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Readers Exchange » Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919 » Mike Cox » New London school explosion Describing Romeo and Juliet's attraction as "star-crossed" sounds romantic, but Shakespeare was just calling the situation as he saw it. If you check the origins of the word "disaster", you'll find that it amounts to something like "against the stars or fate". Attendees...
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Home | Calendars | Apply Now | Contact Us | Give to RSU | Search: RSU Sponsors Three-Day Theatre Workshop by Noted Actor, Playwright Joe Sears Joe Sears (Photo credit: Brenda Ladd) Rogers State University is sponsoring the "Joe Sears Theatre Workshop at RSU Bartlesville" for area high school students on August 8-10 at the Bartlesville Community Center. Teaching staff for the workshop include Sears; RSU Theatre Director David Blakely; Jeff Gentry, Professor and Head of the RSU Department of Communication; and instructors Bob Shell from the Bartlesville campus and Jim Brown of the Pryor Campus. RSU Bartlesville Provost Bill Beierschmitt is serving as host for the three-day event. Sponsored by RSU, the workshop will emphasize character acting and pursuing theatre as a career. Registration is limited to high school students entering 10th, 11th or 12th grade. The event is free, and lunch will be provided. The workshop is limited to the 30 eligible students on a first-come, first-served basis. Students should come to the workshop with a 2- to 3-minute memorized monologue. Sears, along with co-authors Ed Howard and Jaston Williams, created the popular series of plays based in the fictional town of Tuna, Texas, including "Greater Tuna," "A Tuna Christmas," "Red, White and Tuna" and "Tuna Does Vegas." Sears and Williams perform the comedies nationally with the actors portraying multiple roles throughout the performance. He also was commissioned by the Cherokee Nation in 2001 to rewrite its signature outdoor drama, "The Trail of Tears" and created the comic opera, "Ochelata's Wedding," that debuted at the OK Mozart Festival in 2000. "We're honored to be able to offer this free workshop to area high school students," Beierschmitt said. "Recognizing Bartlesville's robust history in the arts, this provided a natural extension of the university's mission of service and outreach to the greater Bartlesville area." Sears said the workshop will provide a good opportunity to help inspire future actors and directors. "I've developed a lot of hard-earned knowledge and insight during my years as a working actor and director," Sears said. "It is such an honor for me to have this opportunity to work with this great workshop team and share with the students some of the lessons I've learned over the years." Interested students can register online at www.rsu.edu/joesears/ or contact Lynsey Simmons at lsimmons@rsu.edu or 918-343-6825 to obtain a registration form.
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Amgen Tour 2012 – Stage One Photo Galleries Sports Tour of California - Stage 1 SANTA ROSA, CA - MAY 13: The peloton leaves the start of stage one of the Amgen Tour of California on May 13, 2012 in Santa Rosa, California. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images) Tour of California - Stage 1 SANTA ROSA, CA - MAY 13: Christopher Horner (L) and Matt Busche of the United States and Team Radioshack-Nissan prepare for stage one of the Amgen Tour of California on May 13, 2012 in Santa Rosa, California. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images) SANTA ROSA, CA - MAY 13: Christopher Horner of the United States and team RadioShack-Nissan prepares stage one of the Amgen Tour of California on May 13, 2012 in Santa Rosa, California. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images) SANTA ROSA, CA - MAY 13: The peloton is welcomed by fans as they line the route during stage one of the Amgen Tour of California on May 13, 2012 in Windsor, California. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images) SANTA ROSA, CA - MAY 13: George Hincapie riding for BMC Racing deposits clothing in the team car during stage one of the Amgen Tour of California on May 13, 2012 in Santa Rosa, California. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images) SANTA ROSA, CA - MAY 13: The peloton rides along the Pacific coast on Highway One during stage one of the Amgen Tour of California on May 13, 2012 in Santa Rosa, California. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)
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1-800-411-SAVE! simply the best! All the Directory Assistance you'll ever need! "Most of the beautiful things in life are FREE!" This how I find the kind of service 1-800-411-SAVE offers.. Now, I don't have to repeat myself for as many times as I've been talking to a machine before. I don't have to amplify my bionic voice for me to be heard and be understood for a very simple request like Baskin Robbins. It's really funny in a way and at the same time disappointing because it consumes our time.. You'll never be able to figure out what I've been talking about unless you try it by yourself. If your interested to know what I discovered, follow these simple steps:1. Call 1-800-411-SAVE2. Try a couple of different requests.3. Look up for you own phone number(if your are unlisted).4. Try looking up for the phone number of your business customers/associates.5. Ask for a phone number by business category - like chinese restaurants, florists, towing, hospitals, doctors, dentists, churches, everything you'll ever need!We can get so much more of their directory assistance services absolutely free! All we have to do is to listen to short audio advertisement(about 5-10 secs in length) and presto! We had it FREE OF CHARGE!You might as well want to check out this video for more clarification. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLvUGXL4oCYWhy spend for Directory Assistance if you can have it for FREE! Posted by
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ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University > PSYCH_FACPUB Psychology Faculty Publications What has Love got to do with it? Sentimental Attachments and Legal Decision-Making David Markell Sarah F. Brosnan, Georgia State UniversityFollow This article was originally published in the Villanova Law Review, which has granted Georgia State University non-exclusive, non-commercial permission to post articles co-authored by Georgia State University professors. Markell, D.M., Tyler, T.R., Brosnan, S.F. (2012). What has love got to do with it? Sentimental attachments and legal decision-making. Villanova Law Review, 57(2), 209-260. Available at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/vlr/vol57/iss2/1/
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A Canadian Lefty in Occupied Land Personal/political musings from a Canadian activist and writer. From May 2004 to July 2005, when the author lived in the U.S., the site was known as A Canadian Lefty in the Land of King George. Here are a few words about the current name. Federal Candidate in Sudbury Calls for 'Homosexuals' to be Executed I kid you not. Here is the story. The perpetrator of this awful, blatant hatred is David Popescu, an independent candidate who regularly runs in elections while spouting extremist views that he claims to derive from his version of Christianity. He made this point in at an all-candidates meeting at a local high school, and then reaffirmed his position on the matter in a later interview with the reporter who wrote the linked story, which quotes him directly:"A young man asked me what I think of homosexual marriages and I said I think homosexuals should be executed," he said.The local police are investigating it as a hate crime. My feelings about the best role for the state in responding to oppressive actions are complicated and I'm not going to try to figure them out here. In particular, I have concerns about how this allows the state to masquerade as protecting the rights and safety of queer people, when in fact historically and in the present it plays a major role in perpetuating heterosexism in ways that make acute hatred like this more possible. However, to the extent that it signals serious disapproval of at least certain kinds of anti-queer actions, I do appreciate the fact they are opening an investigation.What I think is notable and reprehensible is the response of authority figures in the school and the other candidates...apparently students were upset about the call for mass executions and let their displeasure be known, but "Candidates and teachers looked on in silence as students called for him to be 'cut off.'" In other words, none of the non-youth in the room seemed to feel any need to condemn Popescu's comment.Here is how the article goes on to describe the responses from various parts of the education system:Paul Camillo, principal of Sudbury Secondary, emphasized the school's inclusiveness in his closing remarks but did not condemn the statement."We're here today to hear what the candidates have to say," he said in an interview. "As an inclusive school, we respect all other opinion although we may not agree with them — and I know there were definitely some things said today that we don't agree with." When Sun Media-owned Sudbury Star later requested a comment on the controversy from the Rainbow District School Board, the board directed Camillo to provide its response, rather than the board's chair or director of education.Camillo said he could not state whether Popescu would be welcomed back to Sudbury Secondary, as a candidate in a future political debate.So let me just be clear here: a guest in their school said that some of their students should be executed, and they refused to condemn the statement? They are more concerned with being "inclusive" of his speech than responding in a meaningful way to the experiences of the 20-plus people in that auditorium that he had just said deserved to die? Many of whom are probably wrestling with all kinds of shame and self-loathing already? When suicide by queer youth is much higher than the average for straight youth?It is this sort of response, especially coming as it does to about as extreme an anti-queer sentiment as you could possibly find, that contributes to circumstances I blogged about back in the spring -- the profound lack of safety felt by queer youth in Canadian schools, as found in a national survey. One of its key findings was that two-thirds of queer youth in grades 8 to 12 feel that their schools are unsafe. But evidently them feeling safe is much, much less important to the schools than some hateful idiot getting to feel included.The article about these hateful comments is not a bad one, as the mainstream media goes, but it is telling that the dictates of newspaper article structure -- put what you consider to be most important first because most people only read the first few paragraphs, and leave what you consider to be least important to the end, where most people don't see it -- have been interpreted such that response from a person whose death was actually advocated was left to the last few paragraphs. Here is what Gary Kinsman (who also happens to be a friend and a fellow activist on many issues) told the reporter:An advocate for the Sudbury Gay and Lesbian community said while Popescu's extreme views are well known, he has never said something "so extreme." "He's not simply saying that lesbians or gay men are mentally ill or somehow deviant or criminals. He's saying we should be subject to the death penalty," said Gary Kinsman."I think sometimes violence and hatred towards gays and lesbians gets dressed up in sort of a religious guise and is somehow tolerated. I just don't think it should be tolerated at all." Kinsman was particularly concerned the comments were made before a group of young people."There are lots of young people in high schools in Sudbury who are struggling with their sexualities. Often times, it's pretty hard time for them," he said. "To say something to young people is pretty terrible."It would be great if this horrible event could be used by local queer activists to put some pressure on the local school board to actually start taking the safety of queer youth seriously. Scott Neigh skdadl Well, somebody has to do something about that. I have a lot of trouble with our hate-speech laws, but that statement comes very close to incitement, and people have to see how dangerous it is.Feminists understand this danger too. Unquestionably, the hatred fomented against feminists and pro-choice politics has encouraged some wingnuts to go out and commit violence, a few to kill. It doesn't matter how many killers might be sparked by that kind of rhetoric -- one is already too many, obviously. noamzs When I heard this story, the first thing I thought about was 'what did the other candidates he was debating have to say about this?' Why is nobody asking this question? Did they just sit idly by as well, or did the stand up and defend the rights of gays or anyone else who chooses a lifestyle that doesn't harm anybody else? Hi skdadl and noamzs!Yes, somebody has to do something. Regardless of my uncertainty about police involvement, it is a disgrace that school officials and the other candidates said nothing. I hadn't seen it when I wrote this piece originally, but part of the sub-headline in the Sudbury Star print version of this story is "fellow candidates say nothing." Only the youth who were present had the politically appropriate response.Shame on the school personnel and shame on the candidates. I was there, and I don't feel that the lack of immediate reaction from the adults in the room was due to a lack of caring. I think many people were just in such a state of shock that they were not sure how to react. The staff members of Sudbury Secondary School are open minded and supportive people. Many gay people come to my school to find acceptance. However, I also feel that the fact that he was allowed to continue in the debate after his hateful comment was shameful. I left the building shocked; I'm not a naive person but I never expected to see someone display so much hatred towards gay people. Thank you for writing about this issue with the students in mind as many of us feet incredibly hurt by the comment. Name: Scott NeighLocation: Sudbury, Ontario, CanadaAbout Me: hereEmail: scottneigh@talkingradical.ca Learn about them here, buy them here. My Radio Show Talking Radical Radio brings you in-depth interviews with people doing a broad range of social change work from all across Canada. Check out the latest episodes: Tweets by @canadianlefty Recent Work Published Elsewhere Much of my recent blogging is also cross-posted to the Canadian Dimension group blog. And my recent non-blog output can be found in one of these four categories: Online journalistic pieces for The Media Co-op since September 2012 -- listed here. Presentations, talks, and workshops done in recent years -- listed here. Talking Radical Radio -- episodes listed here, on Rabble.ca Other pieces of non-blog work from recent years that don't fit any of the other three categories -- listed here. Book Reviews On This Site Master List of Book Reviews Published On This Site Selected Older Posts About... ...Electoral Politics ...Gender and Sexuality ...History ...Knowledge Production and Transmission ...Parenting ...Popular Culture ...Social Movements ...Sudbury ...Topics That Don't Fit in Other Categories ...What's Going On in My Life
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Currently Hot Topics: Game of Thrones | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Captain America 2 Easter Eggs | X-Men | Spring Movie Preview | ‘Once Upon a Time in Wonderland’ Puts a New Face on Jafar Published 4 months ago by David Griffin 16 Shares: [This is a review for Once Upon a Time in Wonderland season 1, episode 7. It contains SPOILERS.] Once Upon a Time in Wonderland tells a tale of two fathers, each having a complicated relationship with their respective children. Taking a step back from the stories of Will and Anastasia this week, ‘Bad Blood’ chooses to focus on Alice and Jafar’s family dynamics. While not the most plot-building episode of the series, ‘Bad Blood’ does do a respectable job at deepening our understanding of why our heroes and villains do what they do. Alice’s father (Edwin) has been tricked into entering Wonderland by Jafar, who uses his blood in order to impersonate him. Alice is no fool, so Jafar’s deception is quickly discovered. The only move left for the sorcerer is to threaten to kill Alice’s father, hoping that it will force her to make another wish. Jafar’s cleverness is only matched by his drive to succeed, so it was no surprise that Alice chose to use one of her two remaining wishes to save Edwin. In typical fairy-tale fashion, Alice makes peace with her father before his journey back to England, but was this reconciliation too sudden? It would seem more likely that a young woman (like Alice) who is suffering from parental-abandonment issues, would take longer to forgive that betrayal. Although, it’s important to remember that this series is closer to Cinderella than Game of Thrones. Conflict exists in Wonderland, but for Alice, it can be resolved with a single phrase or action by someone she loves. Unfortunately for Jafar, his past relationships are not so easy to mend. Many of you have predicted that the old man in Jafar’s floating prison would turn out to be his father. Well, your predictions have come true, as we meet a sultan who is as cruel and unforgiving as his son. As in previous flashbacks to Agrabah, we see a young Jafar who is still a good boy, who comes from a troubled past. Battlestar Galactica’s very own Rekha Sharma plays Jafar’s mother, who tells him the truth about his father. Locked in a cage for several years should have softened the sultan’s heart, but his only regret is not holding Jafar’s head under water longer. The seemingly kind old man is not so kind after all. This scenario makes for a problematic picture. Unlike Emma Rigby’s portrayal of The Red Queen, Jafar gives no hints of wanting to be a better person. Sure, his horrific past could lead him down this path, but he’s so cartoon-like in his villainy, that there doesn’t appear to be any hope of redemption. His father too, who will not tell Jafar that he loves him, or acknowledge that he is in fact his son, is not a character that’s easy to sympathize with. The sultan wishes for Cyrus and Alice to be together, but it has nothing to do with him being in favor of true love. Jafar’s father only wishes to see his son fail. To him, that is fulfillment enough. With Cyrus awake and Alice left with only one wish, what’s next for our weary heroes? Alice’s dad had a strange look on his face after his return home, so this will probably not be the last time Edwin appears in Wonderland. Keep watching to find out. Once Upon a Time in Wonderland continues with ‘Home’ next Thursday @8pm on ABC. Watch a preview below.
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An Ethnobiographical Garden Layout of Garden Medieval Gardens Mission Santa Clara Clare's Influence Today A Sustainable Garden Features of a Sustainable Garden Creating the Garden The Donor Medieval and Renaissance Studies at SCU SCU » St. Clare Garden » An ethnobiographical garden An Ethnobiographical Garden Clare of Assisi (1193-1253) may be unique among the saints of the Catholic Church for the abundance of horticultural references surrounding her life and legacy. Commemorating Clare with a garden is particularly appropriate because she herself was often compared to a plant or garden. This may have been inspired in part by her mother’s name, Ortolana, which means “good gardener.” In her Testament written ca. 1253 Clare uses gardening metaphors to describe the relationship between Francis and her religious community: “The Lord gave us our most blessed Father Francis as Founder, Planter, and Helper in the service of Christ and in those things which we have promised God and him our Father; and in his lifetime he was ever solicitous in word and in work to cherish and foster us, his little plants.” Written two years after her death, Clare’s Bull of Canonization (1255) calls the convent of San Damiano “the garden of the Lord” and her religious order “a vineyard of poverty” and “a garden of humility.” It declares that Clare herself was “truly a noble and lofty tree with wide-spreading branches” and “a fountain of the water of life” that has “watered many nurseries of religious life.” A memorial garden to Clare is in keeping with Franciscan spirituality that celebrates the beauty and goodness of nature, the Lord’s creatures Francis wrote his greatest expression of his love of God and nature, The Canticle of the Creatures (1225), “Praised be You, my Lord, with all your Creatures, especially Sir Brother Sun…” while recuperating from illness in a reed hut in the garden of San Damiano where Clare was Abbess. Meeting of Saints Clare and Francis © 1985 Br. Robert Lentz, OFM Image used courtesy of Trinity Stores Francis' love of creatures extended even to invertebrates and vegetation: “Even for worms he [Francis] had a warm love, since he had read this text about the Savior: “I am a worm and not a man.” That is why he used to pick them up from the road and put them in a safe place so that they would not be crushed by the footsteps of passersby….Whenever he found an abundance of flowers, he used to preach to them and invite them to praise the Lord, just as if they were endowed with reason.” Thomas of Celano, Life of St. Francis 1:29 A garden commemorating St. Clare is especially appropriate at her namesake mission and university. This garden brings Clare’s legacy to life for visitors and the university community. Viewers gain an understanding of the medieval symbolism of plants and herbs. They will also learn about the plants commonly grown in convent gardens and hence the way of life of the ‘Poor Clares,’ the religious community founded by St. Clare that practiced strict poverty in the tradition of Francis himself. Most importantly, visitors learn how the spirituality of St. Clare resonates today, as they watch with her in the Garden of Gethsemane, marvel at her favorite flowers as the beautiful creations of God, and consider the impact of her life upon the world, this “little plant” of the “little poor man” of Assisi. Statue of St. Clare on facade of Mission Santa Clara at Santa Clara University This web site was written and designed by Nancy Lucid whose research was supported by a generous grant from the Bannan Institute for Jesuit Educational Mission at Santa Clara University. For questions regarding the web site contact Nancy Lucid. All rights reserved.
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SDN Journal Authors: Michelle Drolet, Cloud Ventures, Liz McMillan, Lori MacVittie, Elizabeth White News Feed Item F5 Honors 2013 UNITY™ Partners of the Year F5 Networks (NASDAQ:FFIV) announced today its 2013 UNITY Partners of the Year award winners for the Americas. These awards honor top channel partners that show exemplary performance in sales engagement, customer service, and technical acumen. “In 2013 we saw continued traction in our core business of Application Delivery Networking, and we’ve also seen tremendous growth in our newer offerings—especially those around security,” said Keith McManigal, RVP of Channel Sales for the Americas at F5. “Our UNITY partners, with their dedication to identifying and addressing customer needs, were an integral part of this success. F5 thanks and congratulates our 2013 Partners of the Year. With the roll out of the new F5 Synthesis™ framework—combining high performance services fabric with intelligent services orchestration and simplified business models—we’re looking forward to growing these successful partnerships in 2014 as well.” FishNet Security has been named the 2013 UNITY Partner of the Year based on superior performance throughout the year and for general excellence in sales engagement and customer satisfaction. “Earning this award is the product of over 12 years of mutual investment and the hard work of many people on both sides,” said Rich Fennessy, CEO, FishNet Security. “As a result, F5 is one of our largest partners, and our team has openly embraced their full suite of products including traffic, policy, and security management solutions. We are honored to receive this award.” In addition to Partner of the Year, F5 is proud to announce seven other 2013 partner awards for performance throughout the Americas: UNITY Security Partner of the Year: CDW UNITY Application Delivery Partner of the Year: Accuvant UNITY Distributor of the Year: Ingram Micro UNITY Federal Partner of the Year: GuidePoint Security UNITY Growth Partner of the Year: Nexus UNITY Canadian Partner of the Year: Scalar Decisions UNITY Latin America Partner of the Year: Arkavia Networks CIO, CTO & Developer Resources F5 Agility 2014 These award-winning partners will be recognized in person at Agility, F5’s invitation-only technology summit for partners and customers. This year’s Agility will be held August 4–6 in New York, N.Y. Free to F5 customers and partners, the event offers in-depth technology and business presentations as well as technical workshops focused on F5 solutions. About F5 F5 (NASDAQ: FFIV) provides solutions for an application world. F5 helps organizations seamlessly scale cloud, data center, and software defined networking (SDN) deployments to successfully deliver applications to anyone, anywhere, at any time. F5 solutions broaden the reach of IT through an open, extensible framework and a rich partner ecosystem of leading technology and data center orchestration vendors. This approach lets customers pursue the infrastructure model that best fits their needs over time. The world’s largest businesses, service providers, government entities, and consumer brands rely on F5 to stay ahead of cloud, security, and mobility trends. For more information, go to f5.com. You can also follow @f5networks on Twitter or visit us on Facebook for more information about F5, its partners, and technologies. For a complete listing of F5 community sites, please visit www.f5.com/news-press-events/web-media/community.html. F5, UNITY, and F5 Synthesis are trademarks or service marks of F5 Networks, Inc., in the U.S. and other countries. All other product and company names herein may be trademarks of their respective owners. This press release may contain forward-looking statements relating to future events or future financial performance that involve risks and uncertainties. Such statements can be identified by terminology such as "may," "will," "should," "expects," "plans," "anticipates," "believes," "estimates," "predicts," "potential," or "continue," or the negative of such terms or comparable terms. These statements are only predictions and actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these statements based upon a number of factors including those identified in the company's filings with the SEC.
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Surf-film festival will be all about the waves Don Balch May 09, 2012 | 701 views | 0 | 4 | | view slideshow (3 images) Since the embryonic years of the 1950s when the first films made for surfers flickered across the silver screen, surfing enthusiasts have enjoyed the celebratory atmosphere that is prevalent when a new surf movie would visit their town. When a great ride was viewed, howling hoots and good-natured shaka “hang loose” hand gestures were thrust up by the ebullient crowd. It was a celebration of the major stoke that the sport of surfing gives.On May 11-13, “Hoots and Shakas” will be the appropriate theme as the inaugural San Diego Surf Film Festival gets under way at Bird’s Surf Shed, located at 1091 W. Morena Blvd. Three evenings of feature-length movies and short films dedicated to the joys of wave-riding will screen at this unique surf business venue that is literally ceiling-to-floor with classic surfboards on display.The event is the creation of filmmaker Pierce Kavanagh, who, along with wife Petra and friend Ed Lewis, came up with the idea after attending a surf film festival in New York City and organized the event. “I always wanted to put on a community event with film, art and music,” said Pierce. “With the rich surfing history and culture here in San Diego, it made sense.” He enlisted the help of film directors that he knew to enquire about movies that would make good entries, and the word quickly got out about the San Diego Surf Film Festival. “There are 13 features and 22 shorts,” Pierce said. “We will have an international flavor and local films as well.” Locations include Australia, Africa, Mexico and South America, along with surprising surfing locations in Scotland, Italy and Israel. Locally made films include “WindanSea” by Derek Dunfee, “By the Way” by Hayley Gordon, “Margaux” by Shaper Studios and “The Escape” by Skye Walker. Along with the screenings, live music will also be on the schedule Friday night with a pre- and post-party performance by The Red Fox Tails and The Mattson 2, respectively. Additionally, a new film dedication to recently passed, well-respected local surfer Ted Smith and a proclamation from the city of San Diego is part of the evening schedule.There is also a beach cleanup and bodysurfing/womp demonstration at La Jolla Shores/Scripps on May 12 from 8 to 10 a.m., plus surfboard-shaping demos at Bird’s Surf Shed from noon to 2:30 p.m. and again on May 13 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Panels with shapers, artists and filmmakers will also be running at that time. Displays from talented surfing artists and photographers will also be at the event and available for purchase. A VIP party at Bird’s Surf Shed kicks it all off on Thursday night, May 10.“Local surfing legends and dignitaries like Skip Frye, Larry Gordon, Mike Hynson and Carl Ekstrom are some of the guests and it’s great that people like them support the event and want to be a part of it,” said Pierce. “Everyone is really excited about this entire show schedule.” Expect plenty of hoots and shakas as well.For a full schedule of films, times, admission prices and other essential information, visit SanDiegoSurfFilmFestival.com. Walkers ready to put best foot forward in fight against MS Curtain set to rise on neighborhood theater in OB MARTIN J0NES WESTLIN Since the embryonic years of the 1950s when the first films made for surfers flickered across the silver screen, surfing enthusiasts have enjoyed the celebratory atmosphere that is prevalent when a...
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1 Bon Jovi show found by SeatGeek Any dayThis weekThis monthNext month All timesDayNight Track Bon Jovi Wed 8:30 PM Bon Jovi Bon Jovi at Foro Sol on 09-10-2014 Tickets Bon Jovi Biography & News Bon Jovi Details http://www.bonjovi.com/ Bon Jovi Discography Greatest Hits: The Ultimate Collection (disc 1) We Weren't Born to Follow Burning For Rock (You Want to) Make a Memory Who Says You Can't Go Home Live From the Have a Nice Day Tour Welcome to Soulville Have a Nice Day (bonus disc: Live in Atlantic City 2004) 2005-07-02: Live8, Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA, USA 100,000,000 Bon Jovi Fans Can't Be Wrong (disc 4) This Left Feels Right Live All About Lovin' You This Left Feels Right: Greatest Hits With a Twist Target Exclusive Wanted Dead or Alive 2003 I Wish Everyday Could Be Like Christmas Bounce / Misunderstood Wanted Dead or Alive One Wild Night: Live 1985-2001 Tokyo Road Crush (bonus disc: Live From Osaka) Crush Tour 2000 Switzerland 7800° Fahrenheit Yo-Ko-Ha-Ma Hey God Something for the Pain Cross Road Please Come Home for Christmas Bed of Roses Bed of Roses: Greatest Hits Live Live 1992 Live & Alive, Volume 2 Hard & Hot Living in Sin Essential Bon Jovi Born to Be My Baby Cincinnati Gardens 3/17/87 Noche Silenciosa - Silent Night Top 10 Bon Jovi Songs You Give Love A Bad Name About Bon Jovi 11/24/13: "What About Now" is the question Bon Jovi is asking fans these days, as the rockers have released their twelfth studio album and continue a remarkable career in which they've once again had another project climb to the top of the charts. Released on March 8, 2013, "What About Now" debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200, becoming the fifth Bon Jovi album to bow in the top spot. And though it did so with mixed-to-negative reviews, fans have been clamoring for the new material since the band launched the "Because We Can" tour, named after the lead single from the album. The tour kicked off February 10 in Washington D.C., and will visit all five major continents before it wraps. Not only will it mark the first time the band had traveled to Wales since 2001, it will also be the first time they've returned to Africa in nearly two decades, and the first time in the band's history they will be visiting Bulgaria and Poland. The set list, as it stands now, has routinely included at least four songs from the new album. The one thing missing from the spring leg of the tour will be Richie Sambora. Citing "personal reasons" for his departure, the famed guitarist announced his exit from the tour on April 4. The same day, rumors swirled that tensions between Sambora and frontman Jon Bon Jovi had led to Sambora's departure. The band immediately issued a statement that all shows will go on as scheduled, while Sambora assured fans via Twitter that he was "doing well" and had to stay in LA "to take care of a personal matter." Sambora had recently been promoting his solo career and a new album, "Aftermath of Lowdown," which he previously said Bon Jovi supported. With the tour still going strong, Jon Bon Jovi made more headlines when he granted a superfan's wish and walked her down the aisle at her Las Vegas wedding. The wedding took place October 12 at the Graceland Wedding Chapel – 24 years after Jon married wife Dorothea at the exact same venue. Bon Jovi is one of the top achievers in the touring world for 2013, and will be honored at the 10th Annual Billboard Touring Awards set for Nov. 14 at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York. He joins a list of finalists for the awards, which include Jay-Z, Justin Timberlake, One Direction, Luke Bryan, P!nk, Bruce Springsteen, Taylor Swift and the Rolling Stones. A few weeks later, he'll join Swift again to perform at an exclusive charity gig hosted by Prince William at Kensington Palace. The Centrepoint Winter Whites Gala will be held Nov. 26 to benefit homeless youngsters. Bon Jovi... sans Sambora? (Updated April 10, 2013) "What About Now" is the question Bon Jovi is asking fans these days, as the rockers have released their twelfth studio album and continue a remarkable career in which they've once again had another project climb to the top of the charts. The one thing missing from the spring leg of the tour will be Richie Sambora. Citing "personal reasons" for his departure, the famed guitarist announced his exit from the tour on April 4. The same day, rumors swirled that tensions between Sambora and frontman Jon Bon Jovi had led to Sambora's departure. The band immediately issued a statement that all shows will go on as scheduled, while Sambora assured fans via Twitter that he was "doing well" and had to stay in LA "to take care of a personal matter." Sambora had recently been promoting his solo career and a new album, "Aftermath of Lowdown," which he previously said Bon Jovi supported. About Bon Jovi If you're going to form a rock band with just a few key factors in mind - charisma and longevity among them - your best influence may be Bon Jovi. The rock band has been delighting crowds with its music since 1983 and is still comprised of original band members Jon Bon Jovi, Richie Sambora, Tico Torres, and David Bryan. After nearly 30 years of hit songs, No. 1 albums, tours and awards, the guys are still going strong. Throughout their career, Bon Jovi has released 11 studio albums, three compilation albums and one live album. All totaled, the band has sold 130 million records worldwide, played more than 27,000 concerts globally, with more than 35 million fans jamming sold out arenas, stadiums, amphitheaters and fairs. All the members of the band are especially driven, but it's Jon Bon Jovi's intense work ethic that has kept them relevant through the decades. Widespread recognition came with their third album, 'Slippery When Wet,' in 1986. 'You Give Love a Bad Name' was released as its first single; 'Livin' on a Prayer' came next, and 'Wanted Dead or Alive' (known to this day as the Bon Jovi ?National Anthem') followed. The project was the top-selling album of the year and brought the band numerous awards, including an MTV Video Music Award, an American Music Award and an award for Favorite Rock Group at the People's Choice Awards. The numbers since that time confirm Bon Jovi is still among the top acts in the music business. Of the numbers mentioned above, 13 million of those 35 million tickets have been sold since 2000, resulting in a gross of nearly $1 billion. Jon Bon Jovi won a Grammy in 2007 for his duet with Jennifer Nettles, 'Who Says You Can't Go Home,' and was inducted into the songwriting Hall of Fame in 2009.Bon Jovi toured in 2010 and 2011, and continues to break into new markets and attract new fans. The band is planning the release of another album in 2013, and this September will play the iHeartRadio Music Festival at the MGM Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. Bon Jovi Ticket Prices Bon Jovi Ticket Prices Overview Bon Jovi Foro Sol — Mexico City, Dif Cheapest Bon Jovi Tickets Cheapest Bon Jovi Shows of All Time Bon Jovi with The Futureheads Stadium of Light — Sunderland , Twr Jun 16, 2013$60.08 Isle of Wight Festival (SUNDAY Pass) with Bon Jovi Seaclose Park — Newport , Iow Jul 3, 2013$61.87 Bon Jovi Hampden Park — Glasgow , Glg Jul 16, 2013$68.78 Bon Jovi Klipsch Music Center — Noblesville , IN Jun 9, 2013$71.43 Bon Jovi with The Enemy Villa Park — Birmingham , Wmd Most Expensive Bon Jovi Tickets Most Expensive Bon Jovi Shows of All Time 12.12.12 - The Concert For Sandy Relief with Kanye West, Rolling Stones, The Who Madison Square Garden — New York , NY Sep 22, 2012$730.84 iHeartRadio Music Festival (Saturday Pass) with Linkin Park, Aerosmith, Bon Jovi MGM Grand Garden Arena — Las Vegas , NV Sep 21, 2012$576.94 iHeartRadio Music Festival (Friday Pass) with Rihanna, Linkin Park, Green Day MGM Grand Garden Arena — Las Vegas , NV Feb 9, 2013$381.64 Bon Jovi Mohegan Sun Arena — Uncasville , CT Oct 25, 2013$364.29 — Uncasville , CT Past Tour Dates for Bon Jovi Bon Jovi Tour Dates 2013 Sydney Entertainment Centre AAMI Stadium Osaka Dome Spokane Arena Estadio Ciudad de La Plata Ford Field Lom Parque da Bela Vista RheinEnergieStadion Cannstatter Wasen Slane Slane Castle Twr Cardiff City Stadium Stockholm Stadion Koengen Valle Hovin Quicken Loans Arena Quebec City Festival North Beach Asbury Park Royal Dublin Society Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field Commonwealth Stadium - Edmonton First Union Spectrum Fargodome Neal S. Blaisdell Center See Upcoming Bon Jovi Shows Bon Jovi Bio Bon Jovi Tour Dates Get updates on artists similar to Bon Jovi: Aerosmith and Slash to Combine Rock Forces March 26, 2014 – Aerosmith and Slash Tour With so many rock concerts to choose from this summer (KISS, Motley Crue, Guns ‘N Roses, etc), how does one, well, choose what to attend? Well, sorry to say, but this … read more → iHeartRadio Concert, Do uHeartRadio too? September 17, 2013 – Is your favorite artist not playing at the iHeartRadio Music Festival? Check out our extensive list of all the 2012 summer concerts. iHeartRadio 2012 Ticket Prices Even before the lineup h … read more → 2013 Summer Concerts: Everything You Need to Know July 31, 2013 – Summer Concert Photos Summer Concert Videos Sam Adams - Driving Me Crazy at Bamboozle 2010 Lady Gaga Crowd Surfing at Lollapalooza 2010 MGMT - Kids at Lollapalooza 2010 … read more → Bon Jovi Ready to Rock US Fans More in the Fall June 04, 2013 – Bon Jovi Tour As if one pass through the United States and another through Europe doesn't make for a busy enough year, a second leg of Bon Jovi US concert dates was just announced for the fall, b … read more →
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Toronto Blue Jays Tickets 148 Toronto Blue Jays games found by SeatGeek All gamesHomeAway Time Any dayThis weekThis monthNext month All timesDayNight Track Blue Jays Wed 7:10 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins Blue Jays at Twins on 04-16-2014 Thu 12:10 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins Blue Jays at Twins on 04-17-2014 Fri 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Cleveland Indians Blue Jays at Indians on 04-18-2014 Sat 1:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Cleveland Indians Blue Jays at Indians on 04-19-2014 Sun 1:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Cleveland Indians Blue Jays at Indians on 04-20-2014 Tue 7:07 PM Baltimore Orioles at Toronto Blue Jays Orioles at Blue Jays on 04-22-2014 Wed 7:07 PM Baltimore Orioles at Toronto Blue Jays Orioles at Blue Jays on 04-23-2014 Thu 7:07 PM Baltimore Orioles at Toronto Blue Jays Orioles at Blue Jays on 04-24-2014 Fri 7:07 PM Boston Red Sox at Toronto Blue Jays Red Sox at Blue Jays on 04-25-2014 Sat 1:07 PM Boston Red Sox at Toronto Blue Jays Red Sox at Blue Jays on 04-26-2014 Sun 1:07 PM Boston Red Sox at Toronto Blue Jays Red Sox at Blue Jays on 04-27-2014 Tue 7:10 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Kansas City Royals Blue Jays at Royals on 04-29-2014 Wed 7:10 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Kansas City Royals Blue Jays at Royals on 04-30-2014 Thu 7:10 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Kansas City Royals Blue Jays at Royals on 05-01-2014 Fri 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Pittsburgh Pirates Blue Jays at Pirates on 05-02-2014 Sat 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Pittsburgh Pirates Blue Jays at Pirates on 05-03-2014 Sun 1:35 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Pittsburgh Pirates Blue Jays at Pirates on 05-04-2014 Mon 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Philadelphia Phillies Blue Jays at Phillies on 05-05-2014 Tue 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Philadelphia Phillies Blue Jays at Phillies on 05-06-2014 Wed 7:07 PM Philadelphia Phillies at Toronto Blue Jays Phillies at Blue Jays on 05-07-2014 Thu 7:07 PM Philadelphia Phillies at Toronto Blue Jays Phillies at Blue Jays on 05-08-2014 Fri 7:07 PM Los Angeles Angels at Toronto Blue Jays Angels at Blue Jays on 05-09-2014 Sat 1:07 PM Los Angeles Angels at Toronto Blue Jays Angels at Blue Jays on 05-10-2014 Sun 1:07 PM Los Angeles Angels at Toronto Blue Jays Angels at Blue Jays on 05-11-2014 Mon 7:07 PM Los Angeles Angels at Toronto Blue Jays Angels at Blue Jays on 05-12-2014 Tue 7:07 PM Cleveland Indians at Toronto Blue Jays Indians at Blue Jays on 05-13-2014 Wed 7:07 PM Cleveland Indians at Toronto Blue Jays Indians at Blue Jays on 05-14-2014 Thu 7:07 PM Cleveland Indians at Toronto Blue Jays Indians at Blue Jays on 05-15-2014 Fri 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Texas Rangers Blue Jays at Rangers on 05-16-2014 Sat 7:05 PM Toronto Blue Jays at Texas Rangers Blue Jays at Rangers on 05-17-2014 › Toronto Blue Jays News: Regular Season and Preseason Updates See more MLB tickets. The Super Bowl is in New York (via New Jersey) at Met Life Stadium this year and it's primed to be one the hottest Super Bowl we've seen since SeatGeek launched in 2009. Use our Deal Score to find the best deals on Super Bowl 2014 Tickets. David Cooper delivered the big hit for Toronto in extra innings, scoring Kelly Johnson to lead the Blue Jays to a close 3-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Monday night at the Rogers Centre. Carlos Villanueva got the start for Toronto and was superb, pitching seven strong innings and allowing just one earned run on five hits and a walk. He also added eight strikeouts over the course of his 85 pitches to put Toronto in solid position to win the game. Offensively, Moises Sierra blasted his first home run of the season, a solo shot in the seventh off White Sox starter Jake Peavy. While they only managed seven hits on the day, they got the big hits when they counted - the squad was 2-3 with runners in scoring position. Despite only being five games behind .500, the Toronto Blue Jays find themselves in the cellar of the ultra competitive American League East with a 53-58 record, 12 games behind the division leading New York Yankees. While the team remains near the front of the league in runs scored (currently 5th overall with 525), they rank near the bottom in both batting average and on- base percentage where they are 20th overall for each. Pitching has also been a sore spot, with Henderson Alvarez leading a struggling staff with a 4.58 E.R.A. thus far. Edwin Encarnacion has been a bright spot, currently leading the offense with a .288 average, 29 home runs and 75 runs batted in. The Tampa Bay Rays got the best of the Toronto Blue Jays in an intense inter- division rivalry game as the Rays earned the victory on Wednesday by the score of 4-1. J.A. Happ got the start for Toronto and lasted just 4.1 innings, surrendering four earned runs on seven hits and a walk. He also added five strikeouts over the course of his short 82 pitch outing. Offensively, Colby Rasmus provided all of the pop with his 20th home run of the year, a solo shot off Rays starter James Shields in the fourth inning. Outside of that home run, the Blue Jays only managed two additional hits off Shields and the rest of the Tampa Bay bullpen and were 0-2 with runners in scoring position. Despite a solid start from Brett Cecil, the Toronto Blue Jays dropped a 4-1 ball game to the Detroit Tigers on Sunday at the Rogers Centre. Cecil pitched 6.2 innings, surrendering three earned runs on four hits and four walks. He also added seven strikeouts over the course of his 109 pitches, despite picking up his fourth loss of the year. Offensively, the Blue Jays managed just seven hits off Doug Fister and the Tigers bullpen, with their lone RBI coming off the bat of Colby Rasmus, his 64th of the year. Overall on the game, Toronto was 0-4 when it counted with runners in scoring position. Ricky Romero did not have his best stuff on Wednesday as he and the Toronto Blue Jays were routed to the tune of 16-0 by the Oakland Athletics at the Rogers Centre. Romero lasted just 1.1 innings, surrendering eight earned runs on four hits and six walks. Offensively, the team was anemic - they managed just five hits on the day, none of which came with runners in scoring position. The bullpen didn't fair much better - after Romero was taken out in the second, the bullpen allowed an additional eight earned runs throughout the course of the game. AJ Griffin picked up the victory for the Athletics. The Blue Jays jumped all over Boston starter Jon Lester early and never relented as Toronto defeated the division rival Red Sox by the score of 15-7 on Sunday at Fenway Park. While Blue Jays starter Hudson Alvarez didn't have his best stuff either, he stuck around long enough to earn his sixth win of the year thus far. Alvarez pitched 5.2 innings, surrendering seven earned runs on eight hits and a walk. Offensively for Toronto, Brett Lawrie, Rajai Davis and Travis Snider each hit home runs in the victory, while Edwin Encarnacion, JP Arencibia, Jeff Mathis and Colby Rasmus all also drove in runs. The Toronto Blue Jays managed to hang in there with the rest of the AL East for a while, but the Yankees, Orioles and Rays are beginning to put some distance in between them and the Blue Jays have fallen to 6.5 games behind the first-place Yankees at 31-32. This weekend, the Blue Jays will face the Philadelphia Phillies in an interleague series at home in the Rogers Centre. On Friday night, the Jays will send 7-1 Ricky Romero to the mound to face the 0-3 Cliff Lee, who is off to a rather disappointing start to the 2012 season thus far. In the ultra-competitive AL East, a division that's even tighter than its National League counterpart, the fourth-place Toronto Blue Jays are only 2 games out of the division lead at 30-27. Led by Edwin Encarnacion with 17 home runs, 43 RBI, and a .926 OPS, the Blue Jays have managed to hang with the rest of the AL East competition and stay relevant up to this point in the season by scoring a lot of runs. The Jays are 5th in the league in runs scored and will open up a three-game interleague series on Friday night against the Atlanta Braves at Turner Field in Atlanta. In the ultra-competitive AL East, the 27-24 Toronto Blue Jays are only 2 games out of first place, despite currently sitting in 4th place in the division. They are one game ahead of the last-place Boston Red Sox and they will open up a series against Boston on Friday night at home in the Rogers Centre. They will look to remain ahead of the Red Sox and move up in the division. The Jays, led by Edwin Encarnacion with 17 home runs and 42 RBI, are only a half game behind the 3rd place Yankees and are within striking distance of the Orioles and Rays who share the divsion lead. The Blue Jays won close one against the Texas Rangers on Tuesday on a walk-off home run from rookie third basement Brett Lawrie, moving them to 13-11 on the season so far and 7-7 at home. Interim closer Francisco Cordero blew the save in the top of the ninth inning, but Lawrie's heroics ensured a victory for both the ballclub and for Cordero himself. Kelly Johnson and Jose Bautista also added home runs for the Blue Jays in the winning effort. Bautista's blast was his fourth on the season, while Johnson's was his fifth. Ricky Romero will take the mound for the Blue Jays on Wednesday. The Blue Jays learned this past weekend just how unforgiving the strong American League East will be this season. After beginning the weekend in a first place tie with the Tampa Bay Rays, the Toronto Blue Jays find themselves in fourth place in the division heading into the final game of April. While the entire division is close (first place and last place are separated by only 3.5 games), it appears that it may remain very close for the remainder of the season as these teams continue to beat up on one another. Designated hitter Edwin Encarnacion has paced the Jays offense so far, leading the team with a .310 average, 7 home runs and 20 RBI's. The Toronto Blue Jays continued their strong start this past weekend with a four game sweep of the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. The team currently boasts a 10-6 record and is tied with the New York Yankees for the division lead. The Jays, however, received some unfortunate news last week when it was revealed the closer Sergio Santos would require a stint on the 15-day D.L. with a shoulder injury. To fill the void, former closer Francisco Cordero stepped in and delivered two strong saves for the team over the weekend. Cordero will close until Santos returns from his injury. After revamping their bullpen in the offseason with the additions of Francisco Cordero and closer Sergio Santos, the Blue Jays felt that they finally had a club that could compete with the likes of the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and the Toronto Blue Jays. While they began the season with a 2-2 mark - better than both the Yankees and the Red Sox - a number of questions remain. New closer Santos has yielded 4 earned runs in 2.1 innings, while sluggers Adam Lind and J.P. Arencibia both sport batting averages below .200 through the first week of the season. Toronto Blue Jays Tickets - Team History Toronto Blue Jays tickets allow fans to see the only team outside the United States to have won a Major League Baseball World Series. After the team was founded in Toronto in 1977, the Blue Jays enjoyed much success during the early 90's and came out of the decade with two MLB World Series victories in both 1992 and 1994. The club was purchased by Rogers Communications in 2000 and play at the Rogers Centre, a ballpark that carries the distinction of being the first stadium to have a motorized retractable roof. Watch as the Toronto Blue Jays go for their third ring in 2011! Toronto Blue Jays Tickets - Season Info The Toronto Blue Jays experienced great success in 2010, but are now forced to bear the loss of manager Cito Gaston to retirement and will lean heavily on All Star Jose Bautista. After having a career season in 2010, Bautista agreed to a 5-year contract extension to the tune of $64 million. He not only led the MLB with 54 home runs last season, but also won the American League Hank Aaron award. Count on another solid season from this top performer. Toronto Blue Jays Tickets - Ticket Information Toronto Blue Jays tickets ensure that fans see the Blue Jays playing top contenders throughout the entire MLB season. The Blue Jays have their work cut out for them in a tough American League East. With matchups with great teams like the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays and non-divisional meetings with the Texas Rangers and St. Louis Cardinals throughout the season, the Blue Jays are sure to be tested in 2011. Don't miss a second of the action! Toronto Blue Jays Schedule & Key Dates Toronto Blue Jays Key Dates Opening Day / Toronto Blue Jays First Game 2014 New York Mets at Toronto Blue Jays Olympic Stadium Toronto Blue Jays Regular Season Last Game 2014 Sep 28, 2014 $109.00 Baltimore Orioles at Toronto Blue Jays Rogers Centre Toronto Blue Jays Spring Training Beginning 2014 Mar 21, 2014 N/A Spring Training: Toronto Blue Jays at Tampa Bay Rays Charlotte Sports Park — Port Charlotte, FL Toronto Blue Jays Past Games Schedule and Toronto Blue Jays Scores BLUE JAYS SCORES 7 wins, 6 losses (53.8%) Apr 10, 2014 Spring Training: Toronto Blue Jays Spring Training: New York Yankees Spring Training: Philadelphia Phillies Toronto Blue Jays Upcoming Games Schedule Apr 16, 2014 Toronto Blue Jays Apr 22, 2014 Baltimore Orioles Apr 25, 2014 Boston Red Sox May 1, 2014 Toronto Blue Jays May 7, 2014 Philadelphia Phillies May 9, 2014 Los Angeles Angels May 10, 2014 Los Angeles Angels May 13, 2014 Cleveland Indians May 16, 2014 Toronto Blue Jays Search Results 148 events About Toronto Blue Jays Tickets Blue Jays Ticket Prices Blue Jays Schedule American League East Has Flipped on Its Head April 02, 2013 – MLB 2013 Preview - The AL East As recently as October 2012, the New York Yankees still had a hold of their traditional top spot in the American League East and another playoff berth. However, an … read more → Toronto Blue Jays 2013 Lineup & Roster Preview February 17, 2013 – Toronto Blue Jays Players 2013 The Toronto Blue Jays come into the 2013 season as by far the most improved team in all of Major League Baseball. In 2012, they finished the season with a 73-69 … read more → Toronto Blue Jays 2013 Preview January 22, 2013 – The Toronto Blue Jays come into the 2013 season as by far the most improved team in all of Major League Baseball. In 2012, they finished the season with a 73-69 record for fourth place in the A … read more → World Series Ticket Price Recap and 2012 Preview November 11, 2011 – This year’s World Series provided an exciting Game 7 conclusion to a postseason that started just as strangely. Both leagues saw huge swings in the last month – the preseason favorite Boston Red … read more → Similar Teams
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Originally published Thursday, October 21, 2010 at 10:58 AM Candidate tries for ultimate upset _ Nancy Pelosi It's a popular refrain among Republicans throughout the country this year: A vote for me is a vote to fire Nancy Pelosi. By ROBIN HINDERY SAN FRANCISCO — It's a popular refrain among Republicans throughout the country this year: A vote for me is a vote to fire Nancy Pelosi. But only one candidate means it literally. John Dennis is running against the House Speaker in her San Francisco congressional district where Republicans make up just 9 percent of registered voters and Pelosi has trounced opponents for two decades. The real estate investor is a huge longshot, but has attracted more attention than Pelosi's past challengers. He has been helped by the Republican National Committee's "Fire Pelosi" national bus tour and other GOP-led efforts to paint her as an out-of-control liberal and remove her from her leadership position. Dennis has tapped into the anti-Pelosi anger to raise nearly $2 million. He also made national headlines last month with a campy online ad featuring a Pelosi look-alike as the Wicked Witch of the West from "The Wizard of Oz." In the spot, Dennis ultimately defeats Pelosi by dousing her with water from a bucket labeled "Freedom." His sense of humor extends to his own longshot campaign. "For my first run at office, I decided to aim low," he joked in a recent interview. "Seriously though, I think this year there's a real chance for someone who isn't just going to be the loyal opposition. I have a real alternative to offer voters of San Francisco, and I think my positions are a better fit than her actions." Not surprisingly, Democratic Party leaders disagree. California Democratic Party Chairman John Burton called Dennis and his candidacy "irrelevant" and scoffed at the idea that Pelosi might be at greater risk than in past elections. "Am I concerned? No more than I'm concerned that the sun will come out at night and the moon will come out in the daytime," he said. Pelosi, 70, is similarly unconcerned. She has been traveling the country to raise money for fellow Democrats. "Getting an even larger majority in her congressional district is not a priority," Pelosi spokeswoman Jennifer Crider said. Dennis, 47, believes his platform will appeal to more than just the diehard conservatives and tea party activists who agree with his call for dramatically reducing federal spending and shrinking the government's role domestically and overseas. Others states' fights bring focus to Daniels NEW - 07:13 AMSouth Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is writing memoir Bill would make jail mug shots available Immigration, license bill voted down in state Senate Rival Texas bills require sonograms before abortions More Politics headlines...
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Originally published Thursday, October 18, 2012 at 3:56 PM Book-It Repertory Theatre receives $340,000 grant Paul G. Allen and Jody Allen are giving Book-It Repertory Theatre in Seattle a three-year grant totaling $340,000 for educational performances and programs.
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Single-Payer vs Medicare For All Posted on August 29, 2007 by Dave Johnson I’m hearing proposals for “Single-payer healthcare” again. Please, please, please don’t call it “Single-payer healthcare.” Please call it “Medicare for all“. Everyone knows and likes and understands Medicare. It has been around for a while. It has the word “care” in it. Everyone knows it works and helps people. NO ONE understands what “single-payer” means. It is a complicated word-construct. It contains the word “payer” which works against acceptance. It requires you to start from scratch to sell the idea, and from a marketing background I can tell you that all the money in the world isn’t going to sell “single-payer healthcare” to the public. If you call it Medicare for all, people immediately understand, accept and like the idea. Please, please banish “single-payer healthcare” from your vocabulary. Please. This entry was posted in Health Care, Political Strategy and tagged Medicare for all, Single-Payer healthcare by Dave Johnson. Bookmark the permalink. 2 thoughts on “Single-Payer vs Medicare For All” jim from '63 on August 29, 2007 at 9:22 am said: “I will extend the working Medicare program for our seniors all the way back to contraception, so Americans can concentrate on living their lives without fear of changing a job, going bankrupt from deductibles or fighting HMO bureaucracy.” Log in to Reply jim from '63 on August 29, 2007 at 9:24 am said: gets my vote!
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Our Organization Our People Year in Review Library Search the Library The Double Challenge in Engineering Complex Systems of Systems NEWS AT SEI Authors Philip J. Boxer Edwin J. Morris Dennis B. Smith This library item is related to the following area(s) of work: This article was originally published in News at SEI on: May 1, 2007 Traditional software engineering practices were defined when development was largely controlled by organizations that could set relatively stable requirements, build to those requirements, and deliver a system to the customer. More recently, increasingly complex and dynamic customer demands have focused attention on coordinating activities of multiple organizations and systems within an enterprise to perform a number of tasks or deliver tailored responses. This change in focus from a specific delivered system to the need for flexible capabilities is reflected in product lines, families of systems, and other recent advances in software engineering practices. However, to meet customer expectations with the emerging, complex systems of systems required to support integrated military strategies, homeland security responses, and nationwide health information networks, system developers must meet a double challenge (see Figure 1): A governance challenge of collaborating with an increasing number and diversity of enterprises. This challenge includes developing approaches that support cooperation across unrelated enterprises with no unifying controlling structure. An agility challenge of providing situation-appropriate responses in changing situations.This involves selecting technologies, processes, and structures that are sufficiently agile to support the desired response. Figure 1: The Double Challenge The Governance Challenge The governance challenge involves the changing nature of the collaboration needed to build computer systems. For most of the history of computing, collaboration was needed only to coordinate activities involving point-to-point interfacing of systems within a well-defined program. As anyone experienced with building or maintaining relatively complex software can attest, even this level of collaboration required coordination of the activities of multiple personnel, perhaps with competing interests. However, there was normally one authority that could make and enforce decisions. In more complex cases, collaboration was needed to coordinate the activities of multiple systems within a single enterprise. This situation was typical of an organization that attempted to relate and integrate the activities of several systems. The need to integrate multiple systems became the driving force behind efforts to integrate data and processes in an enterprise-resource-planning (ERP) system or to construct a common situational picture of the location of friendly and enemy assets by fusing the data contained in multiple military systems operated by the Department of Defense. Of course, enterprises of any significant size are not homogeneous; they typically consist of multiple levels of relatively autonomous sub-enterprises (e.g., branches, divisions, directorates, teams). However, a hierarchy is assumed to exist that can resolve conflicts in such a way to produce an internally consistent whole. But system-integration activities become increasingly complex as they cross organizational boundaries. These activities are commonly managed by creating a special management organization with authority that spans these boundaries. The success of these cross-cutting organizations depends on the degree to which they can establish centralized coordination and control of activities—that is, to establish authority over the activities and systems to be integrated as well as over the integration activity itself. We are familiar with the difficulties this presents to such cross-cutting organizations. The interests of the cross-cutting organizations often come into conflict with those of individual organizations that make up the whole. In principle, these difficulties can be resolved by appeal to the higher authority of the enterprise as a whole. In practice this can be infeasible. When the cross-cutting approach is extended to multiple enterprises without a unifying hierarchy, a discontinuity occurs (illustrated along the vertical axis of Figure 1). Moving from bottom to top, collaborators become increasingly autonomous and their motivations, policies, procedures, and capabilities become increasingly diverse. In fact, because of the fluid environment in which complex systems must execute, the owners of those systems cannot fully anticipate who these collaborators will be. To meet the challenge posed by collaboration with an increasing number and diversity of enterprises, processes and strategies must be developed that support negotiation of relationships with these sometimes unanticipated partners. Therefore, we must develop ways of negotiating collaborative governance across unrelated enterprises in rapid order. The Agility Challenge The agility challenge, illustrated in Figure 1 along the horizontal axis, describes the way that an enterprise’s1 computing systems can respond to the needs of its customers. In simple cases, an enterprise can define the systems it needs to provide to its customers, put together (or otherwise acquire) these capabilities, get them into the right hands, and keep them there. This is the strategy used by enterprises in building tightly focused applications for general use (e.g., Microsoft Word). In more complex cases, a single predefined system capability is insufficiently flexible to meet the customer’s demands. In such cases, enterprises try to set parameters for their applications, processes, and organizational structures that customize them to multiple customer situations. Technologies and systems with customizable interfaces and assembly strategies, such as product lines or families of systems, are employed to increase the range of customer needs that can be met by the organization. Another example is service-oriented architecture (SOA), which is intended to maximize the extent to which services can be composed. Solutions to these two cases are driven by what the supplier can provide, either in a predefined system or through a customizable set of applications designed to work within some prescribed set of behaviors. However, customers are expecting ever more flexible responses to rapidly changing situations. In this evolving situation, the specific context in which the customer wants to employ a capability becomes a critical determining factor. As a result, it is no longer possible for the technologies and systems to be under the control of specific individuals or organizations. The customer is adding a new level of composition and synchronization of components. Thus, the agility challenge represents a second discontinuity—between situations controlled by suppliers and situations controlled by the situational needs and demands of users Implications of the Double ChallengeAlong the vertical (governance) axis, interactions between different organizations become increasingly common. This tendency is evidenced in the engineering community by the widespread push for increasing interoperability and standards that support it. It is at the root of efforts to integrate the diverse systems of commercial enterprises into supply chains, to develop common operational pictures across domestic and allied military forces, and to provide emergence response capabilities crossing military, police, government, health care, and other networks. Along the horizontal (agility) axis, there is increased recognition in commercial, government, and military sectors that advantage is best gained by developing system capabilities that can be rapidly aligned in new ways to support responses to changing demands. For commercial organizations, this means that supplier relationships must meet changing needs—whether by supporting rapid changes to products and manufacturing approaches or by providing new ways for service delivery as determined by the customer. Ideally, the alignment of organizational structures, processes, and systems capability is determined by the demand. Thus, the general trend is clearly up and to the right in as depicted in Figure 1. However, given the traditional methods of building systems, the comfort zone for building systems is actually down and to the left as shown in Figure 2. Figure 2: The Comfort and Other Zones The top right quadrant of this chart involves cross-enterprise and agile response to changing needs and demands of users. This goal is perhaps best developed today in the power-to-the-edge strategy of the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), which has recognized that only at the edge can it respond appropriately to the demands being placed on it for cross-command (e.g., services, allied militaries, and non-traditional allied) responses. We believe that the future of software engineering will be dominated by the double challenge of developing governance approaches that can work across enterprises and identifying ways to meet demands for increasing agility in the capabilities that are provided. We are concerned that focusing on developing engineering strategies to improve or fix individual symptoms of the double challenge, such as poor coordination of development efforts across organizations and problems with configuration management, may be helpful in some situations but ultimately will not solve the problem. It is more likely that fixes for individual symptoms along one axis of the double challenge will actually complicate problems along the alternate axis. For example, developing a new, virtual organization that imposes a hierarchy across enterprise boundaries may lead to reduced flexibility in response to new user demands. The key question is how enterprises can develop the ability to work across enterprise boundaries while simultaneously providing the agility to respond to the changing demands of the customer. A starting point involves distinguishing different types of systems of systems based on the type of authority possible and the ability of that authority to control behavior. This approach allows us to begin to characterize requisite engineering practices. Of particular interest to us are those practices that support distributed collaboration2 (e.g., power-to-the-edge). A critical activity for the future is to consider the double challenge (i.e., governance and agility) in relation to achieving distributed collaboration. In response to the double challenge, the SEI is developing the System-of-Systems NavigatorSM, an integrated set of principles, tools, models, techniques, and improvement cycle activities. The SEI is currently developing capabilities to recognize different types of systems of systems along the dimensions outlined above. Of particular interest are those practices that support distributed collaboration (e.g., power-to-the-edge) risk assessment in this complex space through modeling and gap analysis between the required collaborative constituent components. For more information on the System-of-Systems Navigator, contact Suzanne Garcia (smg@sei.cmu.edu). 1 We have used enterprise here to mean any sort of entity that must respond to the second challenge. That enterprise may entail one or more organizations. 2 As opposed to directed collaboration that has a controlling authority Edwin Morris is a Senior Member of the Technical Staff at the Software Engineering Institute, assigned to the Integration of Software-Intensive Systems (ISIS) Initiative. He is currently investigating approaches to achieving technical interoperability between complex systems and programmatic interoperability between the organizations that build and maintain them. Previous activities involved improving processes and techniques for the evaluation and selection of COTS products, and the development of the COTS Usage Risk Evaluation (CURE) technology. Before coming to the SEI, Morris developed custom operating systems for embedded microprocessors along with support tools to predict and monitor the performance of real time systems. Dennis Smith is the lead for the SEI Integration of Software Intensive Systems (ISIS) Initiative. This initiative focuses on addressing issues of interoperability and integration in large-scale systems and systems of systems. Earlier, he was the technical lead in the effort for migrating legacy systems to product lines. In this role he developed the method Options Analysis for Reengineering (OARS) to support reuse decision-making. Smith has also been the project leader for the CASE environments project. This project examined the underlying issues of CASE integration, process support for environments and the adoption of technology. Smith has published a wide variety of articles and technical reports, and has given talks and keynotes at a number of conferences and workshops. He has an MA and PhD from Princeton University and a BA from Columbia University. William B. Anderson is a senior member of the SEI technical staff. Bill’s research interests include integration and interoperability of complex software systems, COTS and reuse management, cost estimation, and business case justification of complex systems. A former Vice President for a Fortune 500 company, Bill is broadly experienced with factory floor and business; processes, support systems, automation, and management. He has many years of experience in large system project management and has successfully led operational, financial, product line, and new product launch groups. The views expressed in this article are the author's only and do not represent directly or imply any official position or view of the Software Engineering Institute or Carnegie Mellon University. This article is intended to stimulate further discussion about this topic. Training Migrating Legacy Systems to SOA Environments - eLearning Service-Oriented Architecture: Best Practices for Successful Adoption See more related courses » Find Us Here
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/616
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By rallying communities in support of the Semper Fi Fund, Community Athletes show our injured and ill servicemen and women that they are not forgotten, and that "help is on the way." The funding and awareness that is raised by Co
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Welcome to servicemon servicemon is a simple service monitoring application written in Python. It periodically calls the init scripts for services it has been configured to monitor and determines whether each service is running, restarting failed services as appropriate. It can send e-mail alerts and has a network interface to talk to a graphical frontend. There is a graphical client available for Linux written in Python/GTK and also a Java client which will run on any platform supported by Sun's Java.
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The Secret Garden Storyboards The Secret Garden premiere is just around the corner and to whet your appetite even more, we've decided to delve a little deeper into painter and video artist Naomie Kremer's designs for the show. Read on to see a selection of Naomie's storyboards showing plans for the set and projections as well as costume sketches by costume designer Kristi Johnson. Additionally, Cal Performances met up with Naomie for a walk through her Bay Area art studio. The resulting video shows her process from concept to finished product. We think you'll be surprised what has gone into creating the backdrop for this exciting new opera! Posted: 02/08/2013 by Naomie Kremer (Visual Designer, The Secret Garden) 2013: A Year of Commissions Calendar 2013 will be a record year in San Francisco Opera history, with three—count’em—THREE world premieres of brand new operas happening in a seven month period! Our new work for families, The Secret Garden, opens in March at Zellerbach Hall at UC Berkeley, followed smartly by our two new main-stage works, The Gospel of Mary Magdalene in June and Dolores Claiborne in September. My job as Director of Music Administration carries with it the privilege (and sometimes the headache) of nudging these commission projects along from initial conception to opening night. So far I’ve been involved with 14 new commissions (not counting the several that never quite made it all the way), and each project has had its unique challenges. Posted: 01/22/2013 by Kip Cranna, Director of Music Administration The Secret Garden Video Set When I started thinking about how to compose the Secret Garden stage, my reference points were three locations: India, Yorkshire, and childhood. I happen to have personal experience of all three, which helped me visualize how they might weave together in Mary's life: moments of petulance, real loss, sadness, curiosity, energy, and a powerful, ultimately healing relationship with the natural world. Posted: 01/14/2013 by Naomie Kremer, Visual Designer A Look Back at Fall 2012 Like Boyz II Men once wisely sang: it’s so hard to say goodbye to yesterday. We can’t believe the fall season is already over and we don’t think it’s too early to reminisce about this fantastic season. Happy 90th Birthday San Francisco Opera On Saturday November 10, San Francisco Opera opened the doors of the War Memorial Opera house and welcomed thousands of Bay Area residents and visitors to our first ever Community Open House! Presented in celebration of our 90th Season and the opening of the opera house 80 years ago, this completely free event was geared towards opera lovers and newbies of all ages. Activities ranged from crafts, temporary tattoos and sing-alongs to musical performances, technical demonstrations and screenings of Carmen for Families--The Movie! One of the most popular highlights of the day was the costume photo booth where guests were able to try on actual San Francisco Opera costumes and pose for photos taken by a professional photographer. From the moment lines began to form around the block in the morning to the moment the last person walked out the door, we were overwhelmed by the response from each and every one of you. Seeing every nook and cranny of this iconic building filled with smiling, energetic faces was truly a sight to behold! We think Gaetano Merola and the founders of San Francisco Opera would be thrilled to see all of you enjoying the fruits of their labors all these years later. All photos by Kristen Loken. Displaying results 36-40 (of 82) |< < 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12 - 13 > >| Follow @sfopera
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The Adlers in 2013: A Photo Recap Tomorrow evening our phenomenally talented Adler Fellows will perform in their annual The Future is Now: Adler Gala Concert. Founded in 1977 as the San Francisco Affiliate Artists-Opera Program, Adler Fellowships are performance-oriented residencies for the most advanced young singers and coach/accompanists. Under the guidance of San Francisco Opera General Director David Gockley and Opera Center Director Sheri Greenawald, the Adler Fellowship Program offers intensive individual training and roles of increasing importance in San Francisco Opera's main-stage season. As the year draws to a close for our Adlers, we want to take a moment to highlight some of their key roles in 2013. The Adler Fellows truly are the rising stars of opera, and you can say “You saw them here first!” Falstaff = Running and singing. In a corset. It’s 6:54 pm and I’m warming up for the opening night of Falstaff; although not in the way one might imagine, scales and such. Instead, I’m doing lunges, hamstring stretches and sun salutations. Just as my muscles are loosening up comes a knock at the door from my (wonderful) makeup artist and the gears of the show begin to move. Soon “Places!” is called and I do one last stretch before I climb into my costume. If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that Falstaff is an athletic event. Posted: 10/11/2013 by Renée Rapier, mezzo-soprano Becoming Antonia: 5 Questions with Natalie Dessay Natalie Dessay last delighted San Francisco audiences in the title role of 2009's Lucia di Lammermoor and this summer she's back, but not in one of her signature roles. The soprano has appeared as Olympia is Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann many times, but for this Laurent Pelly production, she decided to mix things up and sing a role she has always wanted to sing, the tragic role of Antonia. In today's blog post, Natalie Dessay answers our 5 questions. Posted: 07/02/2013 by Natalie Dessay (Antonia, The Tales of Hoffmann) I've seen you somewhere before... We here at San Francisco Opera are often asked, "Who was that great singer who played so-and-so in that one opera you did a few years ago? I feel like I have seen them here before." More often than not, the artist in question is one of the fabulous young artists we have had grace our stage. This summer's production of "Cosi fan tutte" features the San Francisco Opera debut of German mezzo-soprano Christel Lötzsch in the role of Dorabella, as well as the mainstage San Francisco Opera debut of bass-baritone Adler Fellow Philippe Sly as Guglielmo. In addition, the rest of the Cosi cast is comprised of incredibly talented young artists who have recently appeared on our stage. For today's photo blog, we highlight each principal Cosi artist who has had past roles at San Francisco Opera. This way, when you see the production and think to yourself, "I feel like I've seen them somewhere before...," you'll impress your seatmates by knowing where. Displaying results 1-5 (of 36) |< < 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 > >| Follow @sfopera
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Top Contributors[none found] Kickin It Old Skool - Add to My Movies "Kickin' It Old Skool" revolves around a 12-year-old breakdancer, who in 1986 hits his head while performing at a talent show and as a result is comatose for 20 years. He awakens to find he is a grown man. With the mind and experience of a young kid, he attempts to revive his and his dance team's short-lived career with the hopes of helping support his parents' failing yogurt ...
