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Qatar Airways sees 787 fix soon Berlin, March 10, 2013 Qatar Airways backed Boeing's proposals for getting its grounded 787 Dreamliner passenger jet back in service, but suggested that it would seek compensation over the crisis which has left 4 per cent of its fleet idle. The Gulf airline's chief executive said he believed two battery meltdowns that led to the grounding of the high-tech jet were one-off events rather than evidence of a deeper safety problem. "I still have confidence they will get the aircraft in the air in the not too distant future," Akbar Al Baker told a news conference, adding: "but that doesn't mean I will not get compensation." Boeing's flagship jetliner has been grounded for nearly seven weeks, costing an estimated $350 million, after lithium-ion batteries overheated on two 787s in January. The US National Transportation Safety Board is due to issue an update this week on its investigation into what caused one of the batteries to overheat and smoke, but has indicated it will take longer to get to the bottom of what went wrong. Boeing proposed a fix two weeks ago based on a stronger flame-proof container for the batteries, but safety experts have said the timing of regulatory approval is clouded by uncertainty over what caused the batteries to melt down. Al Baker said he was comfortable with Boeing's proposed solution, noting that its engineers had been unable to replicate exactly what happened to the batteries. The CEO, known as one of the industry's fiercest critics and who lambasted Boeing over technical flaws on the 787 shortly before the battery crisis, adopted a conciliatory tone as Boeing wrestles with its worst crisis in years. He praised the "very capable" Boeing Commercial Airplanes chief executive Ray Conner for his handling of the problem. Qatar Airways has taken delivery of five 787 Dreamliners out of 25 it has on order, representing about 4 per cent of its current fleet of 121 aircraft. Qatar Airways is also the largest customer for the competing Airbus A350, of which it will also be the first operator. Al Baker said he expected the first A350 aircraft to be delivered to Qatar Airways in the fourth quarter of 2014. Airbus has said it is aiming for the second half of 2014. He also said it was possible that Airbus would stage a maiden flight in time to fly the jet at the Paris air show in June, or soon afterwards. Speaking at the world's largest travel fair on the eve of the rollout of another new passenger jet, the CSeries built by Canada's Bombardier, Al Baker said he was still looking at the plane though a purchase was not a priority.-Reuters Qatar Airways | Boeing | 787 Dreamliner | More Travel, Tourism & Hospitality Stories
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The unpardonable sin impardonable
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Translate English, Spanish, French, German, Chinese,
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Trapper's uninteresting homepage... Well, I've moved my blog over to Wordpress, and discontinued work on TrapperTim. If I have any readers (probably not!) just go to my Wordpress blog from now on. Basically this site will be to post things that I can't post there, such as trivial source code snippets and my resume. Erlang II I'm still playing with Erlang. I got sick of trying to learn it using the free resources scattered across the Internet and bought the new "beta book" Programming Erlang: Software for a Concurrent World. Right now it is only available in electronic PDF format because it is not quite finished yet. It is scheduled for printing in July. If you are even thinking about programming in Erlang, do yourself a favor, get this book! It has already taught me so much, plus it is written by Joe Armstrong who is pretty much considered to be the father of Erlang. Wow, I can't believe it's been an entire month since I wrote my last entry! Since that time I have taken a nice little break from everything to spend time with my wonderful wife. I have also taken an interest in Erlang. For whatever reason, I have always like working with servers and have even written server software in the past. (Some of my first Java programs were a web server and an FTP server.) Erlang is a language that was designed from the ground up for mission critical, fault tolerant, highly scalable communications software. It is a functional programming language with built in message passing primitives. Erlang is even capable of replacing code "hot" in a production environment. You can literally upgrade your software while it's running on the server and never take the system down. Now that's some serious potential for uptime. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of Erlang, and functional programming languages in general, is the ability to potentially scale out. Erlang is designed from the beginning to run in a multiprocessor environment and scale accordingly. With all of the recent developments in multi-core processors, this is could come in very handy, and could even see Erlang programs outperforming programs written in other, more conventional languages such as Perl, Python, Java, or even C. Granted, it is possible to take advantage of multiple processors in most programming languages, but Erlang makes it easy. It was designed from the very beginning to scale out to multiple processors and this design goal shows. XULRunner I have decided to pack up everything, donate my computer equipment to charity and move to Tibet to become a Shaolin Monk. Nah, not really, but I have been playing with XULRunner for the past couple of days. XULRunner is the engine behind applications like Songbird, Joost, and Democracy Player. Additionally, Firefox 3.0 will be based upon it as well as the next major version of Thunderbird. So far it is pretty fun, and the boilerplate isn't too bad so far in comparison to something like Java, or any of the major cross platform C++ toolkits. Additionally, it provides a clean and highly scalable way of building large pieces of software using platform independent pieces of XML and JavaScript to glue together software components created in C++ or Python. It gets it's name from XUL, the XML-based User-interface Language. Bascially, XUL is HTML for application user interfaces. Firefox itself is written in XUL and JavaScript, so this is a major testament to the power of this platform for software development. I get to use C++ where I need it, but I don't have to use C++ for the areas where it is inconvenient, such as the user interface and high level application logic. Well, I have decided to go back to the time-tested language that we all love to hate, C++. At least for any development that is bigger than a weekend hack. It just scales up so well, retains portability, and generates easy to distribute binaries. Python has it's place too. One big thing that puts me off of many "alternative" programming languages is lack of tools support and very few libraries. With C and C++, you are practically guaranteed access to an up to date library for any major task. This ultimately does improve programmer productivity greatly. Additionally, there's nothing like the feeling of accomplishment that one gets when they do a full build of a major program from source code. About a month ago I had a little foray into the wonderful world of Lisp. Ultimately for several reasons I failed to completely fall in love with Common Lisp. This time around I'm going with the other mainstream branch of the Lisp family, Scheme. Scheme is the simpler, gentler member of the Lisp family. One really attractive thing about Scheme is that there are many different implementations of scheme available, many of which are open source, and even some that are capable of generating native statically linked executables. This is a much more attractive option for coding end user software. I have settled on using the Bigloo implementation because it comes with a fairly comprehensive built-in library, excellent third-party support, and the ability to generate native binaries (well C code actually), Java class files (or jar files), or even .NET bytecode. This power and flexibility should come in handy for many projects. On the surface, Bigloo seems to have all the advantages of a Lisp, without all the drawbacks of the open source Common Lisp implementations. Sorry it's been quite a while since I last wrote. Since then I have redone my laptop again and this time installed Arch Linux. About a year ago I spent several months using Arch. Coming back to it for good really does feel like going home. It just has this nice, light, and open feel to it which is hard to describe until you've actually given Arch a serious try. Admittedly, it is a pain in the ass to set up initially. This is intentional. Nothing that is truly worth doing is easy. The upshot is, because I've hand configured most of my system, I know (for the most part) what it is doing at any given moment. I understand what it does during the boot process. I know what to tweak to get specific behavior. I have a pretty good understanding of what is inside most of the files in my /etc directory. Arch isn't for the faint of heart or those who don't know how to utilize Google, message boards, and community written documentation such as Wiki sites. Things do break sometimes, and you must make some choices of your own as you set up your computer. This is part of what you pay for the control and power that Arch gives you. Probably my favorite part of Arch is that it is always up to date. The vast majority of the packages on my computer are the latest stable versions. All it takes is a single command (pacman -Syu) to keep myself up to date. TrapperTim I've got some pretty big plans for TrapperTim. The first big change will be moving the stylesheet (index.css) into the ttdata/ directory with the other configuration files. This will assist with backups, customization, proper managment of permissions, and the eventual inclusion of an automated upgrade script. That is the next big plan, an automated upgrade script, so that you don't have to restore your ttdata/ directory after every update. After that, I plan to add support for RSS feeds, and the ability to go back to earlier posts that have scrolled off the page. I am hoping to have most of this in place within the next 6 months. That seems to be a pretty reasonable timetable. Throughout all of these upgrades, TrapperTim will still be the same simple, low resource, no nonsense content management system it is today. That was the main reason behind the switch back to PHP. By the way, I migrated this site to the "new" release of TrapperTim-20070302 today. By new I mean, the original TrapperTim with a license change. Baby steps. Well, I'm about to go back to the PHP branch of TrapperTim for future development. I find that Python CGI is really a sub-optimal web development environment. Unfortunately, there are no real standards for packaging up a CGI application. You might have to put all your CGI code in a specific cgi-bin directory, you might have to use a specific file extension, such as .cgi or .py. PHP, however, is pretty standard. You simply name your file with a .php file extension and it should just run. On some setups, you may have to make it executable, but that is it. It really doesn't get any easier than that. Additionally, I find that PHP performs a LOT better on the server than Python CGI does. I could use something like mod_python or fast-CGI, but then I'd be limiting the usefulness of TrapperTim in it's original niche. Additionally, I like to preach about using the right tool for the job, and for portable, run almost anywhere, relatively performant web applications, PHP is the tool for the job. I intend to revert this site back to the earlier PHP branch sometime this week. Well, after a brief trial of Arch Linux, I have settled on using Kubuntu for now. Arch is a very very nice power user distro, but unfortunately it takes way more time to set up than I want to spend right now. I need a stable distro that I can get productive in almost immediately. So far Kubuntu fits the bill. It also has one of the nicest out of the box KDE configurations I've ever seen. It has definitely converted me from being a Gnome user. I'm comfortable enough on Kubuntu to stay a while I think. It's very close to my ideal distro. Sara, my wife Our cats, Charlie and Marshall Our dogs, Cujo, Malakai, and Malibu TrapperTim - a simple content management system (CMS) requiring only PHP 4.x (or later) that is used to power this website Awesum2 - Graphical checksum verifier written in Java that is optimized for large files Resume in PDF format LaTeX source SDF Public Access UNIX System Copyright © 2007, Darren L. LaChausse
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A Changing Life The trailing offspring became a trailing spouse - and life keeps changing Caught in the light A single tree is like a dancing tongue of flame to warm the heart. ~ Hal Borland Clouds come floating into my life, no longer to carry rain or storm, but to add color to my sunset sky. ~ Rabindranath Tagore Plant power Do you remember your biology lessons? All about photosynthesis? We used to do an experiment that involved taping a piece of foil on to a plant's green leaf. After a time we tested the leaf for starch, and lo and behold, the leaf that had been hidden from the sun had no starch. And that was supposed to prove that green leaves needed the sun to produce starch using the magical process of photosynthesis. Although that seems something of a leap of faith now (how? why? couldn't foil have some mystical de-starching properties?), at the age of 12 it seemed a satisfactory demonstration and amazing that plants could change sunlight into starch. Green plants can do this, trap the power of the sun and convert it into food. It is the original green energy, a source of solar power, though we didn't think to call it that then. How great it would be if we could use green plants as sources of solar power, or if we could trap energy in the same way that they do. It isn't so very far fetched as it might seem. Scientists have used nano-technology to create devices that mimic the functions of the molecules involved in the photosynthesis cycle. They have made a photovoltaic device that can absorb light and efficiently convert it to electric current. "These are early days but the possibilities for the application of this technology for environmentally-friendly energy production are very exciting." You can read the research paper in Physical Review Letters. I don't think I'll attempt it myself because I can't even understand the title: Photocurrent Enhancement in Hybrid Nanocrystal Quantum-Dot p-i-n Photovoltaic Devices. A Powerful Noise Hanh is an HIV-positive widow in Vietnam. Nada, a survivor of the Bosnian war. And Jacqueline works the slums of Bamako, Mali. Three very different lives. Three vastly different worlds. But they share something in common: Power. These women are each overcoming gender barriers to rise up and claim a voice in their societies. Through their empowerment and ability to empower others, Hanh, Nada and Jacqueline are sparking remarkable changes. Fighting AIDS. Rebuilding communities. Educating girls. Help CARE help them make A Powerful Noise. Rome Impressions Centurians Flamboyance Two years of hunting Enough is enough. For precisely two years now I have been a PhotoHunter, very nearly without break, but I have decided to stop. The feeling of dismay when I saw people had already posted, before I'd even looked to see the theme, was a clear message. They have been an enjoyable two years so I thought I'd pick out a few of my favourite PhotoHunt entries. From Shadows From Hanging From Lazy From Narrow From, appropriately, Favourite, though I spelt it the American way. From Long From Water Those are my favourite photos from the series. There was also the set of photos in Small which has to be seen as a sequence of pictures. I would have done it differently now, but I still like the story. And finally, there was this one, Thirteen. It brings back memories of trying to explain time switches and thermostats to a commenter with an over-active sense of the absurd. While I've been taking part, not only have I developed an interest in photography but I've met many friends along the way, so my thanks are due to tnchick for running the PhotoHunt. I may return in time, but for now it's goodbye. PhotoHunter A powerful voice Labor migration has been a historical fact of life throughout West Africa. While trade routes have long been a part of the regional economy, patterns of labor migration were established during the colonial period, which is still evident today. Mali is the third poorest nation in the world, according to the Human Development Index. As a result, it is common for people to migrate from Mali to other countries, such as Côte d’Ivorie, or from rural Mali to urban centers, such as the capital of Bamako. Education in Mali is supposedly compulsory and free up to age 12. Still, classrooms are overcrowded, and many times led by untrained teachers who use sub-standard curriculums. In addition, students are left with the responsibility to purchase uniforms and supplies. When taking into account rates of enrollment, attendance and completion, the education system of Mali is ranked exceptionally low, especially among girls. For most Malian parents, it is more economically beneficial to the family if their children work, rather than attend school. In 2002, nearly half of children ages 10 to 14 were part of the Mali work force. They often migrate to find work. Usually, the migration begins as a voluntary act to earn income for the family and/or to accumulate a dowry; often these children end up in an involuntary life of exploitation and servitude. Many children who make their way to the capital city of Bamako end up becoming one of the city’s "street kids." The average age of these children is 15, and they have no form of adult supervision. While the literacy rate in Mali is altogether very low, the female literacy rate is much lower than that of males. So girls are less able to handle life on the city streets and are more susceptible to being forced into domestic servitude. In Africa, 85 percent of child domestic workers are girls. Domestic servants are discriminated against, often contracted unwillingly to employers, and are worked long hours for little to no pay. Lack of governmental oversight subjects domestic servants and girls working on the street to unchecked sexual harassment and abuse. There are a number of laws to curb the exploitation of child labor and the trafficking of children, but enforcement is virtually non-existent. Unless, there are significant measures to enforce those laws, the same heartbreaking story will play over and over for domestic servants and other "street kids." Jacqueline Dembele Goita, also known as Madame Urbain, is one of the lucky ones. Born in Mali, during an era when it was almost unheard of for girls to go to school in the impoverished country, Madame Urbain’s father sent her to school. Today, she uses her education to help hundreds of girls and young women, who flock to the capital city of Bamako every year in search of a better life. From CARE Mali, PhotoHunt: warm I was largely without inspiration this week - the recent weather hasn't helped to make me feel warm, even though it's not as cold as many places. So I've resorted to photos I could find from earlier this year. The glowing warmth of autumn colours. And the fiery warmth of late summer flowers. Technorati tags: PhotoHunt Love locks A taster of my trip to Rome, and it comes as a romantic little story, which appeals to my romantic little heart. As I was trying to take pictures of the Trevi Fountain, I noticed all these padlocks attached to the railing of the nearby Church, Saints Vincenzo e Anastasio. Although the symbolism seems clear - there are names written on them, sometimes with dates, sometimes with hearts - I wanted to find out why they are there. Although it's an old tradition in many places, in Rome it became a craze with the release of a film in which a young couple wrote their names on a lock, chained it around a lamppost and threw the key into the river so that their love would be locked forever. Locks and chains started appearing around a lamppost on the Ponte Milvio, to the extent that the lamppost almost collapsed and the authorities had to provide an alternative place for them. The church by the Trevi fountain has now become popular for the romantic love locks, the keys being thrown into the fountain. As fast as the authorities try to remove them, new ones appear in their place. Portrait of a girl (detail) Quite some time ago Elaine of Old Age is a Bitch did one of those question and answer memes. I remember thinking I would be answering no to almost all the questions. One of them was "Have you ever had your portrait painted?". I wondered how many people would be able to answer yes to that. Then I remembered. I could. My mother had my portrait painted when I was 8 years old, by a friend of hers. It has been hidden away for years and only came to light when we were sorting out my mother's things last year. I have cropped it, so you're missing the gem of the little sailor dress my mother insisted I wore. There are limits to my revelations. I don't believe I ever really looked like that, and I most certainly don't now, but in a rash moment I signed up for Twitter and decided to use it as my avatar. Now I'm wondering whether to use it as my avatar on the blog because I'm tiring of the greenish globe now. Any thoughts on whether I should change or not? Roamin' By the time you read this, all being well, I will be in Rome. First stop, the Trevi Fountain. Picture from Wikimedia I'll be back later in the week with my own pictures. I didn't intend a Valentine's Day post because to me it's not an important event. I'm slipping this one in while I should be doing other things because I'm intrigued by different ways of marking the day. When my sons were small they used to come home from school with offerings such as the one above. That was created with care and love by my elder son, when he could barely write, so it has survived several moves and I've had it a lifetime. I took it to be a way for the teachers to teach children about significant dates and at the same time have some craft practice. Then when it comes to teenage years, Valentine cards fly around, and there are great discussions about how many people have got, and more importantly, from whom. As teenagers become young adults, the pairing off begins and Valentines are for lovers. And that's the sum total of my experience of Valentine's Day. As far as I'm concerned, it is a time for lovers to tell each other how much they mean to each other, not a time to send out greetings to all and sundry, not a time for greeting friends and acquaintances. To me, saying "Happy Valentine's Day" sounds odd, a little like saying "Happy Ides of March". To me, it's a day that some people may mark more or less privately, but by no means everyone. Yes, couples may go out for a meal together but it would be unlikely, I think, for them to go in a group. So, finally I get to my point, and that is to ask is Valentine's Day an actual celebration in some countries? Would you greet you neighbour with "Happy Valentine's Day" in the same way as you would wish them a happy New Year? In what way is the day marked? PhotoHunt: nautical A busy weekend for me, so I'm happy to be able to find a few pictures in my files that would fit the bill - of, or relating to ships, shipping, sailors. I suppose the first two from France aren't strictly ships, but they are relating to sailors. And the third in England may be in permanent dry-dock, but it most certainly is a ship.A misty day on the Ile de Ré, west coast of France, New Year's Eve 2007.A sunny autumn day in Marseillan, on the south coast of France, 2009.HMS Victory in the Historic Dockyard in Portsmouth 2008.Technorati tags: PhotoHunt, HMS Victory Neglected tropical diseases Distant places - forgotten lives This is the list of diseases which are covered by the Neglected Topical Diseases Department of the World Health Organisation. Buruli Ulcer Dracunculiasis Fascioliasis Onchocerciasis Soil transmitted helminthiasis Neglected zoonotic diseases One of these, human African trypanosomiasis, also known as sleeping sickness, is caused by parasites called trypanasomes. The parasites enter the body from tsetse fly bites. During Stage 1, they stay in the bloodstream. At this stage fever, headaches, joint pains, and itching may occur. It can be cured but is rarely diagnosed. During Stage 2 it enters the nervous system and is fatal without treament. Until now the treatment for Stage 2 has been very toxic and hard to administer. The disease has been recorded as occurring in 36 countries, all in sub-Saharan Africa. It is endemic in southeast Uganda and western Kenya and kills more than 40,000 Africans a year This is a video from BBC World showing the situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo at the moment. Every day, over 35,000 people die from AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and most neglected diseases such as kala azar, Chagas disease, and sleeping sickness. They die needlessly. Huge advances in science and technology have helped reduce the infectious disease burden in developed nations. But for the poor and neglected, the current model of drug development has not brought the hope of new medicines and diagnostics. The poor cannot pay premium prices for their treatment so no drug company will develop the cures that the poverty stricken developing world needs. One of the organisations working on tropical neglected diseases, including sleeping sickness, is DNDi, the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative. It was established by: Médecins sans Frontières has directly witnessed the human cost of the lack of drugs for neglected diseases; the Pasteur Institute in France; the UNDP/World Bank/WHO’s Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases works on 10 neglected infectious diseases that affect poor and marginalized populations; the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation; the Indian Council for Medical Research; the Kenya Medical Research Institute; the Malaysian Ministry of Health. DNDi works to develop new drugs or new formulations of existing drugs for patients suffering from the most neglected communicable diseases. DNDi’s success depends on support from foundations, governments and individuals. DNDi, Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, Médecins Sans Frontières, Bilingual children As anyone who uses Google knows, it was 200 years ago today that Charles Darwin was born. Charles Darwin may, or may not, become relevant to this post. There was no mention of Darwin on this morning's BBC Breakfast news, but there was a feature about bilingual education. For the last 20 years there has been a steady increase in the numbers of pupils in the UK who are taught in Irish, Welsh, or Scots Gaelic. Devolution of powers from Westminster has meant increasing differentiation of education and has allowed schools to teach in any of these languages. During the programme it was said that there is evidence that children who are brought up bilingual have higher IQs. The implication was that bilingualism increases IQ. As usual the BBC gives no evidence, nor can I find anything at all about the feature. It may be true that a bilingual upbringing will increase IQ but there could well be other factors at work. Perhaps only intelligent children cope well enough to stay in bilingual education. Perhaps having a second language somehow helps children perforn well in IQ tests. Perhaps (and this is where Darwin may possibly come in) parents most likely to raise/educate their children bilingually are above average intelligence themselves, and their children would be intelligent regardless. Does anyone whose children are bilingual have any views on this? Anonymous j, I know, has bilingual children - are you there Anonymous j? I'm absolutely sure knowing a second language is a huge benefit in many ways and I'm delighted that my as-yet-hypothetical grandchildren will be truly bilingual. I just wonder what the real evidence is that it causes a rise in IQ. Actually, I have all sorts of questions, such as What is the definition of bilingualism? Is there an age constraint on becoming bilingual? Are children brought up in England now at a grave disadvantage? Fascinating subject. I jsut wish I could find out more. Spring sprang sprung To my great delight, there are signs that spring, if it hasn't quite sprung, it is at least on its way. Now that the snow has retreated some of the braver spring flowers are showing their faces. A drift of snowdrops. I think these are the most elegant of flowers, and to be the forerunner of spring makes them a double delight. The snowdrop, winter's timid child ~Mary Robinson The aconites hide beneath a bush. A burst of colour for the still dark days. Aconite, the first of all, Who is so very, very small; Who is so golden-haired and good, And wears a bib, as babies should. ~Jan Struther. Eco babble There is a whole new vocabulary that is growing up in and around the world of climate change and environmental awareness. It seems to be along the same lines as techno-babble and psycho-babble. I always think these words and phrases that specialists use are there more to create an aura of mystery, of exclusivity, than to clarify anything. So, here we are then, some definitions supplied by IRIN and illustrations supplied by me (with a little help from Flickr). Some more apt than others, because it did become a challenge... Greenwashing. This is the process by which assorted products or businesses acquire an eco-friendly spin. An example would be the way John Lewis touted its waste disposal unit as being green, as I reported last year. Ecoflation. Inflation caused by environmental problems such as deforestation or water scarcity. Precycle. Reducing waste by changing buying habits to cut down on waste such as making sure any packaging is recyclable. Locavore. A person who eats as much locally produced food as possible. Energy-exia. Refers to people who keep their energy consumption down to a bare minimum. Photo from Flickr/Martin Ujlaki Green audit. The assessment of the environmental impact of any activity or product. Eco-hacking. An effort to change the environment by large scale projects such reflecting sunlight back. Photo from Flickr/LollyKnit Green jobs. Jobs in environmentally friendly businesses such as renewable energy. Global weirding. A term for the extremes of weather which seem to be happening all over the world these days. Some of these words and phrases are working their way into normal vocabulary, some I've heard once or twice, but many are new to me. Will energy-exia ever succeed as a word? It doesn't exactly slip off the tongue. Reading made easy! ...or subscribe by email Nothing but photos Papillon's blog in English After female genital cutting / mutilation.A French woman's account of reconstructive surgery, translated from the original French. The first post. Friends, Romans, commentrymen, and blogs I like to read Adullamite A Postcard a Day Alison's EleanorBlog DRAGON DAYS Debbie's Wisdom Hypnosis Poetic Shutterbug Lifecruiser Claire's A little piece of me clarity2010 TorAa Mirror RennyBA's Terella Creative Arts Anonymous Top Ten Blog Tips NEW SOLITUDE NEWS Old Age is a Bitch A fortunate man (Dr Brown) Adventures in the 32-Aker Wood Song of Happiness Hathor - Sekhmet Sanity on Edge CALEDONIAN COMMENT Sharp Words Jayceeone's Blog generated by Nexodyne book aid Blog for peace
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Avoiding footwear fumbles when exercising or playing sports (BPT) - No one disputes that exercise provides a host of health benefits, from helping control weight to improving cardiovascular functions. But exercising in the wrong footwear can cause more harm than good, especially since foot health is integral to overall well-being. 'To get the most out of your workout or from play... Men: Make sure you're keeping up your appearances these busy fall and winter months (BPT) - Guys often keep their schedules packed full during the fall and winter months. Between the traditional work meetings, the sports game gatherings and all the holiday season activities, a man should be prepared to look his best at any given moment. Because the season is so busy, men don't want to spend much time keeping up their appearances, but still want to look great. Here are some easy tips from lifestyle expert and founder of MensStylePro.com, Sabir Peele, to help accomplish your b... Cozy up to energy savings with insulation (BPT) - With temperatures dropping, odds are your energy bills will be doing just the opposite. In fact, heating (and cooling) account for approximately 54 percent of the energy use in a typical U.S. home, according to the Department of Energy, representing the largest energy expense for most homeowners. One of the most ... Hard water: bad for your home and wallet (BPT) - Nearly 90 percent of American homes have hard water - water containing high levels of calcium and magnesium, according to The U.S. Geological Survey. The hardest water is commonly found in the states that run from Kansas to Texas as well as in Southern California. Hard water on its own is bad enough, making it di... Hidden national park history comes to life in a Yosemite Tour America's national park system is one of the greatest points of pride for the country, and has even served as inspiration for other nations eager to preserve their own national treasures. One of the most iconic of those parks is California's Yosemite National Park. Images of its rocky cliffs, thundering waterfalls and ga... Turn video games into family time (BPT) - Video gaming has taken a beating over the years from parents, educators and experts on health and social interaction. However, the gaming industry has addressed some of gaming's negative stigma with good educational, physical and socially interactive games that benefit children and adults. Gaming allows players t... Technology to keep families connected and protected this season (BPT) - It's the time of year when family schedules change and their daily routines reset. From coordinating calendars to handling additional demands such as homework and extracurricular activities, it can be a challenging, if not daunting, time for even the most organized family. The good news is advancements in technol... Safety checklist: a new and expecting mom's best friend (BPT) - From a very young age, you've integrated safety into your daily life. You learned to look both ways before crossing the street or to buckle up in a car. These things become second nature. If you welcome a precious little bundle of joy into the world, you naturally want to pass on those same safety measures to you... Actress Rose McGowan is on a personal mission to raise awareness of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (BPT) - Actress Rose McGowan, best known for her leading role in the TV series, Charmed, is sharing her story in a new leading role: raising awareness for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, or IPF. After her father was diagnosed with IPF, she became determined to honor his memory by bringing attention to this widely unheard ... Safeguarding your business when you become a victim of identity theft Anti-lock brakes and driver assist systems aim to help motorists avoid an accident, and when one occurs, a host of safety features, like airbags, activate to help minimize injury to the vehicle's occupants. Cybersecurity for businesses functions much like those assist systems in your car, working to prevent a security br... (BPT) - Super storms like Sandy, major floods in Colorado and other natural disasters remind us of the devastating impact a long-term power outage can have on a community. But it doesn't take a major disaster to take down the power - and make life difficult - for days. A basic winter storm with heavy snow and ice can do ... Dark chocolate: the new dessert (BPT) - The percentage of Americans savoring dessert after dinner has increased 5 percent since 2009, and 78 percent of treats enjoyed after dinner include chocolates, according to a study by The Hartman Group on U.S. eating habits. If you are looking for a treat to complement your next meal, consider dark chocolate. A l...
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You Are Here: Home » Health » Abdominal Fat in Men Linked to Sleep Apnea Abdominal Fat in Men Linked to Sleep Apnea In: Health By Dr. Michael J. Breus Obesity has long been considered one of the most important risk factors for obstructive sleep apnea in adults. In particular, visceral fat — a type of fat that collects in the abdomen — is increasingly regarded as a particularly significant risk factor for sleep apnea. Visceral fat in the abdomen is located within the abdominal cavity, around the body’s organs. Visceral fat itself is considered an important risk factor for a number of serious medical conditions, including cardiovascular disease and diabetes. A new study has found evidence of a strong link between visceral fat and obstructive sleep apnea — a link that is particular to men with the sleep disorder. Researchers in Japan examined the relationship between visceral fat and obstructive sleep apnea in both men and women. The study included 271 men and 100 women who had been treated for obstructive sleep apnea between October 2008 and December 2010. Researchers analyzed the relationships among different measurements of body mass and fat accumulation and indicators of OSA. They found significant differences between these relationships in men and in women: BMI and waist circumference were found to be similar in both men and women. Men in the study had greater accumulations of visceral fat than women. Men also had more severe OSA than women, and also had more severe dyslipidemia — abnormal levels of lipids in the blood. High cholesterol and high triglycerides are the most common types of dyslipidemia. In men, visceral fat accumulation was associated with two indicators of low blood oxygen, which are themselves considered indicators of sleep apnea. In men, visceral fat also was associated with age and with body-mass index (BMI). In women, researchers found no association between obstructive sleep apnea and visceral fat accumulation. In women, visceral fat was only associated with body-mass index. These findings may help to explain the elevated risks of cardiovascular disease among men with obstructive sleep apnea. Simple Memory Loss or Alzheimer’s? Chiropractic Care Seen as One of the Best Career Opportunities Watch Out for Prediabetes Colon Cancer Cases Drop
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May 14, 2013 11:04 AM PDT PETER GADIOT, SOPHIE LOWE
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Ashley Greene at the 13th Annual Super Saturday event Posted by Fe Pattz on July 31, 2010 at 12:30pm tks to twilightsagafan & Twilightxchange Comment by tornumbrella on July 31, 2010 at 8:04pm Thanks! more closeups and different shots here http://justjaredjr.buzznet.com/2010/07/31/ashley-greene-has-a-super... Comment by Tal :)) on August 2, 2010 at 5:22am she's so beautiful!!! thenx for sharing <3 Comment
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Ariana Joan Grande's Comments ← Back to Ariana Joan Grande's Page At 1:26pm on August 17, 2011, Justine. said… hey Ariana. you may remember me from girlsgogames.com (Twilightsagafan20). I love your song "Grenade". At 6:34am on May 13, 2011, Regan Baucom *RB* said… Regan: hey I am a big fan !!!!!!!!!!!!! :D At 11:54pm on March 19, 2011, emo kelsey :P said… hey can u be my friend? At 2:57pm on March 2, 2011, may marie black said… marie:hey how u doing At 10:01pm on February 26, 2011, may marie black said… marie:hi At 6:51pm on February 26, 2011, may marie black said… marie:are u the real ariana grande At 7:54pm on February 22, 2011, Ariana Joan Grande said… At 7:53pm on February 22, 2011, Ariana Joan Grande said… At 7:51pm on February 22, 2011, Ariana Joan Grande said… At 7:48pm on February 22, 2011, Ariana Joan Grande said… :) At 7:47pm on February 22, 2011, Ariana Joan Grande said… No comments yet!
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Latest » The Battle To Save Cowdenbeath » The Battle To Save Cowdenbeath By Ian on Apr 2, 2010 in Latest, Scottish Football | 6 comments Central Park, Cowdenbeath, is one of those old grounds with a bit of what they like to call “character”. Terracing surrounds the ground on three sides, set well back and a little above the pitch, while the fourth side houses the two-part main stand, half of it the old shed and half a newer stand where the older one was fire-damaged sometime in the 90s. A row of floodlight pylons sits in front of the stand to obscure the view. It’s not the most modern of stadia, but at least it’s not one of your modern boxes. It’s also the only ground I know of to retain its perimeter fencing – not, of course, to prevent the few hundred hardy supporters from encroaching onto the pitch, but for protecting the next batch of spectators from the stock cars that ply their trade on the track that separates the pitch from the terrace, later on in the Saturday evening. The stock cars have long been a bigger money-spinner than the football club and for many years, under the mostly successful chairmanship of Gordon McDougall, everyone seemed happy to allow the one to subsidise the other Recent developments, however, have brought the football club’s unsustainability to a head. McDougall left in 2008, subsequently sueing the club for unpaid consultancy fees; his son-in-law Brian Welsh also won a costly unfair dismissal case after being sacked as manager that summer. The new owners, the Brewster family, made no bones about their intentions – the plan was to cash in on the land and build Cowden a new stadium somewhere out of town. Which would have suited all parties had it come to pass, but sadly the latest plans to find an alternate site seem to have fallen through. Furthermore, the shortcomings of Central Park have been accentuated by its failure to pass the conditions required by the SFA’s new licensing scheme. Opinions vary on whether the SFA themselves or, indirectly, UEFA are responsible for this system, or whether the terms of it are too harsh, but it seems that besides some issues with the floodlighting, the field of play which has passed muster for some hundred years at Central Park is now considered too narrow. (Brechin have similar problems, which may see them having to uproot their famous hedge at Glebe Park.) The licensing system isn’t mandatory at present, but those clubs failing to meet the criteria are being fined – £7,500 according to most reports, not a huge sum but harsh enough for a club of this size, and escalating with each season that passes. Combined with operational losses and a feeling that the new regime had overcommitted the wage budget, the club’s future was already looking a little uncertain when rumours started circulating earlier this week that the Brewsters had approached Spartans with a view to selling their shareholding and allowing Spartans, effectively, to take Cowden’s place in the league. Spartans, based in Edinburgh and recent occupiers of a small but tidy new community stadium at Ainslie Park, were one of the teams who lost out (to Annan) in the vote for the vacant league place created by Gretna’s demise in 2008, and have made no secret of their ongoing desire to join the League. Rightly or wrongly, they made a few enemies earlier in the decade when they were perceived as lobbying a little too aggressively for the league spot that it looked might become available during East Stirlingshire’s troubles, and accordingly they have sought to downplay the rumours in the last couple of days, making it clear that they had been approached rather than vice versa and refusing to confirm the terms of any discussions. The Brewsters for their part have claimed that the discussions were only about a groundshare, and indicated that other Fife clubs such as Raith and Dunfermline had also been approached. None of these groundshare ideas look too promising as long, or even medium term solutions go – Dunfermline is nearest and perhaps the best option if it comes to that, although their stadium is rather bigger than required – but the Spartans option makes the least sense. It’s hard to believe anyone thinking that enough fans would travel across to Edinburgh to make the club viable, which makes the suggestion that closer ties than groundsharing were mooted somewhat easy to believe. It also appears that other board members were unaware of these discussions until this week, raising suspicions further. All of this brings the dreaded talk of franchise football back into the open. Such things have of course happened before, Meadowbank moving and becoming Livingston and Clydebank being bought out by Airdrie United, and while this of course is anathema to most of us, it should be said that analogies with (in particular) the Milton Keynes debacle down south don’t really work. England, even before automatic promotion to the league was introduced in the 80s, has long had a roughly identifiable pyramid structure, where Scotland has a jumble of senior non-leagues (The South of Scotland, East of Scotland and Highland Leagues) running alongside “junior” leagues (this having nothing to do with the age of the players) which involve a roughly comparable standard of football but which aren’t even answerable directly to the SFA but to the SJFA. So separate are these set-ups that only in the last couple of years have a handful of teams from the junior leagues been admitted to the Scottish Cup. It’s impossible to identify any levels within this, or to identify from where the most likely legitimate qualifiers for a league place would come. The SFL would, I think, be delighted to have a pyramid system underneath it, but to turn the current mishmash into one would require a radical overhaul, much treading on toes and wrestling with vested interests, and at present it seems there is insuffcient will to make this happen. Spartans may have ambitions to be a league club but it’s far from clear that many of their cohorts share such ideas, or that many junior sides have any desire to involve themselves with senior football at all. The Highland League is also believed to be deeply divided on the issue. In the meantime, an ambitious club such as Spartans has no way of getting into the league except by waiting for someone else to go bust and apply for the vacancy. (Or wait for someone to be voted out, which is technically possible if a club becomes bad enough for long enough but is in practice an even more distant prospect – it’s never happened.) This isn’t very satisfactory for anyone, and if it’s true that Spartans have indeed been approached with – effectively – an offer of a league place by the backdoor then it’s difficult to be too critical of them for at least cautiously considering it. There are many obstacles in the way of such a move, however, and in the meantime nobody in Scottish football wants to lose Cowdenbeath. The ‘Blue Brazil’ are one of the traditional mainstays of the Scottish lower leagues, founded in the 1880s and league members since 1905. The last team to lose its identity in such fashion – Clydebank – were, by 2002, in administration, had been groundless for six years, and had caused the SFL such headaches that – at least according to some allegations – Airdrie United’s bid was not only backed but positively encouraged by the SFL’s management committee. The current scenario is nothing like that: for all the difficulties outlined above, this suggestion has come out of the blue, and it’s to be hoped that any such proposal will be resisted much more strongly. But for this goodwill to mean anything, Cowdenbeath have find a way forward. Through all this, the team is having a good season on the pitch, with a fighting chance of promotion to the first division for the first time since the switch to four smaller leagues. It’s time for the fans and the community to rally round, to act and show that they want and deserve a football club, and help the club find a way to make it work. There is already an active Trust who have been quick off the mark in forming an action group – they can be contacted through their website on http://www.cowdentrust.com . Further information on the current situation will hopefully appear there once the site is updated this weekend. There is much work to be done but hope are high that Cowdenbeath can be saved. Having followed the Airdrie/Clydebank saga when it happened, I can’t help but feel some deja vu. Clydebank for example were promised by their owners that the sale of Kilbowie would be followed by building a new ground, which never happened – the ongoing saga left them vulnerable to the Airdrie United “takeover”, precipitated by Airdrie’s own demise following their having to make expensive improvements (that were not really necessary) caused by the SPL entry conditions. Now here’s Cowdenbeath being told by the authorities that they need to do something about their ground, being faced with either spending money they patently don’t have on something hardly necessary, or by finding alternative accommodation, with owners effectively considering franchising the league place to try and recover something out of it. The whole structure up in Scotland is hard to understand when you’re used to the relative order of the Pyramid; don’t forget that as well as the SFA and SJFA, there is also the Scottish Amateur Football Association, and there is no clear path that an ambitious side in any type of football might take to reach the League. Add in geographical issues as well (I suspect this is particularly pertinent for the Highland League sides) and you have a recipe for confusion. Albert Ross April 2, 2010 COWDEN WILL NOT DIE COME ON ALL FANS NEAR AND FAR GET ALONG TO FIFE TOMORROW I WILL BE THERE 2MORROW WILLL U April 2, 2010 GET YOUR SELF ALONG TO FIFE TOMORROW April 2, 2010 the quicker the club folds the better, its a boil on the arse of the town, contributes nothing but litter, noise and polution as well as congestion and for what? a few half wits that have nothing better to do with their day out of the mental health ward and refuse to grow up April 6, 2010 The required pitch dimensions vary across leagues. I can’t find the SFL’s rules (they want £10 for their Handbook by post, where other leagues have a free PDF). The international Laws of the Game require a minimum of 90m long and 45m wide, but for international matches a minimum of 100m long and 64m wide. The SPL matches the International Match requirement, as does the Football League and Premier League in England, and the UEFA stadium categories (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UEFA_stadium_categories) right down to Category One. I’d be surprised if the SFL were different. UEFA only gets involved if the team play in a UEFA tournament – both the Champions League and Europa League require at least Category Two for the qualifying rounds and Category Three for the group stages. Category Three and Elite (used for the finals) require 105 x 68 metre dimensions, though a lower category can be approved by a special decision. (Category One is used for Youth and Women’s tournaments.) The obvious solution to the pitch dimensions problem is to take away the Stock Car track, but that may be less financially viable than paying the fines. Reducing the track width or the runoff area is unlikely to be viable either. Mike Dimmick April 6, 2010 Great post Jimmy. Well done for remembering not to add “Brewster”. Care to expand on the levels of carnage wrought across Nirvana by a few idiots? Couple of crisp bags and an empty Buckie bottle perhaps? April 9, 2010 Post a Reply Cancel reply
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Posts Tagged "Worthing" » Match Of The Week: Worthing 1-0 Dulwich Hamlet By Ian on Nov 13, 2011 in Latest, Non-League | 1 comment The eyes of the world are largely elsewhere this afternoon. International matches and the first round proper if the FA Cup mean that even the tiny amount of coverage that a match in Division One South of the Ryman League might attract pales away to nothing. Yet this is, in its own way, an intriguing match. The top of this division is tight, and Dulwich sit at its... Match Of The Week: Worthing 2-1 Croydon Athletic By Ian on Apr 5, 2010 in Latest, Non-League | 1 comment It’s a big weekend of football across the length and breadth of the country. One of the unique qualities of the English football season is the way in which, over the course of the Easter weekend, we pass seamlessly from the tail end of the mid-season into the final straights. Saturday lunchtime sees Manchester United play Chelsea at Old Trafford in the Premier... The FA Cup 2009/10: Worthing 4-0 Raynes Park Vale By Ian on Aug 31, 2009 in Latest, Non-League | 0 comments As the new season sleepwalks into life the FA Cup has, before August is even finished, already reached its second round. The names in the Preliminary Round of the competition start to have a familiar feel to them. They’re the little clubs up the road that most of us don’t visit that often. Worthing Football Club are in Division One South of the Ryman... Only two teams in Worthing By Ian on Oct 17, 2008 in Non-League | 0 comments As was touched upon here recently, Sussex is a county with a well-established and extensive non-league football structure. However, it’s not something I was aware of at all until 1995, when I moved to West Sussex. Having grown up just outside Brighton, Brighton and Hove Albion were very much the only team on my radar, so discovering this extraordinarily deep... Worthing 1-1 AFC Wimbledon By Ian on Jan 17, 2007 in Latest, Non-League | 3 comments Imagine, if you will, that you’ve been watching the same team for years and years. Suddenly, and out of the blue, your team is taken over by a “business consortium”, which decides that the part of the country that your club and you are from isn’t profitable enough, and uproot it 60 miles away to a town which has never even had a Football...
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| Help Southwestern view ( 1970-1970 ) External Link: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=g2zAJ5Cw7N4C Title: Southwestern view Physical Description: 1 v. : ill. ; Publisher: s.n.Distributed by the Madisonian Place of Publication: Dillon, MontVirginia City, Mont Spatial Coverage: United States -- Montana -- Beaverhead -- Dillon Coordinates: 45.294167 x -111.941111 Dates or Sequential Designation: Vol. 1, no. 1 (July 23, 1970)-v. 1, no. 50 (July 1, 1971). General Note: "Compliments of the Madisonian, Virginia City, Montana," July 23-Aug. 13, 1970. General Note: "A weekly Newspaper Promoting the Suthwestern Montana Counties of Beaverhead, Madison, Jefferson and Gallatin," July 23-Aug. 13, 1970; "A Weekly Newspaper Promoting Beaverhead County and Southwestern Montana," Aug. 20, 1970-July 1, 1971.
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Health Information Medical Reference Guide Medical Encyclopedia Image Pages Culdocentesis Culdocentesis Version InfoLast reviewed on 2/26/2012Linda J. Vorvick, MD, Medical Director and Director of Didactic Curriculum, MEDEX Northwest Division of Physician Assistant Studies, Department of Family Medicine, UW Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Washington. Susan Storck, MD, FACOG, Chief, Eastside Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, Bellevue, Washington; Clinical Teaching Faculty, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Washington School of Medicine. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc. A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org). URAC's accreditation program is an independent audit to verify that A.D.A.M. follows rigorous standards of quality and accountability. A.D.A.M. is among the first to achieve this important distinction for online health information and services. Learn more about A.D.A.M.'s editorial policy, editorial process and privacy policy. A.D.A.M. is also a founding member of Hi-Ethics and subscribes to the principles of the Health on the Net Foundation (www.hon.ch)
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Email to a friend: De Kooning's Bicycle
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The Kingfisher Illustrated Nature Encyclopedia David BurnieKingfisher The incredible diversity of life on Earth—from microscopic single-celled organisms to giant redwoods and blue whales—is studied in more than 1,000 stunning photographs and illustrations. The introductory section, "A Planet Apart," guides the reader through the formation of the planet and the beginning of life, to evolution and animal and plant life today. The second section, "The Living World," introduces the kingdoms of life on the planet, from microscopic life, through plants to animals. The third and main section of the book, "Wildlife Habitats," takes a detailed look at the world's habitats, with "species features" that focus on animals and plants that are of particular interest, such as the vampire squid and the bristlecone pine. David Burnie Related Links Children's Literature A good source of information for reports and projects, although students may get caught up in reading this attractive book whether or not they are working on a school assignment. School Library JournalHighly detailed color photography, including many full-page, spectacular spreads, illuminates the concepts and discussions. Clear, colorful diagrams explain the unseen processes of nature, as reflected in the digestive system of the carnivorous climbing pitcher plant or the communication of fireflies. David Burnie is an accomplished zoologist who was a nature reserve ranger before becoming a natural history author and editor. A prolific writer of many books, including several on dinosaurs, he has seen many of his titles win educational awards and science prizes. His titles for Kingfisher include Kingfisher Knowledge: Endangered Planet and The Kingfisher Illustrated Dinosaur Encyclopedia, which was nominated for the Aventis Prize for Science Books in 2002. KingfisherApril 2004HardcoverISBN: 9780753455760ISBN10: 0753455765Middle-Grade Nonfiction11 1/10 x 9 inches, 320 pagesAge Range: 9 to 11Grade Range: 4 to 6
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About Cancer Cancer and Genetics Cancer Tests and Procedures Cancer and Nutrition Cancer Treatment Side Effects Hysterectomy is a major surgical procedure in which the uterus and possibly the cervix, ovaries, and fallopian tubes are removed. Fibroids in the uterus are a common reason for a hysterectomy. In this video, you'll find out other medical conditions that may require a hysterectomy and what to expect if you need this procedure. Smoking Cessation, Stages of Change Cigarette smoking is the single leading cause of preventable death and disease in the United States. But because of the physical and psychological addiction to nicotine, smokers find it quite difficult to quit. This video offers important reasons to stop smoking and a framework of change to help you achieve your goal. People can become obese by taking in more calories than they burn. Obesity also appears to be influenced by genetics. This video discusses the health risks associated with obesity and what treatment and lifestyle changes are commonly recommended.
