitous food ingredients around. Those who think of salt only as something used to perk up flavor might wonder what could possibly give this ingredient the level of importance it has gained through the ages. In reality, there is much more to this crystalline cube than first meets the eye. Americans typically consume 4,000-8,000 mg each day, well above their daily needs. A goal for moderation for all adults, (including pregnancy and lactation) is approximately 2,400 mg of sodium per day.Ingredient InformationCalcium CarbonateA A A Naturally occuring calcium / calcium carrier Calcium deficiency is a major problem in the United States. 60% of children under 5 and 40% of children 6 - 11 consume less than their RDA. Of teens, 65% of boys and up to 85% of girls consume less than the recommended amounts. On average, women of all age groups fall far short. These deficiencies, especially in young women, are particularly disturbing because bone built during this time must carry them through the rest of their lives. Calcium is A mineral essential in building and maintaining bones and teeth, as well as in providing efficient muscle contraction and blood clotting. Calcium is found in dairy products, leafy green vegetables (such as spinach, turnip greens and broccoli), sardines and canned salmon with bones and rhubarb. Calcium-fortified orange juice is an excellent source. Deficiency Symptoms include; Loss of bone, and inadequate bone formation that lead to osteoporosis and Vitamin D deficiency. Studies are underway prove possible links between calcium and blood preasure (hypertension), and colon cancer. Toxicity Symptoms: No adverse effects up to 2,400 mg per day for health adults. Generally not well-absorbed higher than 2,400 mg per day. Very high levels may inhibit the absorbtion of other minerals, particularly iron and zinc, and cause constipation. Ingredient InformationFlavoring MaltA A A "The term natural flavor or natural flavoring means the essential oil, oleoresin, essence or extractive, protein hydrolysate, distillate, or any product of roasting, heating or enzymolysis, which contains the flavoring constituents derived from a spice, fruit or fruit juice, vegetable or vegetable juice, edible yeast, herb, bark, bud, root, leaf or similar plant material, meat, seafood, poultry, eggs, dairy products, or fermentation products thereof, whose significant function in food is flavoring rather than nutritional." The new labeling law effective in 2006, The Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act (FALCPA), requires manufacturers to declare if one or more of the 8 major food allergens are contained in a natural flavoring. The top 8 major food allergens are defined as: milk, egg, fish, crustacean shellfish, tree nuts, wheat, peanuts and soybeans. If you are managing food allergies other than the top 8 major food allergens, however, the new law will not be of assistance to you in identifying the sources in any natural flavoring stated on a label. The FDA does not require companies to disclose ingredients of color or flavor additives so long as all the chemicals in them are considered by the agency to be GRAS ("generally recognized as safe") enabling companies to maintain secrecy of formulas. It also hides the fact that flavors often contain more ingredients than the foods to which they give taste. Source: http://web.archive.org/web/20030608101921/www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/opa-bckg.html Ingredient InformationWheyA A A Whey or milk plasma is the liquid remaining after milk has been curdled and strained; it is a by-product of the manufacture of cheese or casein and has several commercial uses. Whey is used to produce ricotta and gjetost cheeses and many other products for human consumption. It is used as an additive in many processed foods, including breads, crackers and commercial pastry. In addition, whey is used as an animal feed. Whey proteins mainly consist of a-lactalbumin and ß-lactoglobulin. Depending on the method of manufacture, it may also contain glycomacropeptides (GMP). Ingredient InformationSoy LecithinA A A Soy lecithin is a mixture of fatty substances that are derived from the processing of soybeans. Lecithin is separated from soybean oil by the addition of water and centrifugation (rapid spinning) and purified for use as a food additive. Its chemical name is phosphatidylcholine, which identifies its major components of choline, phosphoric acid, glycerin, and fatty acids. Lecithin is used widely in foods as an emulsifier, stabilizer, and antioxidant. Studies show most soy-allergic individual can safely eat products containing soy lecithin without experiencing any allergic reactions. While the controversy may seem confusing to the consumer giving it casual consideration, a careful review of the science behind the rule reveals a strict divide between what FDA allows as a health claim based on solid scientific research and related issues that go well beyond the approved statements about health benefits of soy protein. Source:http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2000/300_soy.html Ingredient InformationVitamin A PalmitateA A A Vitamin A is very important for maintaining good vision. In fact, the first sign of a vitamin A deficiency is often night blindness. Vitamin A also contributes to the maintenance of healthy skin and mucous membranes that line the nose, sinuses, and mouth. Research has shown that this nutrient is necessary for proper immune system function, growth, bone formation, reproduction, and wound healing. Animal studies also suggest that it provides some protection from toxic chemicals such as dioxins. (Dioxins are released into the air from combustion processes such as commercial waste incineration and burning fuels like wood, coal or oil. These chemicals can also be found in cigarette smoke.) Ingredient InformationNiacinamide (Vitamin aB)A A A Vitamin B3 Also called Niacin, Nicotinic Acid, Niacinimide, Nicotinic. Dificiency is very rare in modern countries. Symptoms include: Pellagra (diarrhea, dermatitis, and dementia) Less severe symptoms of deficiency include irritability, loss of appetite, weekness and swollen tongue.Ingredient InformationIron ReducedA A A Mineral that helps with creation of hemoglobin, and helps hold oxygen in the blood. Iron, along with B12 and Folate, creates new blood cells. Ferrous Sulfate is a common term used in the food industry for Reduced Iron. Generally considered non-toxic if under 75mg daily. Higher doses can cause abdominal cramps, vomiting & diarrhea. Severe overdoses of iron can be fatal.Ingredient InformationThiamin Hydrochloride (Vitamin B1)A A A Vitamin B1, or thiamine, helps the body convert carbohydrates into energy and helps in the metabolism of proteins and fats. Vitamin B1 deficiency affects the functioning of gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and peripheral nervous systems. Beriberi and Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome (often seen in alcoholics) are the primary diseases related to thiamine deficiency. General symptoms of beriberi include loss of appetite and overall lassitude, digestive irregularities, and a feeling of numbness and weakness in the limbs and extremities.Ingredient InformationVitamin B6Vitamin B6 is a water-soluble vitamin This means you need it in your diet every day because it cant be stored in the body.that exists in three major chemical forms: pyridoxine, pyridoxal, and pyridoxamine, It performs a wide variety of functions in your body and is essential for your good health. For example, vitamin B6 is needed for more than 100 enzymes involved in protein metabolism. It is also essential for red blood cell metabolism. The nervous and immune