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What to do in Keswick & The Northern Lake District Keswick is a picturesque market town which sits proudly at the edge of Derwentwater 'Queen of the English lakes' and is overlooked by Skiddaw and the other surrounding fells. The town hosts a wide variety of restaurants, pubs and tea rooms and a large selection of shops including a host of mountaineering outlets. There are also museums and art galleries as well as The Puzzle Place if the weather is wet. A gentle stroll from Keswick town square will take you to the Theatre by the Lake. On the way you will pass the pitch & putt and crazy golf courses (for the more experienced golfer Keswick Golf club is only a 4 mile drive away). From the lakeshore by the theatre you can catch the Keswick Launch which will take you round the lake and drop you off at any of the 6 landing stages from where you can access the fells. Other activities available locally include sailing, windsurfing, horse riding, rock climbing and much more. For the more laid back visitor we can advise you on a variety of picturesque gentle walks or sight-seeing tours. Fitz Park and the Keswick Leisure pool are also only 5 minutes walk from 'Shemara'. For the lovers of flowers we are sure you will not be disappointed with the parks and gardens as Keswick is a past winner of 'Britain in Bloom'. All in all Keswick has something to offer every visitor.... you will not be disappointed. Shemara Guesthouse, Bank Street, Keswick, Cumbria, CA12 5JZ | tel: 017687 73936 Bed and Breakfast Accommodation and Thai Restaurant in Keswick
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Any Aussies out there addicted to type? This year there's an event just for you. Typism is launching on September 4th on the Gold Coast, a one-day event with Gemma O'Brien, Wayne Thompson, ... > More Tags: Dominique Falla Designers/Studios, Posted by: Kelly Meyer Posted: Jul 31st 2012 I love the combination of digital design with craft techniques in the work of Dominique Falla. Her work includes producing tactile typography for exhibition and publication. There is a short video documenting the process of one of her pieces located here http://www.dominiquefalla.com/portfolio/relax-unwind/ typography Share:
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"If I Left the Church" and the Culture of Intentional Discipleship Written by Sherry Thursday, 16 August 2007 06:14 I'm reviewing some of the many things that I have written over the years. What is surprising to me is how relevant most of my early observations as a Catholic still seem to be. A million air miles and conversations with tens of thousands of Catholics have only show me how wide-spread the phenomena that I first encountered in Seattle and that I describe in the essay below is throughout the Catholic world.I wouldn't write the same way today. I wouldn't use the same language. But my conclusion would be the same: As Catholics, we have a wonderful rich theology of evangelization and mission and the apostolate of the laity - but we aren't living it.An absolutely critical piece is missing for 99% of Catholics: an experience of a culture of intentional discipleship and all that flows from that. Most people won't "get" the theology until they experience the reality on the ground. That's how most of us grasp new concepts. We see it enacted before us and around us by other people with whom we can identify. The one percent of US Catholics who have been part of a lay movement like Communion and Liberation or the charismatic renewal or an evangelization process like Cursillo or some kind of evangelization retreat or part of a most unusual parish (and for links to some really remarkable parishes, check out our links here)tell similar stories. I lost track a long time ago of how many like stories I've heard on the road. At least half of the pastoral leaders who attended Making Disciples last week expressed very similar frustrations. They were from 22 dioceses all over the US and Australia and yet they told us over and over again how isolated they were back home and how incredibly healing it was to be able to talk to other Catholics who cared about the same things they cared about. Even more telling is the fact that five deeply committed, orthodox, and theologically sophisticated Catholics have used the same ominous language in totally unrelated conversations over the past two weeks, "if I left the Church". And the reason was always the same: lack of a community of friends with which they can pursue their relationship with God. ( I need to make it clear that I am NOT considering leaving the church myself nor did I bring the subject up - they used this language spontaneously) Most of these people are cradle Catholics. It really transcends the issue of "Catholic or Protestant?". The central issue is whether or not you have ever experienced being immersed in a culture of intentional discipleship. Christians who have been part of a culture of discipleship have much in common with other Christians who have done so, even if they come from different ecclesial backgrounds. And many Catholics who have left us for the evangelical world would come back in a heartbeat if we could offer them a truly Catholic environment where they felt truly supported in their attempts to follow Christ. So here's my take on the same dynamic from 10 years ago. It is fairly long and covers briefly the story of my conversion (I think I wrote it at the request of a Catholic media group)and ends rather abruptly but still manages to give a pretty vivid sense of what it means to move from a culture of discipleship into a Christian culture that is not primarily centered around discipleship."When I think back on my early life, the thing that is most striking is how easy it was for me to find instruction and support for my Christian faith. I was not a Catholic but was raised in a Christian family that took the faith seriously. Every member of our family was strongly encouraged to make a personal commitment to follow Christ. I studied and memorized the Bible at home as a child. We played games based on Scriptural knowledge during mealtimes. Our Christian culture and local church assumed that every member had a call from God and should be actively discerning that call as a teen-ager and young adult. As a college student I received training in Scripture study, how to share my faith with others, how to lead a small group, how to pray, and how to discern God’s call. All kinds of practical formation in Christian living was available in my tiny local church of 150 people or through local branches of para-church organizations that worked hand-in-hand with local parishes. For instance, I received one-on-one mentoring in the faith by another young woman who had been specifically trained to help me in this way. I was strongly encouraged to study on my own as well and taken on a tour of several local Christian bookstores to familiarize myself with the resources available through the wider Christian community.While I was still in college, a remarkable woman leader in my local church took me under her wing and changed the direction of my life. She taught me how to listen to my own heart, how to listen to God’s voice, and how to pray for others. I was deeply impressed by the her wholeness, the way in which she had integrated her life and faith, and the way in which she used her gifts and exercised leadership as a lay women.Because I had an interest in missionary work to the Middle East, I was able to link up with other young local Christians in my neighborhood who met to pray for missions, to prepare themselves for missionary work and to reached out to international student studying in the US. With this support, I switched majors and studied Arabic and Near Eastern history. I lived in a house near the university run by a young woman who had already spent 6 years abroad with a lay missionary organization. The day after I graduated from college I drove across country with some friends to a national conference on Christian outreach to Muslims put on by an organization dedicated exclusively to the formation of the lay evangelists.In retrospect, I am astonished that I never marveled at the abundance of personal formation and support that was readily available to me as an ordinary Christian lay woman. I assumed that it was normal for local churches and student organizations to provide numerous opportunities for apostolic formation. Since Christ had called every one of his sons and daughters to mission, we thought it was only natural that every Christian be readied for that mission in their local parish. Most importantly, I never found myself alone in my spiritual questionings or discernment process. I was surrounded by lay peers who were asking the same questions and wrestling with the same issues and perfectly at ease in talking about it. I was regarded as gifted (but then so was everyone else in different ways) but never exceptional.We took St. Paul’s teaching in his epistles about spiritual gifts quite seriously and sought to discern the gifts each Christian had been given by the Holy Spirit to empower them for their personal vocation. In my small local church, a group of us took an inventory to help us discern our spiritual gifts or charisms. As a young adult, I had begun to see particular gifts of the Holy Spirit emerge. I had a strong desire to pray for others and saw remarkable things happen when I did so. I discovered that I had a charism of teaching when an older married woman asked to meet with me every week to discuss prayer and the spiritual life. I prepared for these sessions by writing up little lessons on prayer, which she found extremely helpful. Our informal mentoring relationship continued for two years until she left to do missionary work with her family in a "closed" Muslim country, a choice which was not unique in my experience. I knew at least a dozen Christian families in the neighborhood who had done similar things.By that time, I had started to teach small, informal classes in discernment and prayer for interested lay people in homes. I later taught similar classes to the staff of a Christian bookstore where I worked. The classes included prayer exercises that each person would do during the week, often at work, and then would share their experience. I received very strong positive feedback from those who took the classes and begin to discern that here was a specific area in which God had called and gifted me.In light of my desire to do missionary work, it seemed only natural that I do further training and so I enrolled at the largest graduate missions training institution in the world. While there, I lived and worked on a college campus occupied by a lay organization which focused entirely on outreach to completely unevangelized peoples. I lived and breathed frontier world missions twenty-four hours a day with hundreds of eager missionaries and leaders from around the globe. I never knew whether the person next to me at dinner would be an experienced missionary to the Philippines or a Ugandan refugee. It never once struck me as odd that all these people training to spread the faith to the farthest and most inaccessible parts of the globe were ordinary lay Christians.As the ways in which God touched other people through me became clearer, I began to call myself a "people-gardener". I wasn’t exactly a counselor or a healer but mysterious though it was, I recognized that Christians grew as human beings and as apostles around me. I was fascinated with bridging the gap between Christian ideals and the experience of average Christians. I strongly identified with committed Christians who were struggling or discouraged in their attempts to live the faith in a whole-hearted manner and desired to help them. In this area I did not find myself alone since many Christians I knew were concerned about the same thing. In a world where serious lay discipleship was normative, all leaders and pastors were asking "How can I help people live and share the faith in as full and joyful a way as possible?" I was not exceptional in my concerns, I was simply recognized to be especially gifted in this area.In the midst of all, I was slowly awakening to the riches of the Catholic Church. When I began seeking out private places to pray for others, I found that most Protestant churches were closed during the day. And so I entered the lovely church of the Blessed Sacrament for the first time. Its austere beauty accommodated my Protestant sensibilities. But the truly compelling attraction was a sense of God’s presence there in a particularly powerful way. I was completely unfamiliar with Catholic belief in the Real Presence, an idea I would have rejected. Rather, I presumed that since Blessed Sacrament was old, what I was experiencing was the "residue" left from decades of prayer. In any case, I was hooked. Protestant churches, however lovely, weren’t filled with that same Presence. From that time on, I prayed as much as possible in Catholic churches.Those hours spent in different Catholic churches as I moved around the US and then to Britain, and the Holy Land slowly and subtly undermined my anti-Catholic prejudices. My first Easter Vigil service marked the fall of another barrier to the Catholic faith. In my casting about for a fuller way to celebrate Easter, nothing had prepared me for the power and truth of the Vigil. The many Scriptural readings impressed me, and I found the Exultet majestically beautiful. Thereafter, I decided to attend the Vigil every Easter.While serving in Wales, I discover to my surprise that the most nourishing worship service available to me was at the local Catholic parish. The Welsh, mind you, are a people for whom singing hymns in massive choirs is a national sport. And so it was among this nation of choristers that I experienced the rhythms of the liturgy for the first time. Welsh Catholics sang most of the liturgy in parts. I was still very Protestant in my approach to worship. By the time I’d heard all the readings and listened to the homily, I figured the essential part of the service was over. But as I experienced the life of the Church from Epiphany through Corpus Christi, more of my misconceptions fell away.Upon my return to Seattle, I went on an intense, three-week retreat overseen by a Christian psychologist. During one of the high points of this experience, I felt God's goodness and grace passing through me, a created being, into the world. In a flash, the whole sacramental notion that God's grace can and does enter the world through matter became real to me. This was a crisis! My tiny church didn't celebrate sacraments in any form. After a single visit back, I knew I could no longer make do with non-sacramental worship. For me, the sacraments had become spiritual necessities and I knew where to find them! My longing for the sacraments was enough to overcome my remaining reservations and I quickly entered RCIA. It took a couple more years to resolve all my issues but in December of 1987, I was finally received into full communion. When astonished Protestant friends would ask me why I had joined the Catholic Church, I would simply reply "To follow Jesus". I longed to be at the center of the Body of Christ, not at the periphery. I wanted to be where Christ’s redeeming work was the center and focus of worship and His presence the heart of the sanctuary. I wanted to be united with the communion of saints throughout time and space. The Christian world I was entering was infinitely larger than the one in which I had been raised. The inexhaustible depths of the ancient, universal Church dazzled me. New spiritual, intellectual, cultural, and historical horizons beckoned in every direction.My reasons for entering were partly experiential, partly mystical, partly liturgical – but always centered around the compelling vision of Church universal. I had had the best of evangelical Protestantism and was tremendously grateful but now I was being called into an infinitely deeper and richer Christianity. In my joy, I felt like the inhabitant of Sheol being called forth by the victorious Christ in an ancient homily for Holy Saturday "Awake, O sleeper, and rise from the dead, and Christ will give you life"But nothing I had read in any catechism could have prepared me for the reality of trying to sustain my faith in a local Catholic parish. During my first full year as a Catholic, I nearly drowned in loneliness and despair. Where I had once been surrounded by lay peers who shared a similar experience and formation, I now felt as though I were a freak of nature. I had come from a world where our common faith was at the center of every gathering of Christians and at least alluded to in nearly every conversation. Outside of Mass, Catholics seemed to talk only about the weather or the Mariners. The lay men and women in the pews with me were strangely uncomfortable talking about the faith and were mystified and irritated by my enthusiasm for doing so. As one cradle Catholic told a convert friend of mine" if you’re going to pray, pray. If you’re going to socialize, socialize. Don’t mix the two." I quickly discovered that it was better if I didn’t talk about my experience and training or about the accomplishments of the lay missionaries who were my friends. It was simply light years beyond the experience and imagination of nearly every Catholic I met. I was once asked to write an article on lay vocation for a national magazine aimed at serious lay Catholics. I broke my rule and wrote the true story of the woman friend whom I had mentored and who was now quietly doing remarkable things in one of the most oppressive countries on earth. The editor told me to take her story out. "None of our readers could possibly aspire to such a ministry" he told me. Every summer, this very woman returns for a few weeks to Seattle and attempts to describe the struggles and victories of her entire year to me. I meditated on that Catholic editor’s comment during one such visit as I watched her talking. This five-foot-nothing, middle-aged housewife, her rumpled clothes and drooping eyes mirroring her exhaustion and jet lag, was this woman so very extraordinary? Could none of the thousands of lay Catholics who read that magazine never aspire to do something similar?I knew that my friend was not unique. Ordinary lay people aspired to such things all the time in the Christian world I had known. I came from a quite ordinary family. We do not have a tradition of becoming missionaries or pastors or evangelists. And yet had I not listened to my cousin’s stories of his missionary work in Moscow? What about my roommate in seminary who spent five years as a lay missionary in Turkey before marrying a local Armenian. My 19 year old sister had served in Nigeria with a team of young adults supported by a vibrant church only three blocks away from my own parish. I knew that there were thousands of non-traditional lay missionaries in the world. What was it that made Catholics so certain that such a work was "too much" for a lay man or woman to undertake?I once asked that question of a group of Dominican pastors to whom I was speaking on the lay apostolate. A very knowledgeable and committed lay DRE who heard my talk simply could not believe it. "You can’t have come from an ordinary Protestant family", she protested. By that time, I knew that Christians who had been raised Catholic shared a powerful, if invisible lay culture that wasn’t described in any catechism and was foreign to my own experience. In the world of ordinary lay Catholicism, my formation and experience was abnormal and alienating. I gradually ceased to talk seriously with other lay Catholics unless I was with other converts from the same background. The most painful moment came when I realize that I had to admit to myself that if I had been raised Catholic, I would not have received the years of personal nurture and formation that made me who I was. It simply wasn’t available to ordinary lay Catholics in their local parishes and communities. I believed that all that the Catholic Church believed and held to be true, but I was living off the spiritual abundance of my Protestant past.I held on through a naked act of the will. Christ had called me into the center of His Church and I would not leave. But neither could I settle for so little. I would walk the three blocks to the neighborhood evangelical mega-church and look on with longing envy. This church was no larger than many Catholic parishes in Seattle, but it might as well have been on the far side of the moon, so profoundly different were the assumptions at work there. Their motto was "every member a minister" and they meant it. This church had high-powered formation program for children, university students, and adults of all ages. It was normal for 6-9 different classes to be offered for adults every Sunday. This church’s largest department was "Urban and Global Mission". They supported lay missionaries and programs in 25 different countries and sent their own members on short and long-term missions every year. This was the congregation that had enabled my sister to go to Africa. This was the world I had given up by becoming Catholic.I tried to participate in both communities for a while but found it surprisingly difficult. Although people were certainly welcoming, I was no longer Protestant in my theology and understanding of the church and I gradually realized that evangelicalism could never be "home" again. I felt, as have many other converts, personally torn in two by the schism that had riven western Christendom for nearly 500 years. Either I could have the sacraments, the communion of saints, and the Church universal or I could have a vibrant local community where I could really share with like-minded lay Christians and receive real nurture and support in living out my faith. I could not have them both. They belonged to two irreconcilable spiritual universes that dwelt in splendid isolation from one another. Two years after being received into the Church, I felt that God was calling me to prepare for a new work of helping other lay Christians discern their vocations. By this time, I knew better than to turn for assistance or support from my parish or diocese. I was entirely on my own. I made plans to change jobs in order to return to graduate school. Co-workers innocently asked me if I would be getting help from my church. I laughed inwardly at their naivete. My confessor had written a nice letter of recommendation for me but I was quite certain that that was the only help I would receive from the Catholic church.I truly did not know where God was leading me. I certainly never expected to work in a parish. I could not imagine a Catholic parish being seriously interested in serious formation for the laity. The pastors I had met regarded lay people at best as potential parish volunteers, not apostles. I could see no obvious forum for my work in the local Catholic church but felt that if I was faithful, God would make some informal opportunities available. I reminded myself that perhaps God intended that I help just one other person. My ministry might always be quiet and informal. My job was simply to follow as best I could. So I changed jobs and planned to gave up all my discretionary income and my weekends for three years in order to finish school. Those three years turned into six as I finished school and then began helping small groups of lay Catholics discern their charisms. During this time, I kept getting called by lay Catholics who were thinking of leaving the Catholic church for the evangelical world because they longed for fellowship and real instruction. I did my best to support these individuals over the phone for a while. Then, in a single day, I talked to two Catholics on the verge of leaving and was called by a Protestant professor who was seriously considering becoming Catholic but despaired of finding a local parish where his family could be really nourished. I hung up from that call determined to do something.I had been a Catholic for six years by this point and looked to my local parish for nothing beyond the sacraments. In my experience, pastors tended to dismiss Catholics who left the Church for such reasons as fundamentalists who wouldn’t be missed. If anything was going to be done about this, it would have to be done by lay people. I gathered a group of mostly convert friends together and started a fellowship group so that those on the verge of leaving or entering the Church wouldn’t have to wrestle with their issues alone. We met once a month for prayer, a potluck dinner, a talk and discussion. Since we couldn’t come up with a name for our little group at first, we called ourselves "The Nameless Lay Group". In time, we decided that we liked being nameless and nameless we remained.We gave eager young lay Catholics their first experience of personal support and formation in their faith. A Catholic father of eight who had left in frustration found the support he needed to be able to return to the Church. We gave a young Baptist man his first positive experience of lay Catholics and he soon began to attending Mass regularly with his Catholic wife and eventually entered RCIA. Through the miracle of the internet, we helped a entire Protestant family in New Zealand enter the church."
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No. 8 Gender Earnings Differentials: The European Experience By Patricia Rice This paper is concerned with the factors that shape earnings differentials between men and women in industrialised economies, and in particular, on the impact of policies designed to promote equal opportunity and equal treatment of men and women. These issues are examined empirically for a group of European economies: a number of European Union member states, together with Hungary, a prospective EU member. As members of the European Union, countries share a common legislative framework relating to equal pay and equal opportunities, but in other respects, most notably in the provision of benefits and services for families, the countries display considerable diversity. Given this, we are able to identify more clearly the impact of social policies and institutions, as distinct from direct legislation, on earnings differentials between men and women. The effects of such policies are expected to vary with earnings levels, and so in this study we examine gender earnings differentials across the earnings distribution rather than focusing on a single point, e.g. the mean. This paper is part of a series of papers on selected topics commissioned for the forthcoming Policy Research Report (PRR) on Gender and Development. The PRR is being carried out by Elizabeth King and Andrew Mason and co-sponsored by the World Bank�s Development Economics Research Group and the Gender and Development Group of the Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Network. Printed copies of this paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Owen Haaga, in room MC8-434 or at Gnetwork@worldbank.org . Comments are welcome and should be sent directly to the author(s) at P.G.Rice@soton.ac.uk . The full-length paper is available in PDF format.
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FEATURED POSTMichelle Shocked lives up to her name Anti-gay rant at SF show riles fans, show cancellationBy Mark C. Brown Mar 18, 2013 11:27AMWow. No one saw that one coming.Apparently last night's Michelle Shocked show at Yoshi's turned into something you'd expect from the Westboro Baptist Church rather than a folksinger, complete with a "God hates fags" rant. Coming from a woman who once self-identified as bisexual, fans were shocked and stunned. Some left the show. Many went to Twitter to try to make sense of what happened to the singer best known for her hit "Anchorage" a quarter century ago.Some fans tried to see it as some sort of satire, but ultimately Shocked's rant was so pointed and hateful that even the die-hard fans on Twitter reluctantly concluded that she meant it. "Totally sincere. Super anti-gay and hateful," Matt Penfield Tweeted. Yoshi's management finally shut down the show.Shocked Tweeted "Truth is leading to painful confrontation" and has gone silent ever since. She has attended a church in Los Angeles for years, as seen below. According to her official YouTube channel the San Francisco show was the opening night on her new tour; she'll be in Los Angeles soon. Fan reaction is going to be interesting.Update: The fallout has begun, with the nationally syndicated, socially conscious music show eTown cancelling Shocked's upcoming appearance. Helen Forster, co-founder of the long-running program with her husband Nick, issued this statement this afternoon: In light of recent developments, eTown must cancel the upcoming concert with Michelle Shocked, originally scheduled to take place in May at eTown Hall. From the very beginning, our goal as an organization has been to foster a spirit of community and inclusiveness in all that we do - whether it's a radio taping, special event, concert or social cause we support. We are deeply saddened by today's news, and are pulling the plug on this event. Anyone who had purchased tickets for the show can receive a full refund... We apologize for any inconvenience, and appreciate your understanding.More update: Shows have now been canceled in Colorado, Illinois, Oregon and California, and Yoshi's has banned the singer from ever performing there again. I'd be surprised if she plays another show anytime soon. Win an autographed copy of Elton John's 'Goodbye Yellow Brick Road'The recently released 40th anniversary super deluxe edition is the definitive version of the classic albumBy MSN Music Partners Wed 8:30 AMMSN Music is teaming up with Universal Music Group to give away a copy of the lavish anniversary update of Elton John’s classic 1973 album "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" autographed by Sir Elton himself. To win this one-of-a-kind package visit our Facebook page and share the post announcing this contest with your friends. After you share the post, let us know by contacting us at msnmusicfans@microso​ft.com. The lucky winner will be notified via e-mail, and we'll arrange shipment of the autographed super deluxe edition "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" set. Submissions need to be made on or before midnight PT Monday, April 14.This five-disc expanded edition includes a remastered version of the original double album plus a CD featuring new recordings of key tracks by contemporary artists picked by Sir Elton including Ed Sheeran, Miguel, Hunter Hayes, The Band Perry and Fall Out Boy with additional album tracks and B-Sides. Also included is the complete "Live at Hammersmith 1973" concert on two CDs plus a DVD of Bryan Forbes’ 1973 film, “Elton John and Bernie Taupin Say Goodbye To Norma Jean and Other Things.” A 100-page illustrated hardback book featuring photos, memorabilia and new interviews with Sir Elton and longtime lyricist Taupin completes the package. Elton John was already a Top 10 artist in the U.S. and U.K. when he, Taupin and Elton’s band began recording "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road," but the project marked heightened ambitions underscored by its original release as a two-LP double set. This year finds Sir Elton back in the headlines with a headlining performance at this June’s Bonnaroo festival in Manchester, Tenn., a critically acclaimed 2013 album, "The Diving Board," and plans to renew his wedding vows with partner David Furnish next month.RELATED: Writing Elton John's 'The Diving Board'Check out the video and links below to learn more the new versions of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road." Super Deluxe Edition: http://smarturl.it/G​oodbyeSuperDeluxe Digital SDE: http://smarturl.it/G​oodbyeYellowSDE-i Deluxe Edition: http://smarturl.it/G​oodbyeYellowDeluxe Digital Deluxe Ed.: http://smarturl.it/G​oodbyeDeluxe-i Blu-Ray: http://smarturl.it/G​oodbyeYellowBluRay LP: http://smarturl.it/G​oodbyeYelloBrickLP Jack White finishing up new albumRocker drops the news in chat with fansBy MSN Music Partners Jan 6, 2014 12:35PM By Miriam ColemanRolling Stone Jack White has a new album in the works, and it looks like it could be coming out soon. In a recent chat with fans on the message board of his label, Third Man Records, White dropped the news: "I'm producing two albums this month, and finishing them," he said. "One of them is mine." More Billie Joe Armstrong and Norah Jones remember Phil EverlyThe two stars, who'd recently recorded a tribute to the Everly Brothers, honor the fallen legendBy MSN Music Partners Jan 6, 2014 12:21PMRolling Stone A day after the passing of Everly Brothers' Phil Everly, artists influenced by his incredible body of work have started to honor the vocal legend. Billie Joe Armstrong and Norah Jones, who this past November released "Foreverly," an album-length Everly tribute, passed along their thoughts about the death of the sweet-voiced singer, who died on January 3rd due to complications from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. More Kiss to Perform at Los Angeles' first outdoor professional hockey gameRockers will play pre-game set and during intermissionBy MSN Music Partners Jan 3, 2014 11:28AM Rolling Stone Kiss are set to command a new venue: Los Angeles' first outdoor hockey game. The "Detroit Rock City" shredders will bring their face-painted theatrics to Dodger Stadium on January 25th as part of the 2014 Coors Light NHL Stadium Series. The band will perform before the game and during the first intermission. The match pits the LA Kings against the Anaheim Ducks and will air live on NBC Sports. Other musical performers in the series will be announced in the next few weeks. More The Eagles' 'Hotel California' made into 'world's largest vinyl'The record sits atop L.A.'s Forum, spins at 17 miles per hour and covers 5.7 acresBy MSN Music Partners Jan 3, 2014 10:29AM By Kory GrowRolling Stone The marketing and promotion company Pop2Life has created what they're calling the "world's largest record," a recreation of the Eagles' 16-times platinum 1977 album "Hotel California," to accompany the reopening of the Los Angeles venue the Forum and the SoCal rockers' six-concert residency. The band will be playing the venue on January 15th, 17th, 18th, 22nd, 24th and 25th. More How the Beatles took America: Inside the new issue of Rolling StoneA close-up look at the biggest explosion in rock & roll historyBy MSN Music Partners Jan 2, 2014 1:13PM Rolling Stone Fifty years ago, the Beatles landed in the U.S., generating the biggest explosion rock & roll has ever seen. In the new issue of Rolling Stone (on stands Friday, January 3rd), contributing editor Mikal Gilmore examines just how the Fab Four arrived in the States facing media disdain and a clueless record label in the wake of the devastating assassination of John F. Kennedy — and still managed to conquer America. On February 9th, 1964, Ed Sullivan famously intoned, "Tonight, the whole country is waiting to hear England's Beatles." Eight months later, the band had landed 28 records in Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart (11 in the Top 10), seen 10 albums released worldwide and been introduced to marijuana by Bob Dylan. But the band's voyage from Liverpool to New York City in '64 was filled with far more apprehension and stress than relaxation and glee. More Bruce Springsteen debuting new music on 'The Good Wife'His new album will stream on CBS's website on Jan. 5By MSN Music Partners Jan 2, 2014 1:00PM By Andy GreeneRolling Stone A little over a week after Amazon accidentally sold Bruce Springsteen's upcoming album "High Hopes" on their mobile site, CBS will offer a complete stream of the LP on their official website. It's part of a promotional tie-in with the legal drama "The Good Wife," which will incorporate the new tracks "High Hopes," "Hunter of Invisible Game" and a rerecorded "The Ghost of Tom Joad" into a January 12th episode. They will begin hosting the stream at 7 p.m. on January 5th, shortly before a preview runs for the episode with the Springsteen music. More Toby Keith under fire for no guns policy at his restaurant chainToby Keith's I Love This Bar and Grill Virgina location won't allow firearmsBy MSN Music Partners Dec 31, 2013 2:12PM WENN Gun-toting fans of singer Toby Keith's fans in Virginia are taking aim at the country star over a no-weapons policy at a restaurant he owns in the state. More of 132 live local music onEnter your ZIP code to see concerts happening in your area.Data provided by Zventsmusic newsHoward University slammed for naming P. Diddy as commencement speakerMiley Cyrus' Hospitalization Prompts Cancellation of Kansas City ShowMexican singer Juan Gabriel hospitalized in VegasSean Combs to speak at Howard U. commencementInside the Country Music Hall of Fame's massive expansionMore newsfollow msn musicFollow MSN MusicFollow MSN Entertainmentblog rollAurgasmAquarium DrunkardBrooklyn Vegan IdolatorJamBaseMOJONMENPR MusicPastePitchforkPure VolumeRolling StoneSoul SidesSpinStereogumThe Rest is NoiseVibeXXLwhat's hotNew This WeekListening BoothMusic Newsinside music2014 SXSW highlightsEric Church2014 Grammy Awardsmusic videoElton JohnEli Young BandJack Johnsonphoto galleriesTheyre singing what?The Curse of 27Encore! The week in musicexplore with bingJay-ZTaylor SwiftPharrell Williamsour blogReverb
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Email:lmedlock@gmu.eduAcademic Unit:ManagementPosition:Adjunct Professor of The School of ManagementOffice Location:Enterprise Hall, Room 206Office Hours:By appointment Education:Medlock received her undergraduate degree from the University of Texas, Dallas, and a Master of Science in Human Relations and Business from Amberton University, Garland, Texas. She also earned a Certificate of Organization Development from Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. Profile:Linda Medlock is an adjunct faculty member in the School of Management. She has over 30 years experience in human resources in a major financial institution. Specific areas of expertise include: Organizational effectiveness, leadership development, employee training design and delivery, internal facilitation and consulting on organizational issues, communications and change management, project management, employee relations, and employee recruiting and retention.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/627
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Email:lchenk@gmu.eduAcademic Unit:AccountingPosition:Assistant ProfessorPhone:703-993-4532Office Location:Enterprise Hall 105 Office Hours:Monday 4:30 - 5:30 PM or by appointment Research Interests: Accounting Conservatism IFRS and International Studies Compensation and Debt Contracting PhD - Accounting, Washington University in St. Louis MS - Accounting, Washington University in St. Louis BS - Accounting, Beijing Technology and Business University Profile:Long Chen is an Assistant Professor of Accounting at the School of Management, George Mason University. She conducts archival research on issues concerning financial reporting, auditing and corporate governance. Her work has been published in Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, Journal of Accounting and Public Policy, and Current Issues in Auditing. She has taught courses of Managerial and Cost Accounting and Advanced Managerial Accounting to both undergraduate and master of accounting students. Long Chen received her PhD in accounting from Washington University in St. Louis in 2008. Prior to beginning her doctoral study, she spent three years with Lenovo and Hewlett Packard (China) in the accounting and finance group.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/628
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Email:shasan2@gmu.eduAcademic Unit:AccountingPosition:InstructorPhone:703-993-9871Office Location:Enterprise Hall 111Office Hours:Tuesday & Thursday 10:30 - 11:30, or by appointment Research Interests: Taxation and auditing B.Tech - Electrical Engineering , Indian Institute of Technology Profile:Syed Hasan is an instructor of accounting in the School of Management. He started teaching at George Mason in Spring 2006. Hasan has a Bachelor of Technology (B. Tech) in Electrical Engineering from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur and an MBA from George Mason. Hasan is a Certified Public Accountant, licensed in Virginia and is also a Certified Management Accountant and an Enrolled Agent. His interests are in financial accounting, cost accounting, taxation, and auditing. Prior to joining George Mason, he was an assistant professor of accounting at Northern Virginia Community College (NOVA). Hasan began his career as a staff accountant at Grant Thornton and worked in public accounting until taking a job with Bell Atlantic (now Verizon). At Bell Atlantic, Hasan held various positions in corporate accounting and internal auditing. He returned to public accounting in 1995 and remained until he finally decided to do what he likes best, teaching.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/629
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Email:mzadeh@gmu.eduAcademic Unit:AccountingPosition:Associate ProfessorPhone:703-993-2141Office Location:Enterprise Hall 109Office Hours:Monday 1:00 - 2:00 PM, Tuesday 5:00 - 6:00 PM, Wednesday 2:00 - 3:00 PM, or by appointment Research Interests: PhD - Accounting, Syracuse University MS - Economics, London School of Economics BS - Mathematical Economics and Econometrics, London School of Economics Profile:Massood Yahya-Zadeh is an associate professor of accounting. Prior to joining George Mason, he was on the faculty of George Washington, Georgetown, and Penn State Universities. Most recently, Yahya-Zadeh directed the tax and accounting division of TPI Group, Inc. He holds a BS in mathematical economics and Econometrics from the London School of Economics, a Master's degree in Economics from LSE, and a PhD in accounting from Syracuse University. His areas of teaching and research include cost accounting, budgeting and strategic management. Yahya-Zadeh has served as a consultant for several IT companies and has provided strategic planning, as well as, advice on cost accounting and contracting with federal government, and related tax issues.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/630
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Email:rhinton1@gmu.eduAcademic Unit:AdministrationPosition:Associate Dean of Executive EducationPhone:703-993-1662Office Location:Mason InnOffice Hours:By Appointment Research Interests: Organization Performance Trust in Organizations Conflict and Breakdown Prevention and Resolution PhD - Management, Northwestern University MBA, Pepperdine University BS, Southern Illinois University Profile:Roy Hinton is currently associate dean of Executive Programs at George Mason University's School of Management. His responsibilities in this position include developing and implementing strategies for program development, enrollment, and operations. Prior to joining the Mason School of Management team, Hinton was managing director of Exquiry, LLC, a leadership and performance development firm. His responsibilities in this position included business and program development, individual and team coaching, and public speaking. He also worked at Burgundy Group, where he taught courses in leadership, strategy development and implementation, change management, teamwork and coordinated action, communications, strategic planning, organizational climate, trust, and system dynamics. He has served as a senior faculty member of Cardean University, a leading innovator in internet-delivered higher education, located in Deerfield, IL. He has contributed as adjunct professor to the EMBA programs at Villanova University and Loyola University in Chicago, teaching courses in strategy and organization. In addition, he has taught at The Kellogg School of Northwestern University, Lake Forest Graduate School of Management, University of Texas, and Rollins College. Hinton has also founded and operated a management consulting firm specializing in business simulations and executive education. He has helped create over fifty business simulations in a wide range of industries including manufacturing, insurance, banking, hospitality & tourism, healthcare, government, and not-for-profit organizations. Hinton has worked with many organizations worldwide including Allen-Bradley, the American Red Cross, Allstate, Caterpillar, Citibank, Chrysler Corporation, General Motors, Marriott Hotels and Resorts, Motorola, Quaker Oats, Texas Instruments and Visteon. He has published articles in human resource and strategy journals and has written several books pertaining to business simulations. Hinton received his PhD in management from Northwestern University and his MBA from Pepperdine University. He is also a graduate of the Newfield Network Coaching for Professional and Personal Mastery program which is accredited by the International Coach Federation.
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Community > Forum > Other US Government Space Activities > Democracy or Space? Democracy or Space? Posted by: campbelp2002 - Sun Apr 22, 2007 2:14 am [ 55 posts ] Go to page Previous 1, 2, 3, 4 Next Democracy or Space? Would you give up democratic freedom to achieve routine, ecconomical space flight?Poll ended at Sat May 12, 2007 2:14 am Yes 38% [ 3 ] No 63% [ 5 ] Print view Democracy or Space? Author vecima Spaceflight Trainee Joined: Thu Nov 19, 2009 6:45 pmPosts: 20 Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Tue Dec 01, 2009 7:14 pm SuperShuki wrote:Why does your definition of "good" apply to anyone else? If your definition only applies to you, then it's relative.Shouldn't the same be said for a religious definition of "good"? If I don't believe in your God, and your God informs your definition of "good" then yours is relative too. Space Station Commander Joined: Mon May 31, 2004 9:47 pmPosts: 801Location: Yerushalayim (Jerusalem) - capital of Israel! Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Tue Dec 01, 2009 7:16 pm When China sends a man into space, I don't rejoice. When Iran or North Korea succesfully launch a new rocket, I don't celebrate. Progress is only good if it is toward good ends. China's space program means, at the least, good publicity to an evil regime. Iran and North Korea's rockets will be used to as tools to fight free countries. The means don't justify the ends. I tend to think there's maybe a little more grey area than good countries vs evil countries. And I'm Amerian! Anyway, to re-rail the thread, would I trade democracy for space? sure, if the future offered something better than democracy. I'm happy to live in one, but I don't assume that it's the best possible form of government.If it is, then why are we constantly changing it? vecima wrote:SuperShuki wrote:Why does your definition of "good" apply to anyone else? If your definition only applies to you, then it's relative.Shouldn't the same be said for a religious definition of "good"? If I don't believe in your God, and your God informs your definition of "good" then yours is relative too.If God only had influence over me, then you'd be right. But God not only has influence over the whole world, the whole world is dependent on Him. There isn't anything in creation that God didn't create and doesn't have control over. God is omnipotent and omnicient. If something is bad according to God, it's bad because he created it that way. God doesn't have opinions. God knows. vecima wrote:I tend to think there's maybe a little more grey area than good countries vs evil countries. And I'm Amerian! Anyway, to re-rail the thread, would I trade democracy for space? sure, if the future offered something better than democracy. I'm happy to live in one, but I don't assume that it's the best possible form of government.If it is, then why are we constantly changing it?I make a distinction between democracy and freedom. Western democracy is not all good; for example, the idea that all people are created equal is demonstratably false (there are strong people and weak people, tall and short, men and women). Democracy is a system of government, and as such, can be improved. But freedom - that's an absolute value. I think systems of government are better or worse based on the degrees of freedom that they provide. SuperShuki wrote:If God only had influence over me, then you'd be right. But God not only has influence over the whole world, the whole world is dependent on Him.no it isn't. EDIT: I see what you're saying though. In your belief, that makes "good" absolute. In my belief "good" is relative, because no matter who's God is dishing it out, HE isn't dishing it out for everyone. vecima wrote:SuperShuki wrote:If God only had influence over me, then you'd be right. But God not only has influence over the whole world, the whole world is dependent on Him.no it isn't. EDIT: I see what you're saying though. In your belief, that makes "good" absolute. In my belief "good" is relative, because no matter who's God is dishing it out, HE isn't dishing it out for everyone.Exactly. That's the difference between paganism (and atheism), and monotheism. IrquiM Space Station Member Joined: Mon Nov 29, 2004 1:04 pmPosts: 252Location: Norway Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Tue Dec 01, 2009 10:56 pm vecima wrote:I tend to think there's maybe a little more grey area than good countries vs evil countries. And I'm Amerian! There's a first for everything! SuperShuki wrote:vecima wrote:SuperShuki wrote:If God only had influence over me, then you'd be right. But God not only has influence over the whole world, the whole world is dependent on Him.no it isn't. EDIT: I see what you're saying though. In your belief, that makes "good" absolute. In my belief "good" is relative, because no matter who's God is dishing it out, HE isn't dishing it out for everyone.Exactly. That's the difference between paganism (and atheism), and monotheism.And the only difference between monotheism and atheism, is that we go just -1- god further. You're just as much an atheist against other peoples god. Space Station Commander Joined: Mon May 31, 2004 9:47 pmPosts: 801Location: Yerushalayim (Jerusalem) - capital of Israel! Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Tue Dec 01, 2009 11:11 pm Paganism and athiesm both share the concept of unacountability. Without an omnipotent, omnicient God, there is no absolute morality, therefore everything is permissible. I think that most athiests would really be agnostics if they thought about it. Athiesm is illogical. You can't know that something doesn't exists - unless, of course, you know everything. The most that you can say is that, to your knowledge, you have encountered no evidence of God's existence. It's like saying that there are no aliens. Unless you're omnicient, you can't prove that there aren't aliens. Space Station Commander Joined: Thu Oct 27, 2005 7:44 amPosts: 707Location: Haarlem, The Netherlands Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Wed Dec 02, 2009 10:58 am SuperShuki wrote:Paganism and athiesm both share the concept of unacountability. Without an omnipotent, omnicient God, there is no absolute morality, therefore everything is permissible.I think I've already explained to you that it's quite possible to decide how good or bad something is without appeals to an ancient book. I agree that it is not possible to say that something is absolutely forbidden based on this, but to draw from that the conclusion that therefore everything is permissible is of course rediculous. And I think that most religious people don't take their Commandments so literally either.As for atheism versus agnosticism, there is something called Occam's Razor, which states that the simplest solution is often the best. I don't believe there is a God, because I don't see anything that can't be explained by other means.For example, your earlier example of predictions made about the Jewish people can, in my view, easily be explained by means other than intervention by God. Predicting that a not very well-liked minority group will be cast out by the rest of the population doesn't strike me as a prediction that is very unlikely to come true. Whether the Jewish people remained one is to a certain extent a matter of the level of detail that you're willing to go into. From a quick browse around Wikipedia, it appears that there are different denominations of Judaism. If you're willing to gloss over those, then the prediction comes true, otherwise it doesn't. Finally, the prediction of the Jews coming back to the Holy Land became true because it was made true by people, specifically the UN and the UK, after the atrocities commited against the Jews by the nazis in the second world war.I don't see the hand of God in any of that, but I respect your view. I'm not against religion per se. But I think that people should have a choice, and the freedom to practice any religion they choose (including no religion at all), as long as it doesn't affect others, and I reject the stance that people can't be decent human beings unless they follow some religion's rules rigidly. Something like Kerala in the first couple of centuries AD would be nice.Oh, and to respond to your earlier comment about democracy: saying that the King should be nice to his subjects merely sets an ideal of benevolent dictatorship. Unless the people actually got to vote on important decisions, it's not democracy at all. Space Station Commander Joined: Mon May 31, 2004 9:47 pmPosts: 801Location: Yerushalayim (Jerusalem) - capital of Israel! Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Wed Dec 02, 2009 11:48 am aQuote:I think I've already explained to you that it's quite possible to decide how good or bad something is without appeals to an ancient book. I agree that it is not possible to say that something is absolutely forbidden based on this, but to draw from that the conclusion that therefore everything is permissible is of course rediculous. Quote:I base my opinion on whether something is right or wrong on its results to individual happiness and the common good. I think democracy is good because people living in a democracy tend to have more freedom, and people with more freedom tend to be happier. You see? We can discuss ethics and values just fine without God.My belief is in God, the book is just part of the message.Why is 'happier' good? Why should people fight and die in order to tend to be 'happier'? If you die, are you happier? I think its much easier without freedom. Freedom means choices, and hard work. If your not free, everything is provided to your benevolent owner. In fact, it's much easier to be a slave.In any case, what right do you have to kill other people in the name of something that you believe in, and they don't? Quote:As for atheism versus agnosticism, there is something called Occam's Razor, which states that the simplest solution is often the best. I don't believe there is a God, because I don't see anything that can't be explained by other means.There's a difference between not believing that God exists, and believing that God doesn't exist. That's the difference between agnosticism and athiesm.Quote:Predicting that a not very well-liked minority group will be cast out by the rest of the population doesn't strike me as a prediction that is very unlikely to come true.What minority group? The Jews were a nation, they had a kingdom. Would you predict now that England would be occupied, the English exiled, that England would remain barren for the period of the exile, that the English would keep their identity as English, and that, no matter how long it took, even near on two millenia, the English would return to England, as English, and become sovereign again?!Quote:I reject the stance that people can't be decent human beings unless they follow some religion's rules rigidly. You don't have to be Jewish to be a decent human being. But you are obligated to follow the seven Noachide laws. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Laws_of_NoahQuote:saying that the King should be nice to his subjects merely sets an ideal of benevolent dictatorship. Unless the people actually got to vote on important decisions, it's not democracy at all.Not just being nice to the subjects - being King only because the subjects want you to be King. Space Station Member Joined: Mon Nov 29, 2004 1:04 pmPosts: 252Location: Norway Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Wed Dec 02, 2009 1:30 pm SuperShuki wrote:Paganism and athiesm both share the concept of unacountability. Without an omnipotent, omnicient God, there is no absolute morality, therefore everything is permissible.You are kind of right that they share the same concept, but not in the way you think. For atheists, accountability has to do with what is natural, and paganists have their belief in what they can see in the nature. So both is relying on nature, but that's where it stops. Still - both have full accountability. The people that lack accountability is the ones that are theists. Because their accountability is against a deity and not other people, a nation of people that are accountable to a deity cannot become a proper democracy, because they'll base their action on the deity.SuperShuki wrote:I think that most athiests would really be agnostics if they thought about it. Athiesm is illogical. You can't know that something doesn't exists - unless, of course, you know everything. The most that you can say is that, to your knowledge, you have encountered no evidence of God's existence. It's like saying that there are no aliens. Unless you're omnicient, you can't prove that there aren't aliens.This is the argument all religious people use in vain. It is not up to the atheists to disprove any biased claims put forward by religious people. It's the people that make the claim that has to prove it. Space Station Commander Joined: Mon May 31, 2004 9:47 pmPosts: 801Location: Yerushalayim (Jerusalem) - capital of Israel! Re: Democracy or Space? Posted on: Wed Dec 02, 2009 4:25 pm Quote:SuperShuki wrote:You are kind of right that they share the same concept, but not in the way you think. For atheists, accountability has to do with what is natural, and paganists have their belief in what they can see in the nature. So both is relying on nature, but that's where it stops. Still - both have full accountability. The people that lack accountability is the ones that are theists. Because their accountability is against a deity and not other people, a nation of people that are accountable to a deity cannot become a proper democracy, because they'll base their action on the deity.What does accountability, and morality, have to do with "what is natural"? What keeps "what is natural" from being arbitrary? And why should anyone feel compelled to do "what is natural"?Everyone's accountable to God. Even if they don't believe in Him.Quote:SuperShuki wrote:I think that most athiests would really be agnostics if they thought about it. Athiesm is illogical. You can't know that something doesn't exists - unless, of course, you know everything. The most that you can say is that, to your knowledge, you have encountered no evidence of God's existence. It's like saying that there are no aliens. Unless you're omnicient, you can't prove that there aren't aliens.This is the argument all religious people use in vain. It is not up to the atheists to disprove any biased claims put forward by religious people. It's the people that make the claim that has to prove it.Agnosticism is the belief that God may or may not exist. That does not require proof. Athiesm is the belief that God definitely does not exist. That requires proof. You got it wrong.Agnostics are in the middle, yes. But the rest are degrees towards the extremities. Even people like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris, which often is portrayed as the "evil atheists which do not believe in god" in American media, are not at the extremities.This sums up pretty good I think: 1. Strong Theist: I do not question the existence of God, I KNOW he exists.2. De-facto Theist: I cannot know for certain but I strongly believe in God and I live my life on the assumption that he is there.3. Weak Theist: I am very uncertain, but I am inclined to believe in God.4. Pure Agnostic: God’s existence and non-existence are exactly equiprobable.5. Weak Atheist: I do not know whether God exists but I’m inclined to be skeptical.6. De-facto Atheist: I cannot know for certain but I think God is very improbable and I live my life under the assumption that he is not there.7. Strong Atheist: I am 100% sure that there is no God.- Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion And regarding moral and ethics, and what comes naturally to animals, like us humans, I suggest you read the Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins. Doing good to others are in our genes - it's called self-preservation.A wise man, the physicist Steven Weinberg, once said that regardless of religion you will have "good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things." However, "for good people to do evil things, it takes religion." This really sums it up. All times are UTC Board index » Government » Other US Government Space Activities
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/632
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Main » Africa In Uganda, "Because of Special Olympics, I am Somebody" When Florence Nabayinda was diagnosed with intellectual disabilities, her mother ran away. Her father treated her harshly and she grew up amid violence and neglect in a rural Uganda village. Florence Nabayinda of Uganda found a place in Special Olympics.An Opportunity Florence slept on the ground, and night after night she fought off insect-born disease, flu and abuse from relatives who did not understand her disability. The young girl could not look for help from others in Masaka village, where school officials called her “useless” and “unteachable.”But a brighter future lay ahead. Another family took pity on her, and adopted Florence when she was a young teenager. They helped to get her back to school, even though she attended class with small children half her age. They also suggested she take part in Special Olympics. She Can RunFor the first time, Florence was able to do something other children could do: run! She raced and grew strong and received compliments. People were smiling at her and congratulating her – an amazing new experience after a lifetime of scolding, mockery and abuse. “Because of Special Olympics, I am somebody,” Florence says, looking back on it all. She trained as a long-distance runner and competed in the Special Olympics Tanzania 10K, and a half-marathon at the Special Olympics World Summer Games in 1999, receiving gold medals at both races.After a difficult childhood, Nabayinda found strength, courage and persistence in herself.A Bright Future“Growing up, I felt I could do nothing in life – [I was] thrown away like trash, ridiculed as ‘stupid’, and forced to quit school,” Florence explains. “But when I ran a race, I was somebody, and through running and Special Olympics I found my voice.” Florence has been using that voice ever since – not only as a representative for Uganda at the Special Olympics World Games, but also as a global spokesperson for the Special Olympics movement. She has now been involved with Special Olympics for more than 10 years and currently works at the Special Olympics Uganda headquarters. She has also adopted a child, and her dream is to one day serve in the Parliament. Gifts Shine ThroughIn Kenya, a young man who was shunned becomes a beloved, talented coach.Learn More ››Deon NamisebHe's a speaker and role model. It didn't start that way in Namibia.Learn More ››
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Australian Open title defence intact as Victoria Azerenka moves into fourth roundJohn Pye, Associated Press | January 18, 2013 9:52 PM ETMore from Associated Press Australian Open title defence intact as Victoria Azerenka moves into fourth roundMELBOURNE, Australia — Title favourite Serena Williams and defending champion Victoria Azarenka advanced in contrasting styles Saturday to the fourth round of the Australian Open. Williams, aiming for a third consecutive major title, recovered from a break down in the second set to win six straight games and finish off a 6-1, 6-3 win over Japan’s Ayumi Morita in 66 minutes. The 15-time major winner even surprised herself with another serve at 128 mph (207 kph), matching her career fastest serve she hit earlier in the tournament. “I tried to hit it really hard. I hit 207 [kph] the other day and I thought it was luck,” she said. “But I did it again and I was like whew! I’m going to try to go for 210. We’ll see.” RelatedAngelique Kerber wins on 25th birthday to reach fourth round at Australian OpenSweating with the oldies: Federer, Serena make it through Australian Open scorcherMilos Raonic dominates Lukas Rosol to reach third round at Australian Open Top-ranked Azarenka struggled to hold off injured American Jamie Hampton 6-4, 4-6, 6-2, and didn’t help herself with six double-faults. Hampton, who needed a medical timeout for a lower back problem before she served out the second set and winced in pain, frequently on the verge of tears, throughout the third, still managed to hit 41 winners to keep the Belarusian under pressure. Azarenka appeared frustrated at times, but overcame an early break and fended off triple break point in the seventh game of the deciding set before clinching the match in two hours, nine minutes. “She played incredible, went for every single shot. I felt it was touching every single line,” Azarenka said. “She took a medical timeout but she rips winners all over the place and I was like, ’Can I have a back problem?’ I’m feeling great, but I’m missing every shot.” After wasting two set points on Azarenka’s serve late in the second set, Hampton had to leave the court for nine minutes to have treatment on her back. Azarenka practiced her backhands and serve while Hampton was in the locker room, but the break didn’t help her immediately. Hampton returned and held in the next game and needed more treatment in the break at the end of the set. Even with the pain of two herniated disks, the 23-year-old Hampton, from Auburn, Ala., went down swinging — making 47 unforced errors to go with the winners that caught Azarenka off guard and had her asking, loudly at one point, what she could do to counter them. Sensing an upset, and stirred by the obvious signs of pain, the crowd on Rod Laver Arena got right behind the No. 63-ranked Hampton, who had never previously gone past the second round at a major. Azarenka had her share of supporters in the stands, too, including friend and musician RedFoo who was wearing a shirt emblazoned with “We Go Hard” across the front. If results go according to rankings, Azarenka and Williams will meet in the semi-finals. Williams has won the Australian Open five times and is on a 19-match winning streak — and she has lost only one match since her first-round exit at the French Open last year. Considering Azarenka has lost 11 of their 12 meetings, including all five in 2012, it’s a potential matchup where Azarenka will have to play better than ever. But they both have to advance to the last four, something Williams failed to do here last year when she was knocked out in the fourth round. In the corresponding round this year, the 31-year-old American will meet No. 14 Maria Kirilenko, who beat No. 20-Yanina Wickmayer 7-6 (4), 6-3. Azarenka next plays Elena Vesnina, who beat 16th-seeded Roberta Vinci of Italy 7-6 (4), 6-4. Elsewhere, two-time major winner Svetlana Kuznetsova advanced with a 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 win over Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro. On Friday night, Maria Sharapova celebrated with extra exuberance after her 6-1, 6-3 win over Venus Williams, her first victory over the seven-time major winner in a Grand Slam. “I was just really pumped,” she said. “Why shouldn’t I be?” After back-to-back 6-0, 6-0 wins in the first two rounds — the first time that happened at major since 1985 — Sharapova has conceded the fewest number of games en route to the fourth round at the Australian Open since Steffi Graf did so 24 years ago. Graf also lost only four games in her first three matches on her way to the second of her three consecutive titles in Melbourne. Top-ranked Novak Djokovic took another step closer to a third consecutive Australian title, defeating Radek Stepanek 6-4, 6-3, 7-5 in the third round. His victory came on the same day Lance Armstrong admitted during a television interview with Oprah Winfrey that he used banned drugs to win his seven Tour de France titles. Djokovic, a lifetime cycling fan, said at his post-match news conference that it was “a disgrace for the sport to have an athlete like this.” “He cheated the sport,” Djokovic said. “He cheated many people around the world with his career, with his life story.” Djokovic will play Sunday against No. 15 Stanislas Wawrinka, who knocked out the last American man in the draw with a 7-6 (6), 7-5, 6-4 win over No. 20 Sam Querrey. Fourth-seeded David Ferrer finished off a 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 win over 2006 Australian finalist Marcos Baghdatis with an ace, advancing to a fourth-round match against Japan’s Kei Nishikori. No. 5 Tomas Berdych beat Austria’s Jurgen Melzer 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 and will next play South Africa’s Kevin Anderson. Djokovic’s Serbian Davis Cup teammate Janko Tipsarevic advanced to a meeting with No. 10 Nicolas Almagro. In an all-Serbian match of two former No. 1 women, 2008 French Open champion Ana Ivanovic beat Jelena Jankovic 7-5, 6-3. She moved into the fourth round against Poland’s Angieszka Radwanska, who is seeded No. 4 and won her 12th straight match — including titles at Auckland and Sydney — with a 6-3, 6-1 defeat of Britain’s Heather Watson. No. 5 Angelique Kerber and No. 19 Ekaterina Makarova, two of the four women who beat Serena Williams in 2012, will meet in the fourth round. Kerber stopped 17-year-old American Madison Keys 6-2, 7-5 to celebrate her 25th birthday. Makarova had a 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-4 win over 2007 Wimbledon finalist Marion Bartoli. Topics: Sports, Tennis, Australian Open 2013, Victoria Azarenka
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76ers 97, Knicks 80 PHILADELPHIA -- Jrue Holiday celebrated his first All-Star selection by scoring a career-high 35 points Saturday night as the Philadelphia 76ers routed the New York Knicks 97-80. The fourth-year point guard, named an Eastern Conference reserve Thursday, made 16 of 25 shots from the floor and had six assists and five rebounds, helping the Sixers (18-25) snap a two-game losing streak. Philadelphia also avenged two blowout losses to the Atlantic Division-leading Knicks early in the season. Nick Young and Evan Turner had 20 points apiece for the Sixers, who began the night averaging 93.2 points per game, third worst in the league. But they breezed to a 29-point lead late in the third quarter and were never threatened thereafter. They shot 50.7 percent from the floor. About the only thing that went awry for the Sixers was the departure of coach Doug Collins in the second half to undergo a dental examination. Collins lost a tooth before the game. Carmelo Anthony had 25 points to pace New York (26-15). But Anthony, the league's third-leading scorer at 29 points per game, made just 9 of 29 shots from the floor. The Knicks shot 34.8 percent as a team and missed 23 of 27 3-point attempts. They began the night fourth in the league in 3-point accuracy. Amare Stoudemire added 20 points for the Knicks. Knicks point guard Raymond Felton, making his first appearance after missing 12 games with a broken finger, made just 2 of 8 shots from the field and finished with eight points and three assists. The Sixers outscored the Knicks 29-12 in the first 10:32 of the third quarter to extend a 53-41 halftime lead to 82-53. Thaddeus Young had 14 points and Holiday 10 in that stretch. Holiday scored 19 points in the first half, when the Sixers shot 56.1 percent from the field to take a 53-41 lead. Anthony and Stoudemire had 14 and 12 points, respectively, for the Knicks, who shot just 35.7 percent from the field and missed 12 of their 15 3-point attempts. NOTES: Spencer Hawes and Nick Young started at center and guard for the Sixers, respectively. It was Hawes' first start of the season and Young's fourth, as Collins sought to find a way to improve his team's first-quarter performance. "We've won 10 first quarters all year out of 42, which is second worst in the NBA," he said. "We're 10-1 when we've won or tied the first quarter. ... Last year, we used to come out strong and get the defense set. That's not been the case this year." The Sixers got out to an early 12-2 lead and were up 24-19 after a quarter. ... Knicks coach Mike Woodson was asked about his players accepting revised roles, now that Felton, Stoudemire and Iman Shumpert have returned from injuries. "They don't have a choice," Woodson said. "You either accept your role or you don't play." ... Woodson does not plan to play Shumpert more than 30 minutes a game. ... Sixers guard Jason Richardson missed his third straight game with a sore left knee. ... Collins was delayed in addressing reporters before the game when he lost a tooth. "The other guy's in trouble," he joked. ... Collins drew a technical foul with 3:32 left in the first quarter, arguing an illegal-screen call against Lavoy Allen.BasketballSports & RecreationSixersJrue HolidayNick YoungAmare Stoudemire
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Padres' Volquez barely misses a no-hitter Right-hander Edinson Volquez pitched the 26th one-hitter in San Diego Padres history at Petco Park on Thursday night, coming within one tough play of throwing the franchise's first no-hitter. Matt Downs got the Houston Astros' only hit --an infield single -- with two outs in the fourth. He beat out a ball topped to the right of Volquez. The pitcher fielded the ball but had no throw on Downs. "I don't want to talk about that play," Volquez joked. "I'm going to have defensive drills tomorrow. I have to make that play." Volquez retired 15 of 16 last hitters he faced to record the first complete game of his career, the Padres winning 1-0. In addition to the one hit, Volquez, 29, issued three walks and had five strikeouts. He threw 117 pitches, 75 going for strikes. It was the fifth 1-0 one-hitter in Padres history, and San Diego's first one-hitter since Mat Latos had one at San Francisco on May 13, 2010. That was also the most recent 1-0, one-hit win. Thursday night's gem was also the third complete-game shutout by a Padres pitcher at Petco Park and the first since Jake Peavy blanked the Astros on Aug. 23, 2005. Volquez is the first Padre to pitch a one-hit shutout at home since Andy Benes on July 3, 1994, at Qualcomm Stadium. Volquez faced three hitters over the minimum in a game that almost featured a triple play by the Padres. Justin Maxwell's line drive was snagged by a leaping second baseman Logan Forsythe. J.D. Martinez was doubled off second base, but Matt Downs was barely safe back at first.Edinson VolquezHouston AstrosMatt Downs
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Week 16 pickups A look at the best players to boost your fantasy roster in Week 16. Craig Sager describes Hank Aaron's 715th home run from his unique perspective The Turner Sports sideline reporter was a 22-year-old fresh out of Northwestern when he scored the interview of a lifetime. The man known for his colorful wardrobe was the first media member to talk to Hank Aaron after Aaron broke Babe Ruth&#39;s all-time home run record.
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Posted: Thursday December 20, 2012 6:04 AM Fehr says players waiting for NHL to resume talks TORONTO (AP) - Donald Fehr and the players' association are ready to get back to the bargaining table at any moment. They are now just waiting for the NHL to feel the same way. "(We aren't talking) because the owners have not indicated a desire to resume,'' the NHLPA's executive director said Wednesday night before a charity hockey game. "We've indicated any number of times that we're willing to resume when they are (and) we're willing to resume without preconditions. "So we're waiting to hear back from them.'' The sides haven't negotiated with one another since Dec. 6 in New York, when talks broke down. They also met with a U.S. federal mediator for two days in New Jersey last week and reported no progress. Since then, there has been only limited contact between the sides, including a brief email exchange on Wednesday. The NHL believes that negotiations should resume only when there is something new to say. "I don't think either party is refusing a meeting,'' NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said in an email. "But unless there is an indication one side or the other is prepared to move or has a new idea to move the process forward - and so far neither side has indicated - I am not sure what we would do at the meeting. "What is the agenda? Who is directing the conversation? We don't have anything new to say right now.'' Fehr said he likes the idea put forward by Winnipeg Jets defenseman Ron Hainsey that the same parties who met two weeks ago return to the bargaining table, along with himself and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman. Progress was made during a session that included four new owners and a number of players, including Sidney Crosby. "That seems like it might work if the owners are interested in it,'' Fehr said. However, Daly indicated that doesn't hold much appeal to the NHL. He created a stir earlier Wednesday when he made an appearance on CBC's Hockey Night In Canada Radio and was asked to give a yes or no answer on whether there would be an agreement in time to save the season. Daly said, "Yes.'' "That's good news,'' Fehr said in response. "I'm glad to hear that. I certainly hope he's right. That's the players' goal, that's what we want to try and do. "Hopefully, we'll get back together and negotiate out the remaining issues as soon as possible.'' The NHL has insisted on getting in at least a 48-game schedule - the same number it had after the 1994-95 lockout - which means an agreement will need to be reached by the middle of January. More than 500 regular-season games through Dec. 30 have already been wiped off the schedule and further cancellations are expected to be made by the end of the week. Fehr is concerned about the damage being caused by hockey's fourth work stoppage in 20 years. "Any time you are preventing the fans from watching the sport they dearly love, which provides the business that we're all involved in, that's not a good thing,'' Fehr said. "It needs to be ended as soon as possible. We certainly hope we can do that. We certainly want to tell the fans we're doing everything we can to do it. "Hopefully it'll be over soon. That's what we're trying to do.''
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Posted: Thursday April 4, 2013 4:55 PM Pacers F Granger has knee surgery INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana Pacers forward Danny Granger is recovering after what the team says was successful surgery on his left knee. The team said Granger had the procedure Thursday. A full recovery is expected and Granger is expected to be ready for training camp this fall. Granger missed the first half of the season with patellar tendinosis after undergoing a second injection to treat the injury in October. He returned for five games in February, but the injury flared up again and he didn't play again. Entering Thursday's games, the Pacers had a seven-game lead in the Central Division and were third in the Eastern Conference standings.
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Jeff Conine Born: Jun 27, 1966 in Tacoma, Washington
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Dick Cheney Refine results by Decade or from Jan For the RecordFebruary 20, 2006 | Edited by Stephen CannellaOffered By the Nationals, a one-year, nonguaranteed $500,000 contract to Sammy Sosa. Signing with Washington would mean a steep pay cut for Sosa (above), who made $17 million with the Orioles last year; he was still... Everyone In the Pool!March 21, 2005 | Rick ReillyExcept for Rick Neuheisel's NCAA tournament pool--put in $6,400, take home $4.5 million--most office pools are duller than slides of Dick Cheney's angioplasties. THE SHOWAugust 16, 2004 | BILL SCHEFTHey, good news. The boys at BALCO have turned their attention to a new project: developing a glue that actually seals evidence in the Kobe Bryant case. THE SHOWJuly 12, 2004 | Bill ScheftBefore we begin, did you hear about the seven-year-old skateboarder who signed an endorsement deal with Mattel? A seven-year-old pro skateboarder. What's his name, Freddy A-dude? IN WASHINGTON, EVEN RONALD REAGAN IS ON THE EMIL VERBAN BANDWAGONMay 24, 1982 | Ivan MaiselThe members, by unanimous agreement, hold no meetings and pay no dues. Two of the three qualifications for membership are residency in the Washington, D.C. area and a sense of humor, and the former may be waived.... National League (Baseball) COVERSArizona Diamondbacks (5)
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NCAA Game Summary - NC State at Clemson (Sunday, February 10) Final Score: NC State 58, Clemson 57 Clemson, SC (Sports Network) - Scott Wood knocked down the game-winning 3- pointer with one second remaining as the NC State Wolfpack captured the thrilling 58-57 win over the Clemson Tigers in ACC play at Littlejohn Coliseum. Wood finished the contest 3-of-9 beyond the arc, resulting in nine points for the Wolfpack (17-7, 6-5 ACC) as they snapped a three-game slide. Richard Howell filled out his stat line with 16 points, 11 rebounds, four steals and three assists, while C.J. Leslie logged a double-double of his own with 12 points and 10 boards. Off the bench, Lorenzo Brown registered 15 points and four of the unit's eight dishes. The Tigers (12-11, 4-7) were paced by Jordan Roper with a game-high 17 points, followed by K.J. McDaniels and Devin Booker with 12 and 10 points, respectively, in the team's third consecutive setback. NC State led by three points in the first few moments of the contest, but the team ended up shooting only 34.5 percent from the floor in the first half, leading to a 32-26 deficit at the break. In the second half Clemson stumbled with only nine made field goals, opening the door for the Wolfpack to set up Wood for what became the game-winning basket from the right wing. The Tigers did have one last shot to grab the win, but a heave from half-court missed the mark. Clemson held the visitors to just 37.7 percent shooting from the field, but at the same time the Tigers hurt themselves with 17 turnovers. 02/10 15:51:56 ET
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All Tags » who is active (RSS) free tool sql server magazine Released: Who is Active v11.11 It's been several months since the last Who is Active fix, so I thought I'd call this one out specifically via a blog post. v11.11 contains a few minor fixes and enhancements, which you can read about on the download page . This will (I believe) be the Read More... Adam Machanic | 102 Comments Filed under: who is active, sp_whoisactive Twenty Nine Days of Activity Monitoring (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 30 of 30) This post is part 30 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Adam Machanic | 25 Comments Filed under: DMVs, who is active, sp_whoisactive, activity monitoring, month of monitoring Access for All! (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 29 of 30) This post is part 29 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Adam Machanic | 1 Comments Filed under: DMVs, who is active, sp_whoisactive, activity monitoring, month of monitoring Who is Active's Hidden Gems (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 28 of 30) This post is part 28 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Who is Active v11.00 (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 27 of 30) This post is part 27 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Delta Force (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 26 of 30) This post is part 26 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Capturing the Output (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 25 of 30) This post is part 25 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... The Output of Your Dreams (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 24 of 30) This post is part 24 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Sunday, April 24, 2011 11:00 AM Leader of the Block (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 23 of 30) This post is part 23 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... The Key to Your Locks (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 22 of 30) This post is part 22 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Analyzing Tempdb Contention (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 21 of 30) This post is part 21 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... The Node Knows (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 20 of 30) This post is part 20 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Why Am I Blocked? (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 19 of 30) This post is part 19 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Getting More Information (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 18 of 30) This post is part 18 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... Is This Normal? (A Month of Activity Monitoring, Part 17 of 30) This post is part 17 of a 30-part series about the Who is Active stored procedure. A new post will run each day during the month of April, 2011. After April all of these posts will be edited and combined into a single document to become the basis of the Read More... More Posts Next page » 24 hours of PASS demo database
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Orthodox Church in America | Orthodoxy in America St. Andrew Orthodox ChurchSt. Andrew Orthodox ChurchWelcome to Saint Andrew Orthodox Church! Our parish is located in the historic Butchers Hill District in East Baltimore near Patterson Park. We welcome you to come visit and worship with us and become part of our Orthodox Christian community. Please navigate through our web site to find out more about St. Andrew Orthodox Church. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us. We hope to see you soon at one of our services or events!Very Reverend Theodore Boback - Parish Rector Please visit our Donations page to read about our new roof fundraising effort being conducted this year. Your consideration to this cause is greatly appreciated! St. Andrew Resource CenterSt. Andrew Resource CenterA group of 30 families came together in 1940 and founded St. Andrew under the leadership of Rev. Fr. Theodore Shevchuk within the jurisdiction of the Metropolia (now the Orthodox Church in America). Initially, the parish worshipped at Fayette and Linwood Streets until a permanent building was found. The first Divine Liturgy was celebrated in the current building on E. Lombard and S. Chester Streets on Sunday, February 16, 1941.The Vladicon "R" Club (now the Vladicon "O" Club) was founded in March of 1941, and the Sisterhood formed on May 1, 1941 with 11 founding members. The church building was consecrated on June 29, 1941 by Metropolitan Theophilus. The iconostasis was dedicated in 1943, a school and choir were established, and the mortgage was liquidated by the end of the decade. A church cemetery was established in the 1940s but was moved in the early 1950s to its present location on German Hill Road in Baltimore County.The church suffered a disastrous fire on Sunday, February 15, 1970, beginning just after Divine Liturgy had ended. The interior, floor, and roof of the church were destroyed, but fortunately no one was injured. One of the few items to survive intact was an icon of St. Andrew. The parish worshiped temporarily at a building on South Broadway from March 1970 to March 1972 while reconstruction at the S. Chester and E. Lombard site took place. The reconstructed church and fellowship hall was consecrated in June 1972. The former church rectory, adjacent to the church, was renovated by parishioners in the early 1980s and was named the St. Andrew Resource Center. It currently houses the church school, pastor's office and meeting rooms. Today, the parish serves Orthodox Christians from a variety of ethnic and religious backgrounds living in Baltimore City and the surrounding metropolitan counties of Anne Arundel, Carroll, Baltimore and Harford. New members are warmly welcome, and inquiries from individuals wishing to learn more about the Orthodox Faith are always encouraged. Powered by Orthodox Web Solutions Home | Back | Print | Top
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Detective Conan 891 Zipang 74 Reviews by giniel ...... i'm wondering, when this manga will be finished..... can't wait..... nurarihyon is a one of a kind.... it's great ..... i just hope that Tsurara will... > User > giniel Questions? Contact us and we'll get back within minutes!