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HomeFilmAwards Picture placement Studios' decision can have repercussions in Oscar race Stuart Levine @Variety_StuartL In a year where award handicappers agree that no one film is dominating the landscape, the upcoming Golden Globes is a studio’s godsend. Since the mid-1950s, the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has divvied up the picture nominees into two categories: drama and musical/comedy. So instead of five slots open for the top film, there are 10 that will generate headlines and Oscar buzz immediately after nominees are announced Dec. 21. But do pics that land in the musical/comedy category carry as much weight as those that vie for best drama? Some films can qualify for either category and it’s up to the studio to determine where the movie will compete. “I don’t see a downside,” says Tony Angelotti, a veteran Oscar consultant who has worked on the “Shakespeare in Love,” “Pulp Fiction” and “The Cider House Rules” campaigns for Miramax. “You can set up a film in the comedy category and, hopefully, give it a leg up to win. By doing so, you qualify it as a real contender.” However, Angelotti adds, “if you put a film in comedy and it doesn’t get nominated, then that’s a bad sign. You’ve got a real perception problem.” Over the past 10 years, of the 51 films that have been nominated in the comedy/musical category for the Globes, nine have gone on to be Oscar nominated, and few, if any, have been laugh out-loud comedies. In 1998, “As Good as It Gets” was a comedy/musical winner that went on to take Oscar gold as best picture. A year earlier, “Jerry Maguire” found itself in the same Globes category, but it would be tough to find a reviewer who saw the film as a straight comedy. A better example of a pic that audiences would be hard-pressed to describe as funny is the Demi Moore-Patrick Swayze film “Ghost,” which won the Golden Globes comedy category in 1991 and went on to take an Oscar for original screenplay. “There are movies that fall in between and that’s a judgment call,” says Nadia Bronson, president of international marketing and distribution at Universal. She believes that comedies aren’t taken as seriously as dramas by Oscar voters but that it’s the publicity generated by a nom, no matter the category, that counts. Bronson says she relies on the HFPA screenings to determine where U’s films will be slotted. This year, the studio has a bountiful slate of pics that could fall into either category. Although no official decisions have been made, Bronson says U is leaning toward putting “Billy Elliot” in drama — along with “Erin Brockovich” — and was unsure about the upcoming Nicolas Cage pic “Family Man.” In the comedy category, U is confident that “Meet the Parents” will land a nom. Lars von Trier’s “Dancer in the Dark” will be receiving a major awards push from Fine Line and though the film has a few musical numbers as sung by singer-turned-actress Bjork, the film will be placed in the drama category. “We feel and hope that ‘Dancer’ is a dramatic film and we shied away from the musical aspect of it,” says Fine Line executive VP of marketing, Marian Koltai-Levine. “I think the film and her performance lends itself into the dramatic category. It’s more like an opera and operas tend to be very dramatic.”Another chance Though the Globes are often considered a precursor to the Oscars, there have been films that have been completely snubbed by the HFPA but have made their mark with Oscar voters. In 1998, Fine Line’s “The Sweet Hereafter” didn’t receive a single Golden Globe nom but landed director and adapted screenplay noms (both for Atom Egoyan) from the Acad. For “Almost Famous,” DreamWorks also had to decide which genre slot its well-reviewed pic fell into, choosing to go with the drama category. Over at Lions Gate, prexy Tom Ortenberg says “Shadow of the Vampire” will wind up in the comedy category, and Willem Dafoe will be placed in supporting actor and John Malkovich in lead actor in a comedy. “We did some internal soul-searching and decided the picture is a dark comedy and we didn’t want to appear (to be) running away from that,” Ortenberg says. He also believes that the comedy category shouldn’t be judged on a lower tier than drama; if your film can land a nomination there, that’s all that counts. “I think the most important thing in the award process is to have your picture taken seriously,” he says. “If you succeed there, it matters less if its comedy or drama. But just as long as the picture is visible and well spoken of, that’s what counts.”
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HomeFilmMarkets & Festivals Dubbers’ strike could gag pix in Italy Workload increases with more day-and-date openings ROME — A strike by Italy’s dubbers could jeopardize the day-and-date releases of big Hollywood pics including “Troy” and “The Day After Tomorrow” in May, and “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” in early June. Just as actors in the U.S. are holding contract talks, the thesps who give English-speaking actors a voice in Italy are in the middle of a contract renewal dispute. They want a wage hike and are fighting what they call unreasonably short deadlines for delivering a dubbed pic. “We want 20 days to work on a movie, not just five, as is the case now,” said a spokesman for the union — called AIDAC — which started the all-out strike on Friday. The work pace has intensified for Italo dubbers with the increase of day-and-date openings due to piracy. Crisis predicted According to Buena Vista Italy topper Paul Zonderland, if deadlines for releases aren’t met, the situation could become critical. “These films are fundamental to turn this year into a positive one, after last year’s downturn,” he cautioned. While in the short term Buena Vista’s activities in Italy will not be affected, Zonderland said he is already planning to put out the trailer for “Kill Bill Vol. 2″ in English if it can’t be dubbed on time. Italian dubbers went on strike last July, posing a threat to fall releases. But they backpedaled after being promised that their contract — which technically expired more than a year ago — would soon be renewed. The country’s main dubbing studios, ALIED and Editori Associati, said the current strike made it impossible to enter into talks about the dubbers’ demands. Non-union competish The studios cited the economic climate and cutthroat competition from companies employing non-union dubbers as the main reasons for the crisis. The national dubbers’ contract affects about 1,000 workers, including 700 actors. Dubbing in Italy generates an estimated $35 million in revenues, only about 25 % of which is generated by feature films. Most of the rest comes from TV dramas.
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HomeBizNews Boston papers ding New York Times Globe contributes to $648 million quarterly loss Steven Zeitchik Boston was the New York Times’ Achilles’ heel, as the Gray Lady’s two New England papers contributed to a $648 million loss in the most recent quarter. Newspaper firm took a charge of $814 million for its New England Media Group, which includes the Boston Globe, the Worcester Telegram & Gazette and Boston.com, which it wholly owns. Quarterly loss was the first in 10 years for the company. Company swung to a loss after a profit of $63 million in the comparable quarter last year. Revenue was up 4%, to $932 million. The Globe has been on the block, with reports over the past few months that Jack Welch and others are interested. But no sale has yet materialized. Ad sales in the New England market have been particularly hard hit. Analysts and the market, though, generally liked what they saw from the flagship: New York Times’ stock closed up 1% to $23.09. Boston GlobeNew York TimesThe New York Times Follow @Variety on Twitter for breaking news, reviews and more
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HomeFilmFeatures Disney unveils 2009 schedule 'Dogs,' 'Montana,' 'Persia' set release dates Pamela McClintock With the writers strike resolved, Disney is the latest studio to rejigger and give more shape to its release calendar through 2009 and the early part of 2010. The Mouse House has staked out opening dates for a cluster of films, including laffer “Old Dogs,” filmmaker Walt Becker’s follow-up to sleeper box office hit “Wild Hogs.” “Dogs,” with a cast including John Travolta, Robin Williams and Seth Green, bows April 10, 2009. “Wild Hogs” opened in spring as well. In a counterprogramming maneuver, Disney’s “The Hannah Montana Movie” will debut May 1, 2009, opposite 20th Century Fox’s “X-Men Origins: Wolverine.” Looking to Thanksgiving 2009, futuristic cop actioner “Surrogates,” starring Bruce Willis, will unspool the weekend before the holiday on Nov. 20, 2009. During the Writers Guild walkout, studios weren’t in a position to begin rounding out their slates for 2009 or move pictures around, since continuity in the production pipeline was uncertain. Now, however, the majors are relatively confident that a new deal can be struck with actors without a walkout this summer. Last week, Paramount made a number of moves, including relocating J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek” from Christmas to May 2009. Disney is the second studio to make a multitude of changes. It rejiggered release dates for titles including action-adventure “Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time,” which will now open June 16, 2009, instead of July 10, 2009. The move means that “Prince of Persia” will open ahead of Par’s “Transformers 2″ (June 26, 2009) and “Ice Age III” (July 1, 2009) vs. bowing in their wake. As a result of claiming May 1, 2009, for “Hannah Montana,” Disney moved 3-D pic “G-Force” out of that slot to July 24. That’s the second 3-D title to bow on that date after the Weinstein Co. horror entry “Piranha 3D.” The Mouse House also has decided to make Isla Fisher-Hugh Dancy romantic comedy “Confessions of a Shopaholic” its 2009 Valentine’s Day release, instead of Sandra Bullock-Ryan Reynolds romantic comedy “The Proposal,” which will now be released Sept. 25, 2009 vs. Feb. 13, 2009, when “Proposal” debuts. Disney dated two other films: Sci-fi family adventure-comedy “Race to Witch Mountain,” starring Dwayne Johnson, will bow March 13, 2009, while Tim Burton’s 3-D “Alice in Wonderland” will unspool a year later, on March 19, 2010. In another tweak, Disney retitled two films: “South of the Border” (Sept. 26) becomes “Beverly Hills Chihuahua,” while “High School Musical 3″ (Oct. 24) becomes “High School Musical 3: Senior Year.” Meanwhile, Paramount has made an additional move on top of last week’s changes, moving back D.J. Caruso’s Shia LeBeouf thriller “Eagle Eye” one month, from Aug. 8 to Sept. 26. That gives Par some breathing room now that it’s releasing DreamWorks’ Ben Stiller laffer “Tropic Thunder” on Aug. 15. On the specialty side, the Weinstein Co. announced this week that it will bow 2008 Sundance acquisition “Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden,” the Morgan Spurlock docu generating plenty of buzz, on April 18. Shi LebeoufWalt Disney PicturesWild Hogs Walt Becker Follow @Variety on Twitter for breaking news, reviews and more
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HomeBizPeople News Italian scribe Cecchi d’Amico dies August 1, 2010 | 01:21PM PT Grande dame of Italian pics penned 'The Bicycle Thief' ROME – Screenwriter Suso Cecchi d’Amico, who became the grande dame of postwar Italian cinema through her versatile visual storytelling talent, instrumental to such classics as “The Bicycle Thief,” “Big Deal on Madonna Street,” “Rocco and His Brothers” and “The Leopard,” died July 30 in Rome. She was 96. No cause of death was given for Cecchi d’Amico, who had been wheelchair-bound for some time. Born Susanna Giovanna Cecchi into an intellectual family — her father, Emilio Cecchi, was a prominent literary critic — Cecchi d’Amico, who took on a double surname after marrying music and theater critic Fedele d’Amico in 1938, began penning screenplays in the early 1940s. She got her start thanks to neorealist director Renato Castellani, who recruited her on a romancer, curiously titled “Avatar,” which never got made, and then on the 1946 drama “Mio figlio professore,” starring Aldo Fabrizi as a widowed single dad. Just a few years later Cecchi d’Amico collaborated with Vittorio De Sica and the writing team behind the 1948 “Bicycle Thief.” After that she broke into the largely male-dominated Cinema Italiano world and went on to forge a close creative rapport with many of the country’s best directors, including Luchino Visconti, Mario Monicelli, Francesco Rosi, Michelangelo Antonioni and Franco Zeffirelli, in the course of a prolific career spanning six decades and more than 110 titles. Cecchi d’Amico’s longest collaboration was with Visconti, for whom she became a regular screenwriter, starting with Anna Magnani starrer “Bellissima” (1951) and continuing with, among others, “Senso” (1954), “Rocco and His Brothers” (1960) and “The Leopard” (1963), the grand Sicilian epic starring Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale (a restored version of which unspooled this year in Cannes, where it also took the Palme d’Or in 1963). But it was Cecchi d’Amico’s equally brilliant knack for well-observed comedies that made her an ideal match for Mario Monicelli. Their collaborations include “Big Deal on Madonna Street”; “Casanova ’70,” a contempo adaptation of Casanova’s amorous adventures, which earned her an Oscar nomination, along with other co-writers; and, more recently, the bittersweet gem “Speriamo che sia femmina” (Let’s Hope It’s a Girl) in 1986. “More than having worked with her, I can say that I lived with her,” said longtime friend Monicelli, who is 95. “We would meet in the morning and talk about everything, from our personal lives to politics. That’s how our ideas would spring forth. Then we would spend the second half of the day crafting stories.” Zeffirelli, with whom she worked on “Brother Sun, Sister Moon,” and the TV skein “Jesus of Nazareth,” called her “an extraordinary screenwriter” but also a good-hearted woman who was “a mom and a sister to all of us.” This is how Cecchi d’Amico described her craft: “A screenwriter is not a writer: He is a filmmaker, and as such he must not chase words, but images. He has to write with his eyes.” Cecchi d’Amico won scores of Italian awards, including numerous David di Donatello prizes, along with the Venice Film Festival’s Golden Lion for lifetime achievement in 1994. The Writers Guild of America gave her the Jean Renoir Award for Screenwriting Achievement in 2009. She is survived by three children, Caterina, a former RAI Cinema chief; Masolino, a theater critic; and Silvia, a producer. A funeral is scheduled for Aug. 2 in Rome’s Santa Maria del Popolo. (The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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HomeFilmNews Bull market for R-rated bear? July 28, 2012 | 05:00AM PT 'Ted' targets pic's tie-ins to alternative retailers @marcgraser When it comes to movie merchandise, retailers like to play it safe, stocking shelves with products tied to summer tentpoles like “The Avengers,” “The Dark Knight Rises” and “The Amazing Spider-Man” with characters recognized by most consumers. But stores are ready to make room for a foul-mouthed teddy bear from Boston. With “Ted” nearing $200 million domestically and expanding overseas, Universal, which distributes the comedy, and the film’s producer, Media Rights Capital, are rolling out a line of licensed products for the Seth MacFarlane film. That includes a talking plush bear, voiced by MacFarlane, that spouts a dozen phrases like, “How about a Brewstoyevski,” “Come here, you bastard” and, “Stick your finger in the loop of my tag,” as well as cell phone covers, mugs, hats and slogan-covered T-shirts, some too vulgar to publish. The products are unusual for an R-rated film. Retailers generally shy away from adult-oriented fare, especially if a film doesn’t boast existing brand awareness. Moviegoers may know MacFarlane from “Family Guy,” “American Dad!” and “The Cleveland Show,” but “Ted” was based on an original idea by MacFarlane. Most of the “Ted” merchandise will roll out beginning in October, and continue through December, timed with the homevideo push for the film. Partners likely will include major retailers like Best Buy and Transworld to promote the pic’s products as well as the disc. Burbank-based Striker Entertainment, which launched the successful line of products for Summit Entertainment’s “Twilight” franchise and last year’s “The Hunger Games” for Lionsgate, is heading the “Ted” licensing campaign for MRC. Striker spent a month working closely with MacFarlane and Commonwealth Toys to design four sizes of plush bears. The largest is a 24-inch version priced at $59.99. Smallest is sized for keychains. And they all talk. With a film about a talking toy bear, it wasn’t much of a stretch to determine the centerpiece tie-in. MacFarlane approved every element of the bear’s design, from the color, the shape of his nose, even the type of material used. “Seth has a very high level of quality expectation,” says Russell Binder, president of Striker. “Everybody wanted this to be right. I salute rights holders who aren’t willing to put out a product unless they’re satisfied. Even though you could sell a bunch of them, (and) you’ve got the marketplace demanding product, do it the right way.” While Striker isn’t new to the stuffed-animal biz — it also handles the consumer products license for Rovio’s successful “Angry Birds” franchise, which has resulted in plush versions of the pigs and birds in the game — “Ted” is hardly as family friendly. “Because of the nature of the property, and its R-rating, it’s a very tough property to put into channels where there are kids,” Binder says. “It’s considered a bit too risque. It’s hard for a kid not to press a bear’s hand and hear him talk.” That essentially eliminates chains like Walmart, Target and Toys R Us. Instead, Striker is turning to teen- and young-adult skewing mall-based retailers such as Hot Topic, FYE and Spencer Gifts, as well as Urban Outfitters and Amazon.com. Online retailers, in particular, “have become a huge place for us to reach the right customer,” Binder says. In that regard, one key partner has been online tchotchke licenser CafePress, which has quickly become a source for studios looking for “a quick solution to get product into fans’ hands,” Binder says, given the company’s digital print-on-demand process. For “Ted,” CafePress put considerable resources behind promoting the pic and pre-selling the plush bears, in addition to other products like mugs, cell phone covers, aprons and T-shirts. The site is taking pre-orders for the bear. Other retailers will start carrying the foul-mouthed toy by mid-August. Additional partners include Concept One, which is making headwear and accessories, Rippled Junction (apparel) and toymaker Funko (bobble heads and Pop! figures). Still others are making calendars and posters, while Striker is also looking to identify ways to make “Ted” tie-ins relevant year-round, especially during the holidays. Separately, Universal developed a “Talking Ted” app for Apple- and Google-powered devices, in which the toy bear smokes, drinks beer and can be recorded saying tame lines like “I love you,” with the finished video posted on Facebook or Twitter. While there’s a free version that has been downloaded more than 5 million times, the studio is charging 99¢ for an uncensored version that features more phrases. Such digital deals are becoming more commonplace as younger consumers increasingly turn to their tablets and smartphones to play games. The time and money they’re spending on those devices is impacting the business as a whole, Binder says, which is altering the kinds of consumer products that wind up on store shelves. “There’s not a toy company out there that’s not trying to marry physical and digital experiences to engage with kids,” Binder says. “It’s hard to do just television today or just a movie. (The strategy) requires different access to different media.” For skittish retailers, box office returns prove an effective decision-making model. “When the movie came out and crushed opening weekend, all of a sudden retailers came out of hibernation, if you will,” Binder says. “When it hit, that’s when the appetite turned into orders.” As a result, most product deals are generally done after the fact, Binder says. “There’s rarely a pre-movie effort to put deals together. There’s always the intention for something to have merchandising potential. But given how conservative retailers are today and the amount of well-known brand properties there are coming out on a regular basis, there’s not the desire to support a property until it comes out and works. We can do as many licensing deals as possible, but if it doesn’t get supported at retail, there’s no point.” Striker treated “Ted” differently, however, locking down some deals before the film’s bow. For some products, that’s necessary, given manufacturing challenges, particularly overseas. “You can’t make product and turn it around in two weeks,” Binder says. “You have to design it, get it approved, produce it and ship it. That takes time.” Universal has scored in the past with other R-rated fare, producing bowling bags and White Russian cocktail-mixing kits for “The Big Lebowski,” as well as online games and apps for “Scarface,” including a version of “Mafia Wars.” Binder also has brokered merchandise deals around Lionsgate’s “Saw” franchise, “Kick-Ass” and Quentin Tarantino’s “Reservoir Dogs” in the past, including collectible vinyl figures. “Ted” marks “the first plush bear in my career,” Binder says. The marketing maven may want to get used to it. Universal and MRC are pressing MacFarlane to move forward with a “Ted” sequel, but the multihyphenate is juggling animated franchises “Family Guy,” “American Dad” and “The Cleveland Show” for Fox. As he gets retailers excited for more “Ted” product, Binder also is working on licensing deals for Lionsgate’s “The Expendables 2,” out next month, as well as its “Hunger Games” sequel; “I, Frankenstein”; the “Twilight” finale from Summit, as well as its sci-fier “Ender’s Game” and zombie pic “Warm Bodies”; Legendary’s Entertainment’s “Pacific Rim”; and AMC’s “The Walking Dead.” Binder and his team were drawn to “Ted” because it looked like fun, and was a different kind of property from what they normally do, he says. They also were interested in a challenge: “What we expect to be merchandisable in an R-rated space is not that obvious,” Binder explains. With a vulgar toy bear as the most obvious tie-in, Striker had little elso to base its efforts around for “Ted.”Only “The Hangover,” with its wolf pack-branded products and image of a baby wearing sunglasses, and “Napoleon Dynamite” seemed to offer similar campaigns. But Binder , who’s a fan of MacFarlane, didn’t need a lot of convincing after learning who was behind the project. “The challeng e was getting the people (namely licensing partners and retailer) to support it in a meaningful way for a theatrical release. The bulk of this business,” he explains, “is wait and see.” PlushRStrikerToys R UsVince Uncensored Follow @Variety on Twitter for breaking news, reviews and more
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Playfish excels with quality cross-platform games Eric Eldon 0 In the dimly-lit world of social networking applications, companies tend to privately trash each other — often quite accurately. You hear things like “so-and-so always sends spammy invites” or “so-and-so has a suspect means of making money.” Social game developer Playfish is one of the few big app companies that is universally praised by its peers. It has only built a few gaming applications, but it focuses on quality — nurturing each of its seven apps into long-running, profitable titles. Now, like competitors including Zynga and SGN, it is expanding by pushing these games to mobile platforms, driving adoption through its existing popularity on Facebook. It has successfully launched a few apps on the iPhone in recent months, using new Facebook data-sharing service Connect for the iPhone so friends can play games on the iPhone against friends on Facebook’s web site. And, a couple weeks ago, it got an early start building for the still-young Android mobile platform, launching its an app for playing popular Who Has The Biggest Brain quiz game. Playfish has ported games that only focus on core social features; it can immediately tie those features back in to its social networking apps. This is in contrast to SGN, which has focused on building games around mobile-specific features, like iGolf where you use the iPhone’s accelerometer to swing and hit virtual golf balls, and is only more recently tying those games to social networks. On the iPhone, Playfish has seen over 90 percent of players use Facebook Connect to play with their Facebook friends, chief operating officer Sebastian de Halleux. Its social strategy could be great for Android, too. Not many people have Android devices right now, but Playfish’s games will be social anyway because users can play against their friends back on Facebook. Playfish went out of its way to do this, by building its own version of Facebook Connect — Facebook itself hasn’t launched Connect for Android yet. Syncing an empire You can see how Playfish’s mobile plans fit into its overall vision for social gaming. “Suddenly, through social networking platforms, building games is less about hit creation and more about intellectual property creation, and nurturing titles,” de Halleux tells me. First, you build a game that people love, then you figure out how to iterate on it to keep it popular, and make money from it. Founded in October of 2007 by veterans of mobile game developer Glu Mobile, Playfish has been following this vision for years. Its first game, Who Has The Biggest Brain, launched that December. This is more than half a year after Facebook’s developer platform launched. The company’s successful late start is a testament to its game quality. Most other companies that are big on Facebook today saw key growth in the first few months of the platform, before Facebook implemented heavy restrictions on “viral channels” such as how many app notifications users can send to friends, or how frequently app activity might appear in users’ “news feed” homepages. Playfish, in fact, has made a point of not trying to get viral growth, de Halleux tells me — its games tend to de-emphasize activities like inviting all of your friends, and instead try to make the games themselves so fun that users want to invite their friends to share the experience. In Who Has the Biggest Brain, an app that today has more than three million monthly active users on Facebook alone, you can start playing its brain teasers, get some practice in, then challenge your friends to answer questions. In total, Playfish has some 30 million monthly active users, most of whom are on Facebook. While most rivals try out dozens of games, hoping for a hit here or there, Playfish has launched just seven games since it began in the fall of 2007, and all have made the top ten list on Facebook’s platform. What about money? Playfish is “very profitable,” de Halleux de tells me, although he wouldn’t confirm an estimate I’d previously heard — that the company is set to make total revenues of $30 million this year. However, he did say almost all revenue was from direct payments for virtual goods and subscriptions, with a few, high-quality advertising-based offers within games through a company called TrialPay. As opposed to many games, Playfish avoids running the scammier ones — such as free ringtone ads that trick users into paying monthly subscriptions. The company is skeptical of the long-term value in some types of offers, and is focusing those that have some sort of clear value to the user, such a coupon for an in-store clothing purchase. Everything at the company is about building a long-term business. As social networking and mobile platforms continue to merge with each other, and refine their features, expect Playfish to slowly continue expanding its line of titles — and more quickly expand its number of users and revenue. Case in point: Apple plans to introduce mobile payments for iPhone app developers this summer. This will allow Playfish to bring its existing payments-driven features to its iPhone games, and quickly begin making more money. The London-based company has raised $21 million from angel investors, Accel Partners and Index Ventures.
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GamesBeat Glu Mobile chief says Google Glass could trigger another ‘iPhone moment’ for gaming (interview) Above: Glu Mobile CEO Niccolo de Masi and Sourabh Ahuja, head of Glass development at Glu, show off Spellista.Image Credit: Dean Takahashi November 27, 2013 8:00 AM 0 Stepping into unknown territory, mobile game developer Glu Mobile announced last week that it had developed a word game, Spellista, for the Google Glass wearable device. From Google’s perspective, games could be crucial to the future of Glass as games often become the biggest moneymaker on any new digital platform. Once the price of Glass comes down and apps such as games proliferate, the platform could in turn become an important market for game companies. At least that’s what Glu is betting on. Above: Spellista snowImage Credit: Glu Niccolo de Masi, the chief executive of the publicly traded San Francisco company, talked with us about it alongside Sourabh Ahuja, the vice president of Glass development at Glu, to give us a full picture of the game. The company worked closely with Google as a top Glass developer to create the game for the Google Glass GDK beta program. In our interview, de Masi said he believes Glass may deliver “an iPhone moment” in terms of big changes for gaming that are as significant as the introduction of the original iPhone in 2007. The title may never make money. But it is an experiment worth trying as mobile game companies like Glu are always looking for a new frontier and a chance to steal an advantage on rivals. Glu is riding high off of its Deer Hunter 2014 title today, one of the rare action-shooter games that has been successful on mobile devices. While such games can generate $50 million a year for Glu, experimenting in the unknown remains critical. Let’s find out why in the edited interview transcript that follows. GamesBeat: Could you give me a picture of where Glu Mobile is now? Niccolo de Masi: Well, some exciting news on that front. We did our Q3 earnings a couple of weeks ago, and we’ve guided Q4 2013 to be the largest, by revenue and by profitability, in our 12-year history. We’re very pleased with the fact that Deer Hunter 2014, which launched in September, is on track to be our best performing game in history. We’re also pleased that for the fourth year in a row now, we’ve shipped the biggest grossing action shooter of the year on the mobile platforms. I’d argue we have a 50 percent market share of that genre, whether it’s with Deer Hunter, Frontline Commando, Contract Killer, and so on. Big things in store for Glu in 2014. We’ve guided to 20 percent growth year on year, at least. We’ve guided to break even or profitable. The new management team we focused on bringing in over the past year has begun to make a positive impact on our ability to not only improve average revenue per daily active user (ARPDAU) on our games, but also things like retention. We’ve made the right investments in the last year. We’re doing a good job on talent attraction these days. Above: Deer Hunter 2014Image Credit: Glu GB: I never would have predicted a revival for Deer Hunter — once a big PC game hit — on mobile. de Masi: Remember, though, that Deer Hunter 2012 – Deer Hunter Reloaded – was, I would posit, the biggest grossing shooter of last year. That one surprised everyone too. This one is even bigger. It’s been hanging out in the top-grossing for considerably longer than the first one. The market’s bigger now. This phenomenon is happening across the app stores. The market is doubling every year, but the top 10 games are getting bigger at an even faster rate. We went from 2010, where a $10 million new game like Gun Bros was a big game, to today, where it’s a $50 million game if you’re in the same grossing position. That’s been helpful for a company like Glu that’s invested a lot of time in original IP franchises and trying to build barriers to entry around the stuff we’re really good at. I would say that in the last four years, the stuff we’re good at has been action games and Android. GB: Tell us about Glass. de Masi: We’ve been a big partner with Google for six or seven years. We were the first company to build Android games in 2008, 2009. We have a board member in common with Google. We’ve consistently been the pioneer for every new technology enhancement, evolution, refinement — whether it’s hardware or software – that they’ve brought out. Glass is very much an extension of that. We think there’s room for this to be a phone replacer in the long term. We always want to be early to things we believe can go somewhere. We think there’s room for the price point to come down and drive interesting adoption of this long term, especially when you think about Moore’s Law and the reduction of form factors. It’s a brand new paradigm for interactivity, so it’s a brand new paradigm for games. If you haven’t seen the game, you have to try it out. It’s voice commands and head movements, rather than using your thumbs. We’re pretty pleased with the ability to innovate with new technology protocols and the new GDK that we’ve helped them establish. Our game is taking more advantage of everything that Glass can do than all the other apps that were demo’d there. It’s significantly more advanced in its use of the technology. We’re innovating in ways like the ability to send levels from Glass to Glass, and the ability to not only play the game, but also construct levels in the game. Above: Google’s Sergey Brin is an early investor in 23andme GB: So if Android took four or five years to pay off, are you expecting something similar around Glass? de Masi: Android started paying off in 2011. They brought in-app purchasing in March 2011, I think? We were the first doing that too. So that’s a fair statement. I guess we were three years earlier on that one. Sourabh Ahuja: It’s wearables in general. The watches are starting to pick up – the Samsung, the Pebble. The wearables double up on your battery life, so it works both ways. We have delivered three innovations here. We have a voice tutorial, peer-to-peer messaging, and user-generated content. You can create your own levels. Once people get the hang of it, they just want to keep going. It’s fun. You start getting the words. Initially you think, “Uh, what am I doing?” But then it sticks. de Masi: The game is built for one- or two-minute sessions. Wherever you are, you can say, “OK Glass, play a game.” We’re the only game in the store. Ahuja: We did a lot of brainstorming with Google in the beginning. Google wants this device to be something that’s not in your way, that takes away your focus for a maximum of one or two minutes. It gets you what you need and you’re back to what you’re doing. It’s the same way with the game. It’s not supposed to be a really involved experience for 10 minutes at a time. We shipped with nine pre-set levels, and then you can create as many levels as you want, by taking a picture and speaking words associated with it. You can make them public or private. They all go to spellista.google.com. I can log in with my Google account right now, browse the public levels created by the community, and send them to myself. You can create them on your device as well. Then you can log in to the website and send it to a friend or to a Glass device. Say you want to wish somebody a happy birthday. You just take a picture of a cake, you say your statement to the other person, and it goes to them as an encoded message. If you’re playing and you don’t get a word for 30 seconds, a little gift box drops. You can catch the box and it will just put the word right there in front of you. Or you can tap to skip a word and move on to the next one. We didn’t try to build any competition into this game. It’s just fun and engaging with your friends. It’s more focused on socializing than competing for the best time. We wanted to encourage user-generated content. It’s amazing how that lets us scale the game. We don’t have to have artists constantly making new levels. We ship with those nine levels, and now all of a sudden, on spellista.google.com, even if you’re not a Glass user, you can create levels and send them to your friends who are Glass users. Just sign in with your Google account. You can have up to five levels per account stored on our servers – edit them, add words, change images, and send them to your friends. You almost have picture messaging, except the fun part is that the message doesn’t just show up. You have to decode the message. View All 1 2 3 Glu Mobile Topics > Apple Deer Hunter 2014 game interviews game news Glu Mobile Google Niccolo de Masi Sourabh Ahuja Spellista top-stories blog comments powered by Disqus
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/724
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Zack Stortini Hit on Ben Smith (06:10/3rd) Home broadcast - Edmonton Oilers at Chicago Blackhawks - October 29, 2010
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Rick Nash Goal on Mike Smith (05:18/2nd) Home broadcast - Columbus Blue Jackets at Phoenix Coyotes - March 3, 2012
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/726
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Lindy Ruff Post-Game (10/15/11) Lindy Ruff speaks with the media following the 3-2 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins. Lindy Ruff Post-Game (10/15/11)Lindy Ruff speaks with the media following the 3-2 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins.
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Douglas Murray Hit on Martin Hanzal (13:32/1st) Home broadcast - Phoenix Coyotes at San Jose Sharks - October 8, 2011
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When little Weesy Coppin's ghost was called upon by Anne and her surviving siblings to show the fate of Sir John Franklin, the vision she gave was of a sort which was likely familiar to all the children and their parents: an enigmatic message, the 'writing on the wall' from the feast of Belshazzar in the book Daniel: In the same hour came forth fingers of a man's hand, and wrote over against the candlestick upon the plaister of the wall of the king's palace: and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote. And then the king's countenance was changed, and his thoughts troubled him, so that the joints of his loins were loosed, and his knees smote one against another. The king cried aloud to bring in the astrologers, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers. And the king spake, and said to the wise men of Babylon, Whosoever shall read this writing, and shew me the interpretation thereof, shall be clothed with scarlet, and have a chain of gold about his neck, and shall be the third ruler in the kingdom. And this is the writing that was written, MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN. Quite probably the scene had been related in a sermon or Bible reading in the family, and even if it had not, the same scene had been the subject of a number of moving panoramas -- one of them displayed in 1833 alongside Sir John Ross's Arctic paintings -- as well as cartoons in Punch; the phrase "writing on the wall" was already proverbial. And writing on walls seems always to be enigmatic; the Hebrew words on Balshazzar's can be literally translated as mina, mina, shekel, half-mina, with both mina and shekel being common coins. The prophet Daniel, summoned to interpret them, decreed their significance to be "Mina, God has numbered the days of your kingdom and brought it to an end; shekel, you have been weighed on the scales and found wanting; half-mina, your kingdom is divided and given to the Medes and Persians." This was not what Balshazzar wanted to hear, no doubt, but since he was killed later the same night, he had little time to ponder it; in the proverbial sense, "writing on the wall" comes too late to be a warning, and is more of a sentence of fate. We also learn in reviewing Skewes's account of the vision, along with what survives of correspondence about it, that at least one of the Coppin children had the 'gift of tongues.' This supposed gift has to do with that given to the Apostles in the Book of Acts to speak in the tongues of many nations -- but in practice, it too means that one person speaks in "tongues" -- usually inscrutable in terms of earthly languages -- and another has the gift of interpreting these arcane utterances. So it is little surprise that we have again an enigmatic text: B.S. = P.R.I. = N.F. = S.J.F. = B.V.F.R.G.R.L.S.P.F.M.F.M., with Victory and Victoria also "frequently written." The first few clusters immediately suggest a polar voyage, with Barrow Straits, Prince Regent Inlet, and "Sir John Franklin" -- N.F. eludes me -- and as to the remaining letters, the possibilities are too numerous to count. On a later occasion, the child's ghost, asked for clarification, came forth with fuller phrases: "Erebus and Terror, Sir John Franklin, Lancaster Sound, Prince Regent Inlet, Point Victory, Victoria Channel." This seems a good deal more straightforward, and does indeed suggest a definite polar itinerary, as well as implying a passage from Prince Regent Inlet -- the Bellot Strait -- which was not yet discovered. It also, however, is problematic, as there was no "Victoria Channel" in 1849, this not having been given its name -- derived from Victory Point -- until Captain Collinson did so in 1852. This last point is certainly evidence that the 'revelation' as such was augmented and altered over time, though perhaps unintentionally. It is also, in any case, flawed in two other regards: Franklin does not appear to have ventured Prince Regent Inlet or traversed Bellot Strait -- the latter of which would have been quite tricky for ships with the draught and beam of "Erebus" and "Terror" -- and, although Weesy showed him waving his hat, he had already in fact been dead for some months. Never the less, the fact that these revelations not only played a role in Arctic discovery, but also in at least some of their particulars proved uncannily accurate, cannot be disputed. AndrésJuly 7, 2012 at 5:15 AMI´ve been squeezing my brains trying to deduce what is the meaning of "N.F." but i´ve concluded nothing. There are too "perhaps". Althought i´ve been searching thoroughly in the maps from that time I haven´t recognized any geographical feature or place with those initials.Perhaps "Near (Cape) Felix", perhaps "North Felix".But what if this is not a location, there are already two locations, "Bellot Strait" and "Prince Regent Inlet", and one name "Sir John Franklin". Perhaps it is a date or a season. We already have the "Who", "Two Where", but we don´t have any "when". Could it be "N.? February" or "N?. Fall (autumn)" an important datum to deduce where the explorers could have moved during the period of preparations for a subsequent searching exploration.ReplyDeleteAdd commentLoad more... The Londonderry Vision, Redux Amelia Earhart's Freckle Cream?
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- For Rick and David Eckstein, this series is a family affair We've Got Heart For Rick and David Eckstein, this series is a family affair David and Rick Eckstein will share the field at Nationals Park tonight, David as the San Diego Padres' second baseman and Rick as the Nationals' hitting coach. Both of them have reached their position because of one encounter a decade ago, when Rick flew to meet David, his younger brother, in Pawtucket, R.I. Said David: "It's why I'm in the major leagues right now." Said Rick: "That day, it motivates me on a daily basis with my hitters." In 2000, while playing for the Class AAA Pawtucket Red Sox, David fell into the roughest slump of his career to that point. "I could always pick up a bat and hit," David said. "I never once thought about, 'Where are my feet at? Where are my hands?' or anything like that. And then I got to Triple A and someone tried to coach me how to hit. It basically ruined me. He actually flew into town and goes, 'What are you doing? That is not you.' I was hitting .160. He actually had to teach me how I hit." Eckstein used his unique skill of imitating batting stances to explain to his brother what he felt and how he should feel at the plate. "Most hitting coaches, they only know one way, and that's how they did it," David said. "And they can't adjust to anybody else. He understands each individual player and understands what they feel." Shortly after Rick's visit, the Red Sox designated for assignment and the Angels picked him. In the final 15 games of the 2000 season playing for Class AAA Edmonton, Eckstein hit .346. In 2001, he made the Angels out of spring training. In 2002, he played shortstop for the World Series champions. When Rick flew out to help David, he was coaching at Florida, his alma mater. David's success helped spread word about Rick's ability as a coach and a teacher and paved the way for him to become a coach in the major leagues. It also gave him a lesson still uses. "I realized how fragile people are," Rick said. "When things aren't going your way, human nature, you're vulnerable. It's very important that a coach maintain a certain perspective and a certain leadership quality to make sure that person gets back on a path -- strong focus, strong commitment and confidence. ... Failure is a part of this game. How do you fail forward? How do you make mistakes that actually lead you somewhere positive?" Rick still works with David in the offseason in Florida. Several Nationals, including Ryan Zimmerman, Ian Desmond and Roger Bernadina, join them and have gotten to know David well. During this series and their meeting earlier in San Diego, the brothers and friends had to compete against one another. Said David: "It's a club that you root for. I check their box scores every day. If they're on TV, I'm watching them. It's a little bit different. It's definitely not a sibling rivalry where there's bragging rights at the end. We both want to see each other do well. It's kind of like a little bit of a tear." Said Rick: "We both have an obligation to our club. I never wish bad against any opponent. I just wish us good. That's the way I feel. When people ask me how to pitch [David], I don't resist. I give them my honest answer: 'Well, you pitch the ball off the plate, he's not going to chase it. He has a knack for fouling pitches off, so you can go deep into counts and use eight or nine pitches, or you can try to get a soft-contact out by throwing it over the plate, making sure it has a little sink, keeping it down, see if he gets himself out. He's really not going to drive the ball out of the park the other way, so you're probably better off staying away on the plate than coming in on the plate.' I tell them what I think." By Adam Kilgore | July 7, 2010; 7:15 PM ET Save & Share: Previous: Stephen Strasburg's first second-half start is still being decided Next: Game 85 discussion thread: Nationals vs. Padres Comments Nice story, best part is the sportsmanship shown by all involved, really hard to find that it seems these days, but isn't that what competing and sport are really all about? Posted by: mfowler1 | July 8, 2010 6:44 PM | Report abuse
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HR 4310 - National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 - Key Vote Read statements Dan Lungren made in this general time period. HR 4310 - National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 H Amdt 1127 - Repeals Indefinite Military Detention Provisions H Amdt 1103 - Limits Funding for War in Afghanistan to the Withdrawal of U.S. Forces H Amdt 1140 - Prohibits Reductions to Strategic Nuclear Arms Required by New START Title: National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 Signed by President Barack Obama II (81-14) - Dec. 21, 2012(Key vote) Vote to adopt a conference report that appropriates funds for fiscal year 2013 for military activities of the Department of Defense, for defense activities of the Department of Energy, and for other purposes. Prohibits the Authorization for Use of Military Force and the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 from denying the writ of habeas corpus and the right to a trial by jury to an individual inside the United States, who would have such rights in the absence of these laws (Sec. 1029). Appropriates $88.4 billion for overseas contingency operations for fiscal year 2013 (Secs. 4102, 4202, 4302, 4402, 4502, & 4602). Appropriates $17.4 billion to the Department of Energy for national security programs for fiscal year 2013 (Sec. 4701). Prohibits the use of funds appropriated by this bill for the transfer or release of individuals detained in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on or after January 20, 2009, to the United States (Sec. 1027). Prohibits the use of a military installation as a site to officiate, solemnize, or perform a marriage ceremony or marriage-like ceremony for a same-sex couple (Sec. 537). Increases the monthly basic pay rate for uniformed service members by 1.7 percent starting January 1, 2013 (Sec. 601). Limits the Army's reduction in force to no more than 15,000 members per year from 2014 to 2017 (Sec. 403). Limits the Marine Corps’ reduction in force to no more than 5,000 members per year from 2014 to 2017 (Sec. 403). Requires the following minimum numbers of service members for each branch of the military after 2013 reductions in force have occurred (Sec. 402): For the Army, 542,700; For the Navy, 322,700; For the Marine Corps, 193,500; and For the Air Force, 329,460. Requires the target for procurement contracts awarded to small businesses to be a minimum of 23 percent of procurement contracts (Sec. 1631). Requires the president to submit to Congress a certification that any international agreement concerning an International Code of Conduct for Outer Space Activities is non-binding and has no legal basis for limiting the activities of the United States in outer space (Sec. 913). Requires the Secretary of Defense to conduct a study to evaluate at least 3 possible locations in the United States that would be suited for future deployment a missile defense interceptor and requires at least 2 of the locations to be on the East Coast (Sec. 227). (315-107) - Dec. 20, 2012(Key vote) - Dec. 12, 2012 (299-120) - May 18, 2012(Key vote) Vote to pass a bill that appropriates funds for fiscal year 2013 for military activities of the Department of Defense, for defense activities of the Department of Energy, and for other purposes. Prohibits any individual who is not a United States citizen nor a member of the Armed Forces, and who is or was detained in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on or after September 11, 2001, from traveling to the United States (Sec. 1035). Increases the monthly basic pay for uniformed service members by 1.7 percent starting January 1, 2013 (Sec. 601). Limits the marine corp's reduction in force to no more than 5,000 members from 2014 to 2017 (Sec. 403). Requires the following minimum numbers of service members for each branch of the military after 2013 reductions in force have occurred (Secs. 402 & 403): Requires the target for procurement contracts awarded to small businesses to be a minimum of 25 percent of procurement contracts, whereas current law set the target at 23 percent (Sec. 1631). Prohibits the use of federal funds to implement or comply with an international agreement that limits U.S. activities in outer space, unless the agreement has been ratified by the Senate or authorized by a statute (Sec. 913). Requires the Secretary of Defense to ensure that a covered missile defense site on the East Coast of the United States is operational by December 31, 2015 (Sec. 223). Appropriates $100 million for a missile defense interceptor for the missile defense site on the East Coast (Sec. 223).
