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Happy Release Day! At the Heart of the Deep, by Carrie L. Wells At the Heart of the Deep Carrie L. Wells Purchase Link: http://amzn.com/B00Y5ZAPC4 Oceanographer Luke McAllister races to figure out why the ocean depth is changing off Florida’s Treasure Coast. But before he and his crew discover what’s transforming the deep, he stumbles upon an even greater mystery. Leagues below the waves, he swear he sees…a mermaid? Anya isn’t allowed to get close to humans. But when a golden-haired researcher gets too close to her island, she can’t afford to stay away. Together, this unlikely pair will seek to discover what’s causing shifts in ocean floor. While their new alliance is forbidden, Anya will risk everything to save her beloved ocean. The only problem is, she’s not sure what’s really luring her in, her love of the sea or the tempest Luke has stirred in her heart. Either way, Anya knows that the dangers facing the sea are nothing compared to what will happen to her when her father learns she’s broken the merfolks’ most sacred law. Can Anya and Luke discover what lurks at the heart of the deep before it’s too late? Short Excerpt: I caught sight of his cut, thought a moment, and swam away. He floated there, treading water and wondering what would happen next. At that point, his face conveyed the pain in his side. I watched an intense sting replace what I knew of the original burning sensation of a coral abrasion, and the open wound spilled into the ocean at a steady pace. Conceivably, I had underestimated the severity of the cut. Maybe the coral cut deeper than I thought. The blood clouded the water surrounding him, and now the problem remained of how to take the injured man across the reef without doing further damage. We still needed to cross at least two miles and climb a rocky beach. Or did we? Before he had time to contemplate any other option, I approached him from below. I swam up to him slowly, and he did nothing. He didn’t dive to meet me or attempt to swim away. He hung vertically in the water, waiting. He must have felt me before he could clearly see me. The water shifted as I neared, my physicality changing the flow of the ocean around me. He knew I was there, but he didn’t dive below. Was he afraid? Too hurt to move? Instead, he stayed still, moving as little as possible, allowing my approach, and keeping the blood loss at a minimum. I moved below him and then up, along his body, until my head emerged from the inky blue water and he stared into my eyes. He let out a fast gasp and quickly sank below the surface. Carrie L. Wells crosses genres, writing everything from newspaper editorials and textbooks to paranormal romance novellas. Her first fiction publication, The Heart of the Deep, will release in June 2015, followed by Playing with Magic in October 2015. A New England native, she spent her childhood on the beach and inland, fishing and dancing, before moving to Florida. And while she doesn’t tan, nothing keeps her from a walk on the beach. Carrie earned her Master’s degree in English with a minor in Psychology from Hardin-Simmons University and a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Central Florida. With a love of chocolate, books, and her family, Carrie braves the world and chaos only children can bring. She currently lives in Florida with her fire-medic hubby and three children. She is an English instructor at Eastern Florida State College. Connect with the author online: Blog: http://www.carrielwells.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/carriewellswrites Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/clwellswrites/ Newsletter: Subscribe to receive VIP novel excerpts and information http://eepurl.com/bgYN3X ← Cover Reveal: Fight by Gillian Zane Siren’s Kiss ~ Paranormal Love Wednesdays Blog Hop ~ #PNR →
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Posts Tagged ‘Coping Mechanism’ How an Escape Mechanism Can Backfire Posted in Marie's Musings, tagged Coping Mechanism, Escape Mechanism, How to Prevent an Outbreak, Pandemic Movies, Plague, Quarantine, Science Fiction, Star Trek, Stargate SG-1, The Fourth Horseman, wormholes on May 29, 2021| 1 Comment » No one can argue that this past year has been stressful. We all needed escape mechanisms to help us cope. I’ve tried several. After the shut-down last March, when COVID was still fairly new, I came across a list of streaming movies about pandemics to watch while quarantined. With ghoulish curiosity, I watched a few. Because those fictional accounts bore little resemblance to the existing situation, they provided a sort of comfort. Netflix has a series, ominously released in January, 2020 before coronavirus became popular, called Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak. This documentary introduces the viewer to “heroes on the front lines of the battle against influenza” and showcases “their efforts to stop the next global outbreak.” Well, they didn’t stop this one, maybe because they focused on influenza and we were hit with a coronavirus. I watched a few episodes, but they were too close to reality, and I needed escape. I seldom binge watch, but in the evening I’ll sit down to a movie or a couple episodes of a good TV show. Half the world found diversion from reality in Tiger King, but it was short lived. Science fiction is usually a good escapist genre. Even issues pertinent to our real world are disguised well enough to take us out of ourselves. I watched several seasons of Star Trek before I found Stargate SG-1. If you are unfamiliar with the show, the Stargate is an ancient alien artifact that connects to other stargates throughout the galaxy by way of wormholes. SG-1 is a team of four adventurers. Each episode takes the heroes to a different planet where they encounter and surmount new perils. Each season, they save the Earth from impending doom. Good entertainment. Nothing, other than the occasional politics, to remind me of current problems. The Stargate Until I came to Season 9. A two part episode was titled “The Fourth Horseman.” Only after I watched the first part did it dawn on me that they were referring to the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. In the Old Testament, the Fourth Horseman is Plague. In the last century, when we were sending people to the Moon, NASA would quarantine returning astronauts just in case they picked up some microorganism that could wreak havoc on Earth. The SG1 team bopped from planet to planet without a care. Only occasionally did they bring something undesirable home, and then it was usually an alien life form other than a disease. Main characters are not allowed to die, of course, unless they can be restored to life, but lesser actors are fair game. In Episode 10 of Season 9, a team of lesser characters brought back a virus. I should have stopped watching, but I was addicted to the show. One man developed a fever and respiratory distress and died. Others began to fall ill and were quarantined. Unfortunately, a lieutenant with no symptoms had already left the base, and he was a carrier. By the time they reined him in, the public had been exposed. The CDC was called in. Back at the base, even individuals who had no contact with the infected team began to test positive or fall ill. The virus was described as “airborne and persistent.” Efforts to contain it to Colorado (where the story takes place) failed and cases began to pop up in other states. Public transportation was halted. Citizens panicked as the contagion continued to spread. Hospitals were struggling and waiting rooms crowded. Cases emerged in major cities. The US borders were closed. Contact tracing was put into place. It was like watching a recap of the past year’s news. How was this supposed to take my mind off my worries? The script writers seemed to have done their homework. They must have consulted with the CDC on how a pandemic would play out. That, or they had a crystal ball. If that was the case, why didn’t they warn us? There was one difference—no one wore masks. The general ignored the advice of the physician and went to visit his suffering airmen. I yelled at the screen, “Put on a mask!” He didn’t listen. Next scene, the general was in sick bay. I should have skipped the second episode, but I wanted to see how our heroes managed to save the world this time. They were furiously working on a vaccine. Remember the cigarette-smoking man in The X Files? The actor William B. Davis? He is the arch villain in this story. In an attempt to conquer the Earth, he had purposely infected the doomed SG team. However, I don’t think he was responsible for our recent situation. The Archvillain By part two, there were cases in Mexico and Canada. Other countries grounded air travel and closed ports. The Stock Market crashed. Work on the vaccine continued, day and night, as the contagion continued to spread. Finally, the vaccine was ready and being distributed. (No mention of testing for safety and efficacy.) This team of fictional crack scientists developed a vaccine in two episodes in 1995, but it took us months in 2020. At the end of the episode, a news reporter said, “The final death toll of the pandemic has been estimated at a little over 3000 worldwide.” Only 3000? The reporter seemed to think that was a lot. Do you remember when ours was only 3000? As I write this, our death toll has surpassed 3 million. How did I remember so many details? A writer must sacrifice for her art. After I thought about writing this post, I watched the episodes again and took notes. Besides, plunging into it gave me a morbid sense of comfort. The rest of the series thankfully offered more escape from reality. Now I’ve resumed Star Trek. Captain Picard’s world, while beset with conflict and danger, gives an optimistic view of the future where self-interest and greed have largely been replaced by ideals of cooperation and benevolence. What better way to get your mind off your troubles? If you haven’t already, check out my video at the Sunshine State Book Festival and my novel Trials by Fire on Amazon.
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The Benefits of Documenting a Vessel The benefits of documenting a vessel are many, although it may seem like an arduous task. It can be simplified with the help of vessel documentation services. If you are a new owner of a boat, you may be wondering if you have to document your vessel with the federal government. But first, read on to find out if you absolutely must document your new boat. What are the Benefits of Documenting a Vessel? Vessel documentation is a national form of registration, which means that you are registering your vessel with the federal government. Documentation provides evidence of nationality for your vessel, used mainly for international purposes. Vessel documentation simpli?es commerce between states and admits vessels to certain restricted trades, such as ?sheries and coastwise trade. Although vessel documentation started as a way for the federal government to manage commercial shipping and collect taxes, the U.S. Coast Guard is currently in charge of vessel documentation. Which vessels must be documented? If your boat measures at least ?ve net tons and is used in ?shing activities on U.S. waters or in the Exclusive Economic Zone, it must be documented. Vessels used for coastwise trade, which includes transportation merchandise or passengers between ports in the U.S. or the Exclusive Economic Zone, must also be documented. Keep in mind that in order to be documented, the vessel must be wholly owned by a U.S. citizen. How do I ?nd out my vessel’s net tonnage? Contrary to what you might initially think, net cottage does not refer to the vessel’s weight, but to the vessel’s volume. If your vessel is more than 25 feet in length, it is safe to assume that the vessel’s net tonnage is greater than ?ve tons. Are any vessels exempt from documentation? Any vessels that do not operate on the navigable waters of the U.S. are exempt from documentation. Navigable waters refer to any inland body of water, such as a river, canal, or lake that is deep, wide, and slow enough for a vessel to pass through it. Navigable waters are or may be used to transport interstate or foreign commerce while the waterway is in its ordinary condition. Furthermore, vessels that are non-self-propelled and used in coastwise trade within a harbor on a river or lake (excluding the Great Lakes) are exempt from documentation. If you have any questions about documenting a vessel, please contact Maritime Documentation Center at (800) 535-8570, or email us at info@maritimedocumentation.us
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Elon Musk and Stephen Hawking nominated Luddite of the Year for AI comments By Christian Nordqvist Published Dec 24, 2015 at 19:40 PM GMT Elon Musk, CEO of private space transport firm SpaceX and electric automaker Tesla, and Stephen Hawking, a theoretical physicist, cosmologist, author and Director of Research at the Centre for Theoretical Cosmology within the University of Cambridge, have been nominated for the title of Luddite of the Year. Founder of Microsoft Corporation, Bill Gates, has also been nominated. They have been put forward because of fears they have expressed over the past year regarding the future potential dangers of Artificial intelligence. Professor Hawking once said “The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.” The Luddites were 19th century British textile workers who protested against new labour-saving technologies, such as power looms, spinning frames and stocking frames that were introduced during the industrial revolution. ITIF writes “For 2015, we present 10 nominees and invite readers to vote for the organization or individual they believe has done the most to smash the engines of innovation.” (Image Data From: itif.org/publications) The Luddites feared these new machines would replace them with less-skilled, poorly-paid labourers, leaving them out of work. The Luddite Movement became quite vicious and culminated in a region-wide rebellion in Northwestern England that required a considerable deployment of military forces to suppress. Today, a Luddite refers to a person who is opposed to new technology. The fear that artificial intelligence could mean end of humanity According to ITIF (Information Technology & Innovation Foundation), the organisers of the current annual Luddite Award, over the past year several prominent scientists and well-known luminaries, such as Elon Musk, Stephen Hawking and Bill Gates, have expressed fears that in the not-so-distant future we could lose control of AI (artificial intelligence), thus creating an existential threat. For over 200 years, paranoia about evil machines has thrived in popular culture “and these claims continue to grip the popular imagination, in no small part because these apocalyptic ideas are widely represented in books, movies, and music,” ITIF writes in a report. In 2014 alone, people watched several blockbuster movies with a parade of high-tech villains, such as Ex Machina, Terminator: Genisys, and Avengers: Age of Ultron. Neo-Luddites oppose tech and science advances ITIF says it gives the award to people who wish to ‘foil technological progress’ by opposing advances in tech and science. While today’s Luddite no longer wields a sledgehammer, he or she wields something considerably more powerful – bad ideas “For they work to convince policymakers and the public that innovation is the cause, not the solution to some of our biggest social and economic challenges, and therefore something to be thwarted.” “Indeed, the neo-Luddites have wide-ranging targets, including everything from genetically modified organisms to new Internet apps, artificial intelligence, and even productivity itself. In short, they seek a world that is largely free of risk, innovation, or uncontrolled change,” ITIF added. These three guys are extremely intelligent, innovative and creative. They are not technophobes. Should they be ridiculed for expressing a concern? To say that smart devices will be clever enough to conquer the world one day it to misunderstand what artificial intelligence is and where it currently stands, ITIF emphasized. No danger this century, says ITIF ITIF wonders whether such systems will ever develop full autonomy, and if they do, it will be in more than 100 years’ time rather than 10 years’ time, so “it is therefore premature to be worrying about ‘Skynet’ becoming self-aware.” Scaring people with sci-fi doomsday scenarios makes it much more difficult for scientists, policymakers and the public to support more funding for AI research, ITIF insists. A sustained anti-AI campaign could kill any potential funding for research and development, and ways to control it in a responsible way. ITIF wrote: “What legislator wants to be known as ‘the godfather of the technology that destroyed the human race’? (On the other hand, if we are all dead, then one’s reputation is the last of one’s worries.)” If you want to vote, go to this Survey Money webpage. The BBC quoted Bill Gates as saying: “I am in the camp that is concerned about super intelligence. First the machines will do a lot of jobs for us and not be super intelligent. That should be positive if we manage it well.” “A few decades after that though the intelligence is strong enough to be a concern. I agree with Elon Musk and some others on this and don’t understand why some people are not concerned.” Video – Elon Musk warns about AI
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Petrol is cheaper than diesel again in the UK By Alexander Joe Published Oct 4, 2015 at 0:23 AM GMT According to the RAC, the price of petrol in the UK has dropped back to a level cheaper than diesel. The price of petrol dropped by around 2 pence per liter over the past month to just under 110p per litre, while diesel rose by 0.5p to just over 110p. In July, for the first time in nearly 15 years diesel prices dropped below petrol. Simon Williams, RAC fuel spokesman, commented on the data: “Petrol has now returned to its traditional position of being cheaper than diesel. This is primarily due to lower demand for unleaded as a result of the US summer holiday driving season finishing at the end of August. “A secondary factor is that the diesel wholesale price has stayed stronger than petrol because, in the run-up to winter there is now less diesel in the marketplace. More oil from that part of the barrel is being used to produce more profitable domestic heating oil.” The RAC said that filling up a 55-litre car with petrol costs £1 cheaper compared to the start of September and is £4 cheaper than in July. In September the cost of wholesale unleaded dropped 2%. The RAC expects this will result in a further decline in the cost of fuel – of at least 2p-a-litre within the next two weeks. Asda recently announced that it slashed the price of its unleaded petrol by two pence per litre to the national cap of 105.7 pence per litre, while diesel remains at a national price cap of 107.7 pence per litre. Andy Peake, Asda’s senior director for petrol, said: “We’re now seeing unleaded move back to its traditional place after two months of diesel being the cheapest fuel grade. This new drop means drivers across the country will pay no more than 105.7ppl for unleaded and diesel remains at 107.7ppl.”
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New Jersey American Water Reminds Customers About Payment Assistance Programs and Upcoming Information Sessions During ‘Utility Assistance Week’ By: New Jersey American Water via Business Wire In honor of Utility Assistance Week (October 18-22), New Jersey American Water wants to remind customers who need help with their water or wastewater bill to apply for the company’s H2O Help to Others Program™ and utilize other payment assistance programs. “As we continue to navigate through the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, we understand that many customers may still be facing hardships, especially when it comes to paying their monthly bills,” said Mark McDonough, president of New Jersey American Water. “While water service is a tremendous value at just a penny per gallon, we know how important it is to partner with the Board of Public Utilities this week to amplify our outreach efforts before the grace period on utility shut-offs expires on December 31, 2021.” New Jersey American Water continues to promote its bill paying assistance programs through various channels including social and digital media, bill inserts, emails and other customer notifications. Customers are encouraged to watch this informational video highlighting the program and its benefits. For nearly two decades, New Jersey American Water has been assisting qualified customers through this unique assistance program. H2O Help to Others Program™ is administered by New Jersey SHARES (NJ SHARES), a nationally recognized nonprofit organization providing statewide help, guidance and referral for essential services to New Jersey residents in need of assistance. NJ SHARES will be participating in the Utility Assistance Summit on Tuesday, October 19 via Zoom and will be providing information to customers about the H2O Program. In addition, New Jersey American Water and NJ SHARES will be hosting a virtual information session for customers about its payment assistance programs on November 22 from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. During this live session, representatives from both organizations will provide information about payment arrangements and budget billing, and H2O Program eligibility requirements and benefits. A demonstration of the application process will also be shown, as well as answers to commonly asked questions. Participants will also be able to ask questions live during the event. More information can be found on the “Bill Paying Assistance” page of the company’s website at www.newjerseyamwater.com. Through the company’s H2O Help to Others Program, customers meeting lower income requirements can qualify for grants of up to $500 to help pay their indoor water bill. Qualified customers also have the opportunity to receive up to 100 percent discount on their monthly fixed service charges for water and/or wastewater. Customers interested in learning more about the program and its qualifications are encouraged to contact the program administrator, NJ SHARES, directly at 877-NJAWH2O (652-9426), or online at www.njshares.org. Additionally, New Jersey American Water offers payment arrangements and budget billing for customers who need assistance paying their bills but may not qualify for the H2O Program. Customers who would like to explore these options are encouraged to call the Customer Service Center at 800-272-1325. Utility Assistance Week is being promoted by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities and the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs to help educate residents about the many utility payment assistance programs available. For more information, visit www.nj.gov/dca/dcaid. About New Jersey American Water New Jersey American Water, a subsidiary of American Water (NYSE: AWK), is the largest investor-owned water utility in the state, providing high-quality and reliable water and/or wastewater services to approximately 2.8 million people. For more information, visit www.newjerseyamwater.com and follow New Jersey American Water on Twitter and Facebook. About American Water With a history dating back to 1886, American Water is the largest and most geographically diverse U.S. publicly traded water and wastewater utility company. The company employs more than 7,000 dedicated professionals who provide regulated and market-based drinking water, wastewater and other related services to 15 million people in 46 states. American Water provides safe, clean, affordable and reliable water services to our customers to help keep their lives flowing. For more information, visit amwater.com and follow American Water on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. Chelsea Kulp External Affairs Manager Chelsea.Kulp@amwater.com
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Children’s Health: Learning more about the Effects of Concussions Chris Holgreaves, guest contributor We have all probably seen our fair share of cartoons. You know the ones in which the main character has some kind of head injury and stars magically float around their heads? Well sadly, real life doesn’t treat children in the same way as this. The side effects of a nasty “bonk” on the head aren’t always as easy to notice as in your favorite cartoon. Of course, the above might is likely to be fairly amusing in a cartoon; however when it happens for real your young one will probably take a different view. Being knocked out or even feeling dazed for a moment or two can be symptoms of a concussion. If you are worried about the effects of concussions then this blog post is definitely for you. Here we will be taking a closer look at just what to expect. Just what is a Concussion? It would probably make sense to try to understand a little more about what makes a bang on the head a concussion. The simplest way to think about things is that a concussion occurs when there is a temporary change to the way that the brain operates. Sudden movements or indeed jarring are the most likely reasons for this to occur in children. In normal conditions the soft tissue of the brain is protected by the blood and spinal fluid that surrounds it. However, when the head receives a blow it can sometimes have the effect of the brain knocking against the bony surface of the skull. Many concussions only last a relatively short time. But, it should be noted that some can stick around for days, weeks or even longer. Even the shortest of concussions can still be serious. Concussion can manifest itself in many different ways. Some of these will include: Blurred or double vision Attention difficulties The list above isn’t extensive and there are likely to be other possible symptoms. The important thing is to keep a really close eye on your child in the immediate aftermath of a bang to the head. Rest is another key part of the recovery from a concussion. Rest is Vital All head injuries will take an element of time to heal; therefore a period of rest is vital. Of course, this isn’t always easy to achieve. The hardest part is that aside from the noticeable effects that your child might be experiencing there could be other things going on that aren’t seen. Trying to persuade a fanatical sports fan not to take to the football field for a week or so might not be the easiest of tasks. However, nonetheless it is vitally important that rest is administered. As well as a rest from sporting or physical activities you should also help your child to avoid completing cognitive activities. This means a break from schooling or other academic activities. Doctors are highly skilled when it comes to dealing with and treating head injuries. With this in mind it is essential that you get your child checked out as soon as possible. Very often a few short questions skilfully posed to the patient will allow the doctor a greater understanding of the situation. In some cases the doctor will ask what seem like routine questions which serve to test the child’s memory functions. Additionally some might even prescribe an element of physical exertion to see how the brain reacts after a work-out. More precise information can be found by using specialist equipment. One of the best known types is of course a CAT scanner. This machine has the power to take a 3 dimensional x-ray of the brain and can create a wealth of usable information. Patient Follow-Up Even after the all clear is given it is usual for a follow up to be scheduled. Only after this time will the doctor be satisfied that there is no lasting damage caused. One big worry from a concussion is that the child goes out and repeats the injury. This is especially serious if it is happens during the initial healing process. For this reason the doctor will be keen to reinforce the value of making sure the patient gets plenty of rest. Prior to becoming a professional writer, your author (Chris Holgreaves) worked in a children’s care unit for his local hospital. He recommends the involvement of a specialist case manager wherever possible, especially when dealing with children’s head injuries. Categories: Child Safety, Discipline
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Mathematics, mathematics-economy and statistics Department of Mathematics - Staff portal Pages for staff members at AU PhD presentations Master's Degree for international students Student guidance/Career guidance Department of Mathematics Education Bachelor The Department of Mathematics offers three Bachelor study programs: Bachelor study program in Data Science, Bachelor study program in Mathematics (specializing in either mathematics or in mathematical modelling) and Bachelor study program in Mathematics-Economics. Bachelor's degree programme in Data Science Data Science is a new education at Aarhus University focusing on analysis of large amounts of data - Big Data. Here you learn to use advanced data analysis tools to extract knowledge from large amounts of data. The need for handling and analysing large volumes of data is increasing in both society and business sector. With a background in data science you will be able to contribute to society and industry the opportunity to base strategies, process management and decisions on a solid data basis – and play a key role in a data-driven innovation process. A young subject in rapid development As a data science student, you will get a broad education, ranging from handling of data sets to programming of new data analysis tools and visualization and statistical analysis of data. You will work with realistic data from companies, health care or research, and learn to work with modern methods from simple regression and optimisation methods to deep learning. Data science is a young subject in rapid development, and throughout the study you will be introduced to the latest methods and techniques. The programme is offered as a partnership between four departments: Computer Science, Engineering, Mathematics and Economics. The central data science courses that you will follow in the course of the programme will thus be staffed by teachers with a broad scientific background, and you will in addition to the core courses in data science also follow courses offered by the partner departments. The need for graduates with a data science background is huge, and is expected to increase dramatically as a result of the technological development. More about the Bachelor's degree programme in Data Science (in Danish) Bachelor's degree programme in Mathematics Mathematics is everything! Everyday life in modern times is full of mathematics. Every time you use your charge card, the encryption makes sure that outsiders don’t mingle in your affairs; your insurance premiums are based on theory of probability considerations; the Global Positioning System (GPS) that helps you find your way combines technology with mathematical calculations, and so on. Mathematics is an independent subject. However, mathematics is also the language of science and is therefore essential for other subjects. Mathematics is the foundation on which all science is based – from biology to physics, chemistry and computer science. Mathematics is also a prerequisite for all the technological development that has had an impact on our society in recent decades. The role played by mathematics is connected with the fact that it has developed historically in close interaction with fields such as physics and insurance science. It is therefore not surprising that the mathematics degree programme can be naturally combined with other science programmes. Depending on your interests, you can choose to combine mathematics with subjects such as computer science, physics, mathematical modelling or possibly a humanistic subject. What do you learn in the degree programme? The degree programme in mathematics teaches you to systematise, abstract and analyse complicated issues. You learn both the classical theoretical mathematical disciplines and examples of mathematical applications. If you wish to work in the financial sector or the pharmaceutical industry, you can specialise in mathematical modelling, which involves learning how to analyse large amounts of data using advanced mathematical models based on statistics and the theory of probability. Mathematics also plays a role in completely different contexts than science, for example as a necessary tool for developing and analysing economic models. This aspect of mathematics forms the basis of the degree in mathematics-economics. Læs mere om bacheloruddannelsen i Matematik Bachelor's degree programme in Mathematics-Economics An ideal combination of two disciplines Have you ever thought about how you fix the rate of a new mortgage loan with an interest rate ceiling, or the popular interest-only types of loans? In fact, mathematics–economics graduates developed the model used to fix the cost of such loans. The degree in mathematics–economics is primarily an economics degree with mathematics as an important subject. If you wish to study mathematics–economics, you must therefore be interested in both economics and mathematics. The purpose of this degree programme is to give graduates the necessary skills to carry out independent analytical work in private or public sector organisations. At the same time, the degree is a good starting point for a PhD programme in economics. You use a combination of mathematics and economics to understand economic models for production management and planning in business operations. In such cases, mathematics is used as a tool to analyse a given situation, and familiarity with economics makes it possible to develop relevant models for solutions. The financial sector also uses many economic models. A common feature for all of these is an increased use of advanced mathematics. The degree in mathematics–economics can be used in many different contexts. Economics and politics often go hand in hand, and almost every political proposal involves the following question: how much does it cost? A degree in mathematics–economics gives you analytical skills and broad theoretical insight, and you are thus able to fully understand many of the decisions and issues that exist in the field of economics. With a degree in mathematics–economics, you can therefore help shape the future of our society. Læs mere om bacheloruddannelsen i Matematik-Økonomi Guide (in Danish) for Bachelor in Mathematics-Economics Subject portal - Science Studies – the portals address students already enrolled CVR no.: 31119103 P no.: 1008798024 EAN no.: 5798000419803
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Transcription Page Inclusions February 25, 1897-November 11, 1898 February 27-December 31, 1893 April 6, 1895-February 26, 1896 February 29, 1896-February 24, 1897 January 19, 1902-February 4, 1904 February 26, 1904-June 8, 1905 June 9, 1905-October 17, 1907 October 18, 1907-December 31, 1909 January 1, 1910-December 31, 1914 All Diaries Toggle Text May Bragdon Diary, April 3, 1897 – April 4, 1897, p. 18 with his eyes & simply perfect. The scenery is good & the company - fine - especially Ethel Barrymore as a man and "Prof. Jogram" - " But who am I?" Old Capt. Cruickshank, who loses his voice, is also first rate - of course "William" has to be more or less of a chump. We sat in Balcony - 1st row & Charlotte & Mr. Davis with us. It was very enjoyable. Con was there & came home with us. When we got down town we discovered Maude Adams & "Annie Adams" directly behind us - and watched them cross the street & disappear into Harned's. She looked pretty in a shirt waist & sort of cape &c. Con liked it. This is his Edith's birthday she has been rather blue. He came in for a few minutes. Apr. 4. Sunday. Soft spring weather - ideal. Con came up in a white whe sweater & soft hat & his new wheel & sparkling eyes. He & Claude rode out to the country club. I went to Ned's - She goes to N.Y. tonight. She washed her hair & I "helped" pack. Edith was there & did help. She walked up to MacArthur's with me. It's Nellie's birthday. Con was here to dinner & went to St. Mary's hospital to see a man from Portland this p.m. Page: coveriiiiii123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301305306307 of 308 Page2: 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308 of 308 Original Original Only Manuscript Download: Download (1.94 MiB)
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Menu From Farewell Dinner For C G Osborne, March 15, 1919 This was about 24% of all the recorded Farewell’s in USA. Vermont had the highest population of Farewell families in 1840. Usually stoners or alcoholics, they have big hearts, fantastic looks, quick tempers, dark hair and blue eyes, and are really down to earth. A final name, typically pronounced as “farewell” or “fallwell”. You and a group of good friends just got done watching a film at the theater. This is a very common phrase to use when you’re about to element methods with a pal . It suggests that you program on seeing them once more, but you’re not...