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Sailor's body located in Intracoastal Authorities investigating how John Franklin fell from boat MARCIA LANEmarcia.lane@staugustine.com Published Saturday, February 07, 2009 Click here for the video. John Franklin left the Vilano boat ramp in his 24-foot sailboat, Blue Star, sometime after 4 p.m. on Thursday. Nearly 24 hours later, his body was brought back to the same ramp. Discovery of his body ended an intensive search by Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, U.S. Coast Guard and the St. Johns County Sheriff's Office. Franklin, 69, of Interlachen, was planning to sail up the Intracoastal Waterway and over onto the St. Johns River in order to meet his wife in Green Cove Springs on Sunday. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission authorities are trying to find out what went wrong. "We are looking at what we believe to be a boating accident," said Lt. Steve Zukowsky, FWC's law enforcement supervisor for St. Johns County. Franklin apparently fell overboard "... however, we are still investigating what happened and why," Zukowsky said. Franklin was not wearing a life jacket, although FWC officers found several aboard his sailboat. "He was alone when he left (the boat ramp)," Zukowsky said. What FWC officers call a "Good Samaritan boater" found Franklin's sailboat slapping up against his which was anchored, a couple of hundred yards from the Vilano Bridge. When he took his dinghy out, he found the engine on the Blue Star still running and the boat's dinghy lines fouled on his sailboat motor. He notified personnel at Camachee Cove and they notified authorities. Franklin was apparently an experienced sailor, having owned at least one other sailboat. From Missouri, he moved to the Interlachen area of Putnam County about nine or 10 years ago, according to Frank Celler. Celler met Franklin Thursday as he was preparing for his sail. "He seemed like he knew what he was doing," Celler said. Celler often stops at the Vilano boat ramp and was coming back from breakfast around noon when he pulled in. He struck up a conversation with Franklin who he described as about 5'8", weighing around 120 pounds and having a short white beard. "His wife was there ... he said he had to re-rig the boat and that would take him until about 4 p.m. (when the tide would be in)," Celler said. The U.S. Coast Guard began searching for Franklin and the Blue Star Thursday night after his wife reported him missing because she couldn't reach him by cell phone. On Friday morning the Coast Guard was joined by FWC officers, St. Augustine Fire/Rescue and the Sheriff's Office. Half-a-dozen boats, a helicopter and a fixed-wing airplane took part in the search. It was a passing boater who spotted Franklin's body north of Vilano Bridge around 1:30 p.m. It was in three feet of water about 200 yards north of Marker 57. It was about 100 yards from his boat and was part of the area criss-crossed by searchers throughout the morning. The District 21 Medical Examiner will perform an autopsy to determine cause of death. Photographer Daron Dean contributed to this report DARON DEAN FISH AND WILDLIFE COMMISSION MISSOURI VILANO BRIDGE ST. JOHNS COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE PHOTOGRAPHER FRANK CELLER PUTNAM COUNTY JOHNS RIVER WILDLIFE CONSERVATION COMMISSION LAW ENFORCEMENT SUPERVISOR FOR ST. JOHNS COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE INTENSIVE SEARCH EXPERIENCED SAILOR U.S. COAST GUARD CELLULAR TELEPHONE ST. JOHNS COUNTY LAW ENFORCEMENT SUPERVISOR PERSON COMMUNICATION AND MEETINGS FLORIDA FISH Site
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1937 Cord Phaeton for sale The VIN is 1127H C91 1127 The last owner was King Jamison of Bristol, Tennessee. He owned it for many decades and was a long time ACD member. I also have a 1937 Bustleback Beverly that may be available for sale: http://www.stevesclassiccars.com/1937_cord_beverly_bustle_back.htm I am open to discussing offers or a package on both cars. If you have interest, please e-mail me at: steven(at)medcomgroup.com, removing the (at) and replace with an @, or call me at 970-587-0963 ext: 11. There has been discussion as to what the price of $185,000.00 represents. That is a completed car. If you want to take over responsibility as is, or discuss different pricing or terms, I am very open to discussions. My goal is to sell the car . . . The car was inspected/reviewed by a Cord Club judge on its mechanical restoration on 11/24/06. Besides giving the restoration a thumbs up, he noted around 20 areas that would have points deducted on the mechanical side if it was judged today. They are/were all very minor and easily corrected. Things like a wrong bolt here are there, the wrong fan belts (these were purchased from a noted Cord supply house. They sent fan belts that are notched when the originals were smooth, so two points deducted there.) and other easily corrected areas. He left us with a punch list and we are correcting them. The car will be as close to a 100 point mechanical restoration as possible. The interior is being done by Auburn-Cord Restorations, already noted for 100 point restoration work. I am selling my 1937 Cord Phaeton. It is sort of long story, but it ends with my decision to sell the car. I have owned it for over five years. It has undergone, is under going, a complete as perfect as possible, restoration. December 11, 2006 I do not believe in dressing photos for the best view, these are the actual photos of the car as of 11-17-2006 that morning. I stopped to see Chuck and took these updated photos, The flash makes some areas look poor, remember, it is a flash reflection, and there is rubbing compound splashes on the car. Please call or e-mail me with any questions. The convertible top was laid across the top bows so you can have an idea of what it will look like. The interior is at Cord-Auburn Restorations. I have already purchased the carper from him. I will take off $10,000 for the finishing of the interior and another $10,000 if you want it as is where is. Or contact me. Thanks -Steven October 18, 2006: My posting of photos has become confusing. I have left what is below to help you follow the thread of information, but here are the most recent photos, the car is very close to being done. The following is historical information for you. This is old news. Just wanted to leave the "thread" for you. I am motivated to sell the car. Chuck will finish painting the car if you want him to. It is very close to being in full paint, I stopped work because some potential buyers wanted a different color, so, I stopped work until a color decision could be made. I am happy to have Chuck finish painting the car. He would also finish final assembly for you. I can deliver the car at any stage of current or future work, I am happy to work with you. Engine rebuilt, Babbitt was done by EGGE percentage of chrome ready Leather purchased, DeLeo replacement panels purchased from ACD parts in Kansas including new rockers Auburn Cord Duesenberg parts in Wellington, Kansas has supplied all the parts for the car. Well over $10,000.00 in parts. Probably over $20k over the last five years. The wood for the convertible top bows were close to $2,000.00. I have not kept track. They probably have a record of my purchases. Car has original convertible radio, very rare Also purchased all chrome, manifolds and SS to convert it to outside exhaust I am selling the car in as is condition as restoration is progressing-continuing. My restorer is willing to take over the restoration for the new owner and complete it. June, 2006: Chuck has resumed work on the Phaeton. It should be completely painted and assembled soon. Let me know at what stage you want the car, or, if you want the car finished, I will arrange to do that for you. December 8, 2005: I have raised the price to reflect the many recent expensive parts that have been purchased and the additional work completed on the Phaeton. There is not much left to buy for the completion of the car. The wood for the frame, the top bows for the convertible top, all the chrome for the outside exhaust has been purchased; and more. The body is almost ready for its primer. There has been NO bondo used in any part of the car. Where needed, lead has been used. The car should be ready for paint by the end of the year. - Steven December 27, 2005: The car has made amazing progress. It is in primer and being blocked. The smaller parts have been painted. Ford Cigarette Cream Yellow. The red you see in the photos is spot putty, not bondo. No bondo ever, just lead and the occasional spot putty. And most of that will sand out. January 12, 2006: The car body has been painted, the windshield is on and the engine is sitting on the frame. All brakes and fuel lines are in, and some chrome is being put on the car. It is the color of the Franklin Mint car, sort of a creamy yellow. January 27, 2006: Photos below October 5, 2006: Okay, it finally looks like a car. Work was stared in earnest a month ago or so. January 27, 2005: These photos were taken 1-27-2006. My batteries on my strobe died while I was taking these pictures. Sorry. If you buy the car now, you can benefit from a decreased price, as it nears completion, I will be raising the price. I would really like to sell it now, it has been (is) an emotional roller coaster for me. I may sell by Bustleback Beverly as well. These photos were taken January 12, 2006: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ $135,000.00 as is, and you can take over final restoration from Chuck, or your restorer . . . Please e-mail me at: steven(at)medcomgroup.com Remove the (at) and replace with a @ The following photos were taken December 28, 2005: Here are the ones from 12/28, it is now in primer. There is a link to historical photos at the bottom of the page: Small parts with initial coat of paint. Ford Cigarette Cream Yellow. The S/C exhaust tubing. The S/C manifold's with new porcelain. The leather Historical information with older photos: http://www.stevesclassiccars.com/1937_cord_phaeton_1.htm
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Stop the Intervention Search: You are here: Home » Facts & Info » Speeches » G. Newhouse 26-11-08 Alternatives to the Intervention Jobs with Justice CDEP Racial Discrimination Act - New Legislation Outstations - Homelands Ampilatwatja walk off 'concerned Australians' Consultations 2011 Films and Literature Income Management International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination - ICERD Irene Doutney Dr John Falzon Greg Marks Jeff McMullen The Hon Alastair Nicholson HR-Day-13-12-08 G. Newhouse 26-11-08 Emma Murphy 11-4-09 Alison Vivian 28-5-09 Prof. Larissa Behrendt 1-6-09 R. Downs Oct 09 - Jan 10 John Leemans 15-3-11 Katie Wrigley 20-6-11 Marie Ellis 4-2-13 Stronger Futures Legislation Amnesty Intl. Speech on 26-11-08 by George Newhouse AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL SPEECH 26th November 2008 (An exhibition celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) 60 years ago the United Nations proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which we commemorate here tonight. The Declaration of Human Rights was born out of the horrors of the Second World War. Tired of the violence, rape, brutality and murder of war, the United Nations made a clear statement that no one should ever again suffer discrimination and persecution and laid out a series of inalienable human rights. The Declaration provides a moral compass for our modern world. "Mounting international concern over racial discrimination led the United Nations General Assembly, in 1963, to take the formal step of adopting the Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination" By ratifying the convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination Australia agreed to outlaw discriminatory legislation, which includes the current intervention regime. It is hard to believe that 60 years after the Declaration of Human Rights - and 40 years after adopting the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination - a group of Aboriginals, led by Barbara Shaw in Alice Springs are complaining about the Australian Government's racist laws to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination? The brief answer starts with the release of "the Little Children are Sacred" report in the lead up to the last Federal Election. That report focused on Aboriginal disadvantage and need it presented many positive reforms including better policing, education, care, consultation and support for victims and witnesses. What it did not do was to recommend punishment, quarantining, scrapping Aboriginal employment programmes, the compulsory acquisition of Aboriginal land or suspending the Racial Discrimination Act. But the Howard government was in election mode and one does not have to be too cynical to see that the "little children" were used to implement a hidden agenda. The intervention was an ideologically driven campaign by a government that was opposed to communal ownership of aboriginal land and assets; It allowed the government to grant star chamber criminal investigative powers against aboriginal men that had only ever applied to terrorists and Mafiosi before; It allowed the government to quarantine the social security payments of indigenous Australians; It allowed a rollback of indigenous cultural institutions like teaching local languages and the integration of traditional law into our legal system It allowed the government to "decapitate" Indigenous leadership, having already destroyed its national leadership, the former Government then turned its attention to local and communal Indigenous leadership; and Finally, the government got to change perceptions and reframe the narrative of the stolen generation. It was a brilliant strategy. The message to "get tough on blacks" appealed to hardliners but it also quieted everyday Australians. We could hardly object to protecting women and children from abuse. It did not matter that the thrust of the government's policies were not connected to child abuse at all. Supporters of the intervention accuse anyone who demands non-discriminatory solutions to the crisis as being in league with paedophiles and violent men. This was and still is the language used to silence critics, but the inflammatory message that many Aboriginal men were paedophiles gave the former Government a unique opportunity to shift perceptions about the causes of indigenous squalor and reframe the history of the Stolen Generations. Some of the dog-whistle messages that lay behind the interventionist policies were that Aboriginals were responsible for their own misfortune and, even worse, that the stolen generations had to be taken from their parents to protect them from filth, violence and paedophilia ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Yes, Indigenous communities are in crisis today and Women and children throughout Australia have a right to be protected from violence. Everyone has the right to live in peace without fear but this MUST and can be achieved without discriminating against Aboriginals. The little children are sacred report never identified Aboriginal men as the only or even the major perpetrators of sexual abuse, the report states that: Sexual abuse of children is not restricted to those of Aboriginal descent, nor committed only by those of Aboriginal descent, nor to just the Northern Territory. The phenomenon knows no racial, age or gender borders. It is a national and international problem. If the government's primary objective was to address child abuse it would have implemented the recommendations in the Little Children are Sacred Report and taken a national approach to the problem. The government's response ignores the causes of violence and abuse. The Little Children are Sacred Report makes the observation that: The incidence of child sexual abuse, whether in Aboriginal or so-called mainstream communities, is often directly related to other breakdowns in society. Put simply, the cumulative effects of poor health, alcohol, drug abuse, gambling, pornography, unemployment, poor education and housing and general disempowerment lead inexorably to family and other violence and then on to sexual abuse of men and women and, finally, of children. It will be impossible to set [Aboriginal] communities on a strong path to recovery in terms of sexual abuse of children without dealing with all these basic services and social evils. But instead of dealing with those basic services, the Howard Government's intervention punished the victims with a raft of tough discriminatory laws... Laws that degraded Aboriginals, made their struggles more difficult, increased their levels of poverty and increased their experiences of racism and discrimination in their daily life --------------------------------------------------------------------- The imposition of income management provisions is widely regarded as an insult to Aboriginal people in the Territory. The feeling of being stigmatised and restricted on the basis of race is having a deeply negative psychological impact. The system is creating segregated service delivery, leading to deep feelings of shame and an increased experience of racism in daily life. It is scandalous that 60 years after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights our government has created an apartheid system where Aboriginal Australians are forced to line up in separate queues in grocery stores throughout the Northern Territory. Far from improving access to "essential items" for families, income management has created extensive layers of bureaucracy for Aboriginal people to negotiate before they are able to access their entitlements. This has made dealing with all the demands on families such as travel, health care, food and rent much harder. The current Federal government instigated a review of the intervention which concluded that the intervention is letting Aboriginal Australians down and was highly critical of the racist intervention regime. Since then, the Federal Government declared that it will introduce reforms to allow the suspension of the Racial Discrimination Act to be lifted, in 12 months time. Amnesty International Australia has welcomed the Federal Government's announcement that the Racial Discrimination Act will be reinstated. However, Amnesty International has indicated a concern about the time taken for the transition to a new approach. Quite frankly a further 12 months is too long for Aboriginals to wait. But with no constitutional protection, indigenous Australians find themselves with no other recourse than to complain about their government to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD). CERD has the power to urgently respond to problems which require "immediate attention to prevent or limit the scale or number of serious violations of the convention" and Aboriginal Australians like Barbara Shaw of the Prescribed Area Peoples Alliance has every intention of placing the world's spotlight on the Australian government's policies in prescribed areas in the Northern Territory. We are here tonight to mark the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights but we cannot celebrate while our first Australians are suffering from regressive and discriminatory laws. Amnesty International has made it clear that "The protection of the rights of women and children need not and must not be at the expense of the right to protection from discrimination," and that "it is time a new approach by Government that is based on meaningful consultation with affected Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities". Amnesty International must keep the pressure up on the current Government. You can all make a personal stand against discrimination by pressing Jenny Macklin and our Prime Minister to introduce a new and consultative approach quickly and by calling on the independent and Liberal Senators to support these urgent reforms. You can also attend rallies taking place around the country on human rights day and at the opening of parliament in 2009. Finally you can help support Barbara Shaw with her campaign in the United Nations by contributing financially to her cause through the Intervention Rollback Action Group at www.rollbacktheintervention.wordpress.com. Copyright © Stop the Intervention. Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Website and hosting by APCINTERNET.
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Felicity: An American Girl Adventure DVD
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$6 - $9(X) Blood Glucose, Insulin, & Medications Practical Insulin: A Handbook for Prescribing Providers, 3rd Edition (ePub) ePub Version. A practical guide for prescribing, correcting, and maintaining insulin therapy in people with diabetes.
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What New York Artists Pay For A Good Model WHAT NEW YORK ARTISTS PAY FOR A GOOD MODEL: Rules That Obtain Among Those Who Gain a Livelihood by Posing in Schools and Studios. (PDF) The answer: 50 cents an hour. Sure, that sounds like a lot of money to just sit still. But consider: Have you ever tried to sit in one position for twenty-five minutes? Have you ever tried to hold your hand out before you for that length of time? If you have not, then do so at once. When you have had fiteen minutes of it think whether you would care to make a living as a model at 50 cents an hour. Twenty-five-minute periods are the standard ones in the art schools and studios, and the rest of five minutes follows. This lasts for eight hours a day. Being a model, therefore, is no easy task. If you want to see someone hold still long enough to be sketched, there are some great places in the city where you can attend a sketching event with live models. The Society of Illustrators hosts regular Sketch Nights in their Upper East Side clubhouse with a full bar and live jazz. For a more alternative experience, try Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School, which holds events in several cities worldwide.
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Keeping the Faith - At the Brink Ronnie McBrayer Sep 29 KENTUCKY (9/29/13) - You may not be aware of this, but our planet and its people should be bursting with relieved celebration, because 30 years ago this week, life as we have known it, came perilously close to the end. It was September 1983, and the Cold War was anything but cold. President Ronald Reagan was in the White House calling the Soviet Union an “evil empire;” the United States invaded the island of Granada; and the military introduced a ballistic missile defense system that would become known as “Star Wars.” Meanwhile, Great Britain and France were implementing their own aggressive nuclear weapons program that year, and the Soviet Union conducted more than a half-dozen underground nuclear test explosions. It was also on September 1, 1983, that the USSR shot down Korea Air Flight 007 when it strayed near Soviet airspace, killing all 269 civilians on board including Georgia Congressman Larry McDonald. It was as close to war as the US and the USSR had come since the Cuban Missile Crisis. It was tense, but that’s not the half of it. Three weeks after the Flight 007 incident, with passions running high on both sides, and with thousands of nuclear warheads aimed at each other, one of the greatest heroes of our time quietly went to work at a Soviet military base just outside of Moscow. His name was Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov, and until a few years ago, no one knew of his heroics. At the time the Soviets had a highly sophisticated early warning system against US ballistic missile attacks. It was Petrov’s duty to monitor this alert system in the event of a preemptive nuclear attack. The responding protocol was to launch an immediate all-out counterattack. On September 26, 1983, the unthinkable happened. Suddenly, at Colonel Petrov’s station, the computer alarms sounded, warning that an American missile was heading toward the Soviet Union. Petrov waited. He reasoned that it had to be a computer error since the United States was not likely to launch just one missile if it were attacking the Soviet Union. But then, a second missile was detected; then a third; a fourth, and a fifth. The sky seemed to be filled with American warheads! Still, Petrov had a “funny feeling in his gut,” that the alert system was malfunctioning. Further, it was unthinkable, for him, that he would be the final reason for a war that would end human civilization. So, Petrov sat on the alert message, overrode the security system, and prevented the USSR from retaliating. The seconds passed, then minutes, and finally an hour: There were no missiles. His gut feeling had been right all along. The warning system had failed with near cataclysmic consequences for the human race. Singlehandedly, Petrov had prevented a worldwide nuclear war, simply by not becoming a participant in it. And for averting this cosmic disaster Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov was relieved of his duty, and the entire episode was locked away in the cellar of Soviet secrets for nearly two decades. The Pauline admonition is fitting upon the anniversary of Petrov’s heroics. Paul wrote, “Do all that you can to live in peace with everyone.” Literally translated, “Whatever comes out of you, let it lead to peace.” It is redemptive counsel to us to do all we can to protect harmony; clearly, don’t be the one responsible for creating conflict – exceed all limits – to neutralize it. Now, not every personal or individual skirmish has the potential to balloon into a global apocalypse. But worldwide wars are not that much different than private ones in the end. The same tit for tat is in play. The same wounded pride demands to be assuaged. And likewise, at some point in the conflict there is an opportunity for someone to step away from the brink. There is opportunity for someone to refuse to perpetuate the ruthless cycle of attack and counterattack; for someone to reject the established protocol of retaliation; for someone to practice peace. Let that someone be you. You might just save the world. Ronnie McBrayer is a syndicated columnist, pastor, and author of multiple books. You can read more and receive regular e-columns in your inbox at www.ronniemcbrayer.me.
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Elbert E. Cook, Jr., 79 of Bowling Green SurfKY News Nov 20 BOWLING GREEN, KY - Elbert E. Cook, Jr., 79 of Bowling Green passed peacefully with family by his side at the Hospice House of Southern KY. The Allen County native was a son of the late Elbert E. Cook, Sr. and Maggie Elizabeth Wilson Cook and was preceded in death by his first wife Anna Jo Roland Cook and his second wife Dorothy Keller Cook. He was a Korean War Army veteran, a retired teacher at Bowling Green Vocational School and a machinist at Holley Carburetor, member of Modern Woodman, American Legion and a KY Colonel. Survivors include his sons, Dennis Reeder (Charlotte), Steve Reeder (Donna), Gene Cook (Kim); a daughter, Rebecca Foust (Earl); several grandchildren and great grandchildren. Memorial service 11:00 a.m. Saturday at Hardy & Son Funeral Home, Bowling Green Chapel with inurnment at Fairview Cemetery # 2 Visitation will be 4:00-8:00 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/653
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Homeland Security and Public Safety Expo and Forum Representatives from numerous local and federal law enforcement agencies gathered recently at Southwestern College for a career expo and Q&A for Southwestern students. [Photo: Jim Davis, SWC Police Academy Director, addressing the audience in front of the forum panel] Deputies, Officers, Agents and Administrators from Chula Vista Police Department, San Diego Sheriff’s Department, United States Border Patrol, San Diego County and the Federal Government opened up about their lives and careers as Peace Officers to a group of more than 50 Southwestern College students. Host Jim Davis, Southwestern College Police Academy Director, kicked off the morning forum by addressing the students in the audience and telling them to ask questions and gain as much knowledge as possible. “You won’t find this much expertise in one room again,” said Davis. The forum panel consisted of a wide array of career paths for the students to hear about—which was the general theme of the expo. There are countless career paths the law enforcement industry can provide. The forum speakers were a mix of fully uniformed & armed officers, administrative & human resources personnel, corrections officers and forensic scientists. Most speakers said their departments are hiring and in need of employees. [Photo: U.S. Border Patrol Officers talking with students after the Q&A session] Most agencies are interested in people from all sorts of backgrounds, speakers said. The only universal skills required are writing and good reading comprehension. The panel urged students to be truthful in their job applications. Minor infractions on one’s record will in itself not disqualify applicants from a position. Lying on your application will, however, leading to an automatic disqualification, the speakers said. All departments referred students to their websites to register and receive in-depth information on job openings, newsletters, applications, tests and study guides.
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Swedish Hospital Blog Sharing the stories of Swedish Medical Center HomeAbout UsContact UsDisclaimerShare Your Story Swedish Medical Center Physician Breaks New Ground In Cochlear Implants Posted on December 13, 2012 by swedishhospital A Swedish Medical Center physician is breaking new ground in the area of cochlear implants with his recent surgery on a 9-year-old girl who received the medical implant for single-sided deafness. Daniel Zeitler, M.D., a neurotologist and skull-based surgeon is one of only a few medical professionals in the United States to perform the procedure for this population and diagnosis. According to Zeitler, the young patient’s deafness was beginning to take its toll on her both academically and socially. “Although Claire is an excellent student, she had to sit strategically in the classroom to be able to hear. She was having a hard time enjoying music, couldn’t enjoy birthday parties, and often felt socially isolated during basketball practice and games or active family outings such as bicycle rides. Basically, all the things that a 9-year-old girl likes to do were slowly taken away from her because of her deafness,” Zeitler says. Young Claire received the cochlear implant on November 26. The MED-EL device will be activated on Dec. 18, however Zeitler says early testing during surgery indicated it was working properly. The use of cochlear implants for single-sided deafness, and for patients as young as Claire, is an emerging practice in Europe, but is extremely rare in the U.S. In fact, the FDA has not yet approved the device for single-sided deafness, says Zeitler. So why did Dr. Zeitler agree to this rare procedure? Because he feels Claire can benefit greatly from this technology, and rather than wait for other options to emerge or trials to be conducted, he is confident the cochlear implant will dramatically improve the quality of life for this youngster sooner rather than later. “There’s a huge push to initiate clinical trials for its use in these circumstances in the U.S., but only a few anecdotal reports and small objective studies currently exist. Unfortunately, there is no good data or large-scale subjective experiences to make it the norm yet,” Zeitler says. Claire began losing hearing progressively in her right ear at the age of 5 and tried a number of alternative hearing devices, including a traditional hearing aid. However, when her hearing loss became profound, she could no longer obtain any useful benefit from its use. Additionally, she attempted to use an FDA-approved bone-anchored hearing device, but was denied by her insurance. Her insurance is, however, paying for the cochlear implant. Zeitler is skilled in pediatric cochlear implantation, but his clinical interests also include bone-anchored hearing aids (Baha), benign and malignant tumors of the ear and skull base, facial nerve disorders, cholesteatoma and chronic ear disease, ear infections and hearing loss. Zeitler also frequently collaborates with neurosurgeons and radiation oncologists in the treatment of a variety of ear diseases and is an active member of the Colorado Neurological Institute. MED-EL’s MAESTRO™ Cochlear Implant System has proven to be an effective solution for individuals with bilateral severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss. According to Zeitler, the device is expected to last a lifetime. Zeitler and his team of medical professionals at Denver Ear Associates will evaluate the quality of sound Claire experiences once the device is turned on December 18th. “Before surgery, Claire was excited and apprehensive, but she was ready,” Zeitler says. “My hope is that Claire’s story can be shared with other children and adults suffering the same disability, and Claire can be a champion of cochlear implantation for these patients in the future.” Share this:ShareEmailPrintFacebookTwitterLinkedInGooglePinterestTumblrStumbleUponRedditDiggLike this:Like Loading... This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged cochlear implant, deafness, ear, hearing, hearing loss by swedishhospital. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Follow “Swedish Hospital Blog”
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You are here: Home / Our people / Professor Roland Stocker At a glance Find a researcherList of academic staff Publications Professor Roland Stocker There are no publications since 2005 on record for this author Browse individual profilesFind a researcher Profile tools Update your profileNeed help? Professor Roland Stocker Professor of Biochemistry in Vascular Medicine Pathology, School of Medical Sciences Bosch Institute K25 - Medical Foundation Building On this pageBiographical details | Research interests Biographical detailsRoland Stocker received his training as a biochemist at the ETH Zürich (Switzerland), ANU (Canberra, Australia) and the University of California (Berkeley, USA). Following an appointment as Assistant Professor at the University of Berne (Switzerland), Roland moved permanently to Australia in 1988 where he worked as Group Leader at the Heart Research Institute for 13 years, as a Professor at the Centre for Vascular Research at the University of New South Wales for 5 years, before taking up a Professorial Chair at the University of Sydney in late 2006. [More...]Roland Stocker received his training as a biochemist at the ETH Zürich (Switzerland), ANU (Canberra, Australia) and the University of California (Berkeley, USA). Following an appointment as Assistant Professor at the University of Berne (Switzerland), Roland moved permanently to Australia in 1988 where he worked as Group Leader at the Heart Research Institute for 13 years, as a Professor at the Centre for Vascular Research at the University of New South Wales for 5 years, before taking up a Professorial Chair at the University of Sydney in late 2006. Since moving to Australia in 1988, the work of Roland's laboratory has received continuous funding from competitive national (NHMRC, ARC, NHF) and international agencies (NIH). For the last 12 years, he also received commercial research support, including major pharmaceutical companies. Roland has received several awards, including the inaugural Simon Wolff Contrarian Award for work on vitamin E, and several from the NHF for highest ranked grant applications. Highlights of the more than 80 invitations to present at international meetings include four presentations at Gordon Research Conferences, two at each FASEB Conferences, the Biennial Meetings of the International Society for Free Radical Research (ISFRR) and the International Symposia of Atherosclerosis, and presentations at a Harden Conference and the International Symposium on Organic Free Radicals. The many invitations to write reviews on the role of antioxidants and oxidants in atherosclerosis include one for the prestigious Journal Physiology Review. Roland is recognized internationally as an expert in redox biology, particularly for his research on antioxidants, and mechanisms and prevention of atherosclerotic vascular disease. Roland's work on bilirubin as a natural antioxidant is now referred to in biochemistry textbooks and it has contributed to a change in the threshold at which hyperbilirubinemia is treated in clinics. His work on vitamin E has changed the handling of parenteral nutrition in NICUs in New Zealand/Australia, and it provides a scientific rationale for the overall lack of benefit of vitamin E supplements on cardiovascular disease outcome. Roland has been an NHMRC Research Fellow since 1994, and a Senior Principal Research Fellow since 2001. He has been/is editorial board member of all major journals publishing in the area of redox biology (Archiv Biophys Biochem, Chem Res Toxicol, Free Radic Biol Med, Free Radic Res and Redox Report) and of J Lipid Res. He regularly reviews for international journals (average: 1 manuscript/week), national and international granting agencies and has been/is a member of RGICs/GRPs of NHMRC and NHF. In 2003, RS chaired NHMRC GRP7b in Cardiovascular/Renal/Sports Medicine. Roland is an Adjunct Professor at Boston University, a Visiting Professor at the National University of Singapore, Past-President of SFRR Australasia, Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the International Coenzyme Q10 Association, and was a Committee member of the International HDL Research Award Program. He has been/is consultant for international pharmaceutical companies, has organized several national and international meetings, and initiated and was the Chairman of the first joint meeting of SFRR Australasia and Japan. Most recently, Roland has been awarded a Professorial Research Fellowship and a Medical Foundation Fellowship from the University of Sydney. In 2007, he was the Paul Nestel Lecturer at the annual scientific meeting of the Australian Atherosclerosis Society; he successfully licensed IP related to a novel class of compounds with anti-atherosclerotic properties to a US-based pharmaceutical company for development; and he was elected Deputy Chairman of the International CoQ10 Association, and Chairman of the 6th International CoQ10 Conference (2009), the 5th Biennial Meeting of SFRR (Australasia and Japan, 2009), and the 8th International Congress on Heme Oxygenases (2013). Principal Investigator since 1988 Publications: 241 since 1982, of which 185 are peer-reviewed, original research papers; 25 are invited reviews and articles, and 27 are book chapters. Citations: over 16,000 including 5 Citation Classics (>500 citations); 33 cited more than 100 times; 81 more than 50 times, with an average of 67 citations per article. Current h-Index: 62 Patents: 7 Grants: Total Competitive ~$17.4M since 2000 and 15 Commercial ($3M) Plenary Talks and Personal Invitations at International Meetings: 97 (total), plus 23 invited lectures at National Meetings over the last 10 years. [Hide detail]Back to TopResearch interestsOur research focuses on the hardening of blood vessels (a process also called atherosclerosis) that is the single major cause of heart attacks and stroke, and hence death, in Australia. We study the contribution of oxidation to atherosclerosis, and how the disease can be inhibited. We have identified a protein, the up-regulation of which affects many biological processes, resulting in the inhibition of disease in several animal models. We are now studying how a change in a single protein can have such multiple biological effects. We also have discovered a novel protein that regulates the tone of blood vessels and blood pressure in conditions of inflammation, and are now seeking to better understand the underlying principles of this action. Finally, we have established a new Core Facility to assess oxidative stress in vitro and in vivo, and we are developing new methods and tools to apply this to cardiovascular and other research.Back to Top Send a note Roland Stocker In order to prevent spam email, you will need to enter the verification code that appears in the red coloured box to the left. © 2002-2014 The University of Sydney. Last updated: 17-Apr-2013 ABN: 15 211 513 464. CRICOS number: 00026A. Phone: +61 2 9351 2222.
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Robot King bass tab by Infernotorium, added: May 19th, 2004 Logout Robot King Bass Tab by Infernotorium Can't play "Robot King"? Improve your bass playing via easy step-by-step video lessons! www.infernotorium.com intro, verse G|-----------------------------------------------------------------| D|-----------------------------------------------------------------| A|-0-3-0-5-3-0-0-3-7-6---------------------------------------------| E|-----------------------------------------------------------------| A|-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-----------| not sure how many 8's are in there but you get the point rock out this is slapped A|-----------------------------------------------------------------| E|-0-3-0-5-3-0-0-3-7-6---------------------------------------------| InferObtoriuM wrote on July 5 2004, 12:00 am That is Terrible. That is not how it goes at all.VERSEGI-------------------------DI-------------------------AI-------------------------EI---0-3-0-5-3--0-0-3-0-7-5CHORUSGI-----------------------------------------------DI-----------------------------------------------AI-----------------------------------------------EI---12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-13 InferObtoriuM wrote on September 29 2004, 12:00 am Wrong, wrong wron. Whoever did this is retarded.GI---------------------------------DI---------------------------------AI---------------------------------DI-0-3-0-5-3--0-0-3-0-7-5----------CHORUSGI---------------------------------DI---------------------------------AI---------------------------------DI-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12-12Tard.
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Spider Bite bass tab by Jerry Cantrell, added: October 14th, 2005 Logout Spider Bite Bass Tab by Jerry Cantrell Contributor Andrew Zara Jerry Cantrell Tuning: Drop D, all strings flatted (Db, Ab, Db, Gb) Gb|------------------------------| Db|------------------------------| Ab|------------------------------| Db|-/5-0-0---0-0---0-0---0---0-0-| Bend when you reach the 5th fret Gb|-----------------------------------------------------------------| Db|-----------------------------------------------------------------| Ab|-----------------------------------------------------------------| Db|-0-0-5-0-0-3-0-5-0-0-5-0-0-3-0-5-0-0-5-0-0-3-0-5-0-0-5-0-0-5-3-5-| The second time around, right before Fig. 3, there is a little interlude. I’m not quite sure if there is a definite bass part, but if there is, it’s something involving Eb or E. So you might want to play with that. Gb|------------------------|----------| Db|------------------------|----------| Ab|------------------------|----------| Db|-0----5----4----5--3--5-|-(5)-3----| ^__________^ This part played after last time Fig. 3 is played through. Playing order: Fig. 1 x 24 Fig. 2 x 2 Can't play "Spider Bite"? Improve your bass playing via easy step-by-step video lessons!
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Harry Reid Takes Social Security 'Off The Table' (VIDEO) Brian Beutler – January 31, 2011, 6:41 PM EST | 325 At an event with progressive activists last week, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid took major Social Security cuts and privatization completely off the legislative table. "As long as I'm the Majority Leader, I'm going to do everything within my legislative powers to prevent privatizing or eliminating Social Security," Reid said. "I'll simply say it's off the table." You can watch video of the event below, courtesy of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. The key quote comes at the end of the clip. Reid's been a pretty staunch defender of Social Security, but this statement goes a bit further than previous ones. Most recently, on Meet the Press, he said he wouldn't be a part of any effort to undermine the program. But now, he's taken privatization and raising the retirement age off the table. That's significant given a fairly broad consensus among conservative Democrats and Republicans that the retirement age should be bumped up. With Republicans in control of the House, the Senate could end up being the firewall protecting Social Security from those sorts of cuts. In recent weeks, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) has made knocking Reid for his opposition to Social Security cuts into a sort of political sport. But Reid's right that Social Security will be solvent for years into the future, and could be made indefinitely solvent with a minor payroll tax hike on high-income earners. House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) last week walked back his call to raise the retirement age to 70, pending a full Congressional debate on that question.
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Biden Apologizes For HealthCare.gov, Says He And Obama Not 'Technology Geeks' AP Photo / Charles Dharapak Catherine Thompson – October 31, 2013, 7:51 AM EDT | 2696 Vice President Joe Biden apologized Wednesday for the glitchy rollout of HealthCare.gov, calling its technical problems "inexcusable." "Neither [President Barack Obama] or I are technology geeks, and we assumed that it was up and ready to run," Biden said in an interview with HLN. "The good news is, although it's not, and we apologize for that, we're confident that by the end of November it will be and there will still be plenty of time for people to register online." Asked why it would take another month for the glitches to be resolved, Biden said he didn't know the technical reasons for the delay. "I don't know, I wish I could tell you," he joked. "That's why I became a lawyer." The vice president also told HLN that the President and his own daughter tried to access the website, but said he didn't attempt to log on himself because "it was clear" that he wouldn't be able to get online. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius formally apologized for the Obamacare web portal's stumbling launch Wednesday in a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing. Sebelius previously said that Obama wasn't aware of the website's technical issues before its Oct. 1 launch.
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Advertisement Home > Newsletters > Energizing > New York ISO Testifies Before U.S.-Canadian Task Force Hearings on August Blackout New York ISO Testifies Before U.S.-Canadian Task Force Hearings on August Blackout New York Independent System Operator | T&D World Magazine EMAIL Comments 0 Advertisement The primary lesson from the Aug. 14 blackout is that it was caused by largely avoidable human and operational failures and mistakes—and not by system or equipment failures, according to William J. Museler, president and CEO of the New York Independent System Operator, Schenectady, New York, U.S.Museler testified today before the U.S.-Canadian Power System Outage Task Force public meeting on the Aug. 14 blackout in eight states and the province of Ontario. Museler applauded the task force’s interim report for its detail and accuracy in identifying the blackout was caused by violations of “well-established operating rules and practices” and the failure to enforce “six specific standards” set by the North American Reliability Council. “Simply put, if the rules had been followed and the companies involved had supported and insisted on compliance with the rules, the blackouts would have either been avoided entirely, or certainly been much less severe,” he said. In previous testimony before the Congress and the New York state legislature, Museler had revealed that NYISO has launched its own investigation into the electric power failure that affected 15 million people in the United States and Canada, resulting in a series of recommendations: To avoid a recurrence, the NERC reliability standards must be made mandatory, not voluntary. Strengthen the transmission grid in New York and surrounding areas by providing incentives to expand transmission capabilities. The communications among the ISOs, RTOs and control areas need to be significantly improved. Participation in an ISO, RTO or tight power pool for reliability purposes should be made mandatory. Print Discuss this Article 0
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Bridge building and infrastructure in the Age of Austerity August 3, 2012: 12:04 PM ET Architect Ted Zoli has been breaking stereotypes, causing a stir with his designs. By Chip Lebovitz, reporter FORTUNE -- Public opinion has soured on infrastructure projects. Slashed budgets and The Bridge to Nowhere certainly haven't helped, but Ted Zoli's projects represent a consistent bright spot in an otherwise muddied profession. The 2012 Engineering News-Record Award of Excellence winner talked to Fortune about designing bridges in the age of government austerity. You're bridges are very economical, especially considering public works today have a habit of spiral out of control cost wise. How do you accomplish this with your works? If we think about structural systems these days in the developed west, one thing that is very clear is designing a difficult to build bridge with the least materials is not a great strategy for cost effectiveness. There are more labor costs associated with the final construction cost of a bridge now than in any time in the past, and certainly that trend will continue. So to me, it's being quite careful about how bridges are built and integrating the construction strategy into the design. That helps to keep projects on budget or maybe to build projects for much less. I'm also very interested in making structural systems safer. One thing that you may find surprising but is certainly the case is that material efficiency or when you're minimizing materials, does not necessarily make the safest structural system. I'm interested in those opportunities where a structure is easier to fabricate, construct, and is safer, yet is less expensive because you're being very careful about the costs associated with its construction. Do you think that the failure of others has led to a lack of confidence in architects and engineers for public works? If that lack of confidence does exist, how do we fix that? I'm going to maybe argue slightly with the idea that it's maybe not a lack of confidence. What I think what we've tended to do as a culture is we've looked at public works projects like infrastructure, like bridges, as the last bit of public architecture that we have. We're not building libraries and state buildings anymore, so the space in which we think about building iconic structures is often tied to public infrastructure. Iconic structures in many circumstances can be something that has loftier expectations and budget than something more austere, more functional as bridges have been traditionally. For me, I'm very interested in the space where the right structural system, the right form, and the right construction method can still be iconic. It can still scratch that itch that we have I think in the need for public works projects to be a great representation of a community effort to make something better. I think often times bridges are that. It really takes a commitment on the part of a large community —sometimes cities, states, the federal government and the resources agencies. These are projects that involve many, many indeed contributions from many, many sources. It's natural to see this as a coming together and to want to achieve something important, especially for something that is a major crossing. The downside is that in many circumstances we have built infrastructure that doesn't respect in a way the simple logic that it's taxpayer's money and we have very little of it — these days particularly. To me, it means a certain sort of austerity is necessary. Particularly in these times since 2008, it comes into focus how we have many needs and very little funds. To some degree, over budget public works projects were tolerable when tax revenues were up. When tax revenues are down and we are really struggling to stimulate the economy and produce jobs, austerity in our design and some care that we are right sizing projects and being responsive to budgetary concerns is the call of this day. I think we need to be an industry very creative about delivering a lot for a little. How do you provide a lot for a little, especially considering the lack of funds at all levels of government for these public works projects? There's a couple of different strategies, but I would say trying to understand what goes into the cost of a bridge and how can there be innovation on the fabrication process, on the erection and even the transportation of the pieces of a bridge to the site. How all those things go together is a wonderful opportunity for a designer to look at the whole cost of a public works project, try to innovate in that space, and step outside of purely the traditional role of the engineer, which is to make sure the stresses work and the structural system has adequate safety. It's instead to take a broader look at what costs money in public works projects and see if there are not ways that the designer can innovate to get at some cost savings. Certainly some of my work has been successful with that. Some of my work I would say is an experiment and experiments are something that you learn from. I certainly have made some mistakes that I have learned from and lead me to believe that are benefits to these strategies and some cautionary tales. It's not a perfect environment but there's a richness in understanding the way a bridge gets built that gives you an opportunity to change your design. It influences the way your think about design tremendously and I try to lead with that in many circumstances. I'm very curious about how big a piece I can ship? What kind of crane do I need to pick it up? At the fabricator shop, what technique will he use whether it's pre-cast concrete or structural steel? What techniques are cost-effective and what are not? There are a lot of opportunities for engineers to broaden their perspective about what it is they're designing and to get into looking at these other aspect of what makes a bridge cost so much. Do you think the future of bridge building is trending toward your type of work — the economic yet aesthetically pleasing variety? Ha-ha! I'm not so sure but it certainly has given me many opportunities to design bridges with that model and hope to have more in the future. I would say there are many different types of projects with many different types of aspirations and maybe it's fair to say that the designer gets mapped to the right sort of opportunity. I hope to remind people both in my industry and the public that when a bridge gets built it's with their money and they own the bridge. It's really there's. So given that it seems no one likes to pay their taxes and almost no one sees the connection between their taxes and a better life, bridges in my view are a way to reconnect that sort of trust. Now this is sort of farfetched hope, but when people pay their taxes and they have world-class infrastructure – they have a great commute, bridge, or efficient mass transit – that they think to themselves, "My tax dollars went to something valuable." If we can connect that value, some tax dollars to great infrastructure, we would do our industry a great service and also help everyone recognize how invaluable and what the right role of government is to making our lives better.
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Nordstrom Acquires Flash Sales Site HauteLook For $270 Million Posted Feb 17, 2011 by Leena Rao (@leenarao) Why Can't Tablet Makers Just Freaking Ship? In one of the larger exits so far in the flash sales business, retail chain Nordstrom has acquired flash sales site HauteLookfor $180 million in Nordstrom stock and three-year earn-out of up to $90 million. HauteLook has raised $41 million in funding. Thanks to the immense popularity of members-only, online sample sales, HauteLook has grown to 4 million members since launching in 2007. The site offers massively discounted sale events in women’s fashion, men’s fashion, accessories, kids’ clothing and toys, travel and home and beauty. The basic idea behind the flash sales model is this: designers ad retailers, such as Marc Jacobs or Versace, place excess inventory on a sale site at 50 to 70 percent discounts over a several day period. The sales are private, available only to members, with upcoming sales from brands announced via emails. You can get invites from other members or request invites via the site. The flash sales space is definitely competitive; and the amount that HauteLook sold for isn’t entirely surprising. Two years ago GSI Commerce bought RueLaLa in a deal valued at $350 million. Gilt Groupe, has been raising huge amounts of money, growing its user base at a rapid pace and turning a strong profit. In December, Gilt raised another $15 million, bringing the company’s total funding to nearly $100 million. At one point Gilt was valued at $400 million but that number has surely increased over the past year. And an IPO could be in the near future. One Kings Lane, has also recently raised a large amount of money and is growing like a weed. And there are a number of independent players like Ideeli, BeyondTheRack and others who are still growing at a fast clip. The concept has even attracted retail giants like eBay, Saks and Neiman Marcus, which are now jumping on the bandwagon to offer their own private sales, a market which Nordstrom clearly wants to enter the space. I wouldn’t be surprised if other larger retailers snap up niche, smaller flash sales sites over the next few years. Backstage With Kevin Ryan hautelook gilt groupe Popular Posts
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Edit Tag Video How Harvey Mudd Transformed Its Computer Science Program — And Nearly Closed Its Gender Gap Oct 10, 2013 by Colleen Taylor Harvey Mudd is known as one of the most elite science, engineering and mathematics colleges in the world. But historically, its computer science department hasn't exactly been known as a paragon of gender diversity -- in 2006, only 10 percent of Harvey Mudd's computer science majors were female. But under Dr. Maria Klawe, the renowned computer scientist (and Microsoft board member) who joined… Read More
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A.M. BestTV: Axis Capital CEO: Market Ripe to Unlock New Risks OLDWICK, N.J. --(Business Wire)-- In this episode of A.M. BestTV, Albert Benchimol, CEO of Bermuda-based Axis (News - Alert) Capital Holdings Ltd., discusses market opportunities he sees for his company and the industry as a whole, such as using excess capital to take on new risks, or the potential to privatize government functions. Benchimol believes it's essential to apply its capital - especially with the rise of alternative capital and increased competition - to new economic sectors. Cyber liability and business contingency are two obvious areas, Benchimol said, as well as an increased role with in public insurance facilities, replacing the government on flood coverage, wind pools and terrorism. Regulation is also at the top of Benchimol's mind, but he cautioned against overlapping layers of regulation "that do not speak well to each other." Axis Capital provides specialty insurance and reinsurance. Click on http://www.ambest.com/v.asp?v=benchimol114 to view the video program. The full-length interview with Benchimol is available at http://www.ambest.com/v.asp?v=benchimol2114. A.M. BestTV covers exclusive A.M. Best information and reports, targeted topics and key developments in the (re)insurance industry every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Sign up for alerts of episodes at http://www.ambest.com/multimedia/ambtvsignup.html. View A.M. BestTV episodes at www.ambest.tv. A.M. Best Company is the world's oldest and most authoritative insurance rating and information source. For more information, visit www.ambest.com.
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Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Home This Land Called Tennessee Quick Browse » Related EntriesChurches of ChristLife and Casualty Insurance CompanyReligion Categories African AmericanPeopleReligion Next Entry Sampson W. Keeble Marshall Keeble Home » Entries » Marshall Keeble Carroll Van West , Middle Tennessee State University Marshall Keeble, born in Rutherford County in 1878, became the best-known African American leader in the Churches of Christ of the twentieth century. In May 2000 The Christian Chronicle named Keeble as its person for the decade 1940 to 1950 in recognition of his contribution to the Churches of Christ and the Restoration Movement of the twentieth century. The son of slave parents, Robert and Minnie Keeble, Marshall moved with his family to Nashville when he was four. He attended school through the seventh grade, and as a teenager he worked in a local soap factory. He married Winnie Womack, the daughter of minister S. W. Womack, and they opened a grocery store. By the late 1890s Keeble had begun preaching at Nashville's Jackson Street Church of Christ and his fame began to spread through the area. In 1914 he became a full-time preacher, traveling throughout the state and region. By the end of his career fifty years later, the Gospel Advocate would credit Keeble with establishing almost every African American Church of Christ congregation in the state. The turning point in Keeble's career came in about 1920 when A. B. Burton, founder of the Life and Casualty Insurance Company and a devout Church of Christ member, began to underwrite Keeble's expenses. Over the next four decades, Keeble traveled extensively throughout North America and the rest of the world. In 1931 B. C. Goodpasture edited, and the Gospel Advocate published, Keeble's book Biography and Sermons of Marshall Keeble, Evangelist. Late in life, Keeble published his autobiography, From Mule Back to Super Jet with the Gospel (1962). He became a renowned orator and influenced a generation of Church of Christ ministers. In 1942 he became president of the Nashville Christian Institute, a segregated religious school, and served in that position until 1958. Keeble often stated that the philosophy of Booker T. Washington influenced both his religious and political views. According to historian Paul D. Phillips, Keeble embraced "the two-fold task of elevating Blacks by the proclamation of the Gospel and of establishing a bond of interracial fellowship through White support of his ministry." (1) Keeble's Christian approach of urging blacks to turn the other cheek while not asking similar Christian behavior from Jim Crow-era whites infuriated many African Americans. They found Keeble was far too accommodating to his white patrons; in fact, he would reserve whites-only seating when he preached to mixed groups. Many whites embraced Keeble because he appeared to be the "humble" black man who "knew his place" in both the society and the church. The reality, however, is more complex. His training of young ministers at the Nashville Christian Institute addressed the reality of discrimination, and he served as a mentor for such important leaders as lawyer Fred Gray and activist Floyd Rose. In several sermons near the end of his life Keeble celebrated the crumbling of the walls of segregation. Keeble died on April 20, 1968; over three thousand blacks and whites attended the funeral. Keeble is buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Nashville. Published » December 25, 2009 | Last Updated » January 01, 2010 Functionality and information are in compliance with guidelines established by the American Association for State and Local History for online state and regional encyclopedias. Most Popular Entries Civil WarMusic Row, NashvilleDavid CrockettKu Klux KlanAndrew Jackson Most Popular Images "TENNESSEE" ERNIE FORDCIVIL WAROLD HICKORYBELMONT UNIVERSITY“Morning”ABBY CRAWFORD MILTON Pages Viewed Entry - Marshall Keeble Text copyright 1998 by the Tennessee Historical Society, Nashville, Tennessee. Online Edition © 2002 ~ 2014, The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, Tennessee. All Rights Reserved. Powererd by eCMS from R.Squared Communications
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Ten Thousand Days Ten Thousand Days. Ten Thousand Dreams. Ten Thousand Cups of Early Morning Tea How To Be Invisible He was famous because it was reputed that he knew a very secret spell called ‘How To be Invisible'. It was said that only the most powerful magicians knew this spell.This story can now be found at:http://hubpages.com/hub/How-To-Be-Invisible CJ Stone Diamorphine in the UK There is a shortage of diamorphine in the UK. Diamorphine is the world’s most powerful painkiller, used in the treatment of people dying of cancer and other dreadful diseases. The current shortage means that many people may be suffering undue pain and indignity in the final stages of their lives.http://hubpages.com/hub/Drug-problems-or-drug-solutions Posted by diamorphine, heroin, A Pint Of Bitter In A Jug The following stories are in memory of Geoff Squires from Coventry, long-standing resident of Whitstable in Kent, recently passed away.Let's hope they serve a decent pint in the next life.The problem with writing as a medium is that it is very difficult to portray the inflections in words. One word can be said in many different ways. In this case the word is "no". It can be said as "no-o", with a broken inflection. Or as "no-o" with a rising tone, or as "no-o" with a descending tone. Or just as "no", blandly, with no inflection whatsoever. Or in any one of perhaps a hundred different ways.This story involves a trip to Southend. Geoff and his mate got off the coach and - of course - they wanted a pint. So they went into the nearest boozer. Geoff drinks bitter, and his friend drinks lager, but they both have one thing in common, that they prefer to drink out of a jug rather than a glass. Geoff went to the bar. "I'll have a pint of bitter in a jug, and a pint of lager in a jug, please," he said.The barman didn't move. "No!" he said: like that, flatly."Oh," Geoff stuttered: "does this mean that you won't serve us?""No-o," the barman said (brokenly, with a rising tone)."Oh," said Geoff again, bemused, "so you don't mind serving us?""No," (descending, with a shrug).That’s when it struck Geoff what the problem was. He looked about the bar and there wasn’t a jug in sight."You won't serve our drinks in jugs?" he said."No," (indulgently)."But you wouldn't mind serving us a pint of bitter and a pint of lager in glasses though?""No," (positively)."All right then," Geoff said, much relieved, "I'll have a pint of bitter in a glass, and a pint of lager in a glass. OK?""OK." And the barman served them their pints, and Geoff was about to pick them up when something occurred to him. "Incidentally," he added, "why don't you serve drinks in jugs?""Because people tend to use them as clubs," the barman said, miming the action of bringing a jug down on someone's head."Good point," Geoff said as he carried the glasses over to his friend. And they drank up quickly, and left without another word.Geoff is a diminutive Midlander with very thick glasses and wiry black hair like a brillo pad. He's very distinctive. This next story also involved a trip to Southend, although this time Geoff was on his own.He went into a pub and ordered a drink. Now Geoff likes his pint filled to the top. No head. So when the barman handed him a pint with a quarter of an inch of head, Geoff handed it back."Can you fill it to the top please?"The barman tutted, but did as he was asked.After Geoff had finished that, he went for another. This time the barman gave him a pint with a half an inch of head. "This is taking the piss," said Geoff: "can you fill it to the top please." The barman was obviously having trouble with the pumps because the more he pumped, the more head he got. "Right," he said, "I'm the owner of this place. You're barred!"Geoff shrugged his shoulders and headed off to another pub. But no sooner had he got through the door than the barman said: "you're barred.""Barred? How can I be barred? I've never been in here in my life before.""I've just had a phonecall from the owner," the barman told him."Oh well," thought Geoff, and wandered on again. He thought he might as well visit a club this time. He was on holiday, after all. So he looked around for a club, and when he'd found one, went in. He went to the bar, eager for a drink, but, once more, the barman told him he was barred."Don't tell me," said Geoff, "you had a phone call from the owner. Does he own every bloody pub and club in this place? I just want to know where I can get a drink.""He owns two pubs and one club," the barman told him, "and you've just walked into each one in succession.""Oh well," thought Geoff again, crestfallen, "at least I'm guaranteed a drink at the next pub." And he didn't care how much head that pint had on it this time.Geoff has a friend, Big Ted, a tobacco smuggler by trade. Big Ted is about 6 foot something or other and the same about the midriff. A genuine man-mountain. You’ve already had a description of Geoff. He’s about 4'11", and wears milk-bottle bottom glasses. They call him "Double-Glazing" on account of the thickness of his glasses.Big Ted has been in the smuggling game for years. He crosses over on the ferry once a week, returning with large quantities of continental tobacco, which he then sells around the pubs in his home town. There's a few like him in every town. Unfortunately, in the last few years he's begun to lose the use of his legs. Walks with a walking stick over short distances, but needs a wheel chair the rest of the time. Which kind of militates against the smuggling business somewhat. So he got Geoff in to help him. Which is when things started to go wrong.Geoff does the pushing. So you've got mountainous Big Ted in his wheel chair, and little Geoff puffing away behind, eyes swimming like two jellyfish in gold fish bowls. To say that they're an obvious pair is to understate the case. They stand out like two conked-out Morris Minors in a Rolls Royce rally.Geoff's got a croaky voice, a nervous disposition, and likes to do impressions of Reg Presley of the Troggs.Which is fine on Karaoke night. It's not so fine when he's pushing a man-mountain through the Nothing To Declare section of the customs building, in a wheel chair loaded up with illegal tobacco."Wild Thing, you make my heart sing, you make everything groovy, Wild Thing….." echoing around the corridor, while Geoff boogies down to the rhythm."Shhhhh," says Big Ted, curtly.And, of course, the obvious thing happened. All the customs men got to know them."Hello Ted, hello Geoff," they say as Ted and Geoff are embarking on the boat. And: "hello Ted, hello Geoff, what's that you've got tucked away in your wheel chair?" they say, as Ted and Geoff are passing through the customs hall on the way back.These last three times they've been caught. Ted is thinking of taking early retirement. The Battle of Orgreave History cannot be reduced to particular events. There are always complex forces at work. Nevertheless certain moments can seem to carry a resonance, representing a point of change in the life of the nation and defining, in a symbolic way, what went before and what came after.One such “moment” occurred on June the 18th 1984.This was the so-called Battle of Orgreave, during the year-long Miner’s strike, a day when massed battalions of trained riot police were directed at the ranks of picketing Miners attempting to close down the British Steel coking plant in South Yorkshire. It is this moment that helps us to understand British history before and since.Anyone above a certain age will remember it: will remember the sight of Arthur Scargill, his dignity severely compromised, clutching a baseball cap while being dragged away by the police; will remember the scenes of charging horses and stone-throwing rioters; will remember the incongruous picture of baton-wielding policemen, clutching shields, charging from behind protected lines, like medieval knights going into battle; will remember the war-cries and whoops and chanted slogans, the drumming, the jeering, the primitive clatter of wooden truncheons against riot shields, the surges and the counter-surges, the indelible impression of a nation at war with itself.Which is exactly what it was, of course. The police were being withdrawn from their proper battleground - on the streets, fighting crime - and being redeployed, instead, in a war on Trade Unionism. It was the beginning of what has since become known as “globalisation”: the wholesale privatisation of public services and publicly-owned utilities that has continued ever since, and the attack upon anyone who stood - or who stands - in the way.These are the events that a film by Mike Figgis seeks to commemorate, based around a re-enactment of the day, organised by artist Jeremy Deller. The film is available on a new website from Channel 4. http://www.channel4.com/fourdocs.At first sight it is a strange conceit. The artist has called on the services of various re-enactment societies, more used to taking part in recreated battles from the English Civil War or the Roman invasion of Britain, than to play-acting an event in living memory. And yet it is not so strange. Police tactics on that day were exactly those used by the Romans, and revised again and again on the battlefields of history. The Miners represented a strand of tradition in British society that the government of the day had called “the Enemy Within” and openly declared war on.Figgis uses the re-enactment as a sort of framework on which to build our perceptions. We are introduced to a variety of people, including ex-Miners along for the re-enactment, an NUM official, an ex-police officer, a former chair of Rotherham Miner’s Support Group; and Tony Benn, of course, that stalwart of traditional British values and historical good sense.There are some very poignant moments. The ex-policeman, in particular, makes a number of very moving observations.“People travel through Yorkshire or mining communities,” he says, “and all they see is slag-heaps and a bit of muck and grime. They don’t realise about the love and closeness that exists in mining communities....“One of the reasons I joined the police,” he continues, “were I wanted to do some’at for the community I came from. And thanks to Margaret Thatcher I did. I helped to destroy it..."The consequences of the destruction, not only of the NUM and the mining communities, but of a whole proud tradition of solidarity and mutual support in British Working Class life, is still with us: in poverty, unemployment, anti-social crime and drug addiction.Margaret Thatcher called the process, euphemistically, “modernisation”. What she actually meant was a direct attack upon the networks of support devised by working people over the centuries to protect them from degradation and exploitation. “Modernisation” as a concept always serves those who have wealth and power against those who have most to lose.It is one of Tony Blair’s favourite words.I took a copy of the film to the Snowdown Welfare Club and Institute in Aylesham in Kent - once the social club for the Snowdown Colliery - to show it to some of the ex-Miners who still use the place. My thanks to Monty, Ian, Bridget and Graham for helping me to review the film, and to Bridget in particular for providing the TV and video.The reaction was swift, and, I have to say, very intense. Despite the criticism that the re-enactment was unrealistic - there were thirty times more police in 1984, they said, and it was much more violent, much more frightening - it was clear that many memories were brought up. The sight of police snatch-squads, even fake ones, batons raised, cracking arms and heads in a riot of hate-filled reprisal, roused a deep, stirring anger. And they all agreed that the often repeated slogan of the time - “the Miners united shall never be defeated” - was wrong, echoing one of the sentiments of the film. It shouldn’t have been only the Miners, they said. It should have been "the Workers".At one point a heated argument broke out, about who had been at Orgreave and who had not. Accusations were flying about all over the place and voices raised. At another point someone came over to me and abused me for forcing the film on them and reminding them of times best forgotten: “those days of anarchy“, as he described them.“Don’t worry about him,” someone else said. “He doesn’t understand. He was never a miner.”I was made to put the film on twice in a row.“Every penny they had was to defeat the Working Class,” said Graham at the end, reflecting an anger at the way vast amounts of public money was so blatantly used for political ends, to attack people for merely defending their communities.I suspect that this is precisely the reaction that Mike Figgis wants us to have.The Battle of Orgreave was conceived by Jeremy Deller.Commissioned and produced by Artangel in association with Channel 4 Television.Directed by Mike Figgis.Website:http://www.historicalfilmservices.com/orgreave.htmThe film can be viewed online at:http://www.channel4.com/fourdocs/archive/battle_of_orgreave.htmlOriginal article appeared in The Big Issue June 2002. Arthur Scargill, Globalisation, Jeremy Deller, Mike Figgis, Miner's Strike, Tony Benn, Mutton Curry for Vegetarians Someone had scrawled graffiti on a post halfway across the golf-course. I used to pass it every day as I was walking my dog. "Meat means murder," it said. "All meat eaters are fascists."I'm a fascist and a murderer, then. I eat meat.It's an extreme statement. But is it justified? I think not. A fascist is someone who seeks to impose his will by force, and I don't care one way or the other whether another person wants to be a vegetarian or not. In fact - by that definition - whoever wrote that graffiti is a fascist, since they would have me eating only vegetables whether I like it or not. As for meat meaning murder, this is even more absurd. Murder implies malice, and there is no malice whatsoever in my desire to eat meat.Time and time again I've been struck by the fact that extremist views in fact undermine the very aims they seek to impose. Death is a part of life. We all die in the end. When I die my body will feed the worms, no doubt. What we should be aiming for is the eradication of suffering. In other words: the humane and ethical treatment of animals while they are alive. This is a far more realistic aim, than that we should expect every human being on the planet to give up meat.If animal rights activists were really sincere in their desire to help animals, then they would want to enlist the support of meat eaters too. No one wants to see animals boxed up in confined spaces for the whole of their lives, never seeing the sky, never skipping about in the fields. No one wants to see animals screaming in terror at the prospect of dying. No one wants to see animals clubbed to death, or left bleeding, half alive. No one wants to see animals force-fed on a diet of ground-up animal parts, turning naturally vegetarian animals into cannibals. There are many meat eaters who would happily see the end of veal crates, and the transport of live animals. And almost every meat eater who can afford it would be perfectly willing to pay more for their meat if they knew that the animal had had a happy life, and a dignified and painless death.I was a vegetarian for a number of years. The reason I packed it in initially was that I got a job in a steelworks, and the canteen simply didn't serve vegetarian food. There's only so much manual labour you can do on a diet of mashed potatoes and cheese. And, the truth is, vegetarianism tends to be the preserve of the middle classes.I went on the hippy trail to India. India, of course, has a fine tradition of delicious and varied vegetarian food. So no problem there. But those countries in between - Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan - are all almost exclusively meat-eating.I'd already come to the conclusion that the insistence on a vegetarian diet, regardless of the circumstances, was both rude and impractical. There were vegetarian restaurants along the way, set up exclusively to cater for western tastes. But the normal Afghan fare - their equivalent of fish and chips - was pillau rice: a mound of rice fried in meat fat, with a scrawny lump of meat buried at the bottom. Poor man's food. Pillau rice was what the Afghans ate. And that - I decided - was what I would eat too.In Pakistan I ate mutton curry. To this day I have a taste for cheap cuts of old meat - such as mutton or goat - mulled in spices over several hours, till the stringy flesh grows succulent and falls off the bone. It's a pity that such basic forms of meat are so difficult to find in this country. This is how most people in most parts of the world eat. In China they eat every part of the animal, even the feet. Nothing is wasted. It's only in the decadent west that we relish the tenderest parts of lamb and veal and other baby animals, and then throw the rest away. And it's only western travellers who will visit another country and then demand that they cater for our delicate tastes.To be invited into someone's home, and then to put the host to so much trouble by insisting on the particularities of a certain diet, smacks of churlishness to me. To do the same in someone else's country seems rude in the extreme.So let's unite to end barbaric factory-farming methods - shall we? - and leave out the insults. Posted by factory farming, Whitstable Column by CJ Stone CJ Stone on HubPages CJ Stone's writing on the web Latest hubs CJ Stone's HubPages CJ Stone's website is a columnist and author with four books to his credit: Fierce Dancing (Faber & Faber 1996), Last of the Hippies (Faber & Faber 1999), Housing Benefit Hill (AK Press 2001) and The Trials of Arthur (with Arthur Pendragon, Element Books 2003). Columns have included Housing Benefit Hill and CJ Stone’s Britain in the Guardian Weekend, On The Edge in the Big Issue, On Another Planet in the Whitstable Times and Written In Stone in Prediction magazine. He is currently working on two new columns, and his latest book, the “biography” of a well-known supernatural being. He lives in Whitstable in the UK and, when not at his desk, is a part-time postman, which he describes as “like a four-hour workout every morning”. He is almost exactly 20,000 days old. See above for link to the website. Aquila Ka Hecate Bard of Ely Dee Rimbaud Diary of a Hope Fiend Gordon Strong Magic, Myths & Miracles Michael Simmons Reason to Freedom Worry Wart