systems need vitamin B6 to function efficiently, and it is also needed for the conversion of tryptophan (an amino acid) to niacin (a vitamin) Ingredient InformationPyridoxine Hydrochloride (HCL)A A A Pyridoxine Hydrochloride Activated vitamin B-6 is extensively involved in the metabolism of amino acids. efficiently from pyridoxine in the liver. Ex cessive protein intake, alcohol or contraceptive use also indicates a greater need for vitamin B-6. It also plays a crucial role in the multiplication of cells. Source: Vitamin & Mineral Safety 2nd edition - by John N. Hathcock PHD Ingredient InformationVitamin B2Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is required to complete several reactions in the energy cycle. Reddening of the lips with cracks at the corners of the mouth, inflammation of the tongue, and a greasy, scaly inflammation of the skin are common symptoms of deficiency.Riboflavin (B2)- Classic riboflavin deficiency involves the lips, tongue, eyes, skin and nervous system. Vision changes, cheliosis (tiny lesions in the mouth or cracks in the corners of the mouth) tongue inflammation and discomfort eating or swallowing. Riboflavin?s role in the body involves the metabolism of fats and proteins. Enzymes influenced by riboflavin are absolutely necessary to transport oxygen to the cells. A decrease in this vitamin can result in fatigue. New research indicates that migraine headache sufferers may benefit by riboflavin. 400mgs.day have been shown to lessen the incidence of migraines. Required for red blood cell formation, antibody production, cell respiration and growth. Important for good muscle tone. Involved in metabolism of protein, protein fats, and carbohydrates. Necessary for good vision, skin, hair and nails. Ingredient InformationRiboflavin (Vitamin B2)A A A Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is required to complete several reactions in the energy cycle. Reddening of the lips with cracks at the corners of the mouth, inflammation of the tongue, and a greasy, scaly inflammation of the skin are common symptoms of deficiency.Riboflavin (B2)- Classic riboflavin deficiency involves the lips, tongue, eyes, skin and nervous system. Vision changes, cheliosis (tiny lesions in the mouth or cracks in the corners of the mouth) tongue inflammation and discomfort eating or swallowing. Riboflavin?s role in the body involves the metabolism of fats and proteins. Enzymes influenced by riboflavin are absolutely necessary to transport oxygen to the cells. A decrease in this vitamin can result in fatigue. New research indicates that migraine headache sufferers may benefit by riboflavin. 400mgs.day have been shown to lessen the incidence of migraines. Required for red blood cell formation, antibody production, cell respiration and growth. Important for good muscle tone. Involved in metabolism of protein, protein fats, and carbohydrates. Necessary for good vision, skin, hair and nails. Ingredient InformationCalcium PantothenateA A A Pantothenic acid, also called vitamin B5 (a B vitamin), is a water-soluble vitamin required to sustain life (essential nutrient). Pantothenic acid is needed to form coenzyme-A (CoA), and is critical in the metabolism and synthesis of carbohydrates, proteins, and fats. In chemical structure, it is the amide between D-pantoate and beta-alanine. Its name is derived from the Greek pantothen (pa?t??e?) meaning "from everywhere" and small quantities of pantothenic acid are found in nearly every food, with high amounts in whole-grain cereals, legumes, eggs, meat, and royal jelly. It is commonly found as its alcohol analog, the provitamin panthenol, and as calcium pantothenate. Ingredient InformationFolic Acid (Vitamin aB)A A A Folic acid is the synthetic form of the B vitamin folate. Folic acid is necessary for the synthesis of nucleic acids and the formation of red blood cells. Folic-acid deficiency most commonly causes folic-acid-deficiency anemia. Symptoms include gastrointestinal problems, such as sore tongue, cracks at the corners of the mouth, diarrhea, and ulceration of the stomach and intestines. Large doses of folic acid can cause convulsions and other nervous-system problems. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations require enriched grain products to contain this essential vitamin. Current studies have discovered a link between folic acid and brain function in older people. The study divided 818 people ages 50 to 75 to take either a vitamin containing 800 micrograms of folic acid a day, or a dummy pill, for three years. Ingredient InformationVitamin B12A A A Vitamin B12, also called cobalamin, is important to good health. It helps maintain healthy nerve cells and red blood cells, and is also needed to make DNA, the genetic material in all cells . Vitamin B12 is bound to the protein in food. Hydrochloric acid in the stomach releases B12 from protein during digestion. Once released, B12 combines with a substance called intrinsic factor (IF) before it is absorbed into the bloodstream. Good sources include meat, particularly liver, salmon, cod, milk, cheese, eggs, yeast extract, and some fortified breakfast cereals.
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Monday, June 8, 1998 Apple Computer (Nasdaq: AAPL) Phone: 408-996-1010 Website: http://www.apple.com Price (6/5/98): $26 7/8 HOW DID IT DOUBLE? Snow White. Adam. Eve. Investors. All of these had previously found more than indigestion after ingesting a piece of Apple. Pity the shareholders because there was no prince to awaken them from their painful slumber nor fig leaves to cover up their losses. Apple was that rare company with a recognizable brand name and a lagging share price over the last decade. After years of fluctuating goals and revolving-door executives, Apple finally got what every good company strives for -- Jobs and Income. Steve Jobs, who revolutionized the computer industry when he founded Apple with Steve Wozniak, came back to Apple as interim CEO, and along with his return came two consecutive quarterly profit reports. So shares of Apple, which had been trading as low as $12 3/4 at the start of the year, gradually harvested gains by the bushel. While some investors may have been unsure of Apple's recent strategy -- to weed out all of the national resellers except for CompUSA (NYSE: CPU) and to discontinue its clone Mac business -- profits spoke louder than words. BUSINESS DESCRIPTION Cupertino, California-based Apple makes the Macintosh computers and operating systems. It also has interests in software including FileMaker (formerly Claris). On the horizon? Mac OS X, the latest operating system, and iMac, a new line of computers. FINANCIAL FACTS Income Statement 12-month sales: $6334 million 12-month income: ($115.0 million)* 12-month EPS: ($0.96)* Profit Margin: N/A Market Cap: $3440 million (*Includes charges) Balance Sheet Cash: $1285 million Current Assets: $3213 million Current Liabilities: $1384 million Long-term Debt: $953 million Ratios Price-to-earnings: N/A Price-to-sales: 0.54 HOW COULD YOU HAVE FOUND THIS DOUBLE? Apple lost market share to IBM-compatible personal computers for years until finally adapting a similar clone-friendly strategy. But then it ditched the Mac clone makers. And after years of trying to establish a retail presence, it ditched Circuit City, Best Buy, and the other electronics retailers of the world. Why? The answer lies in margins. At the expense of revenues, Apple sought to centralize its operations. By agreeing to set up Apple shops inside CompUSA stores, the company now finds itself with a willing partner. In contrast to the electronics superstore chains that were gradually trimming down Apple offerings, CompUSA now stocks more than 