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12443
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Tuesday, October 19 • 1:15pm - 2:00pm Inclusive Design: A Methodology, Not a Budget Line Sina and Corey will lead the campfire talk with a 10-minute discussion on the inclusive design ecosystem, its ethos and methodology, and a quick elaboration of its facets. Then, having pre-selected 5 participants equipped with unique topics from the MCN Inclusive Design and Accessibility Slack Channel, will facilitate a group discussion across the disparate 5 topics, demonstrating how and why being inclusive is a methodology to be applied, not a project or budget line item. Link to topic submission form: https://t.co/GikoqZSwDl Sina Bahram President, Prime Access Consulting Founder of the inclusive design firm Prime Access Consulting (PAC), Sina Bahram is an accessibility consultant, computer scientist, researcher, speaker, and entrepreneur. In 2012, Sina was recognized as a White House Champion of Change by President Barack Obama for his doctoral research... Read More → Corey Timpson Principal, Corey Timpson Design Inc. Corey Timpson is an active collaborator and thought leader in the experience design, digital media, and museological discourses. As VP, Exhibition, Research, and Design, at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) Corey was responsible for the direction and oversight of the design-build... Read More → Tuesday October 19, 2021 1:15pm - 2:00pm EDT Attendees (140)
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12444
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Main Second Level Navigation The Peters-Boyd (PB) Academy is comprised of three hospitals: Women’s College Hospital North York General Hospital Students may be based at any one of these sites during the foundations years. During clerkship, students from all academies will attend rotations at many different sites, including The Hospital for Sick Children, St. Joseph’s Hospital and other sites around the GTA. Currently, the PB Academy enrollment is 63 students for first year and registers over 400 medical students in total every year. One of the PB Academy’s strongest assets is its teaching faculty, who are committed to small group, case-based learning models, and providing a quality learning experience. Clinics and acute care settings provide a breadth of clinical learning opportunities that uphold the tenets of best-practice patient-centered care and medical education. Director, Peters-Boyd Academy Dr. Gemini Tanna is an Associate Professor and Clinician Teacher in the Department of Medicine at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. She is a proud “U of T lifer” and completed all of her undergraduate and postgraduate training at the University of Toronto, including a nephrology subspecialty fellowship as well as the Master Teacher program. She joined Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in 2006 and has held a number of medical education leadership positions prior to becoming the Peters-Boyd Academy Director in April 2022. Dr. Tanna is the recipient of several education and leadership awards, including a W.T. Aikins Faculty Teaching Award, the Dr. Joanne Bargman Mentorship Award and the Dr. Kevin Imrie Sunnybrook Department of Medicine Leadership Award. Her academic interests include empathy and resiliency in medicine and mentorship. She considers herself as much a learner as a teacher and feels that life is best lived by staying humble and being kind. Associate Director, Peters-Boyd Academy Dr. Alireza Zahirieh is an Associate Professor and Clinician Teacher in the Department of Medicine and Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. He completed medical school training at Western University in 2002 before coming to Toronto for his internal medicine and nephrology training. He joined the Faculty of Medicine in 2009 after completing the Department of Medicine Master Teacher Program. Dr. Zahirieh has held a number of leadership positions prior to becoming the Associate Academy Director in April of 2022. He has also been a recipient of multiple teaching awards at Sunnybrook and more broadly the University. His academic interests include HIV associated Kidney Diseases and the incorporation of point of care ultrasonography into clinical practice. The primary site of the PB Academy, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre has over 9000 staff and physicians, and over 5000 students, residents, fellows and observers working together to provide excellence in patient care. With 1355 hospital beds, Sunnybrook provides nearly one million out-patient clinic visits per year. Students are exposed to a broad-based learning experience, including tertiary care, acute in-patient and ambulatory care and community-based experiences. Priority programs include cancer care, cardiovascular, muscular-skeletal, perinatal and gynecology services, neurosciences, aging and population health, trauma and critical care. At each site of the PB Academy, educational facilities provide students with seminar rooms, computers, a student lounge and access to libraries. Video-conferencing capability connects joint seminars occurring at Sunnybrook, North York and Women’s College. Sunnybrook is located in uptown Toronto. A free shuttle bus runs continuously between Sunnybrook, the Holland Orthopaedic and Arthritic Centre and Women’s College Hospital. For the fitness-minded, there is a beautiful bike trail, extending from the lake to Sunnybrook Park, which is part of the hospital property. Women’s College Hospital is a short walking distance from the University of Toronto Medical Sciences Building. North York General Hospital is located in northern Toronto and accessible by subway. The PB Academy is named after Dr. Vera Peters (1911-1993) and Dr. William Boyd (1885-1979). Dr. Peters was a professor of radiology at the University of Toronto and a pioneer in the radiation treatment of cancer, acclaimed for her contributions to the treatment of Hodgkin’s disease. Dr. Boyd was an award-winning teacher and professor of pathology at the University of Toronto who authored several internationally renowned textbooks. Dr. Gemini Tanna, Director Dr. Alireza Zahirieh, Associate Director 2075 Bayview Avenue, Room E354 Toronto, Ontario M4N 3M5 Sonya Boston, Administrative Assistant to Director 2075 Bayview Avenue, Room E354A
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12445
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Multiple Venues January 19 @ 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm EST « The Beat Goes On: Afro-Cuban Music and Its Impact on the United States Radio Waves: Miami Beach and the Golden Age of Radio » The City of Miami Beach is working alongside some of the world’s best cultural institutions to provide a night of free, unique and unforgettable experiences. Every third Thursday of the month, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Miami Beach will come alive with culture as various institutions and buildings open their doors to give you just a taste of what they have to offer. From backstage tours, exhibition openings, and free film screenings in the park, there will be something for everyone. All events are free unless otherwise noted. The majority of the programming is accessible by foot and by bike, but we will also offer dedicated free trolleys that will drop you off and pick you up at our dedicated Culture Crawl stops – check out our monthly map to find your closest stop. Start where you would like and explore at your own leisure! Let’s hit the street and get our monthly dose of culture! Tag us using @MiamiBeachNews on Twitter and Instagram to hop into our DM’s or use #CultureCrawl to be a part of the story on Facebook! http://www.mbartsandculture.org/culture-crawl/ City of Miami Beach Miami Beach, FL United States + Google Map
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12446
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Based on a "living classroom" method, students plant fruit and vegetable gardens in their schoolyard. They tend the gardens, observing development and learning techniques to combat pests and disease, which they share with their peers. Junior Farmer Field and Life School JFFLS School gardens At the end of 2005, there were 24.5 million people in sub-Saharan Africa living with HIV and AIDS. This has left 12 million children in the region without one or both parents. By 2010 over 18 million children will have lost one or both parents as a consequence of the HIV epidemic. Millions more will be made vulnerable even before they become orphans. Junior Farmer Field and Life Schools (JFFLS) help fill knowledge and skills gaps left by the premature death of parents. A JFFLS is a living classroom and a school without walls. The learning aims of the JFFLS are to empower children and youth, enhance their agricultural and life skills and enable them to explore risks, solve problems and develop greater gender equity. At the end of one season, children and youth gain significant knowledge in agriculture, having been exposed to both traditional and modern techniques, are more confident in analysing and solving life problems, are better informed on health, HIV/AIDS, child rights and gender issues FAO is the lead United Nations agency and is responsible for the quality of the activity. FAO oversees provision of agricultural skills, seeds, tools, and agricultural inputs. © FAO/Simon Maina
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12447
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Jadidi, M. Mehdi, University of Maryland, United States
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12448
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Author: trubin@cpscentral.com Author Archives: trubin@cpscentral.com A Glimpse into the Metaverse: An Introduction to Stageverse What do you get when you cross Second Life, Oculus Rift, and an open-source platform? The answer: Stageverse, the first metaverse of its kind. This social VR platform allows anyone to create virtual venues in which users can interact with each other and purchase digital content like virtual clothing and virtual gift cards using their real money. These virtual venues are fully customizable with skyboxes that can be imported from the Unity store or made completely from scratch using Stageverse’s unique avatars and digital assets—and any combination of the two. What is the Metaverse? The metaverse is a collective virtual shared space, created by the convergence of virtually enhanced physical reality and physically persistent virtual space, including the sum of all virtual worlds, augmented reality, and the internet. Imagine a world where everyone you know is inside your computer. There’s no need for headsets or keyboards; it would be as easy as opening an app on your phone. A world where any daydream you can imagine could exist in perfect detail with graphics that outshine every dream before it. This place is known as the metaverse (met·a·vers·e)–a collective shared space for which communication channels are not limited by physical boundaries and connecting people with each other across long distances. Virtual Reality, VR for short, is defined as a computer-generated simulation of a three-dimensional image or environment that can be interacted with in a seemingly physical way. In other words, virtual reality uses devices such as headsets and gloves and allows users to interact with these 3D environments in real-time. Virtual Reality is an artificial environment that provides immersive sensory experiences through which the user feels like they are present in a physical place or real-world setting. One of the best parts about VR technology is its accessibility; it does not require any additional peripherals because all you need is your headset and motion controllers. How do you get started with Stageverse? 1. Download Stageverse. The program is available on Steam, which you can find here. Stageverse is also offered on Windows Mixed Reality and Oculus Rift VR headsets. 2. Once you’ve downloaded it, sign up for an account by clicking Create Account. 3. In order to download anything in the app, you will need to purchase credits and create a content package first by clicking Buy Now. Follow these simple steps to get you started! As a Creator in Stageverse Stageverse is a social VR platform that features virtual venues, interactive experiences, and digital content. With a customizable avatar and an endless range of possibilities for fun with friends, it’s no wonder people are already making themselves at home in Stageverse. Even if you’re not actively involved in any of its immersive events, the second you log on you’ll be able to explore virtual worlds with your friends from all over the world. And because all interactions take place in shared space (think Facebook Spaces meets Disney World), there’s no need for a headset, goggles, or anything else that might hinder your experience. As a Viewer on Stageverse As you know Stageverse is a social VR platform for anyone with an interest in virtual reality. The creators/members of this space have created some interesting content already and you should look forward to seeing what is yet to come. In fact, members are even currently live streaming concerts! To get started, you can create your account by choosing from one of many available avatars. From there, you’ll be able to explore all the features. One thing that I really love is that with Stageverse–you never know who you might meet next! Entrepreneurship opportunities on Stageverse Stageverse is much more than a game or social network; they offer artists, designers, developers, and storytellers ways to build their own worlds and share them with others. We’re on an entrepreneurial mission to create new art for our augmented virtual reality spaces through cutting-edge content. Whether it’s apps you want to make or interactive experiences you want to share with other users, we have resources that are available for people at every level of their careers. Struggling to get your startup off the ground? If you’re not getting the exposure you need, there are some key marketing tactics that can help get your business trending upward. In today’s blog post, we’ll outline some of the best marketing tactics that startups can employ in order to boost their marketing efforts and grow their businesses quickly and efficiently. 1) Understand your audience When it comes to marketing a startup in the metaverse, it’s important to understand your audience. Who are you trying to reach? What are their needs and wants? How can you best communicate with them? Where will they be spending their time online? What do they care about most? Your answers to these questions will help you better market your product or service. 2) Set goals Any successful marketing campaign starts with specific goals. Without setting attainable objectives, you’ll have no way of measuring your return on investment or whether your marketing efforts are paying off. Furthermore, your goals should be SMART: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. 4) Know who to reach out to Reaching out to people who are already interested in what you’re selling is a great way to get started with marketing your startup. You can use platforms like Twitter and LinkedIn to find potential customers, and then start a conversation with them about your product. Additionally, blogging and guest posting on relevant websites can help introduce your startup to a wider audience. Finally, don’t forget to utilize social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram to connect with potential customers where they already are. 3) Create a campaign plan 1. First, identify your target audience. Who are you trying to reach with your marketing campaign? 2. Second, come up with a creative and attention-grabbing headline that will make people want to click on your blog post. 3. Third, create visually appealing graphics to accompany your blog post. 4. Fourth, write compelling copy that will persuade people to use your product or service. 5. Fifth, come up with a call-to-action (CTA) that will encourage people to take the desired action. 6. Sixth, promote your blog post across all of your social media channels. 6) Personalize your message When it comes to marketing your startup in the metaverse, you need to get creative. That’s because the same old marketing tactics just won’t cut it in this digital world. So what will? Here are a few effective marketing tactics for startups in the metaverse 1. Send personalized messages: Personalize your message using customer data and preferences to craft custom emails or Facebook posts that show up on their screen at the perfect time. 2. Be a part of the conversation: Engage with your customers on social media by asking them questions about their experience with your company and sharing content that is relevant to them as well as other people like them. 3. Post sponsored content: Offer influencers a good deal of money in exchange for mentioning or reviewing your product or service publicly on their blog, Instagram account, etc., and pay them enough so they’ll take it seriously (i.e., don’t make these offers too low). 5) Create outstanding content As a startup, you need to stand out from the crowd to succeed. One way to do this is by creating outstanding content that people will want to read, watch, and share. 9) Give yourself time to learn from mistakes and try again 1. Understand what marketing is and what it can do for your startup. 2. Do your research and target your audience. 3. Get creative with your marketing strategies. 4. Think outside the box and be unique. 5. Have a clear call to action. 6. Be active on social media. 7. Monitor your progress and adjust your tactics as needed. 7) Know how you want to measure success Before you start marketing your startup, it’s important to establish some metrics to gauge whether or not your marketing efforts are successful. This will help you determine which tactics are working and which ones need to be tweaked or abandoned altogether. Some metrics you may want to consider include: -Number of new users/customers -Growth in revenue -Increase in web traffic -Engagement with your brand (shares, comments, etc.) -Mentions in the press 8) Evaluate your campaign’s performance based on its results 1. Evaluate your website traffic. How many visitors are coming to your site? Where are they coming from? What pages are they looking at? 2. Check your conversion rates. Are people taking the actions you want them to take on your site? 3. Look at your social media metrics. How many followers do you have? How much engagement are you getting on your posts? 4. Take a look at your email list. How many subscribers do you have? How often are they opening and clicking through your emails? 5. Analyze your blog stats. How many people are reading your blog posts? What posts are getting the most traffic and comments? 6. Study your PR efforts. The Sandbox was launched on Kickstarter in the summer of 2014 and has since received accolades from press such as Forbes and PC Magazine to name a few. The Sandbox is a metaverse platform that takes your real-life conversations, converts them into interactive virtual worlds, and then allows you to share these experiences with your friends through social media. This platform opens up new avenues of communication by allowing users to participate in games that were never possible before. The Sandbox raised $196,000 dollars from more than 1,600 backers on Kickstarter and has since begun shipping beta kits to early adopters all over the world. Metaspace The Sandbox is a user-generated virtual world where players can create, play, and monetize their creations. The possibilities for what you can do in The Sandbox are nearly endless – from creating art to hosting events to building games, the sky’s the limit. And because it’s a Metaverse platform, you can also interact with other users and explore their creations. So what are you waiting for? Log in and start exploring today! Contribute Art There are endless possibilities for what you can create within The Sandbox metaverse platform. You can build entire 3D worlds from scratch, or create 2D art and animations to share with others. You can also code mini-games or other experiences to share with the community. And all of this can be done without any prior experience – The Sandbox provides all the tools you need to get started. So what are you waiting for? Start exploring and see what you can create! Contribute Sound With The Sandbox, you can create just about anything you can imagine. If you can dream it, you can build it in The Sandbox. This metaverse platform provides the tools and resources necessary to create entire worlds or mini-games, all within a user-friendly interface. Plus, with the ability to import 3D assets and terrains, the possibilities are nearly endless. And because The Sandbox is built on blockchain technology, all creations are securely stored and owned by the creators. So dive in and start building your own corner of the internet today! One unique aspect of The Sandbox is that users can contribute code to the game. This means that there are endless possibilities for what can be created within the game. If you’re a programmer, you can create new objects, scripts, and behaviors to add to the game. You can also create new games within The Sandbox, or modify existing ones. If you’re not a programmer, you can still contribute by creating art assets or writing scripts. All contributions are reviewed by the community before being accepted, so everyone has a chance to have their say. Build Games One aspect you can do within The Sandbox is build games. You can use the VoxEdit tool to create 3D voxel models and then import them into Unity or Godot to create a fully realized game. The VoxEdit tool is powerful and user-friendly, making it easy to create whatever you can imagine. You can also share your creations with others in the community. Another way that people are using The Sandbox is by sharing their creations with others. There are many people who have created beautiful buildings and structures that have been shared with all of us to enjoy! What will you make? Build Experiences Since The Sandbox is a user-generated content platform, the possibilities for experiences are endless. Whether you want to create an educational game, a virtual world to explore, or something in between, The Sandbox has the tools you need. Plus, with the ability to monetize your creations, you can make your dream a reality.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12449
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Community School students traveled north of the Arctic Circle to explore cultural differences — and similarities Photo courtesy of the Methow Valley Community School Students from the Methow Valley Community School and their new friends in a native village north of the Arctic Circle shared lessons about the environment, recycling and Iñupiat language and traditions. “I didn’t notice till we were about to land that there was a little clump of houses in what appeared to be a giant, snowy blizzard,” said William Halpin. That was Halpin’s first impression as he and three classmates from the Methow Valley Community School flew into a native Iñupiat village north of the Arctic Circle. Although in many ways the lives of the 330 residents of Anaktuvuk Pass aren’t that different from their ancestors’, today almost everyone there — including kids as young as 5 — has a snowmobile and cell phone. Kids talk about making videos for YouTube, said Halpin, a sixth-grader at the school. “I thought there would be a lot more traditional ways. I didn’t expect snowmobiles, powerlines from a generator, and wells. It was more like this life than I expected,” said sixth-grader Ila Newman. Nevertheless, seeing another part of the world had a big impact on her. “They’re still in our country, but it’s so far from our culture that it was a lot like going to another country,” she said. Because it’s common for an Iñupiat family to have five or six kids, one-third of the population in the village is under 18, said Community School teacher Michaela Precourt, who organized the trip in conjunction with a program she founded called Down to Earth Expeditions. The fourth- through sixth-grade Community School students shared lessons with a combined fourth/fifth-grade class of about 15 kids at Nunamiut School. In addition to getting to know one another, the students had group lessons in ecology and recycling. The school, with classes from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade, is a community hub that opens its gym and swimming pool to everyone in town until 11 at night. The Iñupiat were nomadic until about 1950 and still follow many of the same traditions. For food, they rely largely on hunting caribou, ptarmigan, hare and Dall’s sheep, supplemented by ice fishing and trading with coastal peoples for whale. Although farming isn’t a traditional part of Iñupiat culture, school cafeteria staff grow cucumbers and hydroponic lettuce in a tent. During their six days in the village, the Community School students sampled local foods, including whale. “It was really salty — and really chewy,” said school director Allison Ciancibelli, who joined them on the trip. No cars, high prices Because there are virtually no roads in the village — other than one that leads a few miles out of town to the landfill — snowmobiles are the main transportation other than walking. The main vehicle fleet consists of a garbage truck and a school bus. The Iñupiat traditionally got around by dogsled, but the villagers are now learning cross-country skiing from a group of traveling ski instructors. In a world where everything has to be flown in, food and basic needs tend to be very expensive. The Methow students were stunned to find that half a gallon of milk cost $12.85 and a six-pack of soda was almost $30. It costs $1.88 per pound to fly in supplies, and 80 cents per pound to fly things out, said Ciancibelli. To Methow kids used to recycling and reuse, the practices in the Arctic were an eye-opener. “My biggest surprise on the first day was at lunch, when I looked everywhere for compost and found all this food thrown away,” said sixth-grader Meaghan Robinson. The trip “makes me thankful for what I have. I’m more oriented to recycling and composting after seeing their life,” she said. Because the isolation makes it especially difficult to deal with trash, everything, including plastic and metals, is burned. “It was pretty much the foulest smoke I’ve ever smelled,” said Ciancibelli. Elders believe the smoke has altered the caribous’ migration route, keeping the animals far from the village. Students also learned about the impact the smoke has on water quality. The two schools also joined in activities to build awareness about trash. They created reusable tote bags from T-shirts and turned plastic bags, cardboard, aluminum foil and Styrofoam into a caribou, a snowy owl, and a ptarmigan wearing a top hat. The Community School kids also joined the local students for their lessons in the Iñupiat language and learned traditional games. They experimented with an Eskimo yo-yo, a contraption made from two strings or sinew with weighted balls that’s used for bird-hunting as well as for games. Although the weather was extremely cold, with temperatures from 20 to 60-below zero, kids in the village walked around in sweatshirts and flip-flops with socks, said Ciancibelli. In that climate, there are almost no trees, except for arctic willows along the river. In fact, in the brilliant Arctic light (there were already 14 hours of daylight when they were there in April), there are few landmarks to provide perspective on the landscape. The towering peaks of the Brooks Range appeared to be right outside the village, although they’re actually several miles away, said Robinson. Anaktuvuk Pass is within the Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve. Arctic lesson planning The Down to Earth program runs annual expeditions for teams of educators, filmmakers and photographers in arctic regions, where the teachers develop lessons that can be used by any school around the world. Precourt, four teachers and a filmmaker took an 11-day backcountry ski trek before the Community School students arrived. The educators each led several lessons in the field for the other teachers on topics such as animal behavior, the geology of Alaska’s Brooks Range, climate change, and patterns in nature. Along with winter tents and gear, to maintain their energy in the frigid conditions the expedition team consumed 16 pounds of butter in 11 days, said Precourt. “The idea of Down to Earth is for teachers to go out into the world and gain a sense of place and bring lessons back to the classroom,” said Precourt. The 10 lesson plans will be available for free in June for teachers around the world at downtoearthexp.org under the Education tab and then Alaska. Video lessons will be on the website in August. Planning is underway for the Iñupiat kids to come to the Community School in the fall. And many of the Community School kids are scheming to get back up to Alaska. “It’s such a kind, caring community,” said Halpin. “Seeing a different culture helps wipe away inner prejudice and breaks stereotypes.” People can learn more about the student exchange at a slide show on the Anaktuvuk Pass trip at the Community School expedition night on Wednesday, May 16, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the Methow Valley Community Center gym. A film about the backcountry expedition should be completed in July. Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: Methow Valley Community School
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By Drew March 7, 2023 5 views Jeepneys have been an iconic mode of public transportation in the Philippines for over 70 years, providing a convenient and affordable way for millions of Filipinos to get around the cities. However, in recent years, the government has been pushing for the phaseout of old and dilapidated jeepneys, citing concerns about their environmental impact and safety issues. While the idea of upgrading the jeepney fleet to more modern and efficient vehicles may seem like a positive step, the reality is that the proposed policy has generated a lot of controversy and opposition, particularly from the jeepney drivers themselves. Many argue that the high cost of purchasing a new unit is simply too much for them to bear, and that they will be left with no source of livelihood if the phaseout is implemented too hastily. It is important to note that jeepney drivers are not opposed to upgrading their vehicles per se. They recognize the need for a more environmentally-friendly and efficient fleet that can better serve the needs of their passengers. However, the problem lies in the way the policy has been formulated and implemented. The government has set a very short deadline for the phaseout, with the deadline for the replacement of old jeepneys set for 2020, which was later extended to 2023. This has put immense pressure on jeepney drivers, who are now facing the prospect of having to purchase a brand-new unit that costs upwards of Php 2 million, or roughly $40,000 USD. For many jeepney drivers, this is simply an impossible task. The majority of them are small business owners who operate on a daily basis, earning just enough to cover their expenses and provide for their families. The high cost of purchasing a new unit is a huge burden that they simply cannot afford, and many are worried that they will be forced out of business if the phaseout is implemented too quickly. What is needed instead is a more gradual and equitable approach to the jeepney phaseout policy. This would involve providing jeepney drivers with ample time and opportunities to transition to a new fleet, without putting their livelihoods at risk. This could be done by offering them low-interest loans or financing schemes that would allow them to purchase new units at more affordable rates, as well as providing training and support for drivers to operate the new vehicles. The government should also work with jeepney drivers and stakeholders to ensure that the new fleet meets their needs and expectations. This means engaging in dialogue and consultation with the drivers, as well as ensuring that the new units are affordable, safe, and environmentally-friendly. The jeepney phaseout policy is a necessary step towards modernizing the country’s public transport system and addressing environmental and safety concerns. However, it is important that this policy is implemented in a way that is both practical and compassionate, taking into account the needs and concerns of the drivers and operators who rely on the jeepney for their livelihoods. By providing ample time and opportunities for these stakeholders to adapt, the government can ensure that the transition is as smooth and sustainable as possible. By Drew March 2, 2023 0 A deep rooted problem that may take generations to cleanse Why religions can’t seem to get along still
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Targetti Sankey Yellow Table Desk Lamp Vintage Mid Century Modern Italian Plastic arm cover has some dust. Base has small paint dots (from a known artist's home/estate). Inside shade has a mark. I did not overly clean this. Measure is approximately depending on how you have the lamp set. This item is in the category "Collectibles\Lamps, Lighting\Lamps". The seller is "rtm1216" and is located in this country: US. This item can be shipped to United States, New Zealand, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Wallis and Futuna, Gambia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Poland, Oman, Suriname, United Arab Emirates, Kenya, Argentina, Guinea-Bissau, Armenia, Uzbekistan, Bhutan, Senegal, Togo, Ireland, Qatar, Burundi, Netherlands, Iraq, Slovakia, Slovenia, Equatorial Guinea, Thailand, Aruba, Sweden, Iceland, Macedonia, Belgium, Israel, Kuwait, Liechtenstein, Benin, Algeria, Antigua and Barbuda, Italy, Swaziland, Tanzania, Pakistan, Burkina Faso, Panama, Singapore, Kyrgyzstan, Switzerland, Djibouti, Chile, China, Mali, Botswana, Republic of Croatia, Cambodia, Indonesia, Portugal, Malta, Tajikistan, Vietnam, Cayman Islands, Paraguay, Saint Helena, Cyprus, Seychelles, Rwanda, Bangladesh, Australia, Austria, Sri Lanka, Gabon Republic, Zimbabwe, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Norway, Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Kiribati, Turkmenistan, Grenada, Greece, Haiti, Greenland, Yemen, Afghanistan, Montenegro, Mongolia, Nepal, Bahamas, Bahrain, United Kingdom, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hungary, Angola, Western Samoa, France, Mozambique, Namibia, Peru, Denmark, Guatemala, Solomon Islands, Vatican City State, Sierra Leone, Nauru, Anguilla, El Salvador, Dominican Republic, Cameroon, Guyana, Azerbaijan Republic, Macau, Georgia, Tonga, San Marino, Eritrea, Saint Kitts-Nevis, Morocco, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Mauritania, Belize, Philippines, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo, Western Sahara, Colombia, Spain, Estonia, Bermuda, Montserrat, Zambia, South Korea, Vanuatu, Ecuador, Albania, Ethiopia, Monaco, Niger, Laos, Ghana, Cape Verde Islands, Moldova, Madagascar, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Lebanon, Liberia, Bolivia, Maldives, Gibraltar, Hong Kong, Central African Republic, Lesotho, Nigeria, Mauritius, Saint Lucia, Jordan, Guinea, British Virgin Islands, Canada, Turks and Caicos Islands, Chad, Andorra, Romania, Costa Rica, India, Mexico, Serbia, Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Japan, Lithuania, Trinidad and Tobago, Malawi, Nicaragua, Finland, Tunisia, Luxembourg, Uganda, Turkey, Tuvalu, Egypt, Latvia, Jamaica, Niue, South Africa, Brunei Darussalam, Honduras. Brand: Targetti Type: Desk Lamp Manufacturer: Targetti Sankey Cord Color: Black Material: Metal, Plastic
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12452
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Why Did Williams Win The Battle Of Hastings? A Revision Information Year 7 The envoy tried to get Harold to simply accept William’s claim to the throne, however Harold refused and even had to be restrained from killing the envoy. The battle of Hastings was an important battle in English historical past. It resulted in a new king and drastic modifications to the country as a whole. The battle was fought between William of Normandy, who wished to overthrow the English king, and King Harold II. William’s seize of the English crown from Harold II was a turning point for historical past, politics, literature, and art—but also for language. It started the transformation of English from an orderly Germanic tongue into the sprawling, messy hybrid we converse right now. Hastings, Battle ofIllustration depicting the demise of Harold II on the Battle of Hastings. According to Norman accounts, he was killed when he was struck in the eye with an arrow. The easy slope allowed William’s knights an open strategy, against which Harold relied on the shut “shield wall” formation of his educated troops to hurl back and dishearten the enemy. The closely armoured knight, driving a powerful charger and holding couched a heavy thrusting lance, was nonetheless 100 years away. Norman armour was flimsy, the horses light and unprotected, and the knights, using javelins, maces, and swords, needed to engage the English infantry hand-to-hand. In the 1800s, the great historian EA Freeman saw Harold II as an English nationalist, fighting for our freedom. His rival JH Round portrayed the English as corrupt and out-of-date, and William because the king who brought modern, European methods to England. The new Norman landowners built castles to defend themselves towards the Saxons that they had conquered. This gave them nice energy, and enabled them to insurgent in opposition to the king. William gathered an invasion fleet of 700 ships and a big military. It is possible she was raised alongside her niece, Matilda, who was of an analogous age to Judith. Malmesbury himself was sceptical of the story and, on situation that Matilda’s dying came after a short sickness in 1083, it does appear quite far-fetched. Despite earlier promises to move his crown to certainly one of his Flemish, Viking, or Norman relations, English King Edward the Confessor dies in 1066, leaving his crown to Anglo-Saxon Harold Godwinson, inflicting a bloody succession war. William reappeared, removed his helmet so his troops could see that he was indeed alive, and the result was a renewed assault. Caught speeding downhill or, in some instances, on the flat, the less mobile Saxons discovered themselves outnumbered and outflanked and, then, cut to pieces. Harold urged his troops to hold their traces, however a couple of extra Norman “attack-retreat-attack” iterations resulted in many extra Saxon deaths. Apparently the crowd cheered so loudly throughout his coronation that the Norman guards outdoors Westminster Abbey thought a struggle had broken out, and set hearth to Anglo Saxon homes in retaliation. It set an acceptable tone for William’s early years as king, and he wasted no time in imposing his will over his new kingdom. In an effort to keep this submit to a reasonable size, you can find out right here why a lot of the stuff you suppose you understand concerning the Battle of Hastings is incorrect. In short – Harold may not have been killed with an arrow and the Bayeux Tapestry uses a huge quantity of artistic license with lots of the events of the battle. One source that has received little attention from historians is Estoire des Engleis – History of the English – by Geoffrey Gaimar. However, this writer offers some interesting particulars concerning the battle. For 300 years after the Battle of https://kristinnspencer.com/ Hastings, French was the language of England’s kings and courtiers, landowners and officials. Latin was additionally a significant participant, serving because the language of diplomacy, philosophy, and theology. Where written language was concerned, English got here in a distant third. Celebrations included displays of falconry, medieval music and spectacular battle scenes re-enacted by 1000’s of fanatics in chain mail armed with golf equipment, swords, lances, battle-axes and bows and arrows. Harold seems to have tried to surprise William, however scouts discovered his army and reported its arrival to William. The Normans were more cunning – they pretended to flee in panic and then turned on their pursuers, who had subsquently left their flanks exposed to attack. However, by 1105 Rainald was now preventing for the duke against the youngest of the Conqueror’s sons, Henry I, defending the citadel of Saint-Pierre-sur-Dives for the duke. He was captured by Henry the next 12 months, but had been freed by September 1106. It is possible he died shortly after, but was definitely dead by 1118 when his brother issued a charter, in which he gave 6 church buildings to Lewes Priory, for the soul of deceased family members, including Rainald. It is heart-wrenching, even now, to suppose about Edith and the elderly Gytha, wandering the blood-soaked area after the battle, seeking the fallen king. Sources say that Gytha was unable to identify her sons amid the mangled and mutilated bodies. It fell to Edith to search out Harold, by undoing the chain mail of the victims, to be able to recognise sure identifying marks on the king’s physique – most likely tattoos. William the Conqueror rapidly took over England and revamped the tax system in England. This allowed William to shortly gather income from England. The author is a scholar of historical and fashionable European historical past. William makes use of a sequence of feigned retreats to entice the Anglo-Saxons to pursue the cavalry, further weakening their defenses. Believing that William is dead, some Norman troops panic and flee into a Marsh, pursued by a portion of Anglo-Saxon troops. William takes his helmet off using up and down the road to show he’s alive. The Dirty Real truth on Mature Sex Conversation
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American Police Force: Internet Scam? What in Hades is going on in Montana? In April 2009, Two Rivers Authority and the Hardin City Council started looking into housing enemy combatants currently detained in Guantanamo Bay (Gitmo), Cuba. A few weeks later (May 15th), a business called the American Police Force (“APF”) registers the domain name AmericanPoliceGroup.com. The next thing you know, APF is trying to contract to operate a private jail and police training center for $27 million. It seems that the detention facility was built but had no prisoners. APF offered to fill the jail and operate it. Although no agreement has been reached because, among other issues, bondholders have rejected it, APF employees have apparently patrolled the streets of Hardin City in Mercedes SUVs with “Hardin City Police” decals on the sides of the vehicles…but there isn’t a city police department. Crime is handled by the county sheriff’s department. Think about this for a minute. A private company with no government contract suddenly decides to play police in your home town. What would you do? It gets better. The server for APF’s website happens to host Defense Product Solutions’ website. This company registered its domain name way back on June 19, 2009. Note that both APF and DPS use the double-headed eagle for their corporate logos. AlliedDefenseSystems.com (registered March 2007) appears to be a related site. This website’s administrative contact is Mohammad Abdalla. Mr. Abdalla is listed as the COO for this company in Anaheim, CA. Here’s where it gets more strange. The admin e-mail is for a Mr. Edward Angelino, who just happens to be listed as a small business contact for Defense Logistics Services, Inc., a company that appears to be providing foreign military sales support for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Mr. Angelino has an interesting tracking record when it comes to both lawsuits and government contracts. DESCRIPTION: Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Support to Kingdom of Saudia Arabia Logistical, Financial Management, Analysis, and Administrative Support According to the California Secretary of State’s office, Defense Logistics Services, Inc. was formed in 2004 but is dissolved. There is, however, an American Private Police Force Org Inc. that was incorporated March 2, 2009, and is based in Anaheim too. In addition to being the corporation’s agent for service of process, a Mr. Michael Hilton is the self-designated “Captain” of the APF. The APF claims it is the subsidiary of a parent company but won’t identify the parent company or where APF is getting its money. The company’s Washington, D.C. address is a virtual office. Its Santa Ana, California office appears to be in an office complex with a Spanish-speaking church, a dental lab, and insurance agency. Our main office is located in Washington D.C. and we service all 50 States and most Countries. Our experienced staff consists of highly experienced former law enforcement officers. – APF Website Based on the above information, it seems that the websites are designed to create a much larger presence for American Police Force than actually exists. If there is actually adequate funding and professional personnel available to handle the construction and operation of a detention facility in Montana, the evidence for it isn’t readily available. If this is a scam, the government officials duped into supporting it should be thrown out of office. If the company is legit, there ought to be an investigation as to why it is patrolling the streets in vehicles with “police” decals when the employees are not municipal police. And if this is somehow a botched federal government operation to relocate Guantanamo Bay detainees, there should be Congressional hearings looking into what has occurred. Schedule Your Phone Consultation Below
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« Design on a Dime : Classroom NEXT Reimagining the Free Library of Philadelphia » Williams College Learning Commons Client: Williams College Architect: Bohlin Cywinski Jackson Architects While the project was still in schematic development, Milder Office had the opportunity to work with Bohlin Cywinski Jackson Architects on the interior design of a new central library building at Williams College, a renowned liberal arts college in Williamstown, Massachusetts. At the time, the idea of the library as a Learning Commons was gaining traction and we challenges the Williams community (as well as the architects) to re-imagine the preciousness of the library and to create a range of unique spaces for students to interact with. At the time, many students were opting to study in local cafes that had fewer restrictions and offered more casual social interactions (without being shooshed). Working with students, faculty, library staff and administrators we created four test sites to prototype and publicly test concepts for new learning environments. Each test site included information on the concept and an invitation for comment. creating better outcomes by engaging stakeholders This was not only an opportunity for the planning team to anticipate what will become the new library later on, but to also to involve the larger community at the college in the discussions and decision making about the new building interior. Working with the Williams community over the course of two semesters, we collected data and feedback from all stakeholders through surveys, interviews, as well as public forums and presentations. For Phase Two, the sites were modified in response to the data collected, so to further investigate and further refine how these different approaches to learning benefited the college’s community. The Café: meeting spot and destination with light fare and beverages (previously verboten at the library). The Lounge: Informal with large pillows, low tables, and moveable displays and white boards for delineating space, note taking and collaboration. Alone + Together: Creating a smaller space on the open floor, this installation explored the dynamic between working individually or in groups, and developing dynamics when shifting between both states. Islands: The fourth site explored a specific architectural detail along the facade of the building and looked for options of larger study ‘islands’. Several years later the project was finally completed and we were pleased to see that some of the insights and learning from the our Test Sites were integrated into the final design of the building. floor lounging tatami platform carrels
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Richardson Manor celebrates 50 years of affordable housing Several businesses, elected officials, and community leaders participated in the 50th Anniversary celebration for Richardson Manor. Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett was one of the speakers along with Common Council president Willie Hines pictured with some of the staff. (Photo by Robert A. Bell) The residents of Richardson Manor celebrated the 50th Anniversary of Retirement Housing Foundation (RHF), its sponsoring organization on Aug. 15. Several businesses, elected officials, and community leaders were invited to participate in our celebration. Milwaukee’s Mayor Tom Barrett was one of our speakers along with Alderman Willie Hines. Richardson Manor is a 40 unit facility for low-income, mobility impaired individuals in Milwaukee. Our residents enjoy a friendly, comfortable environment, where they can have time for themselves in complete privacy inside their apartments or involve themselves with social gatherings in our community room. Richardson Manor residents participate in Project H.A.N.D.S. ® (Helping Angels National Donated Support); Project H.A.N.D.S. is an organized effort by residents in more than 70 Retirement Housing Foundation communities to partner with organizations in their own communities who provide services to the homeless or those in need. H.A.N.D.S. ® volunteers sew, knit and crochet needed items such as mittens, hats, scarves, blankets and stuffed animals for families in need. To express their gratitude and appreciation for the wonderful service provided by Milwaukee Fire Department, the residents of Richardson Manor hosts an annual chili cook-off where the Milwaukee Fire Department firefighters sample several chili recipes prepared by the residents and are the judges of the declared winner. A win/ win event, our residents get an opportunity to give back to civil service workers in their community and the firefighters get to sample a variety of great chili recipes. The Retirement Housing Foundation was started by two clergymen from the United Church of Christ and a layperson who, with $7,000, started a dream that has grown to include Richardson Manor and the 166 other communities throughout the United States, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, serving more than 18,000 older adults, persons with disabilities, and low income families. Richardson Manor is the result of a collaborative effort by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and Retirement Housing Foundation (RHF). Popular Interests In This Article: Project H.A.N.D.S., Retirement Housing Foundation, RHF, Richardson Manor, Robert Bell Photography, Tom Barrett, Willie Hines ‘An Opportunity To Give Back’: Willie Hines Jr. Plunges Into New Role As Leader Of Housing Authority HACM Board Appoints Willie L. Hines Jr. as Secretary-Executive Director Milwaukee Swears in New Mayor Cavalier Johnson Mayor Tom Barrett Officially Resigns as Mayor Effective Wednesday, Dec. 22 Mayor Barrett To Be Next Ambassador to Luxembourg
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SB19 stakes its claim to global domination with larger-than-life single “What?” After exciting the public with impressive teasers that raised the bar to global standards, SB19 finally unravels a new music era that not only elevates their sense of creative aptitude and sonic ambition, but also uncovers their range and discipline as thespians of their own craft. Released today via Sony Music Philippines, their new single “What?” stakes its claim to global domination with a contagiously massive sound that’s larger and louder than life. Veering away from the glossy, dance-pop tunes and anthemic ballads of Get In The Zone, SB19 are pushing the envelope production and songwriting-wise on their latest track, as they command supremacy of P-Pop’s explosion in the global market without resorting to formulaic tricks and pandering to trends. This time, the acclaimed boy band are transcending the genre that positioned them to become the formidable stars that they are now: comfortable with the convergence of personalities, styles, and influences — while embracing a musicality that is hard to pin down, and refuses to be categorized. “The song ‘What?’ is really different from what we have done before,” main rapper and lead vocalist Pablo shares in a statement. “This one has a more aggressive take to it compared to our previous songs, so I really had to force out the ‘oomph’ in the voices of the members. I was really meticulous with the recordings, but so were they. That’s why we would record ’til morning and until everyone was satisfied with their parts. The feeling had to be there.” SB19’s very own Pablo, who is also credited as one of the songwriters and producers of SB19’s latest song, reveals that “What?” proves that they’re “not just here to play games or act cool.” He admits, “A lot of people still doubt us, denouncing everything that we do and everything that we’re trying to achieve. We love what we do, that’s why we do it respectfully. ‘What?’ is about self-love and empowerment. Each of us has our own flag. We should be proud of it and raise it as much as we can. As SB19 and as individuals, we know that we’re not the best at everything, but that shouldn’t stop us from what we want to achieve.” The release of the song comes with a visual accompaniment that marks a triumphant return to the band’s groundbreaking aesthetic and empowering message. The music video of “What?” shows SB19 in battle mode as they claim freedom in a fictional, post-apocalyptic war zone, and exude an aura of power and longevity to go along with its cinematic appeal. SB19’s “What?” is the first single off the award-winning group’s yet-to-be-revealed but highly anticipated follow-up to their debut album, Get In The Zone. The song will be available on all digital platforms worldwide this March 9, 2021 (7:00pm Manila time) via Sony Music Philippines. Stay tuned for SB19’s live launch performance, which will air on the band’s Facebook and YouTube pages at 7:30pm, Manila time — on the same day. Thank you for visiting my site and reading my article. Please follow my other social media accounts and read my column “Don’t Miss This” at The Rizal Weekly Post Www.facebook.com/HomeschoolWorld Www.instagram.com/HomeschoolingiscoolWww.twitter.com/Armipazpineda Www.facebook.com/Mimiworld.net Www.facebook.com/Homeiskool.com Www.facebook.com/Kawaiibeautyandlifestyle.com. Email Add: Armipazpineda@gmail.com Tiktok: Ms armipaz YT Channel: Armi Paz Pineda https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAEszY-nm4XIPSphcppyilw
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Letters dating from December 26, 1973 to April 3, 1974, re: schedule of VE Study World Tour Group (1974).--Correspondence Miles, Lawrence D. Takeuchi, Shigeo Ibam (Institute Of Business Adminstration & Management), Tokyo Letters dating from December 26, 1973 to April 3, 1974, re: schedule of VE Study World Tour Group (1974). Arrangements for group to visit Mr. and Mrs. Miles at Sedgefield, on May 8. Attached: itinerary, "visit theme matrix," and letter.