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Elizabeth Edwards responds to Ann Coulter By Michael J.W. StickingsUpdate: For more on Elizabeth Edwards's phone-in challenge to Ann Coulter and her "language of hate," see my more recent post, "The unabashed bigotry of Sean Hannity and Ann Coulter".For more on John Edwards (and I was once a featured blogger at his One America Committee), see here.For more on the lunacy of Fox News, on which I have done many posts, see here.For more on various assholes extraordinaire, such as John Gibson and Rush Limbaugh, see here.For more on various dangerous idiots, such as Newt Gingrich, Dennis Miller, and John Yoo, see here.**********As you may have heard, conservative darling Ann Coulter called John Edwards a "faggot" at the Conservative Political Action Conference yesterday. (We posted on it here and here.)Well, Elizabeth Edwards has responded at the Edwards '08 blog: "Although her words did not hurt us, they may have hurt some in the gay community. We are all sick and tired of anyone supporting or applauding or introducing hate words into the national dialogue, tired of people thinking that words that cause others pain are fair game. And we are sick and tired of people like Miss Coulter thinking that her use of loaded words about the homosexual community in this country is remotely humorous or appropriate."The problem is, many conservatives find such language both humorous and appropriate. The three leading GOP candidates -- McCain, Giuliani, and Romney -- have spoken out against Coulter's slur, but to think that Coulter and her views reside on the fringe of the conservative movement is to misunderstand the state of that movement. Conservatism today isn't just about low taxes, small government, and a big military, it's about specific cultural and moral values espoused by the evangelical right but embraced more broadly throughout the conservative movement as well as by the Republican Party it sustains. And one of the key conservative values concerns sexual orientation: straight is right, anything else is wrong. This manifests itself not just as opposition to gay rights but as opposition to homosexuality generally.Did I say opposition? I mean hatred.Of course, not all conservatives hate gays. But there is no excuse for what Coulter said. (And it's simply not enough to claim it was all a joke.) And there is no excuse for the fact that many conservatives obviously like Coulter a great deal and consider her to be one of their own, one of their leading media celebrities.**********I disagree with conservative Rick Moran's suggestion that no blogger "write another blog post about Ann Coulter no matter how outrageous, cruel, or bigoted her language" -- as long as she's a popular conservative public figure, we need to call her, and her supporters, out. However, I agree with his five other suggestions, including this one: "Immediately write the Presidents of Fox News, MSNBC, and CNN demanding that they refuse to schedule Coulter on any show for any reason on their networks."By the way, Moran makes the case that Coulter does not speak for conservatives. I disagree with him on this -- she obviously speaks for many conservatives, hence her popularity -- but I appreciate the sentiment.Labels: conservatives, Edwards, homosexuality posted by Michael J.W. Stickings at 9:35 PM | Leave a Comment Forget reality. Gimme that old-time religion. By J. Kingston PierceIs it just me, or do American conservatives seem increasingly adamant (even shrill) about asserting their waning political influence? This last November’s midterm elections, which found Democrats executing a complete shutout of Republican’ts on Capitol Hill and in state governorships, has led to such idiotic stunts as right-wing political commentator Ann Coulter calling former Senator John Edwards a “faggot,” pro-war candidate John McCain sucking up to Christianists by flip-flopping on his abortion stance, and George W. Bush threatening again to start a war with Iran in order to assert his relevance in the post-Rovian United States.But the creation of Conservapedia, a right-wing alternative to the allegedly “anti-Christian and anti-American” Wikipedia online information bank, may be the clearest indication yet that political conservatives are determined to counter any viewpoints not in line with their own reactionary, denial-based, and too often exclusionary perspective on the world and its history. “Conservapedia is an online resource and meeting place where we favor Christianity and America,” the site says on its front page. “Conservapedia has easy-to-use indexes to facilitate review of topics. You will much prefer using Conservapedia compared to Wikipedia if you want concise answers free of ‘political correctness.’” Hmm. So how exactly does Conservapedia demonstrate its greater adherence to the truth and its rejection of “political correctness”?• In its write-up about former President Bill Clinton, it leads with the reminder that “Clinton never won a majority of the popular vote.” That’s followed immediately by the unsubtle editorialization that “In his first two years in office, 1993 through 1994, Clinton failed at his massive attempt to ‘reform’ health-care in the United States by some sort of government-backed universal health-care insurance, which would result in effective government control of the health care system.”• In an entry about “intelligent design,” a religion-based “alternative” to Charles Darwin’s accepted theory of evolution, Conservapedia insists that “Design Theory enjoys broad support within the scientific community which is steadily growing.” It goes on to denounce a federal judge (and a Republican) who ruled in a Pennsylvania case that intelligent design “cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents” as “an activist judge ... whose ruling has been described by influential opinion-makers as ‘biased and religiously bigoted.’” (Gee, way to go Conservapedia: no bias in your own write-up, is there?)• On a page devoted to the four-term presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Conservapedia contributors say absolutely nothing about FDR’s efforts to beat the Great Depression, beef up employment, and help Britain and France survive World War II. Instead, they devote 173 words of their 276-word profile of the 20th century’s greatest U.S. chief executive to Roosevelt’s statements about religion. (It seems he was for it.)• Defining the term “theocracy,” Conservapedia writes: “Government ruled by a divine means or by leaders considered to be divinely guided. Israel was a theocracy before King Saul. Modern theocracies include Iran, Turkey, and Afghanistan prior to the ousting of the Taliban by the military of the United States of America. With any luck, a new modern theocracy will be established within the United States by the end of the decade.”• Remarking on the presidency of George Washington, the site proclaims: “Washington is perhaps the only person other than Jesus who declined enormous worldly power, in Washington’s case by voluntarily stepping aside as the ruler of a prosperous nation.”• On a page about the Democratic Party, the site says little more than this: “The official platform of the Democratic party emphasizes strengthening America. Right-wing critics claim, however, that the Democrat [sic] voting record reveals a true agenda of cowering to terrorism, treasonous anti-Americanism, and comtempt [sic] for America’s founding principles such as freedom of religion.”• Trying further to make the case that it’s “an online encyclopedia you can trust,” Conservapedia has this to say on the important subject of global warming:On February 2, 2007, an internatonal [sic] panel of hundreds of scientists and representatives of 113 governments issued a report concluding:The observed widespread warming of the atmosphere and ocean, together with ice-mass loss, support the conclusion that it is extremely unlikely that global climate change of the past 50 years can be explained without external forcing, and very likely that is not due to known natural causes alone.It should be noted that these scientists are motivated by a need for grant money in their field of climatology. Therefore, their work can not be considered unbiased, though no more than any scientist in any other field. Also, these scientists are mostly liberal athiests [sic], untroubled by the hubris that man can destroy the Earth which God gave him.• And I’m not sure what to make of Conservapedia’s entry under the word “religion.” I’d assumed, given the goals of this site, that it would have much to say on this controversial subject. However, the page contains nothing but this text:Types of ReligionThere is only one type of religion, Christianity. The others are frauds.Sources of ReligionChristians used to look to the Bible for God’s word, but now they have the Blog of the Gods, which relays His word directly in modern language people can understand. It is also less silly than the Bible.(Most of the Web links above have been added by yours truly, in order that readers can find more information on certain subjects. However, don’t blame me for that weird Blog of the Gods link; it’s original to Conservapedia.)Obviously, Conservapedia is still in its formative stages, with subjects of seemingly greatest interest to its originators receiving the most attention first. Which might explain why, after attacking Bill Clinton throughout most of a 519-word write-up, its creators then devote only 168 words to his successor; and why extensive entries are written about homosexuality and abortion--both abject sources of evil, apparently--yet the site offers absolutely no information about the U.S. Congress, only a quote from Mark Twain: “It could probably be shown by facts and figures that there is no distinctly native American criminal class except Congress.”The creation of this sort of online “resource” isn’t really surprising. As Steve Benen of The Carpetbagger Report remarks: “A Bush White House aide famously said a few years ago, ‘We create our own reality.’ I suppose it stands to reason, then, that Bush’s supporters would want to do the same thing.”And the whole enterprise would be quite hilarious, were it not merely pathetic. The idea that self-styled conservatives--trying to counter what they see as a too-liberal interpretation of the world’s complications by intellectuals and encyclopedia authors--need to edit history to fit their own biases simply emphasizes their minority viewpoints. Furthermore, in its effort to avoid what project leader Andy Schlafly (son of longtime conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly) calls the gossip, vulgarity, and long-winded writing of Wikipedia, this site actually insults its readers’ intelligence by trying to shield them from other opinions--not unlike what FOX News does by, say, sinking its resources into seemingly endless coverage of former Playboy playmate Anna Nicole Smith’s death, rather than reporting on the day-by-day increase of body counts from Bush’s Iraq occupation. Can’t let those readers find out what’s really happening in the world, and that most people think differently than they do, lest the sheep start to abandon their right-wing shepherds. Only chaos can ensue from that, am I right?Of course, as Wired News points out, “Conservapedia isn’t the first example of the religious right turning to social software to reach a wider web audience--there’s also CreationWiki, an encyclopedia of creation science written from a Christian perspective.” And we all know how influential that site has been. Getting worked up about Conservapedia is probably just as much wasted energy.(Cross-posted at Limbo.)Labels: conservatives, religion posted by J. Kingston Pierce at 7:18 PM | Leave a Comment Is Europe on the verge of another Great War? By HeraclitusSwitzerland invades Liechtenstein.Labels: Europe, war posted by non sequitur at 3:53 PM | Leave a Comment A major misjudgment By CreatureA resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan. A surprise visit and a warning to do more by the vice president to President Musharraf of Pakistan. A conveniently quick arrest of a Taliban leader soon after. These were the major news stories coming out of Pakistan and Afghanistan this week, but did you know that the Taliban leader captured had already been in custody back in 2001? Did you know the United States gave their "tacit approval" of his release? I certainly did not. The Independent [UK] fills us in:If Mullah Akhund is as central to the Taliban insurgency as now appears to be the case, the fact he was in custody as long ago as 2001 is likely to prove an embarrassment to the Americans and the Afghan authorities. When he was released under an amnesty after surrendering to the Northern Alliance, officially the US military claimed it did not know about it. But according to reports at the time, the Americans gave tacit approval.With the Taliban insurgency looking increasingly dangerous as time goes on, that decision now looks like a major misjudgement.How many more major misjudgments can our troops, our country, our allies, and the world at large endure?(Cross-posted at State of the Day.)Labels: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Taliban, war on terror posted by creature at 3:37 PM | Leave a Comment Greenwald on Coulter and her movement By HeraclitusI don't have much to add to this, but Glenn Greenwald's response to Coulter's latest round of hate-mongering is worth quoting: None of this is news, particularly. This is a movement propelled by an insatiable hunger for more slaughter and more wars. It is centrally dependent upon hatred of an Enemy, foreign or domestic -- the Terrorist, the Immigrant, the Faggot, the Raghead, and most of all, the Liberal. As John Dean brilliantly documented, that is the only real feature that binds the "conservative" movement at this point, the only attribute that gives it identity and purpose. It does not have any affirmative ideas, only a sense of that which it hates and wants to destroy. So to watch as the crowd wildly cheers an unapologetic hatemonger is perfectly natural and not at all surprising. But we should, at the very least, be able to have a moratorium on all of the scandals driven by their claims to be so offended and upset when anonymous commenters on a blog say mean things, or when bloggers use curse words, or when Senators transparently botch a joke. The ugliest and most obscene sentiments are openly expressed not by their blog commenters or even bloggers -- though that is true -- but by their most admired and successful political leaders, the ones whom their presidential candidates desperately seek to embrace and for whom their most committed throngs cheer wildly. Labels: conservatives posted by non sequitur at 3:23 AM | Leave a Comment Friday, March 02, 2007 Army Secretary steps down over Walter Reed scandal By Michael J.W. StickingsWith the Walter Reed scandal still alive and well -- see here and here for our recent posts -- Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey resigned today:Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey resigned today amid a burgeoning scandal over the treatment of wounded outpatient soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and President Bush ordered a "comprehensive review" of care for the nation's war wounded, as the administration sought to deal with growing anger in Congress and among the public over the issue.A visibly angry Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates announced the resignation in a brief statement this afternoon, saying he was "disappointed" by the Army's response to disclosures of inadequate outpatient care at Walter Reed and bureaucratic inertia in dealing with wounded soldiers.The Carpetbagger Report: "My opinion of Robert Gates just went up considerably. As Atrios put it, 'This is the first time in the entire Bush administration that we've had anything which even felt remotely like a genuine "accountability" moment.' There's still time for these guys to screw it up, but if Gates is cleaning house and firing people, I'm extremely encouraged."I can't believe I'm writing this, but... so am I. At least someone in the Bush Administration is taking responsibility for something.(For more on the scandal, see Think Progress, Taylor Marsh, NewsHog, Needlenose, and DownWithTyranny!.)Labels: Bush, U.S. military Leave a Comment Ladies and gentlemen, American conservatism By Michael J.W. StickingsToday at the Conservative Political Action Conference:Mitt Romney: "I am happy to hear that after you hear from me, you will hear from Ann Coulter. That is a good thing. Oh yeah!"Ann Coulter: "I was going to have a few comments on the other Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards, but it turns out you have to go into rehab if you use the word 'faggot,' so I — so kind of an impasse, can’t really talk about Edwards."And the audience cheered.(Think Progress has the video here.)**********Andrew Sullivan (a self-defined conservative, but of a different kind altogether): "When you see her in such a context, you realize that she truly represents the heart and soul of contemporary conservative activism, especially among the young... She is the new Republicanism. The sooner people recognize this, the better."Recognize it now.Labels: conservatives, Mitt Romney Leave a Comment A-Wade's slam dunk By Michael J.W. StickingsI'm sure you've all been following this closely, but the results of Senegal's presidential election are finally in:Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade won re-election for a second term in Sunday's election, the country's electoral commission has said.It said that President Wade, aged 81, won more than 50% of the votes cast, making a run-off unnecessary. [He won 55.86% of the vote. His two closest rivals, a former prime minister and a socialist, received just 14.93% and 13.57%, respectively.]The results must still be reviewed and confirmed by the Senegalese Constitutional Council.Opposition parties have said they have evidence of fraud and may challenge Mr Wade's victory.Ah, yes, fraud. What would a corrupt developing-world "democracy" be without it? This election may have been no exception.I was going to write more on the state of Senegalese politics, but instead I'll turn it over to a good Q&A at the BBC, as well as to the useful entry at Wikipedia.Labels: Africa, elections posted by Michael J.W. Stickings at 12:11 AM | Leave a Comment Ancient sun cult in Peru By HeraclitusHere's an interesting story at the BBC, itself a summary of an article in Science, about a series of 2,300 year old towers in Peru. Although their existence has been known for about a century, archaeologists have apparently just realized or noticed that the towers line up with the sun's arc.The Thirteen Towers of Chankillo run from north to south along the ridge of a low hill within the site; they are relatively well-preserved and each has a pair of inset staircases leading to the summit.The rectangular structures, between 75 and 125 square metres (807-1,345 sq ft) in size, and are regularly spaced -- forming a "toothed" horizon with narrow gaps at regular intervals.About 230m (750ft) to the east and west are what scientists believe to be two observation points. From these vantages, the 300m- (1,000ft-) long spread of the towers along the horizon corresponds very closely to the rising and setting positions of the Sun over the year...The site where the towers are based is about four square kilometres (1.5 square miles) in size, and is believed to be a ceremonial centre that was occupied in the 4th Century BC. It is based at the coast of Peru in the Casma-Sechin River Basin and contains many buildings and plazas, as well as a fortified temple that has attracted much attention.The authors of the paper... believe the population was an ancient Sun cult and the observatory was used to mark special days in their solar calendar...Written records suggest the Incas were making solar observations by 1500 AD, and that their religion centred on Sun worship.Labels: history, Latin America, religion posted by non sequitur at 12:02 AM | Leave a Comment Thursday, March 01, 2007 Still silencing the victims of Bush's warmongering By Michael J.W. StickingsI wrote yesterday about the silencing and mistreatment of soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Well, conditions may soon improve -- may. For the Pentagon has acted:The commander of Walter Reed Army Medical Center was fired [today] after the Army said it had lost trust and confidence in his leadership in the wake of a scandal over outpatient treatment of wounded troops at the Northwest Washington hospital complex.Army Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, who assumed command of Walter Reed in August, will be temporarily replaced by Lt. Gen. Kevin C. Kiley. But the appointment of Kiley, who had earlier been the facility's commander, surprised some Defense Department officials because soldiers, their families and veterans' advocates have complained that he had long been aware of problems at Walter Reed and did nothing to improve its outpatient care.So, okay. The mistreatment has been exposed, there is "new" leadership, and something may be done about the horrendous mistreatment of America's wounded in action.But here's the thing. Aside from the mistreatment, which is bad enough, the Army Times (which I quoted in my previous post) reported that soldiers were being prevented from talking to the media. That is, they were being not just censored but silenced.The mistreatment may end -- hopefully it will -- but the silencing presumably will continue.The warmongers will do whatever they can to keep the truth from coming out.And that's still not supporting the troops.Labels: U.S. military posted by Michael J.W. Stickings at 10:53 PM | Leave a Comment Prisoners used to replace migrant workers By HeraclitusCheck out this article in The L.A. Times about plans in Colorado to use prisoners as farmhands, after "tough" laws against illegal immigration left the state's farmers without anyone to harvest their crops.Ever since passing what its Legislature promoted as the nation's toughest laws against illegal immigration last summer, Colorado has struggled with a labor shortage as migrants fled the state. This week, officials announced a novel solution: Use convicts as farmworkers.The Department of Corrections hopes to launch a pilot program this month — thought to be the first of its kind — that would contract with more than a dozen farms to provide inmates who will pick melons, onions and peppers. Crops were left to spoil in the fields after the passage of legislation that required state identification to get government services and allowed police to check suspects' immigration status.Are those who complain about the ill effects of illegal immigrants on our economic well-being, what with all the free health care in this country and all, lying, hypocritical racists? Could they be? Could this handy, symbolically-rich little vignette illustrate that?Prisoners who are a low security risk may choose to work in the fields, earning 60 cents a day. They also are eligible for small bonuses.The inmates will be watched by prison guards, who will be paid by the farms. The cost is subject to negotiation, but farmers say they expect to pay more for the inmate labor and its associated costs than for their traditional workers.Whoa, sixty cents a day! That's not exploitative at all (ACLU lawsuit in 3...2...1...). Oh, but it's still going to cost the farmers more than hiring "illegals" (which is about the best thing you can call someone when the law looks like this). That right there might tell you all you need to know about the condition of migrant workers in this country. Of course, the main expense is going to be paying the guards. Good sadists are expensive. Don't take my word for it; just check the back pages of your local free weekly.Advocates on both sides of the immigration debate said they were stunned by the proposal."If they can't get slaves from Mexico, they want them from the jails," said Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, which favors restrictions on immigration.Ricardo Martinez of the Denver immigrant rights group Padres Unidos asked: "Are we going to pull in inmates to work in the service industry too? You won't have enough inmates — unless you start importing them from Texas."Hmmm...you know it's bad when the guy cast as the anti-illegal immigration fellow is saying migrants workers are treated like "slaves." Meanwhile, there won't be enough inmates -- unless you start importing them from the heart of wingnuttia, Texas.Farmers said they weren't happy with the solution, but their livelihoods are on the verge of collapse."This prison labor is not a cure for the immigration problem; it's just a Band-Aid," farmer Joe Pisciotta said.Alright, I don't know what this "Pisciotta" bullshit is. It might be Italian, but I don't like the looks of all those vowels.He said he needed to be sure he would have enough workers for the harvest this fall before he planted watermelons, onions and pumpkins on his 700-acre farm in Avondale. But he's not thrilled with the idea of criminals working his fields."I've got young kids," he said. "It's something I've got to think about."Pisciotta said he hoped the program highlighted what he viewed as the absurdity of Colorado's position — dependent on immigrant labor but trying to chase migrants away. He said the people leaving were not just those who entered the country illegally."Some of them have said, 'We think our paperwork is in order, but how about if it's not and we get caught on a glitch,' " he said.Okay, that does it. Ship his ass off to Gitmo.Social service agencies say they have discovered few illegal immigrants on public assistance since the laws were passed.Gee, I wonder if that could be because they've all left the state. But, whatever the reason, the important thing is that migrant workers are no longer taking advantage of the vast system of social welfare programs we have here in the United States. And all it took was bringing the state's agricultural industry to the brink of total ruin.In California, where growers also have complained about a lack of workers, inmates have not labored in private fields since the 1940s. Prisoners then were used as farmhands while laborers were fighting in World War II, said Terry Thornton, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Corrections."The idea [of using prisoners on farms] has been floated before, but these are not unskilled jobs. They're jobs that require a lot of training and supervision," said David Kranz, a spokesman for the California Farm Bureau Federation. "It doesn't seem like a very practical alternative."Wait...I don't...understand...migrant workers...?..."illegal aliens"...doing skilled labor? That...that can't be. Cannot...compute. Must...go...watch...Lou Dobbs.For more, see The Unapologetic Mexican.Labels: immigration Leave a Comment A fighter for history gone By J. Kingston PierceFebruary, the shortest month of the year, finally brought to a close the life and career of one of America’s foremost political historians and social critics, Pulitzer Prize-winner and former Kennedy administration advisor Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. He died in Manhattan last night, after being stricken with a heart attack while dining out. Schlesinger was 89 years old.Born in Columbus, Ohio, in October 1917, Schlesinger was the son and namesake of Arthur M. Schlesinger, a Progressive Era intellectual and Harvard University history professor who may have been best known for surveying U.S. historians on the significance of past presidencies. After graduating summa cum laude from Harvard himself in 1938, during World War II “Schlesinger drafted some statements for President [Franklin D.] Roosevelt and served as an intelligence analyst for the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner to the CIA,” according to an Associated Press obituary. His emergence from his famous father’s shadow was most clearly realized in 1945, when he published The Age of Jackson, a historical text that “offered a new, class-based interpretation of the [Andrew] Jackson administration, destroying the old myth that the country was once an egalitarian paradise. The book remained influential despite eventual criticism--even by Schlesinger--for overlooking Jackson’s appeasement of slavery and his harsh treatment of Indians.”In the mid-’40s, Schlesinger helped found (with Eleanor Roosevelt, Hubert Humphrey, and others) Americans for Democratic Action, a liberal organization that, while it espoused anti-communism, also opposed the dogmatic Communist witch-hunting practiced during the 1950s by Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-Wisconsin) and the nearly as “obsessive” anti-communism promoted by the Left. In 1949, he saw published The Vital Center: The Politics of Freedom, in which he advocated liberal democratic ideals but adamantly rejected totalitarianism (“Neither fascism nor communism can win so long as there remains a democratic middle way,” he wrote in The New York Times in 1948). Schlesinger’s staunch liberalism led him to pen speeches for Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson in 1952 and 1956, and then to do the same for John F. Kennedy in 1960. (Schlesinger conceded that switching his loyalty from Stevenson to the junior U.S. senator from Massachusetts was difficult; he called Stevenson, the former governor of Illinois, a “much richer, more thoughtful, more creative person,” but was drawn to Kennedy’s “cool, measured, intelligent concern.”)After Kennedy’s thin conquest over GOP candidate Richard M. Nixon, Schlesinger served in the White House as a speech writer and presidential special assistant for Latin American affairs. At the time of Kennedy’s assassination in 1963, Schlesinger was left with voluminous notes he’d taken for the president, which Kennedy planned to use in writing his autobiography. Instead, Schlesinger used them to craft his own book, A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House, which won both the Pulitzer and the National Book Award in 1966. He returned to the Kennedy family more than a decade later with Robert Kennedy and His Times.Although his job and inclination was to view politics through the lens of what had gone (and failed) before, he could also be a fierce Democratic partisan. And that had the unfortunate result of coloring his perceptions of what was possible. During the 1972 U.S. presidential election, for instance, Schlesinger forecast a decisive win for South Dakota Senator George McGovern “because he was ‘leading a constituency as broad as Roosevelt’s coalition in 1932,’” recalls Britain’s Guardian newspaper. Nixon, though, won re-election in a landslide. Schlesinger bet the wrong horse again in 1980, when he laid wagers on Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy stealing the Democratic nomination away from incumbent President Jimmy Carter. “Anyone observing that campaign,” opines The Guardian’s Harold Jackson, “could foresee the outcome almost from the start. Clearly Schlesinger was talking from his heart not his head and, as the years went by, it became increasingly important to determine which organ prevailed.”Despite such disappointments, however, Schlesinger remained what he called, upon turning 80 in 1997, “an unrepentant and unreconstructed liberal and New Dealer. ... That means I favor the use of government to improve opportunities and to enlarge freedoms for ordinary people.” But he vociferously opposed the misapplication of political authority to advance extremist causes. In 1998, he joined more than 400 historians to denounce the poisonously partisan impeachment of President Bill Clinton, and he blasted George W. Bush’s decision to invade Saddam Hussein’s Iraq in 2003, calling Bush’s supposed “preventive war” strategy “a fatal turn in U.S. foreign policy.” His 2004 book, War and the American Presidency, spoke disparagingly of Bush’s expansion of presidential power and the dangers of an “imperial presidency,” a term Schlesinger popularized (if not coined) during the Nixon administration. During an interview he did with Salon in 2004, the then 87-year-old historian predicted that Americans would come to “hate” themselves for sanctioning George W. Bush’s abuses of power:Well, there’s a lengthy history of us doing just that. The Red Scare from the First World War, for example. The Wilson administration arrested a lot of people, sent them to prison, including Eugene Debs, the Socialist Party candidate, and deported some others of foreign birth. After the war, people began to wonder what the actual threat had been and we hated ourselves in the morning. As a result, the American Civil Liberties Union was founded and [Oliver Wendell] Holmes [Jr.] and [Louis] Brandeis led the judicial reaction.After the Second World War, we finally paid reparations to the Japanese who had been interned. After the Civil War, the Supreme Court regarded Mulligan [a case in which a Confederate sympathizer from Indiana was imprisoned without charges] as a miscarriage of justice.I think the best current example might be the Patriot Act--its excesses are a lot like those of the Alien and Sedition Acts. In fact, the spinmeisters of 1798 should have called the Alien and Sedition Acts “the Patriot Act.” America was engaged in undeclared naval warfare against France at the time, but afterward, the Alien and Sedition Acts were quickly repented as an overreaction to criticism of government.We overreact and then we’re sorry. Panic is not a wise basis for judgment. I think it will happen like that again. The rather conservative Supreme Court has already rebuked the imperial president by ruling that the Guantánamo prison detainees are subject to due process.However, as we’ve seen, the great virtue of democracy is its capacity for self-correction.But it wasn’t through his political confrontations that Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. became most important to those of us who thrill at the thoughtful examination of American historical developments and presidencies. It was his books that made his name known to us, whether we’re talking about The Age of Jackson or Robert Kennedy and His Times (both of which I have displayed on a high shelf beside my desk), or his three-volume history of the New Deal, The Age of Roosevelt, and what was to have been the first part of his memoirs, A Life in the 20th Century: Innocent Beginnings, 1917-1950.Lately I’ve been working my way through a still-growing series of U.S. presidential biographies, edited by Schlesinger for Times Books, and have been reminded not only of this bowtie-wearing historian’s knowledge of America’s past, but his curiosity about it, as well. Contrary to what many history teachers seem to believe, the past isn’t merely a collection of occurrences with dates and players attached. It is a vital, ever-revealing stew of truths, tragedies, and triumphs that can only be fully understood by those who are made curious about its twists, not made resentful of having to learn it by rote. Schlesinger, understandably inspired to his future by his father, showed an obvious curiosity about what had been and what was to come, together with a faith that history is more tutor than tyrant--indicating but not demanding repetition. We owe him greatly for what he left behind, now that he himself is history.(Cross-posted at Limbo.) Leave a Comment Six months By Michael J.W. StickingsGuardian Unlimited: "An elite team of officers advising US commander General David Petraeus in Baghdad has concluded the US has six months to win the war in Iraq -- or face a Vietnam-style collapse in political and public support that could force the military into a hasty retreat."Suffice it to say, however, there are certain "entrenched problems" that seem to stand in the way of victory.Which begs a couple of questions:-- How is victory now defined?-- Is the war even winnable at all?If the answer to the second question is "No" -- and it would seem to be -- then what's the point? Even an improvement in the security situation in Baghdad -- is that now "victory"? -- would likely just be temporary, what Andrew Sullivan has called a "phony peace".Six months? Victory? Doubtful.Labels: Iraq, U.S. military Leave a Comment Wednesday, February 28, 2007 Alien technology and global warming By Michael J.W. StickingsThis one merits a massive HUH?From AFP: "A former Canadian defense minister is demanding governments worldwide disclose and use secret alien technologies obtained in alleged UFO crashes to stem climate change, a local paper said Wednesday."That's right, Paul Hellyer -- defence minister under Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson in the mid-'60s and then a senior cabinet minister under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau in the late-'60s (and more recently the founder of economic nationalist Canadian Action Party -- "would like to see what [alien] technology there might be that could eliminate the burning of fossil fuels within a generation... that could be a way to save our planet". His words.Something tells me this won't make it into Al Gore's PowerPoint presentation.(For more on Hellyer, see here.)Labels: Canada, global warming Leave a Comment Angelina on Darfur By Michael J.W. StickingsDo I really need a reason to post an arousing photo of Angelina Jolie here at The Reaction? Oh -- this isn't that sort of blog? Then how about a caricature?(This one's from Jorge "Fico" Molina at Monkey Studio.)Actually, let's take Angelina seriously for a moment. She has an interesting (and important) piece in today's Washington Post on the situation in Darfur -- from a refugee camp (Oure Cassoni) in Bahai, Chad. Here are a few key passages:-- "By every measure -- killings, rapes, the burning and looting of villages -- the violence in Darfur has increased since my last visit, in 2004. The death toll has passed 200,000; in four years of fighting, Janjaweed militia members have driven 2.5 million people from their homes, including the 26,000 refugees crowded into Oure Cassoni."-- "When I was in Chad in June 2004, refugees told me about systematic attacks on their villages. It was estimated then that more than 1,000 people were dying each week. In October 2004 I visited West Darfur, where I heard horrific stories, including accounts of gang-rapes of mothers and their children. By that time, the UNHCR estimated, 1.6 million people had been displaced in the three provinces of Darfur and 200,000 others had fled to Chad."-- "Until the killers and their sponsors are prosecuted and punished, violence will continue on a massive scale. Ending it may well require military action. But accountability can also come from international tribunals, measuring the perpetrators against international standards of justice."Angelina does not back away from military intervention -- and I tend to think that only military intervention by NATO (and not just the U.N. and/or the A.U. would have any chance of halting the genocide and securing Darfur and Chad -- but she is right that "there will be no enduring peace without justice". And this means that an empowered International Criminal Court can be an effective vehicle in bringing some semblance of justice to the region, investigating the many criminal acts and prosecuting the perpetrators of the horror. But the ICC will only be "as strong as the support we give it". With military action unlikely, there is no good reason not to empower the ICC."This might be the moment we stop the cycle of violence and end our tolerance for crimes against humanity. What the worst people in the world fear most is justice. That's what we should deliver."Powerful words backed up by first-hand experience of what many of us in the comfort of our prosperous liberal democracies would rather pretend isn't happening.Whatever else one can say about Angelina Jolie, she's emerged as a significant public figure in the fight for justice.Labels: Africa, celebrities, Darfur Leave a Comment Digital cameras By HeraclitusHello, readers. I've been wanting to get one of these digital cameras I keep hearing about (yes, I know, I am teh lame), but I don't know much about them. I'd mainly like to use it to take pictures outside, not just snap shots of family birthday parties and so on. What should I expect to pay? I notice the cheaper ones on Amazon are a little under $100. Are these going to be pieces of crap? The digital camera review sites I've seen mainly review cameras costing several hundred or even thousand dollars. I don't need anything that nice (read: I'm not paying anywhere near that much), but how much should I expect to pay for a decent digital camera that can take good outdoor photos? Thanks.Labels: navel gazing, photography Leave a Comment Silencing the victims of Bush's warmongering By Michael J.W. StickingsFrom Army Times (a rather reputable source):Soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center’s Medical Hold Unit say they have been told they will wake up at 6 a.m. every morning and have their rooms ready for inspection at 7 a.m., and that they must not speak to the media.“Some soldiers believe this is a form of punishment for the trouble soldiers caused by talking to the media,” one Medical Hold Unit soldier said, speaking on the condition of anonymity...The Pentagon also clamped down on media coverage of any and all Defense Department medical facilities, to include suspending planned projects by CNN and the Discovery Channel, saying in an e-mail to spokespeople: “It will be in most cases not appropriate to engage the media while this review takes place,” referring to an investigation of the problems at Walter Reed.The Gun Toting Liberal puts it well: "So there we have it; we now know what happens when the President becomes embarrassed. CENSORSHIP and more ABUSE of our fallen heros and heroines of the military. You keep hearing the President preach over and over again how much he feels for those who’ve given the 'ultimate sacrifice' but for those who’ve only given a limb or two, his actions speak louder than words, and that message is: 'Shut the hell up, quit your whining and go clean your rooms'. Just lovely, isn’t it?"Lovely, indeed. Bush and his right-wing allies always talk about supporting the troops. "If you don't support Bush, you don't support the troops." That's the way the warmongers and their supporters try to back critics into a corner. After all, who wants to be against the troops? It's just like saying, and they also say it: "If you don't support Bush, you're with the terrorists."But supporting the troops means something other than the pro-Bush spin. It certainly doesn't mean sending them into a war that doesn't make any sense, a war that has already been lost, an occupation that has been overtaken by civil war, a war that from the start has been grossly mismanaged. It may mean many things, including ensuring that they aren't put in harm's way without a clear mission, but it certainly means providing all necessary comfort and care to those who have been injured and who in the service of their country need to have their bodies and their lives rebuilt.I have no doubt that many, if not most, are receiving excellent treatment. And yet there is evidently a Pentagon policy to silence and segregate from society those who have given so much for their country, as well as to subject them to mistreatment.And where is the commander-in-chief in all this? Defending his war, more war, always more war, as troops at Walter Reed and elsewhere try to heal.Who really supports the troops?Labels: Bush, conservatives, U.S. military Leave a Comment Bagram blast fallout By Michael J.W. StickingsBy now most of you have surely heard the news:Vice President Cheney was inside the main U.S. air base in Afghanistan yesterday when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives just outside the gates, killing as many as 23 people and showcasing insurgents' growing capabilities in advance of a widely expected spring offensive.Within hours, a purported Taliban spokesman asserted responsibility for the attack -- which killed a U.S. soldier and an American civilian contractor -- and said it was an attempt to assassinate Cheney. U.S. officials disputed the assertion that Cheney was the target, noting that his overnight stay at the sprawling Bagram air base had been unplanned and that he was well away from the blast.There was a good deal of coverage of the attack all over the blogosphere, but see in particular Dustin's excellent live-blogging of the story over at Blue Collar Heresy. He's got some useful links and some solid analysis.But the story is now not so much the attack itself, nor even whether or not Cheney was the target, but the reaction to the attack in the blogosphere.Some leading conservative blogs -- Michelle Malkin, Little Green Footballs, Jules Crittenden, The Strata-Sphere, Wizbang, and Riehl World View, for example, as well as Pajamas Media -- have been falling all over themselves trying to make the case that liberals (or Democrats, or progressives, or whatever) wish that Cheney had been killed in the attack. What they point to are some of the 400+ comments that were later deleted from The Huffington Post's item on the attack, comments that did indeed express regret that Cheney was not killed. (For examples of those comments, see the posts linked above.)There is no excuse for such comments. However much I may dislike Cheney, I do not wish him harm. And I certainly find him preferable to the Taliban. (Obviously.)And yet the right is trying to make an issue out of this -- the comments of a few loose screws -- in order to reinforce its larger smear of liberals (or Democrats, or progressives, or whatever) as pro-terror and anti-American. Here's Glenn Greenwald, who, as usual, gets it right (in a must-read post):The smoke had barely cleared from the suicide bombing in Afghanistan this morning, near a base where Dick Cheney was located, when right-wing pundits -- whose sole expertise seems to be in exploiting terrorism-related issues for political gain -- began their attempt to politically exploit the attack on or near Cheney. Seemingly in unison, they all went digging deep into the comment sections of various liberal blogs, found inappropriate and hateful comments, and then began insisting that these isolated comments proved something...But stray, anonymous comments prove nothing. And those who rely on them to make an argument -- especially without bothering to make any effort to prove that they are reflective of anything -- should be presumed to have no argument at all. That is why they are relying upon such transparently flimsy and misleading methods to make a point. And the same principle applies to journalists -- those who write articles about "the blogosphere" by using random, stray comments (or mean emails they receive), by definition, have nothing to say, no point worth making.Case in point: A couple of months ago I wrote a post called "Bigotry in the blogosphere: Barack Obama and the anti-Muslim paranoia of the right". It looked at how one particularly bigoted conservative blogger, Debbie Schlussel, was making a big deal about Obama's middle name and familial ties to Islam. The first several comments respond intelligently to the post. But then the bigotry truly begins, with various anonymous commenters using various racial slurs to attack Obama. I won't copy them here. I have thought about deleting the comments altogether -- even now I am tempted to -- but I realize that I should rather keep them up as a reminder of the bigotry that still exists out there in the real world. Now, what am I to make of them? They are extreme in their language, reflective of astonishing ignorance and disturbing hatred. They are shocking. But are they representative of anything other than the bigotry of those who posted them? Put another way, do they represent the views of all others who oppose Obama?No, of course not. You may oppose Obama -- you may even dislike him -- without being a racist and certainly without using the 'N' word. You may abhor such racism altogether. (I hope you do.) You may want to distance yourself as much as possible from such detestable ignorance and hatred. (You should.) You may, as I do, consider such comments to be isolated incidents of hate speech.Well, just as some commenters use racial slurs against Obama, so do some commenters wish Cheney dead. The former do not represent Obama's opponents any more than the latter represent Cheney's opponents. To do as some conservative bloggers are doing now I would have to try to make the case that conservatives (or Republicans, or whatever) think Obama is a Muslim nigger terrorist piece of shit. I'm not about to try to make that case. However much I may dislike certain conservatives, including those who have smeared Obama publicly, I do not think that they all think that Obama is a Muslim nigger terrorist piece of shit. (Although I do think that racism of that kind is a much more serious and pervasive problem in America than the problem of those who wish Cheney dead. I suspect there are many more such racists than homicidal Cheney-haters out there.)All of which is to say that the conservative blogosphere -- not all of it, but certainly some of its more significant members -- are making much ado about very little. Many of Cheney's critics -- and I count myself among them -- would like to see him refuted, disgraced, maybe even impeached. But dead? No.Labels: Afghanistan, blogosphere, Cheney, conservatives, Obama Leave a Comment Tuesday, February 27, 2007 Just another day in the life and death of Iraq XLIII By Michael J.W. StickingsThe Washington Post: "Sixteen children playing soccer and two women were killed Monday in a car bombing in the western Iraqi city of Ramadi, an Iraqi official said Tuesday, in an attack that Iraqi leaders decried as horrific."Well, Laura, I guess that's your discouraging bomb for Monday, huh? It's so annoying that the media bother to report it, huh? 'Cause things are going so well, huh? But... uh:CHILDREN ARE BEING KILLED!Do you get the point, Laura? Do you? Do you understand what is happening in Iraq? Do you understand what this war has unleashed upon the people of Iraq? Do you understand how your husband fucked up? Do you understand how remaining in Iraq won't solve Iraq's problems?Seriously, pay some fucking attention to reality.Labels: Iraq, Just another day in the life and death of Iraq Leave a Comment Weakening America By Michael J.W. StickingsAccording to Chairman of the JCS Gen. Peter Pace, as reported at USA Today, "there is a significant risk that the U.S. military won't be able to quickly and fully respond to yet another crisis". And the situation seems to be worsening, largely because of ongoing military action in Iraq and Afghanistan. Which means that the U.S. would have not be able to respond effectively to "any potential outbreaks in places such as North Korea, Iran, Lebanon, Cuba or China" -- i.e., some of the key trouble spots of the (near) future.Steve Benen, as usual, provides the political context: "Let’s be clear. Bush ran on a platform of military readiness, vowing to reverse the 'hollowing out' of the military. Six years later, our over-stretched military may no longer be able to quickly and fully respond to another crisis."See also Christy Hardin Smith.Labels: Bush, U.S. military Leave a Comment Dema and Irma By Michael J.W. StickingsFrom the Globe: "Dema, a 26-day-old endangered Sumatran tiger cub, cuddles up to 5-month-old female Orangutan Irma at an animal hospital in West Java, Indonesia." Both were rejected by their mothers. Both, along with others just like them, are being taken care of at the animal hospital and finding comfort with one another.Yes, there can be happiness in the world even with all the misery and mayhem.Labels: animals, Asia Leave a Comment Giving the finger By Michael J.W. StickingsAccording to The New York Sun, presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani wants the GOP to be "the party of freedom".Isn't that like giving his party's evangelical base the finger?(Think abortion, same-sex marriage, free speech, etc.)**********I would say more about Giuliani's address to the Hoover Institution, a right-wing think tank, but why bother? Everything he has to say is so predictable and I'm awfully tired of the whole "I was the mayor of New York on 9/11" schtick.But let me single out three points:1) He criticized Democratic efforts to expand health care to the uninsured. Universal health care would be "socialization," he claimed. What he prefers are "free market solutions". And those solutions are? As I have said before, America's health-care system is a national embarrassment. America may have some of the best health care in the world, but it's only available to those who can afford it. And, increasingly, it's a system that is sinking the private sector. There are 47 million uninsured people in the U.S. Does Giuliani have a plan for them?2) He suggested that Democrats would raise taxes to pay for America's wars? If America is at war -- particularly one as far-reaching as the so-called war on terror -- shouldn't Americans be asked to pay the necessary price for their security? Shouldn't they be asked to make a sacrifice? Shouldn't massive deficits be avoided? This is a debate worth having, but Giuliani, like Bush, doesn't want to have it. For them, the Democrats are all tax-happy socialists. To me, the Democrats are just being fiscally responsible.3) He argued that "America doesn't like war. America is not a military country. We've never been a militaristic country." Either he's being disingenuous or, far more likely, he doesn't understand America, the country he wishes to lead in a time of seemingly perpetual war. He should take a trip to Arlington National Cemetary and the Vietnam War Memorial. He should read a history book, any history book. He should watch an American war movie, of which there are countless. And he should read Robert Kaplan's Imperial Grunts. America's history is one of expansion. Her present is one of empire. Any serious presidential hopeful should know that.Beyond the hollow shell of image and reputation, Rudy Giuliani leaves much to be desired.[Creature's Note: Once again, Michael's words, my cut-and-paste. Ignore all references to me below. Thanks.]Labels: 2008 election, Republicans, Rudy Giuliani Leave a Comment Laura Bush should keep her mouth shut By Michael J.W. StickingsBecause she doesn't know what she's talking about. In case you missed it, she said this to Larry King last night: "I hope that they can build their government and reconcile with each other and build a country. This is their opportunity to seize the moment, to build a really good and stable country. And many parts of Iraq are stable now. But, of course, what we see on television is the one bombing a day this discourages everybody."There is such enormous cluelessness there (and in much else of what she said) you'd think her husband was feeding her lines through a hidden earpiece. And, like her husband, her vacuous optimism seems to be based on nothing but hope. Apparently she knows nothing of Iraqi history, nor of the nature of Iraqi sectarianism, nor of present-day Iraqi reality.It may be that some parts of the country are relatively stable, but her statement that "one bombing a day" -- as reported by the media -- is what "discourages everybody" is appalling in its ignorance and shocking in its insensitivity. The truth is that there is daily brutality and bloodshed all over Iraq. We try to cover some of it here with our "Just another day in the life and death of Iraq" series, but there's no way to gauge the full extent of the horror. We're not just talking about one single bomb here or there. We're talking about suicide bombers blowing up civilians, about mutilated bodies being tossed onto the streets, about corpses piling up at the morgues, about a virulent disregard for human life that has turned Iraq into a massive killing field.And this is now their opportunity, Laura has the gall to insist?The sectarianism was there long before Bush, but it was his war -- and his gross mismanagement of that war -- that unleashed the forces that had been locked down under Saddam. It was inevitable that they would resurface, but the disregard for Iraqi history and society that accompanied the war and the subsequent occupation contributed significantly to the state of turmoil that prevails today.In getting it wrong, the warmongers made it all so much worse. But that doesn't stop Laura -- who, to be fair, was just regurgitating the party line -- from heaping all the responsibility on the Iraqis. As if it's all their fault when things go wrong. Perhaps she should take a good hard look at her husband. It was he who must bear the responsibility for the failure of the Iraq War.**********Think Progress has the video, transcript, and a graph showing the steady increase in daily attacks by insurgents and militias. One bomb a day? Hardly.(For more, see AMERICAblog and The Carpetbagger Report.)[Creature's Note: Michael's words, my cut-and-paste. Ignore all references to me below. Thanks.]Labels: Bush, Iraq posted by creature at 12:51 PM | Leave a Comment Red Herring By Creature"I don't think we need to send in the Marines, and it's not being contemplated." - Richard Perle, architect of the neocon policy to destabilize the world, speaking about IranSure, sending in the Marines isn't contemplated -- by all accounts an actual invasion is virtually impossible, but the question should be: "Are you contemplating bombing Iran?" I bet the answer to that question would be a whole lot different.[The quote comes from conservative Newsmax.com and is worth a complete read for the folly of it all. If you would rather not venture to the Dark Side I recommend a trip to the All Spin Zone where SpinDentist has more.](Cross-posted at State of the Day.)Labels: Iran, Middle East, neocons Leave a Comment Monday, February 26, 2007 By Capt. Fogg"There were great numbers of people who needed new land, and the Indians were selfishly trying to keep it for themselves.”-- John WayneThe picture of John Wayne dressed as a cowboy stands, thanks to Photoshop, in front of a huge flag, proudly asking us why in the hell we have to "press '1' for English."A week does not go by and often not a day when I don't get some smirking e-mail about the efforts of the business community to make it easier for native Spanish-speaking people to buy things or get information about things or put money in the bank. Pressing '2' to continue in Spanish seems to have had more of an effect on America's sense of security than anything since Pearl Harbor, and people who profess passionate love of flags, John Wayne, and the Republic for which they stand often fail to see this sleazy campaign as the direct attack on freedom of speech that it is.“Women have the right to work wherever they want, as long as they have the dinner ready when you get home.”"My favorite e-mail ever," says the person who sent it to me, and he concludes with "Enough said". I don't think enough can be said. I have never been a fan of Marion Morrison, although I have enjoyed a couple of his movies. His support for the Vietnam War and his attacks on the doubters of its necessity, his McCarthyism and his belief in white supremacy left me with a lasting distaste for his stupid kind of patriotism and bigotry. It may be ironic, however, that the anti-Mexican rabble-rousers chose him as the boy for their poster.Wayne was married three times: to Josephene Saenz, Esperanza Baur, and Pilar Palette. They were all Spanish-speaking women. As he was dying, Wayne requested that his headstone bear an epitaph in Spanish: Feo, Fuerte y Formal. No English translation was offered.“Life is hard; it's harder if you're stupid.”I have to disagree. It's hardest for those who have to deal with the stupid.(Cross-posted at Human Voices.)Labels: film, language posted by Capt. 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Search the ARDA Presbyterian Panel Survey, August 1998 - World Mission, Members Data Archive > U.S. Surveys > Religious Groups > Members or Leaders > Presbyterian > Summary Custom Table The Presbyterian Panel began in 1973 and is an ongoing panel study in which mailed questionnaires are used to survey representative samples of constituency groups of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). These constituency groups include members, elders, pastors serving in a congregation, and specialized clergy serving elsewhere. Panels are re-sampled every three years. The main goal of this study is to gather broad information about Presbyterians in terms of their faith (beliefs, church background, and levels of church involvement), and their social, economic and demographic characteristics (age, sex, marital status, living arrangements, etc.). The August 1998 survey focuses on world mission. Cases: 540 Variables: 321 Weight Variable: None Date Collected: November 1996 (Background questions) and August 1998 Congregational Ministries Division, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Collection Procedures Data were collected by self-administered mail surveys. "In the initial mailing, each sampled individual was sent a 9"x 12" envelope (personally addressed) containing the following materials: a personally-addressed letter (with pre-printed signature) from the Moderator of the 1996 General Assembly, the Reverend John M. Buchanan, encouraging participation; a personally-addressed cover letter (individually signed) from John P. Marcum, Panel Administrator; a sheet (printed on front and back) describing the Panel in question-and-answer format; a 1-1/2" diameter circular wall magnet with the PCUSA seal; a postage-paid, business-reply envelope; and a copy of the questionnaire. ... Overall design of the survey and mailings followed the 'Total Design Method'." (see Dillman. 1978. Mail and Telephone Surveys: The Total Design Method. New York: John Wiley & Sons.)(Technical Notes: Establishment of the 1997-1999 Presbyterian Panel)Initial mailings to individuals in all samples began in November 1996 and were completed in January 1997. All individuals received a reminder postcard from the Panel administrator two weeks after the initial mailing, and a month after that, a duplicate questionnaire was sent to persons not responding. Finally, a third reminder with a replacement questionnaire was sent to the remaining non-respondents in the members and clergy samples.Populations"The Panel consists of three samples, each drawn from a separate constituency group, or population with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). The PCUSA includes congregations in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Commonwealth of Puerto Rico." (Technical Notes)Members"The member sample was drawn from the population of all active members of congregations affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)... [However,] elders currently serving on session, members known to be living more than 50 miles from their congregation, and persons unable to complete a mailed survey [were excluded]. At the end of 1995, the total active membership of the PCUSA was 2,665,276. Subtracting the 115,663 active elders, the approximate population for the member sample was 2,549,613." (Technical Notes)Elders"The population of elders is defined as the subset of active members of Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) congregations (1) who both have been ordained to the office of elder by a PCUSA church (or a church affiliated with one of its predecessor denominations) and (2) who are currently serving on the session of a PCUSA congregation." (Technical Notes)Clergy or Ministers of the Word and Sacrament"The population of ministers of the Word and Sacrament is defined as those persons who have been ordained to this office and continue to hold it as members of a presbytery of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). Retired or emeritus ministers are excluded. In 1996, the population of active ministers totaled 14,384." (Technical Notes) Sampling Procedures "Three representative samples were drawn, one from each of the three populations above, using probability techniques.Members"Lacking an exhaustive list of active members of all PCUSA congregations, [the investigators] used a two-stage sampling process, first sampling congregations, then members within each of the sampled congregations. Using proportional stratified sampling, 425 congregations were drawn from the list of 11,366 congregations affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) at the end of 1995. Strata were based on membership size, using increments of 50."Each sampled congregation was sent a form and detailed set of instructions for sampling eight names from the membership. These instructions asked each congregation to number, consecutively, the names of all current active members using a standard list (e.g., in alphabetical or zip code order). Next, they were requested to send the Panel the names, addresses, phone numbers, and other information for the individual members whose numbers in this process corresponded to one of the eight random numbers generated for that congregation by the Panel." (Technical Notes)"� Responses were accepted until early in 1997, although most congregations responded by the end of September. A postcard reminder and second copy of the form and instructions were sent to non-responding congregations on July 8 and August 1, respectively. Because congregations with large racial-ethnic (i.e., non-white or Latino) memberships and those with few total members (<100) were less likely to respond, in September Panel staff phoned all non-responding congregations in these categories to encourage participation. In all, 310 congregations (73%) provided completed forms. Included in this total were 5 (of the 16 sampled) congregations with majority racial-ethnic memberships, and 138 (out of 187 sampled) congregations with no racial-ethnic members."On average, sampled congregations that completed and returned a form listed seven eligible names. The total sample size was 2,163." (Technical Notes)Elders"Elders were sampled from the same 425 congregations drawn for the membership sample. A national list of current elders, based on annual reports by congregations to their presbyteries, is maintained by the Office of the General Assembly. At the time of the sampling (July 1996) this database contained names of elders from 385 of the 425 sampled congregations, and had been recently updated. Random sampling was used to draw (1) 4 names from each of the 385 congregations, then (2) 1 name from half of these congregations, and finally (3) 1 name from one-tenth of these congregations. Once duplicate names were eliminated, the total sample of elders equaled 1,759." (Technical Notes)Clergy or Ministers of the Word and Sacrament"A list of all ordained ministers of the Word and Sacrament is maintained by the Office of the General Assembly, based on reports from stated clerks of presbyteries. A total sample of 2,530 was drawn in three steps. First, all ministers serving as pastors (including associate, interim, stated supply, tentmaker, etc.) at the 425 congregations chosen for the member sample were included (n=666). The rest were then drawn randomly from the remaining list of all active ministers. Finally, the resulting sample was compared with the list of ministers sampled in 1993 for the 1994-1996 Panel, and names appearing on both samples were struck to reduce respondent burden."For most analyses, the ordained minister sample is split into pastors (those serving a congregation) and specialized clergy (those serving in all other settings, both church-related and not). This division is effected from responses to questions on current call asked on the initial survey." (Technical Notes)Response RatesResponse rates in 1996, by sample, were: Members, 63 percent; Elders, 75 percent; Ministers of the Word and Sacrament, 75 percent."A systematic attempt to interview all member non-respondents by telephone provided evidence of partial non-response selectivity in that sample, with more active and involved members being somewhat more likely to complete and return by mail the Panel survey. However, responding and non-responding members were similar in terms of demographic characteristics, �" (Technical Notes) Principal Investigators Research Services, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and John P. Marcum, Panel Administrator Background Report for the 1997-1999 Presbyterian Panel. 1997. Louisville, KY: Research Services, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).Social Justice and Social Welfare: Report for the August 1997 Presbyterian Panel. 1997. Louisville, KY: Research Services, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
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Home > Species-Spanning Medicine Healthy Living Print [1]|Email [2]|Text Size: || Species-Spanning Medicine When it comes to remedying diseases and disorders, dogs and people are in it together By John Woestendiek [3] Call it a movement, a philosophy, a revelation or a revolution. Call it “one medicine,” “one health” or “zoobiquity.” Call it something new, or—given that the “aha” moment on which the concept is based came in the 19th century—call it something old that’s been remembered and repackaged amidst the growing awareness that solving the mysteries of animal diseases and disorders, from injured spinal cords to cancer, can lead to possibly curing our own. Over at least the past five years, there has been a rekindled recognition of the species-spanning nature of diseases, and of the value of species-spanning research. About 75 percent of recently emerging infectious diseases that affect humans have their origins in animals, according to the Centers for Disease Control [4]. On a theoretical level, the concept of “zoobiquity [5],” a term coined in the 2012 book of the same name, suggests that, no matter our species, we’re all in this together, subject to most of the same infirmities, capable of passing a lot of them back and forth, and more likely to find cures and treatments if we look at the big picture—at the earth and all its creatures —as opposed to focusing solely on humans. On a practical level, species-spanning thinking—referred to by various monikers—has led in recent years to veterinary schools reinventing themselves; to a heightened spirit of cooperation between doctors and veterinarians; to new sources of funding for research; and to the realization that, when it comes to diseases shared by humans and animals, the latter may provide a quicker and less expensive route to a cure for all. Where do dogs fit in? Right at the top. No other animal—if not physiologically, at least in terms of sharing our genetic markers and our home environment—is as close to us. That’s why Texas A&M veterinarians and University of California, San Francisco, medical researchers have teamed up to study spinal problems in Dachshunds [6] and other dwarf breeds and to test a new drug that blocks secondary infections. The research, which is funded by the Department of Defense, has potential application to battlefield injuries That’s why, in New York, veterinarians with the Animal Medical Center have joined forces with physicians and researchers at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center to set up trials in which electrical impulses are used to treat tumors of the urinary tract in canines, with an eye toward possible human application. That’s why the Mayo Clinic has partnered with two veterinary schools, a medical school and a private corporation to study the effectiveness of a device aimed at predicting and controlling epileptic seizures in both dogs and humans. While traditionally, research into canine epilepsy has been funded primarily by the American Kennel Club’s Canine Health Foundation and breed clubs, the Mayo Clinic collaboration received a $7.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. That’s why Tobi, a paralyzed Golden Retriever, is getting stem-cell treatments [7] that may help him walk again as part of a clinical trial headed by Dr. Natasha Olby, veterinarian and neurologist at North Carolina State University’s (NCSU) College of Veterinary Medicine. The trial will involve as many as 30 dogs over three years. And that’s why Peggy, a Chihuahua from Albuquerque who was born with three legs, is being outfitted with a “bionic” paw at NCSU [8]. Implanting the prosthetic device, which will have electrodes that connect to her nerves, will allow her to run and scratch, and could add to the growing use of comparable technology in humans. Similarities between dogs and humans, especially when it comes to genes, are also the basis for Dr. Matthew Breen’s research into the most common cancer in dogs, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, at NCSU’s College of Veterinary Medicine. Breen and fellow researchers have, with help from the canine genome map, developed a test that can accurately predict how long a dog treated with chemotherapy will remain in remission. In collaboration with the Mayo Clinic and others, they’re in the process of converting the canine test to a human one. “If that happens, it will be big news,” says Breen, a geneticist and professor of genomics. Breen lost his first dog to cancer when he was 12 and, as an adult, played a role in the mapping of the canine genome—a game-changing achievement that helped place dogs front and center when it comes to health research. “It’s likely that we will learn more about cancer by looking at what happens in our dogs over the next five to 10 years than we will in the next 20 to 30 of looking solely at cancer in people,” he predicts. But the key, he emphasizes, is looking at both at the same time. “If we consider dogs as dogs, we’ll be able to do so much. If we consider people as people, we’ll do so much. But if we consider them both as mammals, and look at what’s common between them, we will find some intriguing answers.” The possibilities extend well beyond non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and well beyond cancer. Dogs, long our antidote for loneliness, may hold the most promise of all animals when it comes to solving medical mysteries and curing what ails us. “The answer to some of nature’s puzzles about genetics and disease,” Breen says, “has been walking right beside us for the last few hundred years.” In reality, we’ve been turning to dogs for thousands of years, sometimes quite cruelly, to try to solve our human ills: from the time of Aristotle, who conducted experiments on live animals, and the era of Galen, whose second-century experiments earned him the title “the father of vivisection,” to the period of Pavlov, whose 19th-century experiments included severing the esophagi of living dogs to better study their digestion and, as a sideline, bottling and selling their gastric juices to the public as a cure for dyspepsia. Many of the medical treatments we now take for granted were either discovered through the use of dogs or tried on dogs first. In England during the 1600s, the first administration of medication intravenously was accomplished in a dog, via tubes and a pouch made of an animal bladder. In the 1920s, experiments on dogs led to Frederick Banting’s discovery of insulin. Banting and fellow researcher Charles Best surgically stopped the flow of nourishment to a dog’s pancreas and, after it degenerated, removed it, sliced it up, froze the pieces then ground them up. They named the extract “isletin.” When it was injected into another dog in which they’d induced diabetes, the dog’s blood glucose level dropped. In the 1960s—long before they were ever slipped into clogged human arteries—stents were inserted into those of dogs. When a ballooning version was developed in the 1980s, it too was first tested on dogs. Currently, as humans wait to take full advantage of its purported promise, stem-cell therapy is becoming more common—though expensive, at around $2,500 per treatment—in treating dogs with arthritis, hip dysplasia and spinal-cord injuries. Removing, treating and reinjecting stem cells (and even differentiated cells) have led to some miraculous recoveries. Dogs may have access to novel cures and treatments yet to be made widely available to humans, but there’s a trade-off. They are still, in a way, being used as guinea pigs. The difference is—compared to Pavlov’s day, compared to some of the unsavory experimentation on dogs that still goes on—they’re not healthy dogs, or dogs in whom diseases have been induced. Most often, they’re patients, sick dogs who have run out of alternatives and whose owners have enrolled them in clinical trials in hopes of, if not curing their own pet, furthering research that might help other dogs. The canine cancer samples from around the country that end up in Breen’s lab come from willing donors, or at least willing owners, many of whom see contributing to such research as a way their dogs can leave a lasting mark. “By providing that data point, it’s almost a legacy for their own dog,” Breen says. “Every dog we recruit, we ask the owner for a picture to put on our wall of honor. We have hundreds and hundreds of pictures of dogs. It helps ground people in the lab, and makes them realize what they’re dealing with is not just a piece of tissue but somebody’s beloved companion that needs to be treated with the same kind of respect.” Under microscopes, Breen studies chromosomal changes within cancer cells, changes that have been shown to duplicate those that occur in humans. “If we look at what overlaps, it’s those shared genes that highlight the major drivers in the cancer process,” he says. The aberration of particular chromosomes allows Breen to identify which therapies will offer maximum survival chances. In lymphoma cases, up to 90 percent of dogs respond to chemotherapy and go into remission, but only about half live longer than nine months. By looking at the genetic differences between the dogs who survive for short times and those who survive longer, Breen’s team has developed a test that determines how long a dog will stay in remission; this test will, it is hoped, eventually be available for use with humans. Experts estimate that one in four dogs will develop cancer in their lifetime. About 50 percent of those over age 10 will die from it. The types, incidence and outcomes aren’t always identical to those in humans, but even in those differences, other clues and opportunities may be found. Bone cancer, or osteosarcoma, for example, affects a whopping 60,000 dogs a year. In humans, there are only about 900 cases a year and, as a result, its research has never received the kind of funding awarded to work being done on more widespread cancers. By looking at the disease itself, as opposed to its effect on a singular species, some less high-profile diseases (in humans) can get more attention, and progress can be made more quickly, Breen says. “We ignore whether it’s in dogs or people, focus on the cancer and get to the biology faster.” Down the road, such research might keep someone else from hearing those five fateful words Breen remembers hearing as a child, when his own Border Collie cross was stricken with cancer: “There’s nothing we can do.” Rudolph Virchow, though he wasn’t credited for it in his lifetime, is considered the father of “one medicine.” The 19th-century pathologist coined the term “zoonosis” and created the field of comparative pathology. “Between animal and human medicine there is no dividing line—nor should there be,” he said. “The object is different but the experience obtained constitutes the basis of all medicine.” Two centuries later, a variety of factors breathed new life into his old idea. Recently identified zoonotic diseases, like swine and avian flus and West Nile virus, became major public health concerns. At the same time, dissatisfaction was mounting with research studies involving mice, primarily because their findings often weren’t transferable to humans. There was a growing recognition that all animals, both wild and domestic, serve—like the canaries once used in British mines—as sentries for environmental hazards. Dogs, while at the forefront of much modern research, also played a large role in reviving the species-spanning way of thinking. On top of the tremendous diagnostic and research value it held for dogs, the successful completion of the canine genome map in 2005 showed how similar dog genes are to our own. It also reinforced how much more quickly canine health research can progress. Mapping the sequence of the canine genome cost about $50 million and took one year, while mapping the humane genome cost more than $3 billion over 15 years. It was one year after that benchmark, in 2006, that the American Medical Association and the American Veterinary Medical Association issued a joint declaration encouraging more partnerships and information sharing between the two branches of medicine. For far too long, doctors of human medicine and doctors of veterinary medicine—and researchers in the two fields—operated on separate planes. By coming together and sharing their findings, proponents of one medicine held, new opportunities could be realized and new cures, possibly, found. To those involved with treating and researching animal diseases, the increased respect from those in the world of human medical research is palpable. Dr. Jorge A. Piedrahita, geneticist and professor in the Department of Molecular Biomedical Sciences at NCSU’s College of Veterinary Medicine, remembers a time when overtures from the veterinary medical community to the human one would result in “blank stares, as if they were thinking, What would we want with you?” “The human medicine field in the past has looked at us [veterinary schools] as technicians,” he says. “They came to us if they needed a pig or a dog, but they never saw us as partners. Now we sit with them really as equals.” Piedrahita serves as director of the Center for Comparative Medicine and Translational Research, which was created seven years ago. Based at NCSU, one of the first vet schools in the country to fully jump on the one-medicine bandwagon, the center includes 116 researchers at five colleges. The thinking behind the center, he says, is “if we help one species, we’re helping all of them.” Since then, Piedrahita says, the road between veterinary practitioners and doctors has become much more of a two-way street. “There have been an amazing number of new interactions, and we’re still a very young center. It’s really becoming almost like a partnership.” Doctors and vets are not the only two cultures the movement has brought closer together, he notes. It has also led to “increased sharing between clinicians, or those working with patients, and researchers, who are confined to labs.” The result, he says, is faster and more efficient research, capable of reaching solutions sooner. Breen’s cancer research is one example of that. Another is a project Piedrahita is involved with in conjunction with Wake Forest University’s Center for Regenerative Medicine, which is seeking a solution to urinary incontinence. While it’s a significant issue for women, especially elderly ones, one might not think that dogs—generally a less-prone-to-embarrassment species—would rank it too high, even the spayed ones, in which it is most common. Piedrahita is quick to correct that thinking. “It’s a very big deal,” he says. “It’s the reason many of them end up in shelters, or being returned to shelters. For the dog, it may not be that big of a deal, but for the owner, it is.” Throw in its human applications, and it becomes even bigger. Using cells from the patient—for now, canine patients—the treatment involves reinjecting cells, usually taken from a leg muscle, into the urethral sphincter itself, where they regenerate and build new muscle. The project has received funding from the American Kennel Club’s Canine Health Foundation, and clinical trials involving as many as 40 dogs were expected to begin in January. Of all the microscopic matters detected in a typical veterinary research lab, irony is not usually among them. But here’s one that has surfaced. Among purebreds, breeding for certain traits, and to get a certain look—most often accomplished by using dogs who are closely related—has led to recessive disorders, more than those found in any other animal except humans. It’s believed to be why Boxers are prone to mast-cell cancer and brain tumors, Scottish Terriers to bladder cancer, and Bernese Mountain Dogs to histiocytic sarcoma. It’s why one in five Golden Retrievers is diagnosed with hemangiosarcoma. But the limited genetic diversity that has led to cancer-causing mutations in many purebreds is also what has led to dogs becoming such a valuable tool in studying disease. Breen compares it to tuning in a radio station. With the dog genome, there’s none of the noise and static from competing frequencies—just a clear signal. Pointing fingers is useless, Breen says. “I don’t blame anybody.” But he’s among the first to admit that limiting the gene pool has made purebred dogs “a very powerful tool for simplifying genetics.” With their “less noisy” genetic make-up, purebred dogs offer a speedier research route. It takes thousands of human patients with cancer to identify risk factors, he notes, but the same can be accomplished with as few as 100 canine patients. In the book Zoobiquity: What Animals Can Teach Us about Health and the Science of Healing, Barbara Natterson-Horowitz, a cardiologist who consults with the Los Angeles Zoo, delves into the many sicknesses we share with animals. (Editor’s note: For a review of Zoobiquity [9], see the October 2012 issue of Bark.) Co-authored by Kathryn Bowers, the book points out that not only humans get breast cancer, but kangaroos, beluga whales, wallabies and sea lions—to name a few—do as well. Rhinos get skin cancer; gorillas get depressed; horses suffer from erectile dysfunction; and sexually transmitted diseases plague the non-human world as well, from syphilis in rabbits to chlamydia in koalas. By looking at the big picture, we’re likely to further our understanding of species-spanning diseases, of the planet and of the environmental factors that contribute to ill health. Two annual conferences on zoobiquity have urged medical practitioners to do just that. In terms of the latter, dogs, once again, serve as prime examples and perfect models. They sleep in our beds, share our food, lie on our flame-retardant-treated couches and frolic on our insecticide-treated lawns. When we go for a walk, it’s usually with them at our sides or pulling us along behind them. They may soon lead the way in science as well, as rodents take a back seat when it comes to research examining the role environmental factors, such as secondhand smoke and household chemicals, play in causing disease. While much of it was going on years before the AMA-AVMA declaration was announced or the term “zoobiquity” was coined, research involving dogs (and cats) is increasingly looking at the link between pollutants and cancer. On top of the fact that the canine genome is 80 to 90 percent similar to that of the human, dogs are constantly at our sides, making them perfect candidates for studying not just cures but also, causes. Since dogs are such accessible and efficient, not to mention friendly, models, the question arises (or at least ought to): should one health/one medicine/zoobiquity—and more particularly, the view of dogs and other animals as sources of solution to our own diseases—raise animal welfare concerns? Despite their all-inclusive, holistic and harmonious sounding names, none of the calls for a species-spanning approach to medicine state that all animals are our equals, or that their value parallels that of humans. Only that they get many of the same diseases we do. As cures come closer and as dogs are increasingly seen as the road to such cures, could our zeal lead to what animal-welfare advocates might see as reckless driving? The book Zoobiquity points out that in virtually all of the examples it uses, animals involved in the research were already sick. When, on ABC’s “Nightline,” Natterson-Horowitz was asked if the concept could lead to testing on healthy animals—if the Hippocratic Oath of “do no harm” should apply, for instance, to hippos—she replied, “I can’t give you a simple answer, because it’s a very complicated, nuanced question.” Breen, for his part, doesn’t hesitate. “We don’t induce cancers in dogs. The key issue about cancers, and many genetic diseases in our dogs, is that these are all spontaneous conditions … All the dogs in our study are part of a family, sharing their homes and their lives. The path to discovery involving cancer and our dogs is one we walk along side-by-side with the owners. “We have access to state-of-the-art technologies to ask key questions, but these are worthless without the willingness of the dog-owning community to collaborate by submitting cancer specimens from their dogs. By building a strong relationship with pet owners, and realizing that their pets are like family members, like a child … it actually means the chances of ever inducing disease are less. I just can’t see it happening; it wouldn’t happen in my lab, let’s put it that way.” Breen’s bigger fear, when comes to biomedical research, “is that all this will raise people’s hopes too high and too soon.” That applies to the owners of afflicted pets as well as those who are afflicted themselves, or have human loved ones suffering from a disease. We’re eager to find cures. Dogs, being such perfect models for study, provide what may be one of the quickest routes to them. While a resurgence in the use of otherwise healthy dogs in intrusive experiments isn’t likely, the future (which seems to be getting here faster and faster) isn’t crystal clear. This much is, however: fairly early in their domestication—and in what was perhaps one key component leading to it—dogs exhibited their ability to stand sentry, to serve humans by warding off dangerous, life-threatening intruders. In a way, thousands of years later, they’re doing it again. Print [1]|Email [2] This article first appeared in The Bark, Issue 73: Spring 2013John Woestendiek is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, editor of the website Ohmidog! and author of Dog, Inc.: How a Collection of Visionaries, Rebels, Eccentrics and Their Pets Launched the Commercial Dog Cloning Industry. ohmidog.com [10] Photograph by Wendy Savage, North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine Illustrations by Tim Carpenter Source URL (retrieved on 4/16/2014): http://thebark.com/content/species-spanning-medicine?page=show Links:[1] http://thebark.com/print/5517?page=show [2] http://thebark.com/printmail/5517?page=show [3] http://thebark.com/category/author/john-woestendiek [4] http://www.cdc.gov/globalhealth/countries/nigeria/what/zoo.htm [5] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0307593487/thebark [6] http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2012/01/11318/saving-dogs-spinal-cord-injuries [7] http://www.ncsu.edu/features/2012/02/stem-cell-therapies-for-paralyzed-pooches/ [8] http://www.koat.com/news/new-mexico/albuquerque/Albuquerque-Chihuahua-to-get-bionic-paw/-/9153728/17713080/-/a8ww6fz/-/index.html [9] http://thebark.com/content/zoobiquity-what-animals-can-teach-us-about-health-and-science-healing [10] http://www.ohmidog.com/
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Thursday, February 7, 2013 at 3:47 pm BBPW Raises Money for Local Charities post by Ann Winters in BPW, genesee county community services More than 60 members and guests attended the Batavia Business and Professional Women’s Club annual “Cookie Auction” held during their December meeting. This bake good sale raises money for local charities. BBPW members bake, make, and buy the most delectable sweets and treats for auction. Assorted Christmas crafts are also donated and auctioned off to fellow members and guests. This year’s auction was held at Saint James Church in Batavia who provided a wonderful chicken and biscuits dinner. The auction was presided over by member and volunteer auctioneer Catherine Johnson (shown in the picture) with assistance from member’s daughters. One by one the dozens of auction items went to individuals who often opened them immediately to share a tasty desert with others at their table. Service awards will be selected by the club at the May meeting but any Genesee County Service organization may request to be considered by sending a short letter requesting to be considered for our service award on service group letter head to: Batavia Business and Professional Women’s’ Club, Service Award, PO Box 1778, Batavia, New York 14020. Post marked and deadline April 20, 2013. The BBPW has existed for more than 90 years. Besides supporting local charities, it raises money for scholarships to high school, BOCES and Genesee Community College students. It also offers volunteer assistance to local community civic organizations and groups. The Club meets for dinner 10 times a year on the first Thursday of the month. Membership is open to working women who desire to serve their communities. If interested please contact President Joan Post at 356-4617. For further information access the BBPW website at bataviaBPW.wordpress.com or send us an email at bataviabpw@gmail.com