200 Apple SKUs. In cutting loose the clone manufacturers, the company centralized demand to Apple -- once again. Not that the decision was entirely of Apple's own volition. With Taiwan-based clone-maker Umax having lost $21 million on Mac production last year (and looking to lose another $12-15 million this year), breaking up was easy to do. Now Apple has a more direct influence on its own fiscal performance and can control costs more effectively. Streamlining the retail channels really isn't so heinous either. Consider, for example, that with just CompUSA, Apple has one more outlet than direct marketer success story Dell (Nasdaq: DELL). So the strategies seem inherently sound today, even if it goes against the grain of what the company was trying to accomplish just a few years ago. Analysts now expect the company to earn $1.51 a share this year and $1.85 a share in fiscal 1999. But Apple's rise was not a complete surprise, and even if investors waited until the profitable December quarterly results to confirm that a turnaround was in place, one still could have bought Apple shares in the teens. WHERE TO FROM HERE? The G3 Macintosh line has been a large part of Apple's success. Its November introduction coincided with the company's return to profitability. The high-end computers are feverishly fast and come priced with high-margins for Apple. G3 now makes up barely more than half of total unit sales, but expect that to rise. When the OS X upgrade is released, it will be only for G3 machines. Users of older models will need to live with the current OS 8 version or trade up to a G3. There is also the iMac. These slick monitor-encased units are expected to be big sellers in 1998, with pricing rumored to go below $1,000 by the end of the year. With the newly focused company back on the cutting edge, investors have definitely bought into the "Think Different" ad campaign and are once again attracted to the lure of Apple. Even Disney (NYSE: DIS) was a rumored buyer of the company recently. Apple is trading at just 15 times next year's earnings estimates and is selling for less than three times book value on a healthy balance sheet. Unlike Commodore and Atari, two personal computer makers who have faded away, Apple is almost assured of solvency since it is the only company left separating Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) from a true Department of Justice-angering monopoly. It is awfully nice to have your largest competitor rooting for you. Yet, for the company that has killed off its Newton line of personal digital assistants (PDAs), the past has often been subjected to the cruel laws of gravity. This time around one has to wonder how long Jobs can remain "interim" CEO of Apple, shuttling between head gigs at Apple and computer animated film specialist Pixar (Nasdaq: PIXR). Under his watch, both companies have recently gone "to infinity and beyond," but here's hoping Jobs has a clear plan in place on the day when he ultimately must decide to choose one company over the other. Until then, Snow White is back and the shareholders, after years of being Grumpy, are Happy once again. -Rick Aristotle Munarriz (tmfedible@aol.com) Check out the Daily Double Message Board! Daily Double Archive
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Roadrunner Transportation Systems to Open New Service Centers in Florida CUDAHY, Wis.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc. (NYSE: RRTS ) today announced it is continuing to expand its less-than-truckload (LTL) outbound capabilities with outbound service from Florida. The expansion provides full outbound service coverage to the entire state of Florida. This launch into Florida follows other successful openings in the past two years. Roadrunner broadened its footprint by opening the New York metro area, Philadelphia, Baltimore and most recently Boston. “Based on the success of our service centers on the East Coast, we are continuing to expand our footprint in strategic locations throughout the country. The new service centers in Florida will enable us to meet the increasing demand from our growing customer base in these regions,” said Scott Dobak, President of Less-than-Truckload and Transportation Management Solutions (TMS). About Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc. Roadrunner is a leading asset-light transportation and logistics service provider offering a full suite of solutions, including customized and expedited less-than-truckload, truckload and logistics, transportation management solutions, intermodal solutions, and domestic and international air. For more information, please visit RRTS’ website, www.rrts.com. This release contains forward-looking statements that relate to future events or performance. These statements reflect Roadrunner’s current expectations, and Roadrunner does not undertake to update or revise these forward-looking statements, even if experience or future changes make it clear that any projected results expressed or implied in this or other company statements will not be realized. Furthermore, readers are cautioned that these statements involve risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond Roadrunner’s control, which could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, risks related to the integration of acquired companies, competition in the transportation industry, the impact of the current economic environment, Roadrunner’s dependence upon purchased power, the unpredictability of and potential fluctuation in the price and availability of fuel, the effects of governmental and environmental regulations, insurance in excess of prior experience levels, and other "Risk Factors" set forth in Roadrunner’s most recent SEC filings. Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc.Peter ArmbrusterChief Financial Officer414-615-1648orVollrath Associates, Inc.Marilyn Vollrath414-221-0210ir@rrts.com KEYWORDS: United States North America Florida Wisconsin RRTS Roadrunner Transpo…
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5 Shares the Bull Market Missed David O’Hara | LONDON -- Many investors think we are now in a new bull market. Since the beginning of the year, the FTSE 100 index is up 3.6%. Most FTSE 100 stocks have risen in that time, but some are down. I've found five fallers that look like they could be worthy of further research. Price (pence) 2013 P/E (forecast) 2013 yield (forecast) Market cap (millions of pounds) Diageo (LSE: DGE ) 1,802 National Grid (LSE: NG ) 692 J Sainsbury plc (LSE: SBRY ) 322 Marks and Spencer (LSE: MKS ) 365 Unilever (LSE: ULVR ) 2,405 Data from Stockopedia. Unilever Unilever is the company many people have never heard of but whose brands are ubiquitous. The Anglo-Dutch giant owns a collection of household and food brands such as Flora, PG Tips, Vaseline, and Domestos. Unilever is the classic highly rated quality share. Whatever the weather in the markets, Unilever shares never look cheap. That does not mean the shares have not made a good investment in the past. In the last five years, Unilever shares are up nearly 40%. That return gets even better when you add in dividends. In that time, the FTSE 100 has failed to break even. The diversity of Unilever's product offering brings a resilience to the company's earnings that investors love. J Sainsbury Although Sainsbury's shares are down this year, its Christmas trading showed good growth. The supermarket's January trading statement reported a 1.5% increase in like-for-like sales and a record Christmas. Sainsbury's has now enjoyed 32 successive quarters of sales growth. In a market where some operators are clearly winning (Waitrose) while others are losing (Morrison's), Sainsbury's is increasing