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Tag: alaska winter itinerary Winter Activities in Alaska: 10 Adventures of a Lifetime December 13, 2020.Reading time 47 minutes. Thanks to these winter activities, I had the adventure of a lifetime exploring Alaska over the past month. I never expected to visit Alaska for the first time in the winter, but I couldn’t be more ecstatic that I did! Alaska was a winter wonderland and an absolute dream come true. I had experiences that […]
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No Comments on The rabbit hole Three quarters of a unit square placed at the origin are shaded as shown. The remaining quarter is treated similarly but mirrored, and so on to infinity. What are the coordinates of the vanishing point? The vanishing point is at (2/3,2/3). From reflection symmetry in the diagonal, it is clear that x=y. Now if you look at the top vertex of the three-quarter shape, its x-coordinate goes from 0 to 1 to 1/2 to 3/4 to 5/8 and so on as the shape gets smaller. This has the pattern 1-1/2+1/4-1/8+…. In other words it is the sum of (-1/2)n with n=0,1,… This is called the Geometric series and it tends to 1/(1+1/2)=2/3 as n goes to infinity. The rabbit in it’s hole With it’s ears so tall And his eyes so small The rabbit is jumping With it’s twinkly nose Here and there a jump he goes Run run to that hole Leading to Alice’s wonderland And no one to understand In deep soft sand With tunnels dipped so deep No end ! Tags coordinates, infinity, limit, square ← Up and down → Gizeh
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Information on the Manitoba Child Benefit You can download a two-page PDF file explaining how to apply for the benefit here. The following information is from the Government of Manitoba. The Manitoba Child Benefit provides monthly benefits to lower income Manitobans with dependent children in their care. It also provides parents with additional assistance to help with some of the costs of prescription eyeglasses for their children. Low-income families may be eligible for up to $35.00 per month, per child. Low-income families may be eligible for up to $420 tax free each year for every child. For a single parent of three children working full or part time and earning $15,000 or less, this totals $1,260 with partial benefits for parents who earn $15,000 to $20,000. Resident of Manitoba Have dependent children under the age of 18 who are in your care In receipt of Canada Child Benefits for dependent children* Family income is below a specific level and is based on the previous year’s income Cannot be in receipt of Employment and Income Assistance unless you are ONLY receiving the health benefits portion of EIA. The Manitoba Child Benefit is paid through direct deposit. Download a MCB direct deposit form here. To apply for the Manitoba Child Benefit, download a printable PDF version of the guidelines for completing the MCB application, and then fill out and mail in the a printable PDF version of the MCB application. Contact the Government of Manitoba 100 – 114 Garry Street Winnipeg, MB R3C 4V4 *If you are looking for information about the Canada Child Benefit, please contact 1-800-387-1193 Melanie Ferris2020-09-24T14:14:35-05:00September 24, 2020|News|
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MKO Chiefs Call on Province of Manitoba to Address Broken Justice System in Northern Manitoba Treaty One Territory, Winnipeg, MB –Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak (MKO) Inc. is deeply concerned about justice issues and the Constitutional rights of First Nations people involved in the system in Northern Manitoba. Recent stories shared by the Winnipeg Free Press highlight the call from a Manitoba judge for an independent review of the province’s justice system, after a legal challenge exposed a “dysfunctional” bail system and “long-standing and glaring systemic issues” in Northern courts. “I commend Justice Chris Martin of the Court of Queen’s Bench in raising awareness that the Charter rights of two Northern Manitoban citizens were violated due to unacceptably long waits in jail before they were able to apply for bail,” stated Grand Chief Garrison Settee. “The problems in the justice system, particularly Northern courts, are wide ranging and it’s time for the province to take steps to address the failures of the justice system in Northern Manitoba.” At an Assembly in November 2019, Northern Chiefs passed a resolution calling for the need for a remand centre in Thompson, Manitoba. When MKO citizens become involved with the criminal justice system, they are first transported to Thompson. While they are waiting for their case to be dealt with in the court system, MKO citizens are restrained as they are transported between Thompson and The Pas. This poses a safety concern. A remand centre in Thompson would eliminate this safety concern and would enable families, including children, to visit with their relatives while waiting for the courts to deal with their cases. “It is important to note that the involvement of an MKO citizen in the criminal justice system affects the entire community. Therefore, I urge the province to work with MKO to implement a culturally responsive approach to address the diverse healing and justice needs in our First Nations,” said Grand Chief Settee. “There is a need to conduct a comprehensive review to overhaul restorative justice policies and programs in Northern Manitoba to ensure that it focuses on rehabilitation to prevent recidivism and decrease the incarceration rates of MKO citizens as well as reconciliation with victims and the community at large.” Restorative justice programming would complement the need for a remand centre in Thompson by offering an alternative for less serious offences. Restorative justice can be defined as a community and victim-centered sentencing philosophy that emphasizes offender accountability and responsibility through negotiated restitution. Melanie Ferris2020-01-27T16:04:33-06:00January 27, 2020|Media Releases|
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Tagged: bets In urban areas, people are pissed off with regular monotonous life and will hardly get any free time for them to get relaxed. It leads to...
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12463
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2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12464
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1.6.9 Sources of drinking water products Chlorine dioxide products are legally approved worldwide, among other things, for the disinfection of drinking water and are legally available on the market. But please do not ask providers for the MMS application protocols according to Jim Humble! For legal reasons, they may not and will not provide any information on this. The same applies to suppliers of calcium hypochlorite (MMS2) as a pool cleaner. This “other kind” of application as a medicine is not approved and such self-treatments are also always carried out on one’s own responsibility. As described in the chapter “MMS for crisis prevention” and in the MMS tips further back, for me MMS belongs in every household, even if you don’t want to do health applications according to Jim Humble. As many requests for sources of supply for chlorine dioxide products come from many countries where there are locally different manufacturers, suppliers, formulations and qualities, and as we are not able to test all of them all the time, we are announcing the following source of supply for drinking water products of the AQUARIUS pro life brand: www.aquarius-prolife.com The products are manufactured entirely in accordance with the strict German drinking water regulations, comply with the latest formulations and development stages (including the CDSplus), are securely packaged and come with instructions in 11 languages. In addition, the webshop can be operated in over 11 languages and, above all, delivers worldwide. The quality of these products is known to us. There are certainly other sources with decent quality and similar naming, but we have no experience and make no comments about them. The product information and safety data sheets of the respective manufacturers should always be observed. Please also note the warnings regarding outdated remedies and formulations in chapter “Important warnings” further on!
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12465
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Kids Pottery - March 21, 2023 - 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm Homeschool Art Spark - March 24, 2023 - 9:30 am - 12:30 pm Dressing the Abbey: Afternoon High Tea - March 26, 2023 - 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm Family Art - March 30, 2023 - 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm The Happy Flea Market: Monthly Arts & Crafts Meet - April 1, 2023 - 9:00 am - 1:00 pm Jazz Traditions and Jam - April 2, 2023 - 2:00 pm Dressing the Abbey: Easter Floral Design Class - April 6, 2023 - 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Eastern Shore Art Center: First Friday Art Walk - April 7, 2023 - 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Toddler Time - April 13, 2023 - 10:00 am - 11:30 am LoDa Artwalk: Mobile - April 14, 2023 - 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm Special Botanical Art Class - April 16, 2023 - 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm Archaeology Day at Historic Oakleigh - April 22, 2023 - 10:00 am - 4:00 pm Central Arts Collective Spring Open House - April 22, 2023 - 10:00 am - 4:00 pm Family Art - April 27, 2023 - 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Plein Air Dauphin Island 2023 - April 28, 2023 - April 30, 2023 - 10:00 am - 4:00 pm Eastern Shore Art Center: First Friday Art Walk - May 5, 2023 - 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm The Happy Flea Market: Monthly Arts & Crafts Meet - May 6, 2023 - 9:00 am - 1:00 pm Toddler Time - May 11, 2023 - 10:00 am - 11:30 am LoDa Artwalk: Mobile - May 12, 2023 - 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12466
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Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) E. Ettorre, E. Cerra, B. Marigliano, M. Vigliotta, A. Vulcano, C. Fossati, G. De Benedetto, A. Servello, P. Andreozzi, V. Marigliano Istituto San Raffaele Pisana Few therapeutic options are available nowadays to improve the prognosis of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). There are rather several evidences in literature that controlling vascular risk factors may be an effective intervention for modifying the course of this disease. The aim of our study was to investigate the role of CRF in 50 patients with MCI according to Petersens's criteria, and to evaluate their influence on cognitive and behavioral features of the disease and on the development of dementia. Statistical analysis of the data showed that the 60% of the patients with MCI and CRF developed dementia, while 40% maintained the same cognitive conditions at the end of the study. Only 32% of the subjects without cardiovascular comorbidities developed dementia. The results of the study suggest that CRF play a key role in cognitive decline of patients with MCI. Patients with MCI and CRF showed not only worse cognitive performances, but also behavioral disorders, depression and functional disability. Patients with CRF had higher conversion rate to AD than the other group, with a mean disease-free period 3 months shorter than the control group. Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics https://doi.org/10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 Mild cognitive impairment Health(social science) 10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 Dive into the research topics of 'Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)'. Together they form a unique fingerprint. cognitive impairment Social Sciences 100% dementia Social Sciences 68% Cognitive Dysfunction Medicine & Life Sciences 66% Dementia Medicine & Life Sciences 34% Alzheimer Disease Medicine & Life Sciences 21% Statistical Data Interpretation Medicine & Life Sciences 16% comorbidity Social Sciences 16% Behavioural Disorders Social Sciences 16% Ettorre, E., Cerra, E., Marigliano, B., Vigliotta, M., Vulcano, A., Fossati, C., De Benedetto, G., Servello, A., Andreozzi, P., & Marigliano, V. (2012). Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, 54(2), 330-332. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). / Ettorre, E.; Cerra, E.; Marigliano, B. et al. In: Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Vol. 54, No. 2, 03.2012, p. 330-332. Ettorre, E, Cerra, E, Marigliano, B, Vigliotta, M, Vulcano, A, Fossati, C, De Benedetto, G, Servello, A, Andreozzi, P & Marigliano, V 2012, 'Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)', Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, vol. 54, no. 2, pp. 330-332. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 Ettorre E, Cerra E, Marigliano B, Vigliotta M, Vulcano A, Fossati C et al. Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics. 2012 Mar;54(2):330-332. doi: 10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 Ettorre, E. ; Cerra, E. ; Marigliano, B. et al. / Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). In: Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics. 2012 ; Vol. 54, No. 2. pp. 330-332. @article{0b078581984d4ba6af6e00e3dae48adc, title = "Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)", abstract = "Few therapeutic options are available nowadays to improve the prognosis of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). There are rather several evidences in literature that controlling vascular risk factors may be an effective intervention for modifying the course of this disease. The aim of our study was to investigate the role of CRF in 50 patients with MCI according to Petersens's criteria, and to evaluate their influence on cognitive and behavioral features of the disease and on the development of dementia. Statistical analysis of the data showed that the 60% of the patients with MCI and CRF developed dementia, while 40% maintained the same cognitive conditions at the end of the study. Only 32% of the subjects without cardiovascular comorbidities developed dementia. The results of the study suggest that CRF play a key role in cognitive decline of patients with MCI. Patients with MCI and CRF showed not only worse cognitive performances, but also behavioral disorders, depression and functional disability. Patients with CRF had higher conversion rate to AD than the other group, with a mean disease-free period 3 months shorter than the control group.", keywords = "Alzheimer's disease, Cardiovascular risk factors, Mild cognitive impairment", author = "E. Ettorre and E. Cerra and B. Marigliano and M. Vigliotta and A. Vulcano and C. Fossati and {De Benedetto}, G. and A. Servello and P. Andreozzi and V. Marigliano", doi = "10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025", journal = "Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics", T1 - Role of cardiovascular risk factors (CRF) in the patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) AU - Ettorre, E. AU - Cerra, E. AU - Marigliano, B. AU - Vigliotta, M. AU - Vulcano, A. AU - Fossati, C. AU - De Benedetto, G. AU - Servello, A. AU - Andreozzi, P. AU - Marigliano, V. N2 - Few therapeutic options are available nowadays to improve the prognosis of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). There are rather several evidences in literature that controlling vascular risk factors may be an effective intervention for modifying the course of this disease. The aim of our study was to investigate the role of CRF in 50 patients with MCI according to Petersens's criteria, and to evaluate their influence on cognitive and behavioral features of the disease and on the development of dementia. Statistical analysis of the data showed that the 60% of the patients with MCI and CRF developed dementia, while 40% maintained the same cognitive conditions at the end of the study. Only 32% of the subjects without cardiovascular comorbidities developed dementia. The results of the study suggest that CRF play a key role in cognitive decline of patients with MCI. Patients with MCI and CRF showed not only worse cognitive performances, but also behavioral disorders, depression and functional disability. Patients with CRF had higher conversion rate to AD than the other group, with a mean disease-free period 3 months shorter than the control group. AB - Few therapeutic options are available nowadays to improve the prognosis of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). There are rather several evidences in literature that controlling vascular risk factors may be an effective intervention for modifying the course of this disease. The aim of our study was to investigate the role of CRF in 50 patients with MCI according to Petersens's criteria, and to evaluate their influence on cognitive and behavioral features of the disease and on the development of dementia. Statistical analysis of the data showed that the 60% of the patients with MCI and CRF developed dementia, while 40% maintained the same cognitive conditions at the end of the study. Only 32% of the subjects without cardiovascular comorbidities developed dementia. The results of the study suggest that CRF play a key role in cognitive decline of patients with MCI. Patients with MCI and CRF showed not only worse cognitive performances, but also behavioral disorders, depression and functional disability. Patients with CRF had higher conversion rate to AD than the other group, with a mean disease-free period 3 months shorter than the control group. KW - Alzheimer's disease KW - Mild cognitive impairment U2 - 10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 DO - 10.1016/j.archger.2011.04.025 JO - Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics JF - Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12467
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Family, Money Matters It’s a new year and if you’re like two-thirds of Americans, you have a 2023 New Year’s Resolution that sets financial goals, according to a […]
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12468
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Archive for the ‘Fall TV 2013’ Category ‘Survivor: Blood vs. Water’ Recap: The Worst Challenge Performance Ever? 'Survivor: Blood vs. Water' (CBS) Quick Note: We’re going to be bringing you all kinds of “Survivor” fun this season including episode recaps, exit interviews, and Power Rankings with Malcolm Freberg. Be sure to follow me on Twitter (@gordonholmes) for up-to-the-minute news and info. Another Quick Note: I was on hand for the filming of this first episode, so be on the lookout for special Behind-the-Scenes Tidbits from my time in the Philippines. 39 Days (well…technically 39.5), 20 People, 1 “Survivor” Blog We kick things off with each of the pairs being carted off to mysterious locations. Gervase lets us know that he’s going to win because he was on the original “Survivor.” Oh…so that’s why Richard Hatch, Sue Hawk, and Rudy Boesch all won their second time around… Former “Big Brother” winner Hayden calls “Big Brother,” “’Survivor’ in a house.” I don’t know if I’ve ever been more insulted. However, based on this past summer he could call “Survivor,” “‘Big Brother’ with less racism.” Wait, nevermind…there’s Colton. (Oh c’mon…that’s fair. It’s up to him to be less racist…or even not racist at all.) Sure enough, Colton lets us know there’s a new Colton this season. I’m all for that. John thinks there will be big targets on his and Candice’s backs due to being young and athletic. Or, because your wife has a history of flipping. Next up, Monica claims to be a wily veteran. Interesting theory seeing as she’s been on the show 14 days and Rupert has been out there for a hundred. Aras and Vytas seem to have a bit of a contentious relationship. Don’t be fooled, these guys are everybody’s picks to go far. Finally, the individual pairs are greeted by a note that tells them the game has started and they’ll have to camp out alone for the night. And thus begins “Day Zero.” The duos all meet up with Jeff Probst the next morning and it doesn’t seem like anyone had trouble out in the wilderness. Probst greets the players, then immediately lets them know they won’t be on the same tribe with their loved ones. Brad admits that he’d consider throwing a challenge if it meant Monica could win a tarp. Marissa didn’t approve of that answer. Ask Russell Swan, it always comes down to the tarp. The loved ones split up and it’s smooch city. Rupert is psyched that he won’t have to vote for Laura, but he’s also worried that he won’t be able to protect her. (Oh you wait, Rupert.) Alright, let’s take a look at the tribes as they currently stand… The Galang Tribe (wearing yellow) Aras – Musician, 31 Candice – Physician, 30 Colton – Student Teacher, 22 Gervase – Cigar Lounge Owner, 43 Kat – Full-Time Student/Sales, 23 Laura M. – Co-Owner of Morett Construction, 43 Monica – Homemaker, 42 Rupert – Mentor for Troubled Teens, 49 Tina – Motivational Speaker, 52 Tyson – Store Manager, 34 The Tadhana Tribe (wearing red) Brad – Attorney, 44 Caleb – Post Office Manager/Farmer, 26 Ciera – Cosmetology Student, 24 Hayden – Real Estate, 26 John – Physician, 30 Katie – Hedge Fund Support, 25 Laura B. – Merchandiser, 44 Marissa – Student, 21 Rachel – Cocktail Waitress/Graphic Designer, 33 Vytas – Yoga Instructor, 33 After they get their buffs, J-Pro breaks the news that they’ll immediately have to vote someone out. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: The players weren’t allowed to talk before the vote, but they were all trying to make eye contact like crazy. Tadhana’s vote: Vytas votes for Laura B., Brad votes for Laura B., Hayden votes for Laura B., Laura B. votes for Marissa, Caleb votes for Laura B., Marissa votes for Brad, and Ciera votes for Laura B. Laura B. is a goner. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: Laura B. was not pleased. Maybe it’s appropriate that she’s the pirate’s wife, cause she used some salty language. Eventually she tried to rationalize it by saying, “They’re newbies, they don’t know what they’re doing.” Galang’s vote: Candice votes for Laura M., Tyson votes for Laura M., Tina votes for Candice, Kat votes for Candice, Colton votes for Candice, Rupert votes for Laura M., Monica votes for Candice, Aras votes for Gervase, and Laura M. votes for Candice. All is not lost though, as Probst lets them know that Redemption Island is in play this season. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: Candice wasn’t sure how Redemption Island worked. Before Probst sends them off, he decides to give the loved ones an opportunity to take their place on Redemption Island. Rupert immediately steps forward. Tina tried to stop him, but the big, emotional lug had made up his mind. Tina is ticked off because Rupert is a good provider. Also, Laura B. had just said the f word about a dozen times and probably hadn’t made any friends. John is offered the same deal, but he and Candice decide that he should stay in the game. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbits: This opening went on forever. Here are some things that didn’t make the cut… • Colton said he’d rather vote for his mother than for Caleb. • It was at the marooning that the cast first heard the term “Blood vs. Water.” None of them watched the “Survivor: Caramoan” finale because they were all sequestered at the time. • Gervase and Laura B. got into an argument because Laura B. claimed she didn’t know why she voted for Marissa. • Tina dubbed Galang, “Go Long.” Her tribe approved. • At one point Probst had to lay some smack down on Monica because she was dancing around his questions. • Rupert snapped his voting board in half because he was so mad. Over at Galang beach, Gervase immediately says that a target is already on Laura B.’s back. She’s having a rough morning. Tyson helps the Galangians make their first fire using some tips he learned from Boston Rob. Ah…Boston Rob was mentioned before Russell. He wins. Later, Monica asks Colton if he’s going to be someone she can trust or if he’s going to stab her in the back. He replies, “Yes.” That’s hilarious. At Tadhana, Brad is worried that his tarp comment is going to come back and bite him. So, he calls a tribe meeting and lets them know that he’ll go 100% at all times. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: Both tribes got a ton of hardware like hammers, nails, etc. But Tadhana’s machete broke almost immediately. Afterwards, Brad tries to start up an all-guy alliance, but they all seem wary of him. He tries to talk us through the math, but it was embarrassing. Good thing he’s a lawyer and not an accountant. The Tadhanians are also having no luck making fire. But, at least it gives Brad, Ciera, and Vytas a chance to bond. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: Not having fire to boil the water had to be a nightmare because it was ridiculously hot out there. It was the first time I was ever on location where I thought, “Nope, couldn’t do it.” Back at Galang, Colton opens up to his tribe about the difficulties of growing up gay in the deep south. He breaks down and cries because he misses Caleb so much. Honestly, Caleb is awesome. I don’t blame him. Over at Redemption Island (Population: 2), Candice chops away at a coconut as a way to get revenge on everyone who voted for her. That’ll show ‘em. She also isn’t happy about living with Rupert. Apparently he isn’t doing anything around camp…which is very un-Rupert-like. Rupert says he’s conserving his strength for the challenge. Hey…look at Mr. Strategy! Immunity Challenge Time: Six players from each tribe will run off into the ocean. They’ll have to climb over a rope net, a wheel, and a set of crates. From there they’ll swim down to untie a boat, then row it back to shore. Then they’ll take a chest out of the boat and take it to the other three teammates. Those teammates will use the puzzle pieces in the chest to create a wheel. First tribe to use the wheel to raise their tribe’s flag wins immunity. Before the challenge gets underway, Probst gives Laura B. her Galang buff. Tadhana also lies about having fire. Swimming for Galang will be Tyson, Kat, Aras, Laura B., Gervase, and Colton while Marissa, Brad, Vytas, Hayden, John, and Rachel will go for Tadhana. The challenge starts and Tyson tears through the course. The newbies get a bit of lead that only gets bigger when Gervase has to stop to catch his breath. It gets embarrassing as Gervase just stands on the platform while Aras tries to cheer him on. And, once he was over the crates, Aras had to drag him to the boat. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: No lie, it took Gervase forever to get over those crates. The editing was kind. Things even up at the boat a little, but Galang rows off course and eventually ends up rowing backwards. Tadhana now has a huge lead as Caleb, Ciera, and Katie start working on the puzzle. Galang eventually gets to shore and Tina, Monica, and Laura M. fly through the puzzle. It wasn’t even close. Galang wins immunity. When it’s over, Gervase starts talking major smack to Tadhana. He did not come off looking well at all, hence the title of this recap. Not only was he a major physical liability, but he finished it off by ticking off nine potential jury members. I love Gervase, but that may have been the most damaging challenge performance I’ve ever seen. (And yes, I remember Dan Lembo.) Before they head off, Colton breaks down because he misses Caleb so much. Don’t worry, Colton. Anyone who votes for Caleb has to answer to me. Back at Tadhana, Brad tells us that he hates to lose. Oh…that’s rare. Katie is nervous because it’s obvious that the puzzle team is responsible for the loss. Marissa is embarrassed that Gervase was bragging after the victory. She’s also not psyched that his reaction puts a target on her back. Politicking around camp seems to be between Marissa and Katie. Marissa because of Gervase’s outburst and Katie because she didn’t help much with the puzzle. Vytas, wanting to stay tight with everyone, is trying to keep ties with the ladies. That could be dangerous, Vytas. It’s too early for that business. That night at Tribal Council, fire represents your life. Except it doesn’t because of Redemption Island. John says he has a lot of guilt about not replacing Candice. He cries a bit and Ciera and Marissa are quick to comfort him. He also says he’s going to vote to make his tribe strong, but it’s an added advantage if the person he votes out is someone Candice can beat. Brad calls out Gervase for his celebration. Marissa thinks Galang should be more mature because they’re veterans. Vytas points out that this is the first season where a tribe has to be concerned when they send the other team to Tribal. Marissa thinks she should be judged on her performance and attitude, not Gervase’s. Katie wouldn’t be surprised if she goes home based on her challenge performance. Brad says they’re not voting based solely on the puzzle. Voting Time: Katie votes for Marissa, Marissa votes for Katie, and the rest of the votes are secret. J-Pro tallies and returns. We’ve got one vote for Katie, four votes for Marissa, and the third person to be sent to Redemption Island is…Marissa. Behind-the-Scenes Tidbit: Brad made it a point to say his Marissa vote was because of Gervase. Ouch. Verdict: I bounced around a dozen different ways the family member twist could mess with the game. Not once did I think a tribe could get so mad at one person that they’d vote for that person’s loved one to spite them. I think that just goes to show that I have no idea where this season is going. But, I’m excited to see where it goes. Who’s Going to Win? Everything I know about “Survivor” tells me the returnees have too big of an advantage. But, I can’t help but think Vytas is the guy. Tags:jeff probst, survivor, survivor blood vs. water Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor: Blood vs. Water’ Recap: The Worst Challenge Performance Ever? ‘Survivor’ Host Jeff Probst Recaps the ‘Blood vs. Water’ Premiere Jeff Probst (CBS) Gordon Holmes: Let’s start at the beginning, Day Zero…I think we expected everyone to show up cold, muddy, and miserable, but everyone seemed to be in good spirits. Jeff Probst: We didn’t know what the weather was going to do. Fortunately for them they got a beautiful night with a beautiful moon and no rain. The good thing about “Survivor” is whatever happens we use it to our favor. It became; welcome to the calm before the storm. Those people who never played were like, “What were they talking about? ‘Survivor’ is not so tough!” Yeah, you were out there for four hours with no obstacles. They’ll get so hot during the days, then so cold when it rains, they’ll be thinking, “Oh my God, that was like a camping trip.” Holmes: Let’s talk about Gervase’s performance in the challenge. My jaw was on the floor. Probst: Gervase’s charm is that he gets by on so little. It’s fascinating to watch. He was the worst in the challenge today, but he talked the most trash. I love that. Holmes: If Marissa getting the boot had something to do with the way Gervase talked trash, that’s a big deal. Who would’ve ever thought a tribe would punish someone based on the actions of their loved one? Probst: Never, I was completely surprised. I’m still thinking about the ramifications of the notion that you could be out here playing your best game but your idiot family member does something and people get mad and hold it against you. Or, even more likely, they think, “I don’t want to be in an alliance with that idiot, so if we keep this person I might because we’re going to merge at some point. I’m going to get rid of you now so that won’t happen.” Who knows what’s going to happen at the duel, but I bet if we held it tonight Marissa would look at Gervase and say, “It’s because of you, just so you know. It’s because you were a jackass. You should take my spot in this duel.” That’s what I would say if I was Marissa. I’d lean on my uncle. Holmes: What do you think Gervase would do? Probst: I don’t think Gervase would quit, and that would kind of be a quit. I don’t think Gervase works hard enough to win anything at Redemption Island. Holmes: In other news, your seven picks to possibly win the game managed to stay away from Redemption Island. How does that feel? Probst: (Laughs) I feel good, I feel vindicated and justified for all of the naysayers who thought my picks weren’t worthy. Holmes: Now as we’re talking this hasn’t aired, we’re sitting on a Tribal Council set. Do you think you have the pieces to put together a solid premiere episode? Probst: We have a great first episode. We have an opening marooning that starts the night before, we have a split, we have an initial vote out, Rupert saves his wife. We have tears from Candice’s husband John when he doesn’t make the switch. We have one tribe that gets fire, another that doesn’t, showing the value of experience. We have a great challenge where the returning players are so bad in the water that there’s no way they win…except for the fact that the newbies are so bad at puzzles that the returnees manage to comeback and win. Then we have a blindside at Tribal Council. We’ve got all the pieces. Holmes: There have been a lot of doubts with all of these twists. A lot of those doubts came from me. However, I’m prepared to say it looks like you guys are off to a great start. As a producer, how does it feel to put me in my place? Probst: Aww…I don’t feel like I’ve put you in your place, but it’s great to hear you say that. One thing about talking to the press of “Survivor” is you guys know the game and you’re usually not excited about anything we do. (Laughs) Holmes: (Laughs) That’s fair. Probst: I get it, you’re shooting bullets saying, “Prove it.” But we’re going on our fourteenth year and you have to continually try new things, and that’s what we did with this. And we’re well aware it’s a risk. But we’re one episode in and there’s certainly a lot to talk about. With a little bit of “Survivor” luck, hopefully we’ll have a really good season. Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Host Jeff Probst Recaps the ‘Blood vs. Water’ Premiere ‘Survivor: Blood vs. Water’ Official Pre-Season Rankings When did this get so hard?! Back in the day it was safe to assume that the annoying people were going home first and the challenge liabilities were next. From there, we’d hit the merge and the challenge threats were sent packing. Then it was anyone’s guess who’d take home the big prize. But now? People are dying to take the annoying people to the end. There are idols and Redemption Islands waiting to give people a second (or third) chance. And anyone can be targeted based on what their family members have done. Crazy town. Welp, here goes nothing… Read Vytas’s Interview Read Caleb’s Interview 1. Vytas – Vytas and Aras might be totally different outside of the game, but inside of the game they both have the tools to get the job done. They’re smart, they’re strategic, and they’re personable. They’re strong, but not too strong. However, the thing that gives Vytas an advantage is the fact that he’s a little rough around the edges. While people won’t want to take Mr. Perfect to the end, Vytas might have an enemy or two on the jury. 2. Caleb – I feel like Caleb is going to be a power player’s right hand. He’s going to be loyal, he’s going to be amazing around camp, and he’s going to be solid in challenges. If he’s in the right alliance he could find a seat at the final Tribal and he’s definitely likable enough to win over a jury. Read Aras’s Interview Read Ciera’s Interview 3. Aras – There’s no need to question Aras’s ability to win this game, because he’s done it before. He’s still the same guy. He’s likable, he has a good head on his shoulders, and he’s very even-tempered. The only weakness in his game might be that’s he’s too nice. I think I’d have trouble trusting him. 4. Ciera – On paper, it looks like Tadhana could dominate in the challenges. (Although, returnees tend to have a serious advantage in challenges.) What that could mean for Ciera is a safe trip to the merge and the possibility that her mother will be an early elimination. Now, that may sound like bad news for her, but I think there’s a real benefit to being a lone player out there. Someone’s got to be a couple’s third alliance member. Read Tina’s Interview Read Katie’s Interview 5. Tina – If there’s one thing I learned from this season’s pre-game interviews, it’s that a lot of people want to align with Tina. You know who everyone wanted to align with before “Survivor: Caramoan”? Some guy named Cochran. 6. Katie – Anybody who knows me knows I love me some Sophie Clarke. Maybe the most underrated winner of all time. Katie reminds me of Sophie quite a bit. Read Gervase’s Interview Read Tyson’s Interview 7. Gervase – Most people think Gervase’s greatest asset is that he’s likable. I respectfully disagree. While, I do find my fellow Philadelphian (maybe not a word) to be a great guy, I think his biggest asset is that nothing sticks to him. If Teflon Gervase manages to sneak into the final three, he could brush off any backstabbing he had to do and take the whole thing. 8. Tyson – I wanted to put Tyson higher than this, but I kept coming back to one thing; how would he perform at a final Tribal Council? If he has to cut throats on the way to the end, can he convince those people to give him the win? Would the world spin off its axis if Tyson had to be serious? Read John’s Interview Read Hayden’s Interview 9. John – Mr. Cody has all of the tools necessary to make it to the end. And, he’s a great guy. But, nobody is going to want to keep a physical specimen like him around after the merge. It’s rare that the Captain America types aren’t taken out by the rest of the pack. 10. Hayden – Our buddy Hayden is in the same boat as John, but with another disadvantage heaped on top – his “Big Brother” win. Everybody knows how dangerous he is. Read Laura M.’s Interview Read Candice’s Interview 11. Laura M. – A lot of people were scratching their heads when they saw Laura’s name on the cast list. But, if they go back and watch “Samoa” they’re realize that she’s a savvy player who can go in challenges. My big concern for her is I’m not quite sure where she’ll fit in with the rest of Galang. 12. Candice – Cochran was able to shake the “flipper” tag last season. I don’t think Candice will be so lucky. Everyone remembers her “Cook Islands” mutiny and I’m sure Rupert will be more than happy to remind everyone about what happened during “Heroes vs. Villains.” Read Rachel’s Interview Read Colton’s Interview 13. Rachel – Rachel’s a super tough person to rank because both Tyson and Jeff Probst were worried that her emotions might get the best of her. That’s a shame, because she has the right easy-going personality to go deep into this game and she’s charming enough to win over a jury. 14. Colton – Nobody needs an image makeover like Colton. In fact, with his controversial past, he seems like a great goat to take to the end. But, anyone who didn’t purge “One World” from their memory (and many of us have tried) will remember that Colton was running around like a chicken with his head cut off and stabbing people in the back the entire time. Maybe if he can rein in that conduct he’ll have a shot. Read Marissa’s Interview Read Rupert’s Interview 15. Marissa – I like Marissa a lot. She’s a ton of fun and full of life. But, I worry that she might be a little too open for “Survivor.” A little too trusting. If she makes it to the merge she could stick around for a while, but I think that’s a big “if.” 16. Rupert – Next to Russell Hantz, Rupert has to be the most polarizing player in “Survivor” history. Lots of people can’t get enough of him, while others simply don’t buy his act. (For the record, I personally enjoy him.) Where this is going to cause a major problem for Rupert is…the people he’s playing with don’t buy his act. He’ll probably be safe until the merge because Galang is the weaker tribe, but after that’s he’s a goner. Read Laura B.’s Interview Read Brad’s Interview 17. Laura B. – Scroll back up this list and look at all of the names that are in red. Those are Laura’s Tadhana teammates and the majority of them are much younger than she is. How is she going to fit in? Add that to the fact that she’s wearing an outfit that’s very similar to her unpopular husband and you have a recipe for disaster. 18. Brad – The Culpeppers broke out a controversial plan during their pre-game interview. They’re going to tell the jury to vote for whoever they go to the end with. Why? Because they don’t need the money. Interesting…but Jimmy Johnson went into “Survivor: Nicaragua” with that strategy and was the third person out. Read Monica’s Interview Read Kat’s Interview 19. Monica – In the first-ever season with couples, people are going to be looking to break up the duos that have the potential to dominate after the merge. First on that list has to be Brad and Monica. They’re just too high-profile, too early in the game. 20. Kat –I love me some Kat. Power Rankings represent. But I think people are going to be mega wary of Hayden, and that puts a big target on her back. Especially if Galang loses as often as I think they might. Posted in Fall TV 2013, General, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor: Blood vs. Water’ Official Pre-Season Rankings Tags:jeff probst, rachel foulger, survivor, survivor blood vs. water, tyson apostol Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Castaways Tyson & Rachel: ‘She’s the Sweetness to My Salty’ Watch the First Seven Minutes of ‘Survivor: Blood vs. Water’ [iframe http://xfinitytv.comcast.net/watch/Survivor%3A-Blood-vs.-Water/6541379645042428112/48414275989/Survivor%3A-Blood-vs.-Water–First-Seven-Minutes/embed 580 476] Tags:survivor, survivor blood vs. water Posted in Fall TV 2013, General, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on Watch the First Seven Minutes of ‘Survivor: Blood vs. Water’ ‘Survivor’ Castaways Monica & Brad: ‘I Want People to Be Miserable’ Monica and Brad Culpepper (CBS) Name: Monica Culpepper Relationship to Significant Castaway: Brad’s Wife Previous Season: “Survivor: One World” – fifth person eliminated Current Residence: Tampa, Florida Occupation: Former NFL Wife, Homemaker Name: Brad Culpepper Relationship to Significant Castaway: Monica’s Husband Occupation: Attorney and Retired NFL Player. Played for the Minnesota Vikings, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Chicago Bears. Personal Claim to Fame: My 21-year marriage. Pet Peeves: Hypocrisy and long goodbyes. Three Words to Describe You: Tenacious, independent, and forward-thinking. Gordon Holmes: No offense, Brad. But I’m so sick of these pro football players turned lawyers being cast on this show. Brad Culpepper: (Laughs) Yeah, I used to be a caveman, now I’m a lawyer. Actually, I got my law degree while I was playing. I’ve spent 12 years as an attorney, but right now I’m getting the butterflies like I’m about to head out on Sunday morning. Monica Culpepper: Against the Miami Dolphins, through the tunnel. Brad hasn’t competed… Brad: Well, I’ve competed higher than this level. Gordon: There is no higher level than “Survivor.” Monica: (Laughs) Exactly. Brad: This is as close as I can get to the NFL level. Gordon: He’s smart, he’s in good shape, he’s had two very lucrative careers. What do you see in this guy? Brad: Right? Monica: There’s a target on him. He’s my shield. Brad: She’s going to dump me for John Cochran. Monica: Right. We’ve got lots of strategies and lots of ideas. Every single day we need to realize we’re a target. And every single day we need to figure out how they will help themselves by voting someone else off. Brad: This is a game about one winner. You have to convince someone that it’s in their best interest to keep me or it’s in their best interest to get rid of someone else. That’s the game. We’re not sure on how they’re going to split us up. But, we’re used to living with each other and there are loved ones who are not. We’re one person, we can finish each other sentences. I can definitely give her information and run scenarios by her and get truthful responses. Monica: But this time I’m the wily veteran. Brad: You can play as many “Survivors” as you want, I guarantee I’m going to catch more fish, build more fire, and whatever else. Monica: He grew up on an island in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico that you can only get to by boat. He’s an Eagle Scout. Brad: Yeah, but that’s only a third of the game. Monica: Yeah, and the social part and the strategic part I can help you with. And I’m hoping the people out there realize he is a workhorse. I want them to ride him to their goal. Do I think a jury is going to give a retired NFL player the prize? No. The only chance we have of winning at a final three is if we’re playing with Osama or Hitler. Gordon: You’re out of luck on that one. I think I’d notice if they were walking around. Monica: So, the chances of the jury giving it to us are slim. Brad: There are different scenarios, the only reason John Cochran won was because he had a shield. He had the Three Amigos at the merge. The conversation should be, you need me at the merge because you need someone to deflect the arrows off of you. But there are a lot of athletic people here. It’s the John Cochrans we have to look out for. Gordon: I’m seeing a few “One World” folks in this cast. Does that work to your advantage? Monica: On my season those girls had an alliance from the start. I worked my tail off, cooked chickens, did all the fire, boiled everyone’s undergarments while they laid in the sun. We have a tribal swap and I landed on the tribe with four men and three women, but I had Colton. Colton came to me on day three and said, “I’m quitting the game. I need a mom. What can you do?” I said, “Do you have a boyfriend?” He said, “Yes, the love of my life, Caleb.” And I said, “One day you guys are going to adopt children and they’re going to watch and see what you did on ‘Survivor.’ They’re going to know what dad did. Do you want them to see you quit?” Brad: So you talked him out of quitting. Gordon: Oh, so it’s your fault. Brad: For a while. Monica: Yeah, bad move by me. I talked a lot of people out of quitting. But that Monica is back in Samoa. Gordon: Now you’re a bad ass house of fire. Monica: No doubt. But then we’ve got three men vs. three women and Colton. Brad: He backstabbed her. Monica: I thought Colton was on my side. He said I was the strongest person on our tribe and he felt the most threatened by me so it was time to get me off. And he was happy in knowing that they were going to lose every immunity because he knew they’d vote the women off first. Brad: Of course, the next day he’s out. Monica: Who lines up at a challenge and doesn’t care if they win or lose? Brad: This is a new day. It’s not going to be that way this time. Gordon: So what’s your play if Colton is on your tribe? Brad: My kneejerk reaction is; I see Colton here, I want to get him off first. But, I’m smarter than that. The guy said some stupid things that he’d want to take back. Monica: And I guarantee that he’s back because he wants to show that he’s changed. Brad: While he said some things that were inflammatory, that’s almost outside of the game. Within the game he’s a fantastic player. He’s very shrewd, he got a bunch of men to give immunity up. The guy is persuasive. Monica: Eighteen other people here do not know the storm that is coming at them with Colton. He is the most paranoid person you’ve ever met. Brad: If everyone wants to get him off first, I’m all for it. But my plan would be to bury the hatchet with him and say, “Colton, you’re a great player. Yesterday was yesterday.” And he’ll probably apologize, he’s not stupid. He needs us because she can validate him to other people. Everyone here knows his reputation and is probably leery of him. Monica: I can validate that he’s changed. Brad: I think we can play much better with him than we can without. Gordon: Cochran and Dawn (Meehan) did something similar where people didn’t think they’d trust each other based on their past history in “South Pacific.” Brad: It’s the same thing. Monica: Nobody here is going to think we’re together. He was deplorable out there and the worst to me. I’ll be able to look in his eyes and see if he’s changed. Gordon: What are your thoughts on the rest of the cast? Brad: We’ve got two returning winners. Monica: I’m a bit star-struck with Tina here. Tina Wesson is the one that allows mothers to still play the game, she is unbelievable. She’s the kind of person that Colton would go with because she’s motherly. Brad: You’ve got Tyson who’s good at challenges. Hayden who’s very athletic and he’s got the social skills. He won “Big Brother,” which is no small feat. Gordon: It’s no “Survivor.” Brad: No, it’s not. Monica: Gervase, I remember him from season one. We’ll tell him he’s the wily veteran of the game. Brad: The pirate Rupert is here. Monica: He’s played a hundred days. He’ll sell himself as being loyal. He makes an alliance of four and he never wavers. Brad: This game is going to be funky. You’ve got the new-school players and then a Rupert, a Tina, a Gervase. They didn’t even have idols. It’s going to be an interesting blend. Gordon: Has she given you any tips on how to deal with the conditions? Brad: I hope it is hot, I hope it rains. There’s a saying in the NFL, “Anyone can good on Sunday when they’re healthy.” First game of the year, everyone plays well. How well do you play on week fifteen, week sixteen? Same thing with “Survivor.” If it’s a sunny day and cool at night and you’re catching fish, everyone’s going to play well. But if it rains and nobody eats and everyone’s miserable, the cream will rise to the top. I want the shelter to fall down. I want people to be miserable. Monica: We don’t fight. I know that’s strange. Brad: When we’re tired at the end of the day because we’ve got three kids and we’re trying to get someone to do their homework, it’s frustrating. The only time she and I get elevated is in an exasperated, tired kind of a situation. Monica: Which we’re going to have every day out here. Brad: No, I don’t sweat the small stuff. Everything I do at work is small. Nothing I do with my kids is small. I’ll put a bet on you now, I guarantee we’re the last couple that will be filmed having a big argument this season. Gordon: What strategies have you guys been discussing? Monica: You may see something that’s never been done before on “Survivor.” We might pitch that the whoever got us to the final three wins the game. Brad: To cement your legacy in this game, you have to do something that nobody else has ever done. I’m going to make millions of dollars from this show if I can last a long time. My exposure… Monica: Would be ten times that for his law practice. Brad: I would lose the battle and win the war. Monica: And at our stage in life what gives you pleasure is doing nice things for other people. $600,000 after taxes isn’t going to make or break us. But it’s going to make someone else’s life. Brad: And we’re not going to win anyway. Posted in Fall TV 2013, General, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Castaways Monica & Brad: ‘I Want People to Be Miserable’ ‘Survivor’ Host Jeff Probst Ranks the ‘Blood vs. Water’ Castaways Gordon Holmes: OK, we can’t have you getting bored out here on location, so I have arranged an activity. Jeff Probst: Fun. Holmes: I’ve given you flash cards featuring all twenty of this season’s castaways. I need you to put them in order from most likely to win to least likely to win. Probst: (After a few minutes of arranging the names) OK, in front of me I have laid out who I think can win, who has a shot to win, who will probably be middle of the pack, and who has no shot to win. Holmes: Excellent, now tell me why… 1. Hayden – Kat’s boyfriend won “Big Brother.” He’s a good guy, good looking, charming, I root for him. I didn’t see the “Big Brother” season he was on, but I can tell why he won. 2. Aras – Aras is probably the most boring winner we’ve ever had, but it’s because he’s so good at keeping things in check. He knows where his center is and he doesn’t let you get to him. He comes back at you with love. It makes if very difficult to get rid of him even though you know you should. Why am I going to get rid of Aras when I can get rid of someone else? That’s Aras’s charm. 3. Vytas – Aras’s brother is also up here as a possible winner, which is pretty amazing. Vytas would win a very different game. I’m guessing Vytas’s game would be a little darker, a little manipulative. Vytas’s story would be, “I’m the underdog and I’m truly creating a second chance in my life.” He had a rough younger part of his life, was hooked on drugs and has recovered. He’s been sober for 14 years and has really made something of his life. 4. Caleb – Instantly liked him, maybe five seconds after he started talking I wanted him on the show and I thought he could actually win. He’s the guy you want to win. He doesn’t have a big sense of self. He clearly takes care of Colton and as he said in casting, “When I want something I let Colton know. I’m not a doormat. Colton doesn’t always say the brightest things and I try to help him be a better person, and together we’re a really strong couple.” Caleb would be one of the best winners ever. 5. John – Doctor, helps out wounded vets, good looking, extremely likable, always seems to say the right thing. If that guy gets deep into the game he could win. So, we have on my winners list here, five men…no women. 6. Tina – Well…there is a possible winner wild card. I was really bummed when she was voted out early the second time around. I think Tina could win this game, her only obstacle is she’s the oldest woman out there and people judge older women as weak. But Tina lives this life. She lives out there, she takes showers outdoors. She can do this. I hope she finds an alliance that gives her a chance. She’s really good strategically. 7. Ciera – And you know what? I’m going to put Ciera up here as a possible contender. Ciera is a really interesting woman. A really young mom. She’s extremely proud of that. But Ciera is not someone that anyone is going to walk over. She has several guns, she votes against gay rights. I’m looking at her thinking, for you to get my vote…huge obstacles. But if you can prove to me that you’re worthy, then I’ll let the fact that we disagree politically go and give you the million. I think Ciera could earn it. 8. Katie – Now we have a lot of people that are fun to watch, but they just don’t have it to win. Katie isn’t going to win because she just doesn’t have enough life experience yet. She’s very capable, she’s extremely bright, but to outfox everyone in this game? I don’t see it. I think she can go deep, she can make the jury, I don’t see her winning. 9. Brad – I hope he lasts until the very end because I’m fascinated by him. I love every thing he says. He’s electric and compelling. But, I think Brad’s target is going to be that he’s had a big life already. He’s played in the NFL, he’s a stud, his wife is beautiful, they seem to have this incredible life. I think people will be annoyed by that really early on. Brad’s challenge is going to be how to make himself more valuable than his lifestyle is annoying. 10. Monica – I like Monica and I’m glad she’s back on the show. I find them to be a really fascinating couple. But I don’t think that Monica fully sees how other people see her. I think that’s what happens to most people who play this game, and I would be no different. She talks a lot. She has a lot of advice and it comes from a good place. But, people don’t want advice out here. The more you say, the more opportunity you give for someone to find fault with what you say. 11. Tyson – Tyson isn’t going to win because I don’t think he wants to win. I think Tyson lives a life that is so fun that this isn’t about winning a million dollars. This time, I’m going to come out with my girlfriend. Maybe I’ll ask her to marry me, who knows? He’s just this goofy, aloof guy that in a lot of ways I wish I was more like. That guy doesn’t win because ultimately people won’t respect that enough. 12. Gervase – The only way Gervase wins is if he’s in the finals with Rupert’s wife. Gervase isn’t going to win this game, he’s going to maybe make the merge and the reason is he doesn’t work hard enough. Gervase is no different than he was the first time. He’s a really likable guy who wants to get by with as little effort as possible. And that’s OK if there’s a place for him on the tribe. I hope he lasts because he’s funny. And I love that he calls people out. I like seeing him. He makes me happier. But, he won’t be smiling at the end with a million-dollar check. 13. Colton – He’s not going to win. He knows he’s not going to win. Colton still has an invoice to pay from the last time he played…and I would argue that he quit. I don’t think he had appendicitis. I’ve told him this. I think he manufactured a quit. We brought him back because when we talked to him we thought he’d grown as a person. He got home and his friends told him he acted like an ass. Will he go deep in the game? He should, he’s very good. But he’s not going to win. 14. Rupert – Rupert is not going to win this game. There’s just too much animosity for a guy who’s gotten so much celebrity from “Survivor.” He was so popular that America literally voted to give him a million bucks. He’s not going to win. It’s not the way the world works, it’s not the way “Survivor” works. 15. Candice – She just isn’t good enough at making that final argument. She doesn’t own it. She’s really likable. I think she’ll do well in challenges. It takes a certain charisma to win this game. You’ve got to convince people that I’m more worthy than everyone else here. And I don’t see that from Candice. Maybe she’s a little too reserved. 16. Marissa – Very likable and for a young person she is very sharp. There are people out here that have 30-plus years on her and she can hold her own. But, somebody that young winning this game with this group? It’s not going to happen. She’ll get outplayed at some point and she won’t see it coming. 17. Kat – C’mon, who are we kidding? Kat’s not going to win. Kat might think she can win, but Kat’s best bet in this game is to play the way she played last time. Be lovable and goofy and help her guy get deep in the game. If I was part of the alliance, my part of the strategy would be, “I’ll be the distraction. I’ll let people laugh at me, and we keep inching to the end.” Then she should try to marry him before that so she’s entitled to half the money. 18. Laura M. – I think Laura is someone that people will say, “Who?” And that could work to Laura’s advantage. When she was voted out of her season we thought we lost a good player. I think Laura can do well in the game if she can get an alliance early. Laura can also rub people the wrong way. Like her daughter she has some strong opinions about a lot of things and she won’t waver on them. 19. Rachel – She can’t win the game. I just hope the strong version of Rachel shows up and not the little girl. When we talked in casting she was very candid that there is a girl who cries and a woman who doesn’t. Who will show up? 20. Laura B. – And as hard as it is to say, and it is hard to say…Laura has no chance to win this game. I don’t think she understands why. She’ll think it’s because of who her husband is, but I think it’s because of Laura. I think socially she has a harder time blending with people and I don’t think she sees it. And all the producers agree our first choice to be voted out first is Laura. She will be the first person out of this game. Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Host Jeff Probst Ranks the ‘Blood vs. Water’ Castaways ‘Survivor’ Castaways Aras & Vytas: ‘When We Fight, It Is Knives Out’ Aras and Vytas Baskauskas (CBS) Name: Aras Baskauskas Relationship to Significant Castaway: Vytas’ Brother Previous Season: The winner of “Survivor: Panama – Exile Island.” Current Residence: Santa Monica, California Occupation: Musician Name: Vytas Baskauskas Relationship to Significant Castaway: Aras’ Brother Occupation: Yoga Instructor/Math Professor Personal Claim to Fame: Beating heroin addiction, yoga discipline, and receiving a graduate degree in math. Pet Peeves: Stupidity and show-offs. Three Words to Describe You: Smart, strong-willed, and unique. [xfinity-record-button id=”6541379645042428112″ program_type=”series”] Gordon Holmes: Aras, I know all about you and your winning ways. Tell me about this guy. Aras Baskauskas: My brother Vytas is a very smart, very driven guy. He’s very motivated by winning. He’s very competitive and very athletic. Vytas Baskauskas: I think Aras’s assessment is very spot on. I’m driven by winning and most of that drive comes from our relationship. It’s interesting that there’s a big million-dollar prize and I’m with my brother who I always want to win against. And in this case we’re a team. It’s going to be really cool to work together with the source of my competition, but in the end there’s only one winner. Gordon: What was it like watching your kid brother win a million bucks on national TV? Vytas: It was an amazing experience. Being as competitive as I am and seeing that he won…there’s no better that I can do, it’s a little bit discouraging. You can’t top first place. Gordon: Piece of cake. Just get to the end, get all the jury votes, and win Fan Favorite. Aras: Win first place, then go on an all-winners season with me, then there’s the rubber match. Set us up on different tribes and see what happens. Gordon: I literally just rewatched “Survivor: Panama.” Aras: What’d you think? Gordon: It gets a bad rap for some reason. I liked it. The end was a little anti-climactic once Terry Dietz went home. Aras: I get a bad rap for being a non-memorable winner, too. Gordon: Yeah, and Terry is remembered as this great hero, but it seemed like he was kind of a pain in the rear out there. Aras: (Laughs) Terry’s actually a great dude. Gordon: I’m sure he is, but my big takeaway was, these people need to vote for later. Be nicer. Aras: (Laughs) Gordon: Quite a bit of time has passed since that season. Aras: It was seven years ago. On May 14, 2006 I was awarded the million-dollar prize. Seven years is a lifetime. I’ve changed and I’ve grown. Hopefully I’ve gotten more subtle. I’m excited to play. I can’t wait to play again. I’ve become a fan of the show since winning. Vytas and I watch the show religiously every Wednesday. Vytas: I was actually a fan of the show before Aras went on. I watched the first couple of seasons when it was huge. Then Aras got on the show and it reignited my love for it. So, I’m a huge fan. Even meeting Jeff the other day was so exciting. Gordon: He is a charmer. Aras: (Laughs) He is, he’s never off. Gordon: Vytas, you overcame an addiction to heroin, which is awesome. Your body is going to be desperate for things out there; food, sleep, and whatnot. Is this an advantage for you seeing as you’ve been through withdrawal before? Vytas: Overcoming addiction is probably my great victory in life up to this point. It’s since I’ve overcome addiction that I’ve had the most amazing life. When I was nineteen I went to jail for a year. Because I was addicted to heroin I was robbing people on the street. After getting out of jail, going through treatment, getting clean. The last thirteen, almost fourteen years have afforded me the most amazing life. I’ve had to develop new life skills because I don’t drink, I don’t smoke, I don’t do drugs. I’m comfortable in my skin now and I’m comfortable not having luxuries that everyone else does. So for me, being clean and my recovery is really going to help me. Gordon: Something I’ve been thinking about with the game recently is; what’s it like to be paranoid for 39 days? I feel like that’s something that’s overlooked. Vytas: I think it’s difficult not to get paranoid even in pre-game. Watching people’s energy with everyone else. Coming from the underbelly of addiction, I’m pretty good at reading people and fitting into different situations. I think paranoia is letting your mind get away from itself. And using my yoga practice and my meditation practice will really let me reign my mind back in. Aras: What I found to be the most successful way of dealing with paranoia is making mutually beneficial alliances. If I’m in an alliance with you and I’m your best bet, I don’t have to worry when you go off into the woods. Gordon: That works if you’re aligned with a smart person. A person who isn’t letting the effects of hunger and the lack of sleep get to them. Vytas: That’s the problem. Doing all of the analysis about the numbers and the people out here…you want to assume that people are going to make the best moves for themselves, but that doesn’t always happen. People make idiotic moves. Aras: Like Tyson when he voted himself off. Gordon: Oh c’mon. Vote yourself off once and you’re branded for life. Aras: I actually think Tyson’s a very smart guy. Gordon: Agreed. Aras: But, I think you’re right. That’s why you want to align with people who are smart enough to make the best moves for themselves. Everyone else you have to think, what lens are they seeing this game through? And can I present to them the appropriate image? Vytas: Like Laura got shafted by John (Fincher) the rocket scientist. So, she might be wary of young, smart guys. You have to understand what their trauma is from their season and play to that trauma. Let her know that we’re different. Gordon: Who here do you guys want to work with? Aras: I’ve known Gervase for a long time, and I don’t know if anybody knows that. I’ve spent evenings at his house. We watched World Series games together. That’s a no-brainer. Hopefully we’ll be able to keep that friendship under wraps. Tina, as the other winner, is an obvious alliance-mate. Gordon: Who are you guys wary of? Aras: I’m immediately wary of Tyson, just because he’s smart and he has shown himself to be duplicitous. That being said, he was so duplicitous last time he might take a more subdued approach this time. He’s also very athletic. I also think Hayden. He won “Big Brother,” he’s very likable, he’s athletic, he’s quiet. He’s not someone you want to hang around in the game. But, there’s nobody that I personally want out. One of the keys to our strategy is to never identify someone unless they’re an immediate threat. Let other people determine who needs to go out first. Gordon: Any guesses for potential twists? Aras: I think we’re going to be starting together. And then after one or two Tribals they’re going to split us. I think we’re together because they need to have a narrative about our relationship. Vytas: Without us together, there’s not enough time in an episode to tell the story of our relationship. And since there are 20 people, we think the first couple of Tribals will eliminate a whole team. Then they’ll split us. Gordon: I was going to ask why you think you’re back, but I know why you’re back because returning champions are awesome. Aras: (Laughs) That’s a great answer. Gordon: Thank you. But, that puts a target on your back. How do you deal with it? Aras: People play within the rules of the dominant narrative. Gordon: Like in “All-Stars” they all wanted the winners gone. In “Heroes vs. Villains” that wasn’t an issue. Aras: Exactly, it behooves me, Tina, even Rupert, Hayden to have the conversation about getting rid of people who aren’t assets to the tribe. Let’s get to the merge with numbers. Because half of us are returnees, I think everyone is going to be thinking about numbers. People want to be safe and if we can provide that feeling of safety, we’re going to be fine. Gordon: What’s it like when you guys fight? Vytas: When we fight, it is knives out. Aras: It’s ugly. Vytas: Here’s an example; Aras and his girlfriend were staying with me when they were in between places. We had a pact; 60 days, let’s not get into one fight. Day 60, very last night we got into an awful…didn’t talk for weeks afterward. When we fight, it’s not just what we’re fighting about, it’s past scars. Aras: Gordon, if you and I were to get into a fight I’d be very logical and present my case. When Vytas and I fight it’s largely our past coming up. That being said, it’s 39 days. There’s a start and an end. That’s easy for me to wrap my head around. But us fighting would be a bad situation. Gordon: Alright, Vytas. It’s day 39; you, Aras, and I don’t know…Tina find a big basket of food. There’s a big glass carafe of orange juice and other glass items. I need you to keep an eye on your brother. Vytas: (Laughs) Gordon: Don’t let him hurt himself. Make sure he gets to that final Tribal. Aras: I still have a gnarly scar on my back. Tags:Aras Baskauskas, jeff probst, survivor, survivor blood vs. water, Vytas Baskauskas Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Castaways Aras & Vytas: ‘When We Fight, It Is Knives Out’ ‘Survivor’ Castaways Candice & John: ‘I’m Always Wary of Rupert’ Candice and John Cody (CBS) Name: Candice Cody (formerly Candice Woodcock) Relationship to Significant Castaway: John’s Wife Previous Seasons: “Survivor: Cook Islands” – fifth jury member and “Survivor: Heroes vs. Villians” – fifth jury member Current Residence: Washington, D.C. Occupation: Physician, Anesthesiology Resident Name: John Cody Relationship to Significant Castaway: Candice’s Husband Occupation: Physician: Army Orthopedic Surgery Resident Personal Claim to Fame: Being a West Point grad, graduating from Georgetown Medical School and training at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for my Orthopedic Surgery residency. Pet Peeves: Slow thinkers, talkers, and movers, people who eat paper, illogical, irrational and inflexible people, excuses, mouth breathers. Gordon Holmes: Alright, who’s this guy? Candice Cody: John is basically an all-around great guy. John Cody: It’s pretty true. (Laughs) Candice: (Laughs) I was going to say something nice, but now I’ve changed my mind. Gordon: Perfect. Give me the dirt. Candice: He’s great. He’s a talker, he’s very social. He’s like the good in our relationship, and I’m like the dark, evil heart. He’s a sweetie. Gordon: He’s the angel on one shoulder… John: And she’s the devil. It’s true. Candice fancies herself to be very edgy and mean, but she’s actually a sweetheart. She loves to talk like she’s hard as nails, but she has a soft side. Candice: We’re talking about you. John is very athletic. He went to West Point and he played basketball there. He still plays competitive basketball three or four days a week. He lifts weights. Sports and athletics are a big part of our life. He’s very smart. Gordon: Where’s the dirt? Candice: He doesn’t have dirt. I want someone to dig some up about him. John: Don’t ask any of my buddies about the time I was in Thailand. Candice: (Laughs) John: Just kidding, I was never in Thailand. Gordon: Likely story. Gordon: When did you two start dating? Candice: We met the week of the “Cook Islands” premiere. Gordon: So you’ve seen both of her seasons? Gordon: What could she have done better out there? John: I think the first time she was set up much better to win the game. Everybody remembers the mutiny, but when you think about what she was doing, she was making a move to win the game. She could have stayed with her alliance to the final five, but she wouldn’t have won. In “Heroes vs. Villains” she was never in a majority. Candice: I was dead in the water. John: She fought and clawed and scratched her way to the final eight, both times. Gordon: Didn’t “Heroes vs. Villains” screw up your wedding or something like that? John: We were supposed to be married when “Heroes vs. Villains” was filmed. We had our invitations stuffed, stamped, and ready to be sent out. Gordon: Is this a sore spot? Did I cause trouble? John: No, no, no. (Laughs) But we talked about it and we said, “In 30 years we’re not going to care if we got married in 2009 or 2010, but we might care if we missed out on the opportunity to win a million dollars.” Candice: It’s more like me being bitchy to him and then him getting tired of it and being like, “Shut up!” And then I shut up because it’s really hard to ruffle his feathers, but when they’re ruffled you’re like “Whoa…(expletive deleted). OK…I’ll back off.” John: Candice is into details, she looks for fine details and I’m more of a big picture guy. So, I’ll brush off some details and that tends to be the source of our frustration with each other. But we try to be as constructive as possible. Gordon: As I’m sure she’s told you, “Survivor” is a stressful game. Can you two be a calming force for each other? Candice: Our lives are 24 hours stress all the time. I work in the operating room. He has to be cool under pressure when he’s operating as well. That’s our jobs. Our call schedules are always opposite. So we operate under stress. I think we’re at an advantage in a game like this based on how our daily lives are. Gordon: If there are any twists, what do you think they will be? Candice: I have two guesses; one that we start off with returnees on one side and family members on the other. It’d force family members to have their own game. And then the drama of hoping your family member made it through the vote and is at the next challenge. And, the other option would be to start off playing together, which would be nice because we could hang out together. But it’d be a distraction because you’d be with the person you’re comfortable with instead of going out and getting to know everybody else. John: If the couples are together it creates a completely different dynamic for alliance building. You might really like a returning player, but you can’t stand their loved one. So, playing individual games on different sides it should make the merge more interesting. As a fan, the merge has been lacking. The numbers dictate what happens. Gordon: What strategies have you two been discussing? John: We’ve tried to work through all the scenarios. We’ve tried to work out hand signals. Like “I’m in danger.” We’ve talked about throwing challenges to save our loved one. We don’t like that idea. Candice: That’s always a bad idea. John: We’re going to have to wait and see how it falls out. But we know we’re a good team and we’re always acting in each other’s best interest. Candice: We’re always going to be looking for that idol. We’re always going to be on. We’re always thinking about numbers. I thought twice was going to be the last time for me. I’m pretty sure the third time is going to be the last time. Leave everything on the table. We’re going to play hard. We jumped through a lot of hoops in our careers to be here. John: One of my favorite quotes is, “You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” It was on a poster in my room growing up. I always try to live by that. Gordon: It’s a bit of a shock to everyone that you’re here. As people are scrambling to deal with this development, what do you think they remember about you from your season? Candice: I think, and I’m not sure if this is the right perception or not, but I think everyone thinks of the mutiny. But, that’s kind of old news now. The most recent thing was “Heroes vs. Villains.” I think people think of me as someone who flipped on her tribe twice. Which, I think is not that big of a deal to me. Everyone who’s a returning players knows the name of the game is deception. Gordon: That might be an angle to take, “Yeah, I flipped twice and look where it got me.” Candice: Yeah. I’ve thought about that. I got me voted out in the same position both times. Gordon: What are your thoughts on this cast? Candice: Half of the cast I know who they are the other half I don’t. John: There’s a good mix. A lot of these people come from pretty far back. Aras and Tina and Gervase, it’s been a while since they were on. It’s not like their gameplay is fresh in everyone’s minds. Gordon: Anyone stick out as potential alliance partners? Candice: We haven’t picked anyone out yet. It’s especially dangerous this season because you think you know something about the returning player, but the family member might not be someone you want to deal with. Gordon: Anyone make you nervous? Candice: I’m always wary of Rupert. We were butting heads in “Heroes vs. Villains” and he took the game personally. Still after the game, even at the finale. John: He was a little sore. Candice: Sour grapes. So, I’m a little wary of that. Whether he feels that way or not, I don’t know. Tags:candice cody, candice woodcock, jeff probst, john cody, survivor, survivor blood vs. water Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Castaways Candice & John: ‘I’m Always Wary of Rupert’ ‘Survivor’ Host Jeff Probst Discusses Classic ‘Survivor’ vs. Tons of Twists Jeff Probst (XFINITY) Gordon Holmes: Let’s say there are two fans. One wants it to be “Survivor: Borneo” all over again. Sixteen players, no twists, final two. The other is saying, “Show me something new.” How do you find a balance between the two? Jeff Probst: Finding the balance of how to do the show is the single most important thing we do creatively. And I’ve heard a lot of people suggest, “Why don’t you go back to the beginning and have no frills? No idols, no Redemption Island, no Exile Island. Sixteen people, straight up, final two.” I look at it more like baseball. They juice up the ball a little bit, there’s more homeruns, it’s more exciting for the audience. I think when you add elements like an idol, it layers the game in so many ways…why would you take it out? Then you add in Redemption Island or Exile Island…it changes everybody’s strategies. We’re tossing around some other ideas for idols that would really throw people for a loop that maybe we’ll do next season. I like that because “Survivor” is an evolving game. Our job is to make you uncertain of what will happen so you’re constantly going, “If this, then that. If that, then this.” To go back to a straight game of sixteen people, thirty nine days, and then one will never happen. Holmes: There is a (expletive deleted) of twists this season. Having pairs on the show is something I’ve thought of for a while, but could never figure out how to make it work. Probst: We couldn’t either. It took about three months for us to figure it out. It takes months of sitting around and talking, sending emails, someone has another idea, then you talk about that… Holmes: What I kept coming back to is the twist could encourage people to throw challenges. If I know I’m safe on my tribe with my alliance and I’m worried about my girlfriend on the other side, we might conspire to lay down a few times to get our people to the merge. Is that a concern? Probst: One of the exciting things about this season is we’ve never done it so we don’t know what to anticipate. So, would someone throw a challenge if they thought they could get away with it? I’m sure these couples have talked and they have some way to show, “Baby, I’m in trouble,” when they see each other at the challenge. Will you play less hard if you can get away with it? I’d definitely be tempted to do that if my wife was on the other tribe. So, if I make myself trip and then apologize that I screwed up and still be tight with my alliance, that’d be an incredible story. And what’s great about “Survivor” is we’d know because afterward the guy would tell us in an interview that they threw the challenge. Holmes: Or if they’re Phillip Sheppard they’ll just claim to have lost on purpose every time they lose. Probst: (Laughs) That’s true. Holmes: I am a cold, cynical jerk, but the stupid “Survivor” family visits always make me cry. It was Cochran and his mom last time. I’m worried you just signed me up for a full season of bawling every Wednesday. Probst: See, I think this is taking the idea of a family visit and flipping it. I’m not here to give my loved one who’s playing love and encouragement. Ultimately I am here to beat them. This is a zero-sum game. There is one winner. I think what you’re going to see is moments of sadness when someone has to see their loved one lose at Redemption Island and be out of the game. But when push comes to shove, I’m guessing more people will shove. Holmes: Another thing that has changed “Survivor” is the use of social media. Back in the day, if I was mad at Jerri Manthey during “The Australian Outback” I couldn’t drop her a line on Twitter and give her a hard time. Now she’s only a few clicks away. This past season there was an unfortunate situation with Dawn Meehan where she received all kinds of threatening messages after voting out Brenda Lowe. Probst: I don’t know if social media is good or bad, I’ve just accepted that it is. There’s no getting away from it. And I don’t want to be the guy that gets off the merry-go-round and decides I’m going to stop being a part of this new world. It can be brutal. Dawn went through a lot. I read things about Dawn that broke my heart. People saying I hope your kids die, I hope you die in a plane crash. You want to say, “C’mon Dawn, get over it. It’s some idiot writing with crayons.” But when it’s you and you read it about yourself it’s very hard. That’s why people say, “Don’t read the blogs.” I can’t not read them, I’m a human. I’m looking for some insight. I’m looking for someone to say something positive about what I bring to the game. Instead I read that people wish I would die. It’s hard. But, there is no getting around it. I engage in social media because I believe there are people who enjoy the conversation about “Survivor” and I like getting it back from them. But man, some days I’ll think, “Why am I wasting my time with people who clearly have nothing positive to say.” And then I remind myself that this is a small fraction. Holmes: That’s human nature. You get 1,000 positive comments and one negative comment, and you’re going to focus on the negative. Probst: That’s true. I think the thing I struggle with is; I think I can differentiate between criticism and snarkiness. If someone wants to debate Redemption Island or Final Three vs. Final Two, I love it. There’s no right or wrong. I learn things that I take back to the team. But when somebody says, “You suck more than anyone else has sucked in this whole sucking world.” I don’t know what to do with that one. Posted in Fall TV 2013, RealityTV, survivor, TV News | Comments Off on ‘Survivor’ Host Jeff Probst Discusses Classic ‘Survivor’ vs. Tons of Twists You are currently browsing the archives for the Fall TV 2013 category. Art Whatnot (3) Black Entertainment (5) celebrity apprentice (1) Comic Book Movies (1) Fall TV 2013 (21) Fall TV 2017 (1) Fall TV Preview (2) Fall TV Preview 2010 (8) Fall TV Preview 2012 (26) Holiday 2013 (1) Impact Wrestling (1) Life Whatnot (21) Misc. Whatnot (15) Movies Whatnot (22) RealityTV (756) Silicon Valley (1) Sports Whatnot (4) Starz (1) survivor (1,171) Syfy (1) The Amazing Race (10) The Apprentice (1) The Magicians (1) Total Divas (1) TV News (1,101) tv tapas (45) TV Whatnot (60) Watchathon Week 2014 (1) Wrestling Whatnot (11)
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12469
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An organization for collectors, artists, and producers to share information about pop-up books NEW! MBS Greeting Cards A to Z: Marvels in Paper Engineering The Meggendorfer Awards 1998-2018 The Movable Book Society Meggendorfer Awards The organization for collectors, artists, and producers to share information about pop-up books The Movable Book Society, a nonprofit organization, provides a forum for artists, book sellers, book producers, collectors, curators, and others to share enthusiasm and exchange information about pop-up and movable books. There are over 300 members worldwide. All are welcomed to join. Sign up to receive Movable Book Society emails: Copyright 2022 The Movable Book Society Site by Rosstamicah
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12470
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Sedgwick County Moving Leads If you are a professional mover, you know how difficult it is to get more moving leads. Many of the people who are looking for movers go online and look at the reputations of different companies. They want to make sure that the movers are professional, have a good price, and show up on time. But how can you get more moving leads without spending a lot of money? Here are some tips to help you get more moving leads: SEO for Sedgwick County Movers Marketing yourself through the internet is another way to get more leads. Try to use moving aggregators. These services have a low cost but provide quality leads. These leads have a high closing rate. Some of them even provide a profile for your website and a link to your website. If you do not have a good profile for your business on the internet, you can also try advertising your business in social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter. Google Ads PPC Sedgwick County Moving Companies Paying attention to local SEO. This is the process of generating moving leads by appearing in the local maps section of Google. It is important to note that when someone searches for your service, your results will be higher than the organic ones. This is because they will be seen more often and get more attention than the organic ones. In addition, these results will contain a link to your website and a call button. It is important to remember that mobile users will click on these ads, so you should pay attention to these. Sedgwick County Facebook Marketing for Movers Branding your moving company is also important. Having a brand that consumers will recognize is a big factor in the consumer’s decision. It is also crucial that your website converts well. A good website will be attractive and easy to navigate. When people are looking for a moving company, they will look for a trustworthy company that has excellent customer service. The best way to do this is to get an ad that shows up above organic search results. If you want to generate more moving leads, you should focus on referrals from existing customers. Happy customers are the best referrals for your business. Ask your existing customers to spread the word about your services. This way, you will get more referrals and more work. However, you should remember that your reputation is more valuable than your moving leads. In order to gain more customers, you must make yourself known and be known by your target audience. Sedgwick County Website Design for Movers When creating a campaign, it’s important to consider the city where your customers live. If you serve more than one city, you should create separate campaigns for each city. Each campaign should have different ad groups representing different types of services. For example, if you are targeting residential customers, create a specific ad group for each city. Then, you can also use ad groups to attract more commercial customers. Another way to get more moving leads is to exchange business with other moving companies. The reason for this is simple. When you exchange leads, you can share them with other moving companies that are not in the same area. Moreover, the movers will have an incentive to refer more referrals to you. Lastly, you can use the press release to promote your new services. If you’re a small business, you can also use this method to get free moving leads in your area. Buy Moving Leads near Sedgwick County The best way to get more moving leads is to sell your services. In addition to advertising on newspapers and television, you can also use social media. This will help you reach more people and increase the chances of getting more moving leads. This strategy will help you grow your company. There are many different ways to get more moving leads. It all depends on the location and the sales system of your company. It may not be the best option for all companies, but it can give you an excellent start. When generating moving leads, you need to have a strategy. Using a lead generator will help you increase the amount of moving leads you generate. These are the people who are in the market for a move. The best way to generate moving leads is to combine different methods of advertising and build a comprehensive strategy for your business. If you don’t know how to do this, try using various methods and see which ones work best for your business.