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Choices Closer Farther You are hereHome › Roundtables › Development and Disarmament Roundtable › Highly enriched uranium: Less is more Development and Disarmament RoundtableWhat's This?xExperts from emerging and developing countries debate crucial, timely topics related to nuclear energy, nuclear proliferation, and economic development. Each author contributes an essay per round, for a total of nine essays for the entire Roundtable. This feature was made possible by a three-year grant from the Norwegian Foreign Ministry. ddroundtable.png Highly enriched uranium: Less is more A number of high-profile initiatives seek to reduce the possibility of nuclear proliferation and terrorism by minimizing the use of highly enriched uranium (HEU) in civilian applications. Operators of research reactors understand the rationale for reducing HEU use, but converting to low-enriched uranium can involve serious financial, technical, and political challenges -- all of which may seem more vivid to the manager of a research reactor than to faraway bureaucrats and nonproliferation specialists. In this Roundtable, Charles Piani of South Africa, Pablo Cristini of Argentina, and Alexandr Vurim of Kazakhstan share their experience of minimization and answer the question: "How might developed countries best incentivize HEU-minimization programs in the emerging and developing worlds?" 02/05/2013 - 05:25Minimizing danger, maximizing headachesCharles Piani 02/06/2013 - 05:40How to dispense with highly enriched uranium Pablo Cristini 02/07/2013 - 05:35Conversion in Kazakhstan: A multiplayer gameAlexandr Vurim 02/14/2013 - 07:16Better to control than eliminate?Charles Piani 02/21/2013 - 04:52Conversion to LEU: Petals and thornsPablo Cristini 02/28/2013 - 06:45Minimization at any cost?Alexandr Vurim 03/07/2013 - 11:43Eating the elephantCharles Piani 03/25/2013 - 13:16Difficult, but worth itPablo Cristini 03/25/2013 - 13:19Taking a fresh lookAlexandr Vurim español | 简体中文 | العربية Controlling access to fissile material is among the most important measures that can be taken to prevent nuclear weapons proliferation, and it is widely recognized that highly enriched uranium (HEU) poses proliferation threats whether it is used in military or civilian applications. This accounts for the international drive to favor low-enriched uranium (LEU) over highly enriched uranium. But what challenges face developing countries that elect to pursue HEU minimization? In the developing world, highly enriched uranium is put to two uses that are relevant to minimization initiatives: as fuel for research reactors that have not yet been, or cannot be, converted to LEU, and as targets that bear fissionable uranium for the production of medical radioisotopes. (Two other uses may come under discussion in the future: fuel for naval reactors and fuel for fast reactors.) Organizations that promote conversion to low-enriched uranium, such as the US National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), sometimes employ a carrot-and-stick approach to encourage developing nations to convert. As a stick, these organizations might brandish the idea that developing countries will lose their supplies of enriched uranium if they don't convert to LEU. As a carrot, they might offer developing nations support for research and development initiatives or the chance to export radioisotopes. Many developing countries, in response to political pressure or commercial restrictions, and in an effort to be internationally cooperative, are attempting to reduce their use of HEU as much as is feasible. A complication for developing-world research reactors, however, is that facility managers often face pressure to reduce stakeholder costs -- and conversion to LEU, whether for fuel or targets, carries significant financial implications. Costs too high? Several research reactors that use highly enriched uranium as fuel face no urgency to convert to LEU -- they have on hand sufficient fuel inventories for many operational cycles. But for reactors that do require fresh supplies of fuel, a twofold question presents itself: Can the reactor feasibly be converted to LEU; and can conversion be carried out in an efficient, economical way? If management does decide to convert, it must find suitable financial support to ensure that the transition to LEU is smooth, guaranteeing the facility's operational sustainability. Converting to LEU targets for the production of medical radioisotopes presents a different set of issues. Radioisotope production is a major international industry; molybdenum 99 and more particularly its decay product technetium 99 (a metastable medical isotope) play a role in about 30 million patient applications per year. Historically, the industry has been based on irradiating HEU-bearing targets (often uranium 235 enriched to more than 90 percent). Converting to LEU targets requires that the target's uranium content be increased by a factor of two or more. This presents a technical challenge. In addition, if production of radioisotopes is to remain constant, more targets are required and larger volumes of waste are produced. Another obstacle is that converting facilities to LEU, whether it is fuel or targets undergoing conversion, often requires a lead time of several years, during which nuclear licenses and permission to engage in medical applications must be updated. All of this implies substantial up-front costs, to be borne either by the reactor or its isotope producer, or by a major stakeholder (for example, the government). In addition, research reactors and isotope production facilities must concern themselves with loss of sales during any changeover, meaning that conversion often needs to be carried out even as existing production processes continue. This has significant implications for capacity and costs. For research reactors in the developing world that are faced with these issues, financial options are often limited. They can seek assistance from supportive stakeholders like the government. They can try to manage with the funding that is available from commercial isotope production. Or, when it is available, they can seek assistance from developed countries -- incentives. (The best results are often achieved by combining all three of these methods.) Significant technical and financial assistance from developed countries has come through, among other sources, the US Energy Department and the NNSA initiative known as the Reduced Enrichment for Research and Test Reactors Program (RERTR), as well as the Russian Research Reactor Fuel Return Program; both of these have received substantial organizational and financial support from the IAEA. Limit too low? Often, when developed and developing countries discuss HEU minimization, the first issue on the agenda is converting reactors to low-enriched uranium. The second is timely removal and disposal of nuclear materials from facilities that no longer use these materials. To assist in reactor conversion, developed countries often provide subsidized computational evaluations of the feasibility of operating reactors using LEU and of expected increases in costs for producing isotopes after conversion. Removal and disposal of nuclear materials raise issues including the secure storage of used fissile materials until they can be suitably processed or repatriated. Significant progress has been made in recent years regarding the return of used fissile material from research reactors to the United States and Russia, but problems remain -- like how to repatriate residual materials associated with fuel that did not originate in the United States or Russia. In addition, the Gap Material Program, an initiative of the US Global Threat Reduction Initiative that is intended to address high-risk materials not addressed through other programs, seems to be stagnating. All this aside, the question posed in this Roundtable -- "How might developed countries best incentivize HEU minimization programs in the emerging and developing worlds?" -- begs that the term "HEU minimization" be clarified. The entire drive for HEU minimization is related to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and to efforts by nearly 200 signatory nations to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. Minimizing the use of HEU in civilian applications is a natural outgrowth of the treaty. But despite regular discussions on the issue, no universal consensus exists regarding what HEU minimization, as opposed to HEU elimination, is. Moreover, considerable skepticism surrounds the idea that all levels of HEU utilization represent a real proliferation problem. By definition, HEU has more than 20 percent concentrated uranium 235; LEU is less than 20 percent concentrated uranium 235. I present a question here, perhaps confrontational but nonetheless deserving consideration: Why can't the cut-off for LEU be raised to something greater than 20 percent, in order to help research reactors around the developing world overcome the technological and financial challenges they face in the conversion process? español | 简体中文 | العربية About 85 percent of all diagnostic nuclear medical procedures, amounting to 30 million procedures a year, utilize technetium 99, a metastable medical isotope. This is the decay product of molybdenum 99, which is considered the most important radioisotope employed in nuclear medicine. Molybdenum 99 can be produced in several ways, but the most efficient means for medical applications is the fission route -- using thermal neutrons produced in a nuclear reactor to irradiate targets that contain uranium. This results in the splitting (or fission) of uranium atoms into various stable and radioactive isotopes, one of them being molybdenum 99. This isotope is ultimately transported to manufacturers of technetium 99 generators, which deliver the generators to nuclear medicine centers. There, technetium 99 is employed to label molecules for use in diagnostic procedures. Either highly enriched uranium (HEU) or low-enriched uranium (LEU) can be used as the target (the material at which neutrons are fired to induce fission in the reactor core). Use of HEU carries inherent risks for nuclear proliferation and terrorism. Using LEU reduces these risks significantly. High to low. Argentina's National Atomic Energy Commission (CNEA), which is responsible for carrying out nuclear research and development and also for applications and services like radioisotope production, began producing molybdenum 99 in 1985, using targets enriched to more than 90 percent in the isotope 235. During 1988 and 1989, the commission's RA-3 reactor -- then as now the most important reactor in Latin America for producing radioisotopes -- was converted to rely on LEU fuel in order to address international proliferation concerns. The next step in HEU minimization was to develop a procedure for molybdenum production using low-enriched uranium targets. The first challenge was to develop a suitable LEU target that would yield at least as much molybdenum as was obtained using the HEU target. Toward that end, a joint project was carried out by the groups at CNEA responsible for fuel elements, target manufacturing, and chemical processing of targets for separation and purification of molybdenum. Several uranium compounds were tested until, finally, an LEU target was developed with geometry similar to that of the former HEU target but with higher uranium content. To begin using these new targets, several changes were required in the facility's separation and purification processes, but only slight modifications in infrastructure were needed. In 2002, commercial production of molybdenum 99 from LEU targets began. The entire conversion project had been carried out by the commission's staff, with no external technical or financial support. Today, CNEA produces high-quality molybdenum 99 that meets all of Argentina's demand and one-third of Brazil's. Additionally, around 15 percent of the molybdenum 99 produced is exported to the Latin American region beyond Brazil in the form of technetium 99 generators. The Argentine experience with conversion from HEU to LEU has often been presented internationally as evidence that conversion is technically and economically feasible. Examples include a 2009 study mandated by the US Congress, "Medical Isotope Production without Highly Enriched Uranium"; the publications of the High-Level Group on Security of Supply of Medical Radioisotopes, an initiative that addresses global supply issues and also conversion to LEU targets in fission radioisotope production; and the US Energy Department program known as Reduced Enrichment for Research and Test Reactors. CNEA's current efforts to build a new research and production reactor, as well as a new fission radioisotope production plant with a higher capacity, will help increase the availability of medical radioisotopes produced with LEU targets. This will help avert supply crises for technetium 99 -- in 2009, problems at a Canadian technetium facility helped spark such a crisis -- and will also contribute to the global initiative for minimization of highly enriched uranium. Encouraging conversion. International efforts to minimize the use of HEU in the civilian sector are moving in the right direction. Several initiatives mentioned above are powerful instruments for publicizing the feasibility and importance of conversion to LEU; so are efforts by the International Atomic Energy Agency to coordinate meetings and establish research projects on this subject. On a national level, countries with a strong demand for fission molybdenum products should demonstrate a preference for suppliers that use LEU and impose restrictions on products based on HEU. CNEA has contributed strongly to the conversion process -- not only by converting its RA-3 and RA-6 reactor cores and its molybdenum 99 production process to LEU, but also by successfully transferring to entities abroad its LEU production technology. These include the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation and the Atomic Energy Authority of Egypt. Taken together, national and multilateral efforts are helping to create a better understanding of the importance of eliminating HEU in civilian applications. This contributes to making the world a safer place. español | 简体中文 | العربية International initiatives to reduce the use of highly enriched uranium (HEU) deserve unconditional support, but conversion to low-enriched uranium (LEU) is often a difficult project. Research reactors employ a variety of designs and are used for wide-ranging purposes, and different countries have different views on how conversion should be accomplished. In my own nation of Kazakhstan, preliminary plans are in place to convert three research reactors to LEU fuel. But progress has not been as fast as it might have been. Why? To answer this, one must understand the bureaucracy surrounding Kazakhstan's research reactors, all of which are owned and operated by government entities. Two of the country's four research reactors, known as IVG and IGR, are owned by the National Nuclear Center and operated by one of the center's divisions, the Institute of Atomic Energy, which is also my employer. A third reactor is owned by the Institute of Nuclear Physics, which is separate from the National Nuclear Center. A fourth reactor is in extended shutdown, with its fuel unloaded, and is of no interest from a conversion perspective. Conversion to LEU must be approved by two government bodies -- the Atomic Energy Agency, which regulates reactors and oversees issues like licensing and safety, and also the Ministry of Industry and New Technologies. The ministry has given its approval for conversion at the IVG and IGR reactors. But the Atomic Energy Agency (soon to be reorganized as the Committee of Atomic Energy) has not. The agency will only give its approval for conversion if the facilities' chief designer and research manager approve changes to the reactors; Kazakh laws and regulations require, for decisions such as LEU conversion, the involvement of each reactor's chief designer and research manager. And here things get even more complicated, because the reactors' chief designer and research manager are not Kazakh entities. Rather, because of the reactors' Soviet origins, they are government-owned Russian entities that now play a minimal role in the reactors' operation. More to the point, the actions of the chief designer and research manager have, up until now, not been coordinated by any single entity in Russia, leaving the Institute of Atomic Energy to coordinate among them. But it is beyond the institute's capacity to coordinate the actions of entities in another country. It is useful here to recall the organizational structure that was utilized when research reactors were first established in Kazakhstan. All work was carried out under the unified leadership of the Soviet ministry in charge of nuclear science, energy, and industry. The research manager, chief designer, and operating organization were all part of this ministry, and were connected to one another through a clear set of obligations and responsibilities. This system of interaction helped create the most advanced scientific and industrial sector in the Soviet Union, and one of the most advanced nuclear power industries in the world. Unfortunately, the Kazakh government in general, not to mention the Institute of Atomic Energy itself, lacks the capabilities that the former Soviet ministry possessed. Faced with all this, representatives of the Global Threat Reduction Initiative, a US project involved in HEU minimization, have attempted to engage with yet another entity, the Russian manufacturer of the reactors' fuel. The idea is that the fuel provider could develop an LEU fuel that would enable the reactors to convert. But this, though it might solve some technical problems, would not solve the bureaucratic problems. The full involvement of the chief designer and research manager would still be required. The Institute of Atomic Energy is now attempting to circumvent these problems by negotiating with the reactors' fuel provider, in the hope that the fuel provider will take responsibility for coordinating among all Russian entities involved. Indeed, at the Kazakh research reactor operated by the Institute of Nuclear Physics, the conversion effort is proceeding more smoothly, precisely because a Russian, state-owned fuel producer is coordinating among all the relevant Russian entities. The ideal solution for Kazakhstan's conversion process might have been for representatives of the US government to liaise more with officials in Russia, encouraging the Russian government to take a real interest in the work -- to take responsibility for all aspects of the conversion process that involve the competencies of the Russian research manager, chief designer, and fuel manufacturer. In the end, conversion may go forward without that sort of intergovernmental cooperation. But in any event, the Kazakh conversion experience provides an example of the problems that reactors can face while attempting to minimize their use of highly enriched uranium. español | 简体中文 | العربية My colleagues, in their first-round essays, described quite different experiences of converting research reactors, or attempting to convert them, to low-enriched uranium (LEU) from highly enriched uranium (HEU). Pablo Cristini's account of conversion in Argentina is representative of a situation in which a developing country possesses the independent ability to convert a reactor to LEU: Local expertise is sufficient to carry out the project, and the nation's government offers adequate support. Alexandr Vurim's essay on conversion in Kazakhstan presents a situation in which a nuclear facility is willing to undergo conversion but restrictions of a national or international nature may prevent it from doing so. Obstacles such as those faced in Kazakhstan can be very difficult to surmount unless decision makers become convinced of conversion's benefits. South Africa's experience with conversion to LEU at its SAFARI-1 research reactor is more similar to the Argentine than the Kazakh situation. In South Africa, as in Argentina, it was possible to address all technical issues on a local level, and South African conversion efforts benefitted from strong governmental cooperation in the legal and regulatory realms. Financial circumstances in the two countries, however, appear to have been quite different. To begin with, South Africa's exports of molybdenum 99 are significantly larger than Argentina's, so commercial considerations played a very large role in South Africa's deliberations. Also, though the nation's energy department provided significant funding for conversion, South Africa also welcomed US assistance in research and development. This came in the form of evaluating local processes for manufacturing LEU products and providing suggestions for improvement, as well as in performing theoretical computations regarding fuel and target plate efficiencies. (This help was provided by, for example, Argonne National Laboratory.) There is, however, a continuing problem. SAFARI-1 completed its conversion to LEU fuel in 2009 and LEU targets in 2010, but regulatory authorities have not yet authorized the South African Nuclear Energy Corporation's HEU fuel and target manufacturing facilities to begin producing LEU versions. Thus, the nuclear energy corporation currently must import LEU plates for targets and for fuel and control rod assemblies. This represents a commercially undesirable loss of self-sufficiency. Not so convincing. As I discussed in my first essay, research reactors in the developing world face a complex set of considerations when deciding whether to convert to LEU, and facilities at which HEU fuel and targets remain available will in some cases continue to delay conversion, unless very strong international persuasion is brought to bear. Reactors can be offered help in exporting radioisotopes, and decision makers understand this sort of commercial incentive readily enough. But less convincing at times are the nonproliferation arguments that developed countries employ in favor of conversion. This is especially true when converting a reactor would be very difficult. An example (admittedly not in the developing world) is Germany's Forschungsreaktor Munchen-II. There, conversion appears impossible unless difficult technical issues involving fuel density can be overcome. When obstacles of this sort complicate reactor conversions, surely it becomes appropriate to take into consideration the security systems that a nation employs for its nuclear material, rather than attempting to force conversion in all cases. Also, a question that I posed in my first essay is relevant here: Why can't the cut-off between low-enriched and highly enriched uranium be increased to something greater than 20 percent uranium 235? In my view, an enrichment level of 30 percent would be quite safe from a nonproliferation perspective. Additional questions present themselves. What constitutes effective HEU minimization to begin with? How much HEU, in the possession of a particular country or facility, is considered unacceptable? How is that question answered when the fuel is fresh, and how is it answered when the fuel is spent? And wouldn't developed countries contribute more to nonproliferation by focusing their efforts and funding on adequately controlling highly enriched uranium -- whether at their own facilities or at more risk-prone facilities in the developing world -- than by attempting to eliminate all uranium enriched above a particular threshold? español | 简体中文 | العربية As the essays published in this Roundtable so far have established, converting research reactors and fission radioisotope production facilities to the use of low-enriched uranium (LEU) can involve a number of difficult challenges. Some are purely technical, some are financial, and others, as is often the case with medical isotopes, are related to safety and medical regulations. Experience has shown that technical challenges to conversion at facilities producing molybdenum 99 can usually be overcome. Facilities using targets based on highly enriched uranium (HEU) often have the independent expertise to develop new LEU-based processing methods or to adapt their existing HEU processes. Where sufficient expertise is lacking, projects like the Global Threat Reduction Initiative may provide assistance that enables conversion to proceed. In some cases, financial challenges are larger than technical ones. These challenges are best overcome when every stakeholder in the fission radioisotope supply chain becomes convinced that conversion is highly important to global security. Convincing everyone of this can be difficult in itself, as the supply chain contains numerous links: manufacturers of uranium targets, research reactors themselves, processors of molybdenum 99, manufacturers and distributors of technetium 99 generators, and nuclear medicine centers. But gaining the cooperation of all these stakeholders -- as well as that of local governments and international minimization initiatives -- seems the most satisfactory way to finance the costs of conversion. Alexandr Vurim's first Roundtable essay describes a situation in which regulatory issues are paramount to the success of a research reactor's conversion process; indeed, regulation plays a large role in many conversion scenarios. Gaining regulatory approval for LEU conversion can take a long time (and it can take even longer for new facilities). Also, partly for regulatory reasons, facilities undergoing conversion may need to maintain parallel production processes for a while -- the existing HEU process to produce medical radioisotopes until conversion is complete, and an LEU process that, as it is being refined, provides a demonstration for regulatory authorities. So far I have mostly discussed facilities that are already in operation. But I believe it is clearly desirable that newcomers to fission radioisotope production use LEU targets from the very beginning, even if HEU is produced locally. Some new producers will be able to develop LEU-based processing methods on their own; if not, they can draw on programs such as a project of the International Atomic Energy Agency known as Small-Scale Indigenous Production of [Molybdenum 99] Using LEU Targets or Neutron Activation, which has been useful for some countries embarking on small-scale production of molybdenum 99. Or, as Australia and Egypt have done, nations may import LEU-based technology directly from a country like Argentina. Defining the cut-off. My colleague Charles Piani has asked why the cut-off between low-enriched and highly enriched uranium can't be increased to something greater than 20 percent uranium 235, and he suggests that 30 percent might be a more reasonable dividing line. Others have raised the same issue -- after all, cut-offs are often somewhat arbitrary. And from the perspective of some research reactors, economic factors argue for a cut-off higher than 20 percent. I believe, however, that the 20-percent limit makes sense. Alexander Glaser, a Princeton University professor and a member of the Bulletin's Science and Security Board, has argued, in effect, that the existing definition represents a good compromise between competing nonproliferation imperatives. That is, when research reactors use uranium enriched to higher levels, uranium-based proliferation risks grow, in the sense that diversion or theft represents a greater security concern; but when facilities use uranium enriched to lower levels, plutonium-based proliferation risks grow (larger amounts of plutonium are produced when uranium enriched to lower levels is irradiated). I tend to agree with Glaser that the existing cut-off "represents a reasonable and even optimum choice as a conversion goal for research reactors" -- and, I would add, for fission radioisotope production. español | 简体中文 | العربية In their essays so far, my colleagues Pablo Cristini and Charles Piani have expressed very different views on some aspects of minimizing the use of highly enriched uranium (HEU). Cristini has taken what I would call a conventional position on the issue, while Piani has expressed views that are somewhat more controversial. I find myself more in sympathy with the controversial outlook. From the conventional perspective, converting reactors from HEU to low-enriched uranium (LEU) is universally practicable. This belief is mostly based on successful conversions of reactors that produce medical radioisotopes like molybdenum 99 -- and indeed, in such conversions, production of molybdenum 99 has been maintained and reactors have not suffered in the commercial radioisotope market. A lot of experience has been gained in converting this kind of reactor; relevant fuel fabrication techniques have been perfected over the years; and conversions have become increasingly routine. The success of such conversion projects is by this time predictable, and depends only on proper planning, appropriate management, and adequate funding. But reactors that produce medical radioisotopes are generally similar to one another, while reactors with other uses often have unique designs that are inextricable from the features of a reactor's fuel. Generally belonging to this category are pulse reactors, in which uranium enriched to a high level allows high neutron flux density in a relatively small reactor core, and also allows reactors to be operated for a long time without refueling. Designing a low-enriched fuel appropriate for such facilities can be a very difficult problem. It is precisely for these reasons that I tend to sympathize with Piani's controversial views on conversion -- which, in my opinion, really amount to a balanced attitude toward conversion. Monument to achievement. Kazakhstan's IGR research reactor, which I play a role in managing, is the highest-powered research pulse reactor in the world. Preliminary studies have shown that conversion to LEU is theoretically possible, but a number of difficult technical problems remain, and it is impossible to test how the reactor will perform over the long term if it is converted. Taking into account circumstances like these, must research reactors really be converted to LEU at all costs? What if conversion is so difficult that it is essentially equivalent to constructing a new reactor, as may be the case with the proposed IGR conversion? (It is doubtful that even the building that houses IGR, not to mention the reactor's major systems, could be retained after conversion.) Must fuel that is already present in a reactor, and that remains capable of providing excellent performance for years, be replaced? And if it is clear, as is the case with IGR, that a converted reactor will not perform at the same level as the existing reactor, the question becomes: How much effort and expense should be devoted to creating a converted reactor that is inferior to an existing unit? IGR has been in operation for more than 50 years, and over that time it has proven itself very safe. It is equipped with all the standard instruments and procedures that protect against unauthorized access -- and it is located in the former Semipalatinsk nuclear test site, an especially secure area. Moreover, IGR is in high demand because of its suitability for studying the behavior of test fuels in conditions that simulate severe accidents in the cores of power reactors. It would be sad if the IGR reactor, due to a well-intentioned conversion effort, proved unable to maintain its current capabilities, and if knowledge and technology that have existed for more than five decades were effectively lost. Therefore I pose a question, to which I do not have a precise answer myself. Might it be appropriate to preserve the IGR reactor as a monument to human achievement, and as a symbol of one aspect of humanity's cultural heritage? Finally, I would add that even if IGR and all facilities like it are converted to LEU, highly enriched uranium will not disappear from the world. For example, naval propulsion reactors fueled by HEU seem unlikely to disappear any time soon. español | 简体中文 | العربية In my part of Africa, when people are faced with a large, daunting problem, someone often asks, "How do we eat this elephant?" The typical response is: "Piece by piece!" Minimizing the use of highly enriched uranium (HEU) can be seen as an elephant that, indeed, can only be eaten piece by piece. But it may also be the case that certain parts of this animal are simply inedible. My colleagues Pablo Cristini and Alexandr Vurim have expressed somewhat different views about when it is reasonable to expect that reactors using HEU should convert to low-enriched uranium (LEU). But consensus has emerged on one point: At reactors that produce molybdenum 99, converting fissionable targets to LEU is a feasible project, though possibly a painful one. Much the same determination was reached in a 2012 report by the Nuclear Energy Agency, which concluded that, despite the investments of money and time that conversion entails, "conversion is important and will occur." In any event, as long as only a few nations supply HEU, and these countries continue to exert pressure on molybdenum-producing reactors to convert, these facilities will find that their alternatives to conversion are very limited. Reactors that want to be involved in commercial production of medical isotopes will eventually have to eat their piece of the elephant -- or go hungry. Another portion of the meal involves certain research reactors that use HEU and are engaged in activities beyond isotope production. New research reactors, of course, are generally expected to be designed in such a way that they can function well with low-enriched uranium. But older reactors may find their elephant flesh too tough to swallow. This is mainly because possibilities for reconfiguring reactor cores are often limited at research reactors with older designs. In these cases -- for instance at Vurim's IGR reactor in Kazakhstan -- conversion in many cases implies reduced performance. At these facilities, the developed world can provide a sort of meat tenderizer by furnishing technical and financial support for conversion efforts. But even support of this type won't always be sufficient -- not as long as the cut-off between LEU and HEU remains defined as 20 percent uranium 235. So in a few instances, the meal simply cannot be served, and any international minimization strategy that aims to make all research reactors completely safe from a proliferation perspective is unlikely to succeed. The International Atomic Energy Agency's database of research reactors gives an indication of the scope of the problem: Many dozens of the reactors listed there have little financial or technical ability to convert on their own. More to the point, they have no real desire to convert. When it comes to eating the elephant, they just aren't hungry enough. Even if conversion can't be accomplished in all cases, developed countries can contribute to nonproliferation by continuing to carry out risk evaluations of HEU inventories in developing nations, and by helping to improve security and material management programs where appropriate. Inventories that pose the highest risks -- for example, stocks of fresh HEU fuel in developing countries with insufficient programs for nuclear material management and security -- should be given special priority. Spent fuel, in view of its high radioactivity, to a certain extent provides its own deterrent to theft or diversion. Nuclear-powered submarines represent perhaps a more alarming problem than research reactors. Submarines are by definition physically isolated much of the time. They will inevitably make ports of call in foreign countries, whether planned or not, and it is not really possible to apply proper security to facilities that are so mobile. And as Vurim indicated in his second essay, HEU for naval applications is unlikely to be eliminated any time soon. But when it comes to research reactors, conversion to LEU at facilities that produce medical radioisotopes is a meal already on the table, and one that will be consumed fairly quickly. Conversion of all research reactors to LEU, however -- this animal may be even harder than an elephant to eat. español | 简体中文 | العربية In his second Roundtable essay, Alexandr Vurim characterized me as representing a "conventional perspective" toward converting research reactors to low-enriched uranium (LEU) from highly enriched uranium (HEU). From this conventional perspective, he wrote, conversion is seen as "universally practicable." He went on to argue that certain research reactors, if converted to low-enriched uranium, could be difficult if not impossible to operate with the same efficiency that had existed before conversion. And he suggested that conversion should perhaps not be attempted in such cases. I maintain now, as I have before, that many activities carried out at research reactors, including but not limited to radioisotope production, can be conducted perfectly well after conversion to LEU. But in point of fact, I agree with Vurim that it is irrational to halt useful nuclear applications if, for technical reasons, they cannot be performed with acceptable efficiency after conversion to LEU. In some instances, conversion to low-enriched uranium is simply not a reasonable course of action. In these cases, nuclear activities should not be interfered with. Charles Piani, in his smart and funny final essay, employed an extended metaphor in which he portrayed conversion to LEU as an elephant that can only be eaten piece by piece, though some parts of this beast might prove to be inedible. This gets at the truth of the matter, but I would go further, and suggest that the animal to be eaten is not just an elephant but an especially large one -- and that certain cuts of its meat might cause acute indigestion. Still, the meal is being served, so diners should do their best to clean their plates. At least they can look forward to an enjoyable dessert -- the satisfaction of ridding the world, to the greatest extent possible, of civilian HEU. Work goes on. As this Roundtable has emphasized, deciding where and how to convert to LEU can be a very difficult project. The difficulties are eased, however, through international cooperation, whether it is in the form of expert meetings or through minimization programs like Global Threat Reduction Initiative and the Reduced Enrichment for Research and Test Reactors program. These powerful resources have proved quite adequate for overcoming a host of technical and financial hurdles to conversion. Over time, I believe, interactions like these will produce a consensus about which nuclear facilities should convert to low-enriched uranium and which must be allowed to continue using HEU. Wherever the use of highly enriched uranium continues, however, security measure to prevent theft or diversion must be maintained at the highest achievable levels. Meanwhile, the debate over conversion continues. No perfect approach to conversion will be found, if perfection is defined as eliminating all proliferation risks while also overcoming all technical and financial obstacles to conversion. But building awareness of conversion's benefits remains an important project, one that should continue through international initiatives and conferences and, for that matter, fora like this Roundtable. Conversion will take work. It will require funding and time. In the end, some facilities that use highly enriched uranium will probably continue doing so. But my conviction is that the international effort toward conversion to low-enriched uranium is worth the effort. español | 简体中文 | العربية This Roundtable discussion has been very thought-provoking, and has encouraged me to look with new eyes at certain issues that surround the conversion of Kazakhstan's research reactors from highly enriched uranium (HEU) to low-enriched uranium (LEU). The two active research reactors owned by Kazakhstan's National Nuclear Center (NNC) don't require refueling very often. Partly for this reason, Kazakhstan has never developed the capability to manufacture reactor fuel. If Kazakh research reactors convert to low-enriched uranium, this dependence on foreign fuel manufacturers seems likely to persist. At first glance, then, it would seem natural for the Russian firm that now manufactures fuel for the center's reactors to provide LEU fuel after conversion occurs. But maybe this isn't as natural as it appears at first. This is because LEU fuel, by definition, is enriched to a lower level than HEU fuel; therefore, in order for low-enriched fuel to provide performance approximating that of highly enriched fuel, the density of the uranium in the fuel matrix must be increased. But this carries implications for fuel fabrication -- the stage of the process at which enriched fuel is converted into assemblies suitable for use in a reactor. That is, existing technologies for producing HEU fuel may not, even after they are modified for low-enriched uranium, be compatible with existing processes for LEU fuel fabrication. This implies that fabrication techniques for low-enriched fuel would probably have to be designed from scratch. With conversion requiring so many changes, the firm that now manufactures fuel for Kazakh research reactors would appear to enjoy no advantage over competing firms, other than its history of working with Kazakhstan. Thus it seems appropriate for Kazakh authorities, if conversion goes forward, to make an objective assessment of the entire market for LEU fuel suppliers, and not confer any special status on the existing fuel supplier. Another issue to which I have devoted thought as a result of this Roundtable is the exact manner in which conversion at Kazakh reactors might be carried out. The reactors owned by the NNC are in constant use for research projects, mostly involving nuclear energy (including fusion). The center has reached agreements with customers on work schedules through 2018, and proposals have come in for projects as far in the future as 2020. These programs, of course, play a significant role in the NNC's budget. Any reactor shutdown would be undesirable because the center would inevitably sustain financial losses during conversion and, even if conversion were very successful, building up the reactors' business again would take time. Therefore, if conversion is to proceed, disruptions to research projects must be minimized. How could this be achieved? One option, if it proves technically possible, would be to replace HEU fuel with LEU fuel only gradually, during planned refuelings. The NNC might be able to implement this approach at its IVG reactor, where preliminary studies have shown that conversion would not require changes to some of the reactor's systems -- for example, to its control and protection systems. However, this approach would require Kazakh authorities and international partners such as Argonne National Laboratory and the US National Nuclear Security Administration to reach agreement on a conversion schedule. Also, these partners would need to make decisions about providing compensation for financial losses associated with conversion. Not much point. My colleagues Pablo Cristini and Charles Piani have conducted a discussion on whether the widely accepted cut-off between low-enriched and highly enriched uranium should be maintained where it is, at 20 percent uranium 235, or whether it should be increased. To my mind, the existing cut-off is based on reasonable criteria. Any attempt to change the cut-off would have to win acceptance from the international nuclear community and various regulatory bodies -- but the chances of this happening are very low, so I see little point in calling for an increase. In my view, then, there is only one option for converting reactors to LEU, and that is to do so with the cut-off of 20 percent in mind. Charles Piani Piani is a consultant who has spent more than 45 years in science and nuclear engineering. From 1993 to 1998, he was senior manager of South Africa's SAFARI-1 research reactor; there, he was involved in converting the reactor to low-enriched uranium, both for fuel and for targets in the production of molybdenum 99. Currently, through the International Atomic Energy Agency, he helps nations engage in strategic planning for the utilization of research reactors and assists nuclear newcomers in adopting strategies for nuclear power programs. He received a PhD in material science from the University of South Africa in 1981. Pablo Cristini Pablo Cristini is manager of radioisotope production at Argentina's National Commission of Atomic Energy. While at the commission, he has led the process of converting production of molybdenum 99 from highly-enriched uranium to low-enriched uranium (LEU), and has overseen transfers of LEU-based technology for molybdenum production to national authorities in Australia and Egypt. Before becoming manager of radioisotope production, he was head of the commission's fission molybdenum production plant. He has published over 25 scientific papers. He received a degree in chemical sciences, with a specialization in radiochemistry, from the University of Buenos Aires in 1985. Alexandr Vurim Vurim is deputy director of the Institute of Atomic Energy at Kazakhstan's National Nuclear Center (NNC). He manages experiments on nuclear fuel as part of a cooperative effort between the center and the Japan Atomic Energy Agency; develops experimental techniques for carrying out tests in reactors; and manages the center's project for reducing its use of highly enriched uranium. In 1978 he graduated in physics and engineering from Tomsk Polytechnic University and in 2010 earned a master's degree in physics and mathematics from NNC. Recent Development & Disarmament Roundtables 11 April 2014How to confront emerging pathogens 7 April 2014Needed: Ability to manage nuclear power 27 February 2014Time to ban chemical weapons from the Middle East? 29 January 2014Energy imperatives, environmental awareness 19 November 2013Seeking climate equity Shared on Twitter 14 August 2013Banning WMD from the Middle East 29 May 2013Iran and the bomb: The legal standards of the IAEA 22 April 2008The uncertainty in climate modeling 6 March 2008The expanding range of biowarfare threats Shared on Facebook
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Waverly superintendent takes new position By Amanda Renko Waverly Central School District superintendent Joseph Yelich will leave the area after recently accepting a position with another district.Yelich was appointed Tuesday to serve as superintendent of the Oneonta Central School District, according to a statement from the Waverly Central School District board of education.Under his new three-year contract, Yelich will receive a salary of $150,000 per year. At Waverly, he earned $135,000 per year plus approximately $45,000 in benefits, according to district budget information.Yelich became superintendent of the Waverly district prior to the 2011-12 school year following a tenure as a high school principal in Jamestown, N.Y. The school board will immediately begin the search for a new leader with assistance from the local Board of Cooperative Educational Services, according to the board's statement.Amanda Renko can be reached at (570) 888-9652; or email: arenko@thedailyreview.com.
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← A report from Disney’s Animal Kingdom Tangled – International Poster → Pixar’s Top Creative Minds Enlighten the Hamptons Posted on October 10, 2010 by John Frost Editor: Please welcome back guest author Daniel Wanderman This morning I had a very unique opportunity at peeking behind the curtain, into the minds of a couple of Pixar’s finest: Toy Story 3 Director Lee Unkrich and Producer Darla K. Anderson. These two were engaged in an hour-long, in-depth conversation with two New York journalists at The Hamptons Film Festival’s Animation Master Class Panel. The program began by showing us the opening sequence from Toy Story 3. After the clip faded, the screen rose to reveal the panelists and moderators. They went on to discuss a range of topics about the film including some of the challenges they faces. Here are some of the more memorable moments and stories: - Unkrich emphasizes story and emotion as being the most important aspects of their films. He describes their role at the studio not as animators or filmmakers, but as storytellers. - In describing the pressure brought on by continuing the Toy Story legacy, Unkrich stated that he “woke up every morning wanting to vomit over the side of the bed” and didn’t want the third movie to be compared to ‘The Bad News Bears Go To Japan’. - Anderson has never thought of Pixar as a children’s film studio, rather just a film studio that produces films for everyone and are kid friendly. They agree that the most risque line in TS3 was Barbie complimenting Ken on his ascot. They faced some criticism, but it Unkrich says it was “too good to pass up”. - Unkrich tells us that the biggest challenge of producing an animated feature versus live action is being able to create the “illusion of spontaneity”. He goes on to tell us that technology isn’t what makes the film so beautiful, it is the level of artistry of the animators using the technology that makes it look so fantastic. - Anderson tells us that they wanted the audience to find Bonnie’s character to be “super appealing”. They wanted us to be happy and proud that the Toy Story gang ended up with her. Unkrich reveals that Bonnie’s drawings of Woody and the gang were done by his own children and that many of the drawings on display at Sunnyside were done by children of Pixar employees. Children’s drawings from Sunnyside Day Care on display at the The Magic of Disney Animation at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. - Unkrich is happy with the final cut of the film but if he could make one change it would be to include BoPeep in the opening sequence somehow. They wanted the opening sequence to be huge and over-the-top since this is the first time in over ten years that the audience gets to ‘play’ with their favorite toys. The original plan was to reveal the teenage Andy right after this scene, but later it was decided to create a montage of home movies leading to the present day Andy. By the time this decision was made, it was too late to go back and incorporate BoPeep into the sequence. Left to Right: Moderator, Director Lee Unkrich, Producer Darla K. Anderson, Moderator. - Both panelists agreed that the actors don’t get enough credit for the amount of work they put into voicing the characters. Most actors stick to the script but some do a lot of improving. Unkrich tells us a story about his favorite improvised line by actor Michael Keaton (voice of Ken): - In how to handle the trash compactor scene, Unkrich wanted the characters to “face the situation with quiet dignity” by holding hands and baring their demise instead of them jumping around and panicking. - Before showing us the final scene of the film in which Andy donates the toys to Bonnie and drives away, Unkrich tells us a personal story about the last time he saw his grandmother before she passed away. She had been suffering with cancer, and on his last day of visiting her, he drove her to a restaurant where she was attending a friends birthday party. Before he left the restaurant, he looked at her and saw how happy she was with her friends. He took a “mental snapshot”, closed his eyes, turned his head, and walked away. He knew it would be the last time he saw her and wanted to keep that memory of her. Unkrich told this same story to his animators in order to capture these emotions for Andy. He felt that by doing this, he could create a more powerful and realistic emotion for the character. Left to Right: Moderator, Director Lee Unkrich, Producer Darla K. Anderson. Unkrich and Anderson close the session by telling us that they plan to be working on another Pixar film together and that they “complete each other”. The only things that weren’t covered that I was curious about was their thoughts on the controversy of 3D films in theaters and at home, Lotso’s role as a cute and cuddly villain that theme park goers line up to meet, and if Mr. Tortilla Head or Mr. Cucumber head will get a spin-off film. I was also surprised that the November 2nd Blu-Ray/DVD release was not plugged at all. Overall, I was very happy that I was able to attend this event and share all of these great tidbits with you! When he’s not a mild mannered reporter for the Daily Planet, Dan can be found on Twitter. This entry was posted in pixar and tagged Animation, disney, DVD, pixar, sequel, Toy Story, toy story 3, ts3. Bookmark the permalink. ← A report from Disney’s Animal Kingdom 10 Responses to Pixar’s Top Creative Minds Enlighten the Hamptons The Disney Blog says: October 11, 2010 at 3:06 am Great recap of today's Toy Story 3 Panel by @danielwanderman – http://bit.ly/bDUb0A – @leeunkrich discusses the films emotional plot points Pingback: DanielWanderman The Disney Blog says: October 11, 2010 at 6:31 pm Great recap of HFF Toy Story 3 Panel by @danielwanderman – http://bit.ly/bDUb0A – @leeunkrich discusses the films emotional plot points TheDisneyChick says: October 11, 2010 at 6:33 pm RT @TheDisneyBlog: recap of HFF TS3 Panel by @danielwanderman – http://bit.ly/bDUb0A – @leeunkrich discusses the films emotional plot points Pingback: Todd Perlmutter karan kapil says: October 12, 2010 at 10:42 am thank you sooooooooo much for for this post… waiting for more… :o)
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2011 Showdown on the Sabine Submitted by Chad Cooper on September 12, 2011 - 2:04pm The Orange Convention and Visitors Bureau has planned the fourth annual Showdown on the Sabine for Sept. 24-25 at the Orange Boat Ramp located at 1000 Simmons Dr. “This is a fantastic event for everyone,” said Darline Zavada, director of the Orange CVB. “It’s speed on the water plus they are bringing in Formula 1 boats, which go even faster across the water.” Formula 2 boats have sped down the Sabine River in previous years, but according to John Schubert, who is the race director for Southern Professional Outboard Racing Tour (SPORT), Formula 1 boats are louder and faster. “We are going to speed it up and put more boats on the water,” said Schubert. “You really have to see these boats in person. They are fast, loud and they perform sharp turns. It’s exciting.” Schubert expects at least 55 boats from all over the country to make the trip to Orange and will compete in three classes — tri-hull, Formula 1 and Formula Light. “They will get up to speeds of 120 miles per hour and can accelerate quickly,” he said. “That’s fast for a boat that weighs 1,100 pounds, with driver, and has a 300 horsepower engine.” The water track will be set up in the shape of an oval marked by buoys. Formula 1 testing begins at 8 a.m. on both days along with an autograph session at 3:15 p.m. on Saturday and 2:45 p.m. on Sunday. For a complete race-day schedule, view orangetexas.org. The SPORT racing series travels across the country and this will be their second stop in Southeast Texas as they compete at the Thunder on the Neches in Port Neches every year in April. Along with action on the water, there will be plenty of food and craft vendors. Also new this year is a petting zoo, pony rides, waterslides and bounce-houses. “It’s a small carnival type atmosphere,” added Zavada. “People also like to bring canopies to set up, but we ask those who do set up to do so on the top of the levee so they aren’t blocking the views of others,” said Zavada. “We had more than 16,000 people in our first event in 2007 then had to cancel in 2008 because of Hurricane Ike. The attendance increased in 2009 with more than 20,000 people and last year we set a record with 22,000 people in a two-day span.” And the best of all, admission is free as well as parking. Coolers, pets and bicycles will not be permitted. Guests are encouraged to bring lawn chairs and plenty of sunscreen. The event will be held rain or shine. “The city does a great job of promoting and planning the event,” said Schubert. “The weather is supposed to be awesome so come out and watch these guys put on a show for you.” To reach the boat ramp, follow Interstate 10 into Orange and take Exit 878; drive one mile until reaching event banners and signs that will then direct you. For more information, call (409) 883-1011 or go online at orangetexas.org. Puzzle: sudoku puzzles 0613.pdf Solution: sudoku solutions 0613.pdf ‹‹ Crossword solution 08-25-11
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PTA Took From Unused ‘There Will Be Blood’ Scenes For ‘The Master’; Further Downplays Scientology Angle Posted by Nick Newman, on August 20, 2012 at 3:47 pm When there’s enough controversy, enough rumors, and plenty of reason to take either as fact, you sometimes just accept. Such is the case with The Master and its reportedly harsh-on-Scientology bent, which most of us have, for years, bought because we (probably) didn’t have any resources to acquire Paul Thomas Anderson‘s screenplay. And when you, again, hear a whole lot and always have “anonymous sources” backing up as much? It’s really all part of the fun. But people, such as our own, have started to see the film and, any of their opinions notwithstanding, it’s pretty evident that The Master is not just “about more than Scientology,” but isn’t even really about that in the first place. Some don’t even appear to know what the thing’s about at all. Count your lucky stars that a Newsweek profile sees the modern American master speak out on his new epic, even in the most in-depth manner yet. To be perfectly frank: I kind of wish I had skimmed this a bit more when first giving a gander, as the report — a pretty excellent one, in all fairness — shares details on sequences, characters, and whatnot that I might have been better off not knowing beforehand. Such is the risk of my life. So, let’s get right to the essentials. First, Anderson did admit that Philip Seymour Hoffman‘s titular character, Lancaster Dodd, is inspired by L. Ron Hubbard — no surprise there — though that could really be as far as it goes. Their story warns that Scientologists probably won’t be thrilled with what The Master presents, yet the director’s typical themes of fractured protagonists and “families” take over; the main idea, of civilizing a scarred being, is said to actually bring A Clockwork Orange . If anything, he’s now found himself “much more defensive and protective of [Scientology] than I would have thought.” Although Kubrick isn’t such a bad place to get your inspiration from — i.e., if such a thematic crossover is even intentional — some of Anderson‘s prior work even comes back around in unexpected ways. Read this little section for an idea: “Anderson gathered pieces for his movie from disparate sources. There were scenes he’d written early on for There Will Be Blood he’d never used. There were stories Jason Robards had told him on the set of Magnolia about his drinking days in the Navy during the war. Chunks of Freddie’s experiences as a migrant field worker and wanderer were lifted from John Steinbeck’s life story.” Although the Of Mice and Men author doesn’t exactly connect, save for the California roots of either artist, it’s fascinating to consider how his last and soon-to-be-current pictures have any sort of crossovers. Sadly, that needs to be saved for another time: when I see it. Then, that discussion should be a good time. The Master will open on September 14th. Do you think Anderson and Scientology need not be enemies? What are your thoughts on these connections to his prior work? Tags: Paul Thomas Anderson, The Master Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.
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COPSAir Date: Saturday, July 03, 2010Time Slot: 8:30 PM-9:00 PM EST on FOXEpisode Title: (CP-2223) "COAST TO COAST" (Repeat) --"COPS: COAST TO COAST"-(8:30-9:00 PM ET/PT) CC-HDTV 720p-In Stereo BEER, BATTERED AND FRIED ON "COPS" SATURDAY, JULY 3, ON FOX Officers from the Houston Police Department in Texas chase down a suspect after a strong-arm robbery of a donut shop, and the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office in Florida investigates a domestic dispute and ultimately arrest a man for battery after the wife shows them her husband's stash of marijuana. Meanwhile, officers from the Lee County Sheriff's Office in Florida respond to a domestic-violence call involving a knife fight between a mother and her son, which leads to the son's arrest on COPS: COAST TO COAST airing Saturday, July 3 (8:30-9:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. (CP-2223) (TV-PG L)
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[10/24/05 - 12:00 AM]Development Update: October 20-24By The Futon Critic Staff (TFC) LOS ANGELES (thefutoncritic.com) -- The latest development news, culled from recent wire reports: Looking to keep track of all the various projects in development? Click here to visit our newly revamped "Series in Development" charts. Visitors can now filter our listings by network, genre and even development stage (ordered to pilot, cast-contingent, script, etc.). It's updated every day! BALANCING ACT (ABC Family) - The cable channel is said to be close to ordering 13 episodes of the drama series, about a young cop who moves his family back to the inner-city neighborhood where he was raised in hopes of making a difference. Seth Freeman ("American Dreamer") is behind the project, which stars Russell Hornsby ("Playmakers"), Nicki Micheaux ("The Shield"), Rhyon Brown ("That's So Raven"), Erica Hubbard ("The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants") and Mishon Ratliff. Kevin Hooks ("Lost") directed the pilot. No studio is currently attached. CONFESSIONS OF A TAX COLLECTOR (FX, New!)/UNTITLED MICHELLE ASHFORD PROJECT (ABC, New!) - Writer/producer Michelle Ashford ("Medical Investigation") is developing a new drama at ABC about the day-to-day realities of career women with kids. The project is set up at the Warner Bros. Television-based Shephard/Robin Co. with Ashford, Michael M. Robin and Greer Shephard serving as executive producers. In addition, Ashford has set up a script for "Confessions of a Tax Collector," a dark comedy based on the true story of an average Joe who gets stuck working for the IRS for 12 years, at FX. Paramount Network Television-based producers Gavin and Greg O'Connor ("Miracle") are behind said project through their Solaris banner. DARK KINGDOM: THE DRAGON KING (Sci Fi, New!) - The cable channel has purchased the broadcast rights to Germany's successful four-hour mini-series "Ring of the Nibelungs," which stars Kristanna Loken ("Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines"), Alicia Witt ("Cybill") and Benno Fuermann ("The Order"). "Nibelungs," which will air in March under the title "Dark Kingdom: The Dragon King," is loosely based on the Germanic myth about the magic ring of the Nibelungs and the Nordic Volsunga Saga, both of which also served as inspirations for J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings." Uli Edel ("The Mists of Avalon") directed the project, which was filmed in English. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment will release "Dark Kingdom" on DVD shortly after its premiere on Sci Fi. DEADWOOD (HBO) - Creator/executive producer David Milch has inked a two-year production deal with the pay channel. The pact covers his services on "Deadwood" for the next two seasons as well as calls for him to develop new projects for HBO. Currently, Milch is working with his former "N.Y.P.D. Blue" collaborator Bill Clark on a potential new drama about Clark's experiences as a rookie undercover officer assigned to keep tabs on the Black Panthers and other countercultural rabble-rousers during the post-Vietnam era in New York, a period which saw scandalous levels of corruption among New York's finest. FAMILY GUY (FOX) - "Family Guy Presents Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story," the direct-to-DVD movie release of the animated series, has grossed more than $41 million in consumer spending since its September 27 release according to 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. Said numbers already put "Stewie" among the top three of straight-to-DVD titles this year, behind only "Mulan 2" ($60 million) and alongside "Tarzan 2" ($42 million). To date consumer spending on the various "Family Guy" DVD releases have raked in roughly $200 million. HELL'S BELLES/STUPID CUPID (ABC Family, New!) - Reality guru Bruce Nash ("Meet My Folks," "Outback Jack") is making the transition to scripted projects, having sold two original movies to ABC Family. The first, "Stupid Cupid," comes from writers Douglas Tuber and Tim Maile ("Darcy's Wild Life") while the second "Hell's Belles," was penned by Deena Berezin and Chris Papierniak. The former tracks a clumsy Cupid who blows his last chance to help a couple fall in love by accidentally hitting his own heart. The latter tells the story of three young women venturing into the work force for the first time who make a Faustian bargain with a mysterious man who promises to fulfill their wildest dreams. Nash and Robert A. Kosberg ("Mr. Personality") will executive produce each movie should they get the green light. HUSTLE (AMC, New!) - The cable channel has inked a deal to license the first two seasons of the BBC drama as well as co-produce the upcoming third season of the series. Described as a TV version of "Ocean's Eleven," "Hustle" follows the exploits of a group of London-based con artists. Adrian Lester ("Primary Colors"), Marc Warren ("Hooligans"), Robert Vaughn ("The A-Team"), Robert Glenister ("Hitler: The Rise of Evil") and Jaime Murray star. To date 12 episodes have been shot with AMC's run set to begin Saturday, January 14 (time TBA). No premiere date has been set for the show's third season on the BBC. SCRUBS (NBC) - Cheryl Hines ("Curb Your Enthusiasm") is set to guest star on the show's upcoming fifth season. She'll play Paige Cox, the sister John C. McGinley's character, a devout Christian who comes to town for the baptism of Dr. Cox's son. THE SHIELD (FX) - Laura Harring ("Mulholland Drive") has booked a recurring role on the cable drama, which returns for its fifth season in January. No details were given other than she'll play Becca Doyle, an attorney. Harring joins fellow newcomer Forest Whitaker in the new season, who's playing detective in the Los Angeles Police Department's Internal Affairs division. STANKERVISION (MTV2) - The "Sic 'Em Friday" block member will not return for a second season, according to the show's official web site. "Bad news boys and girls. Stankervision has officially been canceled by Mtv2," the statement reads. "The cast and crew are all shocked, because we produced a great show with solid ratings. I guess that's show biz. Anyway, we just want to say thanks to the fans and check back for future projects of the Stank crew." The show wrapped its eight-week run in August. The most-recent airing, a repeat on October 14, drew just 62,000 viewers. Data for its first-run airings was not given. UNTITLED ERIC WINTER PROJECT (New!) - Eric Winter ("Days of Our Lives") has signed a one-year talent holding deal with 20th Century Fox Television. The pact calls for the studio to cast the actor, who's appeared in episodes of "Love, Inc." and "Just Legal" this season, in one of its projects in development, which could be a comedy or a drama. UNTITLED JESSE VENTURA PROJECT (NBC, New!) - One-time pro wrestler and former governor of Minnesota Jesse Ventura may be headed to the Peacock to star in a new comedy for the network. It's understood the Collective's Jeff Golenberg and Michael Green have approached Ventura about toplining a potential comedy project that's being targeted for NBC. No details were given as writers are still meeting with Ventura to hammer out a concept. Should it go forward, Golenberg and Green will executive produce the project along with Ventura's managers, Michael Braverman and Barry Bloom. UNTITLED JANICE DICKINSON PROJECT (Oxygen, New!) - Former "America's Next Top Model" judge Janice Dickinson has pacted with Stuart Krasnow ("Average Joe") to develop a new reality series for the cable channel. It's understood the project will track Dickinson's efforts to establish her own modeling agency. No other details were given other than the pair are eyeing an early 2006 premiere should it move forward. THE WEINSTEIN CO. PROJECTS (New!) - Small-screen versions of the feature films "Sin City" and "Rounders" are among the projects under consideration at Harvey and Bob Weinstein's the Weinstein Co. The news comes as the pair prepare to welcome ex-Miramax Television executive Barbara Schneeweiss to head up their TV arm. Other projects in the works include a series adaptation of Daily Variety editor-in-chief Peter Bart's novel "Dangerous Company: Dark Tales from Tinseltown" at NBC; "Occult Cop," about a real-life New York cop who specializes in occult-related cases; "Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures," about the U.N. peacekeeping forces in the world's most dangerous hot spots; and "The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency," a drama based on Alexander McCall Smith's book about a female gumshoe in Botswana, with Anthony Minghella on board to direct from a script by Richard Curtis ("Love Actually"). So far however only "Dangerous" has a network home. Sources: Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, Reuters, TV Guide · AMERICA'S NEXT TOP MODEL (CW) · AVERAGE JOE (NBC) · CONFESSIONS OF A TAX COLLECTOR (FX) · CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM (HBO) · DANGEROUS COMPANY (NBC) · DARK KINGDOM: THE DRAGON KING (SYFY) · DEADWOOD (HBO) · FAMILY GUY (FOX) · HELL'S BELLES (ABC FAMILY) · HITLER: THE RISE OF EVIL (CBS) · HUSTLE (AMC) · JANICE DICKINSON MODELING AGENCY, THE (OXYGEN) · JUST LEGAL (WB) · LAST OF THE NINTH, THE (HBO) · LINCOLN HEIGHTS (ABC FAMILY) · LOST (ABC) · LOVE, INC. (UPN) · MEDICAL INVESTIGATION (NBC) · MEET MY FOLKS (NBC) · MISTS OF AVALON (TNT) · MR. PERSONALITY (FOX) · NYPD BLUE (ABC) · OUTBACK JACK (TBS) · PLAYMAKERS (ESPN) · SCRUBS (ABC) · SHIELD, THE (FX) · STANKERVISION (MTV2) · STUPID CUPID (ABC FAMILY) · UNTITLED JESSE VENTURA PROJECT (NBC) · UNTITLED MICHELLE ASHFORD PROJECT (ABC)
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Daily Archives: February 8, 2011 Veganism: It’s Not All About The Food Feb 8 I am loving the enthusiasm surrounding vegan week! Even if you love your animal protein (and believe me, I do too), an excuse to add more plants to our diets is never a bad thing. But as a past (yet brief) vegan, I find myself noticing a huge part of veganism has thus far been neglected. The point of veganism is to stay away from all animal products. But that doesn’t end with what we put in our bodies. It also includes what we put on our bodies. I’m talking leather. Suede. Fur. Wool. Silk. To me, veganism doesn’t end at the food. 99% of people make the choice to be vegan because they take issue with animals being hurt and used for our benefit. I guess it’s all about finding where you want to draw that personal line. There are some vegans out there who believe wearing wool is cruel to the animal and won’t have anything to do with it. Then there are vegans who just don’t want to digest anything that came from an animal. I don’t think there’s a right or wrong way to do it. It’s all about making choices that suit you. However, it is definitely food for thought. If I were to ever do veganism again, I would probably try to stay away from all animal-derived products because it’s what makes sense in my brain and in my gut. But I would never poo-poo on someone who thinks that’s silly. For example, there is one vegan “rule” that I just can’t get down with. Honey. Bees run on instincts. They don’t have a central nervous system. I’m not sure what the environmental impact of farming them is. But in my own “Hypothetical Vegan Creed” honey is is a-okay. I grew up eating peanut butter and honey sandwiches every day that my dad packed us for lunch. Of all the things in the world to pair with peanut butter, honey is probably my favourite. Why then, why, has it never occurred to me to put this dynamic duo on top of oats? I will take my honey-topped oats eaten in bed, whilst wearing my fake synthetic wool socks, thankyouverymuch ;) Question of the Day: What are your thoughts on this? Is veganism just about what you eat, or about all products that you buy? Posted in Challenges 21 Comments Tags: honey, vegan Subscribe
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Issue 5: Jan – Feb 2014Previous Issues Subscribe to Small Biz AheadFacebookTwitterLinked inSmall Biz AheadYou bring the passion Census: No sign of economic rebound for many in USBy Hope Yen | September 19, 2013The Associated PressCensus data shows many segments of US population have yet to see signs of economic rebound WASHINGTON (AP) — Even as the economy shows signs of improvement and poverty levels off, new U.S. census data suggests the gains are halting and uneven. Depending on education, race, income and even marriage, not all segments of the population are seeing an economic turnaround. Poverty is on the rise in single-mother families. More people are falling into the lowest-income group. And after earlier signs of increased mobility, fewer people are moving as homeownership declined for a fifth straight year. "We're in a selective recovery," said William H. Frey, a Brookings Institution demographer who analyzed the numbers. The annual U.S. survey of socioeconomic indicators covers all of last year, representing the third year of a postrecession rebound. The figures, released Thursday, also show a slightly faster pace of growth in the foreign-born population, which increased to 40.8 million, or 13 percent of the U.S. Last year's immigration increase of 440,000 people was a reversal of a 2011 dip in the influx, when many Mexicans already in the U.S. opted to return home. Many of the newer immigrants are now higher-skilled workers from Asian countries such as China and India. The number of immigrants in the U.S. with less than a high school diploma, who make up the bulk of the total foreign-born population, fell slightly in 2012 to 10.8 million. Immigrants with bachelor's degrees or higher rose by more than 4 percent to 9.8 million. In all, 21 states saw declines last year in their Hispanic foreign-born population, led by New Mexico, Illinois and Georgia. The number of Americans in poverty remained largely unchanged at a record 46.5 million. Single-mother families in poverty increased for the fourth straight year to 4.1 million, or 41.5 percent, coinciding with longer-term trends of declining marriage and out-of-wedlock births. Many of these mothers are low income with low education. The share of married-couple families in poverty remained unchanged at 2.1 million, or 8.7 percent. By race or ethnicity, a growing proportion of poor children are Hispanic, a record 37 percent of the total. Whites make up 30 percent, blacks 26 percent. Nearly 2.2 million children were poor in California last year, the most of any state, but the child poverty rate was highest in Mississippi, where more than 1 in 3 children was poor. Nationwide, child poverty stood at 21.8 percent, unchanged from the previous year. "Stubbornly high child poverty rates in the wake of the Great Recession suggest we have not yet turned the corner three years after its official end," said Marybeth Mattingly, director of research on vulnerable families at the University of New Hampshire's Carsey Institute. The numbers also reflect widening economic inequality, an issue President Barack Obama has pledged would be a top priority of his administration to address. Upward mobility in the U.S. has been hurt by a tight job market and the longer-term disappearance of midskill jobs due to globalization and automation. The new census data shows that lower-income households are a steadily increasing share of the population, while middle- to higher-income groups shrank or were flat. In 2012, households earning less than $24,999 made up 24.4 percent of total households, up from 21.7 percent four years earlier. The share of households earning $50,000 to $99,999 slipped from 31.2 percent to 29.9 percent. Top-income households making more than $200,000 dipped less, from 5 percent to 4.6 percent over that period. The still-weak economy also meant fewer household moves in 2012. After showing signs of increased migration in 2011, fewer Americans were on the move, many because of few job opportunities or the inability to buy a home. U.S. migration fell by 0.2 percent in 2012 after edging up the previous year. While the number of longer-distance moves remained steady at 2.3 percent, moves within a county edged lower to 9 percent, particularly among young adults 18-34. Demographers say that suggests eroding career opportunities and a diminished ability to buy a home. Young adults typically make long-distance moves to seek a new career, while those who make local moves often do so when buying a home. Homeownership declined for the fifth year in the row to 63.9 percent. "Many Americans continue to think that a rising tide lifts all boats," said Sheldon Danziger, a University of Michigan economist. "But the bad news is that given the way economic growth trickles down now, the number of poor and disadvantaged will remain high unless we do more to help those in need." With poverty remaining high, food stamp use continued to climb. Roughly 15.8 million, or 13.6 percent of U.S. households, received food stamps, the highest level on record. Just over half of these households, or 52 percent, were below poverty and 44 percent had one or more people with a disability. By state, Oregon led the nation in food stamp use at 20.1 percent, or 1 in 5, due in part to generous state provisions that expand food stamp eligibility to families. Oregon was followed by more rural or more economically hard-hit states, including Mississippi, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan and Tennessee. Wyoming had the fewest households on food stamps, at 7 percent. In 45 states and the District of Columbia, poverty rates remained steady at high levels. Mississippi, the poorest state in the nation, was one of just three states posting increases, from 22.6 percent to 24.2 percent. California and New Hampshire were the others. In Minnesota and Texas, the percentage of people in poverty declined. Among the 25 largest metropolitan areas, the Washington, D.C., area had the highest median household income in 2012 at $88,233, followed by the San Francisco and Boston metro areas. The Tampa-St. Petersburg metro area had the lowest median house income at $44,402. The official poverty level is based on a government calculation that includes only income before tax deductions. It excludes noncash government aid such as food stamps. Counting food stamps would have boosted 4 million people, lowering the U.S. poverty rate to 13.7 percent. What's Your Next Move? Subscribe to Small Biz Ahead Find a Small Business Insurance Agent Anti-Discrimination: Are You on the Right Side of the Law? 7 Creative Ways Business Owners Can Give Thanks Hiring Veterans: Good for Them, Good for You 7-Step Guide to Taking Calculated Risks Subscribe to Small Biz AheadSM Sign up to receive valuable information and tips to help you manage and grow your small business. AboutThe HartfordPrivacy PolicyLegal NoticeTX-CA-WA Disclosures© Copyright 2014 The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. All rights reserved.The content displayed is for information only and does not constitute an endorsement by, or represent the view of, The HartfordBack To TopHow it works With Pass-It-On, licensed of The Hartford have a unique opportunity to share articles of interest with prospective and existing clients - and engage in a meaningful conversation about their business. 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Home | Blogs | Blog Briefing Room | News Blog Briefing Roomicon Blog Briefing Room feed December 15, 2013, 11:15 am Kerry expects quick resumption of Syrian aid By Kyle Balluck Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday said he expects the resumption of non-lethal aid to Syrian rebels, suspended last week following the seizure of a warehouse by Islamists, to resume very quickly.“Nobody wants to just build a warehouse up again and have it taken over again. That doesn’t make sense. So we need to make sure of where we’re going,” Kerry said on ABC’s “This Week."ADVERTISEMENT“We have a massive humanitarian crisis. ... You know, look, these things are complicated,” he said.“How do you go in and get the humanitarian assistance if the Assad regime is preventing it from happening? No one on America wants to put American troops on the ground. We could get the food in there very quickly if we did that. But that choice isn’t available," he added."And no one really wants to go to war in Syria because it’s a huge sectarian, you know, mess, with all kinds of implications. So you have to work with the tools that you have that are permissible.”Kerry blamed the warehouse takeover on infighting within the opposition, which may be fueled by Syria’s president.“And this is the nature of the beast that has been unleashed by Bashar Al-Assad, who probably is feeding some of it himself, because he likes to try to play the card that he is the better alternative to these extremists,” he said.The secretary of State on Sunday also held out hope that the moderate opposition in Syrian can be reunited.“And we’ve had conversations constantly — I’ve talked this week with foreign ministers in the region. We’re working — there’s a meeting that’s going to take place, I think next week. People will be coming together,” he said.“We are aiming toward the Geneva 2 Conference, which will take place in January, in the latter part of January,” Kerry added. “We are committed to try to bring people together, a strong representation of the opposition together with the Assad regime representatives and with maybe 30 or so other countries and all try to work in the same direction, which is to get a political settlement out of Syria.”“It’s hard, but that’s the only way you’re ever going to end the fighting and establish some kind of a governance structure that builds a future for the Syrian people.” Tags: Syria, John Kerry Tweet Previous Story Politics cited in regulatory delays Next Story Ryan: Watch for GOP tax reform More in Middle East/North Africa Kerry names new special envoy to Syria
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News Communities Sports Opinion Milestones Sections Ads Classifieds Jobs Extras CU Customer Service News « Depot hosts reception for vo... Edith Falk» Forensic program for students coming up By John Wickline Upshur Bureau Chief , Save | A 14-week session aimed at introducing high school students to the world of forensic sciences will again take place at the Buckhannon American Legion. The second Forensic Mondays program is scheduled to start up at 6 p.m. April 8 with "Criminal Investigation 101." There is no cost to attend the sessions, which run from 6 to 9 p.m. on April 8 and 22, May 6 and 20, June 10, July 15, Aug. 12, Sept. 9 and 21, Oct. 7 and 21, Nov. 4 and 18 and Dec. 9. Those interested do not have to attend every session. "We are not aware of any other program of this nature anywhere in this country," said David Taylor, one of the event's organizers. Topics for the individual sessions range from dealing with a crime scene, to interrogations, to prosecuting the crimes. In between, participants will learn how to process evidence involving crimes of property and crimes of violence. "This year is more legalistic," Taylor said. "There is still a lot of forensic science, and we've opened up the speaker's platform. That was based on the feedback from last year." Taylor said the goal of Forensic Mondays is to show young people the true nature of law enforcement, forensic science and the legal system. Throughout the series, the participants will be exposed to various injury, death and homicide investigations, along with other material of a sensitive nature, shown through photos, slides and videotapes from actual closed cases. "We will be showcasing the talent that this state has to offer," Taylor said, noting law enforcement officers, federal prosecutors and even a U.S. district judge have agreed to be part of the series. Taylor said other scenarios to be covered include cyber-crimes and bullying. The program also is open to anyone serving as a public safety professional or working in the social services field. CEU credits through West Virginia Wesleyan College are available for a fee. An application and the full schedule are available at www.Facebook.com/ForensicMondays. Taylor praised the Frank B. Bartlett American Legion Post 7 officials for helping to sponsor this series for the second straight year. The costs of the program have been covered by various vendors and civic organizations. Save | Subscribe to The Inter-Mountain Elkins Weather Forecast, WV
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Hot Streaks The Laugh Button Inquisition Laughing At Last Week Twitter Reviews Off The Vine My Favorite Sketch Comedy 2.0 Comedy 101 The Laugh Button Live! Stand-Up Shots Artie Lange hospitalized after going into diabetic shock We put on our tightest pants and hang with Steel Panther Thank You Internet! It's 'Time to Dye' (video) Here’s a supercut of Hannibal Buress’ recurring hobo scenes in ’30 Rock’ MattFebruary 21, 2014Funny Clips, TelevisionPermalink When 30 Rock went off the air a year ago, we professed our love for the show with a list of 30 Reasons We’ll Miss 30 Rock. Number 14 on that list was the series of Hannibal Buress cameos that he’d make as a homeless person, or as Liz Lemon called them, “recurring hobos.” Buress was a writer on 30 Rock and was put into episodes here and there providing for some terrifically wacky moments. Internet people Oakley And Allen put together this supercut of Buress and all of his hoboiest moments on 30 Rock. We thank you in advance for making our weekend. Buress has viewed the clip and declared via Twitter, “Hey Emmys, it’s not too late to atone for your mistakes.” That’s enough foil Gus! ‘The Office’s Ellie Kemper to star in Tina Fey-written NBC comedy Bram TeitelmanOctober 31, 2013News, TelevisionPermalink The comedy duo of Tina Fey and Ellie Kemper have been seen together, but only on Thursday nights on NBC as part of different shows (30 Rock and The Office, respectively). Now, a project the two are collaborating on has been given a 13-episode series order by NBC. The comedy, which is tentatively titled Tooken, will be co-executive produced by Fey, who wrote the pilot with 30 Rock collaborator Robert Carlock. The sitcom will center on a woman, played by Kemper, who escapes from a doomsday cult to New York City. While there are no plans for Fey to appear onscreen, it’s a possibility that she’ll make a guest appearance on the show. The new comedy is the latest under Fey’s four-year deal with Universal Television. Another NBC comedy and a FOX sitcom set at a women’s college are also being developed by her. Tooken is set to premiere in Fall of 2014. Tina Fey is working on another sitcom for NBC MattAugust 14, 2013News, TelevisionPermalink Tina Fey is back in business with NBC/Universal. Well, not that she ever left really. But she is working on another workplace comedy for the peacock network. The project, which is currently untitled also links Fey back with her 30 Rock showrunner, Robert Carlock. While Fey is involved, the writer for the project is another 30 Rock alum, writer-producer Colleen McGuiness who actually sold the script to the network. The show’s basic premise is to be be character-driven in the workplace in the vein of Cheers. It will star a young woman trying to reconnect with her father and finds a new family on Fire Island. The show will fall under Fey’s Little Stranger production company and is part of the overall four-year development deal she struck with NBC/Universal last year. Tweet ’30 Rock,’ ‘Arrested Development’ among comedy Emmy noms Bram TeitelmanJuly 18, 2013Awards, NewsPermalink Streaming video service Netflix is still relatively new to original programming, but they’re off to an amazing start. Their drama House of Cards got nine Emmy nominations, the first time a streaming video service picked up any nominations, and possibly a glimpse at what’s to come in future years. Jason Bateman also picked up an Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series nomination for his role in Arrested Development. Sadly, that was the only major nomination that AD picked up, and marks the first time that the show wasn’t nominated for Outstanding Comedy Series. As far as the shows that were, 30 Rock ended its run by picking up nine nominations, including Outstanding Comedy Series. The 13 noms are more than any other comedy this year. The other shows garnering nominations included The Big Bang Theory, Louie, Modern Family and HBO series Girls and Veep. Louis C.K. did well in addition to his show being nominated – he also picked up nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor, hosting Saturday Night Live, and for his special “Oh My God.” Between Two Ferns also picked up a nomination for Short-Format-Live Action Entertainment. Read More Tracy Morgan gets FX comedy pilot Phil RothermichMay 30, 2013TelevisionPermalink The FX network just announced, yet another, comedy pilot that will be coming to the channel called Death Pact starring Tracey Morgan. After the recent wrap on the very successful 30 Rock series, FX quickly picked up Morgan to star in their new show. Death Pact is about a past high school coach, who also deals marijuana, and now receives a great homecoming as a war hero (played by Tracey Morgan). Once home, Morgan’s character starts up a self-help group, however, if you fail there are some serious consequences. I’m pretty sure I would not want to be the one who upsets a past coach and war hero, especially one as loud as Morgan. No word on when the show will make it to series, but it looks interesting to say the least. Stay tuned for more details. Cool thing to buy this week: ’30 Rock’ season 7, the final season Tim HagerMay 8, 2013DVDs, TelevisionPermalink This week the outrageous seventh season of everybody’s favorite TV series, 30 Rock hits stores! Though it is still sad that the show had to come to an end, and we think we gave the show the proper send off it deserved here, it doesn’t mean that you can’t relive all of your favorite moments from the series’ final and terrific season. From Tracy Jordan’s shocking medical news, Kenneth’s new girlfriend, Jenna’s surprise wedding, Lemon’s princess Leia wedding to Chriss Cross and baby adoption, plus Jack’s business crossroads. Season 7 wrapped up an excellently written series of comedic content that was as consistently great as any other great sitcoms that came before it. So, get working on your night cheese and pick it up today and complete your 30 Rock collection! Read More Long Live Liz Lemon and her Ben & Jerry’s yogurt Brian EllesFebruary 4, 2013News, TelevisionPermalink It’s a sweet ending to a fun run for the cast of 30 Rock as promised Ben & Jerry’s revealed their newest flavor in honor of Tina Fey’s lead character, “Liz Lemon Greek Yogurt.” The surprise was shared at a 30 Rock party in New York City. The new flavor is lemon with a blueberry lavender swirl through each batch. The flavor will become available throughout New York City and nation over the next few weeks. 30 Rock has been nominated for 22 Emmys as its final episode aired last Thursday night. This is not the first time Ben & Jerry’s created a flavor for a 30 Rock actor. In 2012 they released a Schweddy Balls flavor in tribute to the skit played by Alec Baldwin on Saturday Night Live. This batch of ice cream was vanilla flavored with fudge and rum-covered maltballs…baller! 30 Reasons We’ll Miss “30 Rock” MattJanuary 30, 2013Features, Lists, TelevisionPermalink For 7 years and 138 episodes Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tracy Morgan, Jane Krakowski, Jack McBrayer and the rest of the 30 Rock entertained us. Tomorrow night the series will end its run and go quietly into the night. The idea for the show started off really different in Fey’s mind – she wanted it to be a news show with a conservative host (“Alec Baldwin if we could ever get him”) and she was the new producer assigned to right the sinking ship. While that initial pitch was rejected, Fey went back and re-wrote the show based on her experience as the first female head writer of Saturday Night Live and the characters that surround it. Baldwin agreed to the pilot and the rest is proverbial history, and also laid out in way more detail in her book, Bossypants. There’s also a really great history of the show by The AV Club. With the show ending, we thought we’d look back and pick out 30 trends, running gags, jokes, memes, catchprases, character traits, and clips that we will miss about 30 Rock. Read More Chris D'Elia on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon: "Nothing matters to a drunk girl at all" (video) Otto Peterson of Otto & George passes away suddenly at 53 Kurt Sutter, the guy that created 'Sons of Anarchy' used to be a stand-up comedian 31 Comedy shows, stand-up specials, festivals, wishlists, and other things we're excited about in 2014 Watch a very brief video clip from John Mulaney's new FOX sitcom Connect In Their Own Words 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 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 December 2008 November 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 October 2007 September 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 Site Movies Photos Video 5 Reasons Lists Events Submit A Tip / Email Us About / Other Services The Laugh Button