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HR 2378 - Appropriations bill FY98, Treasury, Postal Service - Key Vote HR 2378 - Appropriations bill FY98, Treasury, Postal Service HB 521 - Referendum to Revise Judicial Election Laws - Became Public Law No. 105-61 - Oct. 16, 1997 NOTE: THIS BILL WAS SIGNED AFTER A LINE ITEM VETO(S). Public Law No. 105-61 (55-45) - Oct. 1, 1997(Key vote) Title: Appropriations bill FY98, Treasury, Postal Service Vote to pass a bill appropriating $25.6 billion for the Treasury Department, Postal Service, and other uses. Requires those sponsoring political events in the White House to pay for them in advance. Requires the President's political party to maintain a balance of $25,000 for sponsorship of political events. Limits members of the Federal Election Commission to 1 six-year term. $7.8 billion for the Internal Revenue Service. $370 million for federal drug control programs, including $195 million for national youth media campaigns. $86.27 million for the Postal Service. $31.65 million for the Federal Election Commission. (220-207) - Sept. 30, 1997(Key vote) - Sept. 17, 1997 $7.64 billion for the Internal Revenue Service. - Aug. 6, 1997
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Donate QUICK LINKS: MC: Silver Spring Cell Phone Tracking Hot Jazz Big Broadcast NPR : All Things Considered Filed Under: National SecurityInternational An Open Secret: Drone Warfare In Pakistan By: Rachel Martin September 6, 2011 comments Drone warfare is now one of the most fundamental features of the U.S. battle against its enemies. Just don't ask anyone in the government to talk about it. Since 2004, the United States military has fired about 270 missiles into Pakistan, killing thousands of militants, according to the U.S. government. Dozens of so-called high-value targets have been eliminated, like al-Qaida's No. 2, who was killed in an attack last month. But since the CIA runs these attacks, they are secret. As a result, no one in the government is supposed to admit they're happening. "This is the least well-kept secret in the history of secrecy," says Peter Bergen, director of the National Security Studies Program at the New America Foundation, a think tank in Washington, D.C., which has compiled extensive data on the U.S. drone strikes. "Everybody knows these are happening. Everybody knows the Pakistanis are involved in some way. Everybody knows we're doing it," Bergen says. Dramatic Increase In Attacks The drone strikes — part of a covert U.S. war in the northwest part of Pakistan — have changed the way the U.S. fights terrorism in the decade since the attacks of Sept. 11. Started under the Bush administration, the strikes into Pakistan have increased fivefold under President Obama. Last year, there were 118. What accounts for the dramatic increase? According to former U.S. officials, the Obama administration made a decision to step up the drone campaign. The technology has gotten better — drones can now hover for days at a time. As a result, the strikes are working and key militant leaders are being killed. Peter W. Singer, director of the 21st Century Defense Initiative and a senior fellow in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, explains: "In a lot of cases, they'll track that target not just for minutes, but for hours or days, getting a pattern of life — who's coming and going from that compound, where are they? And then you get the strike," he says. And the strikes aren't just against al-Qaida's leadership. In 2008, the Bush administration broadened the campaign to include lower-ranking foot soldiers. They also started targeting groups that Pakistan saw as threats. The Obama administration did the same thing. Risk Of Backlash U.S. officials say the strikes are crucial to keeping al-Qaida off balance. But that tactical success comes at a cost. "There is the potential for backlash," notes Frances Townsend, who served as President Bush's homeland security adviser. "And in each case, you're making a policy decision about the potential gain versus those risks." One big risk is that the attacks have fueled anti-American sentiment in Pakistan. Officials there have allowed the drone operations; but at the same time, Pakistan resents the U.S. for carrying out strikes on its territory. As a result, the U.S. and Pakistan are locked in a toxic marriage where neither partner trusts the other, but walking away isn't an option. Former Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair argues it's time to make the Pakistanis an equal partner in the strikes — putting "two hands on the trigger" — so they feel more invested in the outcome. There is another problem: civilian deaths. It's unclear how many innocent people have died in the strikes — between 50 and 300, depending on who's counting. But Townsend says the secrecy of the drone campaign is a liability of sorts. Neither the U.S. nor Pakistan will admit the strikes are happening, which makes defending them almost impossible. "I do think there's an opportunity now for the administration to have, at least in a minimal way, some public discussion about the necessity of the tool, the care with which it is deployed, if we are to expect that the American people will continue to support such a program," Townsend says. Need For The 'Knockout Punch' For now, the U.S. government has no plans to ease up on the drone strikes, talk about them, or give Pakistan more say in how they're done. Far from it: A couple of months ago, a top security adviser to President Obama, Doug Lute, was asked about the drone strikes at a security conference. He said Osama bin Laden's death makes the strikes even more important. "So this is a period of turbulence in an organization which is our archenemy. This is a period, therefore, that all military doctrine suggests you need to go for the knockout punch," he said. Lute acknowledged that the U.S. does need a real partnership with Pakistan. But, he said, "I'm not ready to switch gears in the next six months when we've got a chance of a lifetime." Copyright 2011 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. Lawmakers Exercise Caution As Edward Snowden Details Come Out Analysis: Cummings Says IRS Case Resolved, Expresses Concern For NSA Issue
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Sean Taylor Remembered Sports Washington Redskins v Tampa Bay Buccaneers TAMPA - NOVEMBER 19: Sean Taylor #21 of the Washington Redskins looks on during the game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on November 19, 2006 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Matt Stroshane/Getty Images) Washington Redskins Training Camp ASBURN, VA - AUGUST 4: Safety Sean Taylor #36 of the Washington Redskins rests during Washington Redskins training camp at Redskins Park on August 4, 2004 in Ashburn, Virginia. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) 2004 AFC-NFC Hall Of Fame Game CANTON, OH - AUGUST 9: Sean Taylor #36 of the Washington Redskins intercepts a pass in the end zone from Denver Broncos quarterback Matt Mauck, intended for receiver Darius Watts #17 as Ralph Brown #22 looks on during the second quarter of the 2004 NFL Hall of Fame game on August 9, 2004 at Fawcett Stadium in Canton, Ohio. (Photo by David Maxwell/Getty Images) Washington Redskins v Detroit Lions DETROIT - NOVEMBER 7: Sean Taylor #36 of the Washington Redskins recovers an onside kick late in the fourth quarter against the Detroit Lions at Ford Field November 7, 2004 in Detroit, Michigan. The Redskins won, 17-10. (Photo by Tom Pidgeon/Getty Images) Washington Redskins v Kansas City Chiefs KANSAS CITY, MO - OCTOBER 16: Dante Hall #82 of the Kansas City Chiefs makes a catch against Sean Taylor #21 and Marcus Washington #53 of the Washington Redskins in the first half on October 16, 2005 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Larry W. Smith/Getty Images) Wild Card Game: Washington Redskins v Tampa Bay Buccaneers TAMPA, FL - JANUARY 7: Cornerback Walt Harris #27 of the Washington Redskins points toward the end zone in celebration after teammate safety Sean Taylor #21 returned a fumble by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 51 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter during the NFC Wild Card Playoff Game at Raymond James Stadium on January 7, 2006 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images) TAMPA, FL - JANUARY 7: Safety Sean Taylor #21 of the Washington Redskins recovers a fumble by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and returns the ball 51 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter during the NFC Wild Card Playoff Game at Raymond James Stadium on January 7, 2006 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images) TAMPA, FL - JANUARY 07: Safety Sean Taylor #21 of the Washington Redskins is ejected from the game for unsportsmanlike conduct by referee Mike Carey #94 in the third quarter against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during the NFC Wild Card Playoff Game at Raymond James Stadium on January 7, 2006 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Doug Benc/Getty Images)
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Firearms, Mental Health, Moral Decline: Montrose Talks Gun Control Feb 08, 2013 | 1446 views | 0 | 4 | | School Safety Is Paramount, Says Sheriff MONTROSE – Gun violence, particularly as it relates to school safety, was the advertised topic last Wednesday, Jan. 30, at the Heidi’s Deli forum and both guest speakers Montrose County Sheriff Rick Dunlap and Montrose Police Chief Tom Chin offered some possible solutions other than new gun control measures. Gun rights was the topic most in the standing-room-only crowd came to vent about. Specifically, the perceived infringement of Second Amendment rights by proposed gun regulation at both the national and state levels. “And how do you feel about the federal government coming and confiscating our weapons?” a woman standing along the wall asked at one point. “I haven’t seen any proposals like that,” Sheriff Dunlap answered. “I don’t think you’ll see it.” “It’s just a matter of time before they try,” the woman said. Dunlap began the hour by saying that the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary were “weighing heavily on everybody’s mind . . . It was the work of a deranged mind,” he Dunlap. “I can’t put my mind around it . . . But now our country is in divisiveness.” Veering between the gun-control and school-safety issues, Dunlap explained, briefly, about a “planned incident with sim[ulated] guns at Olathe High School” in December, shortly after Newtown. (Montrose Schools Superintendent Mark McHale told The Watch later that the “active shooter simulation” had been planned well before the massacre at Sandy Hook, that the district conducts one or more such exercises each year, and that it did not take place on a school day. “It was a Saturday during winter break,” he explained. Volunteer students and teachers participated along with law enforcement and “observers” from Grand Junction, who evaluated the school’s, and the cops’ response. “We considered not doing it” because of the proximity to Sandy Hook, McHale said. “But then we thought, actually, what better time?”) Dunlap told the crowd at Heidi’s that he assumed “you have read my position paper on the Second Amendment. We can’t point the finger. It’s not the guns that did it.” He then listed a couple of the things he believed did do it, and need to be addressed, locally as well as nationwide: the miserable state of mental health care and treatment (“Our jails cannot handle the problem,” he said.), and the proliferation of violent video in America. “I haven’t seen one word on violent movies and video games. Anybody seen the new Hansel and Gretel movie? It’s certainly not the Hansel and Gretel I read! We have got to be responsible and say no to our kids watching this stuff. “We need a cooling off period,” he said. “Right now we’re operating off of a lot of emotion. We should not enact laws that either go against the constitution, or are not enforceable.” Chin then took the microphone and a reassuring tone vis-à-vis the schools. “We’re a lot safer today than we were two months ago,” he said. “We still have a lot to do, but school safety is on everyone’s minds. I think we have something very good happening right now. “We need to be talking about the criminal,” Chin said. “We have a lot of issues to sort out. I’m not sure gun control is one of them.” He went on to deliver a litany of facts about mass shooters: 96 percent are male; 98 percent act alone (“It’s very difficult to identify them ahead of time,” Chin said.); the attacks are dynamic and quick – 2.6 deaths per minute, 8 minutes average from start to finish. “You really are the eyes and ears,” Chin said to the crowd. “If you know about anyone, anybody who you think might be a threat . . . If we can intervene before any kind of incident, we can interrupt before anything bad happens.” McHale had not planned to speak at the forum, but he was asked by the sheriff to comment. “It’s been a rough couple of months,” the district’s top man said. “I was a school principal when Columbine happened. There’s not one answer we can agree on to make our schools safer. Do we make them like an airport [with airport screening]? Do we bring in armed volunteers? Do we arm our teachers? Do we have armed security guards? “The answer is the community coming together and talking and taking a commonsense approach. And this will all take time and money.” Someone in the audience mentioned the Watchdog Program, which McHale confirmed had been a great success, particularly at the Oak Grove School: “Dads, granddads, mentors in the hallways, on the sports fields, teaching sportsmanship, etc., etc.” “Are they armed?” came an audience question. “No, that would be illegal,” McHale said. “Wouldn’t it be nice if we went back to our knees and came back to God?” said another voice in the crowd. Another voice said, “I believe [Colorado] Senate Bill 9 is in committee now and would allow teachers to carry firearms.” To which Sheriff Dunlap responded: “Do I think every teacher should be armed? No.” He also said he thought the bill had failed. Chin added: “There are people who shouldn’t have a firearm. The last thing we want to do is create a problem when we’re trying to do something good.” The woman who had voiced her worry about the inevitability of weapons confiscation spoke up again. “Our country is in moral decline. You have a federal government filled with morally declined people. Nothing gives them the right to take our guns.” At which point forum stalwart Tricia Dickinson had to close the hour-long discussion. pshelton@watchnewspapers.com So Far in 2014, Marijuana Offenses in Line With Last Year’s Figures Ag Water Through Tunnel to Return in Early April Accident Claims Life of Soldier Working in Montrose, Injuries Another
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Bestselling Books Test Prep New Release Movies Ebooks Foreign Language Materials Video Games Audiobooks Portable Tech (like ereaders, makey makeys) Something not listed here Leave this field blank Room 1 You are currently logged in as . Not you? Login here. Date * Empty 'End date' values will use the 'Start date' values. Month * Day * Hour * Minute * Agree * I agree to the study rooms policy Leave this field blank April 2014 « Prev Next » S M T W T F S 30 31 1 2 3 4 5 Christine Room 1 10:15 AM to 11:45 AM William Room 1 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM John Chen Room 1 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM Adam Room 1 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM Kevin R. Room 1 9:00 AM to 9:30 AM Ben Kessel Room 1 10:15 AM to 10:30 AM Ben Kessel Room 1 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM Ben Kessel Room 1 11:30 AM to 12:15 PM Roger Room 1 4:15 PM to 6:15 PM Susan Room 1 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM kaplan Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Kat Room 1 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Nancy Room 1 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM Ramneeda Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Mary Room 1 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Clifton Room 1 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM Abby Room 1 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM Marisa Room 1 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Anna P Room 1 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Clifton Room 1 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM Adam Room 1 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM Clifton Room 1 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM Robin Room 1 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Dennis F. Room 1 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM Mariya Room 1 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM kaplan Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Joe Room 1 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Vera Room 1 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM Jack Room 1 4:00 PM to 5:15 PM David Room 1 6:15 PM to 7:00 PM Adam Room 1 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM kaplan Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM roman.argelis Room 1 1:30 PM to 3:30 PM Sangeeta Room 1 4:30 PM to 5:30 PM Tracy Room 1 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM Susan Room 1 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM Lauren Room 1 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM William Room 1 11:45 AM to 1:45 PM Heather Room 1 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Steve Room 1 3:30 PM to 5:30 PM Carrie Room 1 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM Karen R. Room 1 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM Deborah Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Carla Room 1 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM Clifton Room 1 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM Najat Room 1 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM Heather Room 1 9:15 AM to 9:45 AM mark Room 1 9:45 AM to 10:45 AM steve p. Room 1 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Elizabeth Room 1 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM Adam Room 1 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM Charlotte S. Room 1 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM Aurhur Room 1 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Hana Room 1 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM Jason Room 1 3:00 PM to 4:30 PM Corina Garden Room 1 4:30 PM to 6:30 PM Mariya Room 1 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM Pat Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Nick Room 1 11:45 AM to 1:45 PM Carolyn H. Room 1 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Jason Room 1 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM Jean Room 1 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM Johannah Room 1 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM Adam Room 1 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM Kevin Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Jennifer L. Room 1 3:45 PM to 5:45 PM Susan Room 1 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM Paula Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Clifton Room 1 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Nancy Room 1 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM Deborah Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Carla Room 1 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM Erin Room 1 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM Juliette Room 1 3:30 PM to 5:30 PM Kylie Sparks Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Charlotte Room 1 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM Corina Room 1 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Joe M. Room 1 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Johannah Room 1 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM Susan Room 1 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM Paula Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM CV Room 1 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Nancy Room 1 6:30 PM to 8:30 PM Raisa Room 1 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM Heather Room 1 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Charlotte Room 1 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM 27 28 29 30 1 2 3 stevelatter Room 1 2:15 PM to 3:45 PM Adam Room 1 3:45 PM to 5:00 PM Joe Room 1 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM Ginny Room 1 3:45 PM to 4:45 PM Johannah Room 1 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM Susan Room 1 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM Watertown Free Public Library123 Main Street | Watertown, Massachusetts 02472
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← MUGS GONE WILD: New Translation Coffee Mug In search of … THE VORTEX → NCR’s latest Magical Liturgical Mystery Tour Posted on 2 September 2010 by Fr. John Zuhlsdorf On the site of the National Catholic Fishwrap, Eugene Kennedy, ex-priest and humanistic psychologist, attacks the "reform of the reform". He is actually attacking the new translation of the Roman Missal. His piece is so turgid that it is hard to know just what he is driving at. I caught in the first part that he thinks that those who created and issued the new translation were reacting to a perceived ill in the Church which, in Kennedy’s opinion, doesn’t actually exist. The new translation is being peddled as snake oil. In any event, what are we to make of this. Read it slowly: "Joseph Campbell termed this massive tear in the fabric of life as "Mythic Dissociation." When this occurs we find ourselves in what poet T.S. Eliot describes as The Waste Land. This basic estrangement from any feeling for the mystical energy of the church as the Sacramentum Mundi, the mystical mirror in which the beleaguered world can see a reflection of its profound longings and strivings, can be observed in the way the sacraments are almost exclusively discussed. They are spoken of as static objects to be regulated rather than living symbols to be celebrated." Mystical energy? What would that be? Mystical mirror? Do we really want to turn to Joseph Campbell in this matter? Beyond the fact that this is sheer gobbledygook, note that Kennedy’s notion of liturgy and liturgy language closes us in on ourselves. It is entirely immanent. Don’t be distracted by the sprinkling of "mystical" in there. The Beatles did that too, in 1967. I think Kennedy’s thought is more closely aligned with that than with The Waste Land. There is absolutely NOTHING transcendent about Kennedy’s view. His liturgical vision is a a reflection of the world’s "strivings". For Kennedy, the rites must be constantly adapted to our needs. Fellow travelers, such as His Excellency Bp. Trautman, believe that liturgical language should be constantly adapted to common parlance and be made immediately comprehensible. Their approach makes our rites into reflections of ourselves, self-enclosed gazing at ourselves. There is no salvation in me or in you. Kennedy criticizes the new translation. "The new texts, in effect, split our everyday experience of struggling to work and to love from their sacramental symbolization in the renewed liturgy of Vatican II." No surprise there. What does surprise is that, at the same time, he is really defending the old, lame-duck texts. Over and against the new text, Kennedy would retain the lame-duck translation which includes such sparkling gems as this, which appears on the 19th Sunday of Ordinary Time. We need the Latin first. Super Oblata: LATIN (2002 Missale Romanum): Ecclesiae tuae, Domine, munera placatus assume, quae et misericors offerenda tribuisti, et in nostrae salutis potenter efficis transire mysterium. Now, in offering next a literal version I am not saying that we should pray this way! Read this for content, not the clunky style of a … SLAVISH and CLUNKY LITERAL TRANSLATION: O Lord, having been appeased take unto yourself the gifts of your Church which you both mercifully bestowed as things to be offered as sacrifices and you mightily are causing to transform into the mysterious sacrament of our salvation. Now look at the … Lame-Duck ICEL: God of power, giver of the gifts we bring, accept the offering of your Church and make it the sacrament of our salvation. This isn’t just bad translation. This is insidious distortion. Again, it isn’t that the people at ICEL back in the day didn’t know how to translate the Latin correctly. They didn’t want to translate the Latin correctly. They understood the Latin content and they rejected it. They eliminated the concept of sacrifice entirely. They didn’t like the idea of an God to be appeased, which is at the heart of what Sacrifice is for. Mystery is banished Mercy is ignored. The gifts are all about us. You take away from the ICEL version that we actually deserve something from our partner-God, who will do her part after we do ours. The Latin, however, tells you something very different. This, friends, is why Liturgiam authenticam was issued. Let’s review: 19. The words of the Sacred Scriptures, as well as the other words spoken in liturgical celebrations, especially in the celebration of the Sacraments, are not intended primarily to be a sort of mirror of the interior dispositions of the faithful; rather, they express truths that transcend the limits of time and space. Indeed, by means of these words God speaks continually with the Spouse of his beloved Son, … 20. The Latin liturgical texts of the Roman Rite, while drawing on centuries of ecclesial experience in transmitting the faith of the Church received from the Fathers, are themselves the fruit of the liturgical renewal, just recently brought forth. In order that such a rich patrimony may be preserved and passed on through the centuries, it is to be kept in mind from the beginning that the translation of the liturgical texts of the Roman Liturgy is not so much a work of creative innovation as it is of rendering the original texts faithfully and accurately into the vernacular language. While it is permissible to arrange the wording, the syntax and the style in such a way as to prepare a flowing vernacular text suitable to the rhythm of popular prayer, the original text, insofar as possible, must be translated integrally and in the most exact manner, without omissions or additions in terms of their content, and without paraphrases or glosses. Any adaptation to the characteristics or the nature of the various vernacular languages is to be sober and discreet. Kennedy wants us to look into our own little pond and see ourselves reflected. The Latin prayer wants to bring us to an understanding of pardon, propitiation, Sacrifice, mystery outside ourselves. You decide. Technorati Tags: Eugene Kennedy, Liturgiam authenticam, NCR o{]:¬) View all posts by Fr. John Zuhlsdorf → This entry was posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Translation, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, Throwing a Nutty, WDTPRS and tagged Eugene Kennedy, Liturgiam authenticam, NCR. Bookmark the permalink. ← MUGS GONE WILD: New Translation Coffee Mug 17 Responses to NCR’s latest Magical Liturgical Mystery Tour Melody Faith says: 2 September 2010 at 1:13 pm It’s funny that he quotes Joseph Campbell. In the PBS series, “The Power of Myth”, Campbell laments the Catholic Church’s abandoning Latin for the vernacular in the liturgy. In his opinion, it diminished the apparent transcendence of the mass. TNCath says: 2 September 2010 at 1:37 pm Ironically, Eugene Kennedy, Father Richard McBrien, Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, and all the other “columnists” for the NCR have become the new reactionary fringe of the Church. The only exception to this list is John Allen, who comes under regular criticism from readers for being a “Vatican supporter” and a “papal sympathizer.” While Dr. Kennedy and company certainly continue to do damage to the Church, their influence is becoming less and less, and they know it. That’s why they are throwing caution to the wind and simply saying anything and everything that comes to mind off the tops of their heads, “full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” Mariana says: 2 September 2010 at 2:08 pm Sorry, but The Who’s “Teenage wasteland, it’s only teenage wasteland…” is what keeps ringing in my head…. Dave N. says: 2 September 2010 at 2:30 pm I agree that secularism is a symptom, not a cause. I think the new missal translation is like trying to clean up after a flood with roll of paper towels; it’s admirable they are trying, but… No one quotes Joseph Campbell any more. His work has been discredited as an attempt to universalize various non-universal phenomena. And finally, I assume the above photo is a prescient scene from an upcoming U.K. papal Mass? Rich says: 2 September 2010 at 2:30 pm TS Eliot’s “Wasteland” also presents sympathy for abortion and portrays truly regenerative and fecund female sexuality as that which allows the woman to do whatever she wants with her body (see the second part of PART II of the poem: “A Game of Chess”. I wonder if this priest would like to maintain the old, shabby “translation” for its weak ability to lift our minds and hearts to God – so that we still feel like we can do anything we want with and in the liturgy, thus perpetuating and reinforcing the sense that we can do anything else we want in other areas of our lives in which we live out our faith. M Heller says: 2 September 2010 at 2:43 pm This gobbledygook reminds me of what I was “taught” in religious ed. through the late 60′s and early 70′s. It still gets me irritated. Do they even know what they’re talking about? Or are they intentionally trying to confuse so that we will say , “Oh, they’re so smart…I’m too stupid to understand what they mean.” robtbrown says: 2 September 2010 at 2:51 pm It’s funny that he quotes Joseph Campbell. In the PBS series, “The Power of Myth”, Campbell laments the Catholic Church’s abandoning Latin for the vernacular in the liturgy. In his opinion, it diminished the apparent transcendence of the mass. Comment by Melody Faith He also had no use for versus populum celebration, comparing it (as does Gamber) to a TV cooking show. Nathan says: 2 September 2010 at 3:00 pm Oh, my. Kennedy’s entire argument is based on his unsubstantiated assertions about the motives of those implementing the new translation, not on any merit of the translations themselves. How on earth does the current version, with its deliberate mistranslation of the texts of the Holy Mass, provide “the energy of a sacramental system to ground them in and guide them through the mysterium tremendum et fascinans (the overwhelming and enthralling mystery) of existence,” even if that concept were not completely immanent? Are the advocates of rupture really grasping at straws as much as this article appears to? SonofMonica says: 2 September 2010 at 3:13 pm After reading all the drivel in the combox over there, I’ve decided most of them are probably Episcopalians at heart, if not in membership. I’m quite sure of it, actually. One thing I can’t figure out is why these folks seem to need Rome’s approval for what they want to do (women’s ordination, lay presidency, gender-neutral liturgy, etc.). If they don’t believe what Rome teaches, then why don’t they just go do what they want…
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Convoy, OH 45832 > Convoy Desktop Products Terms of Use Earth Networks, Inc. WEATHERBUG END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT CAREFULLY READ THE FOLLOWING TERMS AND CONDITIONS. THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS ARE ACCEPTED BY DOWNLOADING/USING THE SERVICES. Please read the following terms and conditions before using the WeatherBug website, WeatherBug desktop applications, the WeatherBug Plus application or the various WeatherBug mobile applications (individually, the “Software” and collectively the "Services") provided by Earth Networks, Inc. ("EN") for use as stand-alone products or in conjunction with EN websites and related services. If you do not agree with these terms, do not install or use the Services. EN has the right at any time to change or discontinue any of the Services or any aspect or feature of the Services, including, without limitation, the content, hours of availability, and equipment needed for access or use of the Services. 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related storiesArmstrong helpers unveiledBrailsford quits GB roleBrailsford quits GB roleSwift takes big Basque winOptimism ahead of Giro raceGesink set for heart operationTweet22 January 2013, 17:12Houanard given two-year ban The International Cycling Union (UCI) has announced that French rider Steve Houanard has been given a two-year ban following a positive test for EPO. The banned blood-boosting drug was found in Houanard's system after an out-of-competition test in September of last year. Houanard, who was a member of the Ag2r-La Mondiale team at the time, has signed a document accepting the sanction. The UCI has also asked the Belgian Cycling Federation (RVLB) to open disciplinary procedures against Leif Hoste based on the blood profile of his biological passport. "Mr Hoste shall be accorded the right to the presumption of innocence until a final decision has been made on this matter," the UCI said. "In accordance with the World Anti-Doping Code and the UCI Anti-Doping Rules, the UCI is unable to provide any additional information at this time." The Belgian, who has twice finished second in the Tour of Flanders, announced his retirement from professional cycling at the end of last year.Tweetarticle372406advertisement
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BackgroundProducts and ServicesHow IBRD is FinancedIBRD ResultsFrequently Asked Questions Available in: العربية, Questions:What is IBRD?How does it pursue its goals?Where does IBRD get the money to finance projects in developing countries?Who pays for IBRD's operating expenses?Which countries are eligible to be IBRD clients?Why do middle income countries still turn to IBRD?How strong is the demand for IBRD services from its clients?Answers:What is IBRD?One of five institutions that make up the World Bank Group, the IBRD is structured something like a cooperative owned and operated for the benefit of its member countries. Founded in 1944, it is the part of the World Bank that works with middle-income and creditworthy poorer countries to promote sustainable, equitable and job-creating growth; to reduce poverty; and to address issues of regional and global concern. IBRD's 24-member Board is made up of 5 appointed and 19 elected Executive Directors who represent its 187 member countries.How does it pursue its goals?IBRD helps members achieve results by delivering financial products, knowledge and technical services and strategic advice, while using its capacity to call members together to discuss ways to further their specific development objectives. It strives to increase its impact in middle-income countries by working closely with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA); capitalizing on middle-income countries' own accumulated knowledge and development experiences; working closely with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other multilateral development banks; and collaborating with foundations, civil society partners and donors in the development community.Where does IBRD get the money to finance projects in developing countries?IBRD gets its money from the capital markets. Investors see IBRD bonds as a safe and profitable place to put their money and their cash finances projects in middle-income countries. Annual funding volumes vary from year to year, and are currently around $10-15 billion. The World Bank has become one of the most established borrowers on the world's capital markets since issuing its first bond in 1947 to finance the reconstruction of Europe after World War Two. It has had a triple A rating since 1959.Who pays for IBRD's operating expenses?IBRD covers its operating expenses primarily out of its income. IBRD's earns an income every year from the return on its equity and from the small margin it makes on lending. This pays for IBRD's operating expenses, goes into reserves to strengthen the balance sheet and also provides an annual transfer to the International Development Association (IDA). IBRD has raised the bulk of the money loaned by the World Bank to alleviate poverty around the world. This has been done at a relatively low cost to taxpayers, with governments paying in $11 billion in capital since 1946 to generate more than $400 billion in loans.Which countries are eligible to be IBRD clients?IBRD clients are middle-income and credit-worthy lower income countries. The Bank classifies a country according to the wealth of its population. Middle-income countries are defined as having a per capita income of between around US$1,000 and US$10,000, which may qualify them to borrow from IBRD. Low-income countries with a per capita income of less than $1,000 usually do not qualify for IBRD loans unless they are creditworthy. However, low-income countries are eligible to receive low or no interest loans and grants from IDA. India, Indonesia and Pakistan are examples of creditworthy low-income countries which are eligible for a blend of financial assistance from both IBRD and IDA.Why do middle income countries still turn to IBRD?Middle-income countries that are served by IBRD have made enormous economic strides in the last few years but they still face daunting challenges to reduce poverty to meet the Millennium Development Goals, which set specific targets to be met by 2015. These countries account for two-thirds of the world's population and are home to more than 70% of the developing world's poor people who live on less than $2 a day. . While private capital flows have risen substantially, this flow has been concentrated in a limited number of countries. Only a minority of middle-income countries can be regarded as established bond market borrowers able to access the market regularly at a stable cost. Other countries within the group have only sporadic access or none at all. Therefore, the majority of middle-income countries continue to rely on IBRD to mobilize investments in infrastructure, health, education, clean energy and the environment. IBRD helps clients gain access to capital and financial risk management tools in larger volumes, on better terms, at longer maturities, and in a more sustainable manner than they could receive from other sources. Unlike commercial banks, IBRD is driven by development impact rather than profit maximization. IBRD has also supported middle-income countries in times of crisis when their access to capital has dried up.How strong is the demand for IBRD services from its clients?Some middle-income countries no longer see the need for significant financial support from IBRD, because they have large foreign currency reserves and are in a good budget position. However, others still have large investment needs that include funds for public infrastructure projects and social services. Increasingly, IBRD is meeting the more sophisticated demands of its middle-income clients by proviiding financial services that protect them against exchange and interest rate risks and the turbulence of the commodity markets. In fiscal 2007, it carried out $5.4 billion in interest rate and currency risk management transactions on behalf of its members. In the same period, IBRD committed $12.8 billion for 112 projects. The Bank assists client countries not only through its finance but also by providing access to its development knowledge resources. The Bank's knowledge activities range from conducting country research, to developing analytic and conceptual frameworks for country assistance, to building the capacity for sustainable development within client countries. Permanent URL for this page: http://go.worldbank.org/YX2261GMX0
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Raditude Posted by popzoom on February 14, 2011 at 4:24pm in All Things Weezer Okay, what is the deal with this album? Why does everyone hate it? Am I the only one who appreciates the rockin' riff of "Let It All Hang Out", the cool beat and lyrics of "Trippin' Down The Freeway", the awesome buildup and heart-filled lyrics of "Put Me Back Together", the great tune of "The Girl Got Hot", and the classic "I Want You To"? Why all the hate? Please give me specific reasons, not "this album is a piece of s***". Please explain. Thanks, and I don't care if you guys hate it, just wondering why. For the few who like this album, what is your favorite song? Mine is "Put Me Back Together" Tags: Permalink Reply by johnny rockets on February 16, 2011 at 4:09pm agree on the Maladroit comment but whoa whoa The Angel and The One, Pork and Beans, Greatest Man, and Dreamin' alone annihilate everything on Raditude. Even the power of Prettiest Girl on Rad deluxe is no match for Sweeney, Pig, and Spider. The Red era contains some of Weezer's best tracks post-pinkerton period. That said, Cold Dark World and the exclusion of said deluxe tracks don't allow Red to overtake Make Believe as 3rd best. Indiekid said: Its not Weezer at their best, but there are songs which are really good (Put me back together, i want you to and trippin down the freeway to name a few). It is far better than Maladroit and is probably better than Red IMO Permalink Reply by Gohi on February 16, 2011 at 4:14pm Red has some of Weezer's all-time best songs. Not just Post-Pink but in general. Miss Sweeney, Dreamin', The Greatest Man, The Spider, The Angel and The One... could have easily been the 3rd best Weezer album (if not 2nd best... offensive statement, maybe, but oh well). Permalink Reply by Grace Kiser on February 16, 2011 at 5:53pm Yeah i agree. I don't get why so many people say that track is horrible. I guess it's just because it's different than what Weezer normally does. Or maybe they just hate lil Wayne, which i do but i've still got nothing against the song. Jordan said: Indeed, I've been liking it more and more lately.Dylan Avnet said: I think Can't Stop Partying is super underrated too. Permalink Reply by Grace Kiser on February 16, 2011 at 5:54pm Yes super agreed! especially the cover! teehee! Hugh Lovric said: i really like it i think it was a amazing album Permalink Reply by Next big thing on February 16, 2011 at 5:55pm I love "Put me back together" as well as "I'm your daddy" and " If your wondering if I want you to, I want you to". Permalink Reply by Next big thing on February 16, 2011 at 5:58pm alumb. (sir kittens bieber correction) sir kittens bieber ♥ said: alumb. The dreWid said: I like it, but it's still the worst weezer alumb. Permalink Reply by Trudy Truelove on February 16, 2011 at 9:42pm UGH. I hate all the "pure" Weezer fans who say Raditude is a piece of s*** and a "disgrace" to the band. The songs are so fun! I think they should take the time to appreciate some of the great tracks on it. The Underdogs is such a moving song. I'm sad to see it go over looked so often :P Permalink Reply by Christian Salamy on February 17, 2011 at 12:37am i really like the album too, idk why so many people hate it. my favs are probably i want you to and let it all hang out Permalink Reply by MrFrenchDog on February 17, 2011 at 2:19am Even though raditude may be one of the most shallow albums, that doesn't neccisserily mean it's bad. Maladroit, i love, it's a great album. Although Maladroit is also a shallow album, i still love it. It's the same for Raditude, i like it. That being said Rad is my least favourite weezer album, but that's just a matter of comparison, i do still like rad. Although it's probably true that the best weezer songs have lyrics that actually mean something to Rivers. I don't know how far things would improve with Rivers writing words that actually mean something to him now, it's probably a lot harder to do now that he's happier, which is good for him, it would be selfish to want him to be depressed just for some potentially better songs. Permalink Reply by Robert Hill on February 17, 2011 at 4:44am I agree. I was just gonna say something along the same lines. It's weird the way some people get up on their high horse over it, or are apparently 'offended' by the album. Even the most ardent of Raditude haters still accept there's (at least) a few good tracks, so how can it be wholly bad? It's a good record. Get a grip and get over it ffs. All groups' output varies over long periods, no matter who or how good they are, we're talking about a group that had been around well over 15 years at the inception of Raditude as a record! I personally think Hurley is probably so good because the album before it was Raditude. Things change, deal with it. Trudy Truelove said: UGH. I hate all the "pure" Weezer fans who say Raditude is a piece of s*** and a "disgrace" to the band. The songs are so fun! I think they should take the time to appreciate some of the great tracks on it. The Underdogs is such a moving song. I'm sad to see it go over looked so often :P Permalink Reply by Gohi on February 17, 2011 at 7:13am Guys, this is a discussion forum. Don't get bent out of shape about other people's honest thoughts or opinions. Also, I hope you don't lump my or johnny rockets' post in with the "haters" just because we don't like the album, because we were both respectful and constructive. Permalink Reply by johnny rockets on February 17, 2011 at 11:14am Like Gohi said, we're not haters. Personally, I was really looking forward to Raditude when it was announced. I had very high hopes that Rivers could hone his pop-rock writing craft with individuals who have a history of producing Top 40 hits. This isn't about thinking 90's Weezer is the one "true" Weezer. The band (and Rivers) take many shapes and forms. Each album is unique in its style and approach. That is something I've always appreciated about this band. The fact of the matter is Raditude is a complete disappointment on all fronts. I love watching bands evolve and change over time, because I am too. However, when my favorite band is writing songs that show a regression in their abilities, I can't sit still. If Rivers wants to be a hit machine, that's fine as long as the songs are good. But Raditude was a terrible direction. For a man who we all know can develop melodies that rival Paul McCartney and Brian Wilson and write lyrics that are both clever and thoughtful, for a band we know are collectively and individually (see The Space Twins, The Relationship, Special Goodness) musically capable of producing classic tracks, Raditude is beyond underwhelming. I don't want this band to create another Blue or Pinkerton. In fact Make Believe, Red, and Hurley (despite the missteps because they are there) all show that there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Rivers doesn't have to be depressed to write good songs. The last thing I want is for the man to be a reclusive hermit again. I want him to actually write about his daughter without mutating it into a song about picking up younger chicks or socks. I want him to write genuine songs showing his affection for his wife for once. Of course he doesn't have to be limited to just those topics. But when Rivers writes from the point of view of a 14 year old (even if I do kinda enjoy that stupid daydreaming about ice cream song) or leopard handbags or chicklets, I've gotta draw a line somewhere. Rivers always had a way of being immature in his lyrics, but at least they were witty back then. There's also the issue with the lack of solos and variety in song arrangements. Something like Blowin' My Stack isn't the most poetic thing, but it's fun and interesting as hell. That breakdown and that scream is something that has been missing in Weezer for a long time. But hey does any of this ruined the experience of being a Weezer fan? No. I'm still here, on 2 different Weezer message boards no less. I've been a fan for 13 years and I don't plan on stopping. This isn't about being one type of fan or another. This is about critiquing Weezer's output and pointing on what I enjoy and find brilliant, and what i find terribly embarrassing and facepalm worthy. All I want from this band is to produce an album with great songs from tracks 1 through 10 again and for them, as well as the fans, to be happy with the final product. Michael Rowland (Gohi) said: Guys, this is a discussion forum. Don't get bent out of shape about other people's honest thoughts or opinions. Also, I hope you don't lump my or johnny rockets' post in with the "haters" just because we don't like the album, because we were both respectful and constructive.
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2011/10/08 our friend Mikey Welsh 1971-2011 R.I.P. Posted by karl koch [karlophone] on October 8, 2011 at 11:26pm Mikey Welsh 1971-2011 Dear friends and fans, It saddens me and the guys in Weezer so much to say that our beautiful, creative, hilarious and sweet friend Mikey Welsh has passed away at the very young age of 40. A unique talent, a deeply loving friend and father, and a great artist is gone, but we will never forget him. His chapter in the weezer story ('98 - '01) was vital, essential, wild, and amazing. Mikey was never one to shy away from the absurd, dangerous or strange, and he did so with a gusto few others had. No one had quite the stage presence of Mikey, nor have there been many who pulled the types of shenanigans he did at shows. If it rocked, he had to try it - and he always found a way to pull it off. When he emerged from his nervous breakdown that spelled his exit from the rock n roll world, he took on a new role as an astonishing and pure visual artist. It was a glorious flowering of a talent he always possessed, but he had chosen to rock out first, paint later. Our more recent meet-ups at weezer shows, including recently at the Weezer/Flaming Lips show at Jones Beach were always a great time. We will miss him terribly. Our deepest heartfelt condolences go out to his family and friends. The world has lost a truly one of a kind guy....Tomorrow we play the RIOTfest in Chicago as planned - Mikey was planning on attending this show and we were looking forward to seeing him again. As sad as it is to think about, we know Mikey would never want the rock stopped on his account - quite the contrary in fact. While we wont see him, we know he will be there rocking out with us!Mikey's website: see his art.Mikey's Facebook page - see more art, and his writings - including some wild weez related stories from back in the day...Mikeys Twitter page."...hello hello.. so i'm going on my first vacation in quite a long time.. very stoked.. first i'm off to nashville, to be photographed working on a big painting by a very good friend of mine [we'll get some shots up here eventually] .. and then off to chicago, to see the mighty =w= rock out.. i'm excited to see the boys, hang out and have some fun.. so everyone take care.. i'll be posting some weird random sh*t up here [as usual] over the next 9 days or so..... love--m." ---from Mikeys Facebook page, 10/01/11 Photo above taken in Nashville October 3rd by Mikey's friend Jordan Vittitow. Views: 49553 Comment by Fernando R M on October 10, 2011 at 9:47am sad Comment by Jeffrey Watts on October 9, 2011 at 10:16pm Very sorry to hear the news. My prayers go out to Mikey's family and friends, and of course to Karl and the boys in weezer. I'm sure this is a very tough time. Thanks Mikey, you are already missed. Comment by Karrie Jean Hooten on October 9, 2011 at 9:19pm So sorry for the loss. My condolensces to the members of Weezer and the Weezer community and fanbase. Comment by rwaeceezcearr on October 9, 2011 at 9:04pm Comment by Zac Ross on October 9, 2011 at 4:17pm Poor Mikey. Has the family provided any address where flowers can be sent or a charity where donations can be made? Comment by rwaeceezcearr on October 9, 2011 at 2:54pm Farewell Mikey. Comment by Daniel A. Glaser on October 9, 2011 at 2:09pm My condolences to you and all the guys in Weezer, as well as to all the fans. I'm going to listen to green on steady repeat for the rest of the day along with the singles from green in his memory. Mikey kept the band going after Matt left, and his contribution was great, although for a very short time. Weezer has had three excellent bassists, and each has given his own style and twist to the band. Goodbye to Mikey, you meant a lot to many people. Comment by AcrossTheWeb on October 9, 2011 at 8:55am RIP Mikey. :( Comment by Ricky Bureau on October 9, 2011 at 8:52am Videos of Mikey always made me smile, he seemed like such an awesome guy, why do all of the good musicians die young. :( Comment by Stefan on October 9, 2011 at 7:26am This is so depressing. Rest in peace Mikey, you will be missed. ‹ Previous
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« Valentine's Day Library announces programs...» New Cumberland race heating up Three have filed for mayor's seat February 15, 2013 By STEPHEN HUBA - For The Weirton Daily Times (shuba@reviewonline.com) Save | Post a comment | NEW CUMBERLAND - An interesting political season may be in the offing now that three people have filed to run for mayor of the Hancock County seat. New Cumberland city elections, held every two years, are scheduled for May 14 and will decide the mayor's race and three city council races. Incumbent Mayor Richard Blackwell, 71, said he will run for re-election. He will face 1st Ward Councilman Pat Jones and political newcomer Linda McNeil, 71, president of the Hancock County Museum Commission. In city council, only one race is contested; Ward 1, Seat C, which will pit incumbent Brian Webster, 47, against Melissa Perkins, 48. Ward 2 incumbents Shawn Marks, 63, and Judith Bartley are both running unopposed. Ward 2, Seat B Councilman Jack "Art" Watson is not running for re-election, and no one filed for that seat by the Jan. 26 deadline, so the vacancy will have to be filled by mayoral appointment, City Clerk Tammy Jenkins said. New Cumberland has two wards, each of which has three council seats. Council members serve four-year terms, but the terms are staggered so that there are elections for some seats every two years. "There's never a total replacement of council," said Blackwell, a former councilman who was appointment mayor in May 2011 after the resignation of Mayor Joe Sargent. Council members who serve by mayoral appointment must run for election after two years, Jenkins said. In the mayoral race, Blackwell will have a two-year record to run on. Previously, he served on city council "on and off" since 1973. McNeil, a retired registered nurse, said she decided to run for mayor because "I see some issues in the town that I think I have the ability to help correct. ... We're a good little town, and we are a good place for businesses to come to. I think I have some experience ... that would help me work on that part of it." McNeil said she has successfully worked with local government officials in her capacity as museum commission president. Jones, who brings his city council experience to the mayor's race, could not be reached for comment. In the one contested city council race, Perkins said she decided to run because "there needs to be some changes in the city government. There's just too many things pushed through because nobody wants to differ with anybody." A bookkeeper at the Hancock County Sheltered Workshop, Perkins served on council for two months in 2011. She was appointed to Blackwell's vacated seat in May of that year but had to relinquish it when Jones was elected and took office in July. Council terms run from July 1, the start of the fiscal year. Webster, concluding the end of his second term, comes from a family with a history of public service. His father, William Webster, was both Hancock County sheriff and New Cumberland police chief. His grandfather, John D. Herron, was New Cumberland justice of the peace. "I was just real interested in the city. I just wanted to help the city as much as I could," he said. A retired truck driver, Marks is finishing a two-year stint on council and is hoping to be elected to his first full term. "I'm enjoying the ride," he said. Bartley, who could not be reached for comment, assumed her seat in November 2011 for the resigning Bob Mills. A drawing for the order in which candidates' names will appear on the ballot will be held on Tuesday. There are an estimated 900 registered voters in New Cumberland. (Huba can be contacted at shuba@reviewonline.com) Save | Post a comment | Subscribe to Weirton Daily Times Weirton Weather Forecast, WV
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Share 'The Prince Zine' The Prince Zine is finally here. Readings and dance parties in celebration have come to pass and now it's on sale to everyone across the lands. "A two-year long, 60 page, research zine into the artist currently known as Prince. The Symbol, the Jehovah's Witnesses, sexuality, the PMRC, his protégés, his films, his relationship with the industry, his early life, The Revolution, the New Power Genera…
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In Russia, Modern 'Revolution' Comes At Its Own Pace Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By David Greene Originally published on Thu January 12, 2012 10:08 am Listen The Russian village of Sagra has been in the headlines since last summer, when residents — including 56-year-old Viktor Gorodilov (shown here) — successfully fought off an armed criminal gang that they say threatened their community. For many Russians, Sagra has become a symbol of how they say the government has let them down. David Gilkey Russia had one of the world's most famous revolutions nearly a century ago, in 1917. Yet for centuries, the country has seemed to prefer strong leaders who promised stability rather than revolutionary change. On a trip across Russia today on the Trans-Siberian railroad, NPR's David Greene found many Russians who expressed disappointment with their current government. But most said they wanted changes to be gradual, and were not looking for a major upheaval. Second of three parts In 1941, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin carried out his plan to build a reservoir along the Volga River. Thousands of people were ordered to move their homes or face being submerged. One of the towns that faced flooding was Mologa, where some villagers took their homes apart, log by log, piled them on rafts, and moved them to safer locations. Among the former residents of Mologa was Maria Kuvshinnikova. She was 20 in 1941 and remembers people helping each other dismantle their homes, piling belongings onto rafts, and moving to higher ground. "When taking the houses apart, they marked each log," she says. "They had everything on these rafts — utensils, domestic animals, cows." Kuvshinnikova is now 91 and lives in a typical Soviet-style apartment building with her daughter in the nearby town of Rybinsk. But she says she still thinks back on what a nice town Mologa had been, and all that she was forced to leave behind. "I was sorry for Mologa — it was such a nice town with big rivers," she says. Then, her eyes well up. "My mother is still in Mologa. She died in 1934. My father is here, I could go to the cemetery. But there, even if it was long ago, a mother is a mother," she says. Nikolai Novotelnov was also forced from his home in Mologa. When he was 16, he and his mother took apart their wooden house and moved it to Rybinsk. Now 86, Novotelnov continues to live in the same house with his wife. "I still have memories of the churches, the tombstones," he says about Mologa. "There was just a simple command: Move it all, and start living in a new place." While Novotelnov rebuilt his home and his life, his father was in a gulag, serving a six-year sentence for telling a joke about Soviet leaders. He died before being released. But despite all this tragedy, Novotelnov proudly served his country. He was a truck driver in the Red Army, fighting his way to Berlin in 1945. He still hangs Red Army and Communist Party posters on the walls of his living room. Today, though, under the current leadership, that pride is faltering. "The country is divided into rich and poor," Novotelnov says. "Money has become the most important thing. Nothing good has happened in Russia during Putin's time in office. I am his opponent." Ready For Change The 86-year-old may not seem like a poster child for change. But if there is a fair election in Russia in March — and that's a big "if" — Novetelnov's vote will be counted against Putin. The anti-government demonstrations that took place in Russia last month were some of the biggest in the 20 years since the fall of the Soviet Union. In the capital, Moscow, thousands of people marched on the streets, demanding fair elections. Many were younger, educated, middle-class Russians. They are not representative of the country as a whole — the majority of Russian citizens are older and much less well-off. Nor are many of them ready for wholesale revolution, along the lines of the Arab Spring. But during our travels across Russia, we heard more and more voices that are ready for change. The village of Sagra is a case in point. As with so many Russian villages, visiting Sagra is like taking a step back in time. Dilapidated wood houses are set along snow-covered dirt streets. Geese wander around, honking at passing trains. Many residents have outhouses and heat their homes using wood-fired stoves. And, with a population of only about 130, there is no local police force. Last summer, Sagra residents became caught up in something resembling an inner-city turf battle. A criminal gang was heading to Sagra one night, and residents called the police from another community. Help arrived too late, though, long after the gang did. Villagers, including 56-year-old Viktor Gorodilov, fought the criminals off themselves, swinging pitchforks and firing hunting rifles. In a twist of justice not uncommon in Russia, the government charged Sagra's residents with hooliganism. It would have been a familiar story in Russia — the authorities decide who to blame, the courts agree, case closed. But Gorodilov and others in Sagra found a lawyer, and a local nonprofit, to fight for them. They got their message out on the Internet, insisting they had been neglected by the police and let down by the government. They want something different — but not revolution. Viktor's 39-year-old son, Andrei, is a third-year graduate student in economics. He would seem to be the right demographic for joining the protests in Moscow. But, he says, they scare him. He lived through political upheaval in the early 1990s, and he's not in a hurry to repeat the experience. "I can see what's happening in Libya," he says. "That was our path in 1991 [with the dissolution of the Soviet Union]. The Libyan people will live much worse than they used to live. They had social programs, they got apartments for free. Now this will stop. I already lived through those kinds of changes." Andrei wants more from his government, but he's patient. He was pleased to play a role in defending his father and other villagers against criminal charges. "I have become an annoyance to our local government," he explains. "We are each struggling as much as we can, each at our own pace." Collapse From Within That pace is slow, but the momentum is growing. Yekaterina Stepanova is a professor of philosophy and law in Yekaterinburg, the closest city to Sagra. People out in Russia's far-flung regions, she says, are unlikely to join a large-scale movement to oust a government. But Russia as it's governed today isn't sustainable. Putin will become less popular and less relevant in places like Sagra. And sometime soon, Stepanova says, there will be new leaders who will figure out how to take Russia into the modern day. She calls it a collapse from within. But collapse is not necessarily a bad thing. "Collapse," she says, "is what has to come because what we have now is not the history of this new Russia. It's still the history of the Soviet Union." She has a point. Russia, as we know it now, is only 20 years old — a young country with a long history that is hard to shake. But as the younger generation — a generation that has grown up without Soviet influence — comes to power, some kind of change is inevitable.Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. Transcript STEVE INSKEEP, HOST: All right. We're continuing our travels today with NPR's David Greene on the Trans-Siberian Railway. To remind listeners, we heard the first of David's stories yesterday - an amazing journey that you were on here, David, but a lot of tragedy you encountered when you talked to people along the way. DAVID GREENE, HOST: Yeah, Russians have endured a lot over time. And that includes, I think, enduring tough leaders. I mean, Russians over history have survived czars, dictators, leaders who don't always seem to have a lot of compassion. And, you know, as you know, Steve, we saw people beginning to turn on Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow with these street protests recently that erupted. INSKEEP: In Moscow, but what about when you went further east on the railway? GREENE: And that was the question that I really wanted to answer. I mean, in the capital, you had these protests. Many of those people were younger, middle-class Russians. The country as a whole is older and less well-off, I think you could say. And as I got out into the vast country, I didn't get the sense that people are ready for revolution, their own Arab spring. It doesn't mean that they don't want change. And I want to take you now today to a village northwest of Yaroslavl, a couple hours from Moscow. A dog greeted me out in the snow as I was walking up to this little ramshackle yellow wooden house. This house is the home of a man named Nikolai Novotelnov, and he's an elderly man with quite a story that he told me. When Novotelnov was a teenager, his father was sent to die in one of Josef Stalin's gulags. And his father's crime, Steve, was telling a joke about Soviet leaders. And so this man, Nikolai Novotelnov, was left alone with his mother and then Stalin struck again. He ordered this reservoir to be built, damming the Volga River. It meant flooding entire villages. And thousands of people were ordered to move their homes, including Nikolai Novotelnov and his mom. Alone, they piled the wood onto rafts and then they rebuilt the house where this man Nikolai still lives today. NIKOLAI NOVOTELNOV: (Through translator) I still have memories of the churches, the tombstones, that it was just a simple command. We were all going to start living in the new place. GREENE: Given all this, of course Nikolai Novotelnov was angry, and yet he went on to serve his country in World War II proudly. The Red Army and Communist Party posters still hang on the walls of his living room. It's just he's not very proud of his country today. As he puts it, Russia is now a place with no friendship, where people are divided between rich and poor, and he thinks Vladimir Putin could be trying a lot harder. Putin is Russia's most powerful politician. He was president then prime minster, and Putin expects to return to president in an election this coming March. Novotelnov wishes there was a way to stop that. NOVOTELNOV: (Through translator) During Putin's time, nothing good has happened in Russia. I'm his strong opponent. If we look at his policies and the state our country is in, I don't think we need such a leader. GREENE: This 86-year-old man who was sitting in front of me on his couch might not seem like a poster child for revolution, but I heard voices like this every day as I traveled deeper into Siberia. As I swung through the Siberian city of Yekaterinburg, I stopped for tea and some perspective. I sat down with Yekaterina Stepanova, a professor of philosophy and law, spent years as a visiting scholar in the United States. She told me that Russians are slowly realizing that Putin's style of centralized power and control is not improving their lives. YEKATERINA STEPANOVA: Because certainly Putin and his team are people from the past, because they just see the country from the lenses of '70s, I mean, the '80s. GREENE: Putin, she predicted, will slowly lose popularity and relevance and eventually - eventually, she said - the system he has in place will collapse. STEPANOVA: Collapse is not a tragedy. Collapse is what has to come. Because what we have now in not the history of this new Russia. It's still the history of Soviet Union. GREENE: You seem to suggest that the end of the Putin is not going to be some big loud revolution. What is it going to be? STEPANOVA: I think it's going to be just a slow collapse. GREENE: Slow, because Russians aren't in a hurry to embrace change. It's a learning process. (SOUNDBITE OF TRAIN MOVING) GREENE: In the Russian towns and villages I visited, I had to forget all assumptions about democracy. For years, people have lived under this set of unspoken rule - life will be hard, the government will provide few services, people in power might be corrupt but there's nothing you can do about it. Today, people do seem to be realizing in small ways that maybe they can have a voice. One such place is a village called Sagra. It's near Russia's Ural Mountains, the natural border between Europe and Asia. And it takes you back in time. Geese are wandering around snow-covered dirt streets, honking at the passing trains. The dilapidated wooden houses in the village are heated by wood stoves, the people tough and gritty. And last summer, they faced something resembling an inner-city turf battle. This criminal gang was heading to Sagra one night, and residents called the police. They never showed up. The gang did. And residents, including 56-year-old Viktor Gorodilov fought them off, swinging pitch forks and firing hunting rifles. VIKTOR GORODILOV: (Through translator) You asked me the question who I protected, who I defended? So, I defended my family. I defended my children and my grandchildren and my family. GREENE: But then came a twist of justice that's not uncommon in Russia. The government filed charges against Gorodilov and Sagra's other residents. They charged them with hooliganism. But Gorodilov wouldn't stand for it. He and others in town found a lawyer at a nonprofit and they got their message out on the Internet, insisting that the people of Sagra had been neglected by the police and were left to defend themselves against criminals. I sat down with Viktor Gorodilov and his family and I listened as they spoke about taking truth to power. It was something I had rarely, if ever, heard while recording in rural Russia. GORODILOV: (Russian spoken) GREENE: In Russia, Viktor told me, people in power live their own separate life far removed from most citizens. He thinks that might be beginning to change. Sitting across from him was his 39-year-old son, Andrei. He's a third-year graduate student in economics. And at first, you might expect he'd be jumping to join those protests back in Moscow, but the idea of revolution scares him. He watched Russia fall into this economic abyss after the Soviet collapsed. ANDREI GORODILOV: (Through translator) Look at what's happening in Libya. That was our past in 1991. The Libyan people will live much worse than they used to live. They have social programs, they got apartments for free - now, this will stop. I already lived through those kinds of changes. GREENE: And so, Steve, the point that really came through with Andrei, this man I met, is that it's not that he doesn't want more from this government, it's not that he doesn't want change, he's just very patient. He was happy to have played a role in standing up for the citizens of his village. As he put it, I've become an annoyance to our local government. (SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER) INSKEEP: Which is sometimes what citizenship is. Thanks very much, David. And David Greene's journey across Russia on the Trans-Siberian Railway is going to continue tomorrow. We'll try to get a sense as David heads east of Russia's future and what really holds this giant country together. In the meantime, listeners can go to NPR.org to see photos of the people and places that David's been talking about here on NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright National Public Radio.