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Foodfight! February 12, 2013 War, Inc. January 1, 1970 The Lizzie McGuire Movie January 1, 1970 The Perfect Man January 1, 1970 A Cinderella Story January 1, 1970
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Bob Coleman Muralist, Yazoo City Bob Coleman of Yazoo City. Bob Coleman at Howell's Fish House in Yazoo City. Bob has made Howell's the official exhibit space for his artwork. Bob painted this religous mural across the back wall of the banquet room at Howell's Fish House in Yazoo City. Bob refers to this painting style as "new millenium art." He begins each piece by subconciously "doodling" during Sunday sermons while listening to the preacher. his is the only remaining outdoor mural of Coleman's work in Yazoo City. Bob Coleman was born in Doddsville, Miss. in 1928. The youngest of five children, Coleman grew up working on a farm alongside his brothers. As a child, Coleman stuttered which kept him in the background at school and church. In 1946 he started college and played football for Sunflower Junior College in Moorehead (now Mississippi Delta Community College). Coleman says he asked the coach for a chance to run the ball as tailback, and given the chance, successfully ran through the line for the entire practice. He never stuttered again. Coleman and his siblings were encouraged by their mother to draw. She had one picture frame dedicated to their artwork, and the featured piece was rotated weekly to present a new work by one of the children. Coleman had been working as a cotton farmer for four years when his crop failed in 1951. He went to work for a lumberyard in Ruleville, where he had a very kind boss. “My boss came out one day and said, ‘Bob, if you were a millionaire, what would you do?’ And I said, ‘I’d paint.’ He said, ‘Well, you’ve been here long enough for two weeks paid vacation. I’m not firing you, but if you want to start painting now is the time.’ And I said, ‘Write that check out, and I never looked back. I started painting that day. Everything I did I had to learn. Every job I had to learn on my own because I didn’t have any experience in it. I could draw and paint, but signs, you know, that was the only way I could get any income.” Coleman opened a sign shop in Ruleville in 1952 but relocated the business to Yazoo City in 1955. He painted signs, trucks, billboards, and buildings. Coleman says the sign business was very territorial in the Delta, with each town having its own sign company. He soon learned how to do gold leaf, which took him throughout the region. “One of the first things I learned was to do gold leaf; 23-carat gold,” said Coleman. “You letter behind [gold leaf] in reverse. Well, I was left-handed, so I could go lickety split backwards. So I did Planter’s Bank in Ruleville and I went over to Bank of Ruleville. And I got to doing gold leaf all over the country. I got so much money, I’d dress up with a suit and go do my gold leaf. I could get better sales that way.” As a sign maker, Coleman worked entirely in freehand. He painted on the sides of petroleum tanks and silos and eventually started doing mural projects in downtown Yazoo City. His first mural was of a tree on a hillside in Yazoo City. The tree was growing on the edge of the hill, making it unclear whether the tree was supporting the hill or vice versa. This image is often used in Coleman’s work. He says that during the urban renewal movement, many of the murals were painted over or destroyed. The others have faded with time and are no longer visible. In 2000, Coleman began creating what he calls, “new millennium art.” “The preacher was reading a sermon and I started sketching on half a sheet of paper. Sometimes the drawings pertain to the sermon, and sometimes they don’t. While the preacher is preaching, I’m concentrating consciously on what he is saying. Subconsciously, I’m drawing and I’m watching all this take place. I don’t deviate, I do not change. I don’t say, ‘Well, I’m going to do this. I’m going to do that.’ It is like somebody else in here doing this thing, and here I am watching it take place.” Coleman credits the Lord for each of the “new millennium art” pieces, which consist largely of animated line drawings. During this same time, Coleman turned a local catfish restaurant, Howell’s Fish House, into his personal exhibit space. He also painted a large religious mural in the restaurant’s banquet hall, depicting several scenes from the New Testament. Bob Coleman can be found most days in the basement of the Triangle Cultural Center in Yazoo City, where he and his wife have a studio. Coleman also writes poetry and has a self-published collection of poems called, Rays of Light. Contact Coleman by emailing painterpoetbob@gmail.com
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Relax Centre Sports and Health Restaurant Bulgarian Village Viennese coffee house Cosmos For Your Free Time About Pamporovo Economy Double room Pamporovo resort The winter resort of Pamporovo is situated at the foot of mount Snezhanka (1926 m) in the Rhodopes mountains, at 260 km from Sofia, 85 km from Plovdiv and 16 km from Smolyan. The resort is located at 1650 m above sea level. The average annual temperature is 5.5 degrees. Pamporovo exists as a resort from the 60ies of the 20th century. Almost all the ski runs in the resort start from Snezhanka Peak, with their altitude varying from 1930 to 1444 m. Pamporovo has 37 km of runs, the longest of which is 5.1 km and the maximum displacement is 476 m. The tracks are of varying difficulty - ranging from ones for beginners to those for advanced athletes. There are 9 tows and 6 lifts available to tourists. The tracks in the resort can also be used by snowboarders, there is a halfpipe, as well as good opportunities for downhill skiing on natural terrain. Pamporovo also has cross-country ski runs, with a length of 25 km. In the ski area, there are many places suitable for sledding. For the lovers of the extreme downhill, there is the night lighting of 28 projectors on the "Snezhanka 2" trail, which is 1176 m long, 60 m wide and its displacement is 283 m. Snowmobile trips are also available. There are several ski schools for children and adults in Pamporovo, as well as a kindergarten for children from 4 to 7 years of age. Those who do not have their own equipment can rent such from one of the resort's wardrobes. Although mainly known as a winter destination, Pamporovo also has much to offer to the tourists who decide to visit it during the summer. In the Rhodope mountains there are many eco-paths suitable for walking tours, the Trigrad Gorge is a favourite place for the lovers of rock climbing, there are Devil's and Yagodinska cave - some of the most attractive caves in Bulgaria. There is a marked route from Pamporovo to the village of Shiroka Laka, which is also very suitable for cyclists. The rivers and dams in the Rhodope Mountains offer good opportunities for sports fishing, and nature lovers can also explore the area by horse riding. For herb and mushroom gatherers, the area around the resort is very attractive, as here a lot of interesting species grow. Pamporovo is located in a region with a lot of history. Nearby are the towns of Chepelare and Smolyan, as well as the picturesque villages Shiroka Laka, Stoykite, Gela, Smilyan and Arda, which are very attractive with their well-preserved traditions and the hospitality of the local people. Excursions to historic landmarks in the region and other destinations are also available. Pamporovo bike park The newest project of Pamporovo is the newly opened biking park for mountain cycling Velopark Pamporovo, which was realized with the assistance of Concept Creative. It was officially opened in the summer of 2012 and quickly managed to become one of the leading bike destinations in Bulgaria. The park has a total of 5 specialized and distinct routes and mountain biking routes with a total length of over 20 km, suitable for all ages and skills. The routes are filled with various obstacles and games, such as turns, floats, jumps, various wooden constructions, unique in Bulgaria, as well as marked routes with different levels of difficulty, aimed at the cross country discipline. For all who do not have their own bike, the latest bike models "Drag" are rented on site. In the bike wardrobe of the Studenets we offer different classes bicycles for rent - from ones for a simple ride to those fully equipped for downhill riding, suitable for professionals. Qualified guides are available to accompany every biker on the bike paths. Velopark Pamporovo has quickly established itself as one of the most visited places for cyclists and tourists. During its first season, the bike-park hosted several sporting events including a national mountain biking championship in downhill and cross country categories, a mountain training workshop, and demonstrations of famous names from the world mountain bike scene.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12474
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Ramadanization 2017, 24 May 2017 — 27 Jun 2017 Ramadanization 2017 Resulting from an open call to artists, Dubai Community Theatre & Arts Centre – DUCTAC presents “Ramadanization 2017”, a group exhibition focusing on how the observance of Ramadan upholds the Islamic beliefs and traditions across the globe, and how it influences the daily lives of people residing in the region. The featured artists explores the juxtaposition of the deeply personal and spiritual practices along with the strong and vivid socio-cultural connotations associated the term “Ramadan” and “The Holy Month”.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12475
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Home > Currency Converter > NAD to USD Convert Namibian Dollars (NAD) to United States Dollars (USD) NAD to USD Exchange Rates – Live Currency Conversion 1 NAD: 1 USD: Historical Exchange Rates Namibian Dollar to United States Dollar NAD to USD $1.00 NAD $10.00 NAD $100.00 NAD $1,000.00 NAD Namibian Dollar & United States Dollar Currency Information FACT 1: The currency of Namibia is the Namibian Dollar. It's code is NAD & its symbol is $. According to our data, GBP to NAD is the most popular Namibian Dollar exchange rate conversion. FACT 2: The most popular banknotes used in Namibia are: $10, $20, $50, $100, $200. It's used solely in Namibia. FACT 3: The first banknotes were issued in 1993 by the Bank of Namibia with the coins introduced the following year in 1994. Originally, the name Kalahar was proposed for the currency due to the Kalahri Desert being located in Namibia. FACT 1: The currency of the United States is the US Dollar. It's code is USD & symbol is $. According to our data, GBP to USD is the most popular US Dollar exchange rate conversion. Interesting nicknames for the USD include: greenback, cheese, dollar bills, buck, green, dough, smacker, dead presidents, scrillas, paper. FACT 2: The most popular banknotes used in the USA are: $1, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100. It's used in: United States, America, American Samoa, American Virgin Islands, British Indian Ocean Territory, British Virgin Islands, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guam, Haiti, Micronesia, Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, Panama, Puerto Rico, Turks and Caicos Islands, United States Minor Outlying Islands, Wake Island, East Timor FACT 3: The US Dollar was introduced in 1792 and is the most traded currency on the foreign exchange market. The preceding currency did not feature portraits of the presidents as George Washington did not want his face on the currency. NAD to USD Money Transfers & Travel Money Products UK to New Zealand amount: 3000 GBP USA to Australia amount: 10000 USD New Zealand to Australia amount: 1000 NZD
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12476
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Instructions for a Heat Wave Book Review Instructions for a Heat Wave by Maggie O’Farrell Unexpectedly good read about family and the secrets we keep. Here is my book review Instructions for a Heat Wave by Maggie O’Farrell. I just recently read O’Farrell’s spectacular novel Hamnet and I loved every word. So tackling another Maggie O’Farrell seemed like a good idea. This story, though very different from Hamnet, was also well developed and interesting. It’s 1976 in London and we find the Riordan family in the middle of a heat wave. Then unexpectedly Gretta Riordan’s recently retired husband goes out for the morning paper and never returns. This event is the catalyst that not only brings three siblings back to the family home, but opens a Pandora’s box of long held family secrets. Michael Francis the oldest son who gave up big dreams for his family is now a high school teacher with a crumbling marriage. Monica’s hidden insecurities and skeletons in the closet have created a wide rift between herself and her baby sister Aoife. And Aiofe living in Manhattan is holding her own very big and sad secret. This family, full of hidden tragedies, will be rocked to it’s core when they learn the truth about their parents as they search for their missing father. Can it possibly end happily ever after? ****Four stars for Instructions for a Heat Wave by Maggie O’Farrell Read last week’s review of Five Quarters of the Orange My current read In Pursuit of Memory We love it when you pin and share our book reviews. Thank you.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12477
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Sensory overload in a two year old mind “… and the heavens opened and water poured forth like a reading from the Old Testament.” – Excerpt from Tuesday afternoon. It was one of those Florida afternoons where you could see the rain coming like an omnivorous grey beast. I was on my way to pick up Beth from Tae Kwon Do, with Adam in tow, when I realized there was no way I was going to herd two hyper kids into the car without some serious soakage. Sure enough, it started to pour as we were walking out the door. We three stood there helpless, looking across the open space between us and the car. The way it was raining, ten yards might as well have been ten miles. Always ready with a helpful suggestion, Beth piped in: “Dad, we don’t all have to get wet. Why don’t you just get the car and pull it up on the sidewalk. There’s plenty of room between the dumpster and that column.” I didn’t move the car. We did make a break for it. I got ten steps when I noticed Adam wasn’t following. He got about five steps and stopped. When I turned around to look for him, he was standing with his arms and palms raised and his head down, staring at his wet palms in wonder. The back pack he was helping me carry (in truth, he damn near insists on carrying it) was lying prone in a puddle. We hadn’t been in the rain for more than a few seconds, but I could already see that we were both mostly soaked through. When I called back to him, “What are you doing Adam?” He replied, “It’s RAINING daddy!” He was enjoying himself like only a two year old in the rain can. Family and Friends Adam Give me some credit Grocery update
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Tag: big toe pain Uric Acid and Prostatitis Treatment On April 13, 2018 September 12, 2018 By Pranav4 Comments Uric Acid... Uric acid is a chemical that is produced when the body breaks down a molecule called ‘purine’. This molecule is commonly found in certain foods. The natural breakdown of the body’s cells also produces purines, which break down to form uric acid. This uric acid gets expelled from the body through urine. However, … Continue reading Uric Acid and Prostatitis Treatment
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Countries → United Kingdom → Events in London The Rifles, 26 October 2019 The Rifles Roundhouse London, United Kingdom Oct, 26 Sat 2019 Indie Rock Britpop Gig of The Rifles in Roundhouse You have a great opportunity to see The Rifles, on Oct. 26, 2019 at Roundhouse in London. About The Rifles The Rifles are an English indie rock band from Chingford, London. Their debut album No Love Lost was released on 17 July 2006 and reached No. 68 in the UK charts. The band currently consists of Joel Stoker (vocals, guitar), Lucas Crowther (guitar, vocals), Rob Pyne (bass guitar), Grant Marsh (drums) and Dean Mumford (keyboard). Their follow-up album, Great Escape, was released on 26 January 2009 and came in at No. 27 in the UK charts. Their third album Freedom Run was released on 19 September 2011 reaching No. 37 in the UK. Fourth album None The Wiser was their highest charting release when it reached No. 21 in 2014. The band have released their fifth studio album Big Life on 19 August 2016. Roundhouse Chalk Farm Rd, Camden Town, London NW1 8EH, United Kingdom Open in Google Maps https://www.roundhouse.org.uk/ See all rock & metal events in Roundhouse
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Why Representation (Still) Matters September 21, 2019 December 15, 2019 by Rebecca M. Horner A couple of weeks ago, a member of my DnD group made comments about video game characters. I’m paraphrasing to cut the cussing, but he basically said that he doesn’t care and it doesn’t matter what sexuality characters are or gender identity. He just wants solid, fun characters to play with and play against. I’m not going to explain any more of the situation, but I will leave the thoughts that his comment stirred up for me, because I feel like they are important thoughts for our future audience to know about our mindset for creating this game. We all want solid, fun characters to play as and play off of in our game. No arguments there. The problem is, anyone who is part of the LGBTQA+ community, or even someone who isn’t but is a girl, has to fight for equal representation. Not just representation–because then you can argue that we are there. There’s female options in Overwatch, in World of Warcraft, in Pokemon. The problem is, they aren’t equal to the male characters. It’s why arguments that we don’t still need to push representation drives me nuts. Yes, it’s better–I can play as a girl when I make a Pokemon run. No, I’m still not satisfied because where is my Zelda equivalent of Link? Why are there still more than 75% of the fleshed out characters being male and most of the remaining females don’t have as much dialogue or action? Most women don’t pass what I call the 50/66 rule. What’s the 50/66 rule? It means that 50% of the dialogue and actions in the game–not bios, not in guides, but in the actual game–belong to a female character. The 66 part of the rule is 66% of the character’s skin has to be covered, minimum, and they have to still be dressed practical for what they are. For example, I don’t expect bards to be dressed from head to toe in armor, but I don’t want them to be naked or effectively dressed in underwear and scarves (if that) either. I do expect my knight to wear real armor, not chain mail bikini’s by any other name or literal breast plates. True fact, there isn’t a single GOOD dollmaker out there that lets you create a female knight that doesn’t ruin the armor to do it. NOT ONE. (I’ve looked. If you have one, feel free to share!!!) And those are simple flash dollmakers, much less a more serious game. Aside from a few exceptions, LGBTQA+ content is over fetishized or just not there. If it is there, it’s mentioned in a character bio and that’s about it. A lot of the reason why the Dragon Age games and the new Fire Emblem game are being cheered as hard as they are is because they reach to so many normally ignored demographics, and while other games are picking up on this trend, it’s an uphill battle. (I will say that this is getting better faster than the issue with female characters, but again, we still have a long way to go, so I don’t want either to stop or get more focus than the others.) The only thing this person didn’t bring up is race, but even there, I wish there was more variety to the characters. I don’t want to see American interpretations of Eastern cultures, I want to see people authentic to those cultures create those characters, to actually show us what they see. I want the ratios to be closer to what they actually are in the world. I want exposure to the real culture, the real way things are done, not the way that is portrayed in cartoons or the occasional art film. So how is Mystic Riders any different? We do try to include a wide variety of countries for background, with a heavier focus on Europe only because that is the country we start with. Why? Because that’s where Ginny and I have the background. Will we stay there? Ohhh no. We have plans. But we want the people to have joined us who have the real, in-depth knowledge we can never have before we carry out those plans. Do we make representation the center most core of the game? No, because then it does what I was rallying against earlier–it makes it done just for representation’s sake, meaning it’s superficial and frequently not as enriching and engaging as I want. But what I really want people to take away from this post is representation still matters. We still need to fight for those good, solid characters who are female, who are gay, who are trans, who are from another culture than American, and every combination in between. Trying to deride a game for working on that as well as bolstering the strong story hooks isn’t being an activist, it’s you actually trying to erase the small steps have been taken, when we need to be working on taking bigger ones. characterclassescustomizationfemalefemale agencyfemale gamerfemale gamersfemale protagonistgamergamesgaminggender identityinspirationLGBTQAMMORPGracerepresentationStorystyleWorld Building A Single Player MMORPG Women in Media: The Power of Perception
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LIVE OAK, FLA., MARCH 1, 2023 – The month of March is Florida Biking Month, and the Suwannee River Water Management District (District) wants to encourage all its residents and visitors to take advantage of Florida’s spring weather and enjoy the great outdoors. Research has shown that exercising outdoors includes a variety of health benefits and can be enjoyed by the whole family. There are few places better in North Florida than District-owned lands, many of which provide specific bike trails for enjoyment. “While the District acquires property for conservation and protection, almost all of them are available for public use year-round,” said Hugh Thomas, executive director of the District. “Whether it’s bicycling, hiking, or bird watching, these lands provide many opportunities for various recreational activities and the chance for our residents and guests to enjoy the outdoors.” Some District-owned tracts, such as White Springs (Hamilton County), Little Shoals (Columbia County), and Anderson Springs (Suwannee County), have designated bike trails. Others, however, have administrative or secondary roads that are bicycle-friendly. More information about District lands and their amenities can be found at https://map.mysuwanneeriver.com/. ⇐Previous Public comment period extended for Santa Fe Watershed flood mapsNext⇒ Santa Fe Watershed Flood Risk Review meetings to take place this week
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Watch the latest music video from actress/singer May May Entrata here. ABOUT May May Entrata: Marydale “Maymay” Entrata is a Filipina actress, singer, television host, and model. She came to prominence in 2017, after winning Pinoy Big Brother: Lucky 7. Born in Camiguin, and raised in Cagayan de Oro, Misamis Oriental, Entrata aspired to be an actress from a young age and had auditioned in different talent shows to fulfill her dream. After winning Pinoy Big Brother, Entrata signed a deal with Star Magic and began her acting career by starring in the romantic comedy Loving in Tandem(2017). Entrata’s other film appearances include Da One That Ghost Away (2018) and Hello, Love, Goodbye (2019). She also played supporting roles in horror-fantasy drama television series La Luna Sangre (2017) and Hiwaga ng Kambat (2019). Throughout her career, Entrata has expressed an interest in singing and modeling. Her eponymous debut album, released in 2017, has been certified platinum by the PARI. She was also recognized as the first Filipina to walk in the Arab Fashion Week. She has performed at sold out concerts and continues to release new music.
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‘Superintendent ACLU’ runs police department by nadignewspapers@aol.com · March 17, 2016 by RUSS STEWART Chicago doesn’t need a new police superintendent. It already has one: the American Civil Liberties Union. It is "Superintendent ACLU," and the "ACLU Rule" governs on-street activity and monitors police conduct. Every time a police officer makes a traffic stop, questions a suspect or talks to anybody on the street, a seven-page "stop card" must be prepared and filed, and a copy is forwarded to the ACLU. Every "contact" must be given a written receipt, which goes into the police department’s database. Each "stop card" requires 15 to 20 minutes to prepare, which means that every beat cop must spend more time in the station and less time on the street? Police stops are down 85 percent in thus far in 2016 compared to 2015. In short, the ACLU is policing the police officers who are supposed to be policing the city. Welcome to the brave new world of law enforcement in the post-Ferguson era. Cops don’t "enforce" the law. There is no deterrence. There is no street presence. Cops have become mere observers. The "butt rule" applies: Sit in your patrol car, do your 8-hour shift, ignore on-street activity, do your paperwork, protect your pension, and go home. Above all, don’t get yourself on somebody’s iPad or iPod. The motto of the Chicago Police Department used to be "We Serve and Protect." Now it’s "I Know Nothing." Overtime is no longer street time, it’s paperwork time. Chicago is a "sanctuary city," which means that illegal aliens, if confronted and questioned, cannot be arrested for that reason and cannot be deported. The ACLU has redefined "suspicious behavior," and looking like an illegal is no longer probable cause for an on-street inquiry. In a deal brokered by state Senator Kwame Raoul to litigation, every stop requires documentation as to who, what, when, where and why, with the ACLU as the proverbial judge and jury. "Nobody wants to get out of their car any more," one retired police lieutenant said, and that has serious implications. Back when I was a kid, there was TV western about a mercenary gunfighter titled "Have Gun, Will Travel." That about describes Chicago this summer. This year will be Chicago’s year of homicides and heroin. With cops safely nestled in their cars, every punk, criminal and gang member will pack a gun, either on their person or in their car, secure in the expectation that they will not be stopped, questioned or searched. Welcome to Dodge City. However, here’s the good news: The street gangs who so busily kill each other in territorial disputes will be too busy distributing heroin to waste time on drive-by shootings. Money for everyone. The South and Central American drug cartels, centered primarily in Columbia, have been using street gangs as their end distributors for two decades. Narcotics don’t enter America by boat or plane. They enter through "trap cars," which means hollowed-out sections of cars or trucks which cross the Mexican border. "They can stuff 2,000 to 3,000 kilos of heroin in one vehicle," the retired cop said, and 20,000 kilos, when stepped up and sold in $10 bags, can generate $6 million. "It can’t be stopped," the cop said. "There’s a heroin epidemic." "There are street operators who are making $80,000 to $100,000 a day," the former gang crimes lieutenant said. "All in cash. All in $100 bills. And it all goes back through Mexico to Columbia." The "heroin hub" is the West Side, generally in the area around Cicero Avenue and Van Buren Street, just off the Eisenhower Expressway. The intersections change daily, but, the cop said, the buyers are guaranteed in-and-out "safe passage" by the local gangs, and the suburban white kids can load up on $10 bags, which can be resold for $20 or more. The heroin, known as "China white," is Columbian-grown, and it has replaced the Mexican-grown "Mexican mud." It is injected, which makes it highly addictive. Crack cocaine and marijuana also is sold. Maine Republican Governor Paul LePage recently bemoaned the East Coast’s heroin epidemic, saying that drug dealers from Connecticut and New York are entering his state and, he said, getting white girls pregnant and addicted. He was roundly chastised, not for the fact, but for the implication. In Chicago and Cook County, there are two gang factions, "People" and "Folks." Both have geographic hegemony, certain factions within them peddle dope, and of late there has been a "truce," the cop said. "They’ve stopped killing each other," he said. "They’re all making too much money." Until the 1980s there were white gangs, the most prominent being the "Gaylords." Now they’re nearly all black or Hispanic. Within each faction there is friction. The biggest black "People" gang is the "Vice Lords," who run the West Side heroin trade, which caters to suburban white buyers. The other major dealer on the West Side is the "4-Corner Hustlers," a onetime black faction of the "Vice Lords," which focuses on black buyers." They "own" the street corners around Madison Street and Pulaski Road. Two other former "Vice Lords" offshoots exist on the South Side, the "Mickey Cobras" and the "Black P Stones," which used to dominate the Cabrini Green projects. They are into more prosaic crime, not narcotics. Until recently, they were constantly squabbling — and killing — each other over territory. The other "People" gang is the "Latin Kings," a largely Mexican-American operation which has long dominated the area west of Humboldt Park, stretching down to 26th Street and as far south as 110th Street. The gentrification of Logan Square has pushed them west into Cicero, Berwyn and the near west suburbs. The "Folks" are an equally diverse, equally violent operation. The " "Black Gangster Disciples" dominate the South Side heroin market. The city’s largest Puerto Rican gang is the "Maniac Latin Disciples," who for decades battled the "Latin Kings" for control of the west Humboldt area and who have prevailed. That gang has now moved west, as far as Riis Park, at Grand and Narragansett avenues. Puerto Rican offshoots of the "Maniac Latin Disciples" are the "Spanish Cobras," who run the area east of Humboldt Park, and the "Latin Eagles," who dominate the 26th Street area. In the past decade, territoriality defined drug distribution, and still does. Specific gangs "owned" specific street corners. No "invasions" by rival gangs were permitted. Up until the early 2000s, the city’s "Anti-Loitering Act" was a deterrent to drug dealing. Cops would show up at an intersection with a bunch of milling gang members and order them to disperse, and if they weren’t gone in 30 minutes, arrest them for loitering. It worked, until the ACLU went to court and the law was found unconstitutional. Now everybody has a right to loiter. Back in the 1990s, New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani pioneered the "broken window" concept of policing. He monitored crime statistics, and if they spiked in a certain area, he flooded that area with cops. The law breakers quickly moved elsewhere. Under the Daley Administration, and up until about 2015 under Rahm Emanuel, a similar policing policy worked in Chicago. Cops from low-crime areas were re-assigned to high-crime districts. Where drug dealing and prostitution flourished, two-man squad cars would park at street corners where gang members hung out and walk around getting names and examining identification. That invariably caused the gang members to "rabbit." That was an important law enforcement tool, as all information went into the police department’s database, and those with outstanding warrants were identified and located. No longer. Another Giuliani anti-crime tactic was an aggressive stop-and-frisk policy. "Suspicious" people were stopped, questioned and frisked. No longer. Since it was mostly non-whites who were stopped, the ACLU deemed the procedure racist and got court orders to ban "racial profiling." Just "hanging out" does not rise to the level of "probable cause." Now we have a "violence problem," exemplified by police shootings in Ferguson, Mo., and thereafter in Baltimore, Minneapolis and Chicago. The reaction is, let’s blame the police, and Hillary Clinton recently blamed Donald Trump for fomenting an "atmosphere of violence." You know where this is going. Why not blame Trump for every gang- and drug-related homicide. Of course, it’s not Emanuel’s fault nor the ACLU’s. There used to be 14,500 sworn Chicago police officers. That’s down to 11,500, and you can blame that on hiring procedures. Every politician proposes hiring more cops, but the morass of court rulings mandates that there be more minority hirings, and fewer minorities apply. Morale has never been so low among police officers, the cop said. "They feel like if they do their job they’ll be persecuted and maybe even prosecuted," he said. Not surprisingly, gun purchases have spiked. Here’s some advice to Chicagoans: If you observe some "suspicious activity" or witness a crime being committed, don’t bother to call 911. Phone the ACLU. They’ll send out a lawyer within 14 days. They’ll put the bad guys in jail . . . maybe. Send e-mail to russ@russstewart. com or visit his Web site at www. russstewart.com. Dem’s Downstate losses offset in Collar Counties The ‘Year of Paranoia’ for male politicians in 2018 Martwick, Kessem make campaign pitches at group meeting Next story Local Crime from 16th District 3-16-2016 Previous story Taft Foundation head wants strong LSC election turnout
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“The Little Bulker” Children’s Tale a Big Hit Recently Launched Book a Maritime Best Seller Anika Bjarnadottir November 14, 2022- New York, NY In only two weeks, “The Little Bulker”, by Katerina Perganti Shaw, has become a maritime best seller. Launched at the 15th Anniversary of the North American Marine Environment Protection Association (NAMEPA), the book educates children about the maritime industry. Ms. Shaw has generously donated half the proceeds from the book to NAMEPA to support its educational programs. “The Little Bulker” chronicles the construction of a dry bulk carrier in Japan, accompanied by details on what the ship carries, its components, size, and launching. Further, it is an “eco” ship, which is a critical feature in the effort to reduce Maritime’s impact on the environment. There is also a QR code for readers to follow the voyages of a dry bulk ship named “Athena”, which is trading today. “Katerina’s book is the ideal way to introduce children to the depth and breadth of our industry” observed Carleen Lyden Walker, Co-Founder and CEO of NAMEPA. “With the holidays coming, “The Little Bulker” makes the perfect gift. Companies are purchasing the book for their employees and customers to help spread the message about the value proposition of the maritime industry to the next generation.” “I am delighted that my book is being so well received” said Ms. Shaw when informed it had become a maritime best seller. “It was my privilege to tell the story of the ship as it was being built, so it felt like a personal tribute to the ship and to honor the maritime industry.” As the book is STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) enhanced, Ms. Shaw suggested that readers follow the voyages of a ship called M/V Athena to learn about geography, global trade, potential jobs and more. To order copies of the book, go to The Little Bulker.