its market share. The market seems to be worried that the problems plaguing Morrison's and Tesco could soon find their way to Sainsbury's door. Sainsbury's shares currently trade at a price-to-earnings ratio premium to both. The market is likely discounting Sainsbury's shares because of the struggles of its peers. It's hard to ignore the yield on offer at Sainsbury's. The payout for 2014 is expected to reach 17.4 pence -- that's a 5.4% yield at today's price. Marks and Spencer The New Year trading statement from Marks and Spencer spooked the market. The company reported disappointing sales. Rivals Debenhams, Next, and John Lewis all fared far better. M&S has long epitomized the British high street. However, away from food, it looks as though M&S is becoming less relevant. In recent years, shoppers have seen a string of once-great chain stores disappear from their high streets. On Thursday, the shutters came down at HMV. Marks needs to reverse the decline fast -- for the sake of both the company and its share price. Profit forecasts for Marks in 2013 have also been declining. In the last year, the consensus earnings-per-share forecast for 2013 has fallen 10%. The market now expects EPS for 2013 of 32.5 pence. National Grid In the company's own words, National Grid "owns and operates the grids to which many different energy sources are connected." Looking at year-to-date returns from FTSE 100 companies, retailers and utilities dominate the losers list. Defensive shares like National Grid often take a bashing when sentiment toward shares turns positive. The company's 3.2% decline so far this year is further evidence to me that we are in a bull market. If the great start to 2013 has you twitching to sell some shares, then you'll need another home for the proceeds. With a forecast yield of 5.9% for 2013, National Grid is one of the 10 highest-yielding shares in the FTSE 100. EPS is forecast to rise 10.8% in 2013 and level-off the year after. The dividend is forecast to increase slightly for 2014. Diageo Although Diageo has failed to join the party so far in 2013, it has been one of the FTSE 100's best performers in recent years. Despite the ravages of the financial crisis and recession, shares in this super-brewer increased more than threefold in the five years from the beginning of 2008. In that time, EPS has increased by more than 50%. The dividend has been increased year on year for the last five years at an average rate of 5.9%. The success of Diageo's products (Guinness, Baileys, Smirnoff, etc.) gives it tremendous economies of scale. The recognition that these brands have helps Diageo maintain premium pricing. Market analysts expect Diageo to increase earnings 10.7% in 2013, followed by an 11.2% rise in 2014. The dividend is forecast to rise a similar amount this year and next. Billionaire U.S. investor Warren Buffett loves buying shares in companies with strong brands. Warren knows the kind of returns that can be made buying shares in companies like Unilever and Diageo. Buffett has recently been buying shares in another British company. To find out which one, get your copy of the free Motley Fool report "The One U.K. Share Warren Buffett Loves." This report is 100% free and will be delivered to your inbox immediately. Just click here to start learning from this super-investor today. David does not own shares in any of the above companies. The Motley Fool has recommended shares in Unilever and Diageo. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. CAPS Rating: MKS Marks & Spencer Gr… CAPS Rating: NG CAPS Rating: SBRY Sainsbury (J) CAPS Rating: ULVR
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Appleton takes Blackpool job Michael Appleton has been confirmed as the new manager of Blackpool after the club reached an agreement for his release from Portsmouth. The 36-year-old has agreed terms on a one-year rolling contract to succeed Ian Holloway, who left last weekend to take over at Championship leaders Crystal Palace. Appleton, whose playing career was curtailed by a serious knee injury, was the only man from a shortlist of five men interviewed by Blackpool chairman Karl Oyston. Appleton was assistant boss to Roberto Di Matteo and Roy Hodgson at West Brom before joining financially-stricken Portsmouth last year. Ashley Westwood has also left Fratton Park after being named as first team coach at Blackpool, while Steve Thompson will continue in his role as assistant manager. "Getting the opportunity to come to a club that has had a lot of success over previous seasons is a big part of wanting to be here," said Appleton. "I'm just desperate to meet the players now and crack on with the job. "As a new manager coming in you want to bring a few ideas to the new football club and the team, but I think they've got to be small steps in doing that because if it's not broken then don't mend it, just tweak it a little bit." Meanwhile, Portsmouth have announced that Guy Whittingham will take temporary charge of the first team for their trip to Bury on Saturday.
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Home The Scoop Strength Scoop High School Scoop DFO Scoop AD Scoop Coaching Awards 2013 Coaches of the Year 2013 Offensive Coordinator 2013 Defensive Coordinator 2013 Special Teams Coordinator 2013 Quarterbacks Coach 2013 Running Backs Coach 2013 Offensive Line Coach 2013 Wide Receivers Coach 2013 Defensive Line Coach 2013 Linebackers Coach 2013 Defensive Backs Coach 2013 FCS Coordinator 2013 Division II Coordinator 2013 Division III Coordinator 2013 NAIA Coordinator 2013 Director of Operations 2013 Strength & Conditioning 2013 Director of Player Personnel 2012 Coaches of the Year Offensive Coordinator Defensive Coordinator Special Teams Coordinator Quarterbacks Coach Running Backs Coach Offensive Line Wide Receivers Defensive Line Linebackers Defensive Backs Dir Football Operations FCS Coordinator Strength & Conditioning Division II Coordinator Division III Coordinator 2011 Coaches of the Year 2011 Offensive Coordinator 2011 Defensive Coordinator 2011 Special Teams 2011 Quarterbacks Coach 2011 Wide Receivers Coach 2011 Offensive Line Coach 2011 Running Backs Coach 2011 Defensive Backs Coach 2011 Linebackers Coach 2011 Defensive Line Coach 2011 Dir Football Operations 2011 Strength & Conditioning Coach 2011 FCS Coordinator of the Year 2011 Division II Coordinator of the Year 2011 Division III Coordinator of the Year 2010 Coaches of the Year 2010 Offensive Coordinator 2010 Defensive Coordinator 2010 Special Teams Coordinator 2010 Quarterbacks Coach 2010 Running Backs Coach 2010 Wide Receivers Coach 2010 Offensive Line Coach 2010 Defensive Line Coach 2010 Linebackers Coach 2010 Defensive Backs Coach 2010 Dir of Football Operations 2010 Strength & Conditioning Coach 2010 Div. 1-AA Coordinator 2010 Div. II Coordinator 2010 Div. III Coordinator Randy Sanders - Florida State University FootballScoop is proud to announce that Randy Sanders (Florida State) is the 2013 FootballScoop Quarterbacks Coach of the Year presented by ProGrass. No player/coach combination hit the ground sprinting quite like Florida State's first-year quarterbacks coach Randy Sanders and redshirt freshman quarterback Jameis Winston. In their first year working together, the pair combined to bring their team a No. 1 ranking and a berth in the BCS National Championship and Winston a Heisman Trophy victory. Winston looked like a fifth-year senior from the very moment he stepped on the field, completing his first 11 passes as a college quarterback (and 25-of-27 on the night) as he threw for 356 yards and four touchdowns in his debut against Pittsburgh on Labor Day. Winston was at his best when the lights shined brightest, connecting on 22-of-34 