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Lululemon Vows To Get To The Bottom Of Its See-Through Pants Problem Share Tweet E-mail Print By Mark Memmott Originally published on Tue March 19, 2013 1:51 pm Perhaps not the moment when you want "increased sheerness." The buns ... er, puns ... seem endless: Lululemon, the yoga and running clothier, concedes in a letter to its customers that some of the black "luon women's bottoms" it has been selling since early March aren't quite covering their "guests" the way they should. As Lululemon puts it, there's been some "increased sheerness." Or, as Fashionista.com puts it, "I See London, I See France: Lululemon Recalls See-Through Yoga Pants." Lululemon says it is working with its supplier "to replace this fabric and [with] other manufacturers to replenish the affected core items as fast as we can." The original supplier, Eclat Textile of Taiwan, says it made the pants to Lululemon's specifications. The real gap, the company tells Reuters, may between "Lululemon's expectations and reaction from the market." Lululemon, which assures customers that "we want you to Down Dog and Crow with confidence," needs to get on top of this situation because of its potential effect on the company's bottom line. It is offering customers refunds and, according to The Wall Street Journal, the company "said the incident would reduce its expected first-quarter sales to $333 million to $343 million, down from the $350 million to $355 million it had previously expected." The company's stock (Nasdaq trading symbol LULU) is also getting spanked. It has dropped more than 8 percent from above $68 a share at Monday's opening to about $62.50 as of late-morning Tuesday. And that's about as far as we can stretch this story. Feel free to crack wise in the comments thread.Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. WESA Mobile
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Leo Donohue, 86, Former State Auditor, Dies Calling hours at Honan Funeral Home are on Tuesday. Ronni Newton Leo V. Donohue , 86, formerly of Avon, died Friday, May 20, 2011 at Bethel Health Care Center, after a short illness. Son of the late John and Margaret (Mara) Donohue of West Hartford, which was where he was born and raised, he retired as Democratic State Auditor of Public Accounts in 1992. He had held the position for 25 years. Donohue was employed in various positions by the State of Connecticut for 47 years and served as commissioner of Finance and Control under Gov. John Dempsey. He was a member of the State of Connecticut Executive Committee on Human Rights and Opportunities, chairman of the Connecticut Personnel Policy Board and a member of the Tri-State Transportation Commission. Donohue also was an avid fan of the Boston Red Sox and served as president of the World Series Club of Hartford. He is survived by a son, Christopher T. Donohue, a daughter-in-law, Susanne Nobert Donohue and two granddaughters, Katherine and Margaret, all of Sandy Hook. He was predeceased by his wife, Barbara Troy Donohue; and his siblings, John and Thomas Donohue, Elizabeth Booth and Marion Donohue. Friends may call at the Honan Funeral Home, 58 Main St, Newtown, Tuesday May 24 between the hours of 4 and 8 p.m.. The Honan Funeral Home is handling arrangements.
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West of Soho Buttercup in the park - a treatise on our modern predilection for superstition and alternative beliefs over rationalism. As I walked through Queens Park on a warm late spring afternoon recently, I passed a family - a mum and dad and their two girls. The elder girl, aged about seven, was holding a buttercup under her younger sister's chin. She had the air of someone conducting an important scientific experiment.'Yes', she announced seriously, after a few moments of careful scrutiny, 'you like butter.'The parents watched, amused. The pronouncement made, the family continued on their way. But it caused me to stop and think. Why is it that we are still drawn, almost inexorably, to the rites of old wives, to the rituals of superstition, instead of the calm clarity of rationalism, that was gifted to us during Europe's 'Age of Enlightenment' in the eighteenth century? Why do we still prefer the drama of the obscure to the common sense of reason? (Yeah, okay, forget the idea that it might simply be 'fun' for a moment, and bear with me, because there is something incredibly revealing in this).Do you have an emotional reaction to this? Does the idea of reason irritate like a prickly burr? Why is that? How have reason and logic come to be seen as cold and heartless, compared to the apparent warmth of faith, superstition and religion?I thought about this again while I was watching the latest Star Trek movie. Spok, as always, represents logic and reason - cold, and almost emotionless, his saving grace are his half-human genes. Kirk, on the other hand, impetuous, hot-headed and brave, is the warm-blooded hero we are drawn to. In Star Trek, emotion is seen as greater than reason. Love triumphs over logic. Reason and logic are essential and highly valued of course, but in the end, it is only the complex cocktail of intelligence and feeling, that constitutes a fully realised human being.Yet reason is a great gift, especially because at its root, I propose that reason incorporates feeling. And by feeling, I don't mean dramatic emotion, I mean actual feeling.How does something actually feel to you? Are you afraid to experience this? Why??I believe the reason why is exactly the same as to why we prefer superstition and drama to reason and logic. And it is this:For millennia, most early human societies (you'll have to take this as read because I'm not going to cite all my sources in this essay), were based on social values that included the freedom to feel and experience all human emotions, without fear, including of course, our sexual feelings and desires; the idea that these feelings were in some way wrong did not exist. Because, of course, they are not 'wrong'. They are simply natural feelings. Thus making any personal decision was far easier for people, because they were not afraid to express and feel their feelings.(Try it next time you feel all tied up in knots trying to decide whether to do this or that, especially in relation to someone else; if you allow yourself to feel how you really feel about it, the decision is easy).What happened? Organised religion happened. The reason why organised religion happened is admirably covered in a book that I urge you to read - 'Guns, Germs and Steel' by Jared Diamond. To précis Diamond, early societies that had access to an excess of resources - food and suitable animals (for transport, work and food), quickly developed social hierarchies, with a 'king' type character at the top. To maintain the king position of power, the (fiendishly clever) idea of the 'divine right' to rule was invented, supported by a bureaucratic class of priests, who interpreted and officiated over this divine right; in other words, they told people how to act and what to do, according to the words of 'God'.Once you have a ruling elite in place, it's downhill all the way. Decisions are no longer tribally democratic, they are always determined by the best interests of the ruling elite. As your society grows, the need to control people becomes ever more important. And what better way to control people, than through fear?If you make people fear the very essence of their being, if you tell them that their natural feelings are bad, and that they are, at their very core, 'wrong' ('sinners' in religious parlance), you have created a mentally enslaved population who you can manipulate at will.As human cultures evolved, the interpretation of divine will become ever more sophisticated, and the systematic destruction of pre organised-religious societies took place. We were of course still happily rolling out this perverted ethos throughout the Victorian era and beyond, where missionaries set out to 'save' the ignorant savages across the globe.Indeed, we can still see this power-play at work today, where the most powerful countries feel free to invade other sovereign nations, because they have a divine right to do so. Because they are 'superior'. We know of course, that their true motivations are more basic; ensuring access to wealth and resources for their resource-hungry nations.The British Empire was predicated upon such a divine right; 'we' were just and noble, bringing democracy and justice and Christianity to the heathen. The fact that this was a license to plunder the resources and enslave the people of Africa, India, Asia and the Americas (other empires of course joined in) was somehow overlooked in our great crusade. The new American Empire happily followed this well-trodden path.I have digressed slightly, but if you're still with me, I hope you'll see that because our natural ways and feelings, our easy relationship with ourselves and nature, were systematically suppressed to further the interests of a ruling elite, we lost the ability to trust our feelings. Instead, we had to base decisions on ever more complex systems of morals, theories, dictates and laws that were interpreted by self-appointed priests and enshrined in great tomes such as the bible and the koran.This is not to say that there isn't much of huge value in these treatises (as well as a lot of archaic nonsense), but because at their root they are based on fear and control, they are, in my humble opinion, forever tarnished by this pernicious association. Oppression of feelings creates the uniquely human experience of perversion, sin and guilt. Before organised religions and social control came into being, perversion, as we know it, did not exist. There was no reason for it to exist.Fast forward several centuries, and we reach the Age of Enlightenment in Europe, where science and philosophy unite to create rationalism; a way of looking at and experiencing the universe that is not based on superstition, or religious belief, but on reason.But for most societies, trying to roll-out scientific rationalism, over the top of superstitious belief (religion), has only created more confusion, and more inner turmoil, because now a conflict has arisen between what was supposed to be (divinely) right and what reason tells us to be right. For ordinary people, losing the security of an all-knowing, all-powerful religion (After all, 'God' is supposed to be omnipotent), is a very scary thing. Which is probably why many of the citizens of modern societies are the most mentally disturbed in history.The advances in science of the last three hundred years allowed for the technological advances of the industrial revolution and beyond, which, while benefiting us in so many ways, have also enslaved us even further (the surveillance society in Britain, for example, where almost your every move is tracked, recorded and potentially judged, as are your personal communications), and also possibly terminally harmed us (the destruction of the environment being one obvious example). Science and technology have been a double-edged sword, both a boon to humanity and a poisoned chalice.Therefore, perhaps unsurprisingly, when we have through science and technology, an unprecedented opportunity to embrace 'reality' - as opposed to a dramatic and fear-based superstitious view of the world - we are drawn, inexorably, to the sense of an alternative reality, through which we think we can experience our true nature, and we reject science and technology, logic and reason, as cold, heartless and dangerous.(Alternative medicine, and associated values and ideas, are often profoundly valuable of course, but it is the resort to them without any form of reason or understanding, but simply because they are alternative, that I am discussing here).Our intrinsic fear of our true natures, which has been deliberately created by controlling elites, leads us to fear the very thing that can save us - direct, honest, rational experience.What I am arguing is that, at its very root, direct experience is divine. There is nothing more real or perfect than this - the experience of our own nature. You don't need God, or a bible, to experience this. Indeed, you are free to experience this at will. Yet I wager you do not experience this at will, but rather, your more common daily experience is one of fear and confusion, mixed (if you're lucky), with moments of joy and clarity, but often only through resort to drink or drugs.(If you disagree with this, and if you feel joy as your primary state, then I truly congratulate you on achieving liberation).We need to see that rationalism and reason, rather than being some kind of enemy, are indeed our greatest friends. If we can unhook ourselves from the unhealthy addiction to drama and superstitious belief that perpetuates mental strife and discord in ourselves and in society, then we can liberate ourselves from a mental slavery that has blighted us for millennia.We live on the cusp; as once mighty nations teeter on the brink of economic collapse, which way will the dice fall? We will revert to fear-based superstition and control and all that entails (fascism, for example), or will we embrace our deepest natures, which are the very things we intrinsically feel and know we lost, so long ago, and liberate ourselves from this long nightmare?Over to you..Peace out dudes. Hudster Buttercup in the park - a treatise on our modern... Kate's blog: The Virginity Project Earthsim blog Sunrise in a new tomorrow I consider myself to be an aware human being, a free-thinker and, as I learn to love myself more truly, an increasingly compassionate man.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/748
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Sign Up for West Orange Junior Police Academy Academy is from June 25 through June 29 Sharon Adarlo The West Orange Police Department is now accepting applications for the 12th Annual West Orange Junior Police Academy, which will run from June 25 through June 29. The application packet, which is attached to this report, can be dropped off at the West Orange Police and Justice Building at 60 Main Street, or mailed to the following: West Orange Police Department Juvenile Aid Bureau West Orange, New Jersey 07052 In order to qualify for participation, kids must meet the following criteria: The child must be a resident of West Orange. Must be between the ages of 11 and 14. Must have at least a “C” grade average in school. Exceptions will be made. No conduct or disciplinary issues. For an application packet or for any questions, contact (973) 325-4038.
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Home » Media » Media Media Filming & Photo Shoots on the West Somerset Railway Familiarisation Visits A Thank-you to the West Somerset Railway for their support on Spring Harvest Social Action Day(15/04/2014 @ 10:44:00) Job Vacancy at Turntable Cafe in Minehead(14/04/2014 @ 11:22:00) DISCOUNTED FISH AND CHIPS IN MINEHEAD FOR WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY PASSENGERS.(11/04/2014 @ 13:40:00) ALONG THE WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY APRIL 12th and 13th(10/04/2014 @ 13:05:00) SPECIAL OFFERS FROM LOCAL ACCOMMODATION PROVIDERS(10/04/2014 @ 12:35:00) St Georges Day selling out fast!!(10/04/2014 @ 12:28:00) WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY TOURIST INFORMATION NEWS. APRIL 2014(02/04/2014 @ 13:20:00) Family day out to re-launch Watchet Wednesday Market - Watchet Summer Market �Taster Day� 16 April 2014(02/04/2014 @ 08:11:00) Coming up at West Somerset Railway(31/03/2014 @ 10:58:00) MAJOR SUCCESS FOR WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY�S SPRING STEAM GALA(31/03/2014 @ 09:06:00) BBC RADIO SOMERSET�s EMMA BRITTON VISITS WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY SPRING STEAM GALA(27/03/2014 @ 14:17:00) Helping families affected by flooding on the Somerset Levels.(26/03/2014 @ 14:02:00) SPRING GALA DATES 2015(25/03/2014 @ 13:23:00) ALONG THE LINE - DURING THE SPRING STEAM GALA (24/03/2014 @ 12:02:00) ITALIAN TRAVEL TRADE VISITORS TO TRAVEL DURING WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY SPRING STEAM GALA ON 27th MARCH(21/03/2014 @ 10:44:00) SPRING GALA ACCOMMODATION STILL AVAILABLE(19/03/2014 @ 14:08:00) Working Timetable for Thursday March 20th & Friday 21st March(19/03/2014 @ 11:35:00) First 'guest' Engine now arrived!(18/03/2014 @ 15:40:00) WEST SOMERSET RAILWAY LOCO DIAGRAMS - Wednesday March 26th(17/03/2014 @ 12:48:00) Photographic night shoot at Minehead station(17/03/2014 @ 12:44:00) Plenty of new railway stock at 'Readers Halt'(07/03/2014 @ 14:07:00) Station Farm site at Bishops Lydeard(04/03/2014 @ 11:33:00) Rapid progress with Crowcombe Heathfield fund raising(03/03/2014 @ 15:43:00) West Somerset Railway 2015 calendar has now arrived at Minehead station shop.(03/03/2014 @ 13:00:00) Spring Steam Gala Accommodation (28/02/2014 @ 13:54:00) Bishops Lydeard shop during the Spring Steam Gala(27/02/2014 @ 11:46:00) The model railway in the Gauge Museum at Bishops Lydeard Station looks forward to the 2014 season(25/02/2014 @ 13:44:00) Spring Steam Gala warm up timetable on Wednesday 26th March(25/02/2014 @ 12:06:00) First visiting locomotives for West Somerset Railway Autumn Steam Gala(22/02/2014 @ 15:51:00) First ever ladies day on the West Somerset Railway Saturday May 10th(22/02/2014 @ 15:27:00) Three steam engines in action on March 26th(22/02/2014 @ 12:45:00) A chance to driver a small part of Somerset's railway and industrial history(22/02/2014 @ 11:03:00) Photographs required for West Somerset Free Press WSR supplement(19/02/2014 @ 11:43:00) Julian Holland announces book signing at Spring Steam Gala.(18/02/2014 @ 15:46:00) Spring Steam Gala Heritage Hunter Day Out Itineraries(16/02/2014 @ 10:59:00) 'Inside Track' Railway holiday at Spring Steam Gala(14/02/2014 @ 13:22:00) Bulleid �West Country� 34007 �Wadebridge� announced as final Spring Steam Gala visiting engine(12/02/2014 @ 15:02:00) Powerham Signal Box in Action during Spring Steam Gala(12/02/2014 @ 14:36:00) Somerset and Dorset Railway Trust Washford Station during the Spring Steam Gala(11/02/2014 @ 15:53:00) West Somerset Railway PLC statement following the decision by Somerset County Council to sell the freehold of the line.(10/02/2014 @ 16:50:00) Minehead Winter Festival(10/02/2014 @ 12:07:00) West Somerset Railway Freehold Update(10/02/2014 @ 10:56:00) Appeal for new building work at Crowcombe Heathfield railway station hits one third of target within three weeks.(06/02/2014 @ 16:22:00) Film Night: The Beatles Film �A Hard Day�s Night�. Friday 7th March 2014. Tickets on sale now!(05/02/2014 @ 14:40:00) February Tourist Information news(04/02/2014 @ 09:30:00) Somerset and Dorset Railway Trust Museum open for February half term(03/02/2014 @ 15:56:00) Half-term events along the West Somerset Railway(30/01/2014 @ 11:59:00) Excellent news for diesel hydraulic enthusiasts(28/01/2014 @ 13:59:00) February half-term at the West Somerset Railway(28/01/2014 @ 10:26:00) Somerset's still open for visitors!(27/01/2014 @ 14:19:00) Two more publicity/sales stands have been added to the line-up of those appearing at the Spring Steam Gala. (27/01/2014 @ 11:07:00) West Somerset Railway wins national award for its Day Out With Thomas� Events(24/01/2014 @ 09:51:00) Volunteering your time to help the Railway - Preserving the Past for the Future(21/01/2014 @ 22:32:00) Heritage Hunter App Update(21/01/2014 @ 22:17:00) Heritage Hunter App FAQ's(21/01/2014 @ 21:35:00) What to eat at Crowcombe Heathfield Station during the Spring Steam Gala.(21/01/2014 @ 16:10:00) West Somerset Steam Railway Trust Heritage Carriages Project during the Spring Steam Gala(21/01/2014 @ 15:41:00) Plenty of model railway interest at the West Somerset Railway Spring Steam Gala(20/01/2014 @ 14:45:00) 34070 �Manston� replaces 34053 at West Somerset Railway �Withered Arm� Spring Steam Gala(20/01/2014 @ 13:31:00) Spring Steam Gala: 3rd Annual WSR Literary Festival and WSR Model Railway Exhibition details announced.(20/01/2014 @ 13:24:00) Events along the line of West Somerset Railway 2014(15/01/2014 @ 15:47:00) 2014 Volunteer Information/Open Day (15/01/2014 @ 13:27:00) What happens at the West Somerset Railway in the winter when the trains are not running?(15/01/2014 @ 09:29:00) Getting in the mood for the Spring Steam Gala(14/01/2014 @ 13:54:00) A Somerset and Dorset Railway line anniversary commemorated in March.(13/01/2014 @ 15:52:00) A (sort of) Somerset & Dorset Railway anniversary connected with the Spring Steam Gala in March(13/01/2014 @ 13:35:00) Sandstone block sponsorship sought at Crowcombe Heathfield Station as former building is targetted for recreation. (13/01/2014 @ 11:26:00) Travel on Dunster Castle Express on May 3rd for Civil War Weekend(10/01/2014 @ 16:26:00) A new water tank for the West Somerset Railway locomotive department arrives from Reading(10/01/2014 @ 15:48:00) Steam locomotive which saw service in France in first World War is being hired for West Somerset Railway Spring Steam Gala.(10/01/2014 @ 10:50:00) New for 2014: Augmented Reality Heritage Hunter App(06/01/2014 @ 14:58:00) West Somerset Railway Tourist Information News - January 2014(06/01/2014 @ 09:54:00) Record figures this year for Somerset's tourism, say industry chiefs(01/01/2014 @ 11:22:00) West Somerset Railway News:- March 2014(01/01/2014 @ 11:10:00) 2014 Event and Train tickets now on sale!(17/12/2013 @ 16:55:00) Discounted train tickets are now on sale for all five 2014 West Somerset Railway Meet and Greet Days(17/12/2013 @ 13:09:00) Extra levels of discount for 'Mixed Traction Weekend' and Autumn Steam Gala Rover tickets(16/12/2013 @ 13:07:00) Book launch by Robin Summerhill at 2014 Spring Steam Gala(13/12/2013 @ 15:30:00) Two train simulators on sale at Minehead Station Shop(13/12/2013 @ 13:17:00) Dunster Station platform re-surfacing work (04/12/2013 @ 14:43:00) West Somerset Railway Plc Corporate Plan 2014-2023 Consultation Draft(02/12/2013 @ 16:37:00) BBC �Casualty� so pleased with filming on west somerset railway and local welcome that they will be returning in 2014(29/11/2013 @ 13:22:00) Special winter breaks package at Yarn Market Hotel in Dunster overlaps with Spring Steam Gala.(28/11/2013 @ 10:58:00) Roast Sunday lunch on Minehead Santa Special days(22/11/2013 @ 14:50:00) Santa Special Souvenir Photos - New for 2013(19/11/2013 @ 12:54:00) Renaming of WSR Stations during Spring Steam Gala 2014(19/11/2013 @ 11:32:00) More congratulations go to��(19/11/2013 @ 09:34:00) Special 'EXTRA' Discounted Spring Steam Gala Rovers available to purchase between now and 31.12.13.(18/11/2013 @ 15:54:00) Spring Steam Gala 2014 - Special offer on Rover Tickets(18/11/2013 @ 15:42:00) Contract negotiations are underway to bring two �new to the railway� locomotives to West Somerset Railway Spring Steam Gala(18/11/2013 @ 15:01:00) Trackers visit to Steam Museum(18/11/2013 @ 14:33:00) Beatles Film Night - A Hard Day's Night(18/11/2013 @ 12:08:00) West Somerset Railway makes its first annual presentation to young volunteers(14/11/2013 @ 09:35:00) New for you at the West Somerset Railway in 2014(12/11/2013 @ 15:42:00) 2014 Steam Engineman Course Dates announced(12/11/2013 @ 09:37:00) Only 6 limited edition 4mm scale model railway wagons left in stock(05/11/2013 @ 15:42:00) West Somerset Railway at Bridgwater Carnival(05/11/2013 @ 14:56:00) Turntable Cafe at Minehead to open November weekends(04/11/2013 @ 11:20:00) WSR Tourist Information News - November 2013(04/11/2013 @ 10:14:00) Festive Fun on the West Somerset Railway - The festive season is approaching!(04/11/2013 @ 09:59:00) West Somerset Railway to launch Augmented Reality App(25/10/2013 @ 10:06:00) Four Great Western steam locomotives in action at West Somerset Railway Winter Steam Festival(21/10/2013 @ 12:19:00) Fund raiser for Heritage Carriages Project(21/10/2013 @ 12:16:00) Loco and coach restoration commemorated (18/10/2013 @ 16:13:00) Successful Joint Meeting between the WSR plc and the WSRA (18/10/2013 @ 11:19:00) Autumn Steam Gala - Cambrian Railways Theme DVD now available(17/10/2013 @ 10:51:00) Paralympian Medal Winner launched West Somerset Railway�s New Open Access Coach(15/10/2013 @ 10:00:00) Name that train!(14/10/2013 @ 15:14:00) 86 year old visitor to WSR tries her hand at driving a steam engine.(08/10/2013 @ 14:50:00) The Withered Arm and the Atlantic Coast Express - Spring Steam Gala 2014(06/10/2013 @ 13:32:00) Engagement on 5029 Nunney Castle footplate during Autumn Steam Gala(06/10/2013 @ 12:30:00) President of Welsh Railway Pressure Group visits West Somerset Railway on October 4th during �Cambrian Railways� Steam Gala(04/10/2013 @ 15:06:00) Who or what is ARTHA?(02/10/2013 @ 18:01:00) West Somerset Railway October 2013 News Update(02/10/2013 @ 11:33:00) Blue Anchor Station Building now available(01/10/2013 @ 10:08:00) Request for photos for West Somerset Railway 2015 Calendar(26/09/2013 @ 11:25:00) The brand new Christmas cards for 2013 feature WSR Mogul 2-6-0 No 9351(12/09/2013 @ 15:01:00) Looking for a Christmas Party with a difference?(12/09/2013 @ 13:12:00) Autumn Steam Gala at the Turntable Caf� at Minehead Station(12/09/2013 @ 11:13:00) What's happening at Minehead Station during the Autumn Steam Gala(11/09/2013 @ 11:11:00) Major Makeover Announced for Somerset�s Official Tourism and Leisure Website(09/09/2013 @ 15:30:00) Letter to WSR Volunteers, Members and other Supporters(09/09/2013 @ 10:15:00) West Somerset Railway Agrees Leadership Succession(09/09/2013 @ 10:08:00) Inside track at Autumn Steam Gala(08/09/2013 @ 09:10:00) On Track for Christmas Festive events on the West Somerset Railway(06/09/2013 @ 12:35:00) Circle of Hope mini fun run in Minehead(04/09/2013 @ 12:15:00) West Somerset Railway September News(01/09/2013 @ 12:37:00) Loco and coach restoration to be commemorated by S&D Trust at Washford Station(30/08/2013 @ 14:39:00) Crowcombe Heathfield Station to take part in 'The World's Biggest Coffee Morning in aid of Macmillan Cancer Support(30/08/2013 @ 12:37:00) Chinese journalists visit the West Somerset Railway(30/08/2013 @ 12:18:00) Autumn things to see and do at the West Somerset Railway(26/08/2013 @ 13:06:00) Latest limited edition model wagon available(26/08/2013 @ 12:43:00) Five millionth passenger traveled on the West Somerset Railway today!(22/08/2013 @ 11:42:00) Two Autumn Gala Holiday Offers(20/08/2013 @ 10:38:00) Taunton Model Railway Group In Print(19/08/2013 @ 13:55:00) Celebrate summer on our first class dining train(13/08/2013 @ 11:57:00) 5029 & 7827 in line as �guests� at West Somerset Railway Autumn Steam Gala in line-up of 8 Swindon machines.(12/08/2013 @ 13:55:00) Coffee morning at Crowcombe Heathfield in aid of Macmillan Cancer Support (09/08/2013 @ 12:16:00) Special offer at the buffer stop shop Minehead (08/08/2013 @ 08:52:00) Class 14 diesel locomotive D9526 will be used for driver for a fiver during West Somerset Railway Late Summer Weekend August 31st and September 1st.(06/08/2013 @ 10:45:00) West Somerset Railway Tourist Information News - August 2013(06/08/2013 @ 08:43:00) Press release from Somerset County Council & West Somerset Railway plc about the future of the WSR(30/07/2013 @ 08:11:00) New for 2013: Sherry and Mince Pie Specials(24/07/2013 @ 13:50:00) Great Railway Treasure Hunt - Chance to win a Family Day Rover(24/07/2013 @ 12:45:00) Renaming of Stations for Cambrian Railway themed Autumn Steam Gala(24/07/2013 @ 10:25:00) Station of the week is Crowcombe Heathfield. (22/07/2013 @ 10:57:00) Start of the summer holidays on the West Somerset Railway(22/07/2013 @ 10:17:00) Sir Topham Hat draws out the tickets for the Days Out With Thomas free prize draw. (19/07/2013 @ 18:24:00) 2013 beer festival tee-shirts now on sale in Minehead Station Shop.(19/07/2013 @ 11:50:00) Work begins on extension to locomotive servicing pit at Minehead Station(17/07/2013 @ 15:23:00) Holiday events on and along the route of the West Somerset Railway in late July and during August.(17/07/2013 @ 12:55:00) Two engines of differing gauges at Cambrian Railways Autumn Steam Gala(13/07/2013 @ 11:05:00) The Somerset Tourism Association & its lead brand Visit Somerset is now well and truly planning a regional recovery.(10/07/2013 @ 14:09:00) Sunshine brings the crowds to see �Day Out With �Thomas�� at the West Somerset Railway(08/07/2013 @ 12:43:00) Hire agreement sent off to bring �Sir Haydn� to the Autumn Steam Gala(08/07/2013 @ 10:30:00) Combined ticket deal with Butlins Resort in Minehead for WSR ticket holders(06/07/2013 @ 13:38:00) Special offers available in Minehead Station Shop and at the Thomas Sales Stand on Minehead Station platform: While stocks last!(04/07/2013 @ 11:19:00) West Somerset Railway Tourist Information News - July 2013(01/07/2013 @ 11:16:00) Minehead toy & train sale draws closer(01/07/2013 @ 10:29:00) ICE Project of the year awards - Commended 'bronze medal' place for Goviers Lane Crossing Improvement(01/07/2013 @ 09:53:00) Statement by West Somerset Railway Plc (WSR) on freehold of railway land(01/07/2013 @ 08:34:00) Special Offer at Pips Fish for West Somerset Railway Ticket Holders(28/06/2013 @ 17:31:00) July weekends: some great days out for the family along the west somerset railway.(28/06/2013 @ 15:32:00) July 27th Booking signing by Zoe Ainsworth Grigg(26/06/2013 @ 15:36:00) Watchet Town Council fun day on August 9th(25/06/2013 @ 12:31:00) Free bus link to Dunster Show August 16th.(24/06/2013 @ 14:09:00) Travel by train to Watchet Carnival: Sunday July 28th(24/06/2013 @ 13:05:00) Free bus link to Dunster Country Fair on Wednesday 24th July(24/06/2013 @ 12:46:00) An historic event for �small-boilered Mogul� 9351 (24/06/2013 @ 11:57:00) Late Summer Weekend loco line-up confirmed(21/06/2013 @ 09:02:00) �Eden the Elephant� starts STOMP tour of Bristol and Somerset featuring the West Somerset Railway on Tuesday 9th July @ Minehead Station(18/06/2013 @ 12:30:00) Minehead Harbour Festival details announced.(13/06/2013 @ 13:22:00) Next West Somerset Railway limited edition wagon links to Autumn Steam Gala theme.(11/06/2013 @ 10:18:00) Vintage diesel locomotive action during the remainder of June 2013(09/06/2013 @ 09:07:00) Group & Coach Company travel during Gala events(07/06/2013 @ 10:56:00) June Tourist Information News(04/06/2013 @ 16:19:00) Diesel locomotives on the West Somerset Railway.(04/06/2013 @ 16:17:00) Two new TV Ads and a Video Competition boost Exmoor Tourism(20/05/2013 @ 12:22:00) Powderham Signal Box Exhibit at Bishops Lydeard Gauge Museum(20/05/2013 @ 08:52:00) Peter Johnson (author) to attend Cambrian Gala in October(16/05/2013 @ 09:09:00) Enjoy a First Class Dining experience on the Quantock Belle this August(14/05/2013 @ 08:20:00) 7812 �Erlestoke Manor� makes a 78xx trio for Autumn Steam Gala(13/05/2013 @ 11:04:00) The Somerset & Dorset Line from Above: Evercreech Junction to Bournemouth available now from the Buffer Stop Shop(09/05/2013 @ 10:54:00) Substantial increase in Group Bookings business for the West Somerset Railway(04/05/2013 @ 14:10:00) West Somerset Railway May Tourist Information (03/05/2013 @ 11:29:00) Mixed Traction Weekend working timetables and full locomotive diagrams released(02/05/2013 @ 13:01:00) Visit the WSR Stand at the North Somerset Show on Monday 6th May(30/04/2013 @ 14:14:00) CAMRA and WSR Real Ale Festival.(29/04/2013 @ 08:53:00) The Mixed Traction Weekend June 7th - 9th.(29/04/2013 @ 08:44:00) Taunton Flower Show 2013 is ready to bloom - travel by Steam Train(26/04/2013 @ 12:01:00) Special trains from Bishops Lydeard to Taunton and Back on June 8th & 9th!(23/04/2013 @ 14:44:00) Shuttle trains to link Taunton and Bishops Lydeard during West Somerset Railway Mixed Traction Weekend.(22/04/2013 @ 14:22:00) RSPB Somerset Wildlife Stand at Minehead Station(22/04/2013 @ 12:46:00) Two heritage diesel locomotives making their West Somerset Railway debuts during Mixed Traction Weekend(22/04/2013 @ 11:04:00) Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue services to attend �Fireman Sam� day on West Somerset Railway on Saturday May 4th.(22/04/2013 @ 10:15:00) Stogumber Festival 2013 - International performers to relaunch Music Festival after 15 year break(22/04/2013 @ 10:01:00) D2133 in its previous life prior to arrival at the WSR - Photo Album(17/04/2013 @ 11:06:00) Mixed Traction Weekend timetables announced(16/04/2013 @ 14:02:00) Vintage Bus Display and Running Day - Sunday 12th May(12/04/2013 @ 12:31:00) The Illustrated Railway Children book by Edith Nesbit on behalf of the Cystic Fibrosis and Royal Marsden Cancer Hospital charities.(12/04/2013 @ 09:55:00) 2013 Spring Steam Gala DVD now available(09/04/2013 @ 14:12:00) West Somerset Railway Tourist Information News April 2013(02/04/2013 @ 14:54:00) Class 33 �Crompton� diesel locomotive dating from 1960�s to head St George�s Day �Quantock Belle� dining train on West Somerset Railway on April 23rd.(01/04/2013 @ 09:10:00) West Somerset Railway and Hestercombe Gardens are pleased to announce the return of the Hestercombe Express.(28/03/2013 @ 15:59:00) 2013 Diesel Running Dates(26/03/2013 @ 14:29:00) Station Farm operating area planning application decision(26/03/2013 @ 10:09:00) Ale Train and Fish & Chips Special July 27th - New for 2013(24/03/2013 @ 15:20:00) Easter what to see and do guide on the West Somerset Railway(24/03/2013 @ 09:51:00) Mixed Traction Gala in June will mark a temporary farewell for a Class 33(23/03/2013 @ 10:46:00) Red Arrows announced as headline act for Minehead Summer Festival - August 14th(19/03/2013 @ 07:29:00) Minehead literary festival update(14/03/2013 @ 11:26:00) Cambrian Railways theme Autumn Gala Rover tickets now on sale(13/03/2013 @ 10:27:00) Day Out With Thomas tickets on sale now(06/03/2013 @ 21:36:00) Ale Train and Fish & Chip Special - New for 2013(05/03/2013 @ 12:43:00) West Somerset Railway March Tourist Information News(01/03/2013 @ 16:15:00) 2014 West Somerset Railway calendar is now available(01/03/2013 @ 09:13:00) Limited edition 7 plank wagon used by Hartnell and Sons Taunton and Bishops Lydeard available now.(28/02/2013 @ 15:23:00) Autumn Steam Gala celebrates the 150th Anniversary of the Newtown and Machynlleth railway and the Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway(26/02/2013 @ 13:02:00) A Cambrain Railways theme on the West Somerset Railway West Somerset Railway features in April 2013 issue of Coast Magazine(26/02/2013 @ 12:51:00) WSR Gala Night Shoot featuring the Rail Motor(26/02/2013 @ 10:30:00) WSR Job Vacancies announced: Assistant to the General Manager, Deputy Operating Superintendent and Head of Infrastructure Engineering.(25/02/2013 @ 16:20:00) A Before Tax Profit for the year to 31st December 2012.(22/02/2013 @ 12:31:00) Washford Station Open Day on Saturday 16th March during Spring Steam Gala(20/02/2013 @ 15:28:00) Great Railway Eras book now available(20/02/2013 @ 15:12:00) New facilitiy for disabled people and pedestrians to cross line in Watchet officially opened.(19/02/2013 @ 18:02:00) 2013 Events Update(19/02/2013 @ 16:08:00) Full steam ahead for the West Somerset Railway's 2nd Railway Literary Festival(11/02/2013 @ 11:03:00) 2013 Late Summer Weekend and Winter Steam Festival Updates(06/02/2013 @ 14:28:00) Real Ale Guide to the West Somerset Railway(06/02/2013 @ 12:33:00) Somerset Branch Line Day: Railmotor History?(05/02/2013 @ 13:50:00) West Somerset Railway Tourist Information News: February 2013(01/02/2013 @ 13:03:00) New model railway show at Minehead Station during Spring Steam Gala(24/01/2013 @ 11:47:00) Murder Mystery Evenings 2013 announced(17/01/2013 @ 14:24:00) Exmoor Train and Toy Fair(17/01/2013 @ 12:45:00) Bookings now open for 2013 West Somerset Railway Dining Train Specials(17/01/2013 @ 12:24:00) Confirmed publishers for Spring Steam Gala Railway Literary Festival(15/01/2013 @ 15:54:00) New for 2013: The Lynton and Lynmouth Explorer(15/01/2013 @ 15:14:00) Meet & Greet Days featuring Peppa Pig and George, Fireman Sam, Mike the Knight and Scooby-Doo(14/01/2013 @ 14:09:00) 2013 Spring Steam Gala Update(11/01/2013 @ 10:32:00) Minehead Winter Festival - February 2013(10/01/2013 @ 11:07:00) West Somerset Railway to feature on episode of Michael Portillo�s �Great Railway Journeys� on January 30th.(09/01/2013 @ 16:17:00) Somerset Woodland Association and the Farming & Wildlife Advisory Group (FWAG) SouthWest awareness day with West Somerset Railway on 9th December 2012(08/01/2013 @ 17:38:00) Are you interested in preserving the future of Blue Anchor Station?(07/01/2013 @ 15:50:00) West Somerset Railway carries over 200,000 visitors in 2012(07/01/2013 @ 15:31:00) Local Events along the route of the West Somerset Railway(07/01/2013 @ 11:52:00) West Somerset Railway �Dunster Castle Express� Familiarisation Visits For March 2013(01/01/2013 @ 11:38:00) The West Somerset Railway will be attending The South West Travel Show on January 12th(01/01/2013 @ 11:05:00) Volunteer Induction Sessions 2013(29/12/2012 @ 15:16:00) 2013 Autumn Steam Gala: Four days in which the Cambrian Railways atmosphere will come to West Somerset(28/12/2012 @ 12:20:00) Goviers Lane crossing ready for Christmas(21/12/2012 @ 13:37:00) Real Ale Guide to the 20 miles of line between Bishops Lydeard and Minehead. (20/12/2012 @ 13:54:00) Limited Edition model of SDR 7F number 88 is in stock at the Buffer Stop Shop in Minehead at a discounted price(14/12/2012 @ 13:46:00) 2013 Spring Steam Gala Locomotive line up news(14/12/2012 @ 13:14:00) Visit Exmoor unveils the South west�s first destination mobile website (13/12/2012 @ 20:49:00) The Stories of Whiteball Tunnel(12/12/2012 @ 15:18:00) More Diesel Hauled Quantock Belles in 2013(11/12/2012 @ 13:59:00) West Somerset Railway Tourist Information News - December 2012(05/12/2012 @ 11:54:00) December Shopping At Minehead Railway Station(30/11/2012 @ 14:10:00) News for Group Travel Organisers:- New Year Exhibitions which the West Somerset Railway will be attending(29/11/2012 @ 13:45:00) Somerset 2013 Brochure - View it online now.(23/11/2012 @ 17:32:00) 2013 Family Days Out on the West Somerset Railway(22/11/2012 @ 11:26:00) West Somerset Railway attending South West Group Travel Show in the New Year(16/11/2012 @ 14:13:00) Enjoy a romantic Valentine�s Day Afternoon Tea Special with the West Somerset Railway on Thursday 14th February 2013.(16/11/2012 @ 11:38:00) Exmoor Tourism November Update(16/11/2012 @ 10:37:00) Winter Steam Festival Locomotive Workings(15/11/2012 @ 17:25:00) Launch of 2013 Blue Anchor souvenir mug(13/11/2012 @ 15:32:00) Installation of Water Tower at Minehead Railway Station(13/11/2012 @ 15:28:00) 40th Anniversary of the South West Coast Path Association - Great South West Walk(12/11/2012 @ 14:33:00) Our next weekend of Steam Train travel: December 1st and 2nd.(06/11/2012 @ 14:25:00) November at the West Somerset Railway(05/11/2012 @ 14:43:00) Bands announced for 2012 Carol Train Season(05/11/2012 @ 14:32:00) 2013 Group Travel on England's longest steam railway(29/10/2012 @ 11:15:00) Model Railways and Railway Publishers at the 2013 Spring Steam Gala(26/10/2012 @ 11:49:00) Children's TV Character Meet and Greet Days announced for 2013 season(24/10/2012 @ 10:47:00) Autumn Gala dvd on now on sale(18/10/2012 @ 09:40:00) Extended run for Spring Steam Gala 2013(12/10/2012 @ 13:00:00) Bookings now open for WSR to Bristol & Bath Excursion on Sunday 2nd December 2012(10/10/2012 @ 16:48:00) Successful Autumn Steam Gala 2012.(10/10/2012 @ 12:42:00) Photo contributions required!(09/10/2012 @ 15:07:00) The return of 'Snowdrops & Steam'(08/10/2012 @ 10:07:00) 2012 Autumn Steam Gala DVD(05/10/2012 @ 14:33:00) Excursion from Minehead to Bristol and Bath(07/09/2012 @ 16:16:00) Winner of Day Out with Thomas event prize announced(04/08/2012 @ 10:04:00) Discounted West Somerset Railway Watch available now.(23/07/2012 @ 15:35:00) Christmas Cards and 2013 Calendar and Festive Fun on the West Somerset Railway (16/07/2012 @ 13:11:00) The Somerset Tourism Association starts the 'Biggest' domestic and international tour operator marketing push ever.(05/07/2012 @ 15:57:00) Groups and Parties welcome on the West Somerset Railway(22/06/2012 @ 12:54:00) Dunster by Candlelight tickets on sale now!(20/06/2012 @ 16:21:00) Lifting of boiler from Great Western Railway express locomotive number 6024 �King Edward I�(14/06/2012 @ 10:21:00) Readers Halt Second Hand Book shop at Minehead Station need your help!(13/06/2012 @ 10:50:00) Mid Week diesel hauled 'Quantock Belle' Dining Trains scheduled to be headed by Class 33 'Crompton' D6575(30/05/2012 @ 15:29:00) Joint salute for Olympic Torch as crowds turn out at Washford(30/05/2012 @ 10:06:00) Successful first ever Peppa Pig Day at the West Somerset Railway(26/05/2012 @ 15:13:00) West Somerset Railway to feature in BBC2's Great British Railway Journeys featuring Michael Portillo (24/05/2012 @ 14:02:00) Updated Mineral Line Book available from Buffer Stop Shop from 16th June(22/05/2012 @ 12:24:00) Successful inaugural Art Train Day event(19/05/2012 @ 14:42:00) Mixed Traction Weekend Loco information - What is working what?(18/05/2012 @ 12:46:00) Dystonia Support Network BGS Fundraising and awareness raising visit to the West Somerset Railway(17/05/2012 @ 11:23:00) Mixed Traction Weekend - Steam Services confirmed(16/05/2012 @ 11:00:00) New limited edition wagon available from Minehead Buffer Stop Shop(09/05/2012 @ 14:47:00) West Somerset Railway Mixed Traction Weekend Update June 15-17 (07/05/2012 @ 11:59:00) Enjoy 'lunchtimes at Lydeard'(24/04/2012 @ 14:33:00) Eagerly awaited Bachmann OO model of S&DJR locomotive No.88 and new book on volunteering on the WSR(20/04/2012 @ 10:43:00) West Somerset Railway Spring Steam Gala 2012 DVD available now!(13/04/2012 @ 12:43:00) Mixed Traction & Autumn Steam Gala Rover Fares reduced(06/04/2012 @ 12:55:00) New West Somerset Railway Association Chairman announced(06/04/2012 @ 10:04:00) Wizzer Walk Helps Finance The Heritage Carriages Project(04/04/2012 @ 10:10:00) New Stage 5 Steam Engineman Course announced.(02/04/2012 @ 17:08:00) New West Somerset Railway watch and souvenir book available from the Minehead Buffer Stop Shop(02/04/2012 @ 16:43:00) History meets the 21st century with new Somerset Routes website - Featuring the West Somerset Railway(02/04/2012 @ 15:43:00) Full steam ahead at West Somerset Railway's first Railway Literary Festival(28/03/2012 @ 13:49:00) The first 2 customers to buy their tickets by credit card at Stogumber.(28/03/2012 @ 12:34:00) Ghost Express calling at Chapel Cleeve(23/03/2012 @ 16:06:00) ArtTrain Day activities announced.(23/03/2012 @ 16:04:00) Arrival of East Chord Rail at Norton Triangle - Photo Gallery(22/03/2012 @ 23:00:00) West Somerset Railway News Flash & Photo Gallery: Norton Fitzwarren Triangle Update(22/03/2012 @ 19:13:00) Mixed Traction Weekend Update(21/03/2012 @ 18:45:00) Come and see what's on offer at Washford Station(12/03/2012 @ 12:51:00) 150th Anniversary of the railway opening from Taunton to Watchet on 31st March 1862.(12/03/2012 @ 11:02:00) Free networking event for all tourism providers from Greater Exmoor(05/03/2012 @ 14:42:00) Volunteers needed for West Somerset Railway events(18/02/2012 @ 10:12:00) Research and help needed(17/02/2012 @ 14:04:00) Bradshaw's Handbook available now from Minehead Buffer Stop Shop(14/02/2012 @ 14:34:00) New Family Special for 2012 Announced: Iron horse and Exmoor Pony Days Out(09/02/2012 @ 11:40:00) Discounted West Somerset Railway Official Souvenir Guides available(03/02/2012 @ 11:51:00) Can you help? Watchet Station need Victorian clothes for 150th Anniversary Event(02/02/2012 @ 11:46:00) WSR Volunteering Book Questionnaire(01/02/2012 @ 09:10:00) Recruitment/Open Day for Potential Volunteers � Sunday 22 April 2012 (31/01/2012 @ 14:54:00) Come and see Peppa Pig at Minehead Railway on 26th May!(25/01/2012 @ 12:44:00) ArtTrain - Love Somerset? Love art? Love railways?(24/01/2012 @ 18:21:00) Snowdrop Valley Visitors Steaming In (24/01/2012 @ 09:57:00) Murder Mystery 2012 season announced(21/01/2012 @ 13:42:00) 150th Anniversary of the opening of the original West Somerset Railway(20/01/2012 @ 16:21:00) Two more publishers have joined the line-up for the Minehead Literary Festival(20/01/2012 @ 16:17:00) Spring Steam Gala Literary Festival(16/01/2012 @ 09:26:00) Real Ale Festival announced.(13/01/2012 @ 09:22:00) Snowdrop Valley Open For Business(13/01/2012 @ 09:11:00) Minehead Diamond Jubilee Festival - June 1st - 5th(10/01/2012 @ 14:51:00) 'Calling all participants of the 'Wizzer Walk'. Time to collect that Sponsor Money!'.(09/01/2012 @ 15:28:00) New for 2012: Summer Evenings At The Seaside(05/01/2012 @ 16:32:00) 2012 Diesel Experience course dates announced.(28/12/2011 @ 12:06:00) 90 people took part in the Wizzer Walk Sunday November 27th.(29/11/2011 @ 11:01:00) West Somerset Railway steam locomotive line up for 2012(22/11/2011 @ 10:06:00) Britain's longest standard gauge heritage railway looks to offer combined days out with local attractions (02/11/2011 @ 15:09:00) Autumn Steam Gala DVD on now on sale(17/10/2011 @ 10:45:00) Best Kept Station Awards 2011 - Winners Announced(04/09/2011 @ 15:02:00) West Somerset Railway Mixed Traction Gala 2010 DVD Available now.(04/09/2011 @ 09:40:00) West Somerset Railway calendar in collaboration with local artist Leo Davey(02/09/2011 @ 09:30:00) Winter Steam Festival Bookings now open!(26/08/2011 @ 12:07:00) Commemorative 'Norton Manor' bone china mugs available now.(18/08/2011 @ 10:35:00) Santa invites you to join him on his 'Santa Special' and 'Santa Express' trains on the West Somerset Railway(25/07/2011 @ 19:11:00) New Taster Course dates announced for Engineman Courses(21/07/2011 @ 14:04:00) Wizzer Walk Update: Sunday November 27th(21/07/2011 @ 09:51:00) Diesel and Electric Preservation Group - Williton Diesel Depot 2011 Diary - Revision D Announced(18/07/2011 @ 15:00:00) Book now online for our Late Summer Weekend - featuring 'Tornado'.(18/07/2011 @ 09:34:00) It's the season to be jolly! - Book now for Carol Trains(18/07/2011 @ 08:55:00) Book signings at Minehead's 'Buffer Stop Shop'(12/07/2011 @ 14:40:00) The Brendon Hills Iron Mines and the West Somerset Mineral Railway book by M.H. Jones available now.(12/07/2011 @ 13:36:00) Ian Coleby's 'The Minehead Branch 1848 - 1971' available now.(11/07/2011 @ 10:38:00) Beer Festival Tee-Shirts now on sale at Minehead's Buffer Stop Shop(08/07/2011 @ 15:45:00) Locomotive Naming Ceremony in honour of 40 Commando - Royal Marines at Minehead Railway Station (17/06/2011 @ 13:21:00) Book relaunch: The Minehead Branch and the West Somerset Railway by Colin G. Maggs.(09/06/2011 @ 14:44:00) Rail Ale Trains on West Somerset Railway revives golden age of ale by rail.(08/06/2011 @ 17:35:00) 'Return to Steam' - Odney Manor(02/06/2011 @ 09:49:00) Join the West Somerset Railway on Sunday 18th September 2011 for the 'Return to Steam' - Odney Manor The Heart Radio 'Time Tunnel' brought to you in association with the West Somerset Railway! (25/05/2011 @ 12:30:00) Step back in time with classic tunes and a trip on the West Somerset Railway. West Somerset Railway in Bloom(18/05/2011 @ 10:32:00) Calling All Walkers. Join the Wizzer Walk (13/05/2011 @ 09:50:00) Join the West Somerset on Facebook, Twitter and Youtube(12/05/2011 @ 18:18:00) West Somerset Railway welcomes Rotary Group Study Exchange on board.(07/05/2011 @ 16:58:00) Heritage Traction Passenger Train dates announced for 2011(07/05/2011 @ 11:16:00) We have been advised by the DEPG of the operating dates for heritage traction passenger trains for the next few months. Weekend of Special Events at West Somerset Railway Stations(06/05/2011 @ 15:41:00) Father's Day on the West Somerset Railway(02/05/2011 @ 18:36:00) Train rides, souvenirs, Fish & Chips special... Mineral Line Tours - Book Now!(01/05/2011 @ 10:04:00) Book now online for Day Out With Thomas� (28/04/2011 @ 11:06:00) 'Royal Wedding Special' at the Turntable Cafe, Minehead.(26/04/2011 @ 12:31:00) Toast the Royal couple. 'Fergus', a Traction Engine on rails joins the line-up for 'Day Out With Thomas'(25/04/2011 @ 10:53:00) Calling all amateur sleuths!(24/04/2011 @ 14:51:00) There is murder on the horizon... Mixed Traction Weekend Updated details 'Sir Lamiel' in operation on April 23, 24 and 25.(18/04/2011 @ 14:44:00) Southern Railway 'King Arthur' Class 4-6-0 777 'Sir Lamiel' will make an additional appearance on April 23rd, 24th & 25th operating from Bishops Lydeard. Launch of Hestercombe Express (13/04/2011 @ 15:28:00) Somerset Stages Rally(11/04/2011 @ 17:02:00) Starts at Minehead Railway Station on Saturday 16th April 2011 Accessible Somerset - Easy Access for All(06/04/2011 @ 12:28:00) A new leaflet has been produced West Somerset Railway will be exhibiting at Excursions 2012 come and visit us there! (06/04/2011 @ 12:04:00) Dunster Castle Express Inaugural run.(05/04/2011 @ 18:12:00) The West Somerset Railway and Dunster Castle are gearing up for the inaugural run of the new for 2011 service - the Dunster Castle Express. 35th Anniversary Spring Steam Gala DVD (04/04/2011 @ 08:57:00) The DVD of the recent West Somerset Railway 35th Anniversary Spring Steam Gala will be available in the next few days. 'The Pannier Papers No.2' available now from Minehead Buffer Stop Shop(01/04/2011 @ 08:19:00) 70000 "Britannia" Merchandise Available at Minehead Buffer Stop Shop(24/03/2011 @ 19:14:00) Real Ale Festival September 10th and 11th 2011(22/03/2011 @ 13:32:00) Volunteer Recruitment Day(03/03/2011 @ 13:20:00) The West Somerset Railway Association is holding Volunteer Recruitment Days on 17th April and 25th September West Somerset Railway Walk(13/02/2011 @ 18:01:00) The West Somerset Steam Railway Trust is again organising a Sponsored Walk