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The Movie Asylum Movies I watched, April 2013 (Part I): It’s April the 19th so…I’m totally off-schedule with this one. “Lakeview Terrace" 7.25/10 [I remembered seeing this one advertised while I worked at the movie theater. I just never got a chance to see it until just this month. It surprises me in that it’s not so generic as the trailers suggested. It’s very mature, in fact, in its cinematography and characterizations, as well as atmosphere. You’ll never see a movie quite like it again, and that’s points with me.] “The Last House on the Left (2009)" 7.5/10 [I finally made my way through this film, and it’s not bad. Sure, it’s gruesome, and arguably a torture porn shockfest. That’s debatable. But ultimately it’s the parents’ revenge that sells the entire film. It’s the twist on the narrative. Here, it’s executed competently, but lets out the steam somewhere along the line. Finely acted, I might add. Solid remake. In a post-Rob Zombie world, what’s shocking anymore?] “Get Smart" 7.5/10 (Re-Review) [I misjudged this film when I first saw it, as I misinterpreted Anne Hathaway’s more mature performance, which therefore meant I misinterpreted the context of her and Maxwell Smart’s relationship here. It’s a delightful film, a unique romance, and once you’ve forgotten all those main gags from the trailers, revisit this gem. Wish it’d gotten a sequel.] “The Incredible Burt Wonderstone" 5.75/10 [This is also a delightful film, but strains under its own premise. They didn’t have enough material to write an entire film. If you can argue they did, then they didn’t fill it with the stuff they should’ve. Carell plays Wonderstone in a way I didn’t predict from the trailers, and Carrey is perfection here. The supporting characters make up a great team as well.] **”Evil Dead (2013)" 7.5/10 [It’s not so original in plotline, but viscerally this is a whole new beast. It’s not the nightmare, it’s what the nightmare is populated with. That’s the key to their new Evil Dead series, which is an official sequel, and will lead to at least three more Evil Dead films. To them, I say bring it on. I do love the revamped look of the Deadites. I’ll be giving it a second look soon. Creators, make it scarier, not gorier next time. You can’t outdo blood raining from the sky.] “The Spirit" 6.5/10 (Re-Review) [Oh, this film. I went back and rewatched it…if you love femme fatales, if you love ethereal sequences like daydreams, and if you love a little cheese with your crime-fighting, you may enjoy this movie after all. I think it’s a hidden gem, especially in a stoner context.] “Grandma’s Boy" 5.75/10 [I finally got to rewatch this one, because I couldn’t remember it the first time. Almost couldn’t remember it the second time either. It’s unique, it’s silly, the girl (Linda Cardellini (OMG!)) is fiiiiine, and it’s been defined as a cult hit/stoner classic. But it’s one you watch in snippets on TV. It’s not worth taking seriously. Maybe that’s its secret?] “House of Wax (2005)” 5/10 [Fun throwback premise, a little dull and cheaply made. Watch if you want. If not just once.] “Bully" 8.25/10 [I don’t like it when documentaries are left displaying no resolution to their subjects, but of course that’s merely a reflection of the world we live in. This is another documentary in the latest batch on important issues, and it’s just as affecting as it should be. Let your teens watch it.] “I Am" 7.75/10 [Hard film to find, but I so badly wanted to see it. Tom Shadyac is one of my favorite directors of all time, so to see him make a personal documentary about subjects I hold as important (legacy, improving life, morality) was of course a match made in heaven. I urge you to find a copy for yourself.] “White Noise" 5.5/10 [I found it interesting. Technically this movie is not very good. But I enjoyed it. I found it a decently creepy atmosphere, they utilize EVPs to nice payoff, and it had a semi-twist. I’m not quite sure what Keaton’s doing, but eh. Leave him to it. This film is just a fun one for TV. “Finding Neverland" 8/10 (Re-Review) [Oh yes, what a joy. If Johnny had mastered his Scottish accent here, why was he going in-and-out of it in "Alice in Wonderland?" Either way, this film is a joy. The inspirations for Peter Pan are as marvelous as the story itself. Of course, real life was a darker story, but the screenwriter chose not to bog down the film with it.] “Dark Skies" 6/10 [If they had more story to tell, they should’ve attempted it the first time around. This one needed a little more, and if the director was set on making another one, he’ll have to look at those box office receipts and try to justify a sequel to the studio paying the bill on the first one! Anyways, they get away with a couple jump scares, and surprisingly creepy things, while sticking to a somewhat "Insidious"-inspired structure. I like the alien modernization. Critics say the ending was deliberately attempting to set up a sequel…I think it was borderline. It was only slightly forced.] “House of 1000 Corpses" 6/10 [It’s unique, I’ll give it that. I don’t know if I should say it’s well-acted (sorta half-‘n-half, here), but it instantly makes a horror icon with Captain Spaulding, and Sheri Moon Zombie is a sexy-ass nut. Of course their sadist family commits horrifying acts, but Zombie’s stylization (almost drug-trippy) makes it a ride. Not quite assured behind the camera yet, but we see the makings here.] “Idiocracy" 9/10 [It’s great. It’s hilarious. Sure, the overall premise is disagreeable, but the way Mike Judge plays out the premise is hilarious. It’s the best take I’ll probably ever see on it. Btw Maya Rudolph once had sex appeal??] “The Blob (1988)" 7.5/10 [Thanks again, Barron, for finding an obscure horror and turning me into a convert fan once again. The R-Rated remake of "The Blob" is awesome. It’s gruesome. It’s twisted. It catches you off-guard and even breaks a horror genre convention along the way. And Shawnee Smith looking hella fine circa ‘88! And Jeffrey DeMunn playing the Sheriff, I almost didn’t recognize him!] “The Devil’s Rejects" 7.5/10 [This is the sickest movie I’ve ever seen. In the last two years, you guys have seen how many horror movies I’ve seen. This is the worst of them. Twisted as fuck. Zombie never lets up here. How did this get an R-Rating? I had to pause it to take a breather, it never lets up. My favorite characters, Spaulding, Sheri Moon Zombie, and her brother last to the end. Which means the optimum amount of carnage was produced in the duration of this film. Great conclusion to the story, though. They go out in glory.] “Event Horizon" 6.5/10 [Finally watched it. Yes, other dimensions shouldn’t be touched. Nice finale, especially for a Paul W.S. Anderson film. A tad smarter than the usual film by him, too.] “A Haunted House" 4/10 [Worse than I expected. Yeesh. The charm of Marlon Wayans and that one chick hold the movie pretty well through its miscellaneous, aimless gags. But even still, there’s not enough material. The finale was them just grabbing the camera and running around the house making jokes in character. Yet they’re making a sequel.] “Hannibal" 7.75/10 (Re-Review) [I didn’t quite enjoy this sequel when I first watched it. I was probably 16 or so. Watching it now, I appreciate seeing where Hannibal is at, his murderous side in reserve, and the dynamic between Hannibal and Starling is fun. Julianne Moore is actually really good as Clarice, despite fans’ initial disapproval at the recasting of Jodie Foster. It’s quite good fun, altogether.] “The Cell" 7.75/10 [Also finally got around to watching this one, also recommended to me. They were certainly right. It’s right up my psychological thriller alley, and plays to my surreal tastes. It’s also quite twisted, but between this, "Hannibal Rising," "Hannibal," and "Red Dragon," I’m beginning to think I know a little much about the inside of serial killers’ heads. Either way, J. Lo does alright, Vince Vaughn isn’t bad, and Vincent D’Onfrio is as bizzare as ever. Tarsem Singh’s touch is all over this film.] “Wonder Woman (2011)" 6.75/10 [Unaired TV pilot for NBC, it all comes down to the costume. If the costume was properly modernized, then it all could’ve worked. I liked the story, I liked the premise. If the superhero aspect truly came out in her wardrobe, it could’ve aired and been a moderate success. They could’ve had cool looking posters.] “Hannibal Rising" 5.5/10 [It’s just boring. It is. I "get it," I just don’t "like it." If they cut the running time down by 1/3, it could’ve been a bit better. Also, they miscast the lead dude. No traces of the Hannibal I know in there at all. Only a couple of cool scenes, or psychologically intriguing scenes. The rest is blatantly sketchy prequel work.] “Red Dragon" 6.75/10 [I liked seeing Hannibal mature a little in "Hannibal," but then they went back to pre-"Silence of the Lambs," 10-years-prior to "Hannibal" prequel focused on Will Graham and the Red Dragon. I feel like Hopkins played that up a little while incarcerated. Almost over-the-top. Either way, the cast is great, especially Ralph Fiennes, but the film overall is a little hard to take seriously for some reason. I don’t know exactly where Ratner fucked up this time.] Movies I watched, March 2013 (Part III): A couple of days late, so what. I’ve been on vacation. I finished “American Horror Story: Asylum,” which was an improvement on the first season. Also, been working on “Walking Dead,” but after a while I got jaded on it. Gotta jump back into that soon. “Blade Runner" 7.25/10 [Eh. I had the same issue with "Scarface": broody neon lights, steam, and grunge don’t instantly make a classic. And just because you display a little Phillip K. Dick sci-fi philosophy doesn’t mean your movie is automatically profound. Really, people expected more out of Ridley Scott for "Prometheus" because of this movie? “Prometheus” had more in it than this movie, for sure. It was also more damn fun.] “Take Shelter" 7.5/10 [Yeah, I can dig. Michael Shannon did a terrific job. Jessica Chastain? Perfection de ultimita, as per usual. The film really holds on the unfantastical in order to build its story. As long as you’re seeking a well-performed family drama with potential mental illness as a main subject, this will do just fine.] “Bridget Jones’s Diary" 7/10 [Eh. It’s pretty much what I expected it to be, this being the first official time I’ve ever seen this movie. Zellweger is lovable, Grant is a tool, and Firth is a nice guy. For happy ending’s sake, she ends up with the nice guy. …and? Well, along the way she builds up her character from nothing. And it’s occasionally funny or frank, relationship-wise.] “The Queen" 7.75/10 [Helen Mirren did fantastic, sure. But this film got a lot of unnecessary Oscar buzz resulting from that, including a Best Picture nom (personally, I’d have given the Oscar to Kate Winslet that year for "Little Children," but I’m partial to that gem). Ultimately, Michael Sheen is the standout as Tony Blair, but Helen must upstage him so her authority clearly stands high. She generally succeeds, and it’s a wonderfully British sight.] **”Gambit (2012)" 5.75/10 [As much as I love Alan Rickman, and as much as I like Cameron Diaz and Colin Firth, and as much as I like the Coen Brothers (wrote the screenplay here), this is mediocre work. Maybe a little more focus on definitive, original characters could’ve saved the day. But it was still cheeky fun.] “The Expendables 2" 7.25/10 [If I didn’t like Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger so much, then this might’ve ditched a good .5 point. Still, there is some cool action scenes here. BTW Chuck Norris here is a disappointment, even compared to his same-gen counterparts. This film was more fun than the first, so it’s an improvement, though the story is still a little messy.] “Dredd" 7.75/10 [If it weren’t for that last damn voiceover monologue, this would’ve probably gotten an 8. Just a little too dumbed-down for my tastes. I got the concept the first time around. Anyways, this is a lot more fun, interesting, and exciting than you’d expect. Just see it to believe it. I want more "DREDD!"] “Land of the Lost (2009)" 7.5/10 [Loved it. Critically, a 7.5, but I really enjoyed it. It’s a perfect stoner movie for one, and it’s like a hidden Will Ferrell/Danny McBride gem, and sure it’s silly, but it’s charming, clever, and updated.] “Zero Dark Thirty" 8/10 [Yes, I watched it, get off my back, geez. Only reason I bothered to watch this one was because of Jessica Chastain. Because I can watch her for 157 minutes. But an Osama Bin Laden movie? Let’s just say I paused this movie sporadically and 157 mins turned into 350 mins. It was interesting, especially if you don’t know the entire story from the media. Chastain could’ve won the Oscar, but she’ll earn hers soon at this rate. Overall, this film is definitely solid.] “The Passion of the Christ" 7.75/10 (Re-Review) [I haven’t seen this movie since it was in theaters, back in 2004. 8 years later, does it hold up? Surprisingly, yes. More so surprisingly because I’m not even Christian. If you don’t think about it in religious terms, but just listen and focus on the human story, then it’s a beautifully told, emotional tribute to humanity’s greatest potential.] “Catwoman" 4.75/10 (Re-Review) [This isn’t a total turkey. By that, I mean it’s no "Garbage Pail Kids Movie," or "Star Wars Holiday Special," or "Fantastic Four (1994)." It’s got enough in the screenplay and in the characterization (and Berry’s performance), as well as its own mythology, and just enough action beats. The problem is that the bare-minimum is never enough when releasing yourself as a summer superhero tentpole. I’m surprised this didn’t affect the box office release of “Batman Begins” just a year later, in fact. The direction may be off. Sharon Stone and a cosmetics cover-up plot (as well as an accompanying amnesia subplot) may have been completely wrong/insulting to feminists everywhere. But it is also a nice stoner piece. This film is a genuine anomaly, one “Elektra (2005)” doesn’t even compare to, and contemplating these questions alone makes it worth it at least just once.] “Batman & Robin" 4/10 [Yeah, it’s pretty awful. I love watching Uma Thurman get hot ‘n steamy. I love watching Schwarzenegger say shitty one-liners maniacally. Clooney may have been a decent Bruce Wayne, but he was no Batman. Alicia Silverstone looks good in the Batgirl suit, but she’s a horrible actress and could never seem as smart as Barbara Gordon, just like Denise Richards could never convince me she were a nuclear physicist ("The World is Not Enough"). Robin is a self-absorbed, whiny tool, all semblance of respect and "coolness" he had in "Batman Forever" has fled with those nipples on his suit. The plot is "meh," even Alfred’s potential death doesn’t shake any sense into this movie. At least a half hour of fuckin’ around is put on display here, with silly bells and whistles that don’t make a sound. This movie could’ve been a swift, kid-focused 90 minute runtime. Oh well.] “Frankenstein Conquers The World" 7/10 [My buddy Barron started recommending monster movies to me for research for my new horror screenplay. This was his first choice. Frankenstein is played to perfection, while twisting his mythology upside down to enter him into the kaiju genre. A fun throwback.] “Cheech and Chong’s Up In Smoke" 7.25/10 [I gotta admit, I hadn’t laughed this hard while toking since "Super Troopers," or "Office Space." They’re absolutely right about this film. However, is it a classic? Nah. Tommy Chong is one of my idols, and Cheech is like a ’70s Aziz Ansari. It’s a fun buddy comedy, kind of loses its narrative focus, then gets right back on track for a great finale.] “Syriana" 7/10 [Why did Clooney win for this one? Because he got fat? Either way, the “Traffic” approach to the oil industry is still a movie about the oil industry. Its realism is an attempt to convince people, yet we assumed this all happened. This is why we didn’t like Bush. Duh. They wring what intrigue, suspense, and tension they can, and they have a emotional story (a kid dies), almost as if it were written to be a persuasive essay.] “The Star Wars Holiday Special" 2/10 [OH YES I DID. The infamous "Star Wars" TV special, 1978, came across my desk last week, and I had to watch it with Barron, so I waited as long as I could before playing it. Keep in mind, this special never aired twice, and was never officially released from Lucasfilm on either VHS, DVD, or Blu-Ray. It is a rarity to find. So when I finally watched it…well…it was pretty much as awful as they say it is. It’s a genuine nostalgic joy to see Harrison Ford, Peter Mayhew, Anthony Daniels, Mark Hamill, and Carrie Fisher, all in ‘78, play their roles once more. Yet despite how pleasing a proposition that sounds, it is not enough to even balance itself against the visual and auditory assault that takes place in that 1.5 hrs. The plot is a point A to point B structure, of everyone trying to come together for Wookie Life Day, with only the Imperials standing in their way. And also the distraction of some terribly disjointed variety acts from ’70s celebrities. The worst part are the Wookies: Lumpy, Itchy, and Malla, who are like annoying WALL-Es here, not saying a single word, but making high-pitched Wookie noises for sometimes ten minutes straight, doing nothing more than nonsensical, mundane Wookie chores around the house that in no way drive the plot forward. The sole highlights are the first images of Kashyyk, the first appearance of Boba Fett (as well as his first confrontation with the gang), a Bea Arthur cantina gag, and just seeing everyone together again. A few pleasant geek surprises in a Bantha Poodoo haystack.] “The Wolf Man (1941)" 7/10 [Sometimes it is hard to separate your perception of what a movie will be, and then what it ends up being. Like, it took me a while to get used to what the first "Ghost Rider" movie is, instead of what I wanted it to be. But then I had to get used to the fact that it was a steamy pile of shit. “The Wolf Man” had some misperceptions I had placed on it over time, thinking it more Gothic, or even more dipped in folklore and legend. In fact, it was quite modern at the time. Also, it’s forgivable because of its runtime that the creature only shows up twice after taking Talbot under its curse.] “The A-Team (2010)" 7.5/10 (Re-Review) [There has to be a whole series of films that weren’t overtly exceptional, so they were ignored amidst competing films that were exceptional. “Land of the Lost (2009),” for example, is entertaining in its own right, but failed to produce a franchise, much less its own box office glory. “The A-Team” came out in a summer alongside “Toy Story 3,” “Iron Man 2” and “Inception.” The A-Team was competing to start its own franchise too (clearly, with its big-name cast and its big-ass budget), but got snuffed out. “The Karate Kid” took the money instead in a famous ’80s remake box office face-off, but still hasn’t produced a sequel itself. I think “The A-Team” was the more promising of the two. First off, the cast was perfectly handpicked (though I debate about Liam Neeson for Hannibal, most others wouldn’t). Second, it was riotous fun, even if it gets a little less plausible than preferred. Third, they put more thought into the screenplay than you’d expect. Give this one a second chance.] “Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. (1998)" 4/10 [It’s hard to take seriously. But at least it wasn’t as drawn-out, noisy, or in-your-face as some other recently rated turkeys. And David Hasselhoff wasn’t a bad consideration (at the time) for Fury. It was a straight forward, comic-booky time, featuring some pre-Marvel Studios mythology, like LMDs or the Helicarrier, all on a nice, low budget.] Movies I watched, March 2013 (Part II): Second third of my March reviews. Not many of them this time. “The Man With The Iron Fists" 5.75/10 [A writer RZA is not. But enough of this film is fun enough to keep it from all falling apart into mediocrity. Russell Crowe gets a shoutout for Jack Knife. The action gets a shoutout for its implausible inventiveness.] “Hostel: Part II" 7.25/10 [I’ve now seen all of the "Hostel" films. I think they’re all pretty good in their own right. This one focuses on a female cast, as well as the original Bloodhound factory, tying in a heavy mythology pretty successfully while fleshing out more of said premise. Hard to believe this wasn’t as successful as the first film.] “Superstar" 5.25/10 [What is so popular about "Superstar?" Mary Katherine Gallagher. That’s it. Like most SNL films, they come up with a great creation, then try to make the joke last over a shortened runtime, to dwindling effect. The rest of the film (minus a rockin’ Will Ferrell Jesus) is pretty much average and unfunny.] “Minority Report" 9/10 (Re-Review) [I think this is one of the most underrated sci-fi films of the past couple decades. It’s purely intellectual, it’s action packed, it’s wisely structured and scripted, it’s a great Tom Cruise showcase, and the premise is flawless.] Movies I watched, March 2013 (Part I): I decided to break this month’s reviews into thirds. The last few times I decided to write, it took over an hour each time. Avoiding that like the plague. Now updated with “Flight,” which I just watched on the same night of this post. “The Fantastic Four (1994)" 2/10 [Oh yes, I got ahold of the infamous, never-theatrically-released, low-budget attempt at a big-screen FF adventure. Minus some oddly hokey minions Doctor Doom has, this plays a lot like the 2005 version story-wise. Treads a lot of the same familiar territory. But, you know, with a shoestring budget and horrible acting. And no Jessica Alba in tighty tightness.] “101 Dalmatians (1996)" 5.5/10 (Re-Review) [I wasn’t totally paying attention to this…but Jeff Daniels plays it straight, and Joely Richardson is always a welcome sight, even if she does too. Glenn Close is great, because with so many straight arrows, she’s the crazy one that brings some energy to the show. Also, Mr. Weasley (Mark Williams) and Dr. House (Hugh Laurie) make a great couple of dog nappers. Either way, as far as story and film is concerned…it’s all generic, and adapting this film to live-action means the animals acting like plotting clever people plays off as a tad too cheesy to me.] “The Royal Tenenbaums" 7.75/10 [I finally got to see Wes Anderson’s touchstone pic. I loved the cast. Some members of the cast never acted better (imo). For an ensemble of this size, the screenplay’s balancing act comes off as effortless.] “Creepshow III" 3/10 [For as average as the first "Creepshow" was, I don’t have any idea how they reached a third installment (jk; it was straight-to-DVD, and was solely created to bank off the name of the original ’80s flicks). Pretty much created with zero creative intent whatsoever. There’s a semi-twist here and there that keeps it from being a total waste of 1.5 hrs.] “The Descendants" 8/10 [I want to know what George Clooney does to play different leading man roles. Matt King is definitely different from Ryan Bingham, yet I could not begin to tell you how Clooney pulled that off. This type of film simply tends to depress me (due to subject matter), and just because it says Alexander Payne as director doesn’t mean it’s going to be as funny as "Sideways." It’s still a very solid film, Shailene Woodley is fine-as-hell, and it’s an uplifting ending.] **”21 and Over" 6/10 [No self-respecting writers would repeat their own writing, given certain allowable exceptions (sequels, inside jokes, homages, etc). These guys? They repeated some of their own jokes from "The Hangover," "A Very Harold and Kumar Christmas," and "American Reunion," down to the beer pong competition, violent douchebags, and Asian stereotypes. Still, it’s an OK time.] “For a Good Time, Call…" 4/10 [As much as I love Ari Graynor (she so fiiiine), I didn’t like this movie. Maybe it’s because I semi-blacked out drunk that night, but I just didn’t laugh really. The story was kind of average. Anne Hathaway’s role in “Valentine’s Day” as a phone sex operator was more intriguing (and more dramatic) than anything here, and that was just a small portion of that movie. And I don’t think phone sex is sexy, for whatever reason (sue me, I like feeling something). So yeah. Not that good of a time.] “Pitch Perfect" 7/10 [Pretty much one of the simplest, most streamlined plots I’ve seen in a studio film for years…at least, one that is just as effective as its slightly more complex counterpart. Anna Kendrick and Rebel Wilson steal their scenes easy-peezay. Anna hooked me on her "alternative" character immediately (I’ve crushed on her since "Up in the Air"), and Rebel Wilson never falls flat in any role she picks. Brittany Snow, no matter what role, could not convince me to care for her. Anna Camp was probably one of the more dynamic
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- Form 10-Q ALBEMARLE CORP Form 10-Q ALBEMARLE CORPORATION SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D. C. 20549 FORM 10-Q x QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For Quarterly Period Ended September 30, 2004 OR ¨ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For Transition Period from to . Commission File Number 1-12658 ALBEMARLE CORPORATION (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) VIRGINIA 54-1692118 (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 330 SOUTH FOURTH STREET RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 23219 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code) telephone number, including area code - (804) 788-6000 Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes x No ¨ Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes x No ¨ Number of shares of common stock, $.01 par value, outstanding as of October 31, 2004: 41,660,492 Table of Contents ALBEMARLE CORPORATION INDEX PageNumber(s) PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION ITEM 1. Financial Statements Consolidated Balance Sheets – September 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003 3-4 Consolidated Statements of Income – Three- and Nine-Months Ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 5 Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income – Three- and Nine-Months Ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 6 Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows – Nine Months Ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 7 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 8-23 ITEM 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and Financial Condition and Additional Information 24-38 ITEM 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk 38 ITEM 4. Controls and Procedures 39 PART II. OTHER INFORMATION ITEM 1. Legal Proceedings 40 ITEM 6. Exhibits 40 SIGNATURES 41 EXHIBITS 42-46 2 Table of Contents PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION ITEM 1. Financial Statements ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (Dollars In Thousands) September 30,2004 December 31,2003 (Unaudited) ASSETS Current assets: Cash and cash equivalents $ 60,817 $ 35,173 Accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts(2004 -$863; 2003 - $2,287) 373,697 226,026 Inventories: Finished goods 201,724 154,594 Raw materials 58,119 22,384 Stores, supplies and other 29,550 27,725 289,393 204,703 Deferred income taxes and prepaid expenses 16,459 15,467 Total current assets 740,366 481,369 Property, plant and equipment, at cost 2,019,845 1,605,048 Less accumulated depreciation and amortization 1,130,671 1,078,043 Net property, plant and equipment 889,174 527,005 Prepaid pension assets 251,669 185,531 Other assets and deferred charges 187,137 74,802 Goodwill 140,590 36,832 Other intangibles, net of amortization 220,204 81,752 Total assets $ 2,429,140 $ 1,387,291 See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 3 Table of Contents ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (Dollars In Thousands) September 30,2004 December 31,2003 (Unaudited) LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY Current liabilities: Accounts payable $ 191,365 $ 111,431 Long-term debt, current portion 495,047 190 Accrued expenses 98,792 70,610 Dividends payable to shareholders 5,587 5,494 Income taxes payable 26,600 22,346 Total current liabilities 817,391 210,071 Long-term debt 458,219 228,389 Postretirement benefits 77,236 66,969 Pension benefits 103,796 41,790 Other noncurrent liabilities 72,743 60,186 Deferred income taxes 236,152 143,665 Commitments and contingencies (Note 18) Shareholders’ equity: Common stock, $.01 par value, issued and outstanding – 41,657,017 in 2004 and 41,153,008 in 2003 417 412 Additional paid-in capital 9,432 736 Accumulated other comprehensive income 25,197 23,643 Retained earnings 628,557 611,430 Total shareholders’ equity 663,603 636,221 Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 2,429,140 $ 1,387,291 See accompanying notes ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME (In Thousands, Except Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) Three Months EndedSeptember 30, Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 2004 2003 Net sales $ 413,904 $ 276,551 $ 1,062,672 $ 815,113 Cost of goods sold 324,396 220,543 845,952 640,331 Acquisition-related cost 13,400 — 13,400 — Gross profit 76,108 56,008 203,320 174,782 Selling, general and administrative expenses 43,075 27,965 106,078 85,026 Research and development (R & D) expenses 9,101 4,770 18,768 14,133 Reduction in force adjustments (199 ) 7,503 4,858 7,503 Purchased in-process R & D charges 3,000 — 3,000 — Operating profit 21,131 15,770 70,616 68,120 Interest and financing expenses (6,250 ) (1,449 ) (9,168 ) (4,043 ) Equity in unconsolidated investments 1,826 (930 ) 2,494 (1,148 ) Other income (expense), net including minority interest (16,977 ) (1,733 ) (16,026 ) 1,742 Income before income tax and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net (270 ) 11,658 47,916 64,671 Income taxes (1,097 ) 1,802 12,714 7,294 Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net 827 9,856 35,202 57,377 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (2,220 ) Net income $ 827 $ 9,856 $ 35,202 $ 55,157 Basic earnings per share: Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 0.02 $ 0.24 $ 0.85 $ 1.39 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (0.05 ) Net income $ 0.02 $ 0.24 $ 0.85 $ 1.34 Diluted earnings per share: Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 0.02 $ 0.23 $ 0.83 $ 1.36 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (0.05 ) Net income $ 0.02 $ 0.23 $ 0.83 $ 1.31 Cash dividends declared per share of common stock $ — $ 0.14 $ 0.435 $ 0.42 See accompanying notes ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (Dollars In Thousands) (Unaudited) Three Months EndedSeptember 30, Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 2004 2003 Net income $ 827 $ 9,856 $ 35,202 $ 55,157 Other comprehensive income, net of tax: Unrealized (loss) gain on securities available for sale (4 ) 37 (30 ) 43 Unrealized gain (loss) on hedging derivatives 77 (123 ) 26 (153 ) Foreign currency translation 5,212 1,823 1,558 12,611 Other comprehensive income 5,285 1,737 1,554 12,501 Comprehensive income $ 6,112 $ 11,593 $ 36,756 $ 67,658 See accompanying notes to the consolidated financial statements. 6 Table of Contents ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (Dollars In Thousands) (Unaudited) Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year $ 35,173 $ 47,784 Cash flows from operating activities: Net income 35,202 55,157 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net (a) — 2,220 Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net 35,202 57,377 Adjustments to reconcile net income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net to cash flows from operating activities: Depreciation and amortization 69,288 61,765 Loss on hedging of anticipated acquisition purchase price 12,848 — Purchased in-process R & D charges 3,000 — Working capital changes, net of the effects of acquisitions 15,090 4,084 Increase in prepaid pension assets (3,923 ) (5,108 ) Increase in income tax receivable — (9,685 ) Other, net (288 ) (646 ) Net cash provided from operating activities 131,217 107,787 Cash flows from investing activities: Acquisitions of assets/business, net of $34,418 cash acquired (762,378 ) (106,603 ) Capital expenditures (37,602 ) (30,307 ) Investments in joint ventures and nonmarketable securities (6,742 ) (6,967 ) Payments on hedging of anticipated acquisition purchase price (12,848 ) — Proceeds from liquidation of nonmarketable security — 4,419 Net cash used in investing activities (819,570 ) (139,458 ) Cash flows from financing activities: Proceeds from borrowings 1,050,946 102,378 Proceeds from exercise of stock options 6,762 1,446 Repayments of long-term debt (325,806 ) (53,658 ) Purchases of common stock (827 ) (17,588 ) Dividends paid to shareholders (17,982 ) (17,426 ) Dividends paid to minority interest (3,269 ) (2,700 ) Net cash provided from financing activities 709,824 12,452 Net effect of foreign exchange on cash and cash equivalents 4,173 6,419 Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents 25,644 (12,800 ) Cash and cash equivalents at end of period $ 60,817 $ 34,984 (a) Supplemental noncash disclosures due to a cumulative change in accounting principle: Increase in property, plant and equipment $ — $ (6,520 ) Increase in accumulated depreciation — 3,083 Increase in other noncurrent liabilities — 6,922 Decrease in deferred tax liabilities — (1,265 ) Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ — $ 2,220 See accompanying notes ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) 1. In the opinion of management, the accompanying consolidated financial statements of Albemarle Corporation and its wholly-owned and majority-owned subsidiaries (“Albemarle” or the “Company”) contain all adjustments necessary for a fair presentation, in all material respects, of the Company’s consolidated financial position as of September 30, 2004, and December 31, 2003, the consolidated results of operations and comprehensive income for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, and 2003, and condensed consolidated cash flows for the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, and 2003. All adjustments are of a normal and recurring nature. In addition, appropriate adjustments have been recorded associated with the preliminary purchase accounting for the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business of Akzo Nobel N.V. (“Akzo Nobel”). These consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes thereto included in the Company’s 2003 Annual Report on Form 10-K. The December 31, 2003 consolidated balance sheet data herein was derived from audited financial statements, but does not include all disclosures required by generally accepted accounting principles. The results of operations for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the full year. Certain reclassifications have been made to the accompanying consolidated financial statements and the notes thereto to conform to the current presentation. The reclassifications mainly related to the December 31, 2003 breakout of pension benefits from noncurrent liabilities as well as changes made to segment operating results associated with the July 31, 2004 acquisition of the refinery catalysts business of Akzo Nobel and the reorganization of the Polymer Chemicals segment into the Polymer Additives and Catalysts segments. 2. As a result of the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business, the Company’s designated Significant Critical Accounting Policies have been expanded to include the following: Performance and Life Cycle Guarantees The Company provides customers certain performance guarantees and life cycle guarantees. These guarantees entitle the customer to claim compensation if the product does not conform to performance standards originally agreed upon. Performance guarantees relate to minimum technical specifications that products produced with the delivered catalyst must meet, such as yield and product quality. Life cycle guarantees relate to minimum periods for which performance of the delivered catalysts is guaranteed. When either performance guarantees or life cycle guarantees are contractually agreed upon, an assessment of the appropriate revenue recognition treatment is evaluated. When testing or modeling of historical results predict that the performance or life cycle criteria will be satisfied, revenue is recognized in accordance with shipping terms at the time of delivery. When testing or modeling of historical results predict that the performance or life cycle criteria may not be satisfied, the Company bills the customer upon shipment and defers the related revenue and cost associated with these products. These deferrals are released to earnings when the contractual period expires. 3. Cost of goods sold for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 includes an August 26, 2004 cash settlement whereby the Company and a former insurer settled a dispute related to payments to be made to the Company in connection with certain insurance coverage for the period 1950 through 2000. Pursuant to the agreement, the Company will receive $6,945 ($4,424 after income taxes, or 10 cents per diluted share) with $4,208 paid at the settlement date and future payments to be made on February 1, 2005 and 2006. Cost of goods sold for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 also includes a third-quarter charge amounting to $3,396 ($2,163 after income taxes, or five cents per diluted share) related to the establishment of a valuation reserve for the potential recoverability of a claim incurred by the Company regarding the discontinuance of product support for and withdrawal from a water treatment venture. (See legal proceedings in Part II of this document). In addition, cost of goods sold includes foreign exchange transaction (losses) of ($625) and ($901), and ($258) and ($92) for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, respectively. 8 Table of Contents ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued) (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) 4. Acquisition-related cost totaling $13,400 ($8,536 after income taxes, or 20 cents per diluted share) for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, consists of the step-up increase in acquired inventory to fair value associated with the July 31, 2004 acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business. 5. Purchased in-process research and development (“in-process R & D”) charges amounting to $3,000, or seven cents per diluted share, for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, are comprised of the write-off of the estimated research and development costs associated with the acquired refinery catalysts business deemed not to have future use. 6. Reduction in force adjustments for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, include a $199 adjustment of a reserve for work force reduction. Nine-months period ended September 30, 2004, also includes a second-quarter 2004 charge totaling $550 ($350 after income taxes or one cent per diluted share) related to the cleanup of the zeolite facility in Pasadena, Texas and a first-quarter 2004 charge totaling $4,507 ($2,871 after income taxes or seven cents per diluted share) for layoffs at the zeolite facility and their related SFAS 88 curtailment charge. Reduction in force charges for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2003 totaled $7,503 ($4,780 after income taxes or 12 cents per diluted share) resulted from the acceptance of a voluntary separation package offered by the Company to certain domestic salaried employees. The following table summarizes the total special charges related to the 2004 layoff and 2003 voluntary separation programs: Beginning accrual balance, January 1, 2004 $ 1,193 Workforce reduction charges 3,449 Payments (3,578 ) Overaccrual reversed to income in third quarter (199 ) Overaccrual reversed to income in first quarter (519 ) Ending accrual balance, September 30, 2004 $ 346 * * The remaining amount is expected to be paid prior to the end of 2004. 7. Other income (expense), net including minority interest for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 include foreign exchange hedging charges totaling $15,712 ($10,009 after income taxes, or 24 cents per diluted share) and $12,848 ($8,184 after income taxes, or 19 cents per diluted share), respectively, associated with the settlement of contracts entered into by the Company to hedge the euro-denominated purchase price for the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business. Other income (expense), net including minority interest for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2003 include interest income on tax settlements totaling $1,593 ($1,014 after income taxes, or 2 cents per diluted share) and $2,715 ($1,730 after income taxes, or 4 cents per diluted share), respectively. 9 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) 8. Basic and diluted earnings per share for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, are calculated as follows: Three Months EndedSeptember 30, Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 2004 2003 Basic earnings per share Numerator: Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 827 $ 9,856 $ 35,202 $ 57,377 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (2,220 ) Income available to shareholders, as reported $ 827 $ 9,856 $ 35,202 $ 55,157 Denominator: Average number of shares of common stock Outstanding 41,588 41,177 41,497 41,293 Basic earnings per share: Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 0.02 $ 0.24 $ 0.85 $ 1.39 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (0.05 ) Basic earnings per share $ 0.02 $ 0.24 $ 0.85 $ 1.34 Diluted earnings per share Numerator: Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 827 $ 9,856 $ 35,202 $ 57,377 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (2,220 ) Income available to shareholders, as reported $ 827 $ 9,856 $ 35,202 $ 55,157 Denominator: Average number of shares of common stock Outstanding 41,588 41,177 41,497 41,293 Shares issuable upon exercise of stock options 956 960 845 863 Total shares 42,544 42,137 42,342 42,156 Diluted earnings per share: Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 0.02 $ 0.23 $ 0.83 $ 1.36 Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net — — — (0.05 ) Diluted earnings per share $ 0.02 $ 0.23 $ 0.83 $ 1.31 10 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) 9. The following table reflects the changes in consolidated shareholders’ equity from December 31, 2003 through September 30, 2004: Common Stock AdditionalPaid-InCapital AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncome RetainedEarnings TotalShare-holders’Equity Shares Amounts Balance at December 31, 2003 41,153,008 $ 412 $ 736 $ 23,643 $ 611,430 $ 636,221 Net income — — — — 35,202 35,202 Foreign currency translation, net — — — 1,558 — 1,558 Change in unrealized loss on marketable equity securities, net — — — (30 ) — (30 ) Change in unrealized gain on hedging derivatives, net — — — 26 — 26 Cash dividends declared — — — — (18,075 ) (18,075 ) Stock option remeasurement adjustments — — 880 — — 880 Shares repurchased and retired (27,569 ) — (827 ) — — (827 ) Shares issued upon exercise of stock options 466,959 5 6,757 — — 6,762 Issuance of incentive award stock 64,619 — 1,886 — — 1,886 Balance at September 30, 2004 41,657,017 $ 417 $ 9,432 $ 25,197 $ 628,557 $ 663,603 10. At September 30, 2004, goodwill and other intangibles consist principally of goodwill, customer lists, trademarks, patents and other intangibles. Balances atBeginning ofYear Additions atCost AmortizationCharged toExpense ForeignExchange Balances atSeptember 30, 2004 Changes by operating segment: Goodwill Polymer Additives $ 18,040 $ — $ — $ 73 $ 18,113 Fine Chemicals 18,792 — — (201 ) 18,591 Catalysts — 103,886 (a) — — 103,886 $ 36,832 $ 103,886 $ — $ (128 ) $ 140,590 Other intangibles Polymer Additives $ 79,100 $ 2,929 (b) $ 3,852 $ 673 $ 78,850 Fine Chemicals 2,652 — 338 (31 ) 2,283 Catalysts — 140,627 (c) 1,556 — 139,071 $ 81,752 $ 143,556 $ 5,746 $ 642 $ 220,204 (a) The increase in goodwill in the Catalysts segment is associated with the estimate of the preliminary allocation of the purchase price of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business. (b) Other intangibles additions in the Polymer Additives segment consist of a non-compete agreement ($416), an employment contract ($1,292), a customer list ($890) and other intangibles ($169) associated with the 11 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) acquisition of the assets of Taerim International Corporation (“Taerim”) as well as other intangibles ($162) associated with the allocation of the purchase price of Atofina Chemical, Inc’s (“Atofina”) bromine fine chemicals business. (c) Other intangibles additions in the Catalysts segment consist of intangibles related to the estimates of the preliminary allocation of the purchase price of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business as follows: trade name ($69,013), patents ($41,137), customer list and relationships ($23,832), and non-compete agreements ($6,645). The estimated useful lives range from 8.5 to 30 years with a weighted average of approximately 15 years. Amortization for each of the next five years should approximate $9.3 million. 11. The significant differences between the U.S. federal statutory income tax rate on pretax income and the effective income tax rate for the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, respectively, are as follows: % of Income Before Income Taxes Nine Months Ended September 30, 2004 2003 Federal statutory rate 35.0 % 35.0 % Revaluation of reserve requirements — (12.1 ) State taxes, net of federal tax benefit 0.7 0.9 Extraterritorial income exclusion (4.1 ) (2.9 ) Depletion (2.8 ) (2.1 ) Federal income tax settlement — (7.2 ) Other items, net (2.3 ) (0.3 ) Effective income tax rate 26.5 % 11.3 % For the three month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, differences between U.S. statutory tax rates and effective tax rates are attributable to differences consistent with the nine month periods mentioned above, as well as the effects of special items resulting from the refinery catalysts acquisition. Income taxes for the nine months ended September 30, 2003, reflect favorable income tax benefits totaling $11,988 related to the reversal of certain tax reserves amounting to $7,516 for the 1998 and 1999 tax years, of which $916 relates to the three months ended September 30, 2003, and net income tax settlements amounting to $4,472 for the years 1996 and 1997. 12. Cash dividends declared for the nine-month period ended September 30, 2004 totaled 43.5 cents per share, which included a dividend of 14.5 cents per share declared on January 30, 2004, paid April 1, 2004, a dividend of 14.5 cents per share declared March 31, 2004, payable July 1, 2004, as well as a dividend of 14.5 cents per share declared June 30, 2004, payable October 1, 2004. The cash dividends declared for the nine-month period ended September 30, 2003 included three dividend declarations or 42 cents per share. The primary reason for the two dividend declarations in both first-quarter periods was the timing of the Board of Directors meeting dates. 13. On July 31, 2004, the Company completed the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business for EUR 615,700 ($762,159 at applicable exchange rates) funded by a combination of a bridge loan and long-term financing. Following this acquisition, the Company transferred the existing polyolefin catalysts business 12 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) from the Polymer Chemicals segment, which was renamed Polymer Additives, to a newly created Catalysts segment, which also includes the assets acquired from Akzo Nobel. The Company’s operations are now managed and reported as three operating segments: Polymer Additives; Catalysts; and Fine Chemicals. Additionally, the Company acquired 50 percent ownership of non-consolidated joint ventures in Brazil (FCC SA), Japan (Nippon Ketjen) and France (Eurecat, with affiliates in the United States, Saudi Arabia and Italy). The addition of the refinery catalysts business of Akzo Nobel provides a new platform to broaden Albemarle’s portfolio of specialty chemicals and service solutions, and expands our interaction with a global customer base that plays a key role in the world economy. The preliminary purchase price allocation is summarized below. Cash $ 34,418 Accounts receivable 99,636 Inventory 99,355 Property, plant and equipment 380,000 Other assets 168,697 Goodwill and other intangibles 244,513 In-process research and development assets 3,000 Accounts payable (62,766 ) Other current liabilities (58 ) Non-current deferred tax liabilities (98,828 ) Other noncurrent liabilities (71,390 ) Net cash paid 796,577 Less: cash acquired (34,418 ) Net cash paid less cash acquired $ 762,159 Estimated goodwill on this transaction is mainly attributable to differences between book and tax bases of acquired assets. 13 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) The following unaudited pro forma data summarizes the results of operations for the three-month and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, respectively, as if the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business had been completed as of the beginning of each of the periods presented. The pro forma data gives effect to actual operating results prior to the acquisition, and includes adjustments for tangible and intangible asset depreciation and amortization, interest expense and related income tax effects associated with the acquisition. Additionally, non-recurring items associated with acquired inventory step-up charges of $13,400 ($8,536 after income taxes, or 20 cents per diluted share), in-process R & D charges of $3,000, or 7 cents per diluted share and acquisition-related euro-denominated hedge contract net losses for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 totaling $15,712 ($10,009 after income taxes, or 24 cents per share) and $12,848 ($8,184 after income taxes, or 19 cents per diluted share), respectively are reflected in the pro forma data for each of the periods presented. These pro forma amounts do not purport to be indicative of the results that would have actually been obtained if the acquisition had occurred as of the beginning of each of the periods presented or that may be obtained in the future. Three Months EndedSeptember 30, Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 2004 2003 Net sales $ 447,846 $ 377,597 $ 1,345,639 $ 1,116,926 Income (loss) before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ 5,193 $ (3,555 ) $ 50,806 $ 60,752 Net income (loss) $ 5,193 $ (3,555 ) $ 50,806 $ 58,532 Basic earnings (loss) per share before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ 0.12 $ (0.09 ) $ 1.22 $ 1.47 Diluted earnings (loss) per share before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ 0.12 $ (0.08 ) $ 1.20 $ 1.44 Basic earnings (loss) per share $ 0.12 $ (0.09 ) $ 1.22 $ 1.42 Diluted earnings (loss) per share $ 0.12 $ (0.08 ) $ 1.20 $ 1.39 The above pro forma data includes pro forma amounts for depreciation and amortization, interest expense and income taxes as follows: Three Months EndedSeptember 30, Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 2004 2003 Depreciation and amortization $ 29,084 $ 29,201 $ 88,291 $ 86,169 Interest and financing expenses $ 7,549 $ 7,711 $ 22,658 $ 23,104 Income taxes (benefits) $ 1,195 $ (5,347 ) $ 17,620 $ 6,061 Effective January 1, 2004, the Company acquired the business assets, customer lists and other intangibles of Taerim and formed Albemarle Korea Corporation located in Seoul. Taerim was formerly Albemarle’s Korean distributor and representative. The acquisition purchase price, which totaled $3,337 payable in cash and long-term payables due over five years, consisted primarily of intangible assets and inventory. 14 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) On December 2, 2003, the Company, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Albemarle Chemicals SAS, acquired Atofina’s bromine fine chemicals business for $10,146. The transaction included the transfer to Albemarle of Atofina’s production site in Port de Bouc, France, as well as a long-term supply agreement with Atofina for certain fine chemicals. The acquisition provides Albemarle with flexibility in raw material supply and complements the Company’s existing network of bromine-based facilities in Jordan and the United States. The preliminary purchase price allocation as of September 30, 2004, which is subject to final negotiations with the seller and is anticipated to conclude during the fourth quarter of 2004, is summarized below. Accounts receivable $ 1,861 Inventory 7,914 Property, plant and equipment 7,964 Deferred expenses 799 Deferred tax assets 843 Other assets 1,061 Intangibles 162 Current liabilities (1,440 ) Other noncurrent liabilities (7,839 ) Long-term environmental liabilities (1,179 ) Net cash paid $ 10,146 On July 23, 2003, the Company, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Albemarle Virginia Corporation, acquired Rhodia S.A. and its affiliated companies’ global organophosphorus and ammonium polyphosphate flame retardants businesses (“Rhodia”) for $80,024. This acquisition strengthened Albemarle’s position in rigid and flexible polyurethane foams. The Antiblaze flame retardant product portfolio that was acquired allows Albemarle to be a significant provider of flame retardants for the polyurethane foam industry. It also complements the NcendX™ phosphorus-based flame retardants capability Albemarle has developed for thermoplastic applications. As part of this transaction, Albemarle acquired a production site in Avonmouth, United Kingdom. Albemarle will be supplied with flame retardants and intermediates manufactured at Rhodia’s sites in Charleston, S.C., and Oldbury and Widnes in the United Kingdom. A summary of the final purchase price allocation is as follows: Current assets $ 4,749 Property, plant and equipment 19,401 Intangibles 55,858 Other assets 1,861 Current liabilities (811 ) Noncurrent liabilities (1,034 ) Net cash paid $ 80,024 15 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) On January 21, 2003, the Company acquired Ethyl Corporation’s fuel and lubricant antioxidants working capital, patents and other intellectual property for $26,579. The Company acquired the antioxidants assets to further leverage core strengths of the Company and orthoalkylation. A summary of the final purchase price allocation is as follows: Current assets $ 4,685 Property, plant and equipment 300 Other assets 613 Intangibles 24,161 Current liabilities (2,230 ) Noncurrent liabilities (950 ) Net cash paid $ 26,579 14. Long-term debt consists of the following: September 30,2004 December 31,2003 Variable-rate bank loans $ 936,809 $ 207,935 Industrial revenue bonds 11,000 11,000 Foreign borrowings 4,545 8,687 Miscellaneous 912 957 Total 953,266 228,579 Less amounts due within one year 495,047 190 Long-term debt $ 458,219 $ 228,389 Interest and financing expenses for the three- and nine-months periods ended September 30, 2004 include the write-off of deferred financing expenses totaling $528 ($336 net of income taxes, or one cent per diluted share) related to the refinancing of the Company’s prior revolving credit agreement. In connection with the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business, the Company entered into (1) a new senior credit agreement, dated as of July 29, 2004, among Albemarle, Albemarle Catalysts International, L.L.C., a subsidiary of the Company, certain of the Company’s subsidiaries as guarantors, the lenders parties thereto, Bank of America, N.A., as Administrative Agent, UBS Securities LLC, as Syndication Agent, and The Bank of New York, Fortis (USA) Finance LLC and SunTrust Bank, as Co-Documentation Agents, consisting of a $300,000 revolving credit facility and a $450,000 five-year term loan facility, and (2) a $450,000 364-day loan agreement, dated as of July 29, 2004, among Albemarle, Albemarle Catalysts International, L.L.C., certain of the Company’s subsidiaries as guarantors, the lendors parties thereto, Banc of America Bridge LLC, as Administrative Agent, and UBS Securities LLC, as Syndication Agent. The Company used the initial borrowings under the new senior credit agreement and the 364-day loan agreement to consummate the acquisition, refinance the then-existing credit agreement and pay related fees and expenses incurred in connection therewith. The revolving credit facility, the five-year term loan facility, and the 364-day loan agreement bore variable interest rates at September 30, 2004 of 2.44%, 2.86% and 2.69%, respectively. 16 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) These new credit facilities contain certain restrictive financial covenants including fixed charge coverage, debt to capitalization, and other covenants as set forth in the agreements. The $450,000 five-year facility is payable in quarterly installments of $11,250 beginning September 30, 2004 through June 30, 2008, with three final quarterly payments of $90,000 beginning Sept. 30, 2008 through March 31, 2009. Deferred financing costs associated with the new facilities amounted to $7,045 and are being amortized ratably over the lives of the respective facilities. 15. The Company has the following recorded environmental liabilities primarily included in “Other noncurrent liabilities” at September 30, 2004: Beginning balance at December 31, 2003 $ 29,122 Additions 1,179 Payments (1,357 ) Foreign exchange (412 ) Ending balance at September 30, 2004 $ 28,532 The amounts recorded represent the Company’s future remediation and other anticipated environmental liabilities. Although it is difficult to quantify the potential financial impact of compliance with environmental protection laws, management estimates (based on the latest available information) that there is a reasonable possibility that future environmental remediation costs associated with the Company’s past operations, in excess of amounts already recorded, could be up to approximately $11.5 million before income taxes. On another matter, the Company has submitted a request for arbitration against Aventis S.A. (“Aventis”) to confirm that Aventis is obligated to indemnify the Company pursuant to the terms of a stock purchase agreement, for certain present and future claims asserted against the Company arising out of soil and groundwater contamination at the site of the Thann facility. See Note 20. The Company believes that any sum it may be required to pay in connection with environmental remediation matters in excess of the amounts recorded should occur over a period of time and should not have a material adverse effect upon results of operations, financial condition or cash flows of the Company on a consolidated annual basis although any such sum could have a material adverse impact in a particular quarterly reporting period. 16. Effective August 2, 2004, following the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business, the Company reorganized its segments. The polyolefin catalysts products’ net sales, operating profit and identifiable assets were moved from the Polymer Chemicals segment into a new Catalysts segment, with the remainder of the Polymer Chemicals segment businesses being renamed Polymer Additives. The Polymer Additives and Catalysts segment data herein have been recast for all periods presented to reflect this reorganization. After this reorganization, the Company operates as a global developer, manufacturer and marketer of specialty polymer chemicals, catalysts and fine chemicals, grouped into three segments: Polymer Additives, Catalysts and Fine Chemicals. After the reorganization, the Polymer Additives segment is comprised of the flame retardants and polymer additives product areas; the Catalysts segment is comprised of the refinery catalysts and polyolefin catalysts product areas; and the Fine Chemicals segment is comprised of performance chemicals, pharmachemicals, agrichemicals, and fine chemistry services and intermediates product areas. 17 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) In addition, net sales, operating profit and identifiable assets have been restated for the Fine Chemicals segment and in total for the year of 2002, to move the recognition of revenue of certain bill and hold transactions related to a Fine Chemicals segment product for the fourth-quarter 2002 into the first and second quarters of 2003. The Fine Chemicals restatement resulted in $3,516 of net sales and $2,706 of operating profit shifting from fourth-quarter 2002 to the first and second quarter 2003 results. Fine Chemicals identifiable assets have also been restated to reflect the effect of the recordation of accounts receivable, inventory and income taxes related to the restated sales amounts for the 2002 period. The Company evaluates the performance of its segments based on operating profit (loss) which represents income (loss) before income taxes, and before interest and financing expenses and other income, net. Segment data includes intersegment transfers of raw materials at cost and foreign exchange transaction gains and losses, as well as allocations for certain corporate costs. Summarized financial information concerning the Company’s reportable segments is shown in the following table. Corporate & other expenses includes corporate-related items not allocated to the reportable segments. Three Months Ended September 30, 2004 2003 Summary of Segment Results Net Sales Income Net Sales Income Polymer Additives $ 185,902 $ 24,279 $ 141,605 $ 14,083 Catalysts 106,518 (2,962 ) 20,768 2,985 Fine Chemicals 121,484 9,830 114,178 6,199 Segment totals $ 413,904 31,147 $ 276,551 23,267 Corporate and other expenses (10,016 ) (7,497 ) Operating profit 21,131 15,770 Interest and financing expenses (6,250 ) (1,449 ) Equity in unconsolidated investments 1,826 (930 ) Other income (expense), net including minority interest (16,977 ) (1,733 ) (Loss) income before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ (270 ) $ 11,658 Nine Months Ended September 30, 2004 2003 Summary of Segment Results Net Sales Income Net Sales Income Polymer Additives $ 538,631 $ 65,687 $ 397,002 $ 44,064 Catalysts 153,795 2,227 62,970 8,244 Fine Chemicals 370,246 25,885 355,141 33,924 Segment totals $ 1,062,672 93,799 $ 815,113 86,232 Corporate and other expenses (23,183 ) (18,112 ) Operating profit 70,616 68,120 Interest and financing expenses (9,168 ) (4,043 ) Equity in unconsolidated investments 2,494 (1,148 ) Other income (expense), net including minority interest (16,026 ) 1,742 Income before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net $ 47,916 $ 64,671 18 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) As a result of the refinery catalysts acquisition, and the subsequent reorganization of the Company’s existing segments, the Company’s identifiable assets by operating segment are provided below: September 30,2004 December 31,2003 Polymer Additives $ 515,519 $ 504,263 Catalysts 892,110 69,862 Fine Chemicals 509,906 498,650 Corporate and other 511,605 314,516 $ 2,429,140 $ 1,387,291 17. On January 1, 2003, the Company adopted SFAS No. 143, “Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations,” (“SFAS No. 143”) which addressed financial accounting and reporting for obligations associated with the retirement of tangible long-lived assets and the associated asset retirement costs. At the time of adoption, the Company identified certain assets for which there were future retirement obligations. These future obligations were comprised primarily of the cost of closing various facilities and of capping brine wells. The financial statement impact at the date of adoption of SFAS No. 143 amounted to $2,220 net of taxes of $1,265, or five cents per diluted share, which is reflected as a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net in the Company’s consolidated statements of income in 2003. 18. During January 2003, the FASB issued Interpretation No. 46 (“FIN 46” or the “Interpretation”), “Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities, and an Interpretation of ARB No. 51.” FIN 46 clarifies the application of Accounting Research Bulletin No. 51, “Consolidated Financial Statements,” to certain entities in which equity investors do not have the characteristics of a controlling financial interest or do not have sufficient equity at risk for the entity to finance its activities without additional subordinated financial support from other parties; such entities are known as variable interest entities (“VIEs”). FIN 46 applied to all VIEs created after January 31, 2003. The FASB issued a revision to FIN 46 (“FIN 46-R”) in December 2003. FIN 46-R was effective for the interim period ending March 31, 2004 for all new or existing VIEs. The Company has determined that the adoption of FIN 46-R did not impact the Company or its results. 19 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) 19. SFAS No. 123, “Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation,” (“SFAS No. 123”) encourages, but does not require, companies to record at fair value, compensation cost for stock-based employee compensation plans. The Company continues to account for stock-based compensation using the intrinsic value method prescribed in Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25, “Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees,” and related interpretations. Under the intrinsic method, compensation cost for stock options is measured as the excess, if any, of the quoted market price of the Company’s stock at the date of the grant over the amount an employee must pay to acquire the stock. If compensation cost had been determined based on the fair value at the grant date under the plans consistent with the method of SFAS No. 123, the Company’s net income and earnings per share would have been reduced to the pro forma amounts indicated below: Three Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 Stock based compensation expense, net of taxes as reported pro forma $$ 9351,752 $$ 1741,065 Net income as reported pro forma $$ 82710 $$ 9,8568,965 Basic earnings per share on net income as reported pro forma $$ 0.020.00 $$ 0.240.22 Diluted earnings per share on net income as reported pro forma $$ 0.020.00 $$ 0.230.21 Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 Stock based compensation expense, net of taxes as reported pro forma $$ 2,7035,023 $$ 5223,116 Income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net as reported pro forma $$ 35,20232,882 $$ 57,37754,783 Net income as reported pro forma $$ 35,20232,882 $$ 55,15752,563 Basic earnings per share on income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net as reported pro forma $$ 0.85 0.79 $$ 1.391.33 Basic earnings per share on net income as reported pro forma $$ 0.850.79 $$ 1.341.27 Diluted earnings per share on income before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net as reported pro forma $$ 0.830.77 $$ 1.361.29 Diluted earnings per share on net income as reported pro forma $$ 0.830.77 $$ 1.311.24 20 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) The fair value of each option is estimated on the date of grant using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the following weighted-average assumptions used for options granted in the three and nine-months periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003. Three Months EndedSeptember 30, Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 2004 2003 Fair values of options granted $ 10.61 $ 8.62 $ 10.41 $ 8.62 Dividend Yield 2.37 % 2.54 % 2.37 % 2.54 % Volatility 29.74 % 31.2 % 29.91 % 31.2 % Average expected life (in years) 10 10 10 10 Risk-free interest rate 4.42 % 4.21 % 4.36 % 4.21 % 20. Commitments and Contingencies. The following table summarizes the Company’s contractual obligations for plant construction, purchases of equipment, unused letters of credit and various take or pay and throughput agreements: 4Q 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 There-after Take or pay / throughput agreements $ 29,389 $ 67,012 $ 32,792 $ 9,063 $ 7,066 $ 6,366 $ 27,372 Additional investment commitment payments $ 3,883 $ 1,020 $ 790 $ 790 $ 30 $ 30 $ 210 Capital projects $ 13,652 $ 7,325 $ 616 $ 622 $ 2,525 — — Letters of credit and guarantees $ 4,162 $ 31,378 $ 6,788 $ 3,146 $ 3,508 $ 3,007 $ 4,772 Total $ 51,086 $ 106,735 $ 40,986 $ 13,621 $ 13,129 $ 9,403 $ 32,354 The Company executes, through financial institutions, contracts with certain of its customers which serve as guarantees on product delivery and performance according to customer specifications that can cover both shipments on an individual basis as well as blanket coverage of multiple shipments under customer supply contracts. The financial coverage provided by these guarantees is typically based on a percentage of net sales value. In addition, the Company has commitments, in the form of guarantees, for 50% of the loan amounts outstanding (which at September 30, 2004, amounted to $36,685) of its 50%-owned joint venture company, Jordan Bromine Company Limited (“JBC”). JBC entered into the loans in 2000 to finance construction of certain bromine and derivatives manufacturing facilities on the Dead Sea. The Company also has guarantee commitments for 100% of certain operating loans outstanding (which at September 30, 2004, amounted to $385) of its joint venture company, Eurecat U.S., Inc. (“Eurecat”). On April 2, 2004, Albemarle Overseas Development Company (“AODC”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Albemarle Corporation, initiated a Request for Arbitration against Aventis S.A., through the International Chamber of Commerce, International Court of Arbitration, Paris, France. The dispute arises out of a 1992 Stock Purchase Agreement (“Agreement”) between a predecessor to AODC, and a predecessor to Aventis, pursuant to 21 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) which 100% of the stock of Potasse et Produits Chimiques, S.A., now known as Albemarle PPC (“APPC”), was acquired by AODC. The dispute relates to a chemical facility in Thann in eastern France owned by APPC. The Company believes that under the terms of the Agreement, Aventis is obligated to indemnify AODC and APPC, and hold them harmless from claims, losses, damages, costs or any other present or prospective liabilities arising out of soil and/or groundwater contamination at the site in Thann. Beginning in May 2000, the French Government, with respect to the management of pollution risk on the site of active industrial installations, required APPC to conduct an environmental risk study of the Thann facility. In June 2002, the French Government directed APPC to undertake a more detailed risk study of groundwater contamination. The administrative process of the French Government is still ongoing as of the present date. AODC has demanded indemnification from Aventis for the cost of the studies, but Aventis has refused to pay. The Request for Arbitration requests indemnification of AODC by Aventis for certain costs incurred by APPC, in connection with any environmental claims of the French Government for the APPC facility and a declaratory judgment as to the liability of Aventis under the Agreement for costs to be incurred in the future by APPC in connection with such claims. At this time, it is not possible to predict what the French Government will require with respect to the Thann facility, since this matter is in its initial stages and environmental matters are subject to many uncertainties. The Company believes, however, that it is entitled to be indemnified by Aventis for liabilities arising from this matter, but no assurance can be given that it will prevail in this matter. If the Company does not prevail in the arbitration and the government requires additional remediation, the costs of remediation could be significant. 21. In accordance with SFAS No. 132, “Employers’ Disclosures about Pensions and Other Postretirement Benefits— an amendment of FASB Statements No. 87, 88, and 106”, the following information is provided for interim domestic financial statements (foreign information is excluded from the requirements until the period ended December 15, 2004): Three MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2004 Three MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2003 Nine MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2004 Nine MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2003 Net Periodic Pension Benefit Cost: Service cost $ 2,245 $ 3,101 $ 6,736 $ 7,021 Interest cost 5,971 7,850 17,913 17,774 Expected return of assets (10,299 ) (13,853 ) (30,897 ) (31,367 ) Plan pension curtailment* — — 898 — Amortization of Unrecognized Amounts: Net transition (asset) (2 ) (16 ) (7 ) (36 ) Prior service charge 177 503 532 1,139 Net loss 758 319 2,272 723 Total income $ (1,150 ) $ (2,096 ) $ (2,553 ) $ (4,746 ) 22 Table of Contents (In Thousands, Except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) Three MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2004 Three MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2003 Nine MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2004 Nine MonthsEndedSeptember 30,2003 Net Periodic Postretirement Benefit Expense: Service cost $ 417 $ 369 $ 1,249 $ 1,281 Interest cost 1,062 908 3,186 3,154 Expected return of assets (128 ) (107 ) (383 ) (373 ) Amortization of Unrecognized Amounts: Net transition (asset)/obligation — — — — Prior service charge (349 ) (295 ) (1,047 ) (1,025 ) Net loss 74 75 221 263 Total expense $ 1,076 $ 950 $ 3,226 $ 3,300 * During first quarter ended March 31, 2004, a SFAS No. 88 pension curtailment charge was incurred totaling $898 due to the layoffs at the zeolite facility in Pasadena, Texas. The Company did not make any contributions to its pension plans in the first nine months of 2004. On December 8, 2003, the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 (“the Act”) was signed into law. The Act introduces a prescription drug benefit under Medicare Part D, as well as a federal subsidy to sponsors of retiree health care benefit plans that provide a benefit that is at least actuarially equivalent to Medicare Part D. The Company sponsors medical programs for certain of its U.S. retirees and expects that this legislation will reduce the costs for some of these programs. In April 2004, the FASB issued Staff Position (FSP) No. FAS 106-2 to address the accounting and disclosure requirements related to the Act. The Company does not expect that the effects of this Act will have a material impact on our postretirement benefit obligation or our postretirement benefit expense reported in future periods. 22. The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 was signed into law on October 22, 2004. The Company is currently studying the impact of the law, particularly with respect to the U.S. tax treatment of domestic manufacturing activities, repatriation of foreign earnings and foreign tax credit carryforwards. 23 Table of Contents ITEM 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and Financial Condition and Additional Information Forward-looking Statements Some of the information presented in this Form 10-Q, including the documents incorporated by reference, may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations, which are in turn based on assumptions that we believe are reasonable based on our current knowledge of our business and operations. We have used words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “may,” “should,” “will” and variations of such words and similar expressions to identify such forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions, which are difficult to predict and many of which are beyond our control. There can be no assurance, therefore, that our actual results will not differ materially from the results and expectations expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially include, without limitation: • the timing of orders received from customers; • the gain or loss of significant customers; • competition from other manufacturers; • changes in the demand for our products; • changes in our margins; • increases in the cost of raw materials and energy, and our inability to pass through such increases; • changes in our manufacturing processes; • changes in our markets in general; • fluctuations in foreign currencies; • changes in new product introductions resulting in increases in capital project requests and approvals leading to additional capital spending; • changes in laws and regulations; • the occurrence of claims or litigation; • the inability to maintain current levels of product or premises liability insurance or the denial of such coverage; • political unrest affecting the global economy, including adverse effects from terrorism or hostilities; • changes in accounting standards; • the integration of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business into our operations; • the inability to achieve results from our global manufacturing cost reduction initiatives as well as our ongoing continuous improvement and rationalization programs; • changes in interest rates, to the extent they (1) affect our ability to raise capital or increase our cost of funds, (2) have an impact on the overall performance of our pension fund investments and (3) increase our pension expense and funding obligations; and • the other factors detailed from time to time in the reports we file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC. We assume no obligation to provide revisions to any forward-looking statements should circumstances change, except as otherwise required by securities and other applicable laws. The following discussion should be read together with our consolidated financial statements and related notes included in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q. Overview We are a leading global developer, manufacturer and marketer of highly-engineered specialty chemicals. Our products and services enhance the value of our customers’ end-products by improving performance, providing essential product attributes, lowering cost and simplifying processing. We sell a highly diversified mix of products to a wide range of customers, including manufacturers of consumer electronics, building and 24 Table of Contents construction materials, automotive parts, packaging, pharmachemicals and agrichemicals, and petroleum refiners. We believe that our commercial and geographic diversity, technical expertise, flexible, low-cost global manufacturing base, strong cash flows and experienced management team enable us to maintain leading market positions in those areas of the specialty chemicals industry in which we operate. Growth of our Polymer Additives segment is expected to be derived from increasing demand for electrical and electronic equipment, new construction and increasingly stringent fire-safety regulations in many countries around the world. Growth in our Catalysts segment is expected to be driven by increasing demand for petroleum products, generally deteriorating quality of crude oil feedstock and implementation of more stringent fuel quality requirements as a part of anti-pollution initiatives. The Fine Chemicals segment continues to benefit from the continued rapid pace of innovation and the introduction of new products, coupled with a movement by pharmaceutical companies to outsource certain research, product development and manufacturing functions. Acquisition of Catalysts Refinery Business On July 31, 2004, we acquired the refinery catalysts business of Akzo Nobel N.V. for Eur 615.7 million (approximately $762.2 million at applicable exchange rates). We believe that this acquisition significantly enhances our business by giving us a strong new operating segment. Following this acquisition, we transferred our existing polyolefin catalysts business from our Polymer Chemicals segment, which we renamed Polymer Additives, to a newly created Catalysts segment, which also includes the assets we acquired from Akzo Nobel. Our operations are now managed and reported as three operating segments: Polymer Additives; Catalysts; and Fine Chemicals. Under the terms of the business sale agreement, we acquired two wholly owned subsidiaries of Akzo Nobel (one in the United States and one in the Netherlands), sales, marketing, intellectual property and other assets used in the acquired business, and 50% interests in three different joint ventures: Fábrica Carioca de Catalisadores S.A., a Brazilian joint venture; Nippon Ketjen Co., Ltd., a Japanese joint venture; and Eurecat S.A., a French joint venture (with affiliates in the United States, Saudi Arabia and Italy). As part of the acquisition, we also agreed to assume the liabilities of the two acquired subsidiaries and certain liabilities of Akzo Nobel and its affiliates related to the acquired business. We retained substantially all employees of the acquired business, including all of the incumbent managers. In connection with the acquisition, we incurred during the third quarter of 2004 certain one-time after-tax costs and expenses, including foreign exchange hedging losses of $10.0 million on contracts entered into for the purpose of hedging the euro-denominated purchase price for the acquired business, additional cost of sales charges of $8.5 million as a result of inventory write-ups, $3.0 million as a result of purchased in-process R & D write-offs and unamortized financing cost write-offs of $0.3 million. We expect to finalize the acquisition purchase accounting adjustments by the end of the second quarter of 2005. In connection with the acquisition, we entered into (1) a new senior credit agreement, dated as of July 29, 2004, among Albemarle, Albemarle Catalysts International, L.L.C., a subsidiary of our Company, certain of our subsidiaries as guarantors, the lenders parties thereto, Bank of America, N.A., as Administrative Agent, UBS Securities LLC, as Syndication Agent, and The Bank of New York, Fortis (USA) Finance LLC and SunTrust Bank, as Co-Documentation Agents, consisting of a $300 million revolving credit facility and a $450 million five-year term loan facility, and (2) a $450 million 364-day loan agreement, dated as of July 29, 2004, among Albemarle, Albemarle Catalysts International, L.L.C., certain of our subsidiaries as guarantors, the lenders parties thereto, Banc of America Bridge LLC, as Administrative Agent, and UBS Securities LLC, as Syndication Agent. We used the initial borrowings under the new senior credit agreement and the 364-day loan agreement to consummate the acquisition, refinance our then-existing credit agreement and pay related fees and expenses incurred in connection therewith. 25 Table of Contents Outlook With the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business, we have added a number of foundation technologies to our portfolio, including hydroprocessing, or HPC, catalysts and fluidized catalytic cracking, or FCC, catalysts, as well as new products targeting the fast growing clean fuels catalyst market. Since the completion of the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business on July 31, 2004, the new Catalysts segment has been performing well and we believe that it is poised to participate further in expected growth in the refinery catalysts industry. As we combine our current polyolefin catalyst business with the acquired refinery catalysts business, the Catalysts segment is forecasted to add more than 35% to the historic sales level on an annual basis. The Company’s net sales for the nine months ended September 30, 2004 were $1.06 billion as compared with $815 million in the same period of 2003. We continue to experience significant increases in raw material and energy costs, particularly in molybdenum, which impacts the Catalysts segment, and BPA, alumina, phenol, chlorine and tin, which impact the Polymer Additives and Fine Chemicals segments. Based on our full year forecast for 2004, we expect that our raw material costs and energy costs, excluding molybdenum, will increase approximately 8% and 9%, respectively, compared to 2003. Molybdenum has experienced a steady increase in price from approximately $8 per pound on January 1, 2004 to approximately $24 per pound on October 29, 2004. In order to offset these increases, we are seeking price increases in most product areas, and these initiatives are taking effect with various levels of success. In bromine and bromine derivatives, our price increases are supported by strong global demand for our products. In addition, we began a manufacturing cost reduction program in 2002 targeting $50 million in savings over three years. We believe that we have realized approximately $27 million of these savings through the third quarter 2004 and we expect that this program will continue to help offset the impact of raw material and energy cost inflation. Polymer Additives Polymer Additives net sales have increased to record levels for the past four quarters with an average growth rate of close to 7% per quarter. Comparing the third quarter of 2004 to the similar period of 2003, segment revenues and income grew approximately 31% and approximately 22%, respectively. However, general indicators of market demand in the electronics sector have slowed versus the previous three quarters. While demand for our products at present remains strong and we are running our major flame retardant plants hard to meet customer needs, we believe that we must stay focused on our price increase efforts in order to catch up with inflation. Catalysts Catalysts net sales have increased approximately 144% in the first nine months of 2004 compared to the same period of 2003 due primarily to the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. Sales also reflect higher prices driven by higher metals costs, volume growth in both HPC and FCC catalysts and the effects of currency movements. The inflation of metals costs, most notably molybdenum, is expected to continue to effect margins for HPC catalysts for the balance of 2004. We believe that the demand for HPC catalysts will remain firm for the rest of the year. We expect FCC catalysts volumes to remain strong through 2004 as growth in gasoline demand is tracking slightly above expectations. The major global petroleum refineries continue to prepare for stricter fuel specifications, including the upcoming on-road diesel sulfur specifications that will be implemented in 2006. These stricter specifications are leading to new capital expenditures by petroleum refineries to expand hydroprocessing capability as well as to increased demand for high performance catalysts to be used in existing and new hydroprocessing capacity. 