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Past Studies Dr. Natalie Rosen Lab Photo Album Books About Sexual Health Sexual Health Resources Treatment Resources in Halifax Postpartum Sexuality Dr. Rosen’s Practice #POSTBABYHANKYPANKY Couple Sex Therapy versus Group Therapy for Women with Genito-pelvic Pain Couples & Sexual Health Laboratory Co-authored by Elyse Burchill and Kat Merwin This post is a summary of our published article: Bergeron, S., Merwin, K. E., Dubé, J., & Rosen, N. O. (2018). Couple sex therapy versus group therapy for women with genito-pelvic pain. Current Sexual Health Reports, 10, 79-87. doi:10.1007/s11930-018-0154-5 Pain during sex: While it is not uncommon for women to experience pain during sex, if this problem persists it may have consequences on women’s physical and mental well-being as well as put a strain on her partner and their relationship [2,9]. Genito-pelvic pain/penetration disorder (GPPPD) affects 14 to 34% of young women and 6.5 to 45% of older women [1,10]. GPPPD is a specific condition in which women experience pain in the pelvic area after or during vaginal intercourse. Women with this disorder tend to report significantly lower quality of life compared to women without [2]. A woman’s partner can influence how the woman perceives and manages this pain. In fact, research has found that different types of partner responses are associated with lower or higher levels of for women with GPPPD. In several of our previous studies, we examined three types of partner responses to women’s pain during intercourse [6,7,8]. (See here for a description of the different types of partner responses.) We previously found that negative and solicitous partner responses were associated with more pain for women, whereas facilitative responses were associated with less pain [7,8]. Given these findings, it is important that the partners of women with GPPPD are included in the treatment options in order to improve sexual and psychological well-being of both members of the couple, while improving the overall quality of the relationship. Different methods of treatment have been explored and there are two types of treatments that have been found to be beneficial for couples coping with GPPPD. The purpose of this paper was to evaluate and contrast two different methods of treatment for GPPPD and to provide recommendations as to when each treatment is likely to be the most beneficial. Group Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (group CBT) is a common approach which focuses on reducing pain and improving sexual function and satisfaction. This is accomplished by addressing thoughts, behaviors, and interactions that individuals (who may or may not be in relationships) may have with their sexual partners.During this time women are guided through a series of steps. These steps allow them to learn about the pain they are dealing with, explore what influences it and are given the chance to adapt new coping and communication mechanisms to facilitate the improvement of sexual functions. In a study comparing group CBT to a corticosteroid cream, women in the CBT group reported lower pain levels and were more satisfied with overall sexual functioning six months after treatment [8]. Couples Cognitive Behavioral Therapy(couples CBT) has also recently been explored as a way to treat GPPPD as well. This involves couples setting goals and being guided through different methods of improving coping mechanism along with intimacy and relaxation exercises. A significant amount of time is dedicated to the practice of adaptive communication techniques. In research conducted on the effectiveness of couples CBT it was demonstrated that women with GPPPD showed significantly lower levels of pain after treatment. Both women and their partners reported more sexual satisfaction and better psychological well-being after treatment [4]. Both group and couples CBT are effective treatments of genito-pelvic pain/penetration disorder (GPPPD). However, given the large role of partners in the women’s perception and management of pain, couples CBT seems to be the most beneficial treatment. When treating women with GPPPD who are in relationships, couples CBT should be considered first because of the couples-focused approach which allows the therapist to adjust the treatment for each unique couple’s needs. Despite this, there are times when it may be more advantageous to use group CBT as well. In cases where there are pre-existing relationship difficulties that include psychological and physical violence, couples therapy may have negative effects (e.g., increase tension in the relationship) and it would be advised to begin with group therapy [10]. Group therapy may also be the more appropriate choice when women are not in relationships or when their partner may be unable to attend weekly appointments. Group CBT can also help create a sense of normalcy for women with GPPPD. Finally, group CBT may also be more accessible; due to its cost efficiency and structured approach, it is often easier for health professionals to provide this treatment option. Treatments are continuously being discovered, re-evaluated, and improved upon. The most important take away is women with GPPPD (and their partners) need to find what works best for them! American Psychiatric Association. (2013) Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders(5th ed.). Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing Arnold, L. D., Bachmann, G. A., Rosen, R. G., Kelly, S., & Rhoads, G. (2006). Vulvodynia: Characteristics and associations with comorbidities and quality of life. Obstetrics & Gynecology,107, 617-624. doi: 10.1097/01.AOG.0000199951.26822.27 Bergeron, S., Khalifé, S., Dupuis, M., McDuff, P., Nezu, Arthur, M., & Davila, J., (2016). A randomized clinical trial comparing group cognitive-behavioral therapy and a topical steroid for women with dyspareunia.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 84, 259-268. doi: 10.1037/ccp0000072 Corsini-Munt, A., Bergeron, S., Rosen, N. O., Mayrand M-H., & Deslisle, I. (2014). Feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of a novel cognitive-behavioral couple therapy for provoked vestibulodynia: A pilot study. The Journal of Sexual Medicine, 11, 2515-1527. doi: 10.1111/jsm.12646 Maharaj, N. (2017). Perspectives on treating couples impacted by intimate partner violence. Journal of Family Violence,32, 431-437. doi:10.1007/s10896-016-9810-6 Rosen, N. O., Bergeron, S., Glowacka, M., Delisle, I., & Baxter, M. (2012). Harmful or helpful: perceived solicitous and facilitative partner responses are differentially associated with pain and sexual satisfaction in women with provoked vestibulodynia.Journal of Sexual Medicine,9(9), 2351-2360. doi: 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2012. 02851.x Rosen, N. O., Bergeron, S., Leclerc, B., Lambert, B., & Steben, M. (2010) Woman and partner-perceived partner responses predict pain and sexual satisfaction in provoked vestibulodynia (PVD) couples.The Journal of Sexual Medicine, 7, 3715-3724. doi: 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2010.01957. x. Rosen, N.O., Bergeron, S., Sadikaj, & Delisle, I. (2015). Daily associations among male partner responses, pain during intercourse, and anxiety in women with vulvodynia and their partners. Journal of Pain,16, 1312-1320. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2015.09.003 Sheppard, C., Hallam-Jones, R., & Wylie, K. (2008). Why have you both come? Emotional, relationship, sexual and social issues raised by heterosexual couples seeking sexual therapy (in women referred to a sexual difficulties clinic with a history of vulval pain). Sexual and Relationship Therapy,23, 217-226. doi: 10.1080/14681990802227974 Van Lankveld, J. J. D. M., Granot, M., Schultz, W. C. M. W., Binik, Y. M., Wesselmann, U., Pukall, C. F., et al. (2010).Women’s sexual pain disorders.Journal of Sexual Medicine, 7, 615-631. doi: 10.1111/j1743-6109.2009. 01631.x Tried and True: Exploring the Best Vulvodynia Treatment Options Sexual Talk in Long-Term Relationships: What’s Being Left Under the Covers? Depressed and distressed? Changes in new parents' depressive symptoms and sexual concerns over time Pain during vaginal sex: A current issue among young women CONNECT: A Couples' Study Sexual satisfaction: What is it and why does it matter? What is technology-facilitated sexual violence? Post baby hanky panky? For some women, it’s painful. Is sex still painful years after childbirth? Taking a closer look at persistent postpartum pain New Parents: How empathy for your partner can be beneficial for your relationship post-baby 1355 Oxford Street Life Sciences Centre © 2022 Couple & Sexual Health Research Laboratory
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June 9, 2022 @ 8:00 am - June 12, 2022 @ 5:00 pm « NCAA Rowing Championships (Divs. I, II and III) 15th Annual RoboBoat » The USRowing-produced regatta features more than 3,500 rowers racing for medals in as many as 43 events. There are 778 entries from 210 clubs across the nation, all of whom qualified for this event from regional youth championships. Those events included the USRowing Southeast Regional Championships, to which NBP played host in May. See the list of entries and clubs at https://www.regattacentral.com/regatta/?job_id=7735 To learn more about Youth Nationals, please visit https://usrowing.org/sports/2021/11/3/2022-Youth-National-Championships.aspx Purchase tickets here: https://usrowing.org/sports/2021/11/3/2022-Youth-National-Championships.aspx Per USRowing, spectator tents will be allowed on the West Shore and should be no larger than 10×10 feet. They are not permitted on Regatta Island. We always welcome volunteers — get closer to the action, get a NBP shirt and we’ll even feed you! The roles are various, as are the times available. We can’t wait to have you here with us! Click here to volunteer today. Our friends at USRowing are producing broadcasts of this weekend’s USRowing Youth National Championships here at NBP. Thursday’s time trials weren’t televised, but the racing is: Friday AM: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKyVl_sD4vs Friday PM: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cAqBoDfX6hA Saturday AM: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLkmNwxV1pw Saturday PM: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iErWyaPcF10 Sunday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7l-9QijOfIQ So if we can’t #SeeYouInSarasota, you can join us online from anywhere! June 9, 2022 @ 8:00 am https://usrowing.org/sports/2021/11/3/2022-Youth-National-Championships.aspx
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MonNov 27 AmericanCareers National Brand Day – November 27, 2023 National Brand Day takes place annually on the fourth Monday in November and this year, it falls on November 27. It reminds entrepreneurs to celebrate their brands and to express gratitude and appreciation for being able to have a brand. Business owners pour a lot of their time, ideas, skills, and other resources into creating brands. It often takes many years for a brand to become fully established and turn into a household name. It is only fitting then that we have a day dedicated to recognizing the hard work that brand owners channel into their ventures. National Brand Day was created in November 2020 by Brand Camp U.S.A. History of National Brand Day In the Ashanti Empire of Ghana, successful entrepreneurs who accumulated lots of wealth and slaves, and distinguished themselves through heroic deeds received social and political recognition. They were given the title ‘Abirempon,’ which means ‘big men.’ By the 18th and 19th centuries A.D., the title ‘Abirempon’ was formalized and politicized to include those who conducted trade that benefited the whole state. The empire rewarded entrepreneurs who attained such accomplishments with ‘mena’ (‘elephant tail’), which was considered a heraldic badge. Today, entrepreneurship ranges in scale from solo, part-time projects to large-scale undertakings that involve a team and create many jobs. Many high-value entrepreneurial ventures look for venture capital or seed money from angel investors to raise capital for building and growing the business. Businesses also receive financial and other support from specialized government agencies, business incubators, science parks, and non-governmental organizations such as charities, not-for-profits, foundations, and business advocacy groups. One of the most recent significant developments in entrepreneurship is the rise of millennial business owners. They are well equipped with the knowledge of new technology and new business models and have a firm grasp of such business applications. Many breakthrough businesses have come from millennial entrepreneurs such as Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook. The study of entrepreneurship goes back to the work of Adam Smith and Richard Cantillon in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. However, entrepreneurship remained largely ignored theoretically until the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In the 20th century, the understanding of entrepreneurship grew due to the work of economist Joseph Schumpeter in the 1930s and other Austrian economists such as Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich von Hayek, and Carl Menger. National Brand Day timeline A Term is Coined The word ‘entrepreneur’ first appears in the French dictionary entitled “Dictionnaire Universel de Commerce.” Permission to Do Business In Germany, a craftsperson is required to have special permission to operate as an entrepreneur. Change Increases Profitability Schumpeter demonstrates that a changing environment continuously provides new information about the optimum allocation of resources to enhance business profitability. Entrepreneurship Redefined Entrepreneurship is extended to include social entrepreneurship, where business goals are sought alongside environmental, social, or humanitarian goals. National Brand Day FAQs How many entrepreneurs are there in the world? There are approximately 582 million entrepreneurs across the world. What is the success rate of entrepreneurs? 80% of businesses survive through their first year. How many new businesses start each year in the U.S.? According to S.B.A estimates, more than 600,000 new businesses open each year in the U.S. National Brand Day Activities Support your entrepreneur friends Entrepreneurship is a challenging endeavor. On National Brand Day, express your appreciation for the entrepreneurs in your circles and buy their goods and services. Learn some history Business and entrepreneurship have a long and rich history. Take time on this day to learn about the origins and development of business. Tell others Talk to your loved ones about this day and its importance. You can also post on social media so that more people know about it. 5 Important Facts About Entrepreneurship About 69% of U.S. entrepreneurs start their businesses at home. American business growth More than 600,000 startups are launched every year in the United States. More women needed Only 27% of small startup owners are women. Different origins Research shows that less than 1% of entrepreneurs came from extremely rich or poor backgrounds. Serious money matters More than 80% of businesses fail because of poor cash management. Why We Love National Brand Day It supports entrepreneurs Building a brand takes hard work and dedication. National Brand Day recognizes the efforts of business owners. Celebrate and appreciate them on this day. It’s a time to reflect Brand owners can take time to think about how far they’ve come in their journey. It’s a day of gratitude for what they’ve been able to achieve. It’s good for families When a business prospers, it benefits more than the economy. The brand owner and their family thrive as they’re well provided for. National Brand Day dates 2022 November 28 Monday Yi Peng Lantern Festival Chatham Islands Anniversary Day Lancashire Day National Bavarian Cream Pie Day National Brand Day National Craft Jerky Day National Lawrence Day National Sovereignty Day Argentina Pins and Needles Day Turtle Adoption Day View all November holidays
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12488
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EM 1: The Administrative Organization of the University of Nebraska Executive Memorandum No. 1 The Administrative Organization of the University of Nebraska1 It has been eight years since the Legislature voted to make the Municipal University of Omaha a part of the University of Nebraska. It was at that time that the University of Nebraska System was established. During these eight years many changes have occurred in American higher education. Inflation has brought new fiscal pressures to bear on all universities, and the recent emergence of the federal government as a demanding partner in higher education has added a new dimension of difficulty to academic management. Nationwide there is a continued call for accountability, for common and uniform data, and for evidence of efficiency in management; and collective bargaining is beginning to emerge as a significant new aspect of university management. Moreover, birth rates have sharply declined, portending a likely decline in on-campus enrollment during the 1980's. (This prospect will be modified to some extent, however, by the clear trend for older Americans to attend college, i.e., more than half the current enrollees in the nation's colleges and universities are over 22 years of age.) Finally, non-traditional or open learning has become a new force in higher education which promises to make higher education accessible in an off-campus setting to millions of new learners. Within the University of Nebraska many changes have occurred in these eight years too. The combined enrollment has grown from approximately 30,000 to almost 40,000, with a corresponding increase in the number of employees. The physical plant has been expanded significantly. A major drive toward academic excellence has been undertaken with substantial state support provided for areas selected for special emphasis; and SUN, the nation's leading effort in open learning has been initiated at the University of Nebraska. Changes have also occurred in the University's governance and administrative structures. Several years ago the Board of Regents was expanded from six to eight members, and then more recently to eleven with the addition, ex officio, of the elected presidents of the three campus student bodies. The Central Administration in its early post-merger days was located on the Lincoln campus and was staffed, in many instances, by persons who held joint appointments on the Lincoln campus. Now the Central Administration is physically separate from all three campuses and joint appointments have been eliminated. The Computer Network for the entire University is administered by the Central Administration as is the University's program of graduate studies. In terms of administrative officers, the changes have been equally far-reaching. With but a single exception, no major administrative position on any of the three campuses is now occupied by a person who was incumbent at the time of the merger. Universities are, by nature, dynamic institutions and must always be prepared to respond to changing circumstances. The University of Nebraska is no exception, and it is apparent that after eight years of functioning as a merged system it is now time for a reassessment and for such modifications to the system as seem appropriate. This need for reassessment is reinforced by the growing external pressures for more highly centralized University administration as evidenced in LB 610, and by the recurring expressions of uncertainty about the roles of various components of the University. Thus, it is appropriate that a reexamination and restatement of organizational and functional relationships within the University should be made at this time. Recognizing this need, the Board of Regents at its October 1975 meeting appointed a special committee of the Board (including the President) which was directed to visit other university systems in our part of the country and study their organizational structures and operations. The committee, composed of Regents Hansen, Prokop, and alternately Raun and Schwartzkopf, visited with officials at the University of Illinois, the University of Missouri, the University of Minnesota, the University of Wisconsin, The University of Colorado and the Kansas Board of Regents. This committee submitted its report at the December meeting of the Board of Regents. In addition to this study of similar multi-campus institutions by the special committee of the Board of Regents, two other review projects have recently been mounted. First, in view of certain directives in LB 610 we have asked the management consulting firm of Cresap, McCormick and Paget -- which did a major study of the University's administrative structure four years ago -- to make a new study of selected administrative areas to determine if economies could be achieved through centralization, consolidation, or more extensive cooperation between campuses. The areas reviewed were 1) purchasing, 2) physical plant planning, 3) information services, 4) student financial aid, 5) accounting, and 6) institutional research. In support of this study, the purchasing officers of the University of Illinois and the University of Missouri were brought to Lincoln for extensive consultation. The second study, also undertaken in response to LB 610, is focused on the organization of the University's continuing education or off-campus educational efforts, including SUN. This study is still underway and is being conducted by an all-University committee composed of Dr. Quentin Gessner (UNL), Dr. William Utley (UNO), Mr. Robert Moutrie (UNMC), Mr. Jack McBride (SUN), and Dr. Hans Brisch (Central Administration). The committee is chaired by Executive Vice President Steven Sample, and it has met frequently over a period of three months. General Observations The University of Nebraska System has operated according to the philosophy that major delegations of authority are necessary in order to permit decisions to be made quickly and at the point of impact. Studies indicate that the degree of decentralized decision making at the University of Nebraska has been greater than at most -- if not all-comparable multi -campus systems. This decentralized system works well only if the major administrative positions are staffed with competent professionals who understand the principle of delegation of authority, who transmit this understanding to their colleagues, who communicate effectively, and who respect the roles of their associates in the functioning of the system. An attitude of cooperation and a free flow of information - - both up and down and horizontally -- are essential conditions for the effective functioning of a system which is as highly decentralized as the University of Nebraska has been in recent years. For most of the eight years since merger, the decentralized system has worked effectively because of the quality of the people involved and an understanding of the basic conditions required. However, in recent months there has been growing evidence of a need to review the existing organization of the University and to make certain clarifying modifications. That is, there has recently been an increasing tendency for campus administrators to interpret the delegation of authority as, in fact, an award of independent status. Occasionally this has led to a reluctance to cooperate fully and to share information openly and quickly; and at times it has led some to resist efforts toward coordination. This problem has been aggravated by the tendency of some external agencies and high officials to bypass Central Administration and to deal directly with campus administrative officers, with the inevitable result of a breakdown in effective communications. Finally, the "new environment" in which all higher education now functions -- the call for accountability, the insistence on uniform data, the pressure for adoption of management information systems, the requirements for evidence of compliance with multiple federal and state statutes and regulations, the move toward collective bargaining, the growing specter of increasingly limited resources for an increasingly complex task in higher education -- clearly calls for a reconsideration of this University's management structure and operational relationships. General Recommendations Recognizing the new context in which all higher education operates, admitting that the University of Nebraska has developed as one of the most highly decentralized multi-campus systems in the nation, and accepting the necessity for some restructuring, redefinition, and clarification, the case must still be made for resisting the argument for total centralization in administering the affairs of this University. The basis of this case is the fact that the fundamental purpose of the University is to serve its students -- and they are on the campuses. The University's principal resource for teaching, for discovering new knowledge, for rendering educational public service, is its faculty members -- and they are also on the campuses. Further, it is acknowledged sound administrative practice to locate the decision-making authority as near the point of operation as is practical. Nevertheless, there is a clear necessity to provide for central coordination in many areas, to develop and implement university-wide policies, and to make certain that the public and private resources made available to the Board of Regents are used in the most efficient and effective way. It is within these two broad bounds of constraint -- the need to delegate decision-making authority to the scene of operations and the need to centrally coordinate policy and resources -- that a wise organizational policy must be formulated for the University. With these constraints and this purpose in mind, then, the following general recommendations are made: A Philosophical Clarification Unfortunately, there has been a growing misconception during the past few years that the University of Nebraska is composed of separate, independent institutions operating as a loose confederacy, answering through a central administrative office to the Board of Regents. It is essential that this conception should be clarified. The University of Nebraska is one university with a unified overall mission, answering to one Board of Regents through one President and his central administrative office. The University functions on each of its campuses, each with its own primary role, and operates through authority delegated by the Board of Regents to the President, and from the President to the Chancellors. An Operational Clarification The Board of Regents has the ultimate responsibility for the effective functioning of the University of Nebraska and for the management of all its resources. The Board of Regents has delegated to the President of the University the administrative responsibility for the management of available resources and for the administration of the University as a whole. The President, in turn, has delegated through a line authority the responsibility for the administration of the affairs of each of the campuses to the Chancellor of each campus. It should be underscored that the Chancellors also bear the title Vice President of the University. Similarly, through staff authority, the President has delegated substantial all-University responsibility to other vice presidents: the Executive Vice President and Provost, the Vice President for Business and Finance, the Vice President and General Counsel, and the Vice President for University Affairs. The significance of the title "Vice President" should not escape the attention of all involved. It is expected that the Vice Presidents of the University shall function in a cooperative and reinforcing way, concerned not only with their specific areas of responsibility but with the total well-being of the entire University of Nebraska as a single university.. A Budgetary Clarification In order for the Board of Regents and the responsible officers of the Board to discharge their responsibilities effectively, it is essential that greater budgetary flexibility be accorded the Board of Regents. No informed person questions the responsibility of the Governor and the Legislature to examine budget requests, to ask penetrating questions about the management of the University, to seek clarification of Regents' priorities, to determine funds available to University operations, and to require detailed reporting of expenditures. Full accountability is a proper expectation. Yet, to remove the right of the Board of Regents to establish University priorities, to determine those who merit rewards for performance, and to adjust the budget to meet changing needs during the course of the year is to deny the Board of Regents ability to govern effectively. For these reasons it is essential, if the University is to function properly, for the Board of Regents to be given the maximum possible budgetary flexibility consistent with proper executive and legislative overview and safeguards. A Procedural Clarification There is growing evidence that one of the main causes of confusion in the administration and operation of the University of Nebraska is the current system for responding to legislative and executive requests for information. The current system has evolved on an informal basis and in a spirit of cooperation and good will. It is largely a carryover of practices from a less complicated era. That is, more and more often campus officers find themselves in direct official contact with the executive and legislative branches of government. On the face of it, this seems to many to be the simplest and most convenient way to function. However, this practice often results in subsequent confusion and misunderstanding, particularly when Central Administration and a campus administrator answer similar questions differently. Similar questions asked in different contexts at different times of different officers, who have different duties and either more or less comprehensive data, can understandably produce different answers. Confusion is inevitable. In order to minimize this communications hazard and in the interest of orderly procedures, it is important for the University to develop an understanding with government officers whereby their questions are brought to the Central Administration for response or delegation to the campuses and, similarly, that information from the campuses to the executive and legislative branches is processed through appropriate officers of the Central Administration. In view of our experience of eight years as a multi-campus university, in order to clarify administrative procedures and in the interests of a more orderly and effective functioning of the University of Nebraska, I shall issue additional Executive Memoranda from time to time. This statement was approved by the Board of Regents at its December 13, 1975, meeting and, therefore, represents the policy of the Board of Regents. 1The introduction to Executive Memorandum No. 1 has been retained in its original form to offer historical perspectives. Only the recommendations section has been updated, and that only to the extent deemed necessary to reflect current configuration of the system.
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Tag: Carlotta Walls Lanier Will Ross to Receive Frankie Freeman Inspirational Award WashU Nephrology congratulates Will Ross, MD, MPH, Alumni Endowed Professor of Medicine, Nephrology, and Associate Dean for Diversity at Washington University School of Medicine, who will receive the Frankie Freeman Inspirational Award at the Ethical Society of St. Louis this Friday, February 17, 2023. The event is sponsored by the St. Louis County Library (SLCL), […]
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12490
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On This Day Last Year – Netball World Cup 2019 Final After 10 days of intense competition, the Vitality Netball World Cup 2019 final and 3rd placing took place on Sunday 21st July 2019 at the M&S Bank Arena. England and South Africa battled it out for the bronze medal with the England Roses taking the win with the match ending 58-42. Whilst South Africa didn’t manage to place in the top three, history was made for Africa as all four African countries participating in the netball world cup finished within the top eight. The greatest rivals in netball history, Australia and New Zealand took centre stage for the Netball World Cup final. Bringing their best players in front of 8,000 fans, both teams battled it out and after an intense game, the Silver Ferns finished one point above the Diamonds making them Vitality Netball World Cup 2019 champions. Watch all the matches from the Vitality Netball World Cup 2019 here. During the closing ceremony, the event was handed over to the next hosts, South Africa. Former INF President, Hon. Molly Rhone passed the INF flag to Netball South Africa President and INF Director for Africa, Cecilia Molokwane. The Netball World Cup, 2023 will take place in Cape Town, South Africa and will be the first Netball World Cup to be hosted on the African continent.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12491
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Magda Chinaglia MD., PhD. Works at Reprolatina, a small non-governmental organisation (NGO) in southern Brazil, seeks to improve the sexual and reproductive health of disadvantaged populations in Latin America. Over the past six years Reprolatina has developed approaches for improving health services for women, men and adolescents; for empowering community leaders to engage in advocacy for sexual and reproductive health and rights; and for engaging young people in initiatives that give direction to their lives and help them to decrease vulnerability. Working within a participatory, rights-based and gender/social equity framework, Reprolatina acts as a facilitator and trainer in partnership with public sector service systems and local communities in Brazil, Chile, Bolivia and Paraguay, with the objective of building capacity to ensure sustainability and scaling-up. In addition to developing technical competence Reprolatina’s educational strategy focuses on personal and professional empowerment, social change, and organisational development. Position Research collaborator Magda Chinaglia Comments Magda Chinaglia's Posts Magda Chinaglia's groups Impact: Social and Behavioural Change Red Salud
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12492
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5/20/2022 May 20, 2022 May 20, 2022 @ 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm Recurring Event Whiskey Friday: The Bohemian Whiskey Friday: The Bohemian The Bohemian 1029 3rd St SE, Cedar Rapids Join us every Friday at 4pm at a local bar/ restaurant from a rotating series to celebrate the small and big successes of the week, unwind, and build relationships with … Whiskey Friday: The Bohemian Read More »
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12493
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Look: “Yellow vests” movement wakes up France by Ella Steinhilber | 19 Mar 2019 | Europe, Eyewitness, Nationalism, School Year Abroad, Student Posts “Yellow vests” protests have rocked France for months. We watched angry demonstrators march in Brittany — proof the movement is national in scope. Saturday after Saturday since last November, France has seen protesters take to the streets in demonstrations, often violent, that were initially aimed at rising fuel prices and which have morphed into a broader movement of economic and social discontent. International news coverage of the “gilets jaunes” (yellow vests) movement — named after the vests that motorists in France are required to have in their vehicles in case of an emergency — has focused on violent protests in Paris, especially on the destruction of shops, banks, automobiles, restaurants and cafés in swanky neighborhoods of the capital. But demonstrators have taken to the streets in many other cities, including Rennes in Brittany where I am studying this year. Rennes is a college town with a charming center of half-timbered buildings and narrow cobblestone streets. On a Saturday morning in late January, gilets jaunes demonstrators from all over Brittany gathered to protest in the center of the region’s capital city. Thousands of demonstrators wearing fluorescent yellow vests and brandishing signs denouncing President Emmanuel Macron chanted as they walked through the streets. It was the first time the protesters had amassed in one place in the region. Those from Rennes started marching on the outskirts of the city and met up in the city center with those from elsewhere in Brittany. The reunion was an astonishing event to witness. Riot police with shields quickly lined up, backed by large vans. Protesters created blockades as they faced off against the police. There was a lot of shouting, and some demonstrators threw smoke grenades. The confrontation escalated as police fired tear gas. After the protests subsided, we saw broken windows, graffiti scrawled on banks and smoking embers. It was clear that the gilets jaunes, which lack strong leadership, were disorganized. Still, the movement continues, week after week, to put pressure on Macron’s administration as political parties ready for European Parliament elections in May. Groups on both the far right and far left are hoping to tap into the gilets jaunes movement, although polls show it’s not clear which parties will benefit most from the discontent. It’s also not clear just how long the protests will continue, but the gilet jaunes have vowed to continue pushing for change. Ella Steinhilber is spending her last year of high school in France with School Year Abroad and will finish her high school studies at the University School of Nashville. She loves courses ranging from Math to History, and at university plans to pursue interdisciplinary studies with a global emphasis. Ella plays soccer and lacrosse, and enjoys mentoring underprivileged kids. She co-founded a youth organization that promotes gun law reform in Tennessee. Garrett Wilson is in his second year of high school, studying at School Year Abroad‘s program in Rennes, France. He plans to return to Allendale Columbia School in Rochester, New York, next year. Outside of school, he is a commercial film editor, producing content for major brands and agencies around the world. He enjoys photography and film-making. WorldEuropeLook: “Yellow vests” movement wakes up France
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12494
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Daniel Craig’s last film, No time to Die finally has royal premiere Daniel Craig’s final James Bond film has finally had its world premiere in London, 18 months later than planned because it was delayed by the pandemic. ‘No Time to Die’ is the British actor’s fifth outing as 007. Craig said the role was incredibly important to cinema and to history, and the weight of that has been on his shoulders for a while. INEC Publishes Notice of Election Tunisia Police Arrests Ex-Prime Minister on Money Laundering
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Tag: unsignedproducer The Iconic Music Producer – Pharrell Williams by Karan D. - DLK Pro | Sep 6, 2022 | Featured | 0 | Pharrell Lanscilo Williams is one of the most influential music producers of the 21st century. The American musician, singer, rapper, record producer, and songwriter has had a major impact on the music industry. Williams began
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Forests : 1 Kamloops : 2 New graduate student scholarship fund supports TRU’s best talent Wednesday, June 20, 2018 9:05 AM A new $180,000 graduate student scholarship fund is being provided to Thompson Rivers University (TRU) to support students in priority areas, like science and technology, and boost research and economic growth throughout the province. $861,500 in grants will help fight invasive plants in southern Interior Wednesday, May 2, 2018 10:37 AM The Government of British Columbia is providing $861,500 in grants to help manage the spread of invasive plants in the Okanagan and Thompson-Nicola regions, Doug Donaldson, Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development announced.
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ARCHIVED: Natural Gas Development : 1 B.C. HOME Partnership program open for applications Friday, January 27, 2017 12:30 PM As of Jan. 16, 2017, British Columbians looking to purchase their first home can apply to the B.C. Home Owner Mortgage and Equity Partnership program, which helps first-time homebuyers create secure and stable futures for their families through home ownership.
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Faculty Council meeting Feb. 23 Make it seven At its eighth meeting of the year (Feb. 23), the Faculty Council discussed the February Faculty Meeting. The Council next meets on March 9. The preliminary deadline for the March 15 Faculty Meeting is 9:30 a.m. on Monday (Feb. 28).