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/750
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House Approves 'Keep Your Health Plan' Legislation Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By Bill Chappell Originally published on Fri November 15, 2013 7:29 pm The House votes Friday on a bill submitted by GOP Rep. Fred Upton of Michigan, shown with Speaker John Boehner, that seeks to ensure Americans can keep their existing insurance plans even if those policies don't meet standards in the Affordable Care Act. The House has approved a Republican-sponsored bill that would allow insurance companies to continue offering policies that would be canceled because they don't meet the standards of the Affordable Care Act. The Keep Your Health Plan Act, H.R. 3350, was adopted by a vote of 261-157, with 17 members not voting. We've updated the top of this post with the results of the vote and other news. Update at 7:30 p.m. ET: States Reportedly Confused By Obamacare Fix Reuters reports that it's queried more than 20 states on the ACA about-face and that while California, Colorado, Florida, South Carolina and Ohio "said they would act on Obama's offer," at least 17 others "said they did not have enough information and were still trying to decide how to proceed." Update at 1:35 p.m. ET: House Embraces Bill Altering Insurance Rules The House vote had been closely watched for party defections. In the end, 39 Democrats voted for the bill, while three Republicans voted against it. The measure was introduced by Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., along with more than 150 co-sponsors, including four Democrats, Rep. Patrick Murphy of Florida, Rep. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Rep. John Barrow of Georgia, and Rep. Mike McIntyre of North Carolina. Before the final vote on the bill, the Democrats offered an alternative motion that many observers saw as a chance to allow House Democrats to be on the record voting for a fix to the Affordable Care Act without supporting the Republican-sponsored bill. The Democrats' proposal echoed the fix embraced by President Obama Thursday, which would allow people to keep policies that would have been canceled for one year. Earlier Friday, senior Democratic aides said they expected as many as 40 to 50 of their number might vote for Upton's bill, according to Politico. Our original post continues: The measure targets a key criticism of the new health care law, which has been blamed for cancellation notices sent to millions of policyholders. But critics say the bill would destabilize the nascent health care plan marketplace created under what many call Obamacare. The White House has said President Obama would veto the House bill if it were to reach the Oval Office. But many political observers are watching to see whether any Democrats cross party lines to side with Republicans during Friday's vote, which The Washington Post called a "loyalty test." Obama sought to address concerns over the cancellations Thursday, when he announced that people with policies that don't meet the new health care law's standards would be allowed to keep them for another year. Most of the cancellations had been scheduled to take effect Jan. 1. The president has acknowledged problems with the law and its trouble-plagued rollout. Last week, he apologized to those who had lost their policies. But he has also insisted that despite those troubles, the law itself is sound. "We fumbled the rollout on this health care law," Obama said Thursday. Just before Obama spoke yesterday, House Speaker John Boehner told journalists that he's skeptical of the White House's solution. "This problem cannot be papered over by another ream of Washington regulations," Boehner said. "Americans losing their coverage because of the president's health care law need clear, unambiguous legislation that guarantees the plan they have and like will still be allowed." The GOP bill, sponsored by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton of Michigan, would not only allow insurers to renew individual plans that don't meet the law's standards, it would also allow the companies to sell them to more people. Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., may introduce a similar bill to the House legislation. That version is said to include a provision that would keep insurance companies from selling new policies that don't meet requirements.Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. View the discussion thread.
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Tovia SmithRSS All ContentcloseNews podcastsUse iTunesUse a different playerRSS View all podcasts & RSS feeds Join Our Email List Tovia Smith Tovia Smith is an award-winning NPR News National Desk correspondent based in Boston. For the last 25 years, Smith has been covering news around New England and beyond. She's reported extensively on the debate over gay marriage in Massachusetts and the sexual abuse scandal within the Catholic Church, including breaking the news of the Pope's secret meeting with survivors. Smith has traveled to New Hampshire to report on seven consecutive Primary elections, to the Gulf Coast after the BP oil spill, and to Ground Zero in New York City after the September 11, 2001 attacks. She covered landmark court cases — from the trials of British au pair Louise Woodward, and abortion clinic gunman John Salvi, to the proceedings against shoe bomber Richard Reid. Through the years, Smith has brought to air the distinct voices of Boston area residents, whether reacting to the capture of reputed Mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger, or mourning the death of U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy. In all of her reporting, Smith aims to tell personal stories that evoke the emotion and issues of the day. She has filed countless stories on legal, social, and political controversies from the biggies like abortion to smaller-scale disputes over whether to require students to recite the Pledge of Allegiance in classrooms. With reporting that always push past the polemics, Smith advances the debate with more thoughtful, and thought-provoking, nuanced arguments from both –or all— sides. She has produced award-winning broadcasts on everything from race relations in Boston, adoption and juvenile crime, and has filed several documentary-length reports, including an award-winning half-hour special on modern-day orphanages. Smith took a leave of absence from NPR in 1998, to launch Here and Now, a daily news magazine produced by NPR Member Station WBUR in Boston. As co-host of the program, she conducted live daily interviews on issues ranging from the impeachment of President Bill Clinton to allegations of sexual abuse in Massachusetts prisons, as well as regular features on cooking and movies. In 1996, Smith worked as a radio consultant and journalism instructor in Africa. She spent several months teaching and reporting in Ethiopia, Guinea, and Tunisia. Smith filed her first on-air stories as a reporter for local affiliate WBUR in Boston in 1987. Throughout her career, Smith has won more than two dozen national journalism awards including the Casey Medal, the Unity Award, a Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award Honorable Mention, Ohio State Award, Radio and Television News Directors Association Award, and numerous honors from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Public Radio News Directors Association, and the Associated Press. She is a graduate of Tufts University, with a degree in international relations. Wed November 13, 2013 Victims' Relatives To Face Whitey Bulger At Sentencing Hearing James "Whitey" Bulger was captured in June 2011 in Santa Monica, Calif., with his longtime girlfriend, Catherine Greig. Share Tweet E-mail Comments By Tovia Smith Originally published on Wed November 13, 2013 10:59 am Listen It's the moment many victims of former Boston mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger have been waiting decades for: In federal court in Boston, relatives of those killed by Bulger will face the former gangster and describe their pain. Bulger was convicted in August of taking part in 11 murders while running a massive criminal enterprise for decades. There is little suspense around Bulger's sentencing — even the minimum would be enough to send the 84-year-old away for the rest of his life. To many victims, Wednesday's sentencing hearing is less about Bulger than it is about them. Read more Around the Nation Thu September 26, 2013 Putting Good Deeds In Headlines May Not Be So Good Glen James holds a special citation while facing reporters with Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis during a news conference at police headquarters on Sept. 16. Steven Senne Share Tweet E-mail Comments By Tovia Smith Originally published on Thu September 26, 2013 7:19 pm Listen An online collection has raised more than $145,000 for a man who stumbled onto a pile of money and turned it over to police. Glen James' story of a good deed is just one of many making headlines. It may not be exactly brand new, but public interest does seem to be piqued these days by ordinary folks making what are seen as extraordinary ethical decisions. Some, however, question if airing this kind of "good" news is actually good. A Series Of Good Deeds Read more Shots - Health News Thu September 19, 2013 Boston Hospitals Share Lessons From Marathon Bombing A Boston police officer wheels an injured boy down Boylston Street as medical workers carry an injured runner after the Boston Marathon bombing in April. Charles Krupa Share Tweet E-mail Comments By Tovia Smith Originally published on Mon September 23, 2013 10:10 am Listen Boston hospitals say that overall they did well in their response to the bombings because, as crazy as it sounds, they got lucky on April 15. Dr. Richard Wolfe, chief of emergency medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, says hospitals were fortunate with both the location and timing of the bombs that stunned the city. Read more Education Wed September 18, 2013 Should It Take 2 Or 3 Years To Earn A Law Degree? Share Tweet E-mail Comments By Tovia Smith Listen Transcript RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST: Law students are looking for some changes to their education. The American Bar Association plans to issue a report in the next few weeks, recommending a major overhaul of how law schools operate. And students are hoping that a recent comment from President Obama, will boost one reform in particular: cutting law schools down to two years, from three. NPR's Tovia Smith reports. Read more NPR Story Fri August 2, 2013 'Whitey' Bulger Won't Testify, But He Didn't Finish Quietly Share Tweet E-mail Comments By Tovia Smith Originally published on Fri August 2, 2013 5:19 pm Listen In Boston Friday, former mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger said he would not take the stand in his criminal trial and that his defense would rest. But before that happened, he railed at the judge and his defense team. Pagesfirst
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A Happy Love Story Wednesday, May 29, 2013 11:31 a.m. by Andrew Green Here's an uplifting little romantic comedy for everyone to enjoy.... Hey, why not? Wristcutters: A Love Story (2006) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0477139/ Netflix description: "Trapped in an alternate world populated by suicide victims, a band of souls tries to find an escape route in Goran Dukic's quirky fantasy. Although he took his own life, Zia (Patrick Fugit) isn't ready for such a grim hereafter, particularly when he learns that his ex-girlfriend also killed herself. On a quest to find her, he befriends a jaded hitchhiker and a Russian rocker, and together, they set out in search of a more appealing afterlife." Well, this film is about the afterlives of a bunch of people who committed suicide. It's kind of like the Albert Brooks comedy Defending Your Life , only not as good. The interesting thing about Wristcutters, I thought, was that the place to which the characters have been sent for all eternity (apparently) is basically the same as the Earth they knew before, only more mundane. They've got to work dead end jobs, deal with naggy roommates, and struggle with confusing relationships. Same problems they had in real life; however in this case, the frustration is relentless. There are no vacations from the dead end jobs...the roommates never seem to go out...and the confusing relationships don't develop into anything fulfilling. "Hell" for these characters is simply having to relive the lives they already chose to end, but with no chance of relief. So, really, the setting is what's interesting here. Apart from that, I suppose there's a plot. It has something to do with a guy tracking down his old girlfriend. Meh. He also encounters a free-spirited female hitchhiker who insists that she's been sent to this afterworld by mistake, and wants to find whoever is in charge. Once this road trip aspect of the film emerges, it starts to feel a lot like Little Miss Sunshine -- complete with a crappy foreign vehicle (why is it that these indie dark comedies always involve a funny car?). Yes, the dry, oddball humor is occasionally charming, and this movie undeniably had potential. Still, there's really nothing deeply interesting in Wristcutters once you get past its concept. I'd only recommend this film to those who are looking for humor in suicide...and something tells me there aren't very many of us. 2 out of 5. Tweet Director Admits 3-D Was Horrible..... Movie Trailer Friday More Posts by Andrew Green » Random Movies: Over the G.W. Random Movies: Population 436 Random Movies: The Quiet Earth Hey, Look. It's THAT Guy. Well, THAT sure was a waste of time! The Most Interesting Place in the World A Twofer Of Classic Horror Movies Le Art Film All Posts by Andrew Green »
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Winter Haven Public Library » Children's Programs » Princess Day 2008 Princess 01 Image | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | > | » Camera: KODAK EASYSHARE C743 ZOOM DIGITAL CAMERA | Date: 3/22/08 10:44 AM | Resolution: 3072 x 2304 | ISO: 140 | Exp. Time: 1/64s | Aperture: 2.7 | Focal Length: 6.0mm
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Argument from the second law of thermodynamics Revision as of 22:22, 26 June 2010 (view source)Arensb (Talk | contribs) (→Argument From the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics against God's existence: Deleted plagiarized section)← Older edit Latest revision as of 16:09, 3 May 2011 (view source)Jt (Talk | contribs) m (Tweak in language) (4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)Line 1: −{{stub}}+{{argument-stub}} {{Wikipedia|Second law of thermodynamics}} {{Wikipedia|Second law of thermodynamics}} says that everything tends toward disorder; since living beings (or says that everything tends toward disorder; since living beings (or the universe) is highly ordered, they could not have formed the universe) is highly ordered, they could not have formed −spontaneously.+spontaneously. Along with this idea, they may argue that it seems if organisms were to form by chance within the universe, the ever increasing entropy would wipe out these organisms before they ever had a chance to become as intricate and detailed as they are today. == Examples == == Examples == === The Earth is not a closed system === === The Earth is not a closed system === −The second law of thermodynamics describes what happens to closed systems, that is, systems in which mass and energy are confined to the system and cannot enter or leave. However, the Earth is not a closed system, since it receives radiation from the Sun and also radiates heat and light into space. The Earth's crust is an even more open system, because heat and material is often ejected from the Earth's interior (through volcanoes and other methods). This provides a wealth of energy that drives "machines" such as climate patterns and the flourishing of life. If the Earth was a closed systems, these processes might have "run down" and ended, but as long as the Sun continues to heat the planet they are in no danger of stopping.+The second law of thermodynamics describes what happens to closed systems, that is, systems in which mass and energy are confined to the system and cannot enter or leave. However, the Earth is not a closed system, since it receives radiation from the Sun and also radiates heat and light into space. The Earth's crust is an even more open system, because heat and material is often ejected from the Earth's interior (through volcanoes and other methods). This provides a wealth of energy that drives "machines" such as climate patterns and the flourishing of life. If the Earth was a closed system, these processes might have "run down" and ended, but as long as the Sun continues to heat the planet they are in no danger of stopping. === The argument would apply equally well to known, normal reproduction within a species === === The argument would apply equally well to known, normal reproduction within a species === This argument-related article is a stub. You can help out by expanding it. Creationists often claim that the Second Law of Thermodynamics (sometimes abbreviated 2LoT) precludes evolution (and/or the Big Bang). Often this is explained by saying that the second law says that everything tends toward disorder; since living beings (or the universe) is highly ordered, they could not have formed spontaneously. Along with this idea, they may argue that it seems if organisms were to form by chance within the universe, the ever increasing entropy would wipe out these organisms before they ever had a chance to become as intricate and detailed as they are today. 2 Counter-arguments 2.1 Entropy is not the same as disorder 2.2 The Big Bang theory does not claim anything about prior events 2.3 The Earth is not a closed system 2.4 The argument would apply equally well to known, normal reproduction within a species 2.5 Raised free energies can be the result of natural processes Examples From Thermodynamics vs. Evolutionism at trueorigin.org: "The second law presents an insurmountable problem to the concept of a natural, mechanistic process: (1) by which the physical universe could have formed spontaneously from nothing, and (2) by which biological life could have arisen and diversified (also spontaneously) from a non-living, inanimate world. (Both postulates form essential planks in the platform of evolutionary theory in general.)" A.C. McIntosh, Information And Entropy – Top-down Or Bottom-up Development In Living Systems?, International Journal of Design & Nature and Ecodynamics, Vol. 4, Issue 4: "Consequently, the fundamental laws of thermodynamics show that entropy reduction which can occur naturally in non-isolated systems is not a sufficient argument to explain the origin of either biological machinery or genetic information that is inextricably intertwined with it." Counter-arguments Entropy is not the same as disorder The most common definition of the second law is: "The entropy of an isolated system not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium." The second law of thermodynamics uses the word entropy, which is what causes the confusion (Or allows the lies, depending on how you look at it.) The meaning of the word entropy that is used in the second law is: "For a closed thermodynamic system, a quantitative measure of the amount of thermal energy not available to do work." Using that correct definition the second law of thermodynamics obviously has nothing whatsoever to do with evolution. It never did, it's just about thermal energy. (As should be evident by its very name.) But the definition that the apologists use is: "A measure of the disorder or randomness in a closed system." And using that definition, the second law of thermodynamics would mean: The random disorderliness of an isolated system not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium. However, this is not only an incorrect use of the second law. It is also untrue, some closed systems will tend to fall into disorder, while some will become more orderly. Examples: Disorderly dust clouds in space eventualy gravitate towards a central/denser point, forming a star. If we presume that humanity is orderly, and that the apologists definition of entropy is valid, we should observe the continuous destruction of humanity - human populations should dwindle, human technology should decline. That this is not occurring is not evidence that the definition is incorrect - it would mean that the Earth is not a closed system. Evolution is compatible even with the apologists definition - the earth itself is not a closed system. In a universe consisting solely of the earth and the sun, biological evolution is still possible - the total "randomness" will increase consistently as the sun releases energy, but on earth, that energy is temporarily ordered. The Big Bang theory does not claim anything about prior events That is, Big Bang theory does not currently tell us what happened before the Big Bang, or whether there even was a "before the Big Bang", in the sense of a point in space-time which unambiguously predates the Big Bang itself. Without knowing how much entropy, if any, was present in the pre-Bang universe, you cannot claim that the Big Bang contradicts the second law. The Earth is not a closed system The second law of thermodynamics describes what happens to closed systems, that is, systems in which mass and energy are confined to the system and cannot enter or leave. However, the Earth is not a closed system, since it receives radiation from the Sun and also radiates heat and light into space. The Earth's crust is an even more open system, because heat and material is often ejected from the Earth's interior (through volcanoes and other methods). This provides a wealth of energy that drives "machines" such as climate patterns and the flourishing of life. If the Earth was a closed system, these processes might have "run down" and ended, but as long as the Sun continues to heat the planet they are in no danger of stopping. The argument would apply equally well to known, normal reproduction within a species If the earth could only become more disordered or more "worn down", it would not be possible for populations of life forms to grow and flourish. In fact, every time a cell copies or repairs its own DNA, it creates more information, at least in the obvious sense of producing a longer string of nucleotides. The second law of thermodynamics must allow the creation of ordered systems, or else it would not be possible for new, young, healthy organisms to be descended from older organisms. In order to argue that the second law prevents evolution, one must demonstrate that even though known harmful and harmless mutations and normal reproduction occur, beneficial mutations could never occur. This seems to be a hopeless task, because there is no fundamental difference, either in physics or in the theory of evolution, between "harmful" and "beneficial" mutations, and because beneficial mutations have indeed been observed to occur. Raised free energies can be the result of natural processes The McIntosh quote above relates more to abiogenesis than to evolution (since evolution requires no processes that are physically different from normal reproduction plus mutation). McIntosh claims that the formation of the complex machinery necessary for life requires a positive free energy, and thus cannot happen spontaneously. This has been empirically disproven many times over, as many organic molecules have been produced through lifeless processes, and in fact are found in some comets and meteorites. McIntosh also makes claims about the unique nature of genetic information, claiming that it transcends the physical/chemical medium that it inhabits. However, he gives no clear way of deriving any of this from the second law itself, instead simply proposing it as something that would support his statements. External links Response to this argument at talkorigins.org Argument From the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics at strongatheism.net. Retrieved from "http://wiki.ironchariots.org/index.php?title=Argument_from_the_second_law_of_thermodynamics&oldid=16374" Categories: Argument stubsScienceEvolution Personal tools
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A non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation affiliate of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress. WYOMING AUTHORS WIKI LAUNCHED The Wyoming Authors Wiki at http://wiki.wyomingauthors.org is a new online resource for information on the state's books and authors. More than 700 authors are currently listed, and the site grows daily. It was developed by staff at the Wyoming State Library as a Wyoming Center for the Book project. What makes the wiki different from an ordinary web site is that its users can add or edit information, much like the well-known Wikipedia web site. Authors, publicists, readers, students, historians and others with information about Wyoming literature may register with the Authors Wiki to contribute. "Many state Centers for the Book put author information online, but we believe we are the first to put it in a wiki," said Tina Lackey, Wyoming State Library Publications Specialist. "Wikis, blogs, social networking sites - people are drawn to these because they can become part of the conversation, and they can add their own 'puzzle piece' of knowledge to the picture." She added, "We hope to build a strong user community that will keep the wiki updated with what's happening right now in Wyoming's writing scene and will add to our knowledge of the state's literary history." The State Library hired Jill Armetta, a graduate English student at the University of Wyoming, as a summer intern to do the extensive research and data entry needed to begin building the Wyoming Authors Wiki. "Just by researching authors and the titles of their books, I have learned volumes about the people who formed Wyoming's history and culture," Armetta said, "but the truly interesting information will come from the people who will contribute to the wiki who have personal ties to or who have researched the state's writers." The Wyoming Authors Wiki can be found at http://wiki.wyomingauthors.org. The contributor registration process takes only a few minutes. For more information, contact Tina Lackey at 307-777-6338 or tlyles@wyo.gov. Wyoming Center for the Book | Wyoming State Library
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hide Consumer advisory issued for Michigan produced cheese products Thursday, September 20, 2012 10:22 p.m. EDT LANSING (WKZO) -- The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development says to check the fridge for cheese made by Turner Cheese Company of Whittemore, recently. The milk used to make the Co-Jack, Cheddar, Jalepeno Cheddar, and Garlic Herb cheese and cheese curds has been deemed unfit for human consumption. The milk had been held at 63-degrees for an extended period of time, which can allow bacteria grow and prevent pasteurization. All of the cheeses were sold at the retail counter of Turner Cheese Company, but state officials don't know if it was sold to wholesalers, distributors or retailers as yet.
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Liberty Baptist Church builds new parsonage June 28, 2012 By Daniel Brunty The Winston County Journal A pillar of the Noxapater community, Liberty Baptist Church is receiving blessings in the form of a new parsonage. Thanks to the kindheartedness and hard work of two mission groups and funds raised by the church, the new parsonage is now becoming a reality. The parsonage, which is the house provided by a church for its pastor, will be located right beside the old parsonage. Liberty Baptist Church Pastor Jim Pender and wife Loretta will be the new residents of the parsonage upon its completion. Pastor Pender gave a brief history of the old parsonage, which will be removed after the construction of the new one. “The original parsonage was built 60 years ago,” Pender said. “The original parsonage was built by church members from that time period. A lot of the wood that the old parsonage is constructed with came from the property itself. And some of the lumber came from the old Liberty school that was here years ago. So this will be just another phase of history here at Liberty.” As with any older structure, the need for some type of maintenance arose. “A couple of years ago, we ran into the realization that the old parsonage was in need of a new roof, with it having so many problems,” Pender said. “The parsonage, being 60 years old, was bound to run into problems. Over a period of time, it was determined the most feasible thing would be to build a new pastorium. We started raising funds and wanted to get to a specific point in fundraising before we actually got started with the building program.” Once the funds were acquired, the church would receive help in the form of the Mississippi Chapter of Campers on Mission, a national fellowship of Christian Campers who participate in mission activities. “Campers on Mission is mostly made up of retired but professional people such as electricians, carpenters, and others,” Pender said. “We even have a plumber who is actually a member from our church.” Campers on a Mission decided to incorporate the help of another fellow missionary group to assist them with the project. “Mississippi Campers on Mission, which I am a member of, knew of and have worked with Westwood Tools of Ministry,” Pender said. “They recommended that the Westwood group to come in and do the framing as well as the roof and shingles for the project.” Westwood Tools of Ministry is based out of the Westwood Baptist Church in Alabaster, AL. The group is comprised of several churches that travel on missions to assist other Baptist churches all over the United States. The churches that comprise Westwood Tools of Ministry besides Westwood are County Line Baptist Church in Mississippi, Liberty Baptist Church in Columbiana, AL, Indian Grave Baptist Church in Billingsley, AL, Hillsboro Baptist Church in Hillsboro, and St. Thomas the Apostle in Montevallo, AL. The leadership team for Westwood Tools of Ministry are Steve & Carol Carter and Dennis & Janet Dickey. Carol Carter spoke of the group’s work and background. “Our group is actually a branch off of my home church,” Carter said. “My dad actually started their mission group in 1978. They have helped with construction once a year since 1978. A few years ago several of us from our church went with their group, and when the interest grew we broke off so we could do twice as much.” Westwood Tools of Ministry has been constructing projects for years using non-skilled labor of all ages as a base of their workforce. “One thing that most people find interesting is that other than my dad, none of the rest of us are carpenters, and none of us having anything to do with construction at all,” Carter said. “We have a deputy, a retired UPS worker, a traffic engineer, a lawn care, and many others. Our youngest member is 10 years old and the oldest is 79 years old. Our main goal is to construct what needs to be constructed. Carter also spoke of the group’s work on the new parsonage. “We chose to come here for our next project,” Carter said. “This was just a slab when we got here Saturday. So we framed it up and the goal is to have the roof and shingles by the time we leave this Saturday.” Besides the two missions, Liberty received a lot of assistance from their congregation with items such as clearing the brush to lay the foundation and providing financial assistance. “This whole project is basically being built by volunteer labor,” Pender said. “When the roof and shingles are on, the construction up until that point will have been debt-free.” With the parsonage designed to provide a home for the pastor, it had to be built in a way to suit future pastors and their families. “With a pastorium, you never know the size of your family that is coming in,” Pender said. “We are trying to build it in such a way as not to be overly sized, but large enough. The actual structure will have three bedrooms with an office study and a two-car garage. It will be 2270 square feet of living space.” With no estimated time of completion, the parsonage will be a work in progress or the weeks to come. Upon its completion, Liberty Baptist Church will soon be able to provide their pastors with a glorious and blessed living space. “Hopefully once this is done, it will be a house that will serve the needs of the church for many years to come,” Pender said. ← Obituaries Parade to make colorful downtown July 3 →
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Windows 7 Review, Part 10: Bundled Applications Paul Thurrott's Supersite for Windows Paul Thurrott When it comes to the quality and volume of bundled applications in Windows 7, Microsoft's latest operating system is in an interesting position. On the one hand, several previously bundled applications are no longer provided with Windows 7, though many are available for free as separate downloads. (Others, however, are simply gone for good, as we'll discuss below.) On the flipside, the exodus of often superfluous utilities from Windows 7 can be seen as a good thing: The OS is smaller and more lightweight thanks to the absence of what was, in Windows Vista especially, an eclectic, confusing, and overly-voluminous collection of applications and other utilities. How you view the situation in Windows 7, then, will depend largely on your perspective. As far as I'm concerned, Microsoft has mostly done the right thing. Many of the bundled applications in Windows Vista (Meeting Space? What?) were just weird and went largely unused. And for the truly high-value applications that were spun out of Windows and provided instead with the Windows Live Essentials suite, there's an argument to be made that the unbundling will lead to more frequent updates. We'll see if that happens. There are some illogical aspects to the new Microsoft strategy. For example, Windows 7 includes Windows DVD Maker, but it does not include Windows Movie Maker. Why one is still present and not the other is unclear and, I think, will be confusing to users. Also, previously obvious applications like Windows Calendar and Windows Contacts are now gone for good. You can get back much of the functionality from these apps, as it turns out, but via a download-only application called Windows Live Mail. What? A mail application manages my schedule? Sorry, but that doesn't make sense to me. And it certainly won't make sense to most typical users.
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hide Iran to strengthen naval presence over disputed islands Sunday, November 04, 2012 7:06 a.m. CST DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran will increase its naval presence in the Gulf to strengthen its authority over three islands which the United Arab Emirates says are its territory, Tehran said on Sunday. The islands sit near oil shipping routes at the mouth of the strategic Strait of Hormuz and the challenge over their sovereignty is a constant threat to Iran's fragile relations with its Arab neighbors. "The security of the Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf is part of the various strategies of the naval force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps," IRGC Commander Mohammad Ali Jafari said, according to the website of state television IRIB. Jafari was speaking at a ceremony inaugurating a fifth "naval defense zone" at the port of Bandar Lengeh. He said the IRGC was "increasing, expanding and improving the expert capability in naval defense" in the five zones. "The fifth zone of the Guards' naval force is one of the naval defense chains which is in particular responsible for the defense of the Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf," he said. The 41-year-old dispute between Shi'ite Muslim Iran and the Sunni UAE over the islands - Greater and Lesser Tunb and Abu Musa - has nationalist and ethnic overtones and was inflamed when President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited Abu Musa in April. In September, UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahayan said Iran's "occupation" of the three islands was against international law. Last month Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said Tehran would consider downgrading ties with the UAE over the dispute, although the foreign ministry later denied the report, according to state television. (Reporting By Yeganeh Torbati and Zahra Hosseinian; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)
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hide Meningitis outbreak spurs calls to strengthen FDA By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. and state health regulators called on Congress on Tuesday to strengthen federal oversight of compounding pharmacies as lawmakers prepared for two days of hearings on a deadly fungal meningitis outbreak linked to a compounded steroid. But the main federal regulator, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, said in a statement to Reuters that it faces legal restrictions in regulating drug compounders such as the New England Compounding Center. The Massachusetts pharmacy was at the center of the outbreak that has infected 438 people, including 32 who have died, in 19 states. The chief public health officer for Massachusetts also urged immediate congressional action to bolster federal oversight of the little-known, lightly regulated compounding industry, which is primarily overseen by state pharmacy boards. "It is clear that the patchwork of disparate state regulations is not enough to keep the public safe," Dr. Lauren Smith, interim commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, said in written testimony filed with a U.S. House of Representatives oversight panel. Lawmakers hope to shed light on why regulators failed to act against NECC despite multiple problems dating back to 1999. They also are focusing on whether new legislation may be needed to grant FDA clear authority to police the drug compounding industry. "FDA's authority over compounding pharmacies is more limited by law and needs to be strengthened," said the federal agency's statement to Reuters. "We look forward to working with Congress to prevent this from happening again." Those sentiments were echoed on Tuesday by a new report from the minority Democratic staff of the oversight and investigations panel. "Legal authority over compounding has been complicated by court decisions that have cast doubt on FDA's authority to regulate compounders," the report said. "Compounders operate in a regulatory gap between state-regulated pharmacies and federally regulated drug manufacturers." Smith and FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg are scheduled to testify on Wednesday before the panel, the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee for oversight and investigations. A second congressional hearing is scheduled to take place before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee on Thursday. The Massachusetts health commissioner, who took office less than three weeks ago, said she is determined to find out why the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Pharmacy voted to sanction the company in September 2004 but ultimately agreed to a far weaker consent agreement with NECC in January 2006. "I will not be satisfied until we know the full story behind this decision," she said in her written testimony. DEFRAUDING FDA Smith said the Massachusetts pharmacy board's executive director and staff attorney learned in April 2006 that executives from a company hired to ensure NECC's compliance were convicted of federal crimes related to defrauding the FDA. "However, we found no evidence to indicate that the executive director or staff attorney ... provided this crucial information to the board. Nor did they see fit to send inspectors back to NECC in 2006 to determine if they were fulfilling the requirements of the corrective action plan," Smith said. But in May 2006, the board affirmed NECC to be in compliance with the consent agreement. Smith also believes the board would have acted immediately against NECC last July -- a month before it produced the final doses of steroid injections linked to the outbreak -- if board staff had told board members about a complaint against NECC brought by Colorado authorities. Earlier this month, the state fired board director James Coffey and board counsel Susan Manning for failing to act on the Colorado complaint. The Massachusetts pharmacy board was left to oversee NECC's operations in 2003 when state and FDA officials agreed that its activities did not constitute a manufacturing operation that would need to meet stringent federal standards for safety and efficacy, the FDA acknowledged on Tuesday. The decision was originally disclosed on Monday by a House Republican staff report. Where to draw the line between drug manufacturing and drug compounding is a central question for Congress as lawmakers debate the potential need for new legislation to expand the FDA's authority. Drug compounding is a little-known practice in which pharmacists traditionally alter or recombine drugs to meet the special needs of specific patients. It is overseen mainly by state authorities who are often ill-equipped for the job. The activity has evolved in recent decades to include large-scale production that some experts view as drug manufacturing that should be subject to FDA regulation. Not everyone agrees that the FDA needed new authority to stop New England Compounding Center from operating, however. Advocacy group Public Citizen earlier this month called on the Obama administration to launch an independent probe of the FDA's lack of action against NECC. The group alleges that the FDA already has the authority it needs, but that agency officials failed to take steps that could have prevented the current outbreak. Smith's written testimony also shows that NECC co-owner Barry Cadden was named to a state task force to study oversight of the compounding pharmacy industry in 2002. The task force met for two years and discussed potential regulatory changes. But there is no record of formal recommendations and no changes were ever adopted. (Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Dan Grebler)
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Priest 'Placed On Leave' After Denying Communion To Lesbian Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By Scott Neuman The Gaithersburg, Md., priest who refused to give Communion to a lesbian parishioner during a funeral mass for the woman's mother has been has been placed on leave, according to NBC Channel 4 news. A letter from an archdiocese official says that Rev. Marcel Guarnizo was placed on leave for engaging in intimidating behavior. The archdiocese had previously apologized for Guarnizo's behavior. Guarnizo said he could not administer the sacrament to Barbara Johnson because she was a sinner. "He put his hand over the body of Christ and looked at me and said, 'I can't give you Communion because you live with a woman, and in the eyes of the church, that is a sin,' " Johnson recalled in a story last month published by The Washington Post. Johnson had asked for the priest to be removed. In the letter of apology to Johnson from the archdiocese, Rev. Barry Knestout, a high ranking church administrator, said the lack of "kindness" that Johson endured at the service "is a cause of great concern and personal regret." According to NBC 4: The archdiocese also issued a statement after the funeral saying that any action against the priest will remain confidential because it is a personnel issue. Johnson's family has said it hopes the action against Guarnizo will ensure that others don't endure the same treatment. Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. View the discussion thread.