attempts for 444 yards with four total touchdowns and one interception in a 51-14 stomping of then-No. 3 Clemson, and following that up by completing 21-of-29 passes for 325 yards (plus 27 rushing yards) with a touchdown and two interceptions in a 41-14 blowout of then-No. 7 Miami. For the year, Winston has completed 237-of-349 passes for 3,820 yards with 38 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. He leads the nation in yards per attempt (10.9), ranks 10th in completion percentage (67.9) and sits just 1.72 points behind Russell Wilson's FBS record for passing efficiency. Winston throws for a shade under 294 yards per game on just 26.8 attempts per game, making him the only quarterback in FBS to throw for more than 260 yards per game on less than 27 attempts per game. Winston also ranks fifth nationally in completions of 10-plus yards (161) and second in completions of 20-plus yards (69). "Randy has been a great addition to our staff," said Florida State head coach Jimbo Fisher. "He’s a very good offensive mind that has had great success at some of the top of programs. He’s been key in the development of our quarterbacks this season. He’s mentored some great ones in his past and he’s brought that knowledge and approach to Florida State. I’m very happy that he’s being recognized for his work." For his efforts, Winston became the second redshirt freshman to win the Heisman Trophy, and has Florida State ranked No. 1 in the BCS standings heading into the national title game on January 6. Florida State also ranks second nationally in scoring offense (53.3 points per game), sixth in total offense (529.4 yards per game) and first in yards per play (7.81). Outside of Winston, Florida State signal callers Jacob Coker and Sean Maguire combined to complete 31-of-57 passes for 366 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions. A native of Morristown, Tenn., Sanders spent his entire college football career in the SEC before arriving at Florida State prior to the 2013 season. He played at Tennessee from 1984-88, and started coaching as a volunteer assistant at Tennessee in 1989. Ten years later, Sanders served as offensive coordinator for the Vols' Fiesta Bowl win over Florida State in the inaugural BCS championship game. Sanders left Tennessee for Kentucky prior to the 2006 season, where he was the Wildcats' offensive coordinator for seven seasons. The FootballScoop Coaches of the Year awards presented by ProGrass are the only set of awards that recognize the most outstanding position coaches in college football. The finalists (Cam Cameron - LSU, Tom Herman - Ohio State, Darin Hinshaw - Cincinnati, Sanders and Dave Schramm - Fresno State) were selected based off of nominations by coaches, athletic directors, and athletic department personnel. The prior winners selected this year's winner. Sanders will receive his award and be recognized at an event at the AFCA Convention in January. Previous winners of the Quarterbacks Coach of the Year award are Josh Heupel (Oklahoma, 2008), Tom Rossley (Texas A&M, 2009), Philip Montgomery (Baylor, 2011) and Mark Helfrich (Oregon, 2010 and 2012). 1st Nationally - Passing Efficiency 2nd Nationally - Scoring Offense 3rd Nationally - Yards Per Attempt 2nd Nationally - Passing Touchdowns 14th Nationally - Passing Offense 3rd Nationally - Passes of 20+ Yds. ProGrass LLC, headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, has emerged as one of the preeminent names in the synthetic turf industry. ProGrass installations can be located from Connecticut to California. The ProGrass product has been received as "One of the Best Products on the Market" by many customers who have spent years evaluating this industry. The reason is simple: we know the industry and have developed the TEAM, the products and processes that exceed the expectations of our demanding and knowledgeable customers. We don’t just sell turf, we know turf! For more information please visit: ProGrassTurf.com Created in 1999, FootballScoop.com is the premier source for coaching job information and has evolved into the most widely viewed website by coaches, athletic directors, strength & conditioning coaches, operations and equipment staff across America. As the leading coaching job information venue, FootballScoop.com serves our viewers’ needs by providing 1st hand, timely & accurate information for our audience. FootballScoop.com is the premier provider of official job postings. Author: Zach Barnett Follow @Zach_Barnett Zach Barnett is a native of Denton, Texas and a graduate of the University of Texas. He joined FootballScoop in 2012 after two years at the National Football Foundation. His hobbies include watching college football, reading about college football and writing about college football.
2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/6014
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Help | Connect | Sign up|Log in Jon Entine, Contributor I write skeptically about science, public policy, media and NGOs. Baby Boomer Blues: What Should A Man Of A 'Certain Age' Do When His Face Begins To Sag? I’m a baby boomer. I’m fit and feel pretty spunky, but there is no defying gravity. My once youthful face had begun to sag (I cringe admitting this) and my eyelids looked heavy. I had that tired look. To compound my concerns, I had developed a snoring problem that drove my teenage daughter nuts when we shared a room when traveling. With celebrities and reality stars constantly going under the knife, plastic surgerymay seem almost like the norm these days, but is it right for a working stiff facing a nagging but very literal self-image crisis? After a sharp lull during the Great Recession, plastic surgery is again booming. And the trend doesn’t only apply to women—men are getting nipped and tucked with increasing regularity. National trends suggest that in some busy practices around the country, more than a quarter of the people going in for structural alterations like chin implants are male, a sharp increase over the past decade. Overall, according to the American Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, almost ten percent of cosmetic procedures are done on men—more than double the percentage from 2000. Most of these men, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons reports, are coming in for the same things as women: facial and eyelid surgery, and liposuction. So, apparently like many men of a certain age, and with some trepidation, I checked out the various plastic surgery practices in Cincinnati, where I live. I wanted to address both my snoring and facial flaws, so I targeted someone with expertise in both areas. After my research, I ended up in the offices of Jon Mendelsohn, a surgeon certified by both the American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and the American Board of Otolaryngology. Trained at Syracuse University, the Cincinnati surgeon now has one of the highest-volume Botox practices in the Midwest and is known as a top shelf facial and body remodeler as well. “For years, when it came to plastic surgery, most men said, “It’s not for me,” Dr. Mendelsohn told me. But that’s changed. “I’ve definitely seen more men who, while hesitant, are curious and willing to consider these surgeries. There has been a gradual increase in interest over the past decade, but traffic really picked up after the 2008 financial collapse.” Plastic surgery procedures in the United States peaked in 2007 at 1.84 million, a number still not eclipsed. “Many of the men who have come to see me since the downturn began said they were pushing off retirement and were frankly worried about job security. ‘Image is important,’” they said. “’What can you do to help?’” That’s