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Global perspective Human stories UN Art and Gifts History Corner UN Affairs Law and Crime Prevention The Lid is On UN Gender Focus UN Podcasts Selected Speeches Press Encounters Official Travels UN Video Audio Hub INTERVIEW: Fast-response ‘vanguard brigade’ of peacekeepers now a reality UN Photo/Sylvain Liechti Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Hervé Ladsous speaks to journalists in Bamako, Mali, during his visit. 4 April 2017 Peace and Security A “vanguard brigade” of UN Peacekeepers which can be deployed within 60 days to new trouble-spots, would have been “impossible” to envisage just two years ago. But not any longer, according to Hervé Ladsous, the out-going Peacekeeping chief, who said in his final interview with UN News that the department (DPKO) had become more efficient in recent years, without "lowering the quality" of often life-saving services it provides around the world. Around 126 countries contribute civilian, military and police personnel to DPKO, which has well over 100,000 people on active duty. Mr. Ladsous explained to UN News how the department had been able to cut the budget from $US8.2 billion down to $US7.2 billion since 2011, when he took on the job. UN News: During Friday's press conference, you said the entire budget for peacekeeping operations worldwide is down US $7.2 billion and that the cost for each peacekeeper fell 16 per cent in recent years. How did you manage that without hurting day-to-day operations? Hervé Ladsous: Simply by being more efficient, and I have to stress without lowering the quality of the equipment or the services we were providing. I think it shows that we want to be good stewards of the resources that are given to us. UN peacekeepers in the Central African Republic recently halted the advance of some 40 heavily-armed members of the coalition led by the Front Populaire pour la Renaissance de Centrafrique (FPRC) towards the city of Bambari. Peacekeepers intervened with air operations as part of efforts to prevent a war in Bambari between armed groups. The UN mission in the country has close to 13,000 uniformed personnel. Photo: UN Peacekeeping UN News: If there were to be further budgetary cuts, how would this affect the UN? Hervé Ladsous: Well I of course note that it is for the Security Council to decide on our mandate, and on our ceilings of staffing. We will have to stress that in some circumstances, reductions might have operational consequences on the ground. But we will remain, as ever, in very close touch with all the Member States of the Council and, further down the road of course, with the Fifth Committee (Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions). UN News: You've touted the technological advances that are helping to improve the work of peacekeepers on the ground – can you give us some examples? Hervé Ladsous: Of course. The obvious one is the unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), which are now becoming standard in most of our operations – both the big drones and the smaller ones. But I do stress surveillance drones, of course not tactical machines. But it's also about getting detection radars for weapon attacks; it's about tethered balloons – to watch over a city like Bangui, with cameras and thermal senses – which really allow us to see what is happening. UN News: If you look at all the conflicts that are taking place on the ground, it seems that the peacekeeping operations have had to stretch a bit to be able to accommodate all these crises. What has it been like? Hervé Ladsous: Stretch, yes of course, but when we had the peacekeeping summit two years ago, it translated into many offers by contributors of troops and police, both old and newer ones. We've had to operationalize these offers and now we have reached a point where we will have the capacity to deploy a vanguard brigade within thirty to sixty days, which simply was impossible only two years ago. So, stretch I'm not sure is really the word. The problem, though, has to do with the enablers and with the equipment of certain units, and we are constantly working with those countries to help and improve. We are trying to be creative, to address those issues in the most effective way. Under-Secretary-General Hervé Ladsous briefs the Security Council, the UN body that decides on the deployment and mandates of peacekeeping operations. The cost for each peacekeeper fell 16 per cent in recent years. UN Secretary-General António Guterres recently said that he is ready to discuss with Member States how best to create a more cost-effective Organization that can tackle the enormous challenges facing the international community. UN Photo/Rick Bajornas A member of the Brazilian battalion of the UN mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) demonstrates to Under-Secretary-General Ladsous how they use drones during their security patrols. Mr. Ladsous oversaw the first deployment of drones in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2014. UN Photo/Igor Rugwiza >UN peacekeepers from the Netherlands serving with the UN mission in Mali (MINUSMA) are on guard duty in Gao in the country’s north. According to the Under-Secretary-General, the peacekeeping burden has not been shared equally between the global “north” and the global “south.” Although the balance has improved in recent years, “we can’t say the job has been done.” UN Photo/Marco Dormino Women are still underrepresented in peacekeeping and UN Secretary-General António Guterres recently spoke of improvements to peacekeeping operations and a commitment to gender parity. He intends to ensure that women hold senior roles at the UN and that women continue to be represented at all levels of the Organization. Pictured here is the all-female police force from India providing backup on patrol for local unarmed Liberian National Police. Photo/Christopher Herwig On a recent visit to South Sudan Under-Secretary-General Ladsous told President Kiir that the solution to the problems facing the world’s youngest country has to be a political one. UN Secretary-General António Guterres has stressed the need for the leadership of South Sudan to pull the country back from the abyss, and back from a widening famine. UN Photo/Isaac Billy In the wake of recent news reports of sexual exploitations by UN staff, Jane Holl Lute (foreground left) was appointed as UN Special Coordinator on improving the UN response to sexual exploitation and abuse. UN Secretary-General António Guterres also requested a high-level panel to develop a strategy to improve the Organization’s approach to sexual exploitation and abuse. Here Ms. Holl Lute visits the UN mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA). UN Photo/Nektarios Markogiannis UN News: The Department of Peacekeeping Operations has managed to get more recruits from the global north compared to the global south which has been contributing more troops over the years. What has changed? Hervé Ladsous: I think this was one of the subjects on which I worked a lot over these five years because it seemed to me that the situation was unfair. The burden was not shared equally. We haven't reached a point where we can say the job is done but certainly there has been a trend and when we look at the mission in Mali, MINUSMA, you have no less than seventeen European countries – European Union countries – who are represented by staff or personnel of that mission. In the Central African Republic I have not forgotten that it was the Europeans, indeed, who came to provide a kind of buffering between the African Union and a full deployment of the UN troops. So I think this is something that has to be encouraged because ten years ago many of those countries were heavily involved in Afghanistan. Now that of course has disappeared essentially from the screens and I think they came to realize that coming back to peacekeeping in the UN context is something that is desirable. UN News: Your department has also been trying to increase the participation of women in peacekeeping operations, but women are still underrepresented and why is that? Also I have set a goal for military officers – staff officers – to get also 20 per cent of female officers, as soon as possible. Hervé Ladsous: That is true and of course, we haven't made as much progress as I would have wished but of course you have to be aware that the sociology of the armies of the main countries of the world is not a very feminine one. So we can hardly be expected to do much better than the Member States who provide us the personnel. We are doing rather a little better for police personnel. We stand, I think, right now at 12 per cent and the goal is that we may reach twenty per cent, which I think we may be able to do. Also I have set a goal for military officers – staff officers – to get also 20 per cent of female officers, as soon as possible. But it requires a lot of work, and of course, the active cooperation of those countries who contribute troops and police. During his exit interview with UN News, the outgoing UN peacekeeping chief Hervé Ladsous said that there should not only be “zero tolerance” for sexual exploitation and abuse but also “zero occurrence.” He also highlighted the importance of training on the issue, and the need for troop-contributing countries to do their part. UN News: It must have been frustrating for your department in cases where there is no peace to keep, for example in Mali, South Sudan … It's a shame that a few people, you know, smear the reputation of the vast majority of the peacekeepers and, of course, we should not forget the member states who contribute the troops and police have to do their share. It's not only the responsibility of the secretariat Hervé Ladsous: Exactly, that's true. I was in South Sudan last week, and it's the same. You see, this has been a trend that the Security Council gives us mandates, but in contexts which are not exactly those that we would hope to find. So of course one of the permanent goals for those missions – and it's been certainly the case in Mali, it is the case presently in South Sudan – is to try to support those particular countries of the region who try to engineer a peace agreement, and of course implementing those agreements then becomes our responsibility. But there have been some very delicate transitions and of course situations which exposed our people to greater risk obviously. I haven't forgotten the short-lived supervision mission that we dispatched to Syria in 2012. After four months we concluded that. This was not for us, definitely. There was no peace, nor was there any hope at the time of seeing the process developing. UN News: The issue of sexual exploitation and abuse by UN staff in countries like CAR, DRC, Haiti, just to name few, made big splashes in the news and tainted the name of peacekeepers, although it is a system wide problem. Do you feel that DPKO handled this issue correctly and is it on the right path to rid itself of the scourge? Hervé Ladsous: I think we have always taken this very seriously. The new Secretary-General has put even more emphasis by putting out his plan of action which builds and prolongs a number of things which we had already done. I think it is absolutely a necessity. It's a shame that a few people, you know, smear the reputation of the vast majority of the peacekeepers and, of course, we should not forget the member states who contribute the troops and police have to do their share. It's not only the responsibility of the secretariat. Emergency and search-and-rescue teams have deployed to assess and prioritize urgent needs and to provide life-saving assistance following the devastating earthquake near the Türkiye-Syria border. ♦ Receive daily updates directly in your inbox - Subscribe here to a topic. ♦ Download the UN News app for your iOS or Android devices. Ramped-up emergency preparedness, part of ‘changing the DNA’ of the UN’s health agency ‘Collective endeavour’ needed to strengthen peacekeeping further, says top UN official UN must bring more women police officers into the fold to be effective – UN peacekeeping official News Tracker: Past Stories on This Issue Guterres grateful for US support as largest UN contributor; will work with Member States on reform Secretary-General António Guterres is committed to reforming the United Nations and stands ready to discuss with the United States and any other Member State how best to create a more cost-effective Organization that can tackle the enormous challenges facing the international community, his spokesman said today. Navigate the News UN System Links Media Alert SG Twitter Spokesperson's Office Latest Statements Briefing Highlights Briefing Transcripts Notes to Correspondents UN News App Contact UN News
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12500
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Today is: Monday, June 1, 2015 Home » News » International » BBC banned programme on sexual attacks by its own TV personality BBC banned programme on sexual attacks by its own TV personality New York, March 7: The British Broadcasting Corporation, whose “internal culture” was described as “rotten” by a prominent British politician, has a record of trying to cover up sexual attacks by its own employees, including canceling a TV programme on a BBC star personality who was a serial child rapist. BBC canceled the investigative report exposing its popular presenter Jimmy Savile’s predatory sexual attacks on scores of children that was scheduled to have been broadcast in December 2011 in the Newsnight programme. Just last week a report by a panel investigating Savile’s sexual crimes at one of the hospitals where he volunteered reported that he had attacked 60 people there, about half of them under 16 years, some as young as eight. A report by the Metropolitan Police and the Britain’s National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children said in 2013 that 214 criminal offences have been formally recorded in which Savile is a suspect and these took place from 1955 to 2009. Many of the abuses took place in 14 medical establishments. British Members of Parliament have expressed concern over the BBC ignoring sexual abuses by its own employees. The Guardian reported in 2012 that Labour MP Harriet Harman had asked what it was about the BBC and the hospitals where the abuses took place that had prevented people coming forward when Savile was alive. And after the newspaper exposed allegations against BBC employees in 2013, Conservative politician Rob Wilson said, “For years the BBC’s management allowed a culture to develop of turning a blind eye to sexual abuse and allowing powerful bullies to prosper.” “The internal culture of the BBC was rotten and it remains to be seen whether it still is,” he added according to the newspaper. Wilson, an MP at that time, is now the Minister for Civil Society. Later in 2013, Wilson accused the BBC Trust’s chairman, Lord Patten, of displaying “chilling behaviour” when he tried to prevent Wilson from publishing the contents of an audio recording that brought into question a key aspect of an inquiry into the cancellation of the Newsnight programme, according to The Telegraph. The recording was of the inquiry head, Nick Pollard, which “reportedly undermines his own findings,” the newspaper said. “Lord Patten’s threat to a democratically-elected Member of Parliament is almost reminiscent of something from the Soviet-era,” the Telegraph quoted Wilson. “It is chilling behaviour from the so-called public ‘guardian’ of this country’s dominant state broadcaster.” BBC is funded by a government-imposed levy on all British households that watch broadcasts on television, regardless of whether they view BBC programmes or not. In 2012 when his inquiry report was released, Pollard, a former Sky News head, said “The efforts to get to the truth behind the Savile story proved beyond the combined efforts of the senior management, legal department, corporate communications team and anyone else for well over a month.” The Guardian had obtained the information about the sex abuse of children and teens by BBC employees through a Freedom of Information request. It said that in the six months since October 2012, 20 BBC employees had faced 36 allegations of sex abuse of “an unknown number of victims under the age of 18.” Citing the FoI request report, the Guardian said, “The complaints were among a total of 152 recent and historic allegations of sexual abuse against 81 BBC employees and freelancers, including 48 about Savile. Each of the complaints, involving adults and children, have been made to the BBC since October.” The Guardian said that half the number of the accused were current members of BBC staff or contributors, as of May 30, 2013. Reports of sex abuse by several BBC employees began to come out in the open after the accusations against the network star Savile became public even though BBC blacked out the Newsnight report. In 2012, ITV ran a report of its own investigations into Savile’s decades-long history of sexual attacks. When the report of the review into Savile’s attacks at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Aylesbury, about 65 kilometres from London, was released last week, Dr Androulla Johnstone, who led the inquiry, said, “The Investigation found that none of the informal complaints were either taken seriously or escalated to senior management.” “Savile’s victims ranged in age from eight (to) 40 and almost half were under 16, with ten being under the age of 12,” Johnstone said in a press statement. “Around one-third of his attacks were against patients. Just over ninety per cent of the victims were female.” Her statement added, “The sexual abuse ranged from inappropriate touching to rape.” Calling Savile an “opportunistic predator,” her statement said, “Between 1972 and 1985, nine informal verbal reports were made about the abuse by his victims and in addition one formal complaint was made. ” Another broader review of Savile’s conduct and into “whether the culture and practices within the BBC during the years of Jimmy Savile’s employment enabled inappropriate sexual conduct to continue unchecked” is dragging on. It is headed by a Janet Smith, a former Court of Appeal judge . On its web site the review, set up in 2012, said it had been in contact approximately 740 people till last September and more people were contacting it as of December. It expected to have a report ready early this year. Pollard’s inquiry report on the cancellation of the Newsnight expose of Savile said that BBC’s top leadership was not involved in the decision. The Telegraph reported, “However, it did not include testimony from Helen Boaden, the BBC’s former Head of News. She alleged that Mark Thompson, the corporation’s former director general, was aware of the content of the Newsnight investigation.” “Despite her testimony Pollard’s inquiry found that there was ‘no evidence to doubt’ Mr Thompson’s version of events,” the newspaper said. In Wilson’s recording that BBC tried to suppress, the Telegraph said, “Pollard reportedly privately admits that he was wrong to overlook Miss Boaden’s evidence” that Thompson knew about what the Newsnight investigation found. Thompson is now the Chief Executive Officer of The New York Times. Tags: BBC Kerala Assembly speaker G Karthikeyan passes away I’d love to play Indira Gandhi: Mallika Sherawat Documentary on 2012 Nirbhaya Gang Rape Banned in India Why this outrage? Mukesh Singh’s excuses are hardly unique When British journalist ‘accidentally’ asked Clarke of his ‘tremendous sex’ as skipper! ‘No one above nation, with govt. on documentary ban': Nirbhaya’s mother Meet the man who gets drunk on chips
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HomeOpinionTen questions and answers about nurseries and vouchers Ten questions and answers about nurseries and vouchers By Terrance The coverage at the stations has been expanded, says the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs cites information on the operation of daycare centers and what applies to vouchers and beneficiaries in response to? accusations of the opposition, according to which many children are left out of stations. The ministry answers ten questions about the stations. Particularly: 1. The opposition claims that many thousands of children are left out of nursery schools. What do you answer to that? No child has been left out of nursery school! All applications for nurseries have been filled! It is typical that 111,000 children receive vouchers in the nurseries for the period 2022-2023. The corresponding number of vouchers for 2021 was 97,000, while in 2019 the number of children who received vouchers reached 84,000 (a 32% increase). This year starts with more children than ever in the nurseries, the Children’s Creative Employment Centers (KDAP) and the Creative Employment Centers for People with Disabilities (KDAP AmaA). The increase in the budget of the relevant program to 333 million euros (from 270 million euros in 2019) made it possible to grant a total of 180,000 vouchers (for infants, toddlers, primary school and disabled children) compared to 155,000 given in 2019 (an increase of 16 %). 2. Then which children is the opposition protesting about since you say that all the applications for nursery places were covered? Indeed, no child was left out of nursery school. We underline it. The opposition seeks a conscious confusion between nurseries and Creative Employment Centers (CEDs). The KDAPs cover children aged 5-12. There is absolutely no issue at KDAP PWDs. The discussion arises because of the remaining KDAP. What is happening there; In KDAP, the same beneficiaries as last year were maintained, reaching 60,000 coupons. So in no case, not even in KDAP, was there a reduction in the effort to cover the needs compared to last year and the distant past. However, we note that the excess demand in KDAP will be dealt with in four ways: First, with the allocation of an additional special fund of 5 million euros that is expected to be given through the Ministry of the Interior and the Hellenic Society for Local Development and Self-Government (EETAA). Second, with the new allocation of unused vouchers in early 2023 Thirdly, with additional support from the co-competent Ministries of Finance and Development from the Public Investment Program (PPE), so that more than 10,000 vouchers can be granted for the specific structures. Fourth and most importantly, with the expansion of full-day school, a program immediately promoted by the Ministry of Education with 50% funding from the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, covers the same ages and concerns tens of thousands of children. 3. How will this additional funding work in conjunction with the new allocation of vouchers for KDAP? The possibility to activate the vouchers for the nurseries is until May 2, 2023. On the contrary, for the KDAP it is until December 1, 2022. This gives the possibility to have a new distribution of the unused vouchers at the beginning of 2023 by including new beneficiaries in the program. In addition, as recently announced by EETAA, which is the implementing body of the voucher program, with special funding of 5 million euros expected to be given by the Ministry of the Interior, the number of benefiting children who are going to enroll in Municipal KDAP will increase. 4. And how is the extension of full-day school related to KDAP? But essentially they are related to the same subject! One cannot turn a blind eye to this program – the extension of the full-day school, that is – which has a strong social sign and covers the same needs and the same families. We are talking about extending the opening hours until 17.30 in 2,063 full-day primary schools in Athens, Thessaloniki and the Region. This may not fully satisfy the owners of some KDAP, of course, but it covers families and their needs. And that, after all, is the point. The question is not the owners of the KDAP, but the father, the mother and the children. 5. In relation to the KDAPs for the disabled that you referred to, what is the change? In the KDAP with disabilities, all children with disabilities receive vouchers, regardless of their family’s income. This year we have around 9,000 children, while the corresponding number for 2019 was 4,500, an increase of almost 50%. We have prioritized this particular part of the program for obvious reasons that we are sure everyone understands. 6. What has finally changed in the program regarding the vouchers for places in nurseries? As already noted, 111,000 children are receiving vouchers in the nurseries for this year 2022-2023, which is also the largest number ever. The corresponding figure for 2019 was 84,000. In other words, 27,000 more children received vouchers securing them places in full-care infant, toddler and nursery schools. In this way, the great importance that the government attaches to preschool education, which is a central pillar of its social policy, is highlighted. 7. Have the income criteria for inclusion in the nursery school program changed recently? Yes, indeed the program was expanded. The income criteria for inclusion in the nursery school program have increased by 6,000 euros compared to 2019, as can be seen from the indicative examples we cite: A family with 2 children and an annual income of up to €33,000 this year receives a voucher, while in 2019, to receive it, their income had to be below €27,000. 8. Can public and private employees participate in the program? An injustice of years has been corrected, as it is also possible for employees in the public sector to be able to get vouchers for KDAP from this year and not only for nurseries (possibility valid from 2020). Therefore, regardless of whether the employer is a private person or the State, the employee now has the same opportunity to get vouchers for all categories of structures, which was not the case until now for employees in the public sector. 9. Did only the number of vouchers or the value of each voucher increase? At the same time, with the increase in the overall budget, a 10% increase in the value of each voucher at the stations was ensured in order to support businesses due to their increased expenses (e.g. in a daycare center: from 2,375 euros to 2,612 euros per year) . 10. In other words, is the government completely satisfied with its policy on the issue of nurseries and children’s creative employment centers? There is always room for improvement. However, no one can dispute that both funds and places in crèches and KDAP have overall increased significantly compared to 2019. No one in good faith can dispute that no child has been left out of crèches. No one in good faith can also dispute that all children were covered for KDAP with disabilities. Finally, no one in good faith can dispute that for the remaining KDAP, as many vouchers were issued as last year. The increased demand in KDAP can be covered by other methods: By the distribution of unused vouchers, with additional funding through the Ministry of the Interior and the Public Investment Program, but mainly through the expansion of the full-day primary school that can cover tens of thousands of Greek families. The method of coverage is different, but the result is the same. Read the News today and get the latest news. Follow Skai.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news. Terrance I am Terrance Carlson, author at News Bulletin 247. I mostly cover technology news and I have been working in this field for a long time. I have a lot of experience and I am highly knowledgeable in this area. I am a very reliable source of information and I always make sure to provide accurate news to my readers. How to clean the house properly? See expert tips Why Japan Declared War on Floppy Disks and CDs Diki Kampanou: The 19-year-old’s parents left the room – “What will be heard is very harsh” Unthinkable incident in Larissa: An elderly man was hitting and dragging his grandson on the sidewalk He “ran” the neighborhood under the pretext of dropping clothes on balconies – His loot was over 32,000 euros AEK: Last 0-0 in New Philadelphia, since 1995 and 130 games later! The internationals get to work for the Euro 2024 qualifiers Giving a face to the unknown dead – Skulls from a 3D printer France: In a “handful of votes” the fate of the Macron government will be decided – Faced with two motions of censure UBS: Sanctioned for its merger with Credit Suisse International Conference of Donors today in Brussels for earthquake-stricken Turkey and Syria News Bulletin 247 provides the latest stock market, economy, world, and entertainment news and press release from around the world. 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2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12503
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July 10, 2018 March 4, 2019 News From The Past 1894: Abandoned baby and £200
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Home Business ALEX BRUMMER: The green dream is crumbling ALEX BRUMMER: The green dream is crumbling ALEX BRUMMER: As Britishvolt’s failure shows, Britain’s dreams of becoming a green energy champion rest on fragile foundations Pa Alex Brummer for the Daily Mail Posted by: 6:00 PM EDT, October 31, 2022 | Updated: 6:00 PM EDT, October 31, 2022 The failure of Britishvoltwith its vaunted ambitions to create a £3.8bn gigafactory in the North East, provides a useful lesson. Britain’s dreams of becoming a clean energy champion rest on shaky foundations. Not only Britain’s ambitions to build power plants for the automotive industry are at risk. Liam Condon, chief executive of Johnson Matthey, warns that the UK is also at risk of losing its lead in the race to develop hydrogen. Britishvolt is on the brink of collapse after failing to raise enough funding for a multibillion-dollar battery plant in Northumberland Indeed, the UK’s greatest hope for hydrogen is the drive by major oil companies, particularly BP, to pioneer the field. Unlike Britishvolt, the oil company does not need to dig into the weeds to find support. All this puts into perspective Labour’s big idea for the British Energy Company, the centerpiece of Keir Starmer’s speech at his party’s conference in September. Labor is right to bemoan the fact that so many energy firms have fallen into foreign hands. This means that vital decisions about our government are made in Paris, Berlin and Madrid. International investors usually make firm decisions about where to invest based on the rate of return. But energy is so political, especially given the war in Ukraine, that national interests trump everything else. The UK’s only new nuclear project at Hinckley in Somerset cannot be funded in the UK and is entirely dependent on the engineering and financial support of EDF, which is now wholly owned by the state. The French firm will also be crucial if the facility at Sizewell C in Suffolk is to go ahead. The idea that a UK energy company is going to transform Britain by investing in renewable energy is fantastic. Picking green winners may be possible. A green investment bank set up by the coalition government had several projects but was an easy target for privatization as the government looked for sources of funding. The Labor campaign will receive £8bn of public funding. Where it will come from is unclear, since windfall taxes, even if they had a much larger yield, have already been spent several times over. There are questions about who will lead UK Energy and whether it will be able to attract resources in a Labor government focused on the NHS, schools and social care. Left-wing governments, even with excellent natural energy resources, do not have great energy performance, as the experience of Venezuela shows. Starmer should switch to real-world experience of British Volta and hydrogen before trading on dreams. Royal battle The rapidly revolving doors at the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) make it impossible to discern any consistency in what it does. Those who hoped that the National Security and Investment Act would finally mean that the UK’s trend of selling off its crown jewels could finally be stopped will be disappointed. The latest deal to be scrapped is Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinski’s plan to increase his stake in Royal Mail to 25 percent. One suspects that Kretinski is interested in the fast-growing parcel delivery arm of Global Logistics Services (GLS), not last-mile delivery, the subversive CWU union or Royal Mail’s strange plan to actually date a postage stamp. It is debatable whether it is possible to demerge and be a commercially viable separate Royal Mail. We know the government doesn’t seem to mind our vital communications companies, BT and Royal Mail, being under the thumb of foreign billionaires who could have no interest in customer service or building broadband for hard-to-reach neighbourhoods. The UK may need inward investment to help close the balance of payments capital account deficit. Selling vital and historic government assets is not the answer. Invalid platform And while we’re on the subject of infrastructure, don’t disagree with Michael Gove’s view that it may be time to rethink HS2. The budget for the project may be in excess of £40.3 billion, but giving up the transport links between London and Birmingham and Manchester should not be an option. Infrastructure, from the Elizabeth Line to Hinckley and the Thames, offers the key to increasing productivity and creating a positive legacy for the next generation. Some links in this article may be affiliate links. If you click on them, we may earn a small commission. This helps us fund This Is Money and keep it free to use. We do not write articles to promote products. We do not allow commercial relationships to influence our editorial independence. POPULAR MONEY SECTIONS Take me to… https://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/comment/article-11375131/ALEX-BRUMMER-green-dream-shatters.html?ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490&ito=1490 Previous articleJennifer Aniston and Sandra Bullock try viral pumpkin carving hacks Next articleSpaceX will launch its Falcon Heavy rocket for the first time in three years | News of science and technology London fires LIVE: Horror as Heathrow Airport now meters away from... Is the shortage of parts supply decreasing? Car production rose... Business August 25, 2022 Apple’s next big thing could be healthcare A mountain lion killed by police after fleeing to the US... 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Cons of Returning to the US Posted on June 30, 2021 August 16, 2022 by Nicki The first time I went to live abroad, I was 20 years old, doing a semester program in Seville, Spain. After five and a half months abroad, things were different coming back. I noticed I used different vocabulary, like “child” instead of the “kid” I would normally use. I was translating back into English from Spanish. I noticed how much Americans loved ice. How they used creamy salad dressings like Ranch or Thousand Island, instead of the simple yet delicious, classic oil & vinegar combo. After Australia, I was saying “capsicum” instead of “pepper,” because let’s be real, it’s a much more fitting word. After doing the Transsiberrean Rail in Russia, I became obsessed with gretchka (buckwheat) and borscht (beetroot stew), which were harder to find here. Since Spain, nearly twenty years ago, I have gone abroad and came back home dozens of times. Sometimes for a week, sometimes for a month, and even once for two years. But each time I do, things have changed. Both in the US, and in myself. Sometimes it can be as simple as the words I choose to use, or the foods I choose to eat. But other times, the changes are more mental, more emotional. I have now come back to Colorado once again, this time after fourteen months in Tbilisi, Georgia and three months adventuring across Turkey. As per usual, the first few weeks are the strangest, and the changes are the most apparent and obvious. Listed below are my thoughts, my negative thoughts, on returning to the US. Some of you may not like them, especially if you have never been abroad, and that’s fine. Please keep in mind, however, that these are my thoughts based on my experiences. While they may not be true for you, they are true for me. Understanding everything/being understood I know, I know. You’re thinking this should be a pro, not a con. And in many ways, it is. But when you first come back, and everyone is speaking English, it’s overwhelming. Constant stimulation. I can understand everything, whether I want to or not. On my most recent flight to Denver from Istanbul, I had a hard time falling asleep because I could hear two Americans having a conversation. About ten years ago, I had just come back from Asia. I was sitting at an outdoor cafe with my mom and at the table behind us, I heard people laughing and joking around, in English. My first reaction was to turn around and ask them “hey, where are you from?” Luckily I stopped myself before the words came out. When I lived in South Korea, I could chat with my friends about anything, even the most R rated topics, on the subway, walking down the streets, in coffee shops. If we spoke fast enough, and used enough slang, we knew we could not be understood, and rarely filtered our conversations. On the other side of that coin, I could understand other foreigners, even when I didn’t want to. My last few years in Korea, I really dedicated myself to learning the language. I used to study for hours each night after work, and often at coffee shops. I liked studying in coffee shops because I could hear the chatter of the language I was learning, but it could also be turned into white noise if I wasn’t focusing on it, which allowed me to concentrate on the verb conjugations in front of me. Every once in a while, another foreigner would come into the coffee shop- to meet friends, to have a language exchange, etc. This made things very hard for me because without wanting to, my brain fixed itself to the only English in the room, the only language around me I could understand with zero effort. I couldn’t help but eavesdrop, even though I had no interest in the conversation. This always cut my study sessions short, and I would have to go home to regain that concentration. 2. I FORGET SMALL ASPECTS OF CULTURE Coming back to the US, after being gone for large periods of time, causes me to forget simple things. Like ‘do they bring us the check, or do we ask for it?;’ or ‘do I pay for my coffee now, or when I leave?’ Most recently it was ‘am I supposed to wear a mask outside, or just indoors?;’ ‘am I allowed to see friends in a group?’ I crave doing the things socially forbidden in the US that I could do abroad, like drinking a beer in front of the Family Mart in South Korea, or making new life long friends out of thin air, just because they happened to be sitting next to you on a bus or staying at the same hostel. Cultural expectations are different when you are living in your home country vs. living as an expat, or traveling as a guest through another country. Once you adjust to the cultural norms outside of your home country, it is often difficult to readjust when coming back. Nine years ago, I lost my wallet in Budapest. When I came back to Colorado, I needed a new ID. So I made everyone’s least desirable adventure over to the DMV, and sat in the lobby, waiting for my number to be called. While I sat there, I overheard the conversation another guy was having the clerk. You can only pay in cash, no credit cards, the atm in this building is broken, but there is a drive thru bank atm across the parking lot. Since I did not have any cash on me either, I was going to need to go to this drive thru atm across the street as well. As the guy walked past me, I asked him to verify what the clerk said just in case. We started chatting as we walked out of the DMV, down the hallway, and into the parking lot. Since we had the same task, I asked if he wanted to go together to the bank; that way only one person needs to drive, and we’re doing the exact same thing. The guy started getting nervous, saying a lot of “um” and “well,” and ultimately rejected my request. So I drove behind his car, in my own car, across the parking lot, thru the drive-thru atm, and back to the DMV. Once back in the waiting room, he wouldn’t look at me. When abroad, this type of interaction is normal. It’s how I shared the cost of a taxi ride and a hostel room with a Dutchman I met at the Bangkok airport. It’s how I did a camel trek in the Sahara with an Australian and a Korean I met at my hostel. It’s how I did a horse trip in Western China with two French Canadians. It’s just what you do. But not in the US, and that can be easy to forget. 3. PRODUCTS & PACKAGING Loose leaf tea tastes better. It just does. But Americans are obsessed with tea in bags. I grew up drinking Celestial Seasonings and other teas in bags in the US, so it was just normal. I didn’t think anything of it. But when I left the country, my eyes were opened, and my tase buds delighted. Loose leaf tea is richer, stronger, fresher. In China it was easy to get Jasmine tea and watch the flower open up in the hot water. In Turkey, you have your choice of blacks, greens, and herbals, both in the outdoor markets as well as the super markets. The supermarkets in the US offer endless options of every tea you could imagine, but all in bags. The choice here is what kind of bag you want- thin paper with a string attached, thin paper without a string attached, fancy silk-like bag in the shape of a pyramid. I spent over 15 minutes scanning the tea section at my local King Soopers, and in the end I chose the fancy silk bag. It was the closest I could get. Can lids. In the US, you need a can opener. Almost everywhere else, cans have a tab and you pull off the lid. Easy peasy. You don’t even need a can opener, which is great if you’re moving around, staying in a badly stocked airbnb, or a hostel. Beer cans. Outside of the US, you can buy just one beer. Or two. Or six of six different kinds. In Georgia I could get one Lion IPA, one Lion APA, one Argo, and one Kazbegi. In Turkey, one large Bomonti and a couple of whatever looked craft. However many beers you want, however many beers you need. In the US, six. Six of the same kind. Last week I was in the mood for a local craft beer. I opted for Crooked Stave’s Juicy East IPA. I had never tried it before, I didn’t know if I would like it, but I had to get six of it. Luckily I did like it, but now I have 5 more in the fridge. I don’t often drink on my own, so it’ll be a while before these babies get finished. 4. THE US IS EXPENSIVE Everything costs more here. About 7 years ago, I lived in Boulder for a year and paid $650/mo, before all the extra utility costs, to have 4 other roommates. When I lived in Miami for two years, I shared a flat and paid $700/mo (which is incredibly affordable for Miami standards and much lower than anyone I knew there) for my half, before utilities and extras. I had to buy a car, or in the case of Miami- a scooter, I had to pay for insurance, gas, and repairs. I paid for health insurance. In Georgia, I paid $300/mo for a 2-bedroom, 3-balcony apartment, utilities included. In the Philippines, my half of rent for the month was $120. Two weeks ago, I reactivated my American sim card, and paid $45 for 15gb per month. In Georgia I paid $5 for the same thing. In Turkey, $7. In Italy, $10. Last week I paid $26 USD for a can of Sprite, a small bottle of bitters, and a 6-pack of Craft beer. That’s about 75 Lari, an average weekly grocery shop in Tbilisi, Georgia. You’re always trying to catch up here, always stressed about finances, never able to save more than a couple hundred bucks a month. In other countries, just existing is not a financial burden. I am actually able to save, breathe, and shed the financial anxiety. 5. COMMUNITY DESIGN In the US, you need a car, which is a very unfortunate reality for both the financial cost, as well as the environmental one. Cities are planned for cars. Drivers are considered first class citizens. In Miami I was riding my bike in the bike lane (very rare in Miami, but in this case it existed), and a car swerved near me; the driver shouted “get out of the road, bitch.” That driver then circled back around the block to throw their McDonald’s trash at me. Fortunately where I am at currently, in Boulder County, the public transportation is decent. By decent, I mean there are buses that can take me to Boulder or Denver. There are no trains. There is no underground system. The supermarket is just a 15-minute walk away, but I feel a strong desire that I should drive there because the walk is along a busy 4 lane road. Nobody walks to the supermarket here because the city is not made for walking. This city, like most cities in the US, are built for cars. In most European cities, there is a town center, and plazas, piazze, places. A gathering space, rich with bars, cafes, and markets. Spaces to stroll with family on Sundays. Outdoor spaces to have drinks with friends on Friday night. There is community in these spaces. Warmth. Connection. The traffic is limited, and it is a space designated to pedestrians. To people. Most American cities do not have a center in this way. They have a Main street. One street. That cars drive down. There are meeting spaces that people drive to. You drive to the supermarket. To the swimming pool. To school. To a coffee shop. In Korea, I walked. In Italy, I walked. In Georgia, I walked. And because I walked, I felt connected to the place where I lived. 6. AMERICANS ARE OVERLY POLITE I know, I know. This should be a pro as well. But there are times when it’s just too much. Where the over-politeness actually becomes quite irritating. Americans apologize for everything. The silliest of things. And if you don’t follow along, you are rude. About 15 years ago, I had just come back to the US and I went to the Boulder Bookstore with my sister, on Boulder’s famous Pearl Street. I was standing near a woman, about 5 feet away, and we were both looking at books in the same row. To get to my sister, I walked in front of her. There was space. After I passed by, my sister whispered to me “that was rude.” “What was?” I asked confusedly, as the woman had done nothing to me. “You walked right in front of her, and didn’t even say excuse me,” my bossy older sister admonished me. Last week I was at the supermarket, staring at the packaged lettuce section. There is an entire corner in the supermarket dedicated to packaged lettuce- arugula, salad mix, spring greens, spinach, mini spinach, garden mix, caesar supreme, you name it. In a bag. A family sized bag. A plastic box. A bigger plastic box. I was overwhelmed. I stood staring at those greens for several minutes trying to make my decision. Just then, a woman who knew exactly what she wanted, came over, opened the fridge door, grabbed her greens and was off. But then she turned around again, “I’m so sorry to get in your way.” She wasn’t in my way. I don’t own the mixed greens corner. I wouldn’t have thought twice about it if she hadn’t apologized. Being overly polite is exhausting, and I don’t want to do it all the time. It’s just not necessary. I don’t want to smile and say “hello” to every stranger I pass on my walk; I don’t want to apologize for getting too near to every random stranger at the supermarket; and I don’t want to be seen as rude for not contributing to this culture of over-politeness. 7. THE (lack of) METRIC SYSTEM (and every other global system in existence) The entire world is measured in kilometers, meters, and millimeters. However, the United States, accompanied only by Liberia and Myanmar, measure in miles. Thankfully I ran track and cross country in high school which have helped me to quickly translate how far I need to go. Three miles is five kilometers is a cross country meet; 800 meters is two laps around the track. These are the things I have to reference whenever my ill-equipped, and under prepared American brain adventures out into the world, and told distances apart from the Imperial system. My mind then does mathematics backflips, multiplying and dividing and estimating from there to reach the desired number. Today in my hometown in Colorado, it is 66 degrees Fahrenheit. That is 19 degrees celsius. Luckily this is one of the measurements that I have been able to adapt to more easily, and also prefer. Fahrenheit just doesn’t make sense. What does 66 degrees even mean when your baseline starts out at 32. It feels completely random. Nineteen degrees, I get! From freezing 0, to 19. Great! Makes sense. Luckily when I was about 22 years old, my friend gave me a very hand trick to translate temperatures, which has served me well. Fahrenheit users of the world are in the minority. The United States is one of seven total countries in the entire world to use this measurement of temperature. What we know in the United States as military time, the rest of the world knows simply as time. In the US, my dinner reservation is at 7pm; in Italy it’s 19h. In the US the bus leaves at 1pm, in Turkey it leaves at 13h. This 24 hour scale of time clears up a lot of confusion. Nobody is asking if the flight is at 7am or 7pm. They just know, because it’s 07h or 19h. Except in the United States of America. Because of the US’s fierce rejection of standardizing its units of everything, its citizens go out into the world completely unprepared, confused, and quite frankly to continue the stereotype of being stupid. 8. RESTAURANT CULTURE Eating is eating, right? So how can restaurant culture vary so much from country to country. In the United States, you eat at a restaurant to eat. In the rest of the world, you eat at a restaurant to live. To enjoy. To spend time with friends. Last weekend I went to brunch with a dear friend, and not long after they cleared our plates, the waitress dropped the check. We were still talking, we had lots to catch up on, but that feeling of needing to leave was strong. We had come, we had eaten, and now we must go. The table is for the next person. It was strictly business. In Italy you reserve a table for dinner. For the night. Not for 90 minutes. You go when the restaurant opens for dinner and you stay until it closes. You eat in courses, you drink wine, you chat, you laugh, you connect, you have an amari, or a limoncello, and you leave just before the the lights go out. It’s an experience. However, this fast paced turnover at American tables is most definitely correlated to the way people in the service industry are paid. Americans work for tips, and the rest of the world works for an actual paycheck, regardless of how many people came in to eat that day. In Melbourne, I worked at a restaurant pub. I got paid $15/hour. Then at the end of the night, the entire wait staff divides all the tips equally, which ends up being around $10/night. For me, this was shocking. In a good way. I made the same amount of money on my paycheck whether or not it was raining and slow, or busy and sunny. The Australians complained the pay was too low, their friend was making $19/hour at that other pub across town, but I was happy! The US is the only country who puts the onus of paying their staff onto the customer in the service industry. When you eat at an American restaurant, you pay for your meal, for tax, and 20% tip (15% if you’re an asshole) so your waitress can pay rent. Can you imagine going to fill up your tank with gas, paying $40 for the gas, and an extra $8 to the gas station attendant because the gas company refused to pay that employee’s salary? The federal minimum wage for servers in the US is $2.13/hour. Pay is not consistent, and tips are necessary in order to survive. Because servers rely so heavily on tips in the US, it puts them in unsafe and uncomfortable positions. Ask any American you know who has ever worked in the service industry what they had to deal with from a customer, while maintaining their cool, in order to get a paycheck. Before I moved to Italy, I worked in a taproom in Louisville, CO for a few months. I had to deal with sexism and misogyny on a daily basis, all with a smile across my face, and still told to “smile for me, sunshine.” Male customers made jokes about me giving them blowjobs. Smile, smile, smile and pay me. 9. HEALTHCARE I once saw a meme about if the show Breaking Bad happened in England, it would look like this: man gets cancer, man goes to the hospital and gets the care he needs, doesn’t go broke, the end. It is shocking to me how we as Americans are so resigned to this system of “care” in our country, that we are very cognizant of the fact that at any point we could be broke if we have a health crisis. Thousands, even millions, in debt if anything goes wrong with our bodies. The United States is the ONLY country in the developed world (and 1 of 10 worldwide) that does not have a system in place to protect the health of its citizens, that does not have universal healthcare. According to the 2018 U.S. Census, 27.5 million Americans, or 8.5% of the population, do not have health insurance. And the majority of that uninsured population are poor people and people of color. This country that declares itself to be the best in the world, forces its citizens to choose between health or financial ruin, or worse, death. When lived in Miami, I got an ultra sound on my breast (to check for cancer!) which cost me $1200 with insurance. Twice. In Italy I got that same ultra sound, and paid 150 euros without insurance. In South Korea I paid $30 for dental x-rays, and $900 for lasik eye surgery (total for both eyes) without insurance. In India, I paid $10 to get my teeth cleaned. In Georgia I paid $460 for four veneers, which would cost in the thousands in the US. Beyond the massive costs to healthcare in this country, there are also massive inequalities. The way this country limits childbearing folk from making their own reproductive and parenting choices. Black people have a much higher chance of dying in childbirth than white people. Discrimination against trans individuals in many forms. Last week I saw a man begging at an intersection with a sign stating he needed money for insulin for his diabetes. His hands shook as he drank water. This man was forced to shed his dignity in order to beg for lifesaving medication just to exist. There is something wrong here. 10. GUNS For several years, while I was abroad, non-Americans would inform me they had no interest in visiting the United States. Guns, they told me, they were afraid of getting shot. I used to laugh and say “it’s not that bad,” because at the time, I didn’t think it was. Now, it is that bad, and instead of my previous response, my new one is “I don’t want to go either.” I am afraid to die in a mass shooting. Honestly. Last week there was a shooting in Arvada, 30 minutes from where I am, in the center of town. Three months ago there was a shooting in the King Soopers in Boulder. The very King Soopers I used to go to in university. I imagined people running down aisles I was familiar with. This year alone, there has been more than one mass shooting per day, and the US is on track to have more than 5000 mass shootings by the end of the year. Around 40,000 people died last year in the US due to gun violence. People are dying for doing nothing other than existing. In supermarkets. Shopping centers. Massage parlors. At work. Movie theaters. Public transit. Concerts. Juneteenth celebrations. Moms. Dads. Grandparents. Children. Innocent people are dying every single day in this country. Defenders of the Second Amendment say they deserve their right to carry and own weapons, but what about the right of every citizen to live? 11. “PATRIOTS” If you’re American and you’re reading this, you most likely did absolutely nothing, other than be born, to become American. A big coincidence, you happened to be born while your parent was existing inside the borders of the United States. If you’re American but you weren’t born inside this country (or military posts abroad), then it’s likely you have spent hundreds of hours filling out paperwork, locating documents, talking to lawyers, doing interviews, taking tests, paying thousands of dollars, etc. One of these things is easy, and the other is very difficult and time consuming. I would say to take the latter route, you must be pretty determined to become an American citizen, persistent. So one thing I can’t understand about this country is the overwhelming patriotism for something you did absolutely nothing to achieve if all you did was be born. I can understand pride for a group or “team spirit,” or cheering for a national sport team; if you’re in the military or know someone in the military, maybe you feel a stronger connection to country for that reason. But what throws me is this blind patriotism, this American arrogance. Saying the US is the best country in the world. Because it isn’t. Full stop. Because we assume (incorrectly) that we are the best, we don’t look to improve. We don’t see what other countries are doing right and emulate that. From the small to the big. In South Korea you can push elevator buttons twice. Once to select it, and another time to deselect it if you made a mistake. We could use that in the US. After Australia had a mass shooting in Tasmania in 1996, the government took massive steps to ensure this wouldn’t happen again. They recognized a problem, and took steps to correct it. To protect its citizens. To become better. This patriotism is, quite frankly, embarrassing. It’s why it has become so hard to say where I’m from when I’m abroad. The eye raise, the mouth turned down, the slow nodding. I see it, the way people react when I say where I’m from. During the Bush years abroad, everyone assumed I loved war and didn’t know geography because “Americans are dumb.” During the Obama years abroad, people laughed and exclaimed “Oooh Obama good, America good.” Now, just a nod and on to the next question. While “patriots” are at home shouting about being number one (I will never understand the chanting of “USA USA USA”), the rest of the world is laughing at us. Posted in The US of ATagged adventure, america, being understood, community design, cons, cons of living in the us, cost of living, culture shock, dmv, expensive, expensive usa, guns, healthcare, imperial system, language, metric system, products, reservation, restaurant culture, tipping, travel, understanding, united states, usa Pros of Living in the US 6 thoughts on “Cons of Returning to the US” Spot on! All the things I feel as well. Love this Nicki! Nicki says: Thanks so much Jenny, and thank you for taking the time to read it! 🙂 Rohan says: I also believe that what ever the US may be ; it is the living experiment for the future of democracy and the world in general. Many say the divide in today’s America is a symptom of its demise. But to me this very conflict is the stage 2 of the development of democracy and America will rise even stronger like a Phoenix . I keep an eye one rich democracy – America – to study its constant reach for idealism and individualism. Giant steps for faster progress. And One poor giant democracy – India – it is an exercise in minimalism. Do only as much as need . Slow moving but with a very firm footing. Love the writing Nikki. Keep it up Europe is yet to become a ‘one people’ I’m glad you are more positive than I am about the US, but I see we are both critical of our own countries, which I think is a good thing! We see them for what they are and want more! After Covid, I am less convinced that ‘rugged individualism’ is the best way though. Kelli McClelland says: Thank you for sharing this. I always love to read what you write and your wonderful stories. I clearly remember when you got back from Spain and how out of place you felt. I can only imagine that feeling has grown over the years. I have never lived abroad, so my opinion means little, but to me, your analysis seems entirely accurate! Your opinion means everything! 🙂 I definitely felt weird after Spain. Now I’m sort of accustomed to the weirdness, and expect the weirdness. There’s almost a comfort in knowing how uncomfortable I’m going to feel.