26 Table of Contents Fine Chemicals First nine-months 2004 net sales were up 4.3% compared to last year’s levels despite the loss of revenue from the zeolites business, which we exited in January 2004. Revenue from new products is expected to increase compared to 2003. Looking forward, we expect to see increasingly high asset utilizations and margin improvement in the bromine products area, and we believe that underlying trends in Fine Chemistry Services are beginning to contribute to the segment profitability. Looking forward to the fourth quarter, we expect that we will experience some unabsorbed factory costs resulting from a turnaround in our ibuprofen facility, which is associated with a cost improvement and automation project tie-ins designed to help us continue to drive down our cost of production. We expect continued competitive pricing pressure in ibuprofen as foreign producers attempt to further penetrate the U.S. market, and we are expanding our sales efforts in response to this development. We expect continued growth in demand for bromine and derivatives, and do not anticipate any slowdown in shipments in the fourth quarter due to the relative tightness in chlorine supplies. In our agrichemicals business, we are experiencing tight supply in some important raw materials, which may impact us negatively toward the end of the fourth quarter. We expect to complete construction of a new chlorine production unit as part of our joint venture’s bromine production plant in Jordan in the fourth quarter of 2004. This facility, which is expected to have an annual capacity of approximately 25,000 metric tonnes, should serve to lower raw material costs of this joint venture in Jordan. Industry Conditions We conduct a substantial portion of our business outside of the United States. As a result, our business is subject to economic cycles in different regions of the world. In addition, because many of our customers are in industries, including the consumer electronics, building and construction, and automotive industries, that are cyclical in nature and sensitive to changes in general economic conditions, our results are impacted by the effect on our customers of economic upturns and downturns, as well as our own costs to produce our products. Historically, downturns in general economic conditions have resulted in diminished product demand, excess manufacturing capacity and lower average selling prices. Raw Material and Energy Costs In 2003, our raw material and energy costs increased approximately 8% and 25%, respectively, compared to 2002. Raw material costs and energy costs have continued to increase in 2004. The increases are primarily driven by significantly tighter market conditions and major increases in pricing of basic building blocks for our products such as crude oil, chlorine and metals, including molybdenum, which is used in the refinery catalysts business. In 2003, management estimates that molybdenum represented approximately 10% of the cost of goods sold in the refinery catalysts business and from January 1, 2004 until October 29, 2004, the price of molybdenum increased from approximately $8 to approximately $24 per pound. We generally attempt to pass changes in the prices of raw materials and energy to our customers but we may be unable to or be delayed in doing so. Our inability to pass through price increases or any limitation or delay in our passing through price increases could adversely affect the margins for our products. In addition to raising prices, raw material suppliers may extend lead times or limit supplies. For example, in the aftermath of Hurricane Ivan, certain chlorine producers took actions that limited chlorine supplies. Constraints on the supply or delivery of critical raw materials could disrupt production and adversely affect the performance of our business. Other Factors Impacting Our Results In 2002, we launched a three-year $50 million manufacturing cost reduction program to reduce our fixed cost base. As of September 30, 2004, we believe that this program has yielded estimated savings of 27 Table of Contents approximately $27 million. We expect to implement additional cost-saving initiatives focused on achieving operational efficiencies by investing in flexible manufacturing equipment and processes, optimizing process control technologies, reducing fixed costs through the rationalization of manufacturing capacity and the efficient management of capital spending. Additional information: Set forth below is a reconciliation of net income excluding special items, a non-GAAP financial measure, to net income, the most directly comparable financial measure calculated and reported in accordance with GAAP, for the third quarter and nine months ended September 30, 2004 and 2004, respectively. This information is included to provide further support of the fluctuations discussed in the results of operations below. ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES (In thousands, except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) Third Quarter Ended September 30, 2004 Third Quarter Ended September 30, 2003 AsReported SpecialItems* ExcludingSpecial Items AsReported SpecialItems* ExcludingSpecial Items Net sales $ 413,904 $ — $ 413,904 $ 276,551 $ — $ 276,551 Cost of goods sold(c) (324,396 ) (3,549 )(a,b) (327,945 ) (220,543 ) — (220,543 ) Acquisition related cost (13,400 ) 13,400 (d) — — — — Gross profit 76,108 9,851 85,959 56,008 56,008 Selling, general and administrative expenses (including FAS No.2 R&D) (52,176 ) — (52,176 ) (32,735 ) — (32,735 ) Reduction in force adjustments 199 (199 )(e) — (7,503 ) 7,503 (e) — Acquired in process research and development charges (3,000 ) 3,000 (f) — — — — Operating profit** 21,131 12,652 33,783 15,770 7,503 23,273 Interest and financing expenses (6,250 ) 528 (g) (5,722 ) (1,449 ) — (1,449 ) Equity in unconsolidated investments 1,826 — 1,826 (930 ) — (930 ) Other income (expense), net including minority interest (16,977 ) 15,712 (h) (1,265 ) (1,733 ) 1,593 (140 ) Income (loss) before income taxes (270 ) 28,892 28,622 11,658 9,096 20,754 Income tax (benefit) expense (1,097 ) 9,399 8,302 1,802 4,217 (i) 6,019 Net income $ 827 $ 19,493 $ 20,320 $ 9,856 $ 4,879 $ 14,735 Diluted earnings per share $ 0.02 $ 0.46 $ 0.48 $ 0.23 $ 0.12 $ 0.35 * See footnotes below **Operating profit by segment: Polymer Additives $ 24,279 $ (3,583 ) $ 20,696 $ 14,083 $ 2,931 $ 17,014 Catalysts (2,962 ) 16,400 13,438 2,985 — 2,985 Fine Chemicals 9,830 (165 ) 9,665 6,199 1,814 8,013 Corporate and other expenses (10,016 ) — (10,016 ) (7,497 ) 2,758 (4,739 ) Total $ 21,131 $ 12,652 $ 33,783 $ 15,770 $ 7,503 $ 23,273 28 Table of Contents ALBEMARLE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES (In thousands, except Share and Per-Share Amounts) (Unaudited) Nine Months Ended September 30, 2004 Nine Months Ended September 30, 2003 As Reported SpecialItems* ExcludingSpecial Items AsReported SpecialItems* ExcludingSpecial Items Net sales $ 1,062,672 $ — $ 1,062,672 $ 815,113 $ — $ 815,113 Cost of goods sold(c) (845,952 ) (3,549 )(a,b) (849,501 ) (640,331 ) — (640,331 ) Acquisition related cost (13,400 ) 13,400 (d) — — — — Gross profit 203,320 9,851 213,171 174,782 174,782 Selling, general and administrative expenses (including FAS No.2 R&D) (124,846 ) — (124,846 ) (99,159 ) — (99,159 ) Reduction in force adjustments (4,858 ) 4,858 (e) — (7,503 ) 7,503 (e) — Acquired in process research and development charges (3,000 ) 3,000 (f) — — — — Operating profit** 70,616 17,709 88,325 68,120 7,503 75,623 Interest and financing expenses (9,168 ) 528 (g) (8,640 ) (4,043 ) — (4,043 ) Equity in unconsolidated investments 2,494 — 2,494 (1,148 ) — (1,148 ) Other income (expense), net including minority interest (16,026 ) 12,848 (h) (3,178 ) 1,742 (2,715 ) (973 ) Income before income taxes and cumulative effect 47,916 31,085 79,001 64,671 4,788 69,459 Income tax expense 12,714 10,196 22,910 7,294 13,725 (i) 21,019 Income before cumulative effect 35,202 20,889 56,091 57,377 (8,937 ) 48,440 Cumulative effect, net of taxes — — — (2,220 ) 2,220 (j) — Net income $ 35,202 $ 20,889 $ 56,091 $ 55,157 $ (6,717 ) $ 48,440 Diluted earnings per share $ 0.83 $ 0.49 $ 1.32 $ 1.31 $ (0.16 ) $ 1.15 * See footnotes below **Operating profit by segment: Polymer Additives $ 65,687 $ (3,583 ) $ 62,104 $ 44,064 $ 2,931 $ 46,995 Catalysts 2,227 16,400 18,627 8,244 — 8,244 Fine Chemicals 25,885 4,892 30,777 33,924 1,814 35,738 Corporate and other expenses (23,183 ) — (23,183 ) (18,112 ) 2,758 (15,354 ) Total $ 70,616 $ 17,709 $ 88,325 $ 68,120 $ 7,503 $ 75,623 29 Table of Contents Notes (in thousands, except per share amounts): (a) On August 26, 2004, the Company and a former insurer settled a dispute related to payments to be made to the Company in connection with insurance coverage for the period 1950 through 2000. Pursuant to the agreement, the Company will receive $6,945 ($4,424 after income taxes, or 10 cents per diluted share) with $4,208 paid at the settlement date and future payments to be made on February 1, 2005 and 2006. (b) Cost of goods sold for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 include a charge amounting to $3,396 ($2,163 after income taxes, or five cents per diluted share) related to the establishment of a valuation reserve for the potential recoverability of a claim. (c) Includes foreign exchange transaction losses of ($625) and ($901), and ($258) and ($92), for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, and 2003, respectively. (d) Acquisition-related cost totaling $13,400 ($8,536 after income taxes, or 20 cents per diluted share) for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, is made up of the preliminary purchase price allocation increase in inventory associated with the July 31, 2004 acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business. (e) Reduction in force adjustments for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, include a $199 adjustment of a reserve for work force reduction. Nine-months period ended September 30, 2004, also includes a second-quarter 2004 charge totaling $550 ($350 after income taxes or one cent per diluted share) related to the cleanup of the zeolite facility and a first-quarter 2004 charge totaling $4,507 ($2,871 after income taxes, or seven cents per diluted share) for layoffs at the zeolite facility and their related SFAS 88 curtailment charge. Reduction in force adjustments for the three-and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2003 totaled $7,503 ($4,780 after income taxes, or 12 cents per diluted share) and resulted from the acceptance of a voluntary separation package offered by the Company to certain domestic salaried employees. (f) Purchased in-process research and development charges amounting to $3,000, or seven cents per diluted share, for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, are comprised of the estimated write-off of the deferred research and development costs associated with the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business. (g) Interest and financing expenses for the three- and nine-months periods ended September 30, 2004 include the write-off of deferred financing expenses totaling $528 ($336 net of income taxes, or one cent per diluted share) related to the refinancing of the Company’s previous revolving credit agreement. (h) Other income (expense), net for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 include foreign exchange hedging charges totaling $15,712 ($10,009 after income taxes, or 24 cents per share) and $12,848 ($8,184 after income taxes, or 19 cents per diluted share), respectively associated with contracts exacted by the Company to hedge the euro-denominated purchase price for the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business. (i) Income tax expense for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2003 benefited from the settlement and internal adjustments related to federal tax years 1996-1999 totaling $916 and $11,988, respectively. (j) On January 1, 2003, the Company implemented SFAS No. 143, “Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations,” which addresses financial accounting and reporting for obligations associated with the retirement of tangible long-lived assets and the associated asset retirement costs. The cumulative effect of the implementation of this change in accounting principle was $2,220 net of taxes of $1,265, or five cents per diluted share. Additional information regarding the Company, our products, markets and financial performance is provided at our web site, www.albemarle.com. Our web site is not a part of this document nor is it incorporated herein by reference. 30 Table of Contents Results of Operations The following data and discussion provides an analysis of certain significant factors affecting our results of operations during the periods included in the accompanying condensed consolidated statements of income. Third Quarter 2004 Compared with Third Quarter 2003 Net Sales Net sales by operating segment for the third-quarter periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 are as follows: Net Sales Third Quarter 2004 2003 (in thousands) Polymer Additives $ 185,902 $ 141,605 Catalysts 106,518 20,768 Fine Chemicals 121,484 114,178 Segment totals $ 413,904 $ 276,551 Net sales for third-quarter 2004 of $413.9 million were up $137.3 million (49.7%) from third-quarter 2003 net sales of $276.6 million. Polymer Additives’ net sales increased $44.3 million (31.3%) primarily due to higher shipments and prices, respectively, in flame retardants ($18.9 million and $0.7 million) and curatives and additives ($10.9 million and $4.3 million) and the contributions made by our 2003 acquisitions ($4.5 million). Polymer Additives’ net sales were also favorably impacted by foreign exchange ($5.0 million). Catalysts’ net sales increased $85.7 million primarily due to the impact of the refinery catalysts business acquisition ($82.9 million), higher shipments of polyolefin catalysts ($3.7 million) and the favorable impact of foreign exchange ($0.3 million), offset, in part, by lower prices of polyolefin catalysts ($1.2 million). Fine Chemicals’ net sales increased $7.3 million (6.4%) primarily due to the contributions made by our 2003 acquisitions ($5.0 million), the positive effects of foreign exchange ($3.2 million), higher shipments ($3.1 million) and prices ($3.0 million) in fine chemistry services and intermediates and favorable prices ($0.4 million) in agricultural actives. The increase was partially offset by unfavorable sales mix in performance chemicals ($3.8 million) and unfavorable volumes ($3.6 million) in agricultural actives. Operating Costs and Expenses Cost of goods sold in the third quarter of 2004 increased $103.9 million (47.1%) from the corresponding 2003 period. The increase resulted from higher sales volumes in the 2004 period and the impact of the refinery catalysts acquisition as well as higher raw material and energy costs. Cost of goods sold was also affected by the establishment of a $3.4 million valuation reserve for the potential recoverability of a claim, our exit from the zeolite business and the unfavorable impact of foreign exchange on operating costs. The increase in cost of goods sold is partially offset by a $6.9 million insurance settlement from a former insurer relating to certain payments made by the Company in connection with insurance coverage for the period 1950 through 2000. The Company incurred $13.4 million of acquisition-related charges consisting of the step-up increase in acquired inventory associated with the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. The gross profit margin decreased approximately 186 basis points to 18.4% in third-quarter 2004 from 20.3% for the corresponding period in 2003. Excluding the $13.4 million of acquisition-related costs mentioned above, our gross profit margin for the 2004 period increased approximately 140 basis points to 21.6%. 31 Table of Contents Selling, general and administrative (“SG&A”) expenses and research and development (“R&D”) expenses increased $19.4 million (59.4%) in the third quarter of 2004 versus third quarter of 2003. The increase is primarily due to higher SG&A and R&D costs related to acquisitions ($11.6 million), higher employee related costs ($5.3 million) and higher overall R&D costs ($1.4 million). SG&A costs were also adversely affected by higher outside legal costs ($0.5 million) and the unfavorable impact of foreign exchange ($0.6 million). As a percentage of net sales, SG&A and R&D were 12.6% in 2004 versus 11.8% in the 2003 quarter. Third quarter of 2004 includes a $0.2 million adjustment to the reduction in force accrual while the 2003 period contains a $7.5 million reduction in force charge resulting from the acceptance of a voluntary separation package offered to certain domestic salaried employees. In addition, the third quarter of 2004 includes a $3.0 million purchased in-process research and development (“in-process R & D”) charge associated with our acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. Operating Profit Operating profit by reportable operating segment for the three-month periods ended September 30, 2004, and 2003 is as follows: Operating Profit Third Quarter 2004 2003 (in thousands) Polymer Additives $ 24,279 $ 14,083 Catalysts (2,962 ) 2,985 Fine Chemicals 9,830 6,199 Segment totals 31,147 23,267 Corporate and other expenses (10,016 ) (7,497 ) Operating profit $ 21,131 $ 15,770 Polymer Additives’ third-quarter 2004 segment operating profit increased $10.2 million (72.4%) from third-quarter 2003. The 2004 period includes an allocation of $3.6 million related to an insurance settlement while the 2003 period includes a $2.9 million charge related to a voluntary separation program. Excluding these special items, third-quarter 2004 segment operating profit increased $3.7 million (21.6%) from the corresponding 2003 period primarily due to higher shipments ($8.5 million) in flame retardants and curatives and additives, higher prices ($5.3 million), primarily in curatives and additives, and the overall favorable net effects of foreign exchange ($0.9 million), offset, in part, by unfavorable raw material and energy costs ($8.7 million) and unfavorable manufacturing costs ($2.5 million). Catalysts’ third-quarter 2004 segment operating profit decreased $5.9 million from third-quarter 2003. Third-quarter 2004 includes purchase price adjustments for the step-up accounting values assigned to the acquired refinery catalysts business inventory ($13.4 million) and the write-off of purchased in-process R&D charges associated with the acquisition ($3.0 million). Excluding these adjustments, catalysts’ third quarter operating profit increased $10.5 million from the third quarter 2003 primarily due to the impact of the refinery catalysts acquisition. Fine Chemicals’ third-quarter 2004 segment operating profit increased $3.6 million (58.6%) from third-quarter 2003. The 2004 period includes special items of $3.3 million related to an insurance settlement and $0.2 million related to a reversal of a reduction in force accrual partially offset by the establishment of a $3.4 million valuation reserve for the potential recoverability of a claim. The 2003 period includes a $1.8 million charge related to a voluntary separation program. Excluding these special items, third-quarter 2004 segment operating profit increased $1.7 million (20.6%) from the corresponding 2003 period primarily due to higher prices ($3.1 million), primarily in fine chemistry services and favorable production, primarily in bulk active pharmaceuticals 32 Table of Contents ($3.1 million), offset, in part by, higher raw materials and energy costs ($2.0 million), and lower shipments in bulk active pharmaceuticals and agricultural actives ($2.0 million) and fine chemistry services and intermediates ($0.6 million). Corporate and other expenses for the third-quarter of 2004 increased $2.5 million (33.6%) from third-quarter 2003 primarily due to higher employee incentive costs ($5.3 million) offset, in part, by the absence of the 2003 workforce reduction accrual of ($2.8 million) allocated to the corporate segment. Interest and Financing Expenses Interest and financing expenses for third-quarter 2004 amounted to $6.3 million, an increase of $4.8 million from third-quarter 2003 due to higher average outstanding debt in the 2004 period principally as a result of the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. The third-quarter 2004 expenses also reflect the write-off of deferred financing expenses ($0.5 million) relating to the refinancing of our prior revolving credit agreement. Equity in Unconsolidated Investments Equity in unconsolidated investments for the third-quarter 2004 amounted to $1.8 million, up $2.8 million from third quarter 2003 primarily due to the addition of unconsolidated investments from our refinery catalysts business acquisition ($1.6 million) as well as improved results from continuing unconsolidated investments. Other Income (Expense) Net, Including Minority Interest Other income (expense), net for the third-quarter 2004 amounted to ($17.0) million, a decrease of $15.2 million from the 2003 corresponding period. The decrease is primarily attributable to euro-denominated hedging losses associated with the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business in the 2004 period. Income Taxes For the three month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, differences between U.S. statutory tax rates and effective tax rates are attributable to differences consistent with the nine month periods mentioned below, as well as the effects of special items resulting from the refinery catalysts acquisition. Results of Operations Nine Months Ended September 30, 2004 Compared with Nine Months Ended September 30, 2003 Net Sales Net sales by operating segment for the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 are as follows: Net Sales Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 (in thousands) Polymer Additives $ 538,631 $ 397,002 Catalysts 153,795 62,970 Fine Chemicals 370,246 355,141 Segment totals $ 1,062,672 $ 815,113 Net sales for first nine months of 2004 of $1,063 million were up $247.6 million, or 30.4%, from the first nine months of 2003 net sales of $815.1 million. 33 Table of Contents Polymer Additives’ net sales increased $141.6 million, or 35.7%, primarily due to higher shipments in flame retardants ($56.6 million), the contributions made by our 2003 acquisitions ($39.4 million), higher shipments ($25.4 million) and prices ($6.2 million) in curatives and additives, as well as the favorable impact of foreign exchange ($18.4 million). The increase was partially offset by lower prices in flame retardants ($4.7 million). Catalysts’ net sales increased $90.8 million primarily as a result of the impact of the refinery catalysts business acquisition ($82.8 million), higher shipments of polyolefin catalysts ($8.5 million) and the favorable impact of foreign exchange ($1.8 million), partially offset by lower prices for polyolefin catalysts ($2.1 million). Fine Chemicals’ net sales increased $15.1 million, or 4.3%, primarily due to the contributions made by our 2003 Atofina bromine fine chemicals acquisition ($14.2 million), the favorable impact of foreign exchange ($13.9 million), higher shipments in fine chemistry services and intermediates ($6.5 million) and bulk active pharmaceuticals ($1.4 million) and higher prices ($3.7 million) and shipments ($1.4 million) in agricultural actives. The increase was partially offset by an unfavorable sales mix in performance chemicals ($19.4 million) and lower prices ($7.1 million), primarily in bulk active pharmaceuticals. Operating Costs and Expenses Cost of goods sold in the first nine months of 2004 increased $205.6 million (32.1%) from the corresponding 2003 period. This increase resulted from the higher sales volumes in the 2004 period and the impact of our 2003 and 2004 acquisitions as well as higher raw material and energy costs, the establishment of a $3.4 million valuation reserve for the potential recoverability of a claim, our exit from the zeolite business and the unfavorable impact of foreign exchange on operating costs. The increase is partially offset by a $6.9 million insurance settlement from a former insurer relating to certain payments made by us in connection with insurance coverage for the period 1950 through 2000. In the first nine months of 2004, the Company also incurred $13.4 million of acquisition-related charges consisting of the step-up increase in acquired inventory associated with the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. The gross profit margin decreased approximately 230 basis points to 19.1% in the 2004 period from 21.4% for the corresponding period in 2003. Excluding the $13.4 million acquisition-related charges described, our gross profit margin for the 2004 period decreased approximately 100 basis points to 20.4%. SG&A and R&D increased $25.7 million (25.9%) in the first nine months of 2004 as compared with the first nine months of 2003 primarily due to higher SG&A and R&D costs related to acquisitions ($12.8 million), higher employee incentive related costs ($8.7 million), the unfavorable impact of foreign exchange ($2.3 million), higher R&D costs ($1.7 million) as well as higher outside legal costs ($0.7 million), offset, in part, by the benefits of cost reduction efforts and a voluntary separation program implemented in the third quarter of 2003 and first quarter of 2004. As a percentage of net sales, SG&A and R&D were 11.7% in the first nine months of 2004 versus 12.2% in the 2003 period. The 2004 period also includes a $4.8 million charge consisting of layoffs of 53 employees at the zeolite facility amounting to ($3.4 million) and related SFAS 88 curtailment charges of ($0.9 million) as well as costs associated with the cleanup of the zeolite facility in Pasadena, Texas ($0.5 million). The 2003 period includes a $7.5 million charge related to a voluntary severance program offered to certain domestic salaried employees. Additionally, the first nine months of 2004 includes a $3.0 million purchased in-process R & D charge associated with our acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. 34 Table of Contents Operating Profit Operating profit by reportable operating segment for the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004, and 2003 is as follows: Operating Profit Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 (in thousands) Polymer Additives $ 65,687 $ 44,064 Catalysts 2,227 8,244 Fine Chemicals 25,885 33,924 Segment totals 93,799 86,232 Corporate and other expenses (23,183 ) (18,112 ) Operating profit $ 70,616 $ 68,120 Overall, nine months 2004 operating profit, including special items and acquisition-related charges, increased $2.5 million (3.7%) from the first nine months of 2003. Excluding the effects of special items and acquisition-related charges, nine months 2004 operating profit increased $12.7 million, or 16.8%, from the corresponding 2003 period. Polymer Additives’ first nine months of 2004 segment operating profit increased $21.6 million, or 49.0%, from the first nine months of 2003. This increase includes allocations of special items attributable to an insurance settlement of $3.6 million in the third quarter 2004 and the absence of a $2.9 million charge related to a voluntary severance program in the 2003 period. Excluding the special items, operating profit for the 2004 period increased $15.1 million, or 32.2%, from the corresponding period of 2003 primarily due to higher shipments in flame retardants ($16.9 million) and curatives and additives ($8.9 million) and the overall favorable net effects of foreign exchange movements ($5.3 million), offset, in part, by unfavorable raw material costs ($14.7 million) and higher SG&A costs related to acquisitions ($1.6 million). Catalysts’ first nine months of 2004 segment operating profit decreased $6.0 million, or 73.0%, from the first nine months of 2003. The 2004 period includes purchase price adjustments for the step-up accounting values assigned to the acquired refinery catalysts business inventory ($13.4 million) and the write-off of purchased in-process R & D charges associated with the acquisition ($3.0 million). Excluding these adjustments, Catalysts’ segment operating profit for the 2004 period increased $10.4 million from the corresponding 2003 period primarily due to the impact of the refinery catalysts business acquisition. Fine Chemicals’ first nine months of 2004 segment operating profit decreased $8.0 million, or 23.7%, from the first nine months of 2003. The decrease included special item charges of $4.3 million that resulted from the layoff of 53 employees at the zeolite facility and the related SFAS No. 88 pension curtailment charge, $0.5 million for cleanup of the zeolite facility as well as a $3.4 million relating to the establishment of a valuation reserve for the potential recoverability of a claim, offset, in part, by an insurance settlement of $3.3 million and the absence of a $1.8 million charge related to a voluntary severance program in the 2003 period. Excluding the special items, first nine-months 2004 segment operating profit decreased $5.0 million (13.9%) from the 2003 period primarily due to lower prices in bulk active pharmaceuticals ($7.1 million), unfavorable plant utilization and manufacturing costs including our exit from the zeolite business ($3.7 million), unfavorable sales mix in performance chemicals ($2.6 million) and higher raw material and energy costs ($2.2 million). This decrease was partially offset by higher shipments in fine chemistry services and intermediates ($5.3 million) and higher prices ($3.7 million) and shipments ($1.3 million) in agricultural actives. 35 Table of Contents Corporate and other expenses for the first nine months of 2004 increased $5.1 million (28.0%) from first nine months of 2003 primarily due to higher estimated employee incentive costs offset, in part, by the absence of the 2003 workforce reduction accrual of ($2.8 million) allocated to the corporate segment. Interest and Financing Expenses Interest and financing expenses for the first nine months of 2004 amounted to $9.2 million, an increase of $5.1 million from first nine months of 2003 mainly due to higher average outstanding debt in the 2004 period relating to the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business and a third-quarter 2004 write-off of deferred financing expenses ($0.5 million) relating to the refinancing of our prior revolving credit agreement. Equity in Unconsolidated Investments Equity in unconsolidated investments for the first nine months of 2004 amounted to $2.5 million, up $3.6 million from the first nine months of 2003, primarily due to the addition of unconsolidated investments from the refinery catalysts business acquisition ($1.6 million) as well as improved results from continuing unconsolidated investments. Other Income (Expense) Net, Including Minority Interest Other income (expense), net for the first nine months of 2004 totaled ($16.0) million, a decrease of $17.8 million from the 2003 corresponding period. The decrease is primarily attributable to euro-denominated hedging losses associated with the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business in the 2004 period and the absence of $4.3 million of interest income from an Internal Revenue Service income tax settlement in the 2003 period. Income Taxes The first nine months of 2004 effective income tax rate was 26.5%, up from 11.3% for the corresponding period in 2003. The significant differences between the U.S. federal statutory income tax rate on pretax income and the effective income tax rate for the nine-month periods ended September 30, 2004 and 2003, respectively, are as follows: % of Income Before Income Taxes Nine Months EndedSeptember 30, 2004 2003 Federal statutory rate 35.0 % 35.0 % Revaluation of reserve requirements — (12.1 ) State taxes, net of federal tax benefit 0.7 0.9 Extraterritorial income exclusion (4.1 ) (2.9 ) Depletion (2.8 ) (2.1 ) Federal income tax settlement — (7.2 ) Other items, net (2.3 ) (0.3 ) Effective income tax rate 26.5 % 11.3 % Financial Condition and Liquidity Cash and cash equivalents at September 30, 2004, were $60.8 million, representing an increase of $25.6 million from $35.2 million at year-end 2003. In the nine months ended September 30, 2004, cash flows provided from operating activities of $131.2 million, together with approximately $1,051 million of proceeds from borrowings, were used to cover operating 36 Table of Contents activities, purchase a business and assets for $762.4 million, net of cash acquired, repay debt of $325.8 million, fund capital expenditures totaling $37.6 million, pay quarterly dividends to shareholders of $18.0 million, fund $12.8 million of realized euro-denominated hedging losses associated with the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business, fund investments in joint ventures and nonmarketable securities of $6.7 million, purchase 27,569 shares of our common stock, and increase cash and cash equivalents by $25.6 million. We anticipate that cash provided from operations in the future and borrowings under our new senior credit agreement will be sufficient to pay our operating expenses, satisfy debt-service obligations, fund capital expenditures and make dividend payments. The change in our accumulated other comprehensive loss from December 31, 2003, was due primarily to net foreign currency translation adjustments (strengthening of the U.S. dollar versus the euro), net of related deferred taxes. On July 31, 2004, we completed the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business for EUR 615.7 million (approximately $762.2 million at applicable exchange rates) in cash. Following this acquisition, we transferred our existing polyolefin catalysts business from our Polymer Chemicals segment, which we renamed Polymer Additives, to a newly created Catalysts segment, which also includes the assets we acquired from Akzo Nobel. In connection with the acquisition, we entered into (1) a new senior credit and expenses incurred in connection therewith. Borrowings under our new senior credit agreement and 364-day loan agreement are conditioned upon compliance with the following financial covenants: (a) consolidated fixed charge coverage ratio, as defined, must be greater than or equal to 1.25:1.00 as of the end of any fiscal quarter; (b) consolidated debt to capitalization ratio, as defined, at the end of any fiscal quarter must be less than or equal to 65% (i) prior to the earlier of (A) July 29, 2005 and (B) our first equity issuance subsequent to July 29, 2004, and (ii) thereafter, 60%; (c) consolidated tangible domestic assets, as defined, must be or greater than or equal to $750 million for us to make investments in entities and enterprises that are organized outside the United States; and (d) with the exception of liens specified in our new senior credit agreement and the 364-day loan agreement, liens may not attach to assets where the aggregate amount of all indebtedness secured by such liens at any time exceeds 10% of consolidated net worth, as defined in the agreements. The current portion of our long-term debt amounted to $495.0 million at September 30, 2004, principally reflecting amounts payable on July 28, 2005 under our 364-day loan agreement pursuant to which amounts were borrowed to finance in part the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business. The noncurrent portion of our long-term debt amounted to $458.2 million at September 30, 2004, subsequent to our financing the acquisition of the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business, compared to $228.4 million at the end of 2003. Our long-term debt, including the current portion, as a percentage of total capitalization amounted to 59.0% at September 30, 2004. As of September 30, 2004, we were the guarantor of $36.7 million of outstanding long-term debt on behalf of our joint venture company, Jordan Bromine Company Limited. We were also the guarantor of $0.4 million of outstanding debt at September 30, 2004, on behalf of our joint venture company, Eurecat U.S., Inc. Our long-term debt, including the guarantees, as a percent of total capitalization amounted to 59.9% at September 30, 2004. 37 Table of Contents Our capital expenditures in the first nine months of 2004 were up by $7.3 million from the nine-month period of 2003. For the year, capital expenditures, including capital expenditures relating to the Akzo Nobel refinery catalysts business since its acquisition, are forecasted to be about 50% greater than the 2003 level. Capital spending will be financed primarily with cash flow provided from operations with additional cash needed, if any, provided by borrowings, including borrowings under our revolving credit facility. The amount and timing of any additional borrowings will depend on the Company’s specific cash requirements. On October 13, 2004, we filed a universal shelf registration statement on Form S-3 with the Securities and Exchange Commission covering $700 million of securities. Once the SEC declares it effective, the shelf registration statement will permit us to issue from time to time a range of securities, including common stock, preferred stock and senior and subordinated debt. The registration statement also provides for a proposed offering of common stock. We intend to use all of the net proceeds from the offering to retire a corresponding portion of the indebtedness that we incurred under our 364-day loan agreement to finance the refinery catalysts acquisition. We intend to repay or refinance the remaining borrowings under our 364-day loan agreement before its maturity with borrowings under our senior credit agreement, proceeds from long-term debt or additional bank financings, or a combination of the foregoing. As of September 30, 2004, we had the ability to borrow an additional $347 million under our various credit agreements. The following table summarizes our contractual obligations at September 30, 2004 for plant construction, purchases of equipment, unused letters of credit, and various take or pay and throughput agreements. 4Q 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 There-after Take or pay / throughput agreements $ 29,389 $ 67,012 $ 32,792 $ 9,063 $ 7,066 $ 6,366 $ 27,372 Additional investment commitment payments $ 3,883 $ 1,020 $ 790 $ 790 $ 30 $ 30 $ 210 Capital projects $ 13,652 $ 7,325 $ 616 $ 622 $ 2,525 — — Letters of credit and guarantees $ 4,162 $ 31,378 $ 6,788 $ 3,146 $ 3,508 $ 3,007 $ 4,772 Total $ 51,086 $ 106,735 $ 40,986 $ 13,621 $ 13,129 $ 9,403 $ 32,354 We are subject to federal, state, local and foreign requirements regulating the handling, manufacture and use of materials (some of which may be classified as hazardous or toxic by one or more regulatory agencies), the discharge of materials into the environment and the protection of the environment. To our knowledge, we are currently complying, and expecting to continue to comply, in all material respects with existing environmental laws, regulations, statutes and ordinances applicable to its operations. Such compliance with federal, state, local and foreign environmental protection laws is not expected to have in the future a material effect on earnings or the competitive position of Albemarle. Among other environmental requirements, we are subject to the federal Superfund law, and similar state laws, under which we may be designated as a potentially responsible party and may be liable for a share of the costs associated with cleaning up various hazardous waste sites. ITEM 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk There have been no significant changes in the Company’s interest rate risk, marketable security price risk or raw material price risk from the information provided in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2003, except as noted below. 38 Table of Contents Due to the increase in our outstanding indebtedness as a result of the acquisition of the refinery catalysts business, we now plan to enter into interest rate swaps, collars or similar instruments with the objective of reducing interest rate volatility relating to our borrowing costs. The operations of the Company are exposed to market risk from changes in natural gas prices. The Company purchases natural gas to meet its production requirements. In the second quarter of 2003, the Company began hedging a portion of its 12-month rolling forecast for North American natural gas requirements, by entering into natural gas futures contracts, to help mitigate uncertainty and volatility. Hedge transactions are executed with a major financial institution by the Company’s purchasing personnel. Such derivatives are held to secure natural gas at fixed prices and not for trading. The natural gas contracts qualify as cash flow hedges under SFAS No. 133 and are marked to market. The unrealized gains and/or losses are deferred and reported in accumulated other comprehensive income to the extent that the unrealized gains and losses are offset by the forecasted transaction. At September 30, 2004, there were unrealized gains of approximately $121 ($77, net of tax). Any unrealized gains and/or losses on the derivative instrument that are not offset by the forecasted transaction are recorded in earnings. ITEM 4. Controls and Procedures The Company carried out an evaluation, with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934) as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based upon that evaluation, the Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective in timely alerting them to material information relating to the Company (including its consolidated subsidiaries) required to be included in the Company’s periodic SEC filings. There has been no change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended September 30, 2004 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. We have invested significant resources to document and analyze our system of internal controls, and we are continuing our evaluation of such internal controls versus the standards adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. In the course of our ongoing evaluation, we have identified certain areas of our internal controls requiring improvement, and are in the process of designing enhanced processes and controls to address issues identified through this review. We believe that our efforts will allow management and our Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm to complete the procedures, certification and attestation requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2004 in connection with our annual report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004; however, we cannot guarantee such outcome. 39 Table of Contents Part II - OTHER INFORMATION ITEM 1. Legal Proceedings On April 2, 2004, Albemarle Overseas Development Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of our Company, initiated a Request for Arbitration against Aventis S.A., through the International Chamber of Commerce, International Court of Arbitration, Paris, France. The dispute arises out of a 1992 stock purchase agreement between a predecessor to Albemarle Overseas Development and a predecessor to Aventis under which 100% of the stock of Potasse et Produits Chimiques, S.A., now known as Albemarle PPC, was acquired by Albemarle Overseas Development. The dispute relates to a chemical facility in Thann, France owned by Albemarle PPC. Under the terms of the agreement, we believe that Aventis is obligated to indemnify Albemarle Overseas Development and Albemarle PPC, and hold them harmless from certain claims, losses, damages, costs or any other present or prospective liabilities arising out of soil and groundwater contamination at the site in Thann. Beginning in May 2000, the French government, with respect to the management of pollution risk on the site of active industrial installations, required Albemarle PPC to conduct an environmental risk study of the Thann facility. In June 2002, the French government directed Albemarle PPC to undertake a more detailed risk study of groundwater contamination. The administrative process of the French government is still ongoing as of the present date. Albemarle Overseas Development has demanded indemnification from Aventis for the cost of the studies, but Aventis has refused to pay. The Request for Arbitration requests indemnification of Albemarle Overseas Development by Aventis for all costs incurred by Albemarle PPC in connection with any environmental claims of the French government for the Albemarle PPC facility and a declaratory judgment as to the liability of Aventis under the agreement for costs to be incurred in the future by Albemarle PPC in connection with such claims. At this time, it is not possible to predict what the French government will require with respect to the Thann facility, since this matter is in its initial stages and environmental matters are subject to many uncertainties. We believe, however, that we are entitled to be fully indemnified by Aventis for all liabilities arising from this matter but no assurance can be given that we will prevail in this matter. If we do not prevail in the arbitration and the government requires additional remediation, the costs of remediation could be significant. On June 4, 2004, we initiated a petition for breach of contract and declaratory judgment against Amerisure Insurance Company and Amerisure Mutual Insurance Company (f/k/a Michigan Mutual Insurance Company) in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court, Parish of Baton Rouge, Louisiana on the grounds of the defendants’ refusal to honor their respective obligations under certain insurance policies on which we were named an additional insured to reimburse us for certain damages incurred by us in the discontinuance of product support for and the withdrawal from a water treatment venture. This proceeding has been removed to United States District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana and the parties have agreed to non-binding arbitration. We have also initiated formal discussions related to such damages with our primary general commercial liability carrier. In addition, we are involved from time to time in legal proceedings of types regarded as common in our businesses, particularly administrative or judicial proceedings seeking remediation under environmental laws, such as Superfund, products liability and premises liability litigation. We maintain a financial accrual for these proceedings that includes defense costs and potential damages, as estimated by our general counsel. We also maintain insurance to mitigate certain of such risks. ITEM 6. Exhibits (a) Exhibits 31.1 Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) 31.2 Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) 32.1 Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(b) and 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 32.2 Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(b) and 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized. ALBEMARLE CORPORATION (Registrant) Date: November 9, 2004 By: /s/ PAUL F. ROCHELEAU Paul F. Rocheleau Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer EXHIBIT INDEX Page Numbers 31.1 Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) 43 31.2 Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) 44 32.1 Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(b) and 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 45 32.2 Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(b) and 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 46
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CNBC.com News September 12, 2011 at 05:04 AM EDT 'Nobody's Leaving the Euro': OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria, secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development, issued a strong defense of the euro over the weekend.
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Transamerica via GlobeNewswire News Releases January 04, 2013 at 13:52 PM EST Transamerica Continues to Strengthen Mutual Funds Lineup Firm Adds Two Strategies: Dividend Focused and International Small Cap Value DENVER, Jan. 4, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Following its commitment to provide unique fund offerings from top-tier managers, Transamerica announced the launch of two innovative funds to its lineup today. The funds are Transamerica Dividend Focused, sub-advised by Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss, LLC (BHMS) and Transamerica International Small Cap Value, sub-advised by Thompson, Siegel & Walmsley LLC (TS&W). Dave Paulsen, Chief Executive Officer of Transamerica Capital, Inc., said the new funds were added to bolster the firm's well known asset allocation portfolios, and provide investors with individual strategies from top-tier managers that are designed to be solutions in all markets. "These additions will help us continue to provide investors with unique and relevant solutions from world-class managers," Paulsen said. "We believe that strategies in these asset classes are not only in demand today, but will allow us to address the needs of investors in the future." The Dividend Focused strategy is available in class A, C, I and I2 shares, while International Small Cap Value will be available in class I and I2 shares.Transamerica Dividend Focused (TDFAX, TDFCX, TDFIX) seeks total return gained from the combination of dividend yield, growth of dividends, and capital appreciation. BHMS uses an active contrarian strategy that invests in large- and middle-capitalization stocks listed on U.S. exchanges that have a consecutive 25-year history of paying cash dividends. This includes American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), which generally exhibit more attractive valuations and higher dividend yields than the general market.Transamerica International Small Cap Value (TISVX) seeks maximum long-term total return by investing primarily in the stocks of small-capitalization companies listed on foreign securities exchanges that the managers believe are undervalued. TS&W uses a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods to determine relative value. It also employs a consistent sell discipline, regularly reviewing each stock and selling when another stock presents a significantly better risk-reward combination. Transamerica Capital, Inc. will lead the sales and distribution efforts within the financial institution, wirehouse and independent financial planner channels. Investors interested in learning more should call the Transamerica customer care group at 888-233-4339. Financial professionals interested in learning more should call the Transamerica sales desk at 800-851-7555. Both can also visit TransamericaInvestments.com.Please consider the funds' investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. The prospectus and/or summary prospectus contains this and other information about the funds and should be read carefully before you invest or send money. To obtain a prospectus and for other information on Transamerica Funds, contact your financial professional or Transamerica Investments at 888-233-4339 or visit our web site: transamericainvestments.com.About Transamerica Asset Management Transamerica Asset Management (TAM) is the asset management business unit of Transamerica. TAM consists of Transamerica Funds, Transamerica Partners Funds, Transamerica Series Trust, Transamerica Income Shares, Inc., and Transamerica Asset Management, Inc., a registered investment advisor. TAM manages more than $52.3 billion in assets as of 11/30/12. TAM and its affiliate companies are wholly owned by AEGON N.V., an international life insurance, pension and asset management company. About Transamerica Capital, Inc. Transamerica Capital, Inc. is the underwriting and wholesaling broker-dealer for mutual funds advised by Transamerica Asset Management, Inc. Transamerica Capital, Inc., an AEGON company, works with financial professionals at wirehouse, regional, independent, and bank firms to provide a variety of investment solutions.About AEGON N.V. AEGON N.V., based in The Hague, The Netherlands, is an international life insurance, pension and investment company with businesses in over 20 markets in the Americas, Europe and Asia. AEGON companies employ approximately 25,000 people and have over 47 million customers across the globe. For more information about AEGON, visit www.aegon.com. Mutual funds are subject to market risk, including the loss of principal. Focused funds are less diversified than other mutual funds; therefore, the performance of each holding in a focused fund has a greater impact upon the overall portfolio, which increases the risks associated with investing in the fund. The prices of securities the sub-adviser believes are undervalued may not appreciate as anticipated or may go down. Investments in global/international markets involve risks not associated with U.S. markets, such as currency fluctuations, adverse social and political developments, and relatively small size and lesser liquidity of the markets. MFPR2L1212For more information, please contact: Brenna Miller Communications Managerbrenna.k.miller@transamerica.com This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.comhttp://www.cisionwire.com/transamerica-capital--inc-/r/transamerica-continues-to-strengthen-mutual-funds-lineup,c9353865 Stock Market XML and JSON Data API provided by FinancialContent Services, Inc.
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America: Freedom in the Balance Archives ~ Dottie Roberts then and now Exclusive: The Patriot Declaration Film Visions Republican Documents The Constitution: A Basic Primer www.TheReaganWing.com the conservative conscience of the Republican Party « Disaster Update: How Things Roll in Whatcom County Sue Copeland Passes » Lincoln Day Party replaces cob-webbed tradition in Grays Harbor county March 3, 2013 by Roberta . Join newly elected Grays Harbor Republican Party chair, Constitutionalist Michael Thompson for a . Lincoln Day Dinner Party! . What makes this event like no other? Keynote Speaker Shahram Hadian: “Restoring our Constitutional Republic” The Lighthouse Ballet Company Local recording artist Alex Mabey performs during the social hour. After party: when the music starts, dancing until 11pm. Cash Only bar will remain open throughout the night. Fine dining by O’Brien’s. It is time to put the PARTY back into the Republican Party. Join us for an evening of fun and thank us for it with your contributions. http://www.ghgop.org for registration and convenient online payment, or use this form to register by mail: LDD invite signup sheet The Aberdeen Rotary Log Pavilion 1401 Sargent Blvd. Aberdeen, WA. 98520 Go to http://www.ghgop.org to reserve your seat at the season’s premier event. Share this:EmailMoreFacebookReddit Posted in Party News | Tagged Alex Mabey, Lighthouse Ballet, Michael Thompson, Shahram Hadian | 33 Comments 33 Responses on March 4, 2013 at 8:34 am | Reply Doktor Jeep I’ll tell you what’s really wrong with this Lincoln Day crap. The “first Lincolnian Age” was the end of state’s rights. Now Obama is being heralded as the return of Lincoln, and the second Lincolnian age is intended to be all about the end of individual rights. In fact, the screen writer for Speilbergs Lincoln movie, Tony Kushner even declared that “… that Obama is ‘Lincolnian’ and has made ‘amazing progress’ in the fight against ‘psychotic individualism’” So this is our future? Republicans celebrating the end of states rights, and democrats celebrating the end of individual rights? They will still act like they are against each other. Give me the party that says outright that Lincoln was a tyrant and terrorist and all those who like what he did are of the same ilk, and I will sign on. on March 4, 2013 at 10:38 am | Reply Doug Parris The case against Lincoln is not made. IF we begin with the conclusions of the Confederacy – their interpretation of the Constitution – and (as a former resident of the South and conversant with the latent ideology of racial separatism still there at the time, I can state with some authority) their revisionist interpretation of the “real” war that followed their protection of the “states right” to slavery, then we can also conclude that Lincoln was a tyrant and terrorist. But those assumptions, with which I find every argument against him begins, are never constructed from evidence, only assumed, a priori. Lincoln’s detractors simply assert that slavery was not at issue, in direct contradiction of the assertions of the South at the time. Lincoln’s detractors simply assert that the Constitution gave them the right to secede, without a single word to that effect in the document, itself. My impression of the controversy is that the neo-Confederates take the same approach to the Constitution that Roe vs Wade did – that if a proposition seems reasonable to them it must be in the Constitution – even if they have to put it there themselves. Abraham Lincoln prosecuted a war. The losers, quite logically think of his methods as brutal. That’s the way wars are. The post-civil war Amendments took away the State’s right to institute slavery and the States’ prerogative to abolish the right to keep and bear arms and the States’ ability to do away with free speech and due process and to engage in search and seizure without a warrant – among other “rights” of government quite rationally held to be within the power of individual State governments prior to Lincoln because the Constitution, before the 14th Amendment, did not restrict STATE governments from abolishing rights, only the Federal government. But those post-civil war amendments did NOT abolish any restrictions on the Federal Government. Congress and the Courts did that, principally with absurd interpretations of the “Commerce” and “Welfare” clauses. You can’t blame that on Lincoln. on March 4, 2013 at 11:41 pm | Reply JSBach History has recorded a statement by President Lincoln which most succinctly sums up the cause of a War which started one might say, as a defense of Virginia… a state which had not seceded from the Union at the moment this statement was made, but one of several states which seceded long after the original four. The statement by President Lincoln was made to a private emissary sent by Jefferson Davis at Lincoln’s request, by the name of Colonel Baldwin. It was made after Lincoln was by his own admission, faced with the real truth of the situation for the first time! New information now made it plain to him that his own advisers in his cabinet were misleading him, and that even more southern States would join the initial four in seceding from the Union. Their reasons would be for the unconstitutional invasion of state territory by Federal troops (already a Fait accompli, as unknown to the Colonel as the surety of growing secession was now a shock to Lincoln), and, for unconstitutional tariffs long urged and planned by Lincoln’s cabinet. It was a shock to Lincoln that several more states than the initial four, would most certainly secede, contrary to his cabinets advice that they were merely posturing and bluffing! Lincoln had already set in motion an army to invade Virginia, and had done so when he had given assurances he had not, as of this requested meeting. It was yet within his power to stop this precipitous onset of war. It is recorded by those present that Lincoln was clearly shocked at this turn of information and came under great mental stress! For some time he paced the floor of his private bedroom where the meeting was taking place, when suddenly he blurted out his raison d’être… “But, I must have my tariffs!” on March 5, 2013 at 1:06 pm | Reply Roberta JS: We and our readers would appreciate links to support your statements. Though there are ahead of JSBach, three undocumented assertions by ‘Doktor Jeep’, and ten undocumented assertions by ‘Mr. Parris’, I will jump the queue and state that though the quote by Mr. Lincoln is an approximation but substantially correct, it nevertheless begs a source I agree. The assertions really deserve expansion upon their subject, possibly on a future date, either under this heading or in a separate article. However, suffice it to report that the Baldwin Lincoln dialogue is reported in several locations and from different sources, as related by both Mr. Lincoln and Col. Baldwin. Additionally from three different interviews, meetings at which Mr. Lincoln appeared for both speaking and questioning, there is reliable recording of his positions on the premier cause of the war dealing with tariffs and state sovereignty as opposed to the free-soil issue; the latter being the pretense for a far more onerous cause. Below are three brief attempts to expand upon the matter: Briefly, from the Baltimore Exchange, ~ April 23, 1861 – Reprinted in the Memphis Daily Avalanche May 8th 1861, pg.1, col. 4; Interview between Messengers of Peace, a committee of the “Young Men’s Christian Association of Baltimore,”: “We learn that a delegation from five of the Young Men’s Christian Associations of Baltimore, consisting of six members of each, yesterday proceeded to Washington for an interview with the President, the purpose being to intercede with him in behalf a peaceful policy, and to entreat him not to pass troops through Baltimore or Maryland. … the conversation opened by Dr. Fuller seeking to impress upon Mr. Lincoln the vast responsibility of the position he occupied, and that upon him depended the issues, of peace or war—on one hand a terrible, fratricidal conflict, and on the other peace. “But” said Mr. Lincoln, what am I to do?” “Why, sir, let the country know that you are disposed to recognize the independence of the Southern States (7 at that time). I say nothing of secession; recognize the fact that they have formed a Government of their own; that they will never be united again with the North, and peace will instantly take the place of anxiety and suspense, and war may he averted.” Lincoln’s response: “And what shall become of the revenue? I shall have no government – no resources?” From testimony before the Reconstruction Committee of the US Congress by Mr. Baldwin in 1866: “At an interview between Virginia Convention Delegate John B. Baldwin and President Lincoln on April 4th, 1861, Baldwin suggested to Lincoln that “in order to prevent the possibility of any collision or clash of arms interfering with this effort at a pacific settlement, I would declare the purpose (not in any admission of want of right at all, but with a distinct protest of the right, to place the forces of the United States wherever in her territory you choose) to withdraw the forces from Sumter and Pickens, declaring that it was done for the sake of peace, in the effort to settle this thing; … He said something about the withdrawal of the troops from Sumter on the ground of military necessity. Said I, “that will never do under heaven. You have been President a month to-day, and if you intended to hold that position you ought to have strengthened it, so as to make it impregnable. To hold it in the present condition of force there is an invitation to assault. Go upon higher ground than that. The better ground than that is to make a concession of an asserted right in the interest of peace.”-”Well,” said he, “WHAT ABOUT THE REVENUE? WHAT WOULD I DO ABOUT THE COLLECTION OF DUTIES?” Further a summary quote from Professor Dabney’s four volumes of lectures concluding with Vol IV, entitled ‘Secular’, contains, starting on page 87, a chapter entitled: “NARRATIVE OF COL. J. B. BALDWIN, of his Secret Interview with Abraham Lincoln in 1861, Disclosing the Origin of the War”. “The importance of this narrative is, that it unmasks the true authors and nature of the bloody war through which we have passed. We see that the Radicals provoked it, not to preserve, but to destroy the Union. It demonstrates, effectually, that Virginia and the border States were acting with better faith to preserve the Union than was Lincoln’s Cabinet. Colonel Baldwin showed him conclusively that it was not free-soil, evil as that was, which really endangered the Union, but coercion. He showed him that, if coercion were relinquished, Virginia and the border States stood pledged to labor with him for the restoration of Union, and would assuredly be able to effect it. Eight slave-holding border States, with seventeen hireling States, would certainly have wielded sufficient moral and material weight, in the cause of what Lincoln professed to believe the clear truth and right, to reassure and win back the seven little seceded States, or, if they became hostile, to restrain them. But coercion arraigned fifteen against seventeen in mutually destructive war. Lincoln acknowledged the conclusiveness of this reasoning in the agony of remorse and perplexity, in the writhings and tearings of hair, of which Colonel Baldwin was witness. But what was the decisive weight that turned the scale against peace, and right, and patriotism? It was the interest of a sectional tariff! His single objection, both to the wise advice of Colonel Baldwin and Mr. Stuart, was: “Then what would become of my tariffs?” He was shrewd enough to see that the just and liberal free-trade policy proposed by the Montgomery Government would speedily build up, by the help of the magnificent Southern staples, a beneficent foreign commerce through Confederate ports; that the Northern people, whose lawless and mercenary character he understood, could never be restrained from smuggling across the long open frontier of the Confederacy; that thus the whole country would become habituated to the benefits of free-trade, so that when the schism was healed (as he ‘knew it would be healed in a few years by the policy of Virginia), it would be too late to restore the iniquitous system of sectional plunder by tariffs, which his section so much craved. Hence, when Virginia offered him a safe way to preserve the Union, he preferred to destroy the Union and preserve his tariffs. The war was conceived in duplicity…” In conclusion, the actual relation of the interviews and discussions with Lincoln having been related and published by several historians, the general tone and points covered are ascertained with little difficulty. A study of the intricate discussions, and several talks by Lincoln, as well as questions answered by him, is a good manner of becoming familiar with the reality of the situation, and the political and constitutional debate which swirled around Washington. The combination birthed a most terrible contest. on March 11, 2013 at 5:55 pm | Reply JSBach Lest I be misunderstood… My hat is off to the Constitutionalist Chair of Grey’s Harbor Republican Party! It is also off to rest of the Grey’s Harbor GOP members! Innovation in the cause of liberty, freedom based on the rule of law and the constitutions of both the U.S. and Washington State, is entirely a respite, and welcome! At the same time it is something for which many have been fighting and praying for the past several decades! It is hoped that many other counties will follow the lead that this Washington State county of Gray’s Harbor has so boldly signaled! Regardless of the debates over history, the pros or cons of the Civil War and it’s damage done the Republic, we cannot deny that the course we must follow was clearly marked out for us by the founders! Nothing changed in law! The constitutional solutions are plain and simple! Though that course has been violated numerous times in the past, it has for it’s solid foundation both a lamp post as well as the clearest of maps! The God of Nature being the singular author of the rights enumerated by the constitution, the inflexibility of those rights being well entrenched in the duties and prohibitions laid upon the shoulders of public servants, one cannot deny that the course of correction is amply clear! It remains for us to enforce by wisely choosing those servants! Thank-you Chairman Michael Thompson for your staunch support of the only corrective course of action guaranteed to steer the ship into waters of freedom once again… a return to those constitutions. Your consistency both on the floor of the Washington State convention, as well as becoming a chairman who leads by such principles, demonstrates exactly what this nation needs in the way of citizen action which wins wars for liberty! on March 5, 2013 at 8:01 am | Reply Michael Thompson Lincoln Day Dinners are the one event that is expected of the Republican Party. I like a good party and that is what our Lincoln Day Dinner is all about. Anyone that doesn’t see the fact that I lined up Shahram Hadian as the keynote speaker, must go back and read it all again. I believe the largest sign showing what we are trying to do, is having Shahram Hadian as our keynote speaker. As it shows Hadian is the informational portion of our program. The rest is party time. What is Hadian going to speak about? “Restoring our Constitutional Republic”. And he gets an hour to speak, which means you will hear his entire speech. Call me crazy, but I thought people would see what I am trying to accomplish here. I say, get on board and help change things or just sit back and be quiet while the rest of us do what is necessary to bring our Constitutional Republic back. I may not like fighting for people who refuse to help themselves, but if I don’t do it then I feel I can’t blame someone else for the loss of everything I believe in. In short, 3% changed this country in the beginning, and we are over 30% today. Don’t think for a minute that bringing our Constitutional Republic back to life won’t happen. Those of us who choose this fight, will win. on March 6, 2013 at 1:23 pm | Reply Lysander Even if you assume it was about slavery, the southern states had seceded and thus were not in Lincoln realm and should have been left alone under the ideas of Washington where you leave other countries to mind their own business and not get involved. Lincoln enslaved a nation to free the slaves. And it is well documented trampled on the constitution throughout his time in power. on March 8, 2013 at 12:48 pm | Reply Roberta Lysander, The same request made of Bach: can you please provide some links to support your last statement (“well documented”). In making the request as administrator, moderator, and editor here, I proffer no opinion on the merits of the arguments so far made. It is an area into which I have not adequately delved so as to hold to a position on the subject. on March 21, 2013 at 7:52 am | Reply Lysander Roberta, I have found people generally have a knee jerk reaction to criticism of Lincoln and do not really want to know the truth so I am not going to spend much time trying to look up stuff when I have serious doubts they are going to read the citations or believe them. When the doubters are ready on their own, they will be able to find the information quite easily. If I recommend ‘The Real Lincoln” if you really want a good book documenting his transgressions. The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War: Thomas DiLorenzo: 9780761526469: Amazon.com: Books on March 25, 2013 at 10:57 am | Reply Doug Parris I own The Real Lincoln and if I have time, will document the dishonest and deceptive tactics DiLorenzo uses in that and his other writings to profit personally by attacking Lincoln. A full treatment, however, would require a book. As always, Lincoln detractors begin with the assumption (but no supporting argument) that succession was valid and a “right;” hence, in this case, your assertion that “the southern states had seceded and thus were not in Lincoln[s] realm.” Yes, if you begin with the assumption that you are right, you can easily conclude that you are right. Next we have the assertion that anyone who does not accept these assumptions simply because they are asserted is a “blind follower” or a “Lincoln worshipper,” having a “knee-jerk reaction” or “doesn’t want to know the truth.” Yes, if in debate, you simply call your opponent names you leave him attempting to disprove your accusations, attempting to prove the negative and it gives you a tactical advantage… until people realize what you’re doing. The real question is… why does any purported Liberty activist waste time with such drivel? Let us assume, for the sake of argument, that this President, dead now more than 140 years, prosecuted an immoral war by philosophical error and that false ideas about his motivation have made him a symbol of heroism and Christian example to the Republican Party. What is gained by vilifying that symbol? What is lost by allowing people who think he was a good man and good President and have (we assume for the sake of argument) been fooled by his speeches and writings into thinking he was sincere, by allowing them to uphold an ancient symbol of what they believe? Is there some worry he may run for office again? Is there some concern there will be a new attack by the North on Southern States? Is there some possibility that those who do not buy the line that Lincoln was attempting to destroy State’s rights and who deny that was his “real” intent will suddenly, despite that denial and disavowal, become advocates for Federal abrogation of State’s rights because of the mystical power of that “misunderstood” bearded icon? What we have here, is simply an attempt to politically isolate those of libertarian philosophy from those of conservative philosophy over what are at best historic trifles – to close the door Ron Paul opened – to permanently bury the libertarian voice where it has been buried for decades – in the Libertarian Party – and to end the coalition that holds the possibility of overturning the liberal domination of the GOP. What we have here is the fomentation of pointless factional disputes for no conceivable good. on March 25, 2013 at 8:25 pm | Reply Lysander I really do not care what you think of lincoln. What I care about is that central premise that you want to ignore… Do we have a right to secede. It is a fundamental issue that gets at the heart of the relationship between the people, the states, and the federal government. To accept Lilncolns assertion that we have no right to secede means we no longer have a voluntary union but rather a controlling central authority. on March 25, 2013 at 11:14 pm | Reply Doug Parris How the power of any government works varies, but if it has any authority at all that authority overrides the authority of those who are subject to it to act to the contrary. If ANY subject entity has the authority to remove itself, not only do States have a right to secede, Counties have a right to secede from States, Cities from Counties or States and individuals from all of the above. If ANY constituency, group or individual doesn’t like a law or ruling they/he may simply secede and ignore it. If you do not believe in the concept of the rule of Law, this will sit well with you, but you are, of course, a hypocrite to vote or engage in politics. That the rule of law is incompatible with the universal “right to secede” does not, in and of itself, disprove the Confederate claim, of course, it just means they didn’t have it as a “right of man,” it must be established on other legal ground. Really… You are going to argue that it is hypocrtical to both vote and retain the right to secede? Wow. I guess our founding fathers are a bunch of hyprocrites then. on March 28, 2013 at 9:10 am | Reply Doug Parris Lysander, it is not possible to interpret me to have said that, but, even if I had, your second comment does not logically follow. The founding fathers declared that there WAS such a thing as the rule of law, not that there was not. The founding fathers declared independence because they couldn’t vote. But if you misunderstood me, many others might as well and I’d better make myself clear. All I was saying is that the right to abrogate a jurisdiction is the same as the right to abrogate a law, since jurisdictions are the mechanisms of human law enforcement. A voluntarily joined association may or may not include the right to unilaterally secede, but it is not possible to theorize a UNIVERSAL RIGHT to unilaterally secede from ALL associations because that would mean no jurisdiciton wields real authority. Any component of that jurisdiction, from States to individuals, would then have the right to simply secede and not obey the law in question. The “universal right to secede” is incompatible with the concept of authority and, hence, the concept of law. The only reason that voting is hypocritical to someone who disagrees with law and authority is because voting is the exercise of authority over law and government and such a person has already told us he believes in neither. The length and detail of the Declaration of Independence is largely owing to the fact that the founders DID believe in lawfully constituted authority, particularly the authority of the Creator, by whose endowment we have the foundation of law (inalienable rights) and they were making absolutely clear that they did not mean the dissolution of the authority of the Crown to be confused with a “universal right” to secede. on April 9, 2013 at 8:37 am | Reply Lysander All founders voted after the union was formed but none believed that the could not secede from the union. on April 10, 2013 at 6:51 pm | Reply Lysander Also, by definition for a union to be voluntary it must include the right to secession. AND the universal right to secede is not incompatible with the concept of authority and the concept of law. For example what law is being broken by the south seceding? on April 11, 2013 at 5:25 pm | Reply SharonSS Right on, Lysander! Of course Lincoln is Obama’s shining light! on April 12, 2013 at 11:43 pm | Reply Doug Parris You wear me out, Lysander. Let’s just take your first item. You say, “All founders voted after the union was formed but none believed that the could not secede from the union,” and you appear to be serious. Okay… what about facts? There are many men who might be called “founders” but at the very least we can start with the men who signed the original document (the Constitution). You say all of them believed the States had a right to secede. Here is a list: Washington, George, Virginia Franklin, Benjamin, Pennsylvania Madison, James, Virginia Hamilton, Alexander, New York Morris, Gouverneur, Pennsylvania Morris, Robert, Pennsylvania Wilson, James, Pennsylvania Pinckney, Chas. Cotesworth, South Carolina Pinckney, Chas, South Carolina Rutledge, John, South Carolina Butler, Pierce, South Carolina Sherman, Roger, Connecticut Johnson, William Samuel, Connecticut McHenry, James, Maryland Read, George, Delaware Bassett, Richard, Delaware Spaight, Richard Dobbs, North Carolina Blount, William, North Carolina Williamson, Hugh, North Carolina Jenifer, Daniel of St. Thomas, Maryland King, Rufus, Massachusetts Gorham, Nathaniel, Massachusetts Dayton, Jonathan, New Jersey Carroll, Daniel, Maryland Few, William, Georgia Baldwin, Abraham, Georgia Langdon, John, New Hampshire Gilman, Nicholas, New Hampshire Livingston, William, New Jersey Paterson, William, New Jersey Mifflin, Thomas, Pennsylvania Clymer, George, Pennsylvania FitzSimons, Thomas, Pennsylvania Ingersoll, Jared, Pennsylvania Bedford, Gunning, Jr., Delaware Brearley, David, New Jersey Dickinson, John, Delaware Blair, John, Virginia Broom, Jacob, Delaware Please tell me where I can read the evidence for each of them: 1. that they specifically expressed an opinion on the issue of secession by States from the Union they had just formed, and 2. that they each believed it was a “right,” implicit in, though absent from, the document. I won’t be picky… letters, articles authored, even quotations attributed to them verifiably during their lifetime. Well the constitution gives the federal government specific powers and states and individual retain all other rights. If you can show me where in the consitution the federal government has the right to prevent states from leaving the union I will be quiet. Otherwise I think it is quite clear that they after fighting a long war of secession believed it to be a fundamental right of the states. Jefferson 1801, first inaugural address, “If there be any among us who wish to dissolve the Union or to change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed, as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.” Also feel free to look into the New England Secessionist movement of the early 1800′s. There are tons more quotes if you are truly interested. I suspect that you are not. Lastly I suggest you read the declaration of Independence carefully and then tell me and your readers again that you question whether the founders believed states had the right to secede. If you can do with a straight face I will be impressed. on April 15, 2013 at 8:43 am | Reply Doug Parris On April 9 you claimed “All founders voted after the union was formed but none believed that the could not secede from the union.” There were many men that can be called “founders” but I asked you for a relatively small number, less than forty, to back up your boast. You gave me one. You were fabricating evidence you do not have, but assume must exist because you think you are right. I have already answered your first point in this April 14 post. If, as you claim, the Union had no power to prevent secession on the sole ground that “secession is a universal right,” then it had no power to enforce anything. Any defiance of its power would then be a defacto secession. I’m surprised you can’t follow that. Your suggestion that I “read the Declaration” carefully is disingenuous. If you can cull some point from that document to bolster your assumptions (that, currently, remain no more than your strong feelings) you are welcome to do so. Unless and until you have attempted that exercise, we must assume you cannot. But to simply point at the Declaration and request that I not only do your homework for you but come to the same conclusions is absurd. You need to do your research BEFORE you brag about its results. on April 15, 2013 at 10:40 pm | Reply Lysander It is a fact that they believed that they could secede from the union. That is what the revolutionaries were doing. If you bothered to read the Deceleration which apparently you are not you would see that. what I suppose I am assuming and did not do research on is if they all truly voted after the war. Maybe some did not. I do not know that and concede the argument there (despite you not disputing that part). I truly am amazed that you think the founders opposed secession. I certainly did more than point you to one quote by one of the men. I pointed you to a document they all signed that states, “When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another” And “Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the CONSENT of the governed” (emphasis added) and ” –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it,” The document is essentially a document promoting secession followed by a list of reasons for it. That you would think the people would sign such a document, support a long drawn out war, and then form a voluntary union that you can never leave is beyond me. I must thank you for your advocacy for Liberty. I do not doubt your sincerety, but your argument regarding secession and Lincoln, so far, is based on false assumptions. It is a failure of clarity of thinking. You say, “I truly am amazed that you think the founders opposed secession.” That is a glaring false assumption. I never said any such thing. I’m quite sure most “founders” never expressed any opinion on the subject of the future secession of a future State of a Republic, once formed, one way or the other. For one thing, it was not, at that time, to my knowledge, a practical political issue in the same way the complete abolition of Public Education is not a current practical political issue, although the abolition of the Federal Department of Education IS. Yet you make the claim as if you had written evidence for each of said Founders. To make such a claim on philosophical hubris alone is foolish at best and dishonest at worst. You say, “It is a fact that they believed that they could secede from the union. That is what the revolutionaries were doing.” It is not a “fact” simply because you keep repeating yourself and it is absolutely NOT what they were doing. The Union had not been formed at the signing of the Declaration of Independence. If you had read the document as carefully as you suggest you might have noted that the date on it was July 4, 1776. The Constitution was not adopted at the Constitutional Convention until September 17, 1787. They could not possibly have been seceding from it. The Revolutionary War was fought for independence from a Monarchy that imposed fiat law without representation. The Union in question was a Constitutional Republic that enacted law through elected representatives subject to severe restrictions on its power. They are not the same thing. The means of legal secession from the Union existed in the Constitution (at the very least) according to the terms designated in that Document. No such right existed under British law. It is possible to have believed in the right to withdraw from either the Monarchy or the Union without believing in the right to secede from the other or to believe in the right to secede from both without believing in any “Universal Right” to secede from anything by anyone. You suggest that the quote, “When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another” implies that because the Americans found it just and necessary to dissolve their connection with England, they must have believed that Anyone can dissolve their connection to Anything. It does not follow. One may only conclude from the Declaration that they believed such dissolutions can be justified in at least some circumstances. That they labored in that document to justify that particular dissolution proves, in fact, that they did not think dissolution always justified. That some of them may have believed in some right of Universal Secession (anarchy) does not prove that they all did, nor that those who did were right. You suggest that the quote, “Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the CONSENT of the governed” means that anyone can act contrary to any law at any time by simply disagreeing with, and thereby seceding from its authority(anarchy). It does not. The Union was the establishment by the founders of their best structure for determining government by the consent of the governed through a Republic controlled by elected representatives subject also to the constitutional restraint of its powers. It is not necessary to prove a “Universal Right of Secession” in order to justify any particular secession, nor did the founders attempt to do so. It is not necessary to prove a “Universal Right of Secession” to justify the Confederacy, either, but such a “Universal Right” would, of course, by itself, justify the Revolutionary War, the Confederacy and the termination of George Tiller by Scott Roeder since the latter had seceded. Your suggestion that the statement, “That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it,” postulates a “universal unilateral right of session” ignores the twin facts that: 1. They obviously narrowly defined and placed a condition on the “Right,” thus contradicting “universality.” 