me. But could I risk ending up looking like Kenny Rogers or Bruce Jenner or other plastic surgeries on men gone wrong? Those guys don’t look refreshed; they looked cooked. Mendelsohn first discussed non-surgical options, like Botox. But for me, with the signs of aging growing, only the knife could address the issues. For the snoring, he suggested coblation, which is a relatively new treatment that consists of pushing a probe into the soft palate and soft tissue in the nasal passages, removing and reducing the volume of fat by using radiofrequency energy, which is significantly cooler than traditional electrosurgery or lasers. Considering the thousands of dollars I had already dropped at various doctors and dentists who provided no relief, the cost—a few thousand dollars—seemed affordable. What could I do about my sagging looks? We discussed a range of options, including a facelift, liposuction of my cheeks and lift surgery around my eyes and eyelids. It sounds expensive, and if you live on the coasts or in prime facial surgery regions like West Palm Beach, Atlanta, Dallas or Chicago, it probably would be—upwards of $25,000. However, in line with many Midwest surgeons, high-end physicians in my hometown, like Mendelssohn, charge around $15,000 for the package, and that could include dot laser treatments to rejuvenate the skin. The total would be a gulp inducing outlay. But for me, it would also be a once in-a-lifetime expenditure. So, I swallowed hard, and said “yes”. A few months post surgery, I can say without reservation that it was worth it. As my daughter can attest, the coblation surgery cut my snoring dramatically. You can see for yourself the before and after facial pictures. Maybe they are just trying to flatter, but many people say I look like I’m in my late 40s. That works for me. This is a great piece. I think it gives hope to people who are struggling with aging, and may have had some trepidation about going under the knife. I am a baby boomer myself. I wouldn’t consider myself vein, but I am healthy and active, and did not see a face that I felt reflected who I was on the inside when I looked in the mirror. In 2010 I underwent a mini face lift and botox treatment (Thanks Dr.Vega!.) But not after doing some serious research. I used plasticsurgery.org as a major starting point for my research. I trolled before and afters, read horror stories, and success stories. It took me almost an entire year to decide to do it, but I did, and couldn’t be happier. The first time my college aged children saw me, they couldn’t believe how much better I looked. My daughter told me I looked beautiful, which in itself was worth it to me. It is nice to read other success stories like mine. Jon Entine I cover science and public policy, environmental sustainability, media ideology, NGO advocacy and corporate responsibility. I'm a senior fellow at the Center for Risk & Health Communication and STATS (Statistical Assessment Service) at George Mason University, where I run the Genetic Literacy Project. I've edited/authored seven books on genetics, chemicals and risk assessment and my favorite, on why I never graduated from college football player to pro athlete: "Taboo: Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We're Afraid to Talk About It". I'm also a public policy fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a long time columnist with British-based Ethical Corporation magazine. Previously, I was a producer and executive at ABC News and NBC News. Motto: Follow the facts, not the ideology. Play hard. Love dogs. More from Jon Entine Follow Jon Entine on Twitter Jon Entine’s RSS Feed Jon Entine’s Profile Jon Entine’s Recommended Reading Jon Entine’s Website
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Help | Connect | Sign up|Log in Ken Makovsky, Contributor I write about communications, marketing and management. I’ve always believed that art has much wisdom to offer those of us in the world of business. Australian songwriter and performer Peter Allen — together with his writing partner, Carole Bayer — created one of my favorite songs of the seventies: the classic “Everything Old Is New Again.” You can listen to it here. Among the lyrics, which evoke a timeless truth: Don’t throw the past away You might need it some rainy day Dreams can come true again When everything old is new again How true! Integrated marketing communications (IMC), for example, has been a concern for agencies and their clients for decades now … ever since Y&R’s Ed Ney introduced the “Whole Egg” concept. After lying dormant for a while, IMC has become an issue of supreme importance to CMOs, who are desperately seeking a holistic approach to their marketing communications with consumers. Surveys sponsored by Avidan Strategies and Econsultancy reveal the data underpinning that point of view: When asked what was the most important thing that they wanted from an agency, more than two-thirds (68%) of CMOs put integrated marketing ahead of “effective advertising” (65%). In fact, integration is a pivotal factor in selecting a particular agency in a pitch and among the top reasons that marketers dismiss one agency and look for a new one. Nearly three out of four marketers are unimpressed by the way traditional agencies are transforming themselves to adopt digital marketing capabilities. A typical comment from a respondent was, “I think they have given up adapting and are laying low. I see very little interest in changing.” A different global survey of business people (not limited to CMOs) found that, while the vast majority of responding companies dabbled in integrated marketing, only 12% of respondents report that they have a truly integrated approach to all campaigns, across all channels. Pablo Picasso once said: “Everything you can imagine is real.” The deficits that exist today could well be the greatest opportunities we can imagine … If we’re willing to act holistically, across channel and geographies, to deliver the value our clients crave. I founded Makovsky in 1979 after working with one of the top PR agencies in the world. I've been named a “PR All-Star” and the top business-to-business counselor in the public relations industry, I'm the 2007 winner of the John W. Hill Award, the New York Chapter of PRSA's most prestigious individual award, and I was inducted into the PR News Hall of Fame in 2008. I just won the Grand Prize of "Communications Professional of the Year" at the Bulldog Awards, where I was also named "PR Blogger of the Year" and "PR Agency Pro of the Year" for the second consecutive year. Founder and past president of IPREX, the second largest global corporation of independent public relations firms, I'm a member of The College of Fellows, the honorary organization of the Public Relations Society of America; the Arthur Page Society, an honorary organization of public relations leadership; the Advisory Committee of the Newhouse School of Communications (Syracuse University) Public Relations Executive Distant Learning Program and the Board of Trustees of the Institute for Public Relations. I'm the former president of the Washington University Alumni Club in New York and currently a member of the University’s Board for the School of Arts and Sciences. I hold a JD degree from Washington University School of Law in St. Louis as well as a Bachelor of Arts from the University. More from Ken Makovsky Follow Ken Makovsky on Twitter Follow Ken Makovsky on Facebook Ken Makovsky’s RSS Feed Ken Makovsky’s Profile Ken Makovsky’s Website