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The Coen Bros. On Writing, 'Lebowski' And Literally Herding Cats Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By editor Originally published on Tue December 17, 2013 11:21 pm Joel (left) and Ethan Coen wrote and directed Fargo, The Big Lebowski, O Brother Where Art Thou?, No Country for Old Men, A Serious Man and True Grit. Their latest film is Inside Llewyn Davis. Stuart C. Wilson An orange tabby cat co-stars alongside Oscar Isaac in the Coen brothers' Inside Llewyn Davis. "The whole exercise of shooting a cat is pretty nightmarish because they don't care about anything," Ethan Coen says. Alison Rosa Long Strange Trip/CBS Films Jeff Bridges (from left), John Goodman and Steve Buscemi starred in the Coen brothers' 1998 film The Big Lebowski. It didn't do particularly well in the theaters, but on the home movie market, "it became some sort of cult thing," says Joel Coen. "How do you explain that? I have no idea." Merrick Morton If you ask the Coen brothers about how they write their films, you might not get a straight answer. "It's mostly napping," Ethan tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross. "We go to the office, we're there, we're in a room together," Joel adds. "We take naps, but, you know, the important thing is that we're at the office, should we be inspired to actually write something." The brothers don't split up writing responsibilities — they "talk through" the dialogue and "work it out together," Joel explains. The process seems to be working for the brothers who wrote and directed Fargo, The Big Lebowski, O Brother Where Art Thou?, No Country for Old Men, A Serious Man and True Grit. Their latest film, Inside Llewyn Davis, just won the Grand Prix at this year's Cannes film festival, and it's nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture, musical or comedy, and an Independent Spirit award for Best Feature. Set in 1961, Inside Llewyn Davis stars Oscar Isaac in the title role, as a folksinger in Greenwich Village, just before Bob Dylan comes on the scene. He's known in the clubs but isn't particularly successful.Interview Highlights On basing the Llewyn Davis character on folksinger Dave Van Ronk Ethan Coen: Dave Van Ronk, for those who don't know him — probably most don't know — is a folk singer, probably the biggest person on the scene in 1961 in the folk revival in Greenwich Village, biggest person on the scene until Bob Dylan showed up. But in our minds he was the folk singer, "the generic folk singer," until we kind of figured out who the main character of the movie actually was. Joel Coen: We were never interested in doing a biopic. That was never the ambition, so the question was, "We want to make a movie about a folk singer — who was he?" And we did draw on certain aspects of both [Dave] Van Ronk and other people, like Jack Elliott, from the period. On the roots of their interest in folk Joel: It's a direct descendant from the music that's in O Brother Where Art Thou? It's the kid in 1961 discovering that music that's in that movie. So we've always been interested in those musical forms, and we've always been interested and grew up on the music that grew out of those forms — which is rock 'n' roll and Bob Dylan. When we were kids, Bob Dylan was a top 40 radio artist, we were listening to him on the radio like everyone else was. On casting and filming the cat in Inside Llewyn Davis Ethan: We used the advice of the cat trainer ... [to get] a kind of orange, marmalade tabby cat, just because they're common, so easy to double, triple, quadruple — there were many cats playing the one cat. It comes across pretty well in the movie, but the whole exercise of shooting a cat is pretty nightmarish because they don't care about anything. They don't want to do what you want them to do. As the animal trainer said to us, "A dog wants to please you. A cat only wants to please itself." It was just long, painstaking, frustrating days shooting the cat. Joel: What you have to do is basically find the cat that's predisposed to doing whatever particular piece of action it is that you have to film. So you find the cat that isn't afraid to run down a fire escape or the cat that's very docile and will let the actor just hold them for extended periods of time without being fidgety. Then you want the fidgety cat, the squirrely cat, for when you want the cat to run away. And you keep just swapping them out depending on what the task at hand is. Ethan: In True Grit we had a vulture, a trained vulture ... that was a pain and that was even — by vulture standards — probably a stupid vulture, and that was frustrating. But I would take a vulture over a cat. The cat was just horrible. On The Big Lebowski's cult following Joel: It developed the afterlife on home video. [When] it came out in movie theaters, it didn't do particularly outstanding business in the theatrical market, but it did in the home video market — and then it became some sort of cult thing. How do you explain that? I have no idea. It's one of the more bizarre afterlives, too, of any of the things we've done. We were at a movie theater together with our families a year or two ago in San Francisco, coming down from a movie, and we saw there was a little booth set up with Big Lebowski posters on it and a young woman sitting on the other side of this table, maybe 17 or 18 years old, and Ethan stopped and said, "What is this?" And she said [without knowing who they were], "Well, we show The Big Lebowski every night and people come dressed up in costumes. You should come, you'll like it. It's fun." On their editing pseudonym "Roderick Jaynes" Ethan: We use the pseudonym cutting because our names are in the credits so many times already that adding one more just seemed like bad taste. Joel: We sort of invented a whole persona for this guy. Ethan: He's British, as it turns out. He's written introductions to a few of our screenplays. ... We actually had to come up with a bio for him — you need bios for the personnel of your movies, I don't even know why, for PR purposes. I can't remember what we had him doing. He started out minding the tea cart and shepherding the studios. He's very old, in his 80s, actually, when we first started working with him, which would make him probably over 100 now. Joel: He lives in Haywards Heath, Sussex.Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. Transcript TERRY GROSS, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. My guest, Joel and Ethan Coen, wrote and directed the new film "Inside Llewyn Davis." The Coen brothers also wrote and directed "Fargo," "The Big Lebowski," "O Brother Where Art Thou," "No Country For Old Men," "A Serious Man" and "True Grit." "Inside Llewyn Davis" won the Grand Jury Prize at this year's Cannes Film Festival. It's nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy and an Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature. New York Times film critic A.O. Scott made it number one on his top 10 list. Set in 1961, "Inside Llewyn Davis" stars Oscar Isaac in the title role as a folk singer in Greenwich Village, just before Bob Dylan comes on the scene. He's known in the clubs but isn't particularly successful. He used to be half of a folk-singing duo, but his partner recently committed suicide. The solo album Davis subsequently recorded didn't sell. He's broke and sleeps on the couches of friends, who are losing their patience with him for good reason. He has a way of sabotaging friendships, as well as professional opportunities. In one scene, Davis listens back to a track from the album of duets he made before his partner's death. Here's that track, with Marcus Mumford singing the role of the late partner. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "DINK'S SONG") OSCAR ISAAC AND MARCUS MUMFORD: (Singing) If I had wings like Noah's dove, I'd fly up the river to the one I love. Oh, fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. I had a man, he's long and tall. He moved his body like a cannon ball. Oh fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well. I remember one evening... GROSS: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, welcome back to FRESH AIR. Why did you want to make a film about a folk musician in 1961? (LAUGHTER) GROSS: Sorry I asked. JOEL COEN: Why did we? We had a very early thought, I mean early - meaning well before we ever wrote the script, so a number of years ago - where we thought supposing Dave Van Ronk gets beat up outside of Gerde's Folk City in the Village in 1961, that's the beginning of the movie. And we thought OK. Yeah, that's - why would that happen? And we couldn't really figure out why that would happen. Who would beat up a folk singer is sort of the problem, or the issue. So we put that thought away and came back to it periodically over the next couple of years and eventually worked it out. ETHAN COEN: Dave Van Ronk, for those who don't know him, probably most don't know, was a folk singer. He's kind of the biggest person on the scene in 1961 in the folk revival in Greenwich Village, biggest person on the scene until Bob Dylan showed up. But, sort of, in our mind he was the - kind of, in quote, the generic folk singer until we kind of figured out who the main character of the movie actually was and who actually was beating him and for what reason. GROSS: So how do the characters start shifting away from the original idea of it being Dave Van Ronk? COEN: We were never interested in doing a biopic. That was never the ambition. So the question was we wanted to make a movie about a folk singer. Who was he? And we did draw on certain aspects of both Van Ronk and other people, like Jack Elliott from the period, New Yorkers who came in from the boroughs and were singing in these basket houses in the Village in 1961. GROSS: I don't think I've ever heard the expression, basket houses. COEN: Yeah, I guess you don't hear it anymore. Why would you? It was in a lot of these coffee houses where they played music, folk music or whatever kind of live performance. They would pass around a basket for tips, and that was the performer's - and that was the total of the performer's pay. GROSS: So where does folk music figure into your lives? COEN: Well, now, or...? GROSS: No, then. Like when you were... COEN: It's taken over. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: Yeah. COEN: It's a direct descendent of the music that's in "O Brother Where Art Thou." It's the kids in 1961 sort of discovering that music that's in that music, which we - you know, so we've always been interested in those musical forms, and we've always been interested and grew up on the music that grew out of those forms, which is rock 'n' roll. So that's the music we grew up - and Bob Dylan. When we were kids, you know, Bob Dylan was a top 40 radio artist. We were listening to him on the radio like everyone else was. GROSS: So what point in your lives did you discover, like, folk music, or blues or traditional music? COEN: Yeah, I've got to tell you, it's actually - I like kind of recoil a little bit. When you hear folk music, it sounds kind of wussy(ph). You know, it's like, you know, when we were kids, we listened to rock 'n' roll, and, I don't know, folk music sounds like froggy went a'courting or something. (LAUGHTER) COEN: Hey, that's a good song. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: Yes, but call it what you will. You don't have to call it folk music. But when did you discover the kind of music that you've included in "O Brother" and in "Inside Llewyn Davis"? COEN: Well, I was going to say... GROSS: Answer the question. (LAUGHTER) COEN: What Ethan just said, there was a point at which, you know, Bob Dylan was accused of abandoning folk music, and he said something like to me, folk music is a lot of fat people. COEN: Yeah, you kind of know what he means. I don't know. T-Bone won't even say folk - T-Bone Burnett, who we worked with, and he worked on the music in this movie with us and several other movies, T-Bone calls it American traditional music, which sounds hateful in another way. COEN: The music that was being played, you know, in 1961, 1961 we were very, very young. So, you know, I remember hearing it. You know, I actually remember my mother, you know, listening to or singing some of the stuff that was sort of part of that sort of folk music revival. And when we were kids, one record that we had was a record of a concert that Pete Seeger did with Big Bill Broonzy. It was recorded at a university in Chicago in 1957, that we listened to and that we actually - when we made our second movie, "Raising Arizona," we stole something from that, which was the idea of playing Beethoven on a banjo, something that Pete Seeger does on that record. GROSS: In the movie, there's - Llewyn Davis is broke, and he's made his first solo album, and he's hoping - like he doesn't even have money for a winter coat. So he's hoping he can collect some royalties on the solo album that he made. So there's a scene where he goes to the head of the record label he's recorded for, and this guy's also managing him. And it's this, like, elderly man who's very, like, old show biz, old record industry. And he's there with his - with an older woman who's his longtime secretary. And they kind of bicker like an old married couple. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: So anyway, so Llewyn Davis goes there to try to collect some money, and you can tell that the head of the record company has absolutely, like, no feeling for Llewyn Davis' music. I want to play this scene, where he goes in. And again, Llewyn Davis is played by Oscar Isaac. The head of the record label, Mel Novikoff, is played by Jerry Grayson, and his secretary is played by Sylvia Kauders. Llewyn Davis speaks first. (SOUNDBITE OF MOVIE, "INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS") OSCAR ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) How we doing? JERRY GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) We're doing great. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Really? New record's doing well? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) How we doing? Not so hot, I gotta be honest. Ginny, where's Cincinnati? SYLVIA KAUDERS: (As Ginny) What? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) Cincinnati, it's not in here. KAUDERS: (As Ginny) It should be in there. GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) It's not in here, I'm telling you. Is it...? KAUDERS: (As Ginny) Cincinnati? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) Yeah. KAUDERS: (As Ginny) I got it. GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) What? KAUDERS: (As Ginny) I got it. GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) You got Cincinnati? KAUDERS: (As Ginny) Yeah, you want it? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) Could I have it? KAUDERS: (As Ginny) Should I bring it in? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) Yeah. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) You owe me something? You have to owe me something. GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) I wish. People need time, you know, to get to know you, buy you as a solo act, even know you're a solo act. Cincinnati is not good. KAUDERS: (As Ginny) That's it, right? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) Yeah, this is it, God help... ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Nobody knew us when we were a duo. It's not like me and Mike were ever a big act. It's not a big re-education for the public. Mel? Mel? GRAYSON: (As Mel Novikoff) How 'ya doin' kid? GROSS: I love that scene. COEN: That sounds really good on the radio. It should be a radio play. It just needs, it needs like a few cheesy effects to make it a radio play, you know, a creaky door or something. That was good. I enjoyed that. GROSS: I love the way the agent and his secretary just keep repeating what each other said. So - is that exactly how you wrote it? COEN: Yeah, pretty much. GROSS: So do you know - did you know early in your career old show biz agents like this guy? COEN: No, we didn't, but actually we did know from - well, I guess this is early in our career. When we used to work in the Brill Building, 1619 Broadway, which is - was Tin Pan Alley, exactly where these guys used to work from, it was also a lot of cutting rooms in that building. And there were a lot of - not a lot, but there were a few old-timers still there when we were working in the Brill Building, and we would see them occasionally. COEN: Yeah, they had the pebble glass doors with the name of the company stenciled on the outside. I remember Johnny Marks' Music was on the same hall we were on, our cutting room. COEN: And he'd be a guy who, in that case, I think he had like one song, like "Here Comes Peter Cottontail." And sat in there, he's about 90 years old, and he would wait for the phone to ring in case anyone wanted to license it. GROSS: And so you had your editing room in the Brill Building? COEN: Yeah, there were a lot of cutting rooms there, actually until quite recently. The last kind of movie postproduction company just moved out recently. GROSS: My guests are Ethan and Joel Coen. Their new film, which they wrote and directed, is called "Inside Llewyn Davis." We'll talk more after a break. This is FRESH AIR. (SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guests are Joel and Ethan Coen, and they wrote and directed the new movie "Inside Llewyn Davis." I want to play another scene for you, and this is a scene, Llewyn Davis has been - he spent one night crashing at the home of a university professor who he knows. When he leaves in the morning, he's - the couple who he's crashing with have already left. And when he leaves in the morning, the cat runs out the door of the apartment, and then the door slams behind him. So he's locked out, and meanwhile the cat's running away. So he grabs the cat, and then the cat runs away from him. And then he finds the cat and returns the cat to the apartment. And so this is when he returns the cat to the apartment, and Mr. Gorfein, the university professor, opens the door, and there's a couple of friends at the apartment, too. (SOUNDBITE OF MOVIE, "INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS") ETHAN PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) Oh, there's the cat. Home from the hill. Hey, Llewyn, welcome, come on in. Lillian's in the kitchen. She's making her famous moussaka. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) No, I can't barge in for dinner. I just wanted to... PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) Oh come on, one more person. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) No, I can't. PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) Moussaka. Come on. Do you know - you know Marty Green and Janet Fung? ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Hello, nice to meet you, Llewyn Davis. ALEX KARPOVSKY: (As Marty Green) Oh, Mitch and Lillian's folk song friend. Are you crashing with us? ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) No, no, no, I hadn't even planned on dinner. PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) Llewyn's not an Upper West Side guy. We only get to see him... ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) When I've rotated through my Village friends. PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) We're the last resort. Marty's in my department. And Joe's a musician. This is Joe Flom. He plays in music antique with Lillian. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Oh, how you doing? BRADLEY MOTT: (As Joe Flom) Nice to meet you. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) What's your instrument? MOTT: (As Joe Flom) Well, anything with a keyboard. I play celeste and harpsichord in MA. I'm a piano instructor most days. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Bum a cigarette? MOTT: (As Joe Flom) Oh, sure. PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) Glass of wine, Llewyn? Little (unintelligible) red? ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Yeah. I should've brought something. PHILLIPS: (As Mitch Gorfein) Hey, don't be silly. You brought the cat. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) You know, I used to take piano lessons when I was a kid from Mrs. Siegelstein(ph). You don't know Mrs. Siegelstein, do you? Very, very big calves, orthopedic shoes, lives in far Rockaway, upstairs from the Carlins. MOTT: (As Joe Flom) Does she play early music? ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) Um, Harry James on the radio. On the piano, "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes." She was not a swinger. MOTT: (As Joe Flom) Well, Harry James. ISAAC: (As Llewyn Davis) OK, yeah, well her playing, though, was pretty on the beat. GROSS: That's a scene from "Inside Llewyn Davis." COEN: That doesn't work as... GROSS: It doesn't work so well, you think? COEN: It doesn't work as well as a radio play, I must say. You need the picture. You need the full horror of the little social conclave on the Jewish academic Upper West Side. Yeah, it kind of loses something there, but OK. GROSS: Your parents were both - or are still both university professors. Do you feel like you knew the Gorfeins when you were growing up? COEN: Oh yeah. (LAUGHTER) COEN: Definitely. GROSS: Tell us about the people you knew who you based it on, without mentioning names, of course. COEN: Oh, now you're trying to get me in trouble. COEN: No, you know, it's a world we know. Our parents were both academics in the Midwest in our case, not on the Upper West Side. But, you know, academia is probably similar everywhere. GROSS: Well, I like the way they provide the couch for Llewyn to sleep on, but Llewyn gives them, like, authenticity and, like, folk music credibility. He's their folk music friend. COEN: Right. Maybe he - right, he keeps them feeling young, yes. He's their young friend. GROSS: And their hip friend. COEN: Right. GROSS: And I also like the way what they're serving is moussaka. I know people still eat moussaka, but moussaka was just, like - it was one of these, like, ethnic dishes that was particularly popular in the '60s, I think. COEN: Popular in the '60s... GROSS: New to a lot of people. COEN: Right, it was exotic but - right, exactly. Later in the movie, he comes back, and she's made a tabbouleh salad. GROSS: Exactly. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: And he even has to pronounce it with a certain, like, ethnic flair, like moussaka. (LAUGHTER) COEN: Well yes, that actually was a hallmark of my mother's cooking, too. She was, you know, an incredibly interesting, talented woman but not a cook. She didn't really know how to do it. But she gave everything a try. GROSS: That's something we couldn't see on the radio is that in the Gorfeins' apartment is a very, like, artistic menorah. It's like a menorah where it's a little, like, abstracted. COEN: Yeah, actually there are several menorahs there. You could do a kind of Where's Wally or Where's Waldo looking for the menorahs in the Gorfeins' apartment. COEN: That's true. Actually, I think when we were cutting the movie, at one point I pointed out to you, I said I think there are three menorahs in this one shot. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: And are any of those from, like, family collections? COEN: But yeah, those '60s designs. GROSS: Yes, exactly. COEN: Something we're very - also very familiar with, you know, something that we made more hay out of, perhaps, in "A Serious Man," but we were into that whole '60s, modernist, Judaic aesthetic. GROSS: Right, and as I think everyone could tell from that scene, the main character, Llewyn Davis, just really has a talent for irritating people. He knows exactly how to do it. COEN: Yeah - no definitely. He's his own worst enemy, and he gets into trouble with people and probably realizes immediately after saying the wrong thing that he's said the wrong and probably feels bad about it, but then, you know, 10 minutes later he'll say the wrong thing again. GROSS: Why did you want to give him the power to be that irritating to nearly everybody, including people who are his friends? COEN: I don't know, because it's an interesting character. I mean, you know, we all know people like that. It's - there's something interesting about that and interesting about that, especially for a performer who's supposed to be ingratiating himself to people. I don't know. For us it was just part of the, you know, the character that for us was compelling. GROSS: You had mentioned Bob Dylan earlier. Bob Dylan is not exactly in the movie, but he almost is, and there's a song of his that's on the soundtrack. I read in an article he went to the same summer camp that you did, I presume not at the same time. But... COEN: No, not at the same time. That might even be urban or Midwestern myth, but yeah, that was the myth. COEN: No, it's not myth. I think it's on - who was it that wrote the book about him, Sean Willentz. I think if you go on his website, or some other website having to do with Dylan, there are very early photographs of him at Herzl Camp. (LAUGHTER) COEN: That's funny. COEN: Which is the camp in Webster, Wisconsin, that we went to. COEN: Yeah, where we both went. But yes, no, Bob went before us. He's older than us. We're catching up, but he's still older than us. GROSS: So I have to know, is this the kind of summer camp where you sing songs with lyrics about how great the camp is, and then there's team songs with how great the team is? COEN: No. GROSS: Aw, shucks. I wanted to think of him as singing those songs. COEN: No, you sang - it was Zionist summer camp, and you sang Zionist songs in Hebrew. GROSS: One of the people in your cast is Justin Timberlake, who plays a folk singer who's... COEN: Turning from the Jewish theme. (LAUGHTER) COEN: We're pretty sure Justin didn't go to that camp. (LAUGHTER) COEN: No, unless we're very much mistaken, the man is shegetz. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: So he plays a folk singer who's married to a character played by Carey Mulligan. And did you approach him knowing that he could sing and knowing that he could act and knowing that he could do comedy? COEN: Yes indeed, yes all of those things. He was one of the first people we thought about, actually, when we were casting the movie. GROSS: I want to play a song that really features him, and this is "500 Miles." And he starts off singing it, and then Carey Mulligan is also on it and Stark Sands, who plays a folk singer in the movie. And my favorite - my favorite thing about this song, I don't know if you saw this. Janet Maslin, in reviewing some recent folk-related things, wrote about the soundtrack of the album. And she said that listening to the soundtrack before she'd seen the movie, she heard the beginning of this song and said wow, she sounds just like Mary Travers. And then when she actually saw the movie, she realized that the person she was hearing at the beginning was Justin Timberlake and not Carey Mulligan. COEN: Yeah, that's not surprising. I mean, you know Justin can get up there. He's just unbelievable. COEN: Well, you know, an interesting thing about that is he worked on the rest of the music in the movie, and in the Irish quartet that you hear in the movie, singing "The Old Triangle," that was one song, the one song in the movie that was not performed by the people that you see onscreen. Those are actors lip-synching to playback. And the bass part of that quartet is Justin Timberlake. GROSS: Joel and Ethan Coen will be back in the second half of the show. Here's "500 Miles" from the soundtrack of "Inside Llewyn Davis," featuring Carey Mulligan, Stark Sands and Justin Timberlake, who we hear first. I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH AIR. (SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross, back with Joel and Ethan Coen. They wrote and directed: "O Brother, Where Art Thou?," "The Big Lebowski, " "No Country for Old Men," "A Serious Man" and "True Grit." Their new film, "Inside Llewyn Davis" is set in the Greenwich Village folk music scene of 1961. The soundtrack features the cast, including Oscar Isaac, Justin Timberlake and Carey Mulligan, singing various folk songs. Now you also wrote lyrics for a song that's a variation on an existing song - or on several existing songs. So the song is called "Please Mr. Kennedy" It's like "Please Mr. Kennedy Don't Shoot Me Into Outer Space." But tell us about the song that it's based on that you wrote new lyrics for. COEN: Well, there's another song - yeah. There's another song, there's a song of the period, or maybe a couple years past or a period in the early, mid-60s called "Please Mr. Kennedy" by - it was recorded by a West Coast kind of folk/pop duo called The Gold Coast Singers. And lyrically the idea of the original song was: Please Mr. Kennedy, don't send me off into Vietnam - which was wrong for our period and we kind of rewrote it as a novelty, poppy, please don't shoot me off in outer space. Supposedly it's the - John Glenn is singing it, it's in the voice of John Glenn, who is about to be, you know, shot into orbit. GROSS: OK. So this is "Please Mr. Kennedy" from the soundtrack of "Inside Llewyn Davis," and it features Justin Timberlake, Oscar Isaac and Adam Driver. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "PLEASE MR. KENNEDY") JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE AND OSCAR ISAAC: (Singing) Ten, nine, eight, seven six, five four, three, two... ADAM DRIVER: (Singing) One second, please. ISAAC: (Singing) Please Mr. Kennedy. DRIVER: (Singing) Oh-oh... JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE AND ADAM DRIVER: (Singing) I don't want to go whoa-whoa into outer space. Please don't shoot me into outer space. ISAAC: (Singing) Oh, please. JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE AND OSCAR ISAAC: (Singing) Please Mr. Kennedy. DRIVER: (Singing) Oh-oh... DRIVER: (Singing) I don't want to go whoa-whoa into outer space. Please don't shoot me into outer space. (Singing) I sweat when they stuff me in the pressure suits, bubble helmet, Flash Gordon boots. Nowhere up there in gravity zero. I need to breathe, don't need to be a hero. And are reading me loud and clear? Oh, please Mr. Kennedy. DRIVER: (Singing) Oh-oh. DRIVER: (Singing) I don't want to go whoa-whoa into outer space. Please don't shoot me into outer space. (Singing) Oh, please Mr. Kennedy. DRIVER: (Singing) Oh-oh. DRIVER: (Singing) I don't want to go whoa-whoa into outer space. Please don't shoot me into outer space. ISAAC: (Singing) I'm six foot two, and so... GROSS: that's music from the soundtrack of "Inside Llewyn Davis," and my guests are Joel and Ethan Coen, who wrote and directed the film. Now this - since that's meant to be a novelty song, it made me think of what were the big novelty songs of that period. And one thing I remembered is like Allan Sherman's big hit album "My Son, the Folk Singer," which... COEN: Yeah. GROSS: ...was kind of like satires from a Jewish perspective, with a lot of like Yiddish jokes. And that was a hit in 1962; a year after this is made. COEN: Yeah. GROSS: And you had referred to Allan Sherman in a previous interview when talking about the character of Sy Abelman in "A Serious Man." (LAUGHTER) COEN: Yeah. COEN: Well, I was going to -actually, you know, when you asked about what part folk music played in our lives earlier in the interview. Yeah, I was going to mention Allan Sherman because we had Allan Sherman records when we were kids. And you're right, in fact, we just recently did a concert in New York with some of, all of actors in the movie who sang in the movie and a lot of musicians on the music in the movie, and then lots of people were singing sort of old American folk songs and more contemporary music. And Gillian Welch and Dave Rollins were involved in that and it's always been a subject of sort of, you know, an interesting thing between the two of us and Dave, that he also used to listen to Allan Sherman when he was a kid... (LAUGHTER) COEN: ...which I find very amusing. COEN: Yeah. That was an early folk influence, "My Son, the Folk Singer," which I can picture visit the still the album cover and "My Son, the Nut," which is also a great album cover. And I think with "My Son, the Nut," that had "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh," right? Yeah. Yeah. That was the one where he was buried up to his neck in nuts. COEN: Neck in nuts. Yeah. COEN: Folk music. COEN: Somebody just put out a biography of Allan Sherman called "Overweight Sensation." (LAUGHTER) COEN: Really? COEN: ...which I'm anxious to read. Yet, I haven't gotten it yet, but, yes. COEN: How many volumes? (LAUGHTER) GROSS: So it's interesting. In some ways I think of this as like your second musical. You know, the first being "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" Do you think of "Inside Llewyn Davis" as a musical but, you know, a different kind of musical? COEN: In a way, yeah. COEN: Yeah. OK. (LAUGHTER) COEN: There's a lot of music in it. Is that the - is that the standard? It's not a musical certainly, in the sense that we've never done one in this sense that the characters kind of break into - unmotivatedly(ph) break into song. I mean it's a music about a professional musician, or somebody who is aspiring to be a professional musician, so it's all in a kind of a real context. But, yes, in terms of the amount of music, OK, we'll call it a musical. GROSS: And do you like musicals at all? COEN: Well, sure. (LAUGHTER) COEN: Well, you're talking about Broadway musicals or... GROSS: Oh, no, movie musicals. COEN: Or you're talking about movie musicals? GROSS: Yeah. That would include like Bugsy Berkeley and Fred Astaire and then Broadway... COEN: Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Absolutely. GROSS: ...which includes Stephen Sondheim. I mean like the whole gamut. COEN: Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. GROSS: Mm-hmm. COEN: But Bugsy Berkeley is, you know, a radical sort of and, you know, very, very interesting film artist, and those movies are fantastically interesting. There's fantastic musical numbers in those movies. GROSS: But you didn't think about that at all when making your, musicals? COEN: Well, no, we didn't. But we thought about them in the context of other musical numbers and movies that we've done - specifically, in "The Big Lebowski." COEN: Yeah, we did one thing in "The Big Lebowski" that was kind of, yeah, specifically as; it was very cautiously, self-consciously a Busby Berkeley number. GROSS: Wait. Refresh my memory. COEN: Jeff Bridges, the Jeff Bridges character is - oh, my God... COEN: He's... COEN: I'm going to try to synopsize and it'll sound demented. He's doped up by a pornographer, played by Ben Gazzara, when he's in a, you know, heightened state, he has a dream about this woman, played by Julianne Moore, in which bowling figures - and it's a Busby Berkeley musical number. COEN: He goes under the legs of these sort of chorines in a bowling alley and it's all to Kenny Rogers tune called "Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Is In)." GROSS: Oh, OK. You know, I saw "The Big Lebowski" began when it was released like one night only in movie theaters like two summers ago, maybe. COEN: Mm-hmm. GROSS: It's just amazing how - what a huge following that film got in its afterlife. You know, like after it closed in movie theaters. COEN: Yeah. GROSS: How did that happen? It's a great film, but I mean, how did it develop that afterlife? Do you have any idea? COEN: Well, it developed an afterlife on home video. You're right. It came out in movie theaters, it didn't do, you know, particularly outstanding business in the theatrical market, but it did in the home video market. COEN: Yeah. COEN: And then it became sort of, you know, some cult thing. I don't, how do explain that? I have no idea. It's certainly one of the more bizarre afterlives to any of the things that we've done. GROSS: Mm-hmm. COEN: We, you know, we were in a movie theater together with our families a year or two ago in San Francisco and coming down from a movie and we saw they were little booths set up with Big Lebowski posters on and a young woman sitting on the other side of this table - maybe 17 or 18 years old - and Ethan stopped and said, what is this? And she said, oh, well, we show "The Big Lebowski" every night and people come dressed in... GROSS: Oh wow. COEN: ...in costumes and you should come and you'll like it, it's fun. GROSS: Did she know who you were? COEN: No. She was... (LAUGHTER) GROSS: That's great. Who would you have come dressed as? (LAUGHTER) COEN: We stay away from those things. GROSS: I'm sure you do. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: My guests are Ethan and Joel Coen. Their new film, which they wrote and directed, is called "Inside Llewyn Davis." We'll talk more after a break. This is FRESH AIR. (SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guests are Joel and Ethan Coen. And their new movie is called "Inside Llewyn Davis." In your previous movie, which we talked about when we came out "True Grit," you had to direct a lot of horses in really tough scenes to direct and you had to, of course, the very careful on how you treated the horses. In your new movie, but tough animal scenes have to do with a cat - or a couple of cats. So how do you cast a cat for your film? COEN: Ooh, that was horrible. We just used on the advice of the trainer - the animal trainer, kind of an orange, kind of a marmalade tabby cat, just because they are, you know, common, and so easy to double, triple, quadruple. There were, you know, many cats playing the one cat and, you know, the whole thing is actually pretty, it comes across well in the movie, but the whole exercise of shooting a cat is pretty nightmarish because they don't care about anything; hey don't want to do what you want them to do. As the animal trainer said to us, a dog wants to please you; a cat only wants to please itself. It was just long, painstaking, frustrating days shooting the cat. COEN: What you have to do is basically find the cat that's predisposed to doing whatever particular piece of action it is that you have to film. So you find the cat that can - isn't afraid to run down a fire escape or this, you know, the cat that's very docile and will let the actor just hold them for extended periods of time without being fidgety. And then you want the fidgety cat - the squirrely cat - for when you want the cat to run away and you just keep swapping them out - depending on what the task at hand is. COEN: You know, in "True Grit" we had a vulture - a trained vulture - which who knew there were such. (LAUGHTER) COEN: But, you know, that was a pain. And it was even like, you know, by vulture standards, probably a stupid vulture and that was frustrating. (LAUGHTER) COEN: But, you know, I would take a vulture over a cat. The cat was just horrible. GROSS: Well, you know, it's funny. I have this - I have a cat... COEN: Should have written as a vulture. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: A pet vulture? COEN: He slips out of Gorfeins' apartment... COEN: And flies out. Yeah. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: I have a cat and I have this recurring dream that I take the cat outdoors and I'm holding the cat in my arms and the cat runs away and I know I'll never be able to find it. And that's kind of what happens in the movie. COEN: That's probably a good thing. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: What's a good thing? COEN: Just, we're not big cat lovers. GROSS: Why not, because of this movie? COEN: Well, mostly for this experience, yeah. COEN: So this movie is kind of an anxiety dream for you. GROSS: Yes, exactly. I've had this dream so many times without the singing, of course. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: So your movie is called "Inside Llewyn Davis." And Dave Van Ronk was the inspiration for the movie. And he has a movie, an album called "Inside Dave Van Ronk." And on the cover, he standing in a doorway of what I assume is a Greenwich Village storefront or apartment and there is a cat in the doorway. COEN: Yeah. GROSS: Was that cat and inspiration at all for having a cat in your movie? COEN: No. COEN: No. Here's, it's very interesting. First of all, I think I was told that the doorway is McSorley's Ale House. GROSS: Oh. COEN: Oh, is it? COEN: That's where they shot that. Although, I didn't know that until recently - 'cause when we did our own sort of copy of that album cover, we thought, you know, we were looking around in the Village for the doorways that were the same or similar to that sort of copy of that album. But the fact that there is a cat in the doorway, believe it or not, we did not notice and was pointed out to us by an art director after we'd written the script and when we were actually in postproduction in the movie and that was a little shocking to us. COEN: There should've been a vulture in the doorway. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: So both "O Brother, Where Art Thou" and "Inside Llewyn Davis," referrer in some way to "Ulysses" or "The Odyssey." Did you read that and did that make a big impact on you? Or is it just kind of coincidental? COEN: We haven't read it yet. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: It's pre-influence for you. COEN: It's on our list. (LAUGHTER) COEN: It's on our list. COEN: We've made two movie versions of it and we're going to read it soon. COEN: Yeah. It's right by my bedside table. I keep looking over, at it and going, ugh. (LAUGHTER) COEN: I hear it's a good book. (LAUGHTER) GROSS: What you are doing the film. I understand your next film is going to be set in ancient Rome? Is that true? COEN: Well, part of it is set in ancient Rome. GROSS: Can you tell us anything about the forthcoming movie? COEN: Well, we don't - we're... COEN: We don't know that it actually is going to be the next movie. You know, we're in the middle of writing the script. And quite honestly, I mean, you know, we often start these things, get a certain distance with them, and then put them aside for a while. They generally get finished eventually and even maybe eventually, but not necessarily without sort of digressions and other projects. COEN: It's not really ancient Rome. There's - in 1950 Hollywood and they're making a movie about ancient Rome, so if, yeah, for what it's worth. Are movie, I'm talking about. GROSS: Oh, I see. COEN: Yeah. COEN: Yeah. GROSS: Oh, that's great. COEN: Yeah. It's about a movie that is being made in 1950 about ancient Rome called "Hail Caesar." GROSS: Oh, that's great. So since you're writing a movie together now, can I ask you a little bit about what the writing process is when you write a movie together? Do you write in the same room together? Do you share ideas after you've written separately? COEN: It's mostly napping. (LAUGHTER) COEN: We go to the office. You know, we're there. We're in a room together. We take naps. But, you know, the important thing, we're there at the office should we be inspired to actually write something. No, we don't split it up. We don't sort of - one of won't write something and then give it to the other to react to. We actually, kind of, talk through whatever we're doing together. GROSS: Do you do the dialogue out loud with each other as if you were characters? COEN: Well, sometimes. But it doesn't exactly work like that. It's more - you know, there's so much talking involved, there's so much conversation involved around the whole thing. And a lot of the conversation has to do with specific things that people say in a scene, right? So one of us - and that may be in the context of talking about something completely different from the dialogue, but then that comes up and then that's the - one of may say something about that. And then the other person may just sort of answer it with what might come next. But it's also the case that frequently Ethan will just sit down and or I'll sit down at the computer and just type up dialogue in a scene. You know? And then the other person will look at it and maybe adjust it or change it or something like that. But it's all in the context of this ongoing conversation. GROSS: Because you edit together, you - I don't know; I shouldn't say because, because I don't really know why you do this, but you edit together and you edit under the name Roderick James. Why did you need, like, a pseudonym to edit and does that name refer to anybody? Where does that name come from? COEN: It doesn't refer to anyone. It's just something we grabbed out of the air. I don't know; we just use the pseudonym cutting because our names are in the credits so many times already that adding one more just seemed like bad taste. Yeah, that's really the reason. GROSS: It's a very un-Jewish sounding name. I'll say that. (LAUGHTER) COEN: Oh, yeah. Yeah. COEN: Yes. It certainly is. In fact, we sort of invented a whole persona for this guy... COEN: Yeah. He's British. COEN: ...in the introduction to one of our screenplays. COEN: He's British, as it turns out. He's introduced - he's written introductions to a few of our screenplays, published screenplays. GROSS: Oh, really? (LAUGHTER) COEN: Yeah. COEN: Yeah. GROSS: So tell me more about him. COEN: Well, we actually had to come up for a bio for him, you know. You have to - you need bios for the personnel of your movies for various - I don't even know why - for PR purposes. But I can't remember what we had him doing. He started out minding the tea cart and shepherding the studios. And he's very old, in his 80s, actually, when we first started working with him. Which would make him probably over 100 now. COEN: Over a 100. Yeah. Yeah. He lives in Haywards Heath in Sussex. GROSS: Well, it's been so much fun talking with you both. Congratulations on your new film. COEN: Yeah, likewise, Terry. GROSS: And thank you so much for coming back to FRESH AIR. COEN: Yeah. COEN: Sure. COEN: Thanks for having us. COEN: Thanks. GROSS: Joel and Ethan Coen wrote and directed the new film "Inside Llewyn Davis." Before making the film, they optioned the late folk singer Dave Van Ronk's memoir, even though Davis is not supposed to be Van Ronk. Dave Van Ronk has a song on the soundtrack. He performed on our show in 1988. You can hear two of the songs from that broadcast on our blog which is on Tumblr. That's at nprfreshair.tumblr.com. You'll also find a link there to Milo Miles' review of the recently released Van Ronk album "Down in Washington Square: The Smithsonian Folkways Collection." Coming up, rock critic Ken Tucker's 10 Best List. This is FRESH AIR. (SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR. Related program:Fresh Air with Terry Gross
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Home > WMU News Discussion about regional partnership and development KALAMAZOO--Kenneth V. Miller, a prominent local businessman, will present a talk titled "Arcadia Commons West and Event Center--A Vision for a Regional Partnership and Development," at 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15. The free, public talk will be held in Schneider Hall on the main campus of Western Michigan University and is part of the 2009-10 Haworth College of Business Distinguished Speaker Series. A question-and-answer period and reception in Miller's honor will follow the presentation. Kenneth V. Miller is a member of Suite Idea Inc., a group working on a plan to build a 6,800-seat event center in downtown Kalamazoo. He also is an attorney and a principal in Havirco, a Kalamazoo investment management firm, which he has co-owned since 1983. In addition, Miller is majority owner of the Millennium Restaurant Group, which owns and operates several southwest Michigan restaurants, including the Union Cabaret and Grille, a WMU-theme restaurant on the Kalamazoo downtown mall. Miller is a member of the Kalamazoo Rotary and was recently honored by that organization with its Red Rose award for his service to the community and commitment to development of the downtown Kalamazoo district. In October, he will receive a 2009 Distinguished Alumni Award from the WMU Alumni Association. Miller was recently elected president of the WMU Foundation and is serving his second consecutive term as chair of the WMU Board of Trustees, to which he was appointed in 2002. He earned both a bachelor's and a master's degree in business administration from WMU and a juris doctorate from Thomas M. Cooley Law School. Those planning to attend the upcoming Distinguished Speaker Series talk are encouraged to register by Oct. 9. To register, contact the dean's office in the Haworth College of Business at monique.haley@wmich.edu or (269) 387-5069. Media contact: Jeanne Baron, (269) 387-8400, jeanne.baron@wmich.edu www.wmich.edu/news
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Ted RobbinsRSS All ContentcloseNews podcastsUse iTunesUse a different playerRSS View all podcasts & RSS feeds Connect with Us Ted Robbins Ted Robbins 2010 As an NPR correspondent based in Tucson, Arizona, Ted Robbins covers the Southwest including Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada. Specifically, Robbins reports on a range of issues from immigration and border security to water issues and wildfires. He covers the economy in the West with an emphasis on the housing market and Las Vegas development. He reported on the January 2011, Tucson shooting that killed six and injured many included Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. From Tombstone to Santa Fe, Phoenix to Las Vegas and Moab to Indian Country, there's no shortage of people, politics and places worth covering in the growing American Southwest. Robbins' reporting is driven by his curiosity to find, understand and communicate all sides of each story through accurate, clear and engaging coverage. In addition to his domestic work, Robbins has reported internationally in Mexico, El Salvador, Nepal and Sudan. Robbins' reporting has been honored with numerous accolades, including two Emmy Awards: one for his story on sex education in schools, and another for his series on women in the workforce. He received a CINE Golden Eagle for a 1995 documentary on Mexican agriculture called "Tomatoes for the North." In 2006, Robbins wrote an article for the Neiman Reports at Harvard about journalism and immigration. He was chosen for a 2009 French-American Foundation Fellowship focused on comparing European and U.S. immigration issues. Raised in Los Angeles, Robbins became an avid NPR listener while spending hours driving (or stopped in traffic) on congested freeways. He is delighted to now be covering stories for his favorite news source. Prior to coming to NPR in 2004, Robbins spent five years as a regular contributor to The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, 15 years at the PBS affiliate in Tucson, and worked as a field producer for CBS News. He worked for NBC affiliates in Tucson and Salt Lake City, where he also did some radio reporting and print reporting for USA Today. Robbins earned his Bachelor of Arts in psychology and his master's degree in journalism, both from the University of California at Berkeley. He taught journalism at the University of Arizona for a decade. Wed September 4, 2013 Las Vegas Gambles On Unique Business Incubator Share Tweet E-mail By Ted Robbins Originally published on Wed September 4, 2013 11:12 am Listen The Downtown Container Park will set up budding entrepreneurs in repurposed shipping containers. The park will have 35 containers and a bunch of modular cubes like you'd normally see at a construction site — all to house local businesses. Law Sat August 24, 2013 Cutting Public Defenders Can Cost Federal Government More Courts in Tucson, Ariz., are turning to private lawyers to represent clients who would have had public defenders. Chris Morrison Share Tweet E-mail By Ted Robbins Originally published on Mon August 26, 2013 1:32 pm Listen These days, the Federal Public Defender's Office in Tucson, Ariz., has lots of space. Since the federal budget cuts known as sequestration began, the office has lost a quarter of its staff to layoffs or furloughs. Under the Constitution, clients still need legal representation, so judges have to appoint private attorneys to replace the public defenders. The sequester was supposed to save money. But in this case, the sequester is costing federal dollars. Read more Shots - Health News Wed June 12, 2013 In Arizona, An Unlikely Ally For Medicaid Expansion Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, points during an intense conversation with President Obama after he arrived at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Mesa, Ariz. She has since made light of the incident in trying to rally support for a Medicaid expansion in the state. Haraz N. Ghanbari Share Tweet E-mail By Ted Robbins Originally published on Wed June 12, 2013 6:20 pm Listen The Arizona Legislature is debating whether to extend Medicaid to about 300,000 people in the state. The expansion is a requirement to get federal funding under the Affordable Care Act. The big surprise is who has been leading the charge: Republican Gov. Jan Brewer. She's one of President Obama's staunchest critics and has confounded conservatives in her own party by supporting the expansion. Google the words "Brewer" and "Obama." You'll get a now-famous image of Brewer wagging her finger at the president on the tarmac last year when she met him in Phoenix. Read more U.S. Tue June 11, 2013 Border Drones Fly Into Fight Over Immigration A Predator drone operated by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Office of Air and Marine taxis for a flight over southern Arizona near the Mexican border on March 7 from Fort Huachuca in Sierra Vista, Ariz. John Moore Share Tweet E-mail By Ted Robbins Listen The runways at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., are busy. This is where the Army tests its military drones, where it trains its drone pilots, and where four Customs and Border Protection drones take off and land. From here, the CBP drones survey the Arizona-Mexico border — mainly looking for immigrants and drug smugglers. Read more Law Sat May 25, 2013 Tough Arizona Sheriff Gets Judicial Reprimand Share Tweet E-mail By Ted Robbins Listen Transcript SCOTT SIMON, HOST: This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR News. I'm Scott Simon. A federal judge in Arizona has ruled against the man who calls himself America's toughest sheriff. The judge ruled that the Maricopa County Sheriff's Department has used racial profiling to enforce the state's tough immigration laws. Sheriff Joe Arpaio has maintained that his department has the authority to round up undocumented immigrants. NPR's Ted Robbins has been following the case and joins us now. Ted, thanks for being with us. TED ROBBINS, BYLINE: You're welcome. Read more Pagesfirst
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hide State making progress on unemployment claims backlog by Chris Conley Unemployment image copyright Midwest Communications, Inc. MADISON (WSAU) State officials say they’re making progress in reducing a large backlog in claims for unemployment benefits. There’s been a big increase in claims that need to be reviewed by hand for various reasons. Three weeks ago, the Workforce Development agency had not reviewed 9,300 requests for jobless benefits which dated back to July – and those applicants were waiting for months to get their checks. Since then, about 1,400of the requests were handled, with the help of 15 additional part-time workers. Spokesman John Dipko said 20 more part-timers will start next month – and they expect to make “significant progress” in reducing the backed-up caseload over the next 10 weeks. He said the July cases have been processed, and they’re now working on claims dating back to around August 20th. The backlog involves cases in which unemployment recipients were overpaid after they had under-reported their incomes – either by mistake or on purpose. Officials say those claims must be reviewed manually, and the most complicated ones can take hours to handle. In other cases the agency has to make sure that people exhausted the state’s jobless benefits before getting federal extensions. Officials say the applicants will get all the benefits to which they’re entitled, but they’re not being paid until the processing is finished.
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hide Statin use tied to cataract development: study By Andrew M. Seaman NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The risk of developing cloudy lenses in the eyes may be linked to the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins, according to a new study. While the researchers can't prove the drugs caused the eye condition, they found that people who took statins - such as Zocor and Lipitor - were more likely to develop cataracts, compared to people who didn't take the medication. "The results were consistent that there was a higher risk of being diagnosed with cataracts among statin users," Dr. Ishak Mansi, the study's senior author from UT Southwestern Medical Center and the Dallas VA Medical Center in Texas, said. Statins are popular drugs that block a substance the body needs to make cholesterol, which can get trapped in arteries and ultimately lead to heart attacks and strokes. About one-quarter of U.S. adults aged 45 and older take statins. The drugs are especially recommended for people with diabetes or a history of cardiovascular problems. Researchers have looked at the link between statins and cataracts before with mixed results. While some studies found that taking statins lowered the risk of developing cataracts, other studies found the drugs increased the risk. For the new research, Mansi and his colleagues used data collected from the medical records of people between the ages of 30 and 85 years old who were enrolled in one healthcare system in San Antonio, Texas, and received care between 2003 and 2010. In one analysis, they compared about 7,000 people who were on statins for at least 90 days to about 7,000 people who were not on statins but were similar in about 40 other characteristics, including other health conditions, medications and healthcare use. About 36 percent of statin users were diagnosed with cataracts, compared to about 34 percent of people not taking statins, for a 9 percent higher risk. In a second analysis, the researchers looked at people with no other known health conditions. It included 6,113 statin users and 27,400 people who did not take statins. Before adjusting the results for the participants' age, sex, weight, medications, healthcare use, other vision conditions and cigarette, alcohol and drug use, the researchers found about 34 percent of statin users were diagnosed with cataracts, compared to about 10 percent of people not taking statins. After adjusting for those factors, statin use was linked to about a 27 percent increased risk of cataracts. What's more, the researchers found that the risk of developing cataracts increased with the length of time a person took the medication. While Mansi and his colleagues can't say how statins may affect the formation of cataracts, they write in JAMA Ophthalmology that there are a few possible explanations. One is that the body needs high levels of cholesterol to maintain a clear lens and statins may interfere with the cells that control that process. Dr. Jack Cioffi, head of ophthalmology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York, said the study is very well done, but has some limitations, including that the researchers used billing data rather than medical records, so they can't say how severe the cataracts were. "I don't think we should overstate the significance of this. It goes back to if there is a good reason for you to be on that statin, it outweighs the risk of a mild increase in risk of cataract," Cioffi, who was not involved in the new study, said. He added that the treatments for cataracts have evolved over time. The National Institutes of Health says the procedures to remove cataracts are some of the most common and safest surgeries performed in the U.S. "For patients themselves, my advice is to discuss what your benefit and risk ratio is for you with your doctor," said Mansi, who added that he hopes the results will also encourage people to improve their cholesterol levels through lifestyle changes. "This should motivate patients to do their part. Quit smoking, eat healthy and be active so doctors don't have to give you a tablet that may have some side effects," he said. SOURCE: http://bit.ly/17MsYa7 JAMA Ophthalmology, online September 19, 2013. (This story removes statistic from paragraph 2 (27%); corrects dates of care for included participants in paragraph 7; adds percent of risk to para 9, and corrects adjusted risk in paragraph 11 of story posted on September 19, 2013.)