2. The Confederacy attempted to secede from the very Union that the declaration you quote founded because it was NOT “destructive of these ends.” You say, “The document is essentially a document promoting secession followed by a list of reasons for it.” The document promotes a PARTICULAR secession and the fact that they followed that with reasons in justification proves, at minimum, that they did not believe secession to be a universal right. You say, “That you would think the people would sign such a document, support a long drawn out war, and then form a voluntary union that you can never leave is beyond me.” I expressed no such opinion. Even if you assume that the Constitution formed and embodied the legal foundation of the Union, AND a legal obligation to it by the several States, it is still clear that it could be disbanded, in whole or in part, by the operation of the Constitutional legislative acts of the elected representatives of the People. Even if you assume that they could not do so by simple majority vote, it is beyond debate that they could have done so by Constitutional Amendment. Nor did I ever make either the assumption or the claim that the Confederacy did not have the right to secede(!) I merely said that it could not be based on any “universal” right to secede. And I said this in support of my assertion that the case has not been made against Lincoln, that the condemnations of him I have read depend on the assumption of a “universal right of secession” (as you have done here) which I maintain is not philosophically supportable or upon other legal arguments that, so far, remain invisible. Doug, Secession was most certainly a practical political issue in the days of the founders. They fought a war over it! And afterwards many argued in favor of the New England states seceding. I have already mentioned that you look into that, but apparently you are not interested. The founders make quite clear in the deceleration and plenty of other writings that they are not in favor of secession only from monarchies but as a fundamental right of people everywhere to be self governed. I do see that you agree that the founders do see that they conclude from the Declaration that they believed such dissolutions can be justified in at least some circumstances. Before this point you have been arguing that they do not believe such dissolutions can be justified once your state joined the union. Now you are recognizing that the founders did believe that under certain conditions one should always be able to disolve a union. It is surprising that you do not understand what the consent of those governed means. If a state does not give the federal government its consent to be governed than the federal government does not have consent of its governed. You may see this as anarchy and in terms of nation states, it is. It is also liberty and I am sad that you are not in support of it. The confederacy was seceding from the union because the federal government WAS destructive in its harshly imposed tarrifs. Are you still under the false belief that it was about slavery? I am still waiting for you to point to me the clause in the constitution that grants the power of the federal government to keep states in the union. That would solve this matter very quickly. on April 18, 2013 at 12:42 pm | Reply SharonSS Lysander, you’re in wonderful company. :-) The Judge also mentions Lincoln – he has no use for him. Can Texas Secede? Judge Napolitano says yes . Interposition, Nullification and Secession on Freedom Watch – Judge talks to Lew Rockwell. Lysander says, “Secession was most certainly a practical political issue in the days of the founders. They fought a war over it!” No. They clearly did not. I’ve already outlined basic reasons this is not true and you just ignore them, preferring, instead, to simply repeat your assertion. Things aren’t true just because you keep saying they are, no matter how many times. Lysander says, “I have already mentioned that you look into that, but apparently you are not interested.” If you have pertinent historic material, bring it to the table. Don’t ask me to do your research for you. Lysander says, “The founders make quite clear in the deceleration and plenty of other writings that they are not in favor of secession only from monarchies but as a fundamental right of people everywhere to be self governed.” That is not in question, here. Non sequitur. Lysander says, “Before this point you have been arguing that they do not believe such dissolutions can be justified once your state joined the union.” Not true at all. You have a habit of inventing imaginary dichotomies and jumping to the conclusions that someone who doesn’t agree with “your” side must agree with its polar opposite. Can you explain the difference between a legal dissolution and a universal right of secession? Why do I call only one of them anarchy? Why do you assert that they are the same thing? Lysander says, “It is surprising that you do not understand what the consent of those governed means. If a state does not give the federal government its consent to be governed than the federal government does not have consent of its governed.” Every state, in forming the Union, gave its consent to be governed. That is not in question. Lysander says, “You may see this as anarchy…” What do you mean by “this”? Lysander says, “It is also liberty and I am sad that you are not in support of it.” What is it you think I am not in favor of? Do you believe you, Lysander, have the right to secede from the Union and the State and your County and begin to ignore all the laws? That could, on precisely the same ground, be called “Liberty.” This is a yes or no question. Please respond. Again, you invent my position for me. Nevertheless, while we’re on the subject: “For all the world to see, to justify their actions, and with no less than 82 direct references to slavery or servitude contained in just [four] documents, the seceding states proudly asserted that slavery–and its perceived abolition–was the primary and compelling motive for their secession and, consequently, the singular cause for the war” Georgia: The people of Georgia having dissolved their political connection with the Government of the United States of America, present to their confederates and the world the causes which have led to the separation. For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery. In the momentous step which our State has taken of dissolving its connection with the government of which we so long formed a part, it is but just that we should declare the prominent reasons which have induced our course. Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery– the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. South Carolina: The people of the State of South Carolina, in Convention assembled, on the 26th day of April, A.D., 1852, declared that the frequent violations of the Constitution of the United States, by the Federal Government, and its encroachments upon the reserved rights of the States, fully justified this State in then withdrawing from the Federal Union; but in deference to the opinions and wishes of the other slaveholding States, she forbore at that time to exercise this right. Since that time, these encroachments have continued to increase, and further forbearance ceases to be a virtue. The ends for which the Constitution was framed are declared by itself to be “to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.” These ends it endeavored to accomplish by a Federal Government, in which each State was recognized as an equal, and had separate control over its own institutions. The right of property in slaves was recognized by giving to free persons distinct political rights, by giving them the right to represent, and burthening them with direct taxes for three-fifths of their slaves; by authorizing the importation of slaves for twenty years; and by stipulating for the rendition of fugitives from labor. We affirm that these ends for which this Government was instituted have been defeated, and the Government itself has been made destructive of them by the action of the non-slaveholding States. Texas: Texas abandoned her separate national existence and consented to become one of the Confederated Union to promote her welfare, insure domestic tranquility and secure more substantially the blessings of peace and liberty to her people. She was received into the confederacy with her own constitution, under the guarantee of the federal constitution and the compact of annexation, that she should enjoy these blessings. She was received as a commonwealth holding, maintaining and protecting the institution known as negro slavery– the servitude of the African to the white race within her limits– a relation that had existed from the first settlement of her wilderness by the white race, and which her people intended should exist in all future time. Her institutions and geographical position established the strongest ties between her and other slave-holding States of the confederacy. Those ties have been strengthened by association. But what has been the course of the government of the United States, and of the people and authorities of the non-slave-holding States, since our connection with them? ~ A Libertarian Defense of Lincoln on April 26, 2013 at 11:40 am | Reply Lysander I am not asking you to do my research for me. I am asking you to look into a certain chapter in American history that you are ignoring. It is like you are saying Germany and the US have never fought in a war and I asked you to look into WWI and WWII. Please look into the New England Seccession movement and the Hartford Convention. In it you will see that the debate was never whether secession was allowed (because all at the time believed it was a right of states to leave the union if they chose) but rather whether it was a good idea at the time. Look into it. I already have. Just as I have looked into the world wars of the 20th century and see that Germany was twice an enemy of the USA in war, I also know that early american thought was that secession was acceptable, right of all states for any reason. Your statement was, “many argued in favor of the New England states seceding.” I do not and have not disputed that. But that fact has almost no bearing on the question of whether or not there was a universal belief in the legal right of any State to unilaterally secede. If, from among the writings extant from that era you have material that suggests such a conclusion, bring it to the table. I do not intend to sift through it for you. That you think the Declaration of Independence was, in essence, a nullification of all laws tells me that you are capable of construing documents to agree with your favored view when it is, at the very least, questionable. It is not that many argued in favor of NE seceding, it is that NO ONE argued that they did not have the right to do so. Also I have said the Declaration of Independence was a nullification of all laws, it was a nullification of the authority for England to impose any laws on the colonies. They had seceded. This is fact. on April 30, 2013 at 10:30 am | Reply Doug Parris 1. You made the assertion that there was universal belief in the “universal right of secession” among the “founders.” You purport to present, in support of it, a lack of argument to the contrary in the partial record of a public debate not directly pertaining to the question. I will not attempt to point out, once again, the obvious logical fallacy, assuming those capable of following it already get the point. 2. There is no question, on any side, that the Declaration was a nullification of British authority. If, in the course of doing that, the founders asserted a “universal right of secession” that applies to any person or group that wishes to nullify any authority, then it would bolster your argument and be a Declaration of Anarchy, as well, applying to any government, under any circumstances. on May 1, 2013 at 10:35 am | Reply Lysander So unless I can show in all historical record no argument for your view than you are going to assume that most founders agree with you? Whatever… I have offered you plenty of evidence to show that most supporters in fact supported the right of states to secede from the union. You are refusing to look at it. That is fine. I do not really care if you wish to continue to worship Lincoln. Just understand that those that do not will view you in a negative light for doing so and even more so for refusing to look at evidence that might counter your views. on May 3, 2013 at 11:23 am | Reply Doug Parris Lysander, your first sentence is syntactically incomprehensible, but it ends “… you are going to assume that most founders agree with you?” You assume, falsely, that my position is Lincoln’s. I only made the statement that the case against him had not been made and that most attacks on Lincoln begin with unproven assumptions, yours included. You are good at assuming things, I assume, with good intentions. Like the existence of God, simply because one doesn’t personally possess evidence proving a proposition, does not prove its antithesis. As I sit here, I cannot prove that, at this moment, Barack Obama is still alive. That does not prove he is dead. You say, “I have offered you plenty of evidence to show that most supporters…” Even if that were true (which I strongly dispute) your claim was not “most” but “all.” My only claim was that yours was, at best, speculation, not evidence. You say, “You are refusing to look at it.” To the contrary, you have not brought it. I have refused to scan a lot of irrelevant material to prove or disprove what is, at best, peripheral rhetoric. You have not quoted a single opinion on the legal status of State secession from the record you suggest I search, but rather, a partial record of arguments about the practical and moral desirability of a proposition that, historically, did NOT succeed; The New England secession. I suspect you find such a task as boring as I do. Nevertheless, to beef up the weakness of your argument you accuse me, without any cause or evidence, of Lincoln “worship,” a personal attack on me. I could, with equal validity, accuse you of “worshiping slavery,” it’s equally stupid. on May 4, 2013 at 10:13 am | Reply Lysander Tired of talking with you. You appear to just be arguing to argue. I have at this point no idea what your point was. Yes this is another assumption and I will continue to assume things because… well that is about all one can do with you when you chose to dispute ever other word and ignore the actual topic at hand. If in the future you are ever interested in learning about secession look up what I suggested. Have a nice day. 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A review of Iron Maiden at the Comcast Center in M... Metal Friday Special Edition: Maiden Countdown, "K... The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories 11, a review Metal Friday Special Edition: Maiden Countdown, "T... Q&A With Tolkien and the Great War Author John Gar... Metal Friday Special Edition: Maiden Countdown. "T... Optimistic literature vs. GrimDark Audio zombies: A review of We’re Alive: A Story of... What I've read this year Metal Friday: "Left Hand Black" by Danzig A brief tribute to the stories of Ray Bradbury Godspeed, Ray Bradbury The Dragon Lord by David Drake, a review Metal Friday: "Raining Blood" by Slayer Miyazaki's labor of love Game of Thrones sex chart Short Story Reviews, Mail Bag, and Music A review of Iron Maiden at the Comcast Center in Mansfield, MA My apologies for the delay in posting a review of Iron Maiden at the Comcast Center in Mansfield, MA. The morning after the show, groggy from too little sleep and too much beer and loud music, I left for our annual vacation to our family's summer cottage in NH where internet access wavers between extremely spotty and utterly non-existent. By some miracle I have a decent connection so here goes... It seems that more and more I appreciate the pre-game warmup to concerts as much as the event itself. That was the case with Maiden, as I attended the show with four other friends and Maiden fans. None of them knew each other (I was the common thread connecting them all) but we had a great time nonetheless. Four of us piled into my Chevy Cobalt and drove to Mansfield where we met the other dude (Falze), who had a 3 1/2 hour ride up from NY. The drive and meet-up proved to be an adventure, as after a longer than expected, traffic-snarled ride we found ourselves parked a mile away from Falze in Mansfield's enormous parking lot. And we had a large cooler packed to the gills with ice, beer, water, and half a cherry chocolate cake to carry. But, walking the heavy cooler in two at a time shifts, stopping to reorient ourselves with our cell phones over the din of blasting radios, we made it across the battle-torn, pot-smoke obscured, heavy metal parking lot to Falze. June 26 also happened to be my birthday and as we stood on the Comcast Center asphalt I remarked that there was no other place I'd rather be for the first day of the 39th year of my life than at an Iron Maiden concert with a cold beer. I don't require much from life, you see, which is the secret to staying happy, incidentally. I had a blast bullshitting and chit-chatting with my friends, and accosting passers-by with concert T-shirts or tattoos that caught my eye. Falze packed us some subs from a place called DiBellas and man, they hit the spot. You were right Falze, they were worth it. Inside the show I did something I hadn't done in probably 15 years--purchased an Iron Maiden concert t-shirt. It was my favorite Derek Riggs image, Eddie in cowboy hat at a card table from the Stranger in a Strange Land single. I used to buy a concert T at almost every show I attended "back in the day," but that was a different era when they cost $15-20 and I had ample opportunity to wear them. This shirt was--cough $40 cough--but arguably was worth it, as I will undoubtedly be wearing it to any and all future concerts, Iron Maiden or no. Alice Cooper was the opening act and old Alice was very good. Even in his heyday he had a raspy, scary sounding voice and I detected no difference in his singing style. He played all the usual hits you'd expect ("School's Out," "I'm 18", "Hey Stupid," etc.). "Poison" made an appearance, a song that holds powerful nostalgia for me (Cooper's Trash tour back in 89 or so was the first concert I ever attended). Good stuff. Maiden was great. Really my only complaint was that Bruce's mike was a bit low in the mix and the guitars too loud. But they played an exceptional setlist, blasting out of the gates with "Moonchild" and never letting up. Some highlights for me included "Seventh Son of a Seventh Son," "The Evil that Men Do," "Wasted Years," "Run to the Hills," "Fear of the Dark" and "Aces High." I was really pumped to hear "The Phantom of the Opera" which works exceptionally well in concert. The only headscratcher (and it was a complete puzzle why they played it) was "Afraid to Shoot Strangers," an obscure song off one of their lesser-regarded albums (Fear of the Dark). Dickinson dedicated the song to the late Charlton Heston. I scooted out and grabbed a beer during "Afraid," returning just as the band kicked it back into high gear with "The Trooper." During the beer break I attempted to get the Comcast Center employee to admit that $9.25 was very expensive for a single 16 oz. Coors Light. She smiled, and almost caved, but she had to toe the company line. She wished me happy birthday and my mouth sagged open in surprise as I asked her by what brand of evil sorcery she knew that fact--until my buddy Scott dope-slapped me. "She's holding your driver's license, you dummy." Hey, what can I say, I was riding a buzz. So yeah, fun night, and if you can get out and catch a stop on the Maiden England tour I recommend it quite highly. Biographical, Heavy Metal, Metal Friday Special Edition: Maiden Countdown, "Killers" Imagine it's 1981 and you're a member of Iron Maiden. Your lead singer, Paul Di'Anno, has just left/been kicked out of the band, and although you've got two well-received albums under your belt, your future is very much in question. In comes a shortish dude with a mullet, Bruce Dickinson, front man for Sampson, to audition for the vacancy. He launches into a Maiden hallmark, "Killers." The rest is history, as was Di'Anno. I hope to post a review of tomorrow's show at some point this week. Until then, Up the Irons! From 1975 to 1988 Daw books published The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories, an anthology edited initially by Lin Carter and later by Arthur W. Saha. I own only Vol. 11 but after reading it I’m now inclined to seek out more in the series. Vol. 11 was published in 1985 and by then Carter’s reign as editor had given way to Saha. Saha has a rather interesting and wide-ranging background; according to Wikipedia he served in the Merchant Marine during WWII, is credited with the patent for fire-resistant paint used on early space satellites, hung around Beat poets, was a member of Mensa, and in 1967 was credited with coining the term “Trekkie”. Matching his experiences and personality Saha here put together an eclectic combo of stories that mostly works. My primary complaint with Vol. 11 is again one of unfulfilled expectations. When you’ve got a cover like that pictured at right I was expecting more of a swords and sorcery bent. There are certainly a few S&S stories inside, but Vol. 11 is equal parts horror and magical realism, with a dash of romance and humor. Yet you’ve got a cover featuring a jacked, axe-wielding dude on the back of a giant snake, about to battle a giant owl-riding knight in plate armor, all taking place beneath the gaze of a half-naked lass lashed to a pole (for the record, there is no story featuring dueling snakes and owls, unfortunately—though there is a fair maiden lashed to a pole). So … yeah. Don’t judge a book by its cover and all that. Metal Friday Special Edition: Maiden Countdown, "The Clairvoyant" Continuing my countdown to the Maiden England tour (holy shit--it's only four days away), today I pause to recognize and celebrate the greatness that is "The Clairvoyant," again off Seventh Son of a Seventh Son. Here's a great live version from the Seventh Tour of a Seventh Tour, circa 1988 or 89, I imagine. Whenever I hear Steve Harris' bassline something akin to an electric shock courses through my body, then my heart starts to race when Dave Murray plays that familiar riff. That's how much I freaking love this song. It exalts the spirit. Four days away. I can "Feel the sweat break on my brow" in anticipation. Metal Friday, Q&A With Tolkien and the Great War Author John Garth on Michael Martinez’ Middle-earth website As a subscriber to the Mythsoc listserv I was very grateful to find a link from Michael Martinez—proprietor of the fine Middle-earth.xenite.org website—to a recent interview conducted with J.R.R. Tolkien scholar John Garth, author of Tolkien and the Great War: The Threshold of Middle-earth (Houghton Mifflin Company, 2003). It’s a fascinating read and worth checking out; you can find it here. Some reviewers have dubbed Tolkien and the Great War the best book on Tolkien that has yet been written. I wouldn’t go that far (for the record that book is Tom Shippey’s The Road to Middle-earth) but it is arguably the best book on Tolkien in the last decade. While Humphrey Carpenter’s biography is still the seminal work on the life and times of Tolkien, it brushes only lightly over his military service. Tolkien’s experiences with the Lancaster Fusiliers are stamped all over The Lord of the Rings, as Garth ably demonstrates in Tolkien and the Great War, and so any complete understanding of the influences of Tolkien’s works must account for his World War I experiences. To read the rest of this post, visit The Black Gate website. Black Gate, Metal Friday Special Edition: Maiden Countdown. "The Evil That Men Do" Wow, it's hard to believe that it's only 11 days until Iron Maiden plays the Comcast Center in Mansfield, MA. Look for a heavy rotation of my favorite Maiden songs in the coming days as I gear up for my favorite band of all time. Since this tour is an homage to Maiden England and reportedly features the same stage set and props from the Seventh Son tour, I'll start with one of my favorites from that album, "The Evil that Men Do." As a man, I can definitively say that we do have an evil streak (typically surfacing during heavy drinking) and it almost always comes back to bite us in the ass, hence it does live on and on. Bruce, you were right. Presented without comment: He bent down, scratched the black dirt into his fingers. He was beginning to warm to it; the words were beginning to flow. No one in front of him was moving. He said, "This is free ground. All the way from here to the Pacific Ocean. No man has to bow. No man born to royalty. Here we judge you by what you do, not by what your father was. Here you can be something. Here's a place to build a home. It isn't the land--there's always more land. It's the idea that we all have value, you and me, we're worth something more than the dirt. I never saw dirt I'd die for, but I'm not asking you to come join us and fight for dirt. What we're all fighting for, in the end, is each other." —Michael Shaara, The Killer Angels “Who cares who’s buried where?” muttered Craw, thinking about all the men he’d seen buried. “Once a man’s in the ground he’s just mud. Mud and stories. And the stories and the men don’t often have much in common.” —Joe Abercrombie, The Heroes Audio zombies: A review of We’re Alive: A Story of Survival, season one As a lover of all things zombie I leapt at the chance to review the first season of We're Alive: A Story of Survival, the first season for SFFaudio.com. Following is the text of that review. Uneven and slightly amateurish, but also fun, mildly addictive and highly listenable, We’re Alive: A Story of Survival, the first season (Modern Myth Productions, LLC) should appeal to fans of the zombie/post-apocalyptic/survivalist genres. Unlike most audio books, which typically feature a single narrator reading text in unadorned style, We’re Alive is an audio drama. It employs a large cast, incorporates a wide range of sound effects, and is scripted in a way that caters to the ear, emphasizing dialogue and interpersonal relationships over lengthy descriptive narrative. Our minds are left to fill in the gory details, and it works. It’s simultaneously fresh and retro, reminding me of what the old radio shows of yesteryear must have been like. We’re Alive was launched and remains an ongoing podcast (check it out here: http://www.zombiepodcast.com/The_Zombie_Podcast/Main.html) but you can obtain the entire first two seasons from Blackstone Audio, Inc. The storyline is about what you’d expect: A zombie apocalypse strikes without warning, quickly overwhelming most of the population. Three young Army reservists (Michael, Angel, and Saul) commandeer a humvee and seek out survivors in downtown Los Angeles. After rescuing a couple civilians they find an apartment building, clear it of zombies, and begin to fortify it, rigging it up with a generator and stocking up on food, water, and ammunition. More survivors eventually trickle in and/or are rescued by the group, including Burt, an aging Vietnam veteran who acts and sounds a lot like Clint Eastwood. Soon there’s a small but thriving community holed up in the apartment building. SFFaudio.com, Here's the list of books I've read to date in 2012. Note that a couple are audiobooks, so I use the term "read" loosely here. Links provided to any titles for which I've written a review. Tales, JRR Tolkien The Name of the Wind, Patrick Rothfuss The Cold Commands, Richard Morgan Tolkien on Film: Essays on Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings, Janet Brennan Croft ed. Seven Princes, John Fultz Tolkien: A Cultural Phenomenon, Brian Rosebury The Heroes, Joe Abercrombie Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers, L. Sprague de Camp Styrbiorn the Strong, E.R. Eddison The Well of the Unicorn, Fletcher Pratt The Modern Scholar: Faith and Reason: The Philosophy of Religion, Peter Kreeft Strange Wine, Harlan Ellison Grendel, The Hook, Donald Westlake Carnage and Culture, Victor Conan: Red Nails, Robert E. Howard, Karl Edward Wagner ed. Dark Barbarian, Don Herron ed. Conan, The People of the Black Circle, Robert E. Howard, Karl Edward Wagner ed. The Singularity is Near, Ray Kurzweil Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard The Children of Odin, Padraic Colum Red Moon and Black Mountain, Joy Chant Regrets, Ace Frehley Brak vs. the Sorceress, John Jakes The Dragon Lord, David Drake Alive: A Story of Survival, season one I'm on pace for 56 titles this year, a few more than I read in 2011. Right now I'm about 2/3 of the way through Orson Scott Card's Speaker for the Dead, sequel to Ender's Game. Yeah, the safe choice here would have been "Mother." Well, Metal Friday ain't about safe choices, mother f-er (so says the guy who self-edits swears from his blog). Anyways, I loved this one back in the day, still do. Turn it up, tear off your shirt and pretend you're Glenn Danzig, and enjoy your weekend. I came to Ray Bradbury at what is likely a later age than most. I never had to read Fahrenheit 451 in school; if I read one of his short stories as a student I have no recollection. Several years ago, in a desire to start filling in some gaps I had in classic genre fiction, I gave Fahrenheit 451 a try. It was a powerful read and made a profound impact on me. It prompted me to seek out more Bradbury—and I’ve been hooked ever since. Since then I’ve marveled in the wonders of Dandelion Wine, The Golden Apples of the Sun, The October Country, The Halloween Tree, Something Wicked This Way Comes, and The Martian Chronicles. If somehow you haven’t read any Bradbury yet my advice is to pick any of the above titles and dive in. I’d recommend one over the others, but there’s no need: They’re all pretty much brilliant. You won’t be disappointed. I’ve always been a little leery of science fiction and have read far more deeply of fantasy. Rightly or wrongly, my perception is that SF worships at the altar of technology, and is fixated upon cold, clinical subject matter for which I have little interest. But if the genre contained more books like The Martian Chronicles, I might view it a lot differently (a parenthetical aside: Though it may be the subject of a catchy song, to call Bradbury “the greatest sci-fi writer in history” isn’t accurate. Dark fantasy, horror, soft sci-fi, traditional literary fiction—Bradbury has written in them all, and sometimes all at once. He is in many ways genre-defying). Bradbury’s stories are in tune with our humanity and his fiction is life affirming. They remind us that We’re human, and we’re alive, damn it. Bradbury often said that he loved life and was driven to write not only by his love of libraries and of reading, but of the very act of living itself. And that’s potent fuel for a lifetime of stories. I'll follow up with another post later this week, but in case you haven't heard the news already: Ray Bradbury died at age 91. Bradbury was probably my favorite living author and an amazing talent. He'll be missed. Some twenty years before TheWarlord Chronicles, a grim and gritty take on the Arthurian mythos by historical fiction author Bernard Cornwell, David Drake’s The Dragon Lord (1978) covered the same war-torn ground, employing a similar historical Dark Ages realism in the telling. Imagine Arthur as a power-hungry, petulant warlord with a clubbed foot; Launcelot as a hulking Roman Gaul, arrogant and bullying; and Merlin a half-crazed sorcerer barely in control of his own overestimated powers of magic, and you have the basic flavor of Drake’s debut novel. Cornwell’s trilogy is a good deal superior to Drake’s effort, as the latter is marred by flaws perhaps forgivable of a first time novelist, including a choppy, uneven narrative and an abrupt, rather unsatisfying ending. But The Dragon Lord has a curious power of its own, perhaps because it manages to successfully straddle both the historical fiction and fantasy genres; it feels something like the Northern-inspired novels of Poul Anderson. If you like that stuff, you’ll probably like The Dragon Lord. Bernard Cornwell, King Arthur, I have a threshold when it comes to heavy metal. At some indefinable point of heaviness I personally find that the music loses its artistry and appeal. "Cookie Monster" lyrics and a cacophonous wall of thudding, high speed drums and screeching guitars turn me off, thus I personally have no use for bands like Cannibal Corpse and their ilk. Slayer is about as far on the "heaviness" scale as I like to go, but I do like them a lot. "Raining Blood" is a classic featuring one of the all-time great metal riffs. The sound of rain and those drums kicking in still gives me a chill, decades after I first heard it. In my opinion this is heavy metal at its most brutal and primitive (played live the bit from 2:10 to 2:38 results in an instant mosh pit; I've seen these guys in concert and the reaction is pavlovian). Yes, there are "heavier" bands, but Slayer still remains recognizable as music--a savage and scary brand of music, but one performed by talented musicians. Your mileage may vary, of course. Turn it up, but not too loud, lest you frighten your household.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/689
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KRISTEN STEWART'S BLOG ON MYSPACE.COM Posted by Rose L. Sutton on December 29, 2009 at 7:33pm FOR ALL OF YOU NON-BELIEVER'S!! FROM KRISTEN STEWART'S BLOG ON MYSPACE: "Hey guys Merry(late) Christmas and Happy New Year!! My Christmas was great and I spent it here in California with my family. Robert wanted me to go with him to visit his family but I missed mine :( We did have a long conversation on Christmas over the phone and it was nice. I just wanted to let you know that the first promo for The Runaways is out and on my page if you have not yet seen it. I'm not allowed to tell you when it comes out yet though but I will soon. The first poster for Eclipse is also out and I have uploaded that....can't wait for the summer! The first promo should be released soon for Welcome to The Riley's and when it is you will be sure to find it here. I'm sitting here now with Dakota Fanning (she says hi) and we are about to go out for lunch with my brother Cameron and we are all so excited for you to see The Runaways and it was so fun for me and Dakota to work together and maybe we will again soon??!!!(eclipse of course). I haven't had the opportunity to hang out with Taylor lately but we talk a lot and hopefully we will be jumping into Breaking Dawn soon which, by the looks of it, will be made into two movies because of the amount of scenes and details...now on the concern of them being rated R...the producers and Summit Entertainment have not yet decided on the rating. But, we are all doing really well and me and Dakota are going out now....talk to you guys later. Happy New Year and we love you all...... " http://blogs.myspace.com/newmyspacekristenstewart SHE IS SO COOL! WE HAVE BEEN COMMUNICATING THERE. Views: 1 Tags: Breaking, Dakota, Dawn, Eclipse, Entertainment, Fanning, Kristen, Riley's, Robert, Runaway's, More…Stewart, Summit, The, blog, myspace Like 0 members like this
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Kay Rose's Comments ← Back to Kay Rose's Page At 5:40am on August 10, 2010, ✯ ¥αnα ✯ said… hey :) At 8:57am on April 30, 2010, ilovealicecullen said… Hi I'm so sorry for continuing my story for so long but if you're still interested with my story Dim Light then I just finished Chapter 6. Here’s the link : http://www.thetwilightsaga.com/group/ashleygreenfanclub/forum/topics/dim-light-chapter-5-1 Thanks.. At 8:20am on December 28, 2009, timmeee said… thanks for adding me At 6:50am on September 5, 2009, ✯ ¥αnα ✯ said… Hey! Love your page... cool stuff! Hope we'll be friends! At 12:13pm on July 30, 2009, Jaz Cullen ♥ said… Make your own Glitter Graphics At 9:07am on July 27, 2009, ilovealicecullen said… Hey guys... I'm done with chapter 4.... Hope you'll like it... pls. comment http://www.thetwilightsaga.com/forum/topics/dim-light-chapter-4-1 At 4:39pm on July 22, 2009, alyra said… thanks 4 adding me!!!!!!!!=-) At 12:55pm on July 16, 2009, xXloud_and_proudxX said… ur page rocks At 9:46am on July 9, 2009, mikkkaykay said… all you have to do is drag the top of the box to the side of the screen and if has an "X" or its just not showing up then that side is already full other boxes At 6:05am on July 6, 2009, ilovealicecullen said… thanks... At 10:07am on July 5, 2009, ilovealicecullen said… Hi there.. I have a fanfic of Alice.. Pls. have time to read and comment it.. http://www.thetwilightsaga.com/forum/topics/please-read-everyone-this-is# At 10:27am on July 3, 2009, mikkkaykay said… Thank you!! At 10:27am on July 3, 2009, mikkkaykay said… Thank you!! At 10:44am on July 2, 2009, Judeeth.Eats.World. said… Hey Alice! I'm still betting on you :) At 10:46pm on June 27, 2009, Esmeralda Padilla said… Hi *smile* At 6:59pm on June 27, 2009, nancii<3 said… hello sis what up! At 8:56pm on June 25, 2009, Senna Amazon said… It's beautiful Alice At 4:29pm on June 25, 2009, nancii<3 said… Hello sis want to be friends!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! At 3:31pm on June 25, 2009, Zim said… thanks i got one from yuki ur brother his hot (edward) lol ♥ At 11:34pm on June 24, 2009, Esmeralda Padilla said… hey No comments yet!
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This is a parody site. This is humor. You are meant to laugh. Parody, people, it's parody. The ex-factor of Lauryn From John Bream of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:If her 2001 meltdown on MTV's "Unplugged" wasn't enough to raise concerns about Hill, it was topped by a 2003 Vatican Christmas concert where she delivered a tirade about abuse by Catholic priests. Since then, Hill has mostly been MIA except for a few concerts with the Fugees (in 2004-05) and a few solo gigs, many of which have received less-than-enthusiastic reviews. Even on her current comeback tour, which started last month, the reports haven't always been flattering. Crowds have been frustrated by extremely tardy starts and a lack of new material (although a new tune, "Repercussions," was leaked last year). One thing that has impressed is her bold honesty onstage.Also true, and this is all over Black radio, her voice keeps cracking during most concerts.Have drugs destroyed her?I have no idea. She's lucky to have had her Amy Winehouse antics take place before the net was the force it is today.Lauryn's become a joke.If she can put together a new album, I'll listen to it at least once. But she doesn't have a new one coming out. That's because Sony can't believe how much money she's already wasted on recording sessions with nothing to show for it. Nor did they want to release her 2001 MTV album. They were right. The problems with her voice were first obvious there.In addition, her new songs were beyond weak. And one appeared homophobic.Lauryn Hill has serious image problems.When her solo album came out, the image problem some forced on her was, "She's a woman, she can't do hip-hop without the two men from the Fugees." She proved them wrong and proved she could shape and influence music.And that gave her the standing to do a song like "Doo Wop" without getting slaughtered. Getting slaughtered?I don't wear a weave. Many Black women I know do. So when Lauryn's off on her 'fake nails' and fake hair screed, she's actually going to piss off a lot of black listeners. She'll pull in a few who might be more political at the same time; however, when she goes off into homophobia, as she did on the MTV album, she pushes them away as well.So the point I'm making is Lauryn can give it up. No one gives a damn anymore. If she does an album in the next three years, it will most likely debut at number one and then set a record for quickly sinking out of the top forty.It's too bad because she had a great deal of talent and, before the drugs, an amazing voice. "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill" was the finest work she'd done -- on her own or with the group. It still stands. But she's weakened it with her antics since and I hope she doesn't further weaken it. I expect to hear her delivering a rap (speech) from the stage against gays next. She's gotten so nutty."Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills): Friday, January 14, 2010. Chaos and violence continue, a group of Iraqis demonstrate against continued war and occupation, Diane Rehm wonders "But what about what the American people have been told?," Christians in Baghdad are attacked and eye witnesses state the police were among the attackers, Barack Obama finally has a statement about the attacks on Iraqi Christians, and more. This week US Vice President Joe Biden visited several countries including Afghanistan and Iraq. On the second hour of today's The Diane Rehm Show, the visit was discussed and we're emphasing the Iraq section but picking up at the end of the Afghanistan discussion. Diane's guests were NPR's Tom Gjelten, NBC News' Courtney Kube and UPI's Martin Walker. Excerpt: Diane Rehm: Courtney? Courtney Kube: Yeah, on Vice President Biden's remarks in Afghanistan, I-I had to laugh when I read that the other day because he's made so many comments about the withdrawal -- the deadline in Afghanistan -- in the past few months. Just three weeks ago, he told Meet The Press -- NBC's Meet The Press -- that-that the US was going to be out of Afghanistan in 2014 come hell or high water. So three weeks later he's standing with President Karzai and says they're going to stay there. Now if you read through his remarks, it's plausible that he was specifically referring to supporting an Afghanistan nation-building plan and that-that it's possible he was talking more about the US would be there in a support role for nation-building -- that's sort of how his aides were spinning it afterwards. Whether that's what he meant or not, you got to ask Vice President Biden, though. Tom Gjelten: You have to wonder, Diane, whether President [Barack] Obama sent Vice President Biden on this trip to Afghanistan precisely to force him into that situation to clarify his remarks. I think it was -- You know, we were -- everyone was -- looking for the magic words from him about the withdrawal and he did say to them -- he said that the withdrawal of US forces would be "conditions based" and that is not his position before. Clearly, he had gotten the message from President Obama that he needed to get on the same page as the rest of the administration in supporting the policy. That's one point. The second point is, as Martin eluded to, no one could better project the-the credibility of this message than the very figure of the administration who had been most skeptical of it. So, if you have Vice President Biden saying the United States is ready to stay after 2014, you can assume there are no more dissenting voices that are going to detract from that message. Diane Rehm: But what about what the American people have been told? Namely that we are gonna get out [of Afghanistan] in 2014? Does that matter at all? Martin Walker: It depends what you mean by "out." And I think this is Courtney's point, but -- as we're seeing in Iraq -- it's one thing to withdraw combat troops. Diane Rehm: Sounds like the definition of the word "if." Martin Walker: Exactly. That's the echo I was seeking. But there is a difference between having combat troops engaged in combat aggressive operations and having a number of support troops [who are] training troops and so on. And I think we're going to see that distinction blurred as creatively as possible by the administration over the next couple of years. Tom Gjelten: You know, Diane, I'll go out on a limb here, I think what really concerns American people more than anything else is casualties and if you can -- Diane Rehm: Exactly. Tom Gjelten (Con't): -- come up with a presence that does not produce a lot of casualties, there's gonna be a lot more tolerance for it. The United States still has a lot of combat troops in Iraq and will continue to have for a long time. But casualties there have gone way, way down. And I think that probably means the United States would be inclined to accept it -- the people of the United States would be inclined to accept it. Diane Rehm: But what about Moqtada al-Sadr and his comments that he wants the US out of Iraq right now? Martin Walker: Well he's back and he seems almost as feisty as [in] the past. What he was not saying was that he would perhaps lead any kind of military action to drive the Americans out. What is really striking is that his joining the government means that the deal that was reached with [Ayad] Allawi to bring the Sunnis on board by making him [Allawi] chairman of this new national strategy council -- that deal now looks hollow. In other words, the stability of Iraq in the future -- which will depend upon Sunni support -- now looks a great deal less certain than it was looking just two weeks ago. Since Diane raised the issue of Moqtada al-Sadr, we'll move first to him and his supporters. Khaled Farhan, Khalid al-Ansary, Michael Christie and Tim Pearce (Reuters) report that approximately 2,000 followers of Moqtada al-Sadr marched through Kufa protesting that Joe Biden had visited and, P.S., they don't want him coming back. Of course the protest might not be so damn laughable if they'd managed to stage it while Joe Biden was actually in Iraq. In what should be a show of strength or at least moderate influence, the Sadr movement looks incredibly sad as their protest takes place after Biden leaves. So much for the talk of 'powerful' Moqtada and his 'powerful' movement. Azzaman reports that the followers "chanted anti-Ameircan slogans" and quoted follower Mohammed Abbas ("day-laborer") stating, "We demand no repeat visits to Iraq by Biden and we demand the departure of the occupier." In the midst of a series of high profile meetings with Nouri al-Maliki, Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Ali al-Sistani and Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Moqtada al-Sadr presumably wanted to "stay on message." The protest knocked him off that and, in fact, got far more attention than did any of his photo-ops. It's doubtful al-Sadr's sanctined, let alone called for, the demonstration which only further indicates the problems he will be experiencing in the coming months as he tries to strike the pose of leader of a civil and engaged political body. His years and years in exile has allowed his 'movement' to engage in a variety of activities and, as Kufa's protest demonstrates, they still think that is appropriate -- even when it knocks al-Sadr off message and, in fact, upstages him and forces him to spend Saturday addressing the topic of the protest. So much for 'fearless' or 'fearful' leader Moqtada al-Sadr. Whether these are merely initial growing pains as the 'movement' and the man re-embrace or if they are signs of a natural split emerging will be determined in the coming months. Moqtada al-Sadr wasn't the only one visiting al-Sistaning, also visiting him was Iraq's President Jalal Talabani. Al Mada reports that al-Sistani stressed that Iraq was a place for all Iraqis regardless of "religion, doctrine or nationalism, they are all brothers and we stand as one" and that Talabani told reporters after the meeting that he discussed with al-Sistani the suffering of Iraqi Christians and that al-Sistani repudiates the attacks and calls them crimes that do an injustice to all of Iraq. However, approximatley at the time Talabani was speaking to reporters, the Christian Association of Ashurbanipal in Baghdad was under attack and their property was damanged by unknown assailants and by, according to eye witness, Baghdad police officers. Abdul-Karim, speaking for the police, denied that they were connected to the attack. One eye witness reports that the Baghdad police could be seen with the assailants and exclaiming, "We are an Islamic state!" and "No place for Christians and Yazidis in Baghdad!" Iraqi Christians have long been targeted throughout the Iraq War and the latest wave of attacks started October 31st with the assault on Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad leading to the deaths of approximately 70 people with approximately 70 others left injured. In November, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton became the highest ranking US official to speak out on the ongoing attacks. Joe Biden quickly followed. Today President Barack Obama issued the following proclamation: Our Nation was founded on a shared commitment to the values of justice, freedom, and equality. On Religious Freedom Day, we commemorate Virginia's 1786 Statute for Religious Freedom, in which Thomas Jefferson wrote that "all men shall be free to profess, and by argument to maintain, their opinion in matters of religion." The fundamental principle of religious freedom -- guarded by our Founders and enshrined in our Constitution's First Amendment -- continues to protect rich faiths flourishing within our borders. The writ of the Founding Fathers has upheld the ability of Americans to worship and practice religion as they choose, including the right to believe in no religion at all. However, these liberties are not self-sustaining, and require a stalwart commitment by each generation to preserve and apply them. Throughout our Nation's history, our founding ideal of religious freedom has served as an example to the world. Though our Nation has sometimes fallen short of the weighty task of ensuring freedom of religious expression and practice, we have remained a Nation in which people of different faiths coexist with mutual respect and equality under the law. America's unshakeable commitment to religious freedom binds us together as a people, and the strength of our values underpins a country that is tolerant, just, and strong. My Administration continues to defend the cause of religious freedom in the United States and around the world. At home, we vigorously protect the civil rights of Americans, regardless of their religious beliefs. Across the globe, we also seek to uphold this human right and to foster tolerance and peace with those whose beliefs differ from our own. We bear witness to those who are persecuted or attacked because of their faith. We condemn the attacks made in recent months against Christians in Iraq and Egypt, along with attacks against people of all backgrounds and beliefs. The United States stands with those who advocate for free religious expression and works to protect the rights of all people to follow their conscience, free from persecution and discrimination.On Religious Freedom Day, let us reflect on the principle of religious freedom that has guided our Nation forward, and recommit to upholding this universal human right both at home and around the world. NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim January 16, 2011, as Religious Freedom Day. I call on all Americans to commemorate this day with events and activities that teach us about this critical foundation of our Nation's liberty, and to show us how we can protect it for future generations here and around the world. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this fourteenth day of January, in the year of our Lord two thousand eleven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-fifth. Returning to the topic of Joe Biden's visit and the ongoing Iraq War, Al Mada reports that both US and Iraqi officials are "calling for" some sort of "small American force" to remain in Iraq "in order to provide air support and military assistance" and notes Labid Abawi, Iraq's Deputy Foreign Minister, says the security agreement will be worked on by "a high joint committee" and numerous subcomittees and that any amendment extending it "depends upon the request of one of the parties and the approval of the second party." Jack Kenny (New American) notes Biden's "hints" at a longer US presence and offers: Whether al-Sadr and the 40-member Shi'ite faction in the nation's parliament could block an extension of the deadline is not known. What may be of greater concern to the United States is the link to Iran al-Sadr represents after spending the past four years there, and the growing influence Tehran may exert on the politics of neighboring Iraq. Iran, along with Saddam's Iraq and North Korea, was labeled part of the "axis of evil" by President George W. Bush and hostility between Washington and Tehran has continued over Iran's alleged efforts to develop nuclear weapons. While U.S. officials in both the Bush and Obama administrations have not ruled out a military strike against Iran, another war in the Middle East is something the United States can ill afford, both financially and militarily, while it is still fighting a nine-year-old war in Afghanistan and winding down its mission in Iraq. As Biden recalled in a speech to American troops in Baghdad yesterday, that mission has so far resulted in more than 4,000 American dead and some 32,000 wounded. Whether the US is leaving or not, 12 escapees left a Basra prison today. AFP reports, "A dozen suspected members of Al-Qaeda's front group in Iraq escaped from a prison in the south of the country on Friday morning, police said." Reuters quotes Ali Ghanim al-Maliki, "head of the security committee of Basra's provincial committee," stating. "All of the men are linked to the Islamic State of Iraq, that is linked to al Qaeda. Some of them were arrested eight months ago, and three of them were arrested a month or less than a month ago. All the guards securing the compound have been detained for investigation. Of course, there was collusion from within the compound, but we do not know who is involved at this moment." Al Mada reports that photos of the escapees have been distributed to checkpoints throughout Basra. Reuters notes today's violence includes a Tikrit sticky bombing which claimed the life of 1 city worker and a Mosul sticky bombing which claimed the life of 1 police officer. Meanwhile Fadel al-Nashmi (Niqash) examines the politics of Iraq or the way politicians posture at any rate: Three months have passed since the publication of US secret documents by the Wikileaks site, which included 400,000 documents relating to Iraqi political affairs. So far, there has been no serious Iraqi response. Instead, the two main political forces in the country, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law Coalition, and Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya list, initially tried using these documents to further their own interests.The Iraqiya list demanded investigations over allegations that Maliki had commanded squads that killed and tortured his opponents.Maliki denied these accusations, saying they were "tricks and media bubbles planned to serve certain political goals." But since the two parties joined forces and agreed on the formation of a new government at the end of December 2010, they have both ignored the Wikileaks documents. Yesterday, we noted that spin on Iraqi refugees that's being advanced. Strange, isn't it? At a time when the White House should be explaining the number of refugees admitted to Iraq, instead there's a 'press' 'movement' about to insist that there were never that many Iraqi refugees. We called out those lies yesterday and the chief liar. Turns out Thomas E. Ricks' online equivalent of a sex toy, Joel Wing, is advancing the lies as well. In a lengthy post that says so very little, he advances every lie in the book and then -- to back up his lies or make it appear that they have been -- he lists 12 sources. But only two of them apply to "Not so many refugees!" and they're both the bad 'reporting' of Nicholas Seeley. Seems to me if you're including Works Cited for a piece claiming that the number of Iraqi refugees was much smaller than reported, you'd need more than one source for that claim but Nicholas Seeley is Wing's only source. Joel Wing may not be lying, he may truly be that stupid. Stupid tends to attract stupid and that would explain that Wing-Ricks online loving. But if you're so damn stupid that you don't grasp that most refugees in the country are not going to register -- especially in countries where they are not legally allowed to work -- or the issues of 'visiting' which requires some Iraqi refugees to cross the border back into Iraq and then return to get their passports stamped, then maybe you should find another subject to write about? Staying on the topic of lies, BBC News reports the Iraq Inquiry will again take testimony from War Hawk Tony Blair on January 21st. Chris Ames (Iraq Inquiry Digest) notes: This page on the Hutton Inquiry website provides a great deal of detail on the redrafting of the September 2002 Iraq dossier, including the dates and times that drafts of Tony Blair's foreword were circulated. At 10.01 on 17 September 2002, Alastair Campbell, who wrote the foreword, circulated this first draft. "I am in no doubt that the threat is serious, and current; that he has made progress on WMD, and that he has to be stopped; that he does not want the UN inspectors in precisely because he has a great deal to hide." But Saddam had already agreed to the return of UN inspectors. For example, at 02.39 that morning, the Guardian had reported that: "Saddam Hussein last night caved in and agreed to the unconditional return of weapons inspectors to Iraq." Turning to the US, Wil Cruz (Fox News Latino) reports on the journey home of the bodies of Sgt Jose M. Cintron Rosado and Spc Jose Delgado Arroyo who became the two most recent US military deaths in Iraq January 2nd. Cruz notes, "The deaths of Cintrón Rosado and Delgado Arroyo, the third and fourth soldiers from the Puerto Rico National Guard killed since Sept. 11, are a somber reminder of the sacrifice Puerto Ricans and Latinos have made to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In all, 593 Latino members of the military have been killed since Oct. 7, 2001, when U.S. soldiers and Marines first landed in Afghanistan, according to the Department of Defense. And that number doesn't include casualties who have committed suicide after returning from their tours."Larry Copeland (USA Today) notes that it's not just people, things are also coming back from Iraq, the unmanned drones are itching to come to your neighborhood:One of the chief obstacles to widespread use of UAVs is their inability to "see and avoid" other aircraft as required by federal regulations, a key to flight safety. Davis says he believes operators on the ground can comply with federal rules if they can see the aircraft and the surrounding environment. Wesley Randall, principal investigator on an FAA grant awarded last year to researchers at Auburn University to study the risks associated with unmanned aircraft, predicts drones will be used by police departments in five to 10 years. Randall predicts that much larger unmanned aircraft will be used to transport cargo within 15-20 years.No local police departments have been authorized to use unmanned aircraft, although police departments in Houston and Miami have conducted field tests of such planes, Dorr says.Also home from Iraq is of Bradley Manning. Monday April 5th, WikiLeaks released US military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7th, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported in August that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified information." Manning has been convicted in the public square despite the fact that he's been convicted in no state and has made no public statements -- despite any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements. Manning is now at Quantico in Virginia, under military lock and key and still not allowed to speak to the press. Paul Courson (CNN) notes Bradley is a suspect and, "He has not admitted guilt in either incident, his supporters say." War Is A Crime's David Swanson passes on:DIFFENDING DISSENT FOUNDATIONFounded in 1960 as the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities CommitteeCONTACT: Sue Udry, 301-325-1201 sue.udry@defendingdissent.orgMartin Luther King Day is Monday, January 17, 2011Invoking the spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King, peace and justice activists to descend on Quantico prison to protest torture of Bradley ManningMLK Day plans call for noon demonstration at FBI headquarters in Washington followed by caravan to Quantico Marine Base"Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak." - Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.We'll celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day in a way that would make the great man proud. We embrace his legacy. Martin will be with us in the streets. Noon: Protest at FBI Headquarters - 935 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Washington, DC, to demonstrate our outrage and indignation against police state surveillance, infiltration, and attempts to entrap peace, environmental, animal rights, civil rights, and solidarity activists.Renowned "whistleblower" Coleen Rowley, a FBI special agent for almost 24 years, who testified to the Senate Judiciary on FBI's pre 9-11 failures, will address the crowd at the FBI headquarters. Ms. Rowley describes FBI abuses, "Instead of safeguarding our freedom and security, the FBI has become a growing danger to those trying to exercise our Constitutional rights. It is alarming to see the FBI revert to the abuses of the Vietnam era."1 pm: Convoy to Quantico - We'll take off from the center of the American police state in a caravan to Marine Corps Base Quantico where military authorities are holding our brother Bradley Manning in an inhumane condition of solitary confinement. (Quantico is 45 minutes south of DC.)2 pm: Rally at the Iwo Jima statue, Quantico Marine Base - The statue is at the southwest corner of Rt. 1 (Jefferson Davis Hwy) and Rt. 619 (Fuller Rd.) From I-95: Take exit 150, Quantico/Triangle. Take route 619 east to the entrance of the base.Activists will descend on Quantico to protest the isolation and torture of Bradley Manning at Marine Corps Brig Quantico. This treatment is designed to break Manning's mind and reduce his ability to defend himself. Manning has been kept in 23 out of 24 hour solitary confinement for 7 months in a 6 foot by 12 foot cell. He is not allowed any meaningful exercise, has his sleep and day-night cycles disrupted by constant light, and is harassed by what the military calls "prevention of injury" measures. These require a guard to ask him every 5 minutes "are you ok?" which requires an affirmative response.We call on Adm. Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., Army Chief of Staff, Gen. James F. Amos, Commandant of the Marine Corps, and Colonel Daniel J. Choike, Base Commander, Marine Corps Base Quantico, to end the inhumane, degrading conditions of pre-trial confinement and respect Bradley's human rights. Specifically, we are calling on Pentagon officials to lift the "prevention of injury" watch. This would allow Bradley meaningful physical exercise, uninterrupted sleep during the night, and a release from isolation. See the Letter from Psychologists for Social Responsibility to Defense Secretary GatesDan Ellsberg captures our sentiments regarding Bradley, "I spent years [during Vietnam] keeping my mouth shut as presidents lied to us and kept these secrets. I shouldn't have done that. And that's why I admire someone like Bradley Manning, or whoever the source was, for actually risking their own personal freedom in order to tell us the truth. I think they're being better citizens and showing their patriotism in a better way than when they keep their mouths shut."(See our letter attached hereto.)"Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice. Justice at its best is love correcting everything that stands against love." - Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Endorsed by: Backbone Campaign, Bill of Right Defense Committee, Bradley Manning Support Network, CodePink, Courage to Resist, DC Bill of Rights Coalition, DC National Lawyers Guild, Defending Dissent Foundation, Democrats.com, Friends of Human Rights, Jobs for Afghans, Montgomery County Civil Rights Coalition, National Accountability Action Network, National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance, Peace Action, Peace of the Action, Progressive Democrats of America, United for Peace and Justice, Voters for Peace, WarIsACrime.org, Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility, Witness Against Torture, World Can't Wait That's only one action this month. Another is scheduled for Tuesday, January 25th and this is from Stop FBI Repression about the January 25th actions: In December 2010, under the direction of U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, the FBI delivered nine new subpoenas in Chicago to anti-war and Palestine solidarity activists. Patrick Fitzgerald's office is ordering the nine to appear at a Grand Jury in Chicago on January 25. In response we are calling for protests on Jan. 25 across the country and around the world to show our solidarity. Hundreds of organizations and thousands of people will be protesting at Federal Buildings, FBI offices, and other appropriate places, showing solidarity with the nine newly subpoenaed activists, and with all the activists whose homes were raided by the FBI. Fitzgerald's expanding web of repression already includes the fourteen subpoenaed when the FBI stormed into homes on September 24th, carting away phones, computers, notebooks, diaries, and children's artwork. In October, all fourteen activists from Chicago, Minneapolis, and Michigan each decided to not participate in the secret proceedings of Fitzgerald's Grand Jury. Each signed a letter invoking their Fifth Amendment rights. However, three women from Minneapolis -- Tracy Molm, Anh Pham, and Sarah Martin -- are facing re-activated subpoenas. They are standing strong and we are asking you to stand with them --and with the newly subpoenaed nine activists -- by protesting Patrick Fitzgerald and his use of the Grand Jury and FBI to repress anti-war and international solidarity activists. Defend free speech! Defend the right to organize! Opposing war and occupation is not a crime! Tell Patrick Fitzgerald to call off the Grand Jury! Stop FBI raids and repression! Take Action! Please organize a local protest or picket in your city or on your campus on Tuesday Jan. 25 and e-mail us at stopfbi@gmail.com to let us know what you have planned. The Committee to Stop FBI Repression www.StopFBI.net Please e-mail stopfbi@gmail.com or call 612-379-3585 Here is a flyer you can use for your local protest (pdf). Just fill in the time and location of your local protest, and local contact information if you want. We'll note two other actions. First, this is the upcoming Iraq Veterans Against the War event:February 25, 2011 9:30 - 10:30 am Busboys & Poets, Langston room 14th & V st NW Washington DC This report back will be to answer questions from media and the peace movement about the recent trip back to Iraq by members of Iraq Veterans Against the War. The war is not over but it is not the same as it was in years past. What is the humanitarian situation in Iraq? How can we do reparations and reconciliation work? Speakers are all returning from this delegation and include: Geoff Millard (IVAW) Hart Viges (IVAW) Haider Al-Saedy (Iraqi Health Now)Richard Rowely (Big Noise Films) The following month, A.N.S.W.E.R. and March Forward! and others will be taking part in this action: March 19 is the 8th anniversary of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S. soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries. The war in Afghanistan is raging. The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and bringing Korea to the brink of a new war. While the United States will spend $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people. Actions of civil resistance are spreading. On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131 veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled soon in Washington, D.C. Saturday, March 19, 2011, the anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action against the war machine. Protest and resistance actions will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more. Click this link to endorse the March 19, 2011, Call to Action. Sunday on CBS' 60 Minutes: Descent Into Madness"60 Minutes" talks to Jared Loughner's friends and classmates and to ex-Secret Service, to reconstruct the pathway to mass murder he allegedly took in Tucson - a pattern this agent who once guarded the president could write a textbook about. Scott Pelley reports. YemenSteve Kroft reports on the U.S.'s new partner in the war on terror, Yemen, a known al Qaeda hideout and recently the source of several explosive packages sent to America. The GamblerLas Vegas sports betting legend Bill Walters has never had a losing year - a winning a streak that's made odds makers call him the "most dangerous sports bettor in Nevada." Lara Logan reports. | Watch Video 60 Minutes, Sunday, Jan. 16, at 8 p.m. ET, 7 p.m. PT. iraq alsumaria tvreuterskhaled farhankhalid al-ansarymichael christietim pearcenprmorning editionkelly mceversfox news latinowil cruzusa todaylarry copeland chris ames bbc newscbs60 minutes I'm a black working mother. I love to laugh and between work and raising kids, I need a good laugh. I'm also a community member of The Common Ills. Shout outs to any Common Ills community members stopping by. Big shout out to C.I. for all the help getting this started. I am not married to Thomas Friedman, credit me with better taste, please. This site is a parody. Clyburn should talk The amazing Hillary Is 44 Desperate Housewives (I cry again) David DeGraw article that enraged the net
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Timpanogos Storytelling Festival Clare Murphy She travels all the way from England! Come see her at the Festival 2014! See Storytellers Make It, Tell It, Write It - DVD Become a Volunteer! Read More School Outreach & On-site Festival Programming Read More Submit a Story on this Website! Read More Master the Power of Story in Your Business Read More At The Moment We are best known for our annual storytelling festival the Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of each Labor Day weekend. Though it started out as a backyard event in a small town neighborhood in 1990, it is now the largest storytelling festival in the west and sets the standard for festivals across the nation. From that humble beginning we have grown steadily each year. In addition to the festival, we now support the annual Timpanogos Storytelling Conference and several storytelling contests and retreats. But it doesn’t stop there. We have expanded our influence to reach children in schools and youth across the country in ways we would have never imagined 24 years ago. The Timpanogos Storytelling Institute promotes language and literacy in schools. In collaboration with the Orem Public Library, we continue to bring storytelling experiences to our children locally. The school outreach program makes it possible for students to experience exceptional educational and cultural events. We have been able to place national storytellers in many schools for once-in-a-lifetime educational programs that students would never otherwise experience. And now, at our Timpanogos Storytelling Conference and through the National Youth Storytelling Showcase (NYSS), the next generation of storytellers are learning the art of storytelling. In January 2012, we formally incorporated as a nonprofit with 501(c)(3) status and established the Timpanogos Storytelling Institute. Shortly afterward, we hired our first full-time employee. In March, we organized a board of directors which includes members of the Timpanogos Storytelling Institute and the City of Orem. This board oversees 17 different committees with over 12,500 volunteer hours being donated by these committees in 2012. It is incredible to think that for the past 24 years, the Timpanogos Storytelling volunteers have put on the Festival and all of its related programs with the unfailing support of the City of Orem and the service of its dedicated employees. A New Website! In August 2013, we launched this website to help those who are looking for storytelling events and resources across the nation. Users will be able to find storytelling festivals, concerts, conferences, retreats, and more through the national events calendar. They will find books, CDs, DVDs, art prints, and puppets to help them enjoy storytelling and learn how to tell stories of their own. In addition, they will be able to share their own stories on the website for all to see. Keep watching to see how this site can help you enjoy the art of storytelling even more in your life! Providing Family-Friendly Entertainment The Timpanogos Storytelling Institute and City of Orem is committed to continuing to provide family-friendly entertainment through their annual Festival and storytelling concerts. A Commitment to Storytelling Education TSI and the City of Orem will continue to work together to raise up the next generation of storytellers and story lovers through their school outreach program, support of the National Youth Storytelling Showcase, and in providing opportunities for youth to tell stories on the same stages as national tellers. In addition, TSI and the Orem Public Library will continue to build the largest storytelling resource center in the nation. The Center for Story TSI is in full support of the City of Orem’s efforts to build a Center for Story. This 385-seat auditorium will adjoin the Orem Public Library and will be paid for with funding from the CARE tax monies and donations from the Ashton Family Foundation, the Timpanogos Storytelling fund, and other private donors. We are excited to support a facility that will give all in the community a place to tell their stories through song, dance, music, puppets, the spoken word, and more. Prologue: An introduction to a story that establishes the setting and gives background details. In the late ’80s, Karen Ashton was serving as a member of Orem City’s Library Board. One of her goals was to activate a Friends of the Orem Public Library organization to help raise funds for a new children’s library. After attending the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee, she returned to Orem, Utah and helped the Friends organization catch the vision of starting a storytelling festival of their own. Fantasy artist, James Christensen was commissioned to create a piece of art that would portray storytelling. The result, “Tales Beneath Timp,” depicted an old storyteller telling to mystical characters at the foot of the majestic Mt. Timpanogos mountain. The old storyteller has come to symbolize the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival. Ashton went on to convince businesses in the valley that a storytelling festival would help raise funds for a children’s library and bring quality entertainment to the area. The resulting sponsorships made the event affordable and ensured that dollars raised at the festival would help support the library. In the meantime, the Friends continued to plan and promote an event they didn’t fully comprehend. In preparation, they pitched tents that blew over with the first gusts of wind before letting a professional company set up sturdy ones. They asked three professional storytellers to join local tellers and enlisted the help of local musicians to play between storytelling hours. Then, after not knowing if anyone but their families would come, the Festival was underway. It was happy. It was fun. And it helped those who attended realize that they, too, had stories that needed to be shared with family and friends. And that, as they say, was only the beginning. (Click here to read more about our history.) 9 Apr 2014 - How to Prepare Students for Assemblies with Storytellers. read more › 31 Mar 2014 - School Outreach & On-site Programming. read more › 12 Mar 2014 - Welcome! A Short Prep on this Year’s Conference. read more › 27 Feb 2014 - Free Workshop for Educators. read more › 20 Feb 2014 - Storytelling and Sochi. read more › 7 Feb 2014 - Timpanogos Storytelling Conference. read more › 5 Feb 2014 - We’re Going to RootsTech!. read more › 17 Dec 2013 - Holiday Story Prompts – Do You Remember When?. read more › Join our email list for the latest. Name:Email: Copyright ©2014 Timpanogos Storytelling Festival
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Campus Chest Extends its Deadline 11:36 am • Categorized as News Brief,Staff Stuff Be Sociable, Share! Tweet The 2011-12 Campus Chest campaign wrapped up its official final week with pledges totaling $480,507 or 81.44 percent of the $590,000 goal. The campaign has been extended for another week to provide additional opportunity for employees to make pledges. The Campus Chest campaign has met or exceeded its goal consistently for the last twenty years and has provided hundreds of thousands of dollars to the East Tennessee community. During tough economic times our contributions become even more important for these social and health related nonprofit agencies. If you have not yet turned in your card, please see your department representative for more information. Employees can make a one-time donation or pledge through payroll deduction. Any amount is appreciated and will help provide services for the area’s less fortunate individuals and families. Departments that already have exceeded their goals include the Office of the Chancellor, Vice Chancellor for Research, UT Foundation, College of Business Administration, UT Libraries, UT Athletics, and the Vice Chancellor for Communications. Campus Chest is a comprehensive campaign to support public-service agencies including Community Shares, the Greater Knoxville United Way, and many others. It’s important for employees to remember those less fortunate and give to a charitable organization. The Knoxville area campaign includes the UT Knoxville campus, UT Institute of Agriculture, Institute for Public Service, UT system, students, and retired personnel in the Knoxville area. Tagged as: Campus Chest Search Tennessee Today
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Murray Tinkelman: Problem Child If Mrs Goodheart were alive today, she would probably be surprised to hear that Murray Tinkelman grew up to become an award-winning illustrator, educator and illustration historian. In the early 1940's, when Mrs. Goodheart was assistant principal at Murray's junior high, she advised his parents to send the boy to the High School of Industrial Arts -- otherwise he might end up in jail."I was just a hideous student," says Murray as he recalls his childhood, "I was terrible in all my academic subjects and the only thing I had any ability in was drawing.""I lived in a huge apartment house in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn. There were a hundred and eleven families on six floors. During World War Two there were these paper drives and people would deposit their newspapers and magazines in the incinerator rooms. A maintenance man would come around and collect them for the war effort. My father was a radical progressive, so we were never allowed to see the Journal American in our home - but they had all the great comics - so I used to guiltily take out Prince Valiant and Flash Gordon from the papers left in the incinerator room and take them into my room and hide them." "The same thing with the Saturday Evening Post, which my father thought was antisemitic. But I loved the Post, so I'd tear off the covers and some of the interiors and hide those, too."Murray would study the drawings of Alex Raymond and Hal Foster and try to copy them in his own drawings. "Even the way Prince Valiant was lettered," he adds. He knew about Superman and Batman, but "comic books were a dime and there was no money in my family (or very little) so comic books were a real rarity for me." Which is ironic, because Murray's first job was working in a comic book art studio."I had just graduated from high school," Murray explains, "and my best friend in high school was Dick Giordano. He got a job at Iger Studios. We both interviewed the same day, but Dick was so much better than I was he got the job that same day. About three months later, I got a call to show up. I started at the same lowly job that Dick had started at, making thirty dollars a week, doing 'clean-up'. I would erase the pencil lines on the finished inked pages and I would rule the lines around the panels. And then I kind of graduated after about three weeks to doing backgrounds. And then after a while I graduated to doing figures. But no heads! One guy who was the shop 'boss' (Al something-or-other) did all the heads... male, female... and they all looked alike!""But I was really awful... I was not very good... and I was fired. We worked from 8:30 to 4:30 and I got called down at 4:15 and I knew I was going to be fired. I had come in about 30 seconds late that morning and (Jerry) Iger was at the door, and he looked at his wristwatch. I said, "Are you checking your pulse?" But it wasn't because of that, it was because I really wasn't very good. So around 4:15 he called me down... I had already said goodbye to everybody. I cleaned my brushes and said, "I'll meet you at the bar around the corner." So he called me down and he said, "Well, we're a little slow..." and I said, "We're not slow, everybody's busy here." I just wouldn't go down quietly. My mother always said I had a big mouth.""Iger said, "If you don't watch your mouth, we won't call you back" and I said, "Well, I'm not coming back anyway." and I left in a huff. I went down to the bar and ordered a beer and the entire staff came down to say goodbye to me. I didn't know what the future would hold, but I did know that I was going to join the Army, and get that out of the way.""It was the Korean War and many of my friends had already been drafted. I didn't really like the idea of getting shot at, and I had heard that the Army would accept a two-year enlistee, so I figured maybe it was better to get in and get out early."Murray spent his first year in the Army doing art work for training aids and posters. The second year he decorated cakes and painted "Welcome to Germany" signs for newly-arrived wives of officers. He even decorated cigar bands for officers whose wives had had babies.When he returned to civilian life he attended Cooper Union in the evenings while working days at a series "dull paste-up jobs".Murray says, "I went from the Army to Norcross Greeting Cards. I remember it was my first job out of the Army because my mouth was filthy with 'barracks talk'. I was the only male in the department and I was so embarrased because I would just say "Fuck you" - it was just automatic... even at home I would say "pass the fucking salt"... it was awful... I lasted about three months there. I got the lowest level job, called 'scaling'. Each day or so we would get a stack of finished comp art, same size as it would eventually be reproduced. And our job was to put it in a Lucie and blow it up to half-up, and then do a precise tracing of that finished art. We'd give that to the boss of the scaling group, who would give it back to the original artist, who would then do an actual piece of finished art which would be reduced by 1/3 for printing so everything would 'tighten up'. "Murray left Norcross for American Artists Group, another greeting card company. He had managed to sell Norcross a few actual illustrations on a freelance basis and hoped to do the same at AAG. "I was making maybe $35 a week at this point," says Murray, "So I left American Artists for yet another greeting card company, Wallace Brown...""... and at Wallace Brown I was making $50 a week -- but I was doing very, very well selling them groups of greeting cards for boxed sets, which would involve 12 to 24 individual paintings. I would look at what was being done and think, "well, if its good enough for Hallmark, its good enough for me." So I would do boxed sets of Christmas cards or boxed sets of Valentine cards. And I was clinically depressed by the junk I was doing!"* My Murray Tinkelman Flickr set.* AND be sure to check out Charlie Allen's Blog for an amazing array of Charlie's 1950's billboard art for Chevron. David Apatoff6:50 PMI didn't know any of this about Murray's background but I find it very, very easy to believe.ReplyDeleteZach Trenholm2:50 PMVery much enjoying these posts---bravo to Mr. Tinkelman....!ReplyDeleteAdd commentLoad more... Murray Tinkelman: "The only one who had any faith... Lynn Buckham: Advertising Art The Quirky Lynn Buckham Lynn Buckham, 1957: A Very Good Year Lynn Buckham: Detective Work on a Career Trajecto... Lynn Buckham (1918 - 1982) Tom Lovell "down by the bay" Tom Lovell: Dealing with "the model problem" Norman Kent on the "Meticulous" Tom Lovell Tom Lovell: Friends and Influences Sorry Folks... Tom Lovell: "...this youthful-looking, soft-spoke... Norman Kent Offers 'True' Praise for William A. Sm... Norman Kent on Illustrators and Their Working Meth... Norman Kent Offers 'True Praise' for West Coast Il...
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Commentary on "The Music Mice-Tro" (1967) and "Plop Goes The Weasel" (1953) I haven't done any new voice-over commentaries in a while, so I thought it would be fun to do a couple new ones. I have no idea why, but one of the two I did, "Plop Goes the Weasel" (1953) was rejected by Dailymotion.com, where I usually upload these. If anyone knows of a video-host site that doesn't randomly reject stuff upon upload, let me know.Anyway, my initial goal for this entry was to look at two cartoons that are overlooked. Someone once requested that I do this and choose one from the golden age that should get more attention, and one later stinker that should remain overlooked. For reasons unknown, Dailymotion didn't mind the latter. But You will!So, here's my take on "The Music Mice-Tro". -Gulp.-"The Music Mice-Tro" (1967) CommentaryUploaded by MatthewHunter. - Classic TV and last night's shows, online.Update: Guess video site "Zoopy" didn't care. Here's one of the best Robert McKimson Looney Tunes of the early 50's, "Plop Goes the Weasel". This is a great, overlooked gem starring Foghorn Leghorn, and I hope you'll see why! Carl Russo Great job, Matthew! You would've been a asset as a VO on the Golden Collections. Larriva later went on to direct episode of the "Mister T" animated series in the 80s. His work there isn't much better. Though you didn't have time to finish what you wanted to say at the end of "The Music Mice-Trio", I want to point out Format Films did "The Alvin Show" in '61, so they have already pretty much got what they did best down pat, and it's that look that didn't really work for WB at all despite whatever effort they tried to do on this cartoon. It's more a UPA-feel since Herb Klynn and others there had previous worked at that studio in the 50's. Commentary on "Terrier Stricken" (1952) Commentary on "The Music Mice-Tro" (1967) and "Plo... The New Pussyfoot...Be VERY Afraid!
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> THE Market For Sale, Wanted items, and Trading. This is an experiment. Please use wisely, and caveat emptor: it's a rough crowd buying this stuff, so you're on your own... This user doesn't exist or has been deactivated.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/698
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R&M posts solid growth in MEA Swiss structured cabling specialist, Reichle & De-Massari (R&M) said it has registered a 16 per cent growth in the Middle East and Africa in the first half driven by region-wide infrastructure investment. On its recent performance, Jean Pierre Labry, R&M managing director (MEA) said the growth is being driven by increased infrastructure investment, notably in Public Networks division (broadband, telecom) where the firm benefited from initiatives to deploy fiber or FTTx solutions in key markets such as the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Qatar. R&M has also completed a number of projects in private networks division (building, companies, clinics, data processing centers) across several industry verticals including healthcare, oil and gas, data centers, hotels, education, and finance, Labry pointed out. On the global scale, the Middle East and Africa region emerged as the most successful for the Swiss structured cabling specialist. 'Despite the still uncertain economic climate, R&M recorded an impressive 16 per cent growth rate for the first half of the year and was able to extend its regional market leadership in the passive cabling domain,' he noted. Africa, Labry said, was particularly successful, having achieved in the first half of the year its entire sales figures of 2009, enabling the company to extend its regional market leadership in the passive cabling domain. According to him, R&M is expecting a significant increase in Public Network orders in the coming days. 'Looking forward, we expect the growth trend to be maintained as international network operators, telecoms companies and data processing centers continue to invest in new infrastructure,' he added. At the product level, Labry said the demand for the recently launched Cat. 6A connection module, which sets new standards for high performance copper cabling is particularly strong. 'The Single Circuit Management System that simplifies the management of large volumes of fiber optics in broadband providers’ distributors is also about to be launched in the Middle East market.' On the economic outlook, Labry said, “It remains uncertain, with large projects being planned very cautiously. However, we have every reason to be optimistic that the strong growth performance we demonstrated will continue.' 'It is a testament to our overall strategy of developing forward looking products that anticipate the needs of the market as well as investing in the region for the region,' he added.-TradeArabia News Service Tags: broadband | growth | Reichle & De-Massari | Swiss cabling specialist | More Industry, Logistics & Shipping Stories
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