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Help | Connect | Sign up|Log in Luisa Kroll, Forbes Staff My beat: How folks make, keep and spend fortunes. Qualcomm's Irwin Jacobs Is Fourth Billionaire In April To Announce $100 Million Plus Gift Irwin Jacobs and his wife Joan announced a $133 million gift on Monday to Cornell University and the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. It will fund the creation of The Joan and Irwin Jacobs Technion-Cornell Innovation Institute, including helping support faculty and graduate students, among other initiatives. A former academic, Jacobs attended Cornell seeking a degree in hotel administration before switching over to electrical engineering. He earned his doctorate at MIT where he then spent several years teaching. His wife Joan also graduated from Cornell, and both have been deeply involved in the school. He has also been a supporter of Technion, a public university in Israel, and supposedly helped advice the two partners, when they were competing to build a new graduate school of applied sciences on Roosevelt Island in New York; they were awarded the contract in December 2011. The Jacobs’ gift will play a key role in furthering one of the most highly anticipated developments in New York City, one that has already received a record breaking gift of $350 million from DFS cofounder, Chuck Feeney, the subject of a Forbes profile last year, entitled “The Billionaire Who Is Trying To Go Broke.” The project will probably cost close to $2 billion and the first phase of construction isn’t expected to be finished until 2017. Worth approximately $1.5 billion, with the majority of his fortune still held in Qualcomm Qualcomm, the wireless chip manufacturer he cofounded, Jacobs has been giving away money at a steady pace. A noted philanthropist and Giving Pledge signatory, he has donated $185 million to the University of California at San Diego, where he taught computer science. He and his wife have also given $75 million to the University of California, San Diego health system and pledged more than $100 million to the San Diego Symphony. Jacobs is one of at least four billionaires who have announced gifts of $100 million or more in the month of April. Leonard Lauder gifted his $1.1 billion collection of Cubist art to Metropolitan Museum of Art. David Koch announced a $100 million gift in April to NY Presbyterian for new UES ambulatory care center, and Berkshire Hathaway’s Charlie Munger gave $110 million to University of Michigan dorms. UPDATE Make that five: According to a Wall Street Journal article, Blackstone founder and billionaire Stephen Schwarzman has announced a $100 million donation to fund a scholarship program to bring 200 mainly U.S. students to China every year. Follow me on twitter . Leonard Lauder's $1.1 Billion Cubist Art Gift To Met Is One Of Largest Donations In History Caleb Melby Chuck Feeney: The Billionaire Who Is Trying To Go Broke Steven Bertoni brendatnyc Back in my day you could buy an entire medical school or a Lincoln Center theater for $100 million. Today $133 million buys you a ‘concentration’? I do long for those simpler times. www.HereSheIsBoys.com Luisa Kroll, Forbes Staff It is crazy to think about. That size gift doesn’t even make him top dog donor at this new campus. but can you help me ? i wont to borrow money I don’t think donating 100 million to a symphony is real philanthropy. Surely the purpose should be to adress unequal weath distribution. Giving money to an orchestra means that people who like such a pastime (generally well-educated, well-off people) will be able to express their interests further. As with most of these examples, they don’t seem to be about improving the well-being of those who have little, rather improving the well-being of the middle or upper class. Money the wealthy donate often go to the arts or universities. Without these donations opera and ballet companies would fold in droves. Most will be used by people like themselves which is what all normal people would do. The fact that the government lets them deduct as much as half from their taxes should probably be limited. Although museum curators would scream in horror that without tax benefits their programs would fold. Which is akin to saying without the common folks contribution by tax credit to the wealthy many rich people wouldn’t have the opera to go to. I do find it interesting that so many of the wealthy people I follow give to universities and cultural institutions. Much fewer to eradicate global poverty. At some point, I’d love to sit in on a discussion debating the merits. The Roosevelt Campus will create many jobs for starters.. Joseph Udo Philantrophy is always a commendable project… but I’ve noticed that ‘giving constructively’ is almost used interchangeably with giving to universities, research centres, etc. while projects with direct impact on the poor are hard sells, so do we say those kind of projects are not ‘constructive’? US King Nathen CONGRADULATIONS ON MAKING ALL OF YOUR MONEY IN YOUR NEW FOUND WEALTH, ENJOY IT! hello i am Simon Tsertsvadze i live in Georgia. i was dancer but now i pain leg and i have not work …. i need help please my email is s_tsertsvadze@yahoo.com please help me !! you are very rich people , please help me I’ve tracked the world’s wealthiest people for Forbes for more than 16 years, first as an enterprising reporter and later as the editor who oversees all our global wealth coverage and ultimately signs off on the final ranks of the world’s billionaires. Over the years, I have valued everything from Polish telecom companies to property on the Black Sea Coast to an African game park. I have gotten to travel as far as Iceland, Singapore and South Africa to meet these folks at their homes, in their hotel rooms and on their yachts. Handling highly confidential and sensitive information is a critical part of my job, as is figuring out who to trust. It is never dull and I am always trying to uncover new information and out new billionaires. Any tips, email me at lkroll@forbes.com More from Luisa Kroll Follow Luisa Kroll on Twitter Follow Luisa Kroll on Facebook Luisa Kroll’s RSS Feed Luisa Kroll’s Profile
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Help | Connect | Sign up|Log in Tom Van Riper, Forbes Staff I cover the business of sports for Forbes. The Highest Paid Coaches In Sports see photosAP Click for full photo gallery: Highest Paid Coaches in Sports Want to make it as a big-time coach? It’s best if you aren’t good enough to play past college, and get started early on the X’s and O’s. Bill Belichick, the New England Patriots’ resident genius, last played as a tight end at unheralded Wesleyan University in Connecticut in the early 1970s. Despite an economics degree, he may well have started off as the lowest paid member of Wesleyan’s class of 1975, reportedly earning less than $50 a week as an assistant coach with the Baltimore Colts. But that knack for defensive schemes would pay off. Click Here To See The Highest-Paid Coaches In Sports Ten jobs, 37 years, 175 wins and three Super Bowls later (plus a pile more as an assistant), Belichick makes more money than any coach in America, some $7.5 million annually. While the Patriots have never publicly disclosed Belichick’s salary, no pundit we spoke to doubted it was north of $7 million – what the Seattle Seahawks were paying Mike Holmgren – when the club extended is contract in 2007. With eight of the top ten spots, the NFL dominates the list highest paid coaches in the land. And that’s without counting the Saints’ Sean Payton, who will forfeit his $7 million-plus salary this year while he sits out a suspension, and the Giants’ Tom Coughlin, the two-time Super Bowl winner who doesn’t quite crack the top ten despite an estimated $5.25 million a year (Coughlin, showing no sign of slowing down at 65, will probably cash in with one more