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Census Bureau's Website Is Coming Back: 1940 Data Now Viewable Sara and Arthur Memmott, July 1939. Close up of the 1940 census records for Arthur and Sara Memmott. 1940census.archives.org The old Memmott homestead, which in 1940 you could rent for $20 a month. After a tough start because of huge interest that overwhelmed servers, the Census Bureau's new website devoted to records from the 1940 census is showing signs of life. Monday, as The Associated Press says, the website was "nearly paralyzed shortly after the records became available to the public": "Miriam Kleiman, a spokeswoman for the archives, told The Associated Press that the site registered more than 22 million hits in just four hours on Monday from almost 2 million users. In a tweet posted after 5 p.m. on its official Twitter account, the archives said the website had gotten 37 million hits since the information was released at 9 a.m. "The government released the records for the first time after 72 years of confidentiality expired." But this blogger has been able to navigate through the site this morning to find his parents' records. It wasn't easy. If you don't know the "enumeration district" for the records you're looking for, you need to hit the help button and do a search through the 1930 census records. For me, that turned up the enumeration district linked to the records of my grandfather. Then it was back to the 1940 data. Plugging in the enumeration district produced a set of 36 pages for the old home town (it was and still is a small place). And there, 13 pages in, were mom and dad — Arthur and Sara Memmott (both now deceased). Any shocking surprises? No. Their ages are correct. They were indeed married at the time, as they told us they had been since July 1939. Brother Ed hadn't yet been born (he came along in July, 1940). Dad had earned $1,700 the year before, teaching at the school in town. Mom had earned $810. If I have my family history right, 1939 would have been her last year of teaching. One kind of amazing number: $20. That's what they were paying in monthly rent for the huge home they would buy a year or two later (for $2,500, according to my father). So the folks were spending about 14 percent of dad's monthly income on rent. Overall, just a little snapshot of the Memmotts just before World War II, before their six kids were born. Happy hunting if you're also inclined to search the records.Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. View the discussion thread.
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hide Flowers Foods to buy some Hostess brands for $390 million By Tom Hals and Jonathan Stempel (Reuters) - Flowers Foods Inc on Friday said it has agreed to buy Wonder and other well-known bread brands from Hostess Brands Inc for $390 million, as part of the latter company's bankruptcy reorganization. The Thomasville, Georgia-based company said it agreed to pay $360 million for the Wonder, Butternut, Home Pride, Merita and Nature's Pride brands, as well as 20 bakeries and 38 depots. It also entered a second contract where it agreed to pay $30 million for the Beefsteak brand. Flowers already owns brands such as Cobblestone Mill, Nature's Own and Tastykake. It said it expects the purchases to add to earnings in 2013, and that it would finance them with cash on hand plus debt. Gregory Rayburn, Hostess' chief executive, said the Irving, Texas-based company remains in talks to sell its snack cake business, including Twinkies and Drake's cakes, as well as its remaining bread brands. The Flowers purchase is subject to higher bids at a court-supervised auction, and requires approval by regulators as well as U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain in White Plains, New York. Hostess will ask that the auction take place on February 28, with a hearing to authorize a sale on March 5. In winning the right to serve as the initial bidder in the auction, Flowers beat out Grupo Bimbo SAB de CV , one of the world's largest bakers, whose U.S. brands include Entenmann's, Sara Lee and Thomas'. Hostess said it chose the Flowers bids after its bankers at Perella Weinberg Partners ran a bidding process that drew 169 prospective buyers, including 87 that signed confidentiality agreements. Grupo Bimbo representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Hostess in November decided to shut down its baking business and liquidate after a strike by its baker's union crippled the 82-year-old company. One of Hostess' bankers, Joshua Scherer, told Drain at a November court hearing that the company's brands had drawn "furious" buyer interest, including from national retailers. Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Kroger Co are among prospective buyers, according to media reports. The case is In re: Hostess Brands Inc et al, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-22052. (The story corrects that Hostess based in Irving, Texas in paragraph five) (Reporting By Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Gary Hill)
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hide Wal-Mart plans $50 billion "buy American" push Tasha heads to checkout at a Walmart Store in Chicago, November 23, 2012. REUTERS/John Gress By Jessica Wohl NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores Inc will buy an additional $50 billion in U.S.-made products over the next decade in areas like sporting goods and high-end appliances in what the world's largest retailer called a bid to help boost the U.S. economy. Wal-Mart, the largest private employer in the United States, also said on Tuesday it plans to hire 100,000 newly discharged veterans over the next five years, at a time when the U.S. unemployment rate is at 7.8 percent. Wal-Mart said the plan to buy more U.S.-made goods is an effort to create U.S. jobs and spur economic growth. Critics countered that the company and other retailers could help the economy by paying better wages and offering workers more regular hours. The moves come as the U.S. economy continues to grow slowly 3-1/2 years after the end of a severe recession. An average of $5 billion a year in spending is a drop in the bucket for the $15 trillion U.S. economy, and the question is how many other retailers could do the same. Terry Lundgren, chief executive of Macy's Inc and until this month the chairman of the National Retail Federation, told Reuters that Wal-Mart's plans to buy American were good but that cost would still be an issue. "We would all love to do that, the customer will not pay more," Lundgren told Reuters on the sidelines of an NRF event where Wal-Mart presented its plans. The moves received a cool reception from critics who claimed Wal-Mart does not pay its workers enough and slammed the retailer for selling too many goods made in lower-cost countries like China. The company is also under pressure over its sourcing practices, particularly after a deadly fire at a Bangladesh factory that made Wal-Mart clothes. Wal-Mart's U.S. unit says about two-thirds of the goods it buys for its stores are made, sourced from or grown in the United States, citing data from its suppliers. It did not give a dollar amount for how much it pays for those goods, or what percentage the increased domestic sourcing would bring. The company has previously run "Made in America" campaigns, and in the early 1990s it was criticized for promoting foreign goods as domestically made. Last year, 55 percent of Walmart U.S. sales came from groceries like food and drinks as well as other products that are typically sourced locally. Only 7 percent of Walmart U.S. sales were of apparel, jewelry and accessories, which retailers typically get from lower-cost countries. To the extent Wal-Mart buys more U.S.-made goods the company would have otherwise imported, it would reflect the recent shift in the U.S. commercial relationship with the rest of the world. Both economic output and net imports declined sharply during the 2007-09 recession. While gross domestic product has rebounded, net imports have not, a sign the United States is meeting more demand for goods and services domestically. The company said its Walmart U.S. and Sam's Club warehouse chain will increase what they already buy in the United States in categories like sporting goods, basic apparel, storage containers, games and paper products. Wal-Mart is not a member of the NRF, a major industry trade association that has promoted the importance of retail jobs in the United States. The NRF asserts that 25 percent of American jobs are supported by the retail industry. Along that line, the company said starting on Memorial Day in May, it plans to hire 100,000 U.S. veterans over five years, a move supported by First Lady Michelle Obama. "We've developed a national paralysis that's driven by all of us waiting for someone else to do something," Walmart U.S. Chief Executive Bill Simon said in prepared remarks for the NRF. "But if we're waiting on government, we're waiting on a process that can't act with the same speed as business." Veterans' issues are of personal interest to Simon, who served 25 years in the U.S. Navy and Navy Reserve. The company said it will offer a job to any honorably discharged veteran in the first year after active duty. Depending on the time of year, there are anywhere from 15,000 to 50,000 job postings at Walmart. The company said it promotes about 170,000 people each year to jobs with more responsibility and higher pay. About 75 percent of its store management started as hourly associates, and now earn an average of $50,000 to $170,000 a year. The highest earning store manager last year made more than $250,000. Wal-Mart has repeatedly claimed its pay and benefits are in the top half of the retail industry. Starting wages for Walmart U.S. store employees vary by market. Simon noted that in his first job as a dishwasher in a restaurant, he made $2.10 an hour. Walmart U.S. also said it would give part-time workers the first shot at full-time positions. It also plans to make scheduling more transparent, giving part-time workers the ability to choose more of their own hours. Simon had barely finished speaking at the NRF event before critics responded to the new spending and hiring plan. "Retailers like Walmart could provide the nation with a much needed economic boost by paying higher wages and providing stable scheduling - while still remaining profitable and continuing to offer low prices," Stuart Appelbaum, president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, said in a statement. "By part-timing their workforce, they're hurting both workers and our economy by fueling underemployment." Sales for Walmart U.S. rose 1.5 percent to $264.19 billion in fiscal 2012, which ended in February 2012, and accounted for 59.5 percent of the company's total sales. NO MENTION OF GUNS One issue Simon did not discuss was the retailer's position on guns, a hot topic since the massacre at a Newtown, Connecticut elementary school last month. Wal-Mart is the nation's largest gun retailer. Gun-control advocates rallied on Tuesday outside a store just eight miles from Sandy Hook Elementary School, where 20 children and six educators were killed on December 14. The retailer canceled a series of media interviews with Simon after his NRF speech, including one with Reuters. Some media outlets claimed the cancellation was due to his reluctance to discuss the gun issue. A spokesman declined to give a reason. Walmart shares rose 1.1 percent to $69.05 in afternoon trading, while the S&P retail index <.SPXRT> rose 0.6 percent. (Additional reporting by Phil Wahba; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Andrew Hay)
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U.S. Debt In A Debt Crisis, U.S. May Have To Decide Payment Priorities Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By John Ydstie Originally published on Wed October 9, 2013 12:02 pm Listen House Republicans have proposed directing the Treasury Department to pay bondholders first if there is not enough money available to pay all the nation's debts. Carolyn Kaster AP The government is just 10 days away from defaulting on its debt. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew has said that by Oct. 17, the department will likely have less money on hand than it needs to pay all its bills. "The reality is that if we run out of cash to pay our bills, there is no option that permits us to pay all of our bills on time, which means that a failure of Congress to act would for the first time put us in a place where we're defaulting on our obligations as a government," Lew said on NBC's Meet The Press on Sunday. House Republicans say there's a way to minimize the negative effects of a default. In May, the GOP-controlled House passed a bill that would have prioritized some of the payments the Treasury makes so the most important bills could get paid first. The bill directed the U.S. Treasury to pay bondholders first if there wasn't enough money available to pay all the nation's debts. It didn't become law because it wasn't passed by the Senate. House Speaker John Boehner defended the idea on Bloomberg TV. "I think doing a debt-prioritization bill makes it clear to our bondholders that we're going to meet our obligations," he said. When asked if that means paying China before U.S. troops, Boehner said it's no different than "in any other court proceeding." "The bondholders usually get paid first," he said. "Same thing here." But Mark Patterson, the chief of staff at the U.S. Treasury from 2009 to last May, dismisses the idea. "I think if you ask anybody who has been secretary of the Treasury of either party going back many years, they would tell you that is a god-awful idea," Patterson says. Ultimately, says Patterson, making payments to bondholders but delaying checks for seniors on Social Security, for instance, still undermines confidence in the commitment by the United States to meet its obligations. "If we go into an internal debt crisis, if you will, where we're not paying Social Security beneficiaries who've paid into the system over the years, many of whom live check to check, then we are going to appear as a country that is in a whole lot of trouble and the world is going to view us that way," Patterson says. He says that Treasury departments in both Democratic and Republican administrations have concluded that paying all of the nation's bills "on time, in full" is what makes investors, whether they're individuals or other countries, willing to lend money to the U.S. "I liken it to a household," Patterson says. "If you are a homeowner and you decided to pay only your mortgage payment, but you stopped paying your utility bill, your credit card bill, your student loan bill and your car payment, your credit rating would go down the tubes even though your mortgage was still current. And you'd find that from then on, [it would be] very hard to convince people to loan you money down the line." Even if a president and Treasury secretary decided to prioritize payments, it would be a huge technical challenge, says Patterson, because the Treasury's system that makes 80 million payments a month is automated. "It is designed only to make all payments on time and in full," he says. "There's no switch that says, 'Pay payment A, C, D and G today and tomorrow pay some other set of priorities that's not all payments.' " Both sides in Washington say they don't want a default. But Patterson, who's now a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, says he worries every time the nation tiptoes up to the abyss. He says he fears that one of these times, there won't be a last-minute solution.Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. Transcript ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST: The U.S. government is just 10 days away from defaulting on its debt. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew has said that by October 17th, the Treasury will likely have less money on hand than it needs to pay all of its bills. Here he is on NBC's "Meet The Press" yesterday. JACK LEW: The reality is that if we run out of cash to pay our bills, there is no option that permits us to pay all of our bills on time, which means that a failure of Congress to act would, for the first time, put us in a place where we're defaulting on our obligations as a government. SIEGEL: The House Republicans say there is a way to minimize the negative effects of a default. Earlier this year, they passed a bill that would have prioritized some of the payments the Treasury makes so that the most important bills would get paid first. NPR's John Ydstie explains. JOHN YDSTIE, BYLINE: The bill that passed the House in May directed the U.S. Treasury to pay bondholders first if there wasn't enough money available to pay all the nation's debts. It didn't become law because it wasn't passed by the Senate. Here's House Speaker John Boehner defending the idea on Bloomberg TV. REPRESENTATIVE JOHN BOEHNER: I think doing a debt-prioritization bill makes it clear to our bondholders that we're going to meet our obligations. UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Doesn't it mean, as Democrats have suggested, you're basically choosing to pay China before you pay U.S. troops? BOEHNER: Listen, those who have loaned us money, like in any other proceeding, if you will, court proceeding, the bondholders usually get paid first. Same thing here. YDSTIE: But Mark Patterson, the chief of staff at the U.S. Treasury from 2009 to last May, dismisses the idea. MARK PATTERSON: I think if you ask anybody who has been secretary of the Treasury, you know, of either party, going back many years, they would tell you that is a god-awful idea. YDSTIE: Ultimately, says Patterson, making payments to bondholders, but delaying checks for seniors on Social Security, for instance, still undermines confidence in the commitment of the United States to meet all its obligations. PATTERSON: If we go into an internal debt crisis, if you will, where we're not paying Social Security beneficiaries who've paid into the system over the years, many of whom live check to check, then we are going to appear like a country that is in a whole lot of trouble and the world is going to view us that way. YDSTIE: Patterson says that Treasury Departments in both Democratic and Republican administration have concluded that paying all of the nation's bills on time, in full, is what makes investors, whether they're individuals or other countries, willing to lend money to the U.S. PATTERSON: I liken it to a household. If you are a homeowner and you decided to pay only your mortgage payment, but you stopped paying your utility bill, your credit card bill, your student loan bill and your car payment, your credit rating would go down the tubes, even though your mortgage was still current. And you'd find that from then on very hard to convince people to loan you money down the line. YDSTIE: Even if a president and Treasury secretary decided to prioritize payments, it would be a huge technical challenge, says Patterson, because the Treasury's system that makes 80 million payments a month is automated. PATTERSON: It is designed only to make all payments on time and in full. There's no switch that says pay payment A, C, D and G today and tomorrow, pay some other set of, you know, priorities that's not all payments. YDSTIE: Both sides in Washington say they don't want to default, but Patterson, who is now a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, says he worries every time the nation tiptoes up to the abyss. He says he fears that one of these times, there won't be a last-minute solution. John Ydstie, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR. Tags: economy
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2 Americans, 1 Swede share Crafoord science prize Posted at: 01/17/2013 5:37 AM By: Tweet (AP) STOCKHOLM - Two Americans and a Swede have won this year’s Crafoord Prize, a 4 million kronor ($600,000) scientific award given by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to honor achievements not always covered by its more famous Nobel Prizes. Peter Gregersen of the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research near New York, Robert Winchester of Columbia University and Lars Klareskog of Stockholm’s Karolinska institute were cited for discoveries related to rheumatoid arthritis. The academy said Thursday that the three scientists, who will share the award, "contributed to a basic understanding of how the most common and serious form of rheumatoid arthritis develops." Named after Holger Crafoord, the Swede who designed the first artificial kidney, the award has been given annually since 1982. (Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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TVO prepares for further Olkiluoto 3 delay Finnish utility Teollisuuden Voima Oyj (TVO) said that it is "preparing for the possibility" that the third unit at Olkiluoto may not start operating until 2016. Last year it said that the EPR had been delayed beyond 2014. Olkiluoto 3 (Image: TVO) TVO said that, based on recent progress reports from the Areva-Siemens consortium constructing the unit, "it is preparing for the possibility that the start of the regular electricity production of Olkiluoto 3 nuclear power plant unit may be postponed until year 2016." Construction of Olkiluoto 3 - the first-of-a-kind EPR reactor - started in May 2005, with completion originally scheduled for 2009. However, the project has suffered several setbacks. TVO announced in December 2011 that it anticipated the 1600 MWe plant to begin commercial operation in August 2014, some five years later than originally planned. In July 2012, the company declared that the plant unit "will not be ready for regular electricity production in 2014." Noting that Areva-Siemens are constructing the 1600 MWe plant under a fixed-price turnkey contract and are therefore responsible for the time schedule of the project, it requested the supplier provide an updated schedule and completion date. TVO's senior vice president of the Olkiluoto 3 project Jouni Silvennoinen said in a statement today, "We have not yet received an adequate schedule update." He added, "Additionally, the instrumentation and control (I&C) design has not proceeded as planned, and therefore the plant completion may be further delayed." TVO said that although it "is not pleased with the situation and repeated challenges with the project scheduling," work is proceeding at the unit. The civil construction works of Olkiluoto 3 have mainly been completed and the major components of the nuclear island - such as the reactor pressure vessel, pressurizer and steam generators - have all been installed. Welding work of the primary coolant circuit piping has also been completed. TVO noted that some 75% of the installation works have now been completed. Areva responded to TVO's claims by saying, "Over the course of the past year, the consortium has asked for significantly more active cooperation from TVO in order to obtain the final approval of the detailed I&C architecture." It added, "The Areva-Siemens consortium regrets that TVO continues to not fulfil its obligations to allow for the project to advance properly." However, TVO stated that it continues to provide support to the Areva-Siemens consortium "to complete the project as soon as possible." Areva-Siemens filed a request for arbitration with the International Chamber of Commerce in December 2008 concerning the delay of Olkiluoto and the related costs. Its latest monetary claim, including indirect items and interest, is some €1.9 billion ($2.3 billion). TVO has made a counterclaim which currently amounts to €1.4 billion ($1.7 billion). TVO's announcement of a further potential delay in the Olkiluoto 3 project comes just days after the Finnish government published an updated strategy for meeting its energy and climate change targets. In it, the Ministry of Employment and the Economy notes that Finland is still not self-sufficient in electricity generation and is heavily dependent on electricity imports during the winter. "This situation will persist until the point when the Olkiluoto 3 plant unit starts," it noted. However, the ministry said that the country would not be fully self-sufficient in electricity production until the 2020s when both the planned fourth unit at Olkiluoto and Fennovoima's planned plant are in operation and generation from renewable sources has increased. Researched and writtenby World Nuclear News Olkiluoto 3 delayed beyond 2014Bidding starts for Olkiluoto 4New date for Olkiluoto 3Areva talks tough on Olkiluoto 3Olkiluoto 3 start-up 'may be postponed until 2012' Nuclear Energy in Finland ArevaSiemensTeollisuuden Voima Oyj Construction, Finland
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Great Britain Sovereign (1760-1820 : George III) Overview History Sources Maps Pamphlets Classifications: AC4, 216 Publications Princesses : the six daughters of George III by Flora Fraser The Scourge. Numb. I. Major Hæreditas venit unicuique nostrum a jure & legibus, quam a parentibus. A greater inheritance descends to us from the laws, than from our progenitors. The chief magistrate is a last become so corrupt Speech of the Right Honourable William Pitt, on the King's message which was delivered in the House of Commons, on Friday, Feb. 1, 1793 by William Pitt Whereas it hath pleased Almighty God to call to his mercy our late Sovereign Lord King George the Second, of blessed and glorious memory, by whose decease the imperial crown of Great-Britain ... are solely and rightfully come to the high and mighty Prince George, Prince of Wales ... Given at the Council chamber, in New-York, the seventeenth day of January, one thousand seven hundred and sixty one by New York (Colony) By the Honourable Thomas Fitch, Esq ; governor and commander in chief of His Majesty's colony of Connecticut in New-England in America. A proclamation. ... Having received His Majesty's instruction ... where the royal family is appointed to be particularly pray'd for, the following form of words should be used, viz. Our Gracious Queen Charlotte, Her Royal Highness the Princess Dowager of Wales and all the royal family ... Given under my hand in Norwalk, the 14th, day of December ... 1761 by Connecticut By the Honorable Jonathan Trumbull, Esquire ; governor and commander in chief of the English colony of Connecticut, in New-England, in America. A proclamation. Whereas I have received His Majesty's royal instruction ... where the royal family is appointed to be particularly prayed for ; the following form and order should be observed, viz. Our Gracious Queen Charlotte, His Royal Highness George Prince of Wales, and all the royal family ... Given under my hand, in the Council chamber in Hartford, the twenty-sixth day of May, 1772 By the Honourable Thomas Fitch, Esq ; governor ... of Connecticut ... A proclamation. Whereas I have received his majesty's royal instruction ... containing directions for an alteration in the prayers for the royal family ... Given under my hand in New-Haven, the 22d day of January ... 1761. Salem, Wednesday, January 18, 1769. Boston, January 17. Capt. Scott ... arrived here last evening in 40 days from the Land's-End ; having the addresses to his majesty, which are as follow by Great Britain A letter from a Chancellor, out of office to a King in power. Containing, reflections on the aera of His present Majesty's accession to the throne of his ancestors. On the war with America; the Spanish and Russian armaments; and the present war with France; ... the whole being a solemn appeal to the justice, benevolence, and political wisdom of our gracious King, George the Third by Chancellor out of office The scourge. Numb. II. If we could suppose the badge of office laid, for a few hours entirely aside by Sidney To the honourable magistrates, and worthy electors of King's County, on Nassau-Island, in the colony of New-York. Gentlemen, January 23, 1776. It is with sensible and singular pleasure I meet you here this day, and on this constitutional occasion. We are now assembled to manifest to the whole world, our duty and loyalty to our rightful and gracious Sovereign Lord King George the Third by Freeholder Alderman Townsend's speech in defence of the lord mayor by Townsend King George III and the politicians by Richard Pares London in the days of George the Third : a catalog of selections from the library of Charles J. Tanenbaum : exhibited at the Grolier Club September 23 to November 20, 1992 by Charles J Tanenbaum A letter from a Chancellor out of office, to a King in power. Containing, reflections on the aera of His present Majesty's accession to the throne of his ancestors. On the war with America; the Spanish and Russian armaments; and the present war with France; thoughts on church and state establishments, forming an enquiry into the immediate expediency of reform, political, religious, and moral; in the course of which are examined, the relative points about which trinitarians and unitarians chiefly differ, as well as Thomas Paine's assertions concerning Jesus Christ. Lastly, on the laws that were and the laws that are; interspersed with occasional retrospectives of associations, national bankruptcy, revolutions, and universal patriotism. The whole being A solemn appeal to the justice, benevolence, and political wisdom of our gracious King, George the Third by ( To the honourable magistrates, and worthy electors of King's County, on Nassau-Island, in the colony of New-York : Gentlemen, January 23, 1776. It is with sensible and singular pleasure I meet you here this day, and on this constitutional occasion. We are now assembled to manifest to the whole world, our duty and loyalty to our rightful and gracious Sovereign Lord King George the Third The scourge. Numb. II : If we could suppose the badge of office laid, for a few hours entirely aside Anno regni Georgii III. regis Magnae Britanniae, Franciae, & Hiberniae, tricesimo : At the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the eighteenth day of May anno Domini 1784, in the twenty-fourth year of the reign of Our Sovereign Lord George the Third, And from thence continued, by several prorogations and adjournments, to the twenty-first day of January 1790 ; being the seventh session of the sixteenth Parliament of Great Britain Extracts from the Treaty of Paris of 1763 By the King. A proclamation By the King. A proclamation, declaring the cessation of arms, as well by sea as land agreed upon between His Majesty, the Most Christian King, the King of Spain, the States General of the United Provinces, and the United States of America, and enjoining the observance thereof His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Friday, October 27 [i.e. Thursday, October 26], 1775 Declaration of the court of Great Britain respecting the late negotiation An act to enlarge the term and powers of two acts of His present majesty for repairing the roads from the East Gate of King's Lynn, to the North End of Babingley Lane, and to extend the road from thence to Darsingham, in the county of Norfolk By the king, a proclamation for giving currency to a new coinage of copper money of one penny and two penny pieces His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Tuesday the eighteenth day of November, 1760 Lord Malmesbury's embassy. Official documents, in the negociation at Lisle, presented to the two Houses of Parliament, by order of his Majesty. Containing the whole state papers which passed between the British and French plenipotentiaries, & c By the King, a proclamation, for suppressing rebellion and sedition His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Friday the sixth day of November, 1761 His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Tuesday the nineteenth day of April, 1763 To the King's Most Excellent Majesty. the humble petition of the General Assembly of the colony of New-York The address, petition, and remonstrance, of the City of London, to the King, in favour of the Americans, and their resolves, presented to His Majesty, July 5, 1775 by London (England) A collection of several commissions, and other public instruments, proceeding from His Majesty's royal authority by Francis Maseres Debates of the House of Commons in the year 1774 on the bill for making more effectual provision for the government of the province of Quebec His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Thursday the twenty fifth day of November, 1762 His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Thursday, May 23, 1776 His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Saturday, July 3, 1779 His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Tuesday the thirteenth day of November 1770 London in ...) George III King of Great Britain 1738-1820 Former owner Great Britain Parliament Great Britain Great Britain Parliament House of Commons Great Britain Sovereign (1727-1760 : George II) Eyre, Charles Printer London (England) Great Britain Parliament House of Lords Strahan, Andrew -1831 Printer Connecticut Governor (1754-1766 : Fitch) Useful Links Amelia,--Princess, daughter of George III, King of Great Britain, American loyalists American Revolution (1775-1783) Anglo-French War (1793-1802) Augusta Sophia,--Princess, daughter of George III, King of Great Britain, Barracks Canada Charlotte,--Queen, Consort of Frederick I, King of Württemberg, Coinage Colonies Colonies--Administration Copper coins Elizabeth,--Princess of England, England--Norfolk Families First Coalition, War of the (1792-1797) France George--II,--King of Great Britain, George--III,--King of Great Britain, George--III,--King of Great Britain, Great Britain Great Britain.--Army Highway law International relations Jacobite Rebellion (1715) Kings and rulers--Children Law reports, digests, etc Louis--XVI,--King of France, Mary,--Duchess of Gloucester, Massachusetts Money Napoleonic Wars (1800-1815) New York (State) Passes (Transportation) Peace Political science Political science--Sources Prayers Princesses Proposed Invasion of England (1793-1805 : Napoleonic Wars) Québec Quebec Act (Québec (Province)) Revolution (France : 1789-1799) Roads--Maintenance and repair Sedition Seven Years' War (1756-1763) Sophia,--Princess, daughter of George III, King of Great Britain, South Orkney Islands--Falkland Islands Treaty of Paris (1763) United States Alternative Names Great Britain. Sovereigns, etc., 1760-1820 (George III)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/775
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hide Congressman Duffy talks about immigration, jobs, and Obamacare with Wausau Chamber of Commerce by Raymond Neupert Representative Sean Duffy (R-Ashland) after taking the oath of office from House Speaker John Boehner Congressman Sean Duffy (R-WI... (Download MP3) WAUSAU, Wis. (WSAU) - Congressman Sean Duffy stopped at in Wausau today to talk with the Chamber of Commerce and discuss policy. First up was immigration, and Duffy says he's interested in reform but first he wants a secure border. "If you don't secure the border, we're going to have this situation all over again." He says that people living here in the US should have some legal status if they are contributing, but that full citizenship for everyone is not the answer. "That's not fair to the people who are already going through the process." Duffy told the crowd that the government needs to do more to improve and repair the work visa program as well, and offer security to people. "To arrest and deport 11 million people is impractical." He says a plan that will work like that will have a better chance of passing the House. On the topic of the Affordable Care Act, Duffy says a Republican plan to tie the next round of spending bills to repealing Obamacare is not the answer. "That's not a leverage point, it's a losing point." He says Americans are already seeing that they don't like the program, and that suddenly shutting down the whole government just to get rid of the program will make the GOP look like cavemen. Duffy says he'd like to see the House and Senate doing more to look at what sort of things the NSA is doing, and that the programs that have come to light are far beyond what he would have approved. "I have a concern about what they're doing, and the more information that's coming out, I think they're violating their authority to keep us safe." He says intelligence officials never disclosed the full nature of these programs to Congress and that he'll be pushing for more investigation. Business taxes and laws were a hot topic at the Chamber as well. Duffy says he's also working to reduce the tax rate for small businesses in Wisconsin. "If you're a small business, you pay 40% in taxes, where corporations pay 35%. That's not right." He says too many business owners have to worry about rules and regulations and can't devote their time to actually running their businesses, and that he's trying to solve that. Duffy is making stops in Wausau today while the August recess continues.
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hide Rhode Island city drops fine for allegedly foul-mouthed cockatoo Wednesday, March 27, 2013 11:03 a.m. CDT By Daniel Lovering BOSTON (Reuters) - A Rhode Island city has dropped its case against a woman who was fined $15 for violating a noise ordinance after her pet cockatoo allegedly swore at her ex-husband's girlfriend, who lived with him next door, a lawyer said on Wednesday. Warwick Municipal Court fined Lynne Taylor in September following a series of complaints from the neighbor over noise from the parrot and other offenses, said Taylor's lawyer, Stephen Peltier. The bird allegedly used salty language to refer to the neighbor, but Peltier said the bird was merely saying "knock it off," and that the noise ordinance was unconstitutional because it was highly subjective and intended for cases of dog-barking. Taylor's former husband had given her the bird before they divorced and he moved into a neighboring house, Peltier said. His girlfriend began complaining to police after she moved into the house and the dispute escalated over a period of months in 2011, the attorney added. Taylor appealed the decision, and on Friday the City of Warwick dropped the case, he said. "We were prepared to fight this right on through the Supreme Court, and Warwick decided they were not going to fight it," Peltier said. Police told a local television station, WJAR, it was in the best interest of justice to drop the case instead of using city resources to enforce the fine. A Warwick police officer involved in the case was not available for comment. The ordinance says any dog, animal or fowl that habitually barks, howls or makes noise and disturbs a neighbor may be deemed a public nuisance, according to Peltier. (Editing by Scott Malone; Editing by David Gregorio)
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hide AIG may sue Morgan Stanley over mortgage securities: SEC filing Monday, November 04, 2013 4:35 p.m. CST The logo of American International Group Inc. (AIG) on the outside of their corporate headquarters in New York, November 10, 2008. REUTERS/M NEW YORK (Reuters) - American International Group Inc may file a lawsuit against Morgan Stanley related to $3.7 billion worth of mortgage securities that the investment bank sponsored or underwrote from 2005 to 2007, and which AIG purchased, according to a regulatory filing on Monday. AIG has terminated a "tolling agreement" with Morgan Stanley, which allowed the companies to try to settle their dispute out of court. The termination will be effective Thursday, according to Morgan Stanley's 10-Q filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. A Morgan Stanley spokesman declined to comment. A spokesman for AIG did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In August 2011, the insurer filed a $10 billion lawsuit against Bank of America Corp, accusing the bank of "massive" mortgage fraud. Bank of America has denied any wrongdoing. The lawsuit is working its way through multiple jurisdictions. Although Morgan Stanley set aside less money last quarter for legal expenses, so far this yet it has accrued an additional $549 million for litigation costs, up 44 percent from the $381 million it accrued in the first nine months of 2012. (Reporting by Lauren Tara LaCapra; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)
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hide Baghdad blasts kill more than 30 over Eid holiday Saturday, October 27, 2012 5:37 a.m. CDT BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Bombings on Shi'ite neighborhoods in Baghdad and a blast on an Iranian pilgrim bus killed more than 30 people on Saturday, marring Iraqi celebrations of the second day of the Islamic Eid al Adha religious festival. Violence in Iraq has eased sharply, but Sunni Islamist insurgents and al Qaeda's Iraq wing often target Shi'ites in an attempt to stir up the kind of sectarian tensions that dragged the country close to civil war in 2006-2007. Two car bombs exploded on Saturday, one ripping into a restaurant in the Shi'ite stronghold of Sadr City and killing at least 23 people, police and hospital sources said. "I was just selling fruit and we were surprised by a huge explosion on the other side of the street," Hassan Falih Shami, a grocery stall owner near the site of the blast. "You can see pools of blood, the shoes and pieces of clothing." Hours earlier, a roadside bomb planted near an open-air market killed seven people, including three children at a playground. Another blast killed six people when it hit a bus carrying Iranian pilgrims to a Baghdad shrine, police and hospital officials said. Police said the attack on the Iranian pilgrims came from a bomb that had been attached to their bus. It exploded around 300 meters (yards) from a police checkpoint, sending the bus out of control before it flipped over on its side. Insurgents have carried out at least one major attack a month since the last U.S. troops left in December. Iraqi officials worry Syria's crisis is bolstering Iraqi insurgents. The monthly death toll from attacks in Iraq doubled in September to 365, the highest number of casualties in two years, including a series of bombings targeting Shi'ite neighborhoods that killed more than 100 people. Security officials had said they believe insurgents would try to carry out a large attack during the religious holiday, which started on Friday. Car bombs exploded and mortars landed around the Shi'ite neighborhood of Shula, northwestern Baghdad, on Tuesday killing eight people and wounded 28, and another person was killed by a mortar round in Kadhimiya area. (Reporting by Raheem Salman; Writing by Patrick Markey; Editing by Jon Hemming)
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Father wanted for toddler’s death arrested in North Carolina Posted on: 12:54 pm, December 16, 2012, by Jason Gunn, updated on: 06:00am, December 17, 2012 Share this:FacebookTwitterGooglePinterestLinkedInEmail Floyd Logan Police in Asheville, North Carolina say they have arrested the man wanted for Waayliah Brown’s murder. Her father, Floyd Logan of Newport News, was arrested in Asheville Friday night. According to a press release from the Asheville Police Department, they found him at his girlfriend’s house on Jeffress Avenue in Asheville and took him into custody. Previous: Newport News man wanted for murder of 16-month-old daughter Detectives in Chesapeake started investigating the little girl’s death in mid-August. It took multiple autopsies to determine that her death was indeed a homicide. Logan is charged with first-degree murder and child abuse.
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Internet security is big business for Wisconsin Rapids firm Joe Vanden Plas Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. - Sami Saydjari could serve as an inspiration for anyone who has ever dreamed of building a home-based business, but his four-year-old venture is no ordinary consulting company.SaydjariSaydjari has established a $5 million annual business called the Cyber Defense Agency in his Wisconsin Rapids home, one that is helping the United States defend itself against cyber attacks.His work environment wasn't always residential. He has more than 20 years' experience directing information assurance research, including 13 years at the National Security Agency and three years as a program manager with the Defense Advanced Projects Agency. Since these organizations are based in the nation's capital, why would Saydjari select a city 1,000 away to establish a home and a business? Part of the answer is that he is a Wisconsin native - born in Rice Lake - and part of the answer is because, thanks to the magic of computer technology, he can.“I was born in Wisconsin, so I just wanted to raise my son in the Midwest,” Saydjari explained. “It wasn't particularly Wisconsin Rapids. That just happened to be the place we landed. “It's more about raising a family in a small town, and being a virtual company that is a thought leader, where the physical location is really not terribly important.”Line of defenseThe company's location may not be important, but its work is. CDA provides research and strategic consulting to secure critical infrastructure against attack - critical infrastructure that ranges from the Department of Defense to the power, finance, and telecommunications industries. Due primarily to its work with Defense, CDA has grown into a $5 million a year company with 20 employees, but they don't congregate in one spot.The company, founded in 2002, has people in Wisconsin, California, Minneapolis-St. Paul (including the CIO), Tennessee, and the Baltimore-Washington, D.C. region. About half of its employees are in the vicinity of the nation's capital, where most of its defense clients operate.CDA has received two DoD grants through the Small Business Innovation Research program, so its scattered staff did not prevent the department from selecting it for key projects. The SBIR awards, including one for nearly $750,000, are for research contracts, so locale doesn't matter as much as brain power. That power is being deployed to conduct automated “red teaming,” a way to shape a better defensive posture by having organizations self-assess their information systems to understand how adversaries might come after them. Other work, however, cannot be performed in the home. “For some of our other work that is classified, we needed a facility, and we in fact have a facility capable of handling classified work in the Washington, D.C. area,” Saydjari noted.Beyond DoDThus far, CDA primarily has served the DoD, but the company is in discussions with prospective private-sector clients. It started with the defense sector because it was familiar territory and because the department has been living with the cyber security problem for the past 30 years. More recently, Saydjari said there has been an increasing understanding of what's needed by the private sector, so the timing is right to branch out.The company has a very aggressive mission, but that doesn't necessarily translate into revenue goals and other measures of growth. Although security metrics are difficult to measure, CDA's bottom line is linked to mission - it intends to reduce the national cyber security risk by half in the next five years. “If it takes a company of this size to do it, we will be this size,” Saydjari said. “If it takes a company 10 times this size to do it, we'll do that.”CDA doesn't yet belong to an industry association, but it operates in the information assurance industry, which Saydjari characterizes as immature. He gets no argument from Jeff Stapleton, founder and president of the Information Assurance Consortium, one of a handful of industry associations. Thus far, membership consists of a small group of small businesses, individuals, and similar organizations that serve as liaisons, and the composition of the industry remains unclear."I don't know of any information technology security body that has collected cross-industry information on information assurance,” Stapleton said. “Nobody is measuring it, so nobody really knows.” Professional hackersIn shaping a security policy, Saydjari advises CIOs to look at the risk to their systems, and the ways in which they depend on their information infrastructure to accomplish the corporate mission. As the hacker community evolves into a professional criminal class with a profit motive, it comes in all shapes and sizes, including members of organized crime. More frequent random invasive attacks have given way to fewer targeted attacks, yet they still cause billions of dollars in damage.In combating today's threats, Saydjari gives equal weight to sensible policy and technology solutions because both have to work in unison. In his view, technology without policy is useless, and he laments the lack of integrated security solutions. He said there is no magic tech tool on the market, but a diverse set of mechanisms handling a very narrow portion of the attack space. With several remote locations, CDA encrypts sensitive traffic, places its most sensitive data on separate computers (outside the network), and has developed a secure sharing site.“What I advocate right now is an intelligent security architectural approach to defending the system, again with respect to the way the mission is accomplished,” he said, “and orchestrating those mechanisms together in a way that coherently defends against attackers.”National initiativeIn 2002, Saydjari was one of 50 people who wrote a letter to President Bush stating how vulnerable the United States is to a cyber attack. He has called for a cyber “Manhatten Project” to address the threat, which isn't from terrorists alone. Such a project would require presidential leadership and a multi-billion-dollar investment to bring together the nation's top scientists and engineers to build a defensive capability - mostly in an open engineering project that is managed as a virtual entity."We need robust technology against nation-state adversary attack," he said, "and that requires concerted government strategic investment.”Related stories• Jerry Norton: Auditors paying more attention to IT woes• Security concerns grow with mobile tech devices• Companies still neglect network security• Company issues warning on outsourced software• Wisconsin Rapids firm will challenge student security skills
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International envoy warns of failed state in Syria Sunday - 12/30/2012, 9:22pm ET In this photo provided by Turkish Prime Minister's Press Service, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and his wife Emine Erdogan hold newly born babies during a visit to a Syrian refugee camp in Sanliurfa, Turkey, Sunday, Dec. 30, 2012. Erdogan repeated a call on Syrian President Bashar Assad to step down. (AP Photo/Kayhan Ozer) BASSEM MROUE BEIRUT (AP) -- The international envoy seeking to end Syria's civil war warned Sunday that the failure of the government and the rebels to pursue a political solution could lead to the "full collapse of the Syrian state" and threaten the world's security.Lakhdar Brahimi, who represents the United Nations and the Arab League, said that as many as 100,000 people could be killed in the next year as Syria moves toward "Somalization" and rule by warlords.Brahimi has reported little progress in his mission to push forward a peace plan for Syria first presented in June at an international conference in Geneva. The proposal calls for an open-ended cease-fire and the formation of a transitional government to run the country until new elections can be held and a new constitution drafted.But so far, neither the regime of President Bashar Assad nor the scores of rebels groups fighting his forces across the country have shown any interest in negotiations.The rebels' political leadership has called Assad's departure a prerequisite for any political solution, and it is unlikely that the opposition's National Coalition could even stop rebels on the ground from continuing to fight.Likewise, it is doubtful that top members of Assad's regime will voluntarily give up power.The Syrian government has remained officially mum on Brahimi's plan, which he has pushed in the past week in meetings with Assad in Damascus, with top Russian officials in Moscow and on Sunday with the head of the Arab League in Cairo.Speaking alongside Nabil Elaraby on Sunday, he estimated that 100,000 people could be killed if the 21-month conflict continues for another year."Peace and security in the world will be threatened directly from Syria if there is no solution within the next few months," he said. "The alternatives are a political solution or the full collapse of the Syrian state."Since meeting Assad early last week, Brahimi has given no indication how his plan was received. When asked Sunday if there is any willingness among the opposition to enter a political process, Brahimi said, "No, there isn't. This is the problem."Syria's crisis began in March 2011 with political protests against Assad. The conflict has since evolved into a civil war. Anti-regime activists say more than 45,000 people have been killed.The Syria government does not give death tolls for the conflict and says the rebels are terrorists backed by foreign powers who seek to destroy the country.The Syrian conflict has split world powers, with the United States, Turkey and many European and Arab states calling for Assad to stand down. Russia, China and Iran have stood by the regime and criticized calls for Assad's ouster.On Sunday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Syrian refugees along Turkey's southern border, where he was joined by Mouaz al-Khatib, head of Syria's National Coalition.Erdogan called for Assad to step down and said that Syria is experiencing "a holy birth.""That holy birth is the coming to power of the will of the people," he said as refugees chanted his name.Activists reported violence around Syria on Sunday.Rebels in the north clashed with government troops near military bases in the provinces of Idlib and Aleppo and seized an oil pumping station in al-Raqqa.The station receives crude oil from the nearby province of Hassakha and pumps it to one of Syria's two oil refineries in Homs, said Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.The Observatory also said rebels stormed a government air base in the area of Tel Hassir south of Aleppo, while government fighter jets launched deadly airstrikes near Aleppo, Hama and in a number of rebellious Damascus suburbs.Activists also reported two car bombs in the Yarmouk district of Damascus, where most residents are Palestinian refugees.___Associated Press writers Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, and Sarah El Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report.