long term contract before he’s done). The most obvious reason for NFL dominance: price competition from the college ranks that drives up compensation for both head coaches and assistants. College competition also drives up coaching salaries in the NBA, the only league in which coaches salaries are comparable to the NFL. The NBA accounted for more spots a couple of years ago, but the retirement of Phil Jackson in L.A. and resignation of Mike D’Antoni in New York has left just Boston’s Doc Rivers ($7 million) and San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich ($6 million) among the elite ten. Among football’s big earners, it isn’t just Bellichick who took the long road to coaching stardom and the big money that comes with it. Washington’s Mike Shanahan ($7 million a year) started out as an assistant at Northern Arizona right out of college. Seattle’s Pete Carroll (also $7 million) was a grad assistant at his alma mater, the University of Pacific, before beginning his run at major conference schools like Arkansas, Iowa State and Ohio State. The Steelers’ Mike Tomlin was a small college player at William & Mary before launching his coaching career as an assistant at Virginia Military Institute. Then there’s Chicago’s Lovie Smith, a linebacker at the University of Tulsa, started coaching high school ball right after he graduated from Tulsa in1980. It took him until 1996 to reach the NFL, when he got the gig as linebackers coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Working under T0ny Dungy in Tampa proved fruitful – eight years later Smith was the head coach of the Chicago Bears. He’s gone 71-57 with a Super Bowl appearance in eight years. The two members of the NFL’s top ten that did play in the league, St. Louis’ Jeff Fisher and Arizona’s Ken Whisenhunt, had relatively undistinguished careers – Fisher played 49 games with the Bears while Whisenhunt carved a spot for himself as a blocking tight end with three teams over nine seasons. If you’ve got big time talent, why not go to USC (Fisher) or Georgia Tech (Whisenhunt)? But if coaching is your goal, Wesleyan University will do just fine. Click Here To See The Highest-Paid Coaches In Sports Follow Me on Twitter stephen hickman Interesting title, why can’t Americans understand that there is a world outside of there country. ‘All of sports’ does not mean ‘US sport’. I could give you 20 coaches that get more than Belichick around the world. Steve Iversen To Stephen Hickman. Name them please. Jony Brumas Jose Mourinho, Pep Guardiola, Alex Ferguson, … almost 3 times more Beth Conmee Lovie Smith….Working under Tiny Dungy……LMAO! Tom Van Riper, Forbes Staff Ah yes, thank you for picking up our little typo… Mr. Van Riper I’m afraid that Tomlin was never an assistant to Cowher in Pittsburgh and he was never an assistant with Whisenhunt anywhere. He was the DC for the Vikings and the defense backs coach for Tampa Bay. In fact he was one of the few out of house candidates interviewed for the job. Russ Grimm and Whisenhunt were both on the Pittsburgh staff, but Tomlin came from outside. That wasn’t in the article itself, but whoever is writing the photo captions was a little lazy with their research. Yikes thanks for that, Matt. rick figueiredo In Sports is misleading. Sports in America more accurate and I doubt these figures are actually correct. Coaches have a stated salary and then a real salary with all the extras and perks. Jose Mourinho of Real Madrid has a base salary of $19 million. I find that the NFL, for a league that has the highest profit margins in the world for any sport pays their coaches this low. Tom Van Riper I have been writing for Forbes since 2005. Prior to that I covered the business beat for the New York Daily News. Because I've studied both finance and journalism, and because I like both numbers & analysis and sports, what's a more fun job than merging the two, writing about sports from the business side and from the stat geek/number crunching side? I have a BS in business from Boston College and a masters in business journalism from New York University. More from Tom Van Riper Follow Tom Van Riper on Twitter Tom Van Riper’s RSS Feed Tom Van Riper’s Profile
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A "Concrete" Commitment to the Civil Engineers of Tomorrow May 18, 2011 Request more information RESTON, VA -- For more than two decades, civil engineering students have come together each June to see if the thousands of hours they have spent researching, designing and constructing canoes made of concrete have paid off. In turn, each summer a group of five leading industry professionals is also challenged with the daunting task of determining which team will take home the "America's Cup of Civil Engineering." The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) today announced the elite group chosen to serve as judges for the 2011 National Concrete Canoe Competition to be held June 16-18 at the University of Evansville in Indiana. They are: David G. Lewis, P.E., Bridge Engineer for the County of Santa Barbara, California, Transportation Division of the Department of Public Works. Craig A. Lindquist, P.E., M.ASCE, president of Creative Construction Solutions in Chesterfield (St. Louis) Missouri. Larry K. Owens, P.E., M.ASCE, Chief Engineer/Area Manager for Traylor Bros., Heavy Civil Construction Division in Evansville. David J. Wanninger, P.E., M. ASCE, president of Acura Engineering, Inc., Evansville. Michelle L. Wilson, FACI, director of Concrete Knowledge for Portland Cement Association, Skokie, Illinois. "This event would not be possible without the commitment of the National Concrete Canoe Competition judges, who unselfishly lend their extensive knowledge, time, energy and enthusiasm to making it the best learning experience possible for the students," said ASCE president Kathy J. Caldwell, P.E., F.ASCE, "The judges' endless commitment to civil engineering education will have a significant impact on the future of the profession and on the competition's participants." The best and brightest from 24 top engineering schools compete in four categories -- the aesthetics and structural integrity of their canoe; a technical design paper highlighting their planning, development, testing and construction; an academic presentation covering their canoe's design, construction, racing ability and other innovative features, and, of course, the performance of the canoe and its paddlers in five different races -- men's and women's slalom/endurance races and men's, women's and co-ed sprint races. For more information on the National Concrete Canoe Competition, including downloadable high-resolution photos, please visit www.concretecanoe.asce.org. A "Concrete" Commitment to the Civil Engineers of Tomorrow Concrete Hycrete Introduces Performance Warranty for Flooring Concrete CSDA Releases Proceedings from Roundtable Discussions Concrete CTS Cement Discovers New Self-Organized Structures in Cement Concrete Larry Scofield Joins the Staff of the International Grooving and Grinding Association Concrete Collaborative Efforts in New Technology Development of Reactive Porcelain Enamels for Reinforcing Steel in Concrete Concrete Concrete Students Prove Academic Excellence Concrete iCrete Link Now an Information Platform For Global Concrete Industry Concrete Doka announces partnership with masons supply company Concrete T.B. Penick Awarded Contract for Reconstruction of the Coney Island Boardwalk Concrete Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute Appoints New Chairman, Board Members Loading
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2014-15/0022/en_head.json.gz/6020
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