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Maryland man who called himself 'joker' charged Wednesday - 8/1/2012, 5:51pm ET This image provided by by Mike Cochran shows Neil E. Prescott in an undated photo. Cochran, a friend of Prescott, says the Maryland man accused of threatening to shoot up his workplace is a ''gentle giant'' who collected weapons and had expressed concerns about break-ins near his apartment complex. Cochran tells The Associated Press on Saturday, July 28, 2012, that he thinks Prescott did not intend for his comments to be taken seriously. Cochran says Prescott was known for having a sarcastic sense of humor. (AP Photo/Mike Cochran) Gallery: (4 images) By ERIC TUCKER Associated Press UPPER MARLBORO, Md. - A man accused of referring to himself as "a joker" and threatening to shoot up his workplace has been charged with misdemeanor telephone misuse, prosecutors announced Wednesday. Neal E. Prescott, 28, of Crofton, was taken into custody last Friday after police said they found ammunition and a cache of about two dozen weapons, including semi-automatic rifles and pistols, in his apartment. He has been undergoing an emergency psychiatric evaluation at a hospital since then. The charge is punishable by up to three years in prison and Prescott would lose the right to get his guns back if convicted, Prince George's County State's Attorney Angela Alsobrooks said. The "joker" comment prompted concern because of a mass shooting a week earlier at a Colorado movie theater screening the latest Batman movie. Authorities have said Prescott had either been fired or was in the process of being fired from his job when he allegedly said last Monday: "I'm a joker and I'm gonna load my guns and blow everybody up." Police also said Prescott was wearing a T-shirt that said "Guns don't kill people. I do" when officers made an initial visit to his apartment. Police initially said the comment was made to a supervisor, but the state's attorney said it was to a coworker. Alsobrooks said the misdemeanor was "insufficient" to deal with the alleged threat and that she would have preferred to charge Prescott with a felony. But she said there was no statute in Maryland making it a felony to make a generalized threat over the telephone. Prescott had been working for a subcontractor of software and mailroom supplier Pitney Bowes at a branch in Prince George's County, just outside Washington. After he was taken into custody, friends described Prescott as a "gentle giant" _ court records list him as 6 feet, 7 inches _ who was interested in computers, electronics and who collected guns as a hobby and liked to shoot at a target range. Phone messages left with his parents have not been returned. It wasn't immediately clear whether Prescott has a lawyer. Online Maryland court records list his only past offense as a speeding ticket in 2007. (Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.) Tags: shooting
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Search Tags: AVClub Shock rockers GWAR take on Kansas (VIDEO) The members of GWAR, founded in Richmond, Va., describe themselves as "the epitome of an art-rock band." Since the 1980s, they have performed intense songs such as "America Must Be Destroyed" and "War Is all We Know" that correspond to their diabolical monster costumes made of rubber and foam. Tuesday - 10/02/2012, 01:31pm EDT Tags: gwar, Kansas, Carry On Wayward Son, 12
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hide As election, Sandy draw near, pressure mounts on disaster chief U.S. President Barack Obama delivers a statement on the Hurricane Sandy situation from the press briefing room of the White House in Washing By Mark Felsenthal WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As Hurricane Sandy bears down on the U.S. East Coast little more than a week before the presidential election, President Barack Obama's fortunes may in part depend on how well a former volunteer firefighter from Florida does his job. Craig Fugate, a former paramedic and firefighter who rose to become Florida's top emergency management official, heads the Federal Emergency Management Agency and is the man Obama is counting on to bring relief quickly to millions of people expected to be hit by monster storm Sandy. With the presidential election at hand and closely fought, the stakes are high for Obama to avoid an embarrassment like former President George W. Bush's botched reaction to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Much of the pressure is on Fugate, who has earned high marks for his quick and effective response to recent storms. That includes Hurricane Isaac in August, the deadly May 2011 tornadoes that struck Joplin, Missouri, and Hurricane Irene, which lashed the east coast in August 2011. Fugate, 53, was one of the few people Obama consulted in the White House Situation Room Monday morning for an update on the hurricane's movements and federal response efforts, the White House said. After the meeting with Fugate and a handful of other officials, Obama delivered a statement from the White House, pleading for patience from the American public but also pledging that his administration will have emergency relief in place - a task that Fugate will have to carry out. "I'm confident that we're ready, but I think the public needs to prepare for the fact that this is going to take a long time for us to clean up," Obama said. Obama switched from campaign mode to first-responder-in-chief on Monday, canceling scheduled campaign stops in Florida and Wisconsin and returning to Washington to monitor the storm and the government's response. Rival Mitt Romney, who is running neck-and-neck with Obama in the polls, also canceled his campaign appearances, "out of sensitivity for the millions of Americans in the path of Hurricane Sandy," his campaign said. BLANKETS, GENERATORS IN PLACE The president has declared emergencies in at least eight eastern states and the District of Columbia. During a conference call with reporters on Monday, Fugate, who wears a goatee and glasses and speaks with a Florida drawl, rattled off an extensive list of the administration's preparations, including getting bottled water, meals, blankets and generators in place. He said the disaster relief fund held $3.6 billion. "As the storm's coming ashore, we'll be rapidly moving into response operations, as soon as weather conditions permit," he said. The aggressive response, and the image of a fully engaged commander-in-chief, gives Obama yet another chance to contrast his efforts with the response to Hurricane Katrina. Former President Bush's FEMA director Michael Brown, a lawyer who owed his job to political connections, resigned shortly after it became clear the government's reaction to the devastating storm was inadequate and poorly planned. Bush's remark, "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job," made even as New Orleans residents fled to higher ground to avoid onrushing waters, became a catch-phrase that tarred the Bush presidency with an image of cronyism and still evokes bitter memories. Fugate told reporters this summer that Katrina taught officials to be in place before the storms hit. Local officials have expressed gratitude to him for help with such delicate problems as how to search for remains. In the thick of a close election, Obama's turn to crisis management may offer him a chance to rise above the fray of campaigning, a notion he tried to drive home at the briefing on Monday. "The election will take care of itself next week," he said. "Right now, our No. 1 priority is to make sure that we are saving lives, that our search-and-rescue teams are going to be in place, that people are going to get food, the water, the shelter that they need in case of emergency, and that we respond as quickly as possible to get the economy back on track." (Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Karey Wutkowski and Cynthia Osterman)
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Rim Fire near Yosemite National Park 70% contained Posted on: 7:17 am, September 3, 2013, by Chris Westfall Share this:FacebookTwitterGooglePinterestLinkedInEmail From Dave Alsup and Tina Burnside (CNN) — The stubborn Rim Fire, one of the largest wildfire in California’s history, is 70% contained, the U.S. Forest Service said Monday night. With rain and cooler temperatures in the forecast, firefighters who have toiled tirelessly for days will likely make further gains in the coming days. Still, officials don’t expect full containment until October 20. The Rim Fire started August 17 and swallowed more than 235,000 acres — making it the fifth-largest wildfire in California history. It has cost the state more than $39 million to date. Although the fire has consumed tens of thousands of acres inside Yosemite National Park, it has so far had little or no direct impact on Yosemite Valley, a popular spot for tourists and home to many of the park’s iconic attractions, including the El Capitan rock formation. Authorities don’t know what started the Rim Fire — although the fire chief in the town of Twain Harte said illegal marijuana growers could be the unintentional culprits. “It might be some sort of illicit grove, marijuana grow-type thing.” Todd McNeal told a meeting on August 23. The video of the meeting was posted on YouTube and picked up steam recently. Calls to the Twain Harte fire department were not answered Monday night. But Mark Healey with the Rim Fire Information Line dismissed the suggestion, calling it “rumors.” The fire, he said, was still under investigation. Topics: california, Fire, National Latest News HOLMBERG: More wounded in the battle over Monroe Park
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Mon September 17, 2012 Great Lakes Civil War Forum Extends Antietam's Impact Beyond Battlefield President Lincoln with the soon-to-be-replaced General George McClellan and officers after the Battle of Antietam. Credit Photo courtesy of LOC Share Tweet E-mail By Stephanie Lecci Listen Before the break, we heard the story of the Iron Brigade’s role at the battle of Antietam. It was a group of fights that are commonly remembered as the bloodiest day of battle in American history, and for good reason. Read more Civil War Sun September 16, 2012 Web Exclusive: The Father of Battlefield Medicine Jonathan Letterman, the "father of Battlefield Medicine" Share Tweet E-mail By Stephanie Lecci Listen One hundred fifty years ago on September 17th, Union and Confederate soldiers met up near Sharpsburg, Maryland by Antietam Creek. The ensuing battle would become known as the bloodiest single day of fighting in American history, claiming 23,000 casualties. It would also mark a turning point in the American Civil War, committing the country to a prolonged and deadly conflict. Read more Civil War Sun September 16, 2012 Web Exclusive: Rare Images of Antietam Offer Veterans' Look at Battle Battlefield guide and author Stephen Recker's new book is "Rare Images of Antietam" Share Tweet E-mail By Stephanie Lecci Listen By the end of the day on September 17th, 1865, more than 23,000 Union and Confederate soldiers had been killed or wounded. The Battle of Antietam, near Sharpsburg, Maryland, was the bloodiest single day of the American Civil War - and in American history. Read more Civil War Sun September 16, 2012 Web Exclusive: Clara Barton Transforms Role of Nurse on the Battlefield The famous Civil War nurse and founder of the American Red Cross Clara Barton Credit Photo courtesy of the National Park Service Share Tweet E-mail By Stephanie Lecci Listen One hundred fifty years later, it's hard to place enough significance on how the American Civil War would go on to shape our country and its people - or to overestimate the extreme loss of life it caused. Beyond the battlefields, however, the War Between the states also brought forth many firsts, such as the first Army ambulance corps, the first use of conscription of soldiers, the first black U.S. Army officer - the list goes on and on. Read more Environment Fri September 14, 2012 Slipping Green into Rock Rock the Green creator Lindsay Stevens Gardner (right) with director of sponsor and event management Corey Sutton. She's one of 250 volunteers who make the event happen. Share Tweet E-mail By Susan Bence Listen Last year in Milwaukee, more than 7,000 people showed up for a new one-day music festival at Veterans Park in the midst of heavy rain and wind. Organizers would like to think people were drawn to its mission - to create as little waste as possible during a concert. Read more Pagesfirst
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Guess Who's Singing The National Anthem At The Super Bowl? http://wvtf.org/post/guess-whos-singing-national-anthem-super-bowl She's probably not among your first, or second, or 10th, or 20th-round guesses, but the NFL <a href="http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap2000000316164/article/renee-fleming-to-sing-national-anthem-at-super-bowl-xlviii" target="_blank">just announced</a> that American soprano <a href="http://www.npr.org/artists/15656760/renee-fleming" target="_blank">Renee Fleming</a> will sing the national anthem at Super Bowl XLVIII on Feb. 2.<p>Fleming is the first-ever opera singer to be given the honor. Anastasia Tsioulcas 16189 at http://wvtf.org Reunited After 50 Years, An Algerian Buena Vista Social Club Makes Its U.S. Debut http://wvtf.org/post/reunited-after-50-years-algerian-buena-vista-social-club-makes-its-us-debut <p>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RVN1ZvHZCk</p> Anastasia Tsioulcas 8716 at http://wvtf.org
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Can Anything Be Done To Tornado-Proof A House? Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By editor Listen Transcript LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST: As you heard, repairing the physical damage to Moore, Oklahoma will take a long time. Reducing that time and the damage these storms cause is something Andrew Graettinger is working on. He's a civil engineer, a professor at the University of Alabama, and he was part of a study that looked at the structural impact of the 2011 tornados that ripped through Joplin, Missouri and Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He joins us now. Good morning, Dr. Graettinger. ANDREW GRAETTINGER: Good morning. WERTHEIMER: Now, it's hard to imagine more thorough destruction than occurred when that tornado plowed up Moore, Oklahoma. Houses are reduced to shards and shreds. Should something be done? Can anything be done to tornado-proof a house? GRAETTINGER: Well, when we looked at what happened in Tuscaloosa and then unfortunately had the opportunity to go right back and do the same study in Joplin just a month later, we looked at the path that the tornado took and we kind of walked across it and saw that the damage level on the edges was much lower than in the center. And when we started to understand the wind speeds that would cause the damage on the edges, we found out that about 85 percent of that area in both Tuscaloosa and Joplin we could engineer to protect those homes and reduce the amount of damage that was occurring in those homes. WERTHEIMER: What would you have to do? GRAETTINGER: Well, we can leverage some of the technology that they're using along the Gulf Coast in hurricane regions so we could hurricane clips which are at the top of the wall and they connect to the roof, and that would hold the roof on. And then, if you hold your roof on, you need to hold - you need to continue that path down into the foundation so at the bottom of the wall you need to put a hurricane strap on, which then straps the bottom of the wall to the foundation. WERTHEIMER: Would this be very expensive to do? GRAETTINGER: They're not very expensive. These hurricane clips and straps, they're maybe about a dollar apiece or even a little bit less than that. You'd need several hundred of them for a house, and then, of course, installation costs. Now, you'd do this on new construction. Trying to retrofit an existing home with these clips and straps is very expensive, so that wouldn't be an option. But remember, we've got two levels of damage. We've got this level of damage we can engineer for at the lower wind speeds, but then in the center of that storm it's complete destruction. Even the wood is breaking. And so what you need to have in those areas is a safe room to go to. So it's kind of a dual objective. At the lower wind speeds, we try and keep your house together and protect it with those hurricane clips and straps, and at those higher wind speeds we're looking for life safety and that means a safe room in your house. WERTHEIMER: What would a safe room have to be? What would it need to be safe? GRAETTINGER: Well, FEMA has designs out for safe rooms and storm shelters, and so these are well-designed. They're reinforced. Typically it's concrete. It could be made out of steel and you could even make it out of wood with steel reinforcing in it. So there's a number of ways you can design a safe room, and you can even put them underground and build them that way. So there's a number of different designs and they're designed to handle those EF5 kind of wind speeds. WERTHEIMER: I gather that nothing could really protect property against a storm like Moore, Oklahoma, but you think you could protect people. What about those old-fashioned storm cellars like my grandmother who lived in Oklahoma had one in her backyard. I remember lots of nights waking up in that thing. GRAETTINGER: Yes. It's a great place if that's where you have to go. And of course safe spots in your house, like in the bathroom or something in the center of the house or the basement, if that's all you have, those are the best places to go. But you want to make sure that something like a root cellar or something like that has a proper tornado door on there also because you don't want any impacts to get in, like a flying piece of debris to break through the door or the door to be pulled off. But any one of those locations that we had talked about, those are all good places to go if that's where you have to go. WERTHEIMER: Andrew Graettinger is a professor at the University of Alabama. Thank you very much for joining us. GRAETTINGER: Oh, you're welcome. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR. Related programs:Morning Edition on WVTF/RADIO IQ Morning Edition on RADIO IQ with BBC Morning Edition on RADIO IQ
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All ContentcloseNews podcastsUse iTunesUse a different playerRSS View all podcasts & RSS feeds Health Care Three Years On, States Still Struggle With Health Care Law Messaging Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By editor Originally published on Sat March 30, 2013 6:25 pm Listen Joy Reynolds of San Diego looks at the newspapers on display at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., on June 29, 2012, following the Supreme Court ruling on President Obama's health care law. It is hard to imagine that after three years of acrimony and debate we could still be so confused about President Obama's Affordable Care Act. Is it actually possible Americans know less about Obamacare now than they did three years ago? Apparently that is the case, and the news comes just as the most sweeping effects of the law are about to kick in. According to a new poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation, 80 percent of people don't know whether their state is going to expand Medicaid under the law, a huge piece of the health care changes coming down the pike. Half of people don't know whether their states are going to be setting up so-called health exchanges, and half of people think the law gives undocumented immigrants health care subsidies — it doesn't. The poll also shows that 40 percent of people still think the government is going to set up death panels to decide if someone gets heath care when they're dying — it won't. To further illustrate confusion about the law, 70 percent of people said they like the initiatives in the law when they were asked specifically about each one, but only 37 percent of people said they liked the law itself. Where Are We Now? NPR's health policy correspondent Julie Rovner says a lot of the confusion regarding the Affordable Care Act comes, in part, from a commanding "misinformation and disinformation" campaign. "It has worked better than the people who were trying to put the law into effect, who have been working to put the law into effect rather than messaging about it," Rovner tells weekends on All Things Considered guest host Laura Sullivan. There are essentially three big pieces to the Affordable Care Act: the insurance reforms (also known as the patients' bill of rights), quality and cost measures, and the health care mandate. The insurance reforms portion has mostly taken effect, Rovner says, and includes things like allowing adult children to stay on their parents' health insurance until they are 26, and not letting health plans cancel coverage after you get sick. These are things she says most polls show Americans back. The quality and cost measures are mostly behind-the-scenes changes that are meant to change the way health care is delivered to improve the care patients get to save money for both the patient and the government. The third part goes into effect on Jan. 1, and is the one that has caused the most controversy: the health care mandate. In an effort to get about 30 million more people health insurance, those who don't have coverage will pay a penalty. "This October is when small businesses and people without insurance can start enrolling in these so-called health exchanges," Rovner says. "That's where they'll be able to shop for health plans if they have moderate incomes [and] they'll be eligible for subsidies from the government to help pay for the plans." For low-income Americans who live in a state that has decided to accept the option to expand Medicaid, they can see if they qualify. As part of the Supreme Court's decision to uphold the Affordable Care Act, it made the Medicaid expansion portion of the law optional. "So we're still waiting to see how many states take up the federal government's offer to pay for most of that cost," Rovner says. Despite the law's efforts to get all Americans health coverage, she says, some Americans could still fall through the cracks if their state doesn't take the option to expand Medicaid. The Risks Of Opting Out In order to get everyone health care coverage — whether a 22-year-old working in a coffee shop or a 58-year-old who's just been kicked off another insurance plan — the idea was that every state would create something called a health care exchange. This is a fancy way of saying each state would build a website and offer folks a sampler platter of low-cost insurance options. The law, however, gave states the chance to opt out of creating one. So far 26 states — mostly red states and mostly on ideological grounds — have done just that. It doesn't mean the exchanges aren't coming to those states or that people in those state's wont have to get insured, it simply means the federal government will build the exchange for those states. One of the states opting out of building its own health exchange is Texas. "Texas has the distinction of having the most uninsured people as a percentage of the population [than] any place in the country," says Ron Cookston, executive director of Gateway to Care, a nonprofit health care advocacy group in Houston. Almost 30 percent of adults in Texas lack health care insurance, according to the research company Gallup. Cookston and other advocates have to find a way to reach out to all those people and let them know what's coming. "The state of Texas ... [has] great capabilities, and it would have been wonderful if since the passage of the Affordable Care Act they had begun to help communicate and inform our public so they would be ready," Cookston tells NPR's Sullivan. "People just don't have any idea about how they will be impacted." Texas Gov. Rick Perry has been outspoken about his opposition to Obamacare, saying it costs too much and "kills too many jobs." Perry has also rejected Medicaid expansion in his state, which would have provided care to more than 1 million poor Texans. President Obama says the federal government would pick up the tab, but Gov. Perry says he believes the state will be left with higher costs in the long run. In Houston, where Cookston's group operates, few people who will be required to use the health care exchange know anything about it. "When leadership in any state talks about things in a negative way, it becomes awfully easy for the general public to dismiss it and not think about it," he says. The federal government is going to send organizations like Cookston's group some money to help get the word out, but he says what they're missing is a coordinating central body. "The government of the state of Texas, they are not doing anything at this point in time," he says. "We certainly are, neighborhood by neighborhood ... because that's how this will have to be done — church by church, community by community. Unfortunately, we've not had the support of the [state]." Spreading The Message Unlike Texas, California has decided to build its own health exchange. The state has even gave it a catchy name, Covered California. "[We're] doing consumer surveys, marketing and focus groups," says Peter Lee, who is running the state's health care effort. "So come this summer, we're going to hit the ground in a big way with messages that we know will resonate." The state is hiring thousands of people to get Covered California off the ground, and the federal government is giving the state $900 million to do it. The "ground troops" needed to spread the message, Lee says, will come from the community. "We'll be funding groups in communities across the state that are based in faith-based organizations, schools [and] unions," he says. "Because we know that delivering this message needs to come from your neighbor, from people in your community." About 2.5 million Californians will be eligible for subsidies through Covered California, a diverse group of people, says Lee. He says the state needs to have outreach that speaks to farmers and people in rural communities, and in dozens of languages in downtown urban areas. About half the states are following California's lead, setting up their own exchanges and using what is essentially seed money from Washington to get them off the ground. "These are states that have said, 'Lets get this venture capitalist funding from the federal government to set up an exchange that works right for our state,' " Lee says. For consumers, however, it doesn't matter if you're in Texas or California or anywhere else in the country, the law is clear: The uninsured are expected to get coverage by January. Whether those folks will be informed and ready by then is not so clear.Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. Transcript LAURA SULLIVAN, HOST: It's WEEKENDS on ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Laura Sullivan. Coming up, a surprising look into the world's biggest smartphone seller. Bet you think we're talking about Apple. And when sports and politics collide, Dave Zirin on his new book. But first, is it actually possible Americans know less about Obamacare now than they did three years ago? Apparently, that is the case according to a new poll. It's hard to imagine after three years of acrimony and debate, we could still be so confused about a law. It couldn't come at a worse time, just as the most sweeping effects of the Affordable Care Act are about to kick in. That's our cover story today: Where exactly are we when it comes to this law, and why do we keep getting it so wrong? AL WORTOSTELPINO: What do I know about it? I don't know that much about it. SULLIVAN: That's Al Wortostelpino(ph) on the street of Charlotte, North Carolina, where we asked him and a lot of others what they know about the Affordable Care Act's mandatory health care exchange. JOHN MORRIS: That's the issue that the governors are all fighting over, right? DOROTHY LINDSEY: I don't know a lot about it, but I heard a lot of people talking about it. VIC WARANNY: I know nothing. JASON FOREMAN: The exchange might be a little bit daunting for me to try to navigate because no one can tell us exactly what it means. SULLIVAN: That's John Morris, Dorothy Lindsey, Vic Waranny(ph) and Jason Foreman. And folks just outside Milwaukee didn't fare much better. LORRAINE RANDALL: Actually, I'm not sure what the Affordable Health Care is going to do. MARGARET GUNDERSON: I have a vague understanding about exchanges. ROBERT HOLSIER: I'm unfamiliar with it, and most of my friends are skeptical because they don't know that much about it. SULLIVAN: That's Lorraine Randall(ph), Margaret Gunderson(ph) and Robert Holsier(ph). And they're just like the rest of us. A new poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation finds 80 percent of people don't know whether their states is going to expand Medicaid under the law, a huge piece of the health care changes coming down the pike. Half of people don't know whether their states are going to be setting up one of these so-called exchanges. Half of people think the law gives undocumented immigrants health care subsidies - it doesn't. Forty percent of people still think the government is going to set up death panels - it won't. And this was interesting. Just 37 percent of people say they like the law. But when Kaiser asked people about specific things within the law, like providing tax credits to small businesses, insuring the sick, the overwhelming majority - 70 percent of people - say those are great ideas. I asked NPR's health policy correspondent Julie Rovner why we are so confused. JULIE ROVNER, BYLINE: I think partly because there has been a very commanding misinformation and disinformation campaign, and it has worked better than the people who are trying to put the law into effect, who have been working to put the law into effect rather than to message about it. SULLIVAN: So what is actually happening with Obamacare right now in year three? ROVNER: There are really three big pieces of this law. And the first part of the law has mostly taken effect, and that is the insurance reforms. And that's what's known, really, as this patients' bill of rights that they tried to pass in the late 1990s. That's things like letting adult children to stay on their parents' plans until they turn 26, outlying annual and lifetime limits on insurance policies, and not letting health plans cancel coverage after the fact if you get sick. SULLIVAN: And this is the good stuff. I mean, this is the stuff that most Americans, when you ask them in polls, say we love this. This is great. ROVNER: Absolutely. SULLIVAN: OK. So that's the first part. What's the second part? ROVNER: The second part is what I call quality and cost, and this is mostly behind-the-scene stuff, mostly in Medicare because that's what the government has most control over. It's designing ways to change the way health care is delivered to improve the care patients get, to make care more efficient and, hopefully, to save money for both the patients and the government. SULLIVAN: And then we have part three, which is the big dollop. I mean, this is the thing that's been the big controversial piece. ROVNER: That's right. And this starts next January 1st, is getting as many as 30 million more people health insurance. SULLIVAN: This is the mandatory health insurance. You must get health insurance or you have to pay a penalty. ROVNER: That's right. And it actually really rolls out this October, which is when small businesses and people without insurance can start enrolling in these so-called health exchanges. That's where they'll be able to shop for health plans if they have moderate incomes. They'll be eligible for subsidies from the federal government to help pay for the plans. If they have low incomes and if their state decides to accept the option, they can qualify for Medicaid. But remember, the Supreme Court made the Medicaid expansion optional last year, so we're still waiting to see how many states take up the federal government's offer to pay most of that cost. So far, it's just shy of half the states, but that could change. SULLIVAN: OK. So about nine million people starting in about six months are going to go onto these exchanges, this website, and they're going to start picking a health insurance. ROVNER: That's right. SULLIVAN: Is this solving our national health care problem? ROVNER: It's a step towards solving the national health care problem. It's expected to be a way for people to be able to compare health insurance. They'll get help paying for it. You can compare apples to apples. Insurers won't be able to discriminate against people with pre-existing conditions. This will be a place for people to go who can't get insurance now and a place where people will have to go since most people will be required to have insurance. SULLIVAN: Are there still going to be millions of Americans who won't have health insurance after this is all said and done? Are there people who are going to fall through some sort of loophole here? ROVNER: States that do not expand Medicaid, there will be a number of people who then are not eligible for Medicaid and are not eligible to get insurance at these exchanges. And there could be millions of people who will fall through the cracks who were originally anticipated to get coverage through this law. SULLIVAN: So there are people who are not poor enough to get Medicaid - their state hasn't expanded Medicaid - but at the same time they're not going to be able to afford to buy this insurance on the exchange. ROVNER: That's correct. SULLIVAN: NPR's health policy correspondent Julie Rovner. So here's where we are: If you're uninsured - whether you're a 22-year-old working in a coffee shop or a 58-year-old kicked off another insurance plan - you will have to buy insurance by next January or you're going to get a tax penalty. For the most part, there are some exceptions. The idea was that every state would create its own health care exchange, which is just a fancy way of saying each state would build a website and offer folks a sampler platter of low-cost insurance options. But the law gave states a chance to opt out of creating one. And 26 states - mostly red states and mostly on ideological grounds - have done just that. It doesn't mean the exchanges aren't coming or that people in those states won't have to get insured. It just means the federal government will build the exchanges for them. RON COOKSTON: Texas has the distinction of having the most uninsured people as a percentage of the total population of any place in the country. SULLIVAN: Ron Cookston is executive director of Gateway to Care. It's a nonprofit health care advocacy group that works in the Houston area, in a state choosing to opt out of building its own health care exchange. Almost 30 percent of adults in Texas lack health insurance according to Gallup. Ron Cookston and other advocates have to find a way to reach out to all of those people and let them know what's coming. COOKSTON: The state of Texas - and I'm sure it's true in all the other 26 states - have great capabilities, and it would have been wonderful if since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, they had begun to help communicate and inform our public so that they would be ready. People just don't have any idea how they're going to be impacted. SULLIVAN: Even people who work for Cookston's own health care advocacy group don't fully understand the requirements. COOKSTON: I'm embarrassed to have to admit it, but I've got two staff that don't take the health insurance I offer. It wasn't until conversation in a staff meeting this week where it finally dawned on them that they're going to have to do something as well. These two individuals work to help people access health care every single day, but even they had not really understood that they, as an individual, are going to have to take responsibility. SULLIVAN: Texas Governor Rick Perry has been outspoken in his opposition to Obamacare. He says it's bad policy. And he's rejected expanding Medicaid, which would have given health insurance to more than a million poor Texans. COOKSTON: When leadership in any state talks about things in a negative way, it becomes awfully easy for the general public to sort of dismiss it. SULLIVAN: The federal government is going to send organizations, like Cookston's, some money to help get the word out. But Cookston says what they're missing is a coordinating central body. COOKSTON: The government of the state of Texas, they are not doing anything at this point in time. Are Texans paying attention and beginning to work together all over the state in Lubbock and in San Antonio and in Dallas and Houston to begin to develop ways to get the word out? We certainly are, neighborhood by neighborhood, because that's how this will have to be done - church by church, community by community. But unfortunately, we have not had the support of the government of the state of Texas. SULLIVAN: So that's Texas at the moment - advocacy groups on shoestring budgets going church to church. Here's what's happening in California. PETER LEE: Doing consumer surveys, marketing, focus groups. So come this summer, we're going to hit the ground in a big way with messages that we know will resonate for those that speak Spanish, speak English, speak Mandarin. SULLIVAN: That's Peter Lee, and he's running California's health care effort. And the state has opted in. California is building its own exchange, giving it a catchy new name. They've called it Covered California. The state's hiring thousands of people to get it off the ground, and the federal government is giving the state $900 million to do it. LEE: So we have what we call the ground troops. We've issued a community-based grants program. We'll be funding groups in communities across the state that are based in faith-based organizations, schools, unions, because we know that delivering this message needs to come from your neighbor. SULLIVAN: About two and a half million Californians will be eligible for subsidies through Covered California, and Lee says it's a diverse group of people. LEE: We need to have outreach that speaks to farmers, people in rural communities, people that live in downtown urban sectors and literally in dozens of languages. SULLIVAN: About half the states are following California's lead, setting up their own exchanges or doing it in partnership with the federal government, using what is essentially seed money from Washington to get them off the ground. LEE: These are states that have said, let's get that venture capital funding from the federal government to set up an exchange that works right for our state. We want to not just control our destiny but get the federal resources to make it work for our state. SULLIVAN: But for consumers, it doesn't matter if you're in Texas or California or anywhere else in the country, the law is clear: The uninsured are expected to get coverage by January. Whether those folks will be informed and ready to do so by then is not so clear. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR. Related program:All Things Considered on WVTF, RADIO IQ and RADIO IQ w/BBC News
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An Evening of Jazz September 10, 2012 - 10:16pm First-at-Four Enjoy some jazz and help support veterans living in West Alabama. OAD: Friday, September 7th, 2012
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Where's George?: The Trail Of $1 Bills Across The U.S. Share Tweet E-mail Comments Print By Stan Alcorn Originally published on Sun March 24, 2013 8:08 pm A group of hobbyists has been tracking the movement of stamped "Where's George?" $1 bills across the country. Prince Roy wheresgeorge.com gather at Kabooz's Bar and Grill at New York's Penn Station to trade dollar bills and send off a group that's going on a cross-country train trip to Los Angeles." href="http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/shared/npr/styles/placed_wide/nprshared/201303/175072649.jpg" class="noexit lightbox"> Avid users of wheresgeorge.com gather at Kabooz's Bar and Grill at New York's Penn Station to trade dollar bills and send off a group that's going on a cross-country train trip to Los Angeles. Stan Alcorn for NPR When you hear the words "social network" you probably think of Facebook or Twitter. But years before either of those websites — when most of us weren't using the Internet at all — a smaller, stranger community was emerging around something called WheresGeorge.com, a 15-year-old subculture that's dedicated to the $1 bill. At Kabooz's Bar and Grill at New York's Penn Station, Jennifer Fishinger is covering her table in stacks of ones. There are 500 $1 bills laid out. At the next table over, David Henry has his stacks of cash in plastic bags. They're paper-clipped $1 bills in groups of 10. 'A Quirky Idea' For this group, it's all about the George Washingtons. Their dollars are stamped with messages like "currency tracking project" and "Track me at WheresGeorge.com." The website is the brainchild of Hank Eskin, a former tech consultant. "I started the website in '98 as just a quirky idea. I didn't expect anything to happen," Eskin says. "I had no idea it would turn into a hobby or create this whole sensation." It's called Georging. And typical Georgers log in religiously to enter their dollars' serial numbers and ZIP codes before they stamp and spend them. If one gets entered a second time, the Georger gets an email. That's called a "hit." Robert Rothenberg was sitting at the table in Kabooz's when he got a hit in New Jersey. He gets a lot of hits, since he's entered nearly 100,000 bills into the website's database. "I have a hit streak going since July of 2010, every day since then. I'm trying to get to 1,000 days, which will be the end of the month," Rothenberg says. 'Sexy' Statistics Part of the attraction for a segment of users, Eskin says, is the math and data. "Getting a lot of bills out there, getting them into different states and counties, seeing where they hit and analyzing all the statistics and the distance and time and the ZIP codes — real-like gearheads," he says. But it's not just gearhead Georgers who love the statistics. "As a data set, it is very sexy," says Dirk Brockmann, a theoretical physicist at Northwestern University. He was studying human mobility when a cabinetmaker in Vermont told him about the website. "I was like, 'Oh wow, this is amazing because it's data that goes down to the ZIP code scale in the U.S.,'" Brockmann says. By analyzing the Where's George? data, he's tested theories about networks, modeled infectious diseases and mapped the flow of currency in the U.S. "It turns out that what started as a — in quotes — 'silly game' did some massive science, it was like the first measurement of human mobility on this scale," he says. Traveling Dollar Bills And human mobility interests the individual Georgers, too. The gathering at Kabooz's is to send off a group going on a cross-country train trip from New York City to Los Angeles. Howard Weissman isn't traveling on this journey, but he has envelopes full of stamped bills to trade with the Geogers who are. "I don't travel much nowadays," Weissman says. "This is one way for me to get my bills across the country. The bills do a lot more traveling than I do." This is the wistful side of Georging and maybe of capitalism, too — your money always travels a little bit farther than you do.Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/. View the discussion thread.
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Credit December 5, 2013December 5, 2013 CFO.com | US For Small Banks, Life Fades Away Over the last 30 years, the number of U.S. banks has been cut in half. Regulators don't seem interested in preventing further contraction. Vincent Ryan Businesses that bank at small financial institutions have reason to worry about their diminutive counterparties. Small banks are more vulnerable than ever — not to a financial crisis, but to getting crushed by competitors and low interest rates or being consumed by acquisitive banking giants. According to the latest count by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, there were 6,891 financial institutions in the third quarter, the first time that number was below 7,000 since the Depression. The peak year was 1984, when the FDIC counted 14,483 banks. The population of small banks has gone through numerous culls, the most recent being the period since 2008. The current numbers would be even lower, in fact, if not for the hundreds of banks that received capital injections under the Troubled Asset Relief Program in that period. Next year and beyond, the outlook is grim. “Long term, it will be difficult for banks under $500 million [in assets] to be viable, standalone institutions,” says Roberto Barragan, CEO and president of Aquaria Funds, an independent small-business lender. “They have a bullseye on their backs.” To a large extent, a decline in population of community banks and other small institutions was due. As Barragan, (a founding board member at California United Bank) describes it, the mid-2000s saw an explosion in bank startups. Barragan launched a credit union in 2005 with $2 million in deposits and $500,000 in capital. By 2006, he says, “I was being invited to presentations left and right by former bankers trying to start their own bank and raise the $15 million to $25 million to launch it. Their presentations were what you see in these multilevel marketing programs: ‘Invest in the bank and you will have 10 times book value in seven years, and you will sell to some regional or national bank and make a lot of money.’ It was amazing to me how you could treat a regulated industry like it was some type of investment scheme. It kind of got crazy there for awhile.” The pendulum has swung about as far from the craziness of the mid-2000s as it can; U.S. regulators have approved one de novo (startup) bank in three years. It would be “foolhardy” for anyone to start a bank now, says Barragan. Economically, ultra-low interest rates and a competitive lending environment mean a de novo wouldn’t be able to earn much profit on investments or loans, he says, even with deposits bulging across the banking system. Smaller banks, especially those with less than $100 million in assets, on average, have lower returns on equity, worse efficiency ratios (expenses as a percentage of revenue) and, at least in the third quarter of 2013, a higher percentage of non-current business loans. In real-estate lending, a traditional area of strength for small banks, many can no longer compete. “A national bank will do a loan at prime or one point above prime; a community bank can’t do that,” Barragan says. On the regulatory front, post-Enron, banks have been bowled over by a wave of costly regulation, starting with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and continuing with the Bank Secrecy Act and Dodd-Frank. Initiatives from new governmental bodies such as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are also costing banks, in dollars and customers. The CFPB, for example, is in effect trying to regulate non-regulated financial services firms — like check-cashing and debt-collection businesses — through their lenders, adding to bank compliance burdens and causing them to sever relationships in those industries. The Federal Reserve and the FDIC have in effect also shut off the creation of new banks. As noted in an early December letter from the Independent Community Bankers of America and The American Association of Bank Directors, the FDIC’s policy on de novo banks, adopted in 2009, makes “forming new banks prohibitive.” The lobbying groups cite the FDIC requiring “applicants to raise capital prior to opening that would be sufficient to maintain [the bank’s] leverage ratio at a minimum of 8 percent for the full 7 years [of its prospective business plan].” For small businesses and other companies that bank with small, local financial institutions, this is a problem. Community banks often have branches in communities where big banks won’t venture. And, when these banks are acquired, the buyer often closes any money-losing locations, usually the branches in less economically desirable cities and towns. The loss goes beyond bank branches. “Credit is the lifeblood of businesses,” Barragan says, and “the fewer institutions, the less access to capital there is.” Regulators and Congress have helped small, private companies in other ways. The prime example is the JOBS Act’s easing of Securities and Exchange Commission reporting requirements and equity-investor solicitation. Meanwhile, high-level public debate about addressing the disappearance of small banks and how to support the continued viability of them is nonexistent. “There’s a lot of discussion about too-big-to-fail, a lot of discussion about Basel, a lot of discussion about capital levels,” says Barragan, but not about small banks. “To the extent community banks are an important part of a diverse financial-services industry, particularly in underserved communities, what can be done to ensure they stick around?” he asks. “Implicit” Government Guarantees To Bail Out Bank Creditors Tighten Their Grip On US Taxpayers Regulations are stifling creation of new banks, industry groups say 3 thoughts on “For Small Banks, Life Fades Away” Chris Holmes says: 12/06/13 at 9:01 am A very interesting read! Chris Homes – Single Debtor Finance | Cashflow Solutions Reply Pingback: » Blog Archive » For Small Banks, Life Fades Away – CFO Magazine Terry Martin says: 01/13/14 at 1:04 pm Having worked for both large and small banks, the loss of the small banks will have a negative impact on the economy and small businesses. Due in large part to the limitations on maximum size of loans, small banks are limited to dealing with small businesses. It takes approximately the same amount of time and expense to make a large loan as it does to make a small loan. The large banks place their marketing efforts at the larger businesses where they will receive a higher impact for the bank relative to increased revenue and assets. In addition, the larger banks have moved credit scoring, initially used for consumer lending, to the small business arena. The lenders have little if any authority to affect the outcome of the program. On the other hand, the small banks look at each loan request more closely and can more easily allow for mitigating circumstances. The bottom line is that the decline in small banks will have a negative impact on the ability of the small businesses to obtain loans. Reply Discuss Cancel reply To Drive Growth, Ask Sales Better Questions SeedInvest Raises Series A on Its Own Platform Risk Management Is the Terrorism Insurance Logjam Finally Broken? CFOs on the Move: Week Ending April 11
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Cases Of Early Onset Alzheimer’s Disease Growing Increasing MORE INFORMATION: Raising The Hope Friday February 22, 2013 4:37 PM UPDATED: Friday February 22, 2013 6:19 PM COLUMBUS, Ohio - Alzheimer’s disease robs people of their memory and takes away their ability to be independent. Now, the Alzheimer's Association of Central Ohio says it's seeing early onset in more people under the age of 65.Faye Moore admits that she sometimes forgets and needs her brother, Brian, to help.Brian said he made sure that Faye moved into an apartment down the street from him, because with serious memory loss, she needs someone to watch over her.It’s a role reversal for someone who raised four successful children.“A lot of things I don't understand, and want so much for her to be the way she was,” said Brian Hall, Faye’s brother.Faye was an independent woman who loved to travel and loved to work.But as her struggle to remember became more profound, she had to give up her job.“At some point they said ‘You're disabled, Faye. You're not going to be working anymore.’ It was hard to take,” she explained.At the time, Faye was only in her mid-50s. Doctors have diagnosed an estimated 200,000 Americans under 65 with Alzheimer's disease.“We are seeing people diagnosed more and more with younger onset. We actually have started a new support group because the need has been so great,” said Mari Dannhauer, Alzheimer’s Association, Central Ohio Program Director.Dannhauer said some of the people in those groups are in their 40s.“I think it's just better diagnostic techniques and people are more aware of this condition,” said Dr. Doug Scharre, OSU Wexner Medical Center.He said an earlier diagnosis means earlier medication which can slow the decline; but there is no cure.Faye said that finding a cure is important so that people can live productive lives, continue to know their kids, live in peace and continue to hope and dream.Faye keeps those words close and family closer.“I love my children. I have good children. They help me,” said Faye. Watch 10TV and refresh 10TV.com for the latest news. ©2014 by 10TV.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Currently in Columbus
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Suspicious Package Found To Be Child's Forgotten School Project Tuesday October 22, 2013 2:42 PM UPDATED: Tuesday October 22, 2013 5:00 PM BLACKLICK, Ohio - The Columbus Bomb Squad was called out to a reported suspicious package that ended up being a school project parents knew nothing about.The bomb squad was called to a Blacklick home, located in the 1100 block of Moneca Street, shortly before 2 p.m. Tuesday.Chopper 10 captured images of officials inspecting the area and the bomb robot being sent in to inspect the object found on a propane grill at the home.A spokesman with the Columbus Division of Fire said that the "suspicious package" ended up being a school project, which was a box with paper clips on it holding eggs. The scene was cleared at about 3:15 p.m. Watch 10TV News and refresh 10TV.com for more information. ©2014 by 10TV.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Currently in Columbus
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How Nationalism in the Balkans Contributed to the Outbeak of WW1 Rate This Paper: Length: 805 words (2.3 double-spaced pages) Nationalism in the Balkans helped contribute to the outbreak of WWI. Beginning in the late 19th century, the social unrest in the Balkan States became the focal point of many European powers. The Balkan peninsula was that of great importance due to its territorial and economic significance; however, the Balkan States consisted of many proud ethnic cultures who did not wish to be ruled by any authority other than themselves. The unification of other countries and strong patriotism fueled the desires of the Slavs, Greeks, Montenegrins, Rumanians, and Bulgarians to gain independence and revenge for the occupation of their lands by the Turks. This revolution sparked by strong nationalistic views led to the second largest war in human existence. Up until the early 20th century, the Balkan States were controlled by the Ottoman Empire; however, due to the decline of their power and prestige, the Balkan States found an opportunity to gain independence. The unification and formation of Italy and Germany as countries encouraged the Balkan revolt of 1875-8. The revolt spread like wild fire through the Balkan peninsula and with the aid of Russia, Turkey was defeated. Through this, the Balkan States: Serbia, Montenegro, and Rumania, gained increases in their land; thus, resulting in a stronger patriotic pride. Turkey, however, still controlled parts of the Balkans and this angered Balkan nationalism because they now felt capable of governing themselves. In 1885, the Bulgarian population of Eastern Rumelia revolted against Turkish rule and declared its union with Bulgaria . The Serbs became furious and proclaimed war because they felt threatened by this act. Surprisingly the Bulgarians proved to be a greater match for the Serbs and in the battle of Slivnitza, they were defeated. Britain agreed to the unification of Eastern Rumelia and Bulgaria and the Balkan States again gained more power through their nationalistic ideologies. Religious tensions in Crete added to the possibility of war with a revolt in 1897 against Turkey. Due to the murders of both Muslims and Christians on the island, Crete and Greece declared war on Turkey. They were swiftly defeated within two weeks; however, because of the intervention of European powers, Turkey was forced to give up its possessions on the mainland. The Cretan revolt added to Balkan nationalism in this era and led the way for the formation of the Balkan League. The Balkan League was formed in 1912 by Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece and Montenegro. Their goal was the expulsion of the Turks from the Balkan peninsula. Due to the growing nationalism among these four countries, they sought power and prestige through the defeat of their old master. Turkey's difficulties with the Turkish revolution (1908-1909) and the Turko-Italian War(1911 - 1912), gave the Balkans a chance for both retaliation and sovereignty. In October 1912, the Balkan League attacked the Turks and began what was to be known as the Balkan Wars(1912-13). The European Powers became alarmed with the success of the Balkan States in the war. This was due to a rapid growth of intense nationalism which made them a threat to larger countries. The major powers' fears were appeased with the Treaty of London. The Balkan States felt cheated through the treaty which created a friction among the Balkan allies. The Bulgarians, who felt cheated the most, declared war on both Greece and Serbia. In a rage of enormous pride, the Bulgarians had sealed their doom and were defeated by Serbia, Greece, Turkey, and Rumania. The dismantling of Bulgaria led to significant problems in the months to come. With the decline of Bulgaria and Turkey in the Balkans, the Serbs were able to gain a great deal of power in the area. Austria-Hungary felt threatened by a Serbia growing in power and wished to crush it before it was too late. The Serbs were now a very proud people who wished to see the unification of all Slavs. The people of Bosnia belonged to the same Slavic race as the Serbs and wished to join Serbia; however, they were controlled by the Austria-Hungary Empire. Serbian nationalists were angered with Austria-Hungary's control and wished to see Bosnia free. On June 24th , 1914, a young Serbian nationalist killed Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the Austrian throne. The fuse was lit and war was imminent. Through the strong patriotism in the Balkan peninsula, wars were fought and lost which resulted in WWI. Although the Balkans were somewhat unimportant in relation to more powerful countries of the time, they managed to play an important part in the history of Europe through their determination. Within the tiny Balkan States, the nationalism of the early 19th century erupted into an ocean of patriotic fervor. Their desire helped bring them towards freedom; however, with independence came a lust for power and excess of patriotism. "How Nationalism in the Balkans Contributed to the Outbeak of WW1." 123HelpMe.com. 16 Apr 2014 <http://www.123HelpMe.com/view.asp?id=23651>. Balkans Nationalism Great Importance Social Unrest Human Existence Early 20th Century Other Countries Late 19th Century Bulgaria Ottoman Empire Keywords:
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Reminicences …and then they came for the trans* people. Mhairi McAlpine Europe, Gender, Greece, Internationalism, Kyriarchy, Sexuality 308 Comments Operation Zeus in August last year marked the start of an ugly reminder of a European past that we thought we had long buried. Nearly 60 years after the end of the Second European War, migrants were round up from the streets of Greece and shoved unceremoniously into internment camps. In May, women working in the sex industry were pulled from the streets, forcibly tested for HIV, publicly humiliated and imprisoned. In March, they rounded up drug users from the streets of Athens and put them too into camps. Last month in Thessaloniki they came for trans gender people. Article also available in Serbian On the 30th of May, the Greek authorities stepped up their cleansing of the streets of the undesirables. The daily checks of papers, papers, papers whenever someone non-white encounters a police officer sees numerous migrants hauled to police stations, and many imprisoned in one of the hellholes that pass for the detention camps of Greece. In April alone 10, 000 people were stopped in these checks, and there are currently 5, 000 languishing in the official camps with an unknown number in temporary facilities such as police cells and shipping containers. Last month Dendias announced a doubling of the capacity of these camps, although with no commitment to closing the alternative facilities. Greek citizens, drugs users, homeless people and women working in the sex industry, have also been targeted under these sweeps where they are hauled to police stations, forcibly tested for HIV and in some cases imprisoned among with the migrants in the internment camps. As the graffiti is cleaned off the shop facades in anticipation of the summer tourist influx, the streets are being cleansed of undesirables. On the 30th of May, a new group of undesirables was identified. Trans gender people. For the last week, daily raids have been taking place in Thessaloniki, Greece’s second largest city. Under the pretense that of checking that the person is not involved in the sex industry trans people are being rounding up and arrested. Their details are taken and they are detained for several hours. On release they are warned that if they did not “return to normal” they would be arrested for public indecency. This is not the first time that trans people have been targeted in Greece, in August last year, 25 trans women were arrested and force to undergo HIV testing and charged with prostitution offenses, in April, finally, the last of this group was acquitted. This is however a new and sustained campaign against trans people, some of whom were stopped driving their cars and accused of sexual impropriety. In May, the official broadcast to publicise Athens Pride was banned as it included a lesbian kiss, while in Thessaloniki, the Metropolitan of the Greek Orthodox Church described Pride as an “unholy and unnatural event”, urging citizens not to take their children and indicating that he would like to see the event shut down. At the end of last year gay men were repeated assaulted by member of the Golden Dawn, sometimes armed with knifes, in the wake of the violent and vicious rabble that saw the opening of the play “Corpus Christi” besieged by Nazis. One MP from the fascist Golden Dawn attacked a journalist, punching him in the face and screeching after him as he escaped “You run away you faggot, you ass-muncher“, while the police silently watched. This new escalation follows a familiar pattern of harassment, false imprisonment, detention, and arrests. The experiences of migrants, drug users and women in the sex industry are all testimony to the deliberate targeting of marginalised groupings. The pink triangle isn’t just a cool emblem, but a reminder that we’ve seen it all before. We said never again – only it IS happening again….and one-by-one the people who may have spoken up disappear. Update on the Situation of the Trans women of Thessaloniki Related Posts :
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| News | Columns | Reports | Video Reviews | Title History | News Report | SPOTLIGHTS 411mania » MMA » News Advertisement Jim Miller Says He Wants to Finish Joe Lauzon Posted by Jeremy Thomas on 12.21.2012 That's what he's focused on... Jim Miller recently spoke with MMAjunkie about his fight with Joe Lauzon at UFC 155 and more. Check out the highlights: On the positive side of his losses to Ben Henderson and Nate Diaz: "It shows me where I am � I know I can beat any of these guys who have beaten me, and could've beaten them that night had I gotten off a little bit sooner, or had the momentum not gone their way. It comes down to little things, and it makes me know I can beat anyone in the world and be the champion. There's a little bit of that, 'Son of a b----. That would've been a good one to win' (after those losses). But I know where I am and know where I am because the guys who have been able to beat me are at the top." On Lauzon: "I'm a fan of his, and I think it's an exciting fight and I match up well with him. I'm excited to get back in the swing of things because even after I came back from the injury, I was having a tough time just getting back in consistently with everything going on. It's good to be back and going full-bore." On being more focused on finishing Lauzon than winning Fight of the Night: "You never know who's going to take those bonuses � you never know what else is going to be on the card. So it really doesn't come into my mind. I'm looking to put him away. I'm looking to get a sub or a knockout and make it impressive over him. If he can survive the whole night, then yeah � I'll take a 'Fight of the Night.' But I just want to go out and have a dominant fight and satisfy myself. I haven't been satisfied with a fight for coming up on two years now and it's really been eating at me. I want to get in there and do everything I'm capable of." On his win over Melvin Guillard: "The Guillard fight, I was happy I won and happy I finished him. But it wasn't a dominant two-minute fight. He landed a shot, and that's not what I want. I want to go in and make somebody look bad. I want to beat him up and be dominant from bell to bell. I try to be my own biggest critic and really push myself." On his hopes that this will be a win that rebounds him toward the top: "That's the plan: Beat him as dominantly as I can, take another big one and put somebody else away."
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