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Tag: Phyllis Lyons August 1 for LGBTQ2 The American Federation of Musicians went on strike after Union president James C. Petrillo told musicians that phonograph records were ‘a threat to members’ jobs.’ As a result, musicians refused to perform in recording sessions over the next several months, although live, musical radio broadcasts did continue. “The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour” was debuted on CBS-TV. Blogger Nina Notes: the show was funnier after the divorce A new television cable network called MTV (Music Television) started broadcasting music videos, 24 hours a day in the US. The show begins with the intro “Ladies and gentlemen, Rock and Roll.” The first video to be shown was “Video Killed the Radio Star” by the Buggles. Jermaine Jackson and Whitney Houston appeared on the television soap opera As the World Turns. George Michael had #4–“I Want Your Sex” Whitney Houston’s former #1 “I Wanna’ Dance With Somebody” was song #9 Elton John’s 43rd Adult Contemporary hit was another chart-topper for one of the Rock Era’s top superstars–“The One” was #1 for a second week. MTV launched another channel known as MTV2. https://www.sfchronicle.com/projects/2021/lgtbq-flags/ Pride flag guide: LGBTQ community’s varied flags and who they representIndividual communities within the LGBTQ spectrum have created their own flags as symbols of liberation and, in recent years, variations on the original Gay Pride rainbow flag have become more prominent.www.sfchronicle.com https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/31/us/gay-games-lgbtq-olympics-trnd/index.html Welcome to the ‘Gay Games,’ an Olympics alternative, where activism is encouraged and everyone’s an athlete – CNNTom Waddell, an athlete in the 1968 Olympics, created the Gay Games first held in 1982 to celebrate LGBTQ inclusion. The Gay Games are still held to this day with the next round scheduled for 2022 in Hong Kong.www.cnn.com queerbaiting and of no plot significance…. a throw away line https://www.out.com/film/2021/7/30/jack-whitehall-dwayne-johnson-reflect-gay-jungle-cruise-moment Jack Whitehall & Dwayne Johnson Reflect on Gay ‘Jungle Cruise’ MomentThe two stars of Disney’s latest adventure film talk about the film’s LGBTQ+ inclusion.www.out.com https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/when-vir-sanghvi-asked-shah-rukh-khan-if-he-was-gay-or-bisexual-4028765.html When Vir Sanghvi Asked Shah Rukh Khan If He Was Gay or BisexualThough we had never met before, he (SRK) spoke with such breezy confidence that there was no sense in which meeting him for the first time was awkward, writes Vir Sanghvi in his memoir.www.news18.com https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/incredible-story-lesbian-activists-del-martin-and-phyllis-lyon-180978309/ The Incredible Story of Lesbian Activists Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon | At the Smithsonian | Smithsonian Magazine After first meeting in 1950, the couple was instrumental in founding the nation’s first organization for gay womenwww.smithsonianmag.com Author dykewriterPosted on August 1, 2021 August 1, 2021 Categories bisexual, gay, lesbian, LGBTQ2, music, UncategorizedTags Cher, Del Martin, disney queerbaiting, Elton John, Phyllis Lyons, Sha Rukh Khan, Whitney HoustonLeave a comment on August 1 for LGBTQ2
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12507
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Tag: Ricky Wilson LGBTQ2 for October 12 1774 – Adolph Jans van Oldeberkoop of Frisia, Netherlands, a fifty year old customs officer, was convicted of seduction to sodomy and banished for two years. 1871, India – The Criminal Tribes Act, which defines certain social communities as “addicted to the systematic commission of non-bailable offences,” comes into effect. One of these “criminal tribes” is the Hijra, a term referring to several identities within the transgender spectrum across South Asia. After independence from Britain rule, the Hijara were no longer officially criminalized. The Chrysler Corporation introduces high fidelity record players for their 1956 line-up of cars. The unit measured about four inches high and less than a foot wide and mounted under the instrument panel. The seven inch discs spun at 16 2/3 rpm and required almost three times the number of grooves per inch as an LP. A set of 35 classical recordings were available that provided between 45 and 60 minutes of uninterrupted music. The players would be discontinued in 1961. A motion picture called Don’t Knock The Rock, featuring Little Richard and Bill Haley And His Comets, opens in US theatres. The movie tells the story of a disc jockey, Alan Freed, who tries to prove to teenagers’ parents that Rock ‘n’ Roll is harmless and won’t turn their kids into juvenile delinquents. On tour in Sydney, Australia, Little Richard denounces Rock ‘n’ Roll, saying “If you want to live for the Lord, you can’t take Rock and Roll too. God doesn’t like it.” When his sax player, Clifford Burks, dares Richard to prove his “faith in God,” Little Richard tosses four diamond rings, valued at $8,000, into Sydney’s Hunter River and soon after launches a Gospel career. Five years later, he would switch back to Rock ‘n’ Roll. Johnny Mathis topped the Cashbox Best Sellers chart with “Chances Are”, a song that currently sat at #7 on Billboard’s Most Played By Disc Jockeys chart. The record would go on to sell over two million copies and was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998. 1957 – Debra Chasnoff (October 12, 1957 – November 7, 2017) was a documentary filmmaker and activist whose films address progressive social justice issues. Her production company GroundSpark produces and distributes films, educational resources and campaigns on issues ranging from environmental concerns to affordable housing to preventing prejudice. Chasnoff had been a member and owner of the film distribution company New Day Films since 1996 and has served as Chair of New Day’s Steering Committee twice. Chasnoff’s organization Groundspark has produced several films as a part of its Respect for All Project. The series includes the following films, all directed and produced by Chasnoff: Straightlaced—How Gender’s Got Us All Tied Up, It’s Elementary—Talking About Gay Issues in School, It’s STILL Elementary, Let’s Get Real, and That’s a Family! It’s Elementary—Talking About Gay Issues in School(1996) illuminate how all young people are affected by anti-gay stigma, and have helped schools all over the world address anti-gay prejudice in the classroom. Chasnoff was married to Nancy Otto who works as a glass blowing artist and a non-profit fundraising consultant. The Beatles, still just an up and coming local group, open for one of their idols, Little Richard at a concert at New Brighton Towne, Liverpool. Although Richard apparently found John and George to be “rude,” he was quite taken with Paul, reportedly to the point of trying to seduce him. The LP “Cheap Thrills” by Big Brother And The Holding Company hit #1 on the Billboard album chart for the first of eight non-consecutive weeks. It would prove to be the most successful LP of the year, selling over a million copies. The cover, drawn by underground cartoonist Robert Crumb, replaced the band’s original idea, a picture of the group naked in bed together. Crumb had originally intended his art to be the LP’s back cover, but Joplin demanded that Columbia Records use it for the front cover. Initially the album title was to have been Sex, Dope and Cheap Thrills, but this didn’t go down too well at Columbia Records. On March 22, 2013, the album was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the US Library of Congress and was preserved into the National Recording Registry. 1971 – New York City Dept. of Consumer Affairs recommends repealing a law that prohibits homosexuals from being employed in or frequenting the city’s bars, cabarets and dance halls. Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s “Jesus Christ Superstar” debuted on Broadway. Elton John is awarded a Gold record for his two disc set, “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road”, his third straight number one album. 1979 – The National Coalition of Black Gays sponsored a conference in Washington DC, the first Third World Lesbian and Gay Conference in preparation for the upcoming March on Washington. Ricky Wilson (B-52s) died of complication of AIDS at the age of 32. 1998 – Openly gay college student Matthew Shepard, 21, dies of injuries inflicted when he was beaten and tortured. Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson rob and beat Shepard four days earlier and tie him to a split-rail fence outside of Laramie, Wyoming. The murder, for which the pair are each serving two consecutive life sentences, inspired “The Laramie Project,” a play and later film about Laramie, WY in the year after the murder Federal hate crimes legislation approved in 2009 bears Shepard’s name. The play and later fa ilm about Laramie, WY. Shepard’s murder brought national and international attention to hate crime legislation at the state and federal levels. In October 2009, the United States Congress passed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act (commonly the “Matthew Shepard Act” or “Shepard/Byrd Act” for short), and on October 28, 2009, President Barack Obama signed the legislation into law. Following her son’s murder, Judy Shepard became a prominent LGBT rights activist and established the Matthew Shepard Foundation. Shepard’s death inspired notable films, novels, plays, songs, and other works. 2008 – Connecticut Supreme Court legalizes same-sex marriage in a 4-3 decision. 2011 – Huffington Post launches “Gay Voices,” the first mainstream news organization to have an LGBT-focused section. Noah Michelson is the section’s first editor. David Bowie and Prince were both new entries in the latest list of top-earning dead celebrities compiled by Forbes. Prince’s pre-tax income from 1 October 2015 to 1 October 2016 was estimated at $25m (£20.5m) by the business magazine, putting him fifth in the list. Bowie, meanwhile, was ranked at 11th for an estimated income of $10.5m (£8.5m). Both, however, are dwarfed by Michael Jackson who topped the list once again with a record-breaking estimated income of $825m (£672.8m). the first women to walk in space was a lesbian https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2021/10/astronaut-sally-ride-will-first-lgbtq-person-united-states-currency/?utm_source=LGBTQ+Nation+Subscribers&utm_campaign=491dcf0d70-20211011_LGBTQ_Nation_Daily_Brief&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c4eab596bd-491dcf0d70-430855381 Astronaut Sally Ride will be the first out LGBTQ person on United States currency / LGBTQ NationThe coin will be available next year…www.lgbtqnation.com “Does the kingdom of Spain have to apologise because five centuries ago it discovered the New World, respected those who were there, created universities, created prosperity, built entire cities? I don’t think so,” Mr Casado said in a video posted on Twitter. His comments came after President Biden, in a message to mark the US Columbus Day holiday, said the explorer’s arrival had led to “a wave of devastation” for Native Americans and he urged Americans not to “bury these shameful episodes of our past”. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-58882832 Spanish right attacks Biden over Columbus and conquests – BBC NewsSpanish nationalists scorn President Biden for condemning colonial crimes against Native Americans.www.bbc.com Blogger Nina Notes: Columbus was never in North America. from this blog: Queer Music Oct 12 Today in LGBT History and LGBT by Ronni Sanlo Our Daily Elvis Author dykewriterPosted on October 12, 2021 November 8, 2021 Categories UncategorizedTags Adolph Jans van Oldeberkoop, Connecticut Supreme Court, Debra Chasnoff, Elton John, he National Coalition of Black Gays, HuffPo Gay Voices, Johnny Mathis, Little richard, Matthew Shepard, Matthew Shepard Foundation, Prince, Ricky Wilson, sally ride, The Criminal Tribes ActLeave a comment on LGBTQ2 for October 12
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12508
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Student organizations celebrate High Holy Days Hope Williams on September 27, 2020 in Life The Rohr Chabad House, which is used by both Tech and Georgia State students, is located in Midtown. // Photo Courtesy of atlantajewishtimes.timesofisrael.com Two on-campus Jewish organizations, Chabad and Hillel, have adapted to the pandemic restrictions to provide students with new ways to observe the High Holy Days, which include Rosh Hashanah, the 10 Days of Awe and Yom Kippur. “The biggest challenge to any of our programming, but specifically around High Holidays, is that we can’t gather,” said Hillel Program Director Lauren Rekhelman. Rekhelman, who oversees the team of staff for Tech’s Hillel and makes sure all programs are running smoothly, elaborates on changes that have been made to their events. “Particularly for the High Holidays, you would go to synagogue in big numbers and you would have services and you would have a big, festive meal together on Rosh Hashanah,” said Rekhelman. “So this year, we’ve adjusted and all of our meals have been grab-n-go style.” Rosh Hashanah marks the start of the Jewish New Year on the Jewish calendar. This is the start of year 5781 and Rosh Hashanah fell on Sept. 18-20. “We had our Hillel table with all the meals, pre-packaged, individually wrapped, all of that, and the students came and picked up what they had ordered,” said Rekhelman. “And then we offered virtual services for all of Hillels of Georgia, so we had a rabbi leading services from our building at Emory and we live-streamed it on a Zoom webinar.” Chabad has also been facing similar challenges this semester. Second-year BMED and Chabad Leadership Team member Mira Mutnick explains what this has meant for their events. “Every week, pre-COVID, there would be Shabbat dinners on Friday night. So Shabbat is the main weekly holiday that we have and so on Friday night, we have a big dinner,” said Mutnick. “… but during COVID, we can’t really do that, so they’re running Shabbat to-gos, where they’re packing up dinners and people can come and pick up the dinners and have them with their friends in smaller groups, socially distanced.” To celebrate Rosh Hashanah, Chabad held a special Shabbat to-go and small events at the Chabad House.” It was more of a grand Shabbat to-go with more food in the boxes just to celebrate the holiday, including different kinds of honey and apples,” said Mutnick. “And then they had small in-person services in their backyard in the tent for people who wanted to have the prayer service.” On Sept. 20 at 5 p.m., Chabad also held a shofar blowing on Tech Green. “A shofar is a ram’s horn and that’s one of the main aspects of Rosh Hashanah is hearing the shofar blow,” said Mutnick. Yom Kippur, which translates as the Day of Atonement, will occur on Sept. 27 and 28. It is traditionally a fast day in which teshuva is done, which translates to repentance or return. “The idea of Yom Kippur is that it is a time to return to ourselves, return to our best selves, return to what we want to be doing in life and also to let go of anything you don’t want to take with you,” said Rekhelman. “It’s an opportunity to ask for forgiveness, if that is needed, and to give forgiveness too if that is needed.” Placed in the context of 2020’s events, the themes of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur offer a chance for reflection. For Rekhleman, the global pandemic and imminent election have been especially relevant. “For me, it definitely has an extra significance,” said Rekhelman. “It’s a chance to say, what do I want to do in the coming years to make the world a better place? And so I think that is very present for me, I obviously can’t speak to if that’s everybody’s experience, but I know it is mine.” Mutnick also draws similarities between Rosh Hashanah and the practice of making New Year’s Resolutions. “Learning from the lessons of coronavirus and becoming more connected to people that you drifted away from has definitely been a really big influence on Rosh Hashanah this year,” said Mutnick, who mentions getting closer to her family has been a positive this year. Moving forward, both Hillel and Chabad are working to implement safe activities for students to participate in. “We have been finding ways to have small groups able to gather in outdoor spaces, primarily, with social distancing and masks, [which] has been really wanted and needed,” said Rekhelman. “So I think that as we move through the year, we’re going to try to maintain some of those small community connections where maybe five students meet each other.” Hillel offers additional programming related to Shabbat and Jewish holidays, Israel and Jewish learning, sports and outdoors events. To find out more, students can reach out to Rekhleman at [email protected], Engagement Associate Shaina Lubliner at [email protected] or Israel Fellow Elinoy Granot at [email protected] Chabad has also been trying in-person events in small numbers. “They’ve started doing some Shabbat in-person for team members to keep the numbers small, and to kind of test drive it, see how people are social distancing and we’re trying to kickstart some picnics,” said Mutnick. “There’s someone who’s trying to lead that, having more picnics around campus throughout the week, to have more of an in-person community feel while still being socially distant.” Students interested in participating in Chabad can reach out to their Instagram account, @chabadgt_gsu.
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Howell completes 100-mile horse ride By Community Member | August 25, 2014 11:50 pm Mary Howell, a New Kent resident, completed a 100-mile endurance horse ride with her rescue horse Gryphon in a trail ride in Auburn, Ca. Howell was among 190 riders who began the 24-hour journey at Lake Tahoe. After navigating through rocky and treacherous trail, she and Gryphon were among 109 riders to successful complete the annual event. Howell has amassed more than 7,000 miles over the past 16 years as part of the American Endurance Riding Council (AERC) sanctions and competitions held nationwide. She received a legacy silver belt as a result of completing the Western States Trail Ride and continues to compete in the Old Dominion 100-mile ride that has been held in Northern Virginia since the mid-1970s.
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Monthly Work Day April 6, 2019 9:00 am – 12:00 pm
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Charles “lost” by Harry? This little ambiguous phrase that makes him sad Entertainement / By admin Prince Harry reportedly told Meghan Markle that he had lost his father. This confidence, revealed in the article in El Corte on August 29, 2022, had caused confusion. On August 29, an article by Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, appeared on The cut. The Duchess of Sussex, 41, showed off her new life in America. Among other revelations, Meghan Markle confided this comment from Harry about his father. The interview conducted by journalist Allison P Davis was held at the mansion in Sussex California, in Montecito. Among other pumps Launched by Prince Harry’s wife, there was his revelation about your comment. Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, 37, would have confided in him one day: “I lost my father in this process.“. This little phrase would have caused confusion because the youngest son of Carlos III would not have do not refer to the latter. According to the entourage of Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, 41, the son of Carlos III would have referred to the wife’s father and not of him. The source confided in daily mail the day after the publication of Meghan Markle’s article. According to this close friend of the former actress, Prince Harry was referring to The break between Meghan Markle and her fatherThomas Markle. “This was a comment from Harry about Meghan Markle’s family situation“, confirms the source of the Daily mail. Charles III: The King of England loves his two sons, Prince Harry and Prince William On August 30, 2022, another source, this time close to King Carlos III, trusted some the effect of this statement daily mail. According to this relative of the son of Queen Elizabeth II of England, the former Prince of Wales, loves his two sons, and even more. This source also noted that King Charles III of England would be “saddened” if her relationship with her son, Prince Harry, was lost. On June 30, author Katie Nicholl had already said that Prince Charles “loves his son. She wants to forgive her son, for everything. He wants to fix this relationship and move on.“. © Agency / Bestimage 21/2 – King Charles III of England This confidence, revealed in the article in El Corte on August 29, 2022, had caused confusion. On August 29, Meghan Markle’s article appeared in The Cut. © Agency Among other revelations, he confided this comment from Harry about his father. The interview conducted by journalist Allison P Davis took place at the Sussex’s Californian mansion in Montecito. Among other bombshells dropped by Prince Harry’s wife was her revelation about Harry’s comment. Prince Harry would have confided in him one day: “I lost my father in this process.” This little phrase would have caused confusion because the youngest son of Carlos III would not have referred to the latter. 10/21 – According to Meghan Markle’s entourage, the son of Carlos III would have referred to his wife’s father and not his own. The source confided in the Daily Mail the day after Meghan Markle’s article was published. According to this close friend of the former actress, Prince Harry was referring to the breakup between Meghan Markle and her father, Thomas Markle. “This was a comment from Harry about Meghan Markle’s family situation,” the source confirms to the Daily Mail. Charles III loves Prince Harry and Prince William On August 30, 2022, another source, this time close to King Carlos III, spoke about the effect of this statement to DailyMail. Carlos III would have been sad to read that his son had considered that their relationship was lost According to this close friend of Queen Elizabeth II’s son, Charles III, the former Prince of Wales, loves both of his sons and more. This source has also wanted to say that King Carlos III would be “sad” if the relationship with his son was lost. On June 30, author Katie Nicholl had already declared that Prince Charles “loves his son. He wants to forgive his son, for everything. He wants to fix this relationship and move on.” He had also confirmed that the late queen’s son would like to see his grandchildren. He even confirmed that the latter was ready to travel to the United States for it. Patrick Sébastien reveals having overcome kidney cancer and talks about his separation Leave a Comment / Entertainement / By admin Audiences: “Marianne” ending rising on France 2, C8 stronger than France 3
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12512
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REPAY Announces Partnership with Inovatec Systems Corp. ATLANTA, June 3, 2020 — Repay Holdings Corporation (NASDAQ: RPAY) (“REPAY”), a leading provider of vertically-integrated payment solutions, today announced its partnership with Inovatec Systems Corp., a provider of industry-leading, cloud-based lending solutions for all financial institutions. As the proprietary payment platform of choice for Inovatec, REPAY will enable lenders and finance companies on the Inovatec system to securely accept debit cards, credit cards, and ACH payments through its digital suite of consumer-facing payment channels, including text-to-pay, Interactive Voice Response (IVR) phone pay, the REPAY mobile app, and online payment portals. With its strength in business process automation, Inovatec’s configurable loan servicing and customer engagement platform provides full servicing capabilities and portfolio analytics while allowing businesses to create customized processes and workflows throughout the lifecycle of a loan or lease. “Inovatec’s extensive experience across automotive, equipment, and consumer sectors, along with its strong presence in the United States and Canada, makes this a valuable and exciting partnership to embark on,” said Susan Perlmutter, Chief Revenue Officer of REPAY. “These critical times have proven how important it is for lenders to offer convenient, easily accessible digital payment solutions to their customers to help reduce friction in the loan origination and repayment processes.” Inovatec’s cloud-based lending solutions for the automotive industry streamline the process of submitting applications to lenders. Combined with REPAY’s market-tested, proven transaction processing platform, Inovatec can ensure an optimal customer experience with a turnkey, fully digital solution that can be rapidly deployed end-to-end. “We look forward to our partnership with REPAY and are thrilled to now have the ability to provide fast and secure payment processing solutions to our clients,” said Bryan Smith, Head of Customer Growth and Strategic Partnerships at Inovatec. “We selected REPAY as our platform of choice because of the company’s seamless integration capabilities, direct lending processing solution and distinct experience in the automotive industry.”
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« Time for an update? Multi & Inter » This entry was posted on November 11, 2011 at 11:20 and is filed under experiment. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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Home/Payment Methods How can I pay for my order? You can use credit cards and PayPal to check out. Can you tell me more about checking out with PayPal? PayPal is a safer, easier way to send and receive money online. When you select PayPal as the payment method, you will be linked to the PayPal site where you can make your payment. PayPal can be used to purchase items by Credit Card (Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express), Debit Card, or E-check (i.e. using your regular Bank Account). 1) After viewing your items on your shopping cart page, you can click and check out with PayPal. Then you will leave our site and enter PayPal’s website. 2) You can sign in to your PayPal account, or you can create a new one if you haven’t got one. 3) You can use the PayPal as you want according to the on-screen instructions. Usually, PayPal e-check will take 3-5 business days to be confirmed by PayPal. Can you tell me more about checking out with a Credit card? The store may also accept credit cards for the payment. In order to accept credit card payments, the store complies with the industry security standards established by the major credit card companies (American Express, Discover, JCB, MasterCard, and Visa) to protect the buyers from cardholder information theft. Your details are safe with us as we take security very seriously. All credit card information is kept to a minimum. The storage and retention of any credit card information is limited to what is required for business operations only. Access to credit card information is strictly limited to those employees who are authorized and trained to use it for business purposes.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12515
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Water Lily, Sheila Sims If you were a July baby you have a choice of two for your birth flower. One is the Larkspur, a spiky blue flower which used to be found in the corn fields of East Anglia, but is now rare in the wild; many of us, however, have a cultivated relative, the Delphinium, in our gardens. July’s other birth flower is the very fragrant Water Lily. Found in lakes, ponds and slow moving water, rhizomes on the bottom send up flexible stalks, bearing the leaves and flowers, which often form dense colonies, covering the surface. They provide shelter for many aquatic invertebrates which in turn are food for fish, reptiles, amphibians and water birds; deer and rodents will also feed on the leaves and rhizomes. It is a beautiful flower, one that compels us to stop and stare and that the artist, Monet, found irresistible. The paintings of his lily pond are probably some of the most familiar works of art. A Native American legend tells us that a bright star turned into a maiden so that she could fall to earth and play with the children, but it seems that they were not very impressed. So she did another quick change and became a Water Lily, which the children loved! It must be true because American Indians are honourable people and never lie, especially to their children. Four-spotted Chaser, Sheila Sims Some of the invertebrates that lurk under Water Lilies will be dragonfly larvae, called nymphs. These are the immature forms of the colourful hunters we see flying in the summer. The greater part of the dragonfly’s life is spent under water as a nymph, where it will feed on a wide range of aquatic creatures. When it is ready to mature it will climb up a plant, split its skin and emerge as a dragonfly. It will then pump fluid from its body into the wings until they are large and rigid enough for flight. There are two main groups, the larger ones, known as true dragonflies, are hawkers, chasers, darters and skimmers. Look out for the Norfolk Hawker, which has a brown body and clear wings and only occurs in the Broads; it is closely associated with the aquatic plant, the Water Soldier. A similar insect is the Brown Hawker, but this one has brown wings. Azure damselflies about to mate, Mike Sims The small, dainty dragonflies are damselflies which include a couple of species called demoiselles. The larger dragonflies are fast, athletic fliers and catch their insect prey by forming a net with their legs; damselflies tend to pluck their victims from vegetation. The mature insects do not live very long and now they must find a mate. The male will transfer his sperm to below his belly and, with claspers at the end of his body, he will grip the female by the head, or behind the neck, depending on the species. When she is ready she will loop round and collect the sperm with the tip of her abdomen. Damselflies often remain in tandem while the female lays her eggs by dipping the end of her body in the water; other dragonflies will place them in a slit in a plant stem. Sunny days are the best times to observe these beautiful insects. And…… when the sun goes in, the bats come out. There are sixteen to eighteen species of bat in Britain, depending on which data you read, and numbers are boosted by immigrants from abroad. Thirteen types have been recorded in Norfolk and eleven of those are found in the Norwich area. Although there are some mammals that are said to fly, some tropical squirrels for instance, these animals are in fact gliding. Bats are the only mammals that truly fly and their wings consist of membranes of skin that are stretched between elongated finger bones. They are very efficient flyers, twisting and darting as they pursue their insect prey and can be seen in towns and cities, flitting around lampposts, catching moths and other nocturnal insects which are attracted by the light. If you have a pond in your garden this will also be liked by insects and bats will quickly move in. Myths and bats go hand in hand, mainly due to ‘Dracula’, Bram Stoker’s famous book about a vampire. Vampire bats do exist and, although they have been known to feed on human blood, their main source of food is from sleeping animals. They are found in Central and South American countries, Mexico and some Caribbean islands – they definitely avoid Norfolk! Oh, and that story about bats getting tangled in your hair? Well, they would have to be very ill to do that, they normally know exactly where you are! While on holiday in the Caribbean island of Grenada, we were exploring a disused sugar mill and disturbed a colony of hundreds of large bats. The air was full of them, so close we could feel the breath of their wings on our faces. Not a single bat touched us even though they were obviously in a panic. So don’t worry and enjoy your evening visitors. Although we use the phrase ‘blind as a bat’ they are not, and their vision, like all nocturnal animals, is well adapted to low light. They use their sight to judge their height from the ground and to avoid predators and large objects; however, when hunting they use a sense called echolocation. A bat will emit very high frequency sounds, way beyond our range of hearing, which bounce off an insect and send back an echo to be picked up by sensitive ears. This will tell the animal the position and the size of the prey and whether it is hard or soft bodied. Even a tiny midge can be detected by this incredible system. Like all mammals bats are furry and warm blooded and the babies feed on their mother’s milk. When at rest during the day they hang upside down from a roof or beam, and they are able to do this without getting a headache because of adaptations to their circulatory system. A bat has an extremely large heart, relative to its body size, enabling it to increase the amount of blood pumped around when flying, which requires a great deal of energy, but when roosting during the day the heart rate drops dramatically. During hibernation in the winter, necessary because there is very little insect food about, it drops even further; in some species it will go down to as little as four beats a minute. They use many different roosting places, caves, hollow trees and man-made structures such as out-buildings, churches, and tunnels; they will also hang out under bridges. It is illegal to disturb bats and many a well-planned building project has been held up, or even refused when they have been found to be in residence. The free flying White Storks at Thrigby Hall, near Great Yarmouth, have not, as far as we know, produced any eggs in their nest on the chimney. They are young birds so maybe they are just practising for the future. Although our four cathedral Peregrine chicks all fledged successfully, leaving a very untidy nest behind them, sadly, the last one to go was found dead in a nearby garden. A post mortem is being carried out at the time of writing. Hopefully we will see these stunning raptors return next year. Things to do this month include:- • Dragonflies and Damselflies – Upton Broad and marshes. • Water trail and pub supper – Hickling Broad. • Summer treasure trail – Cley marshes. • Details at Norfolk Wildlife Trust www.norfolkwildlifetrust.org.uk or call 01603 625540 • Pod dipping and guided walks – Holkham Nature Reserve ticketoffice@holkham.co.uk or call 013128713111 • Beginners birding – Titchwell Nature Reserve – 01485 210779 © Sheila Sims previousJune 2014 nextAugust 2014
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12516
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Camille Henfling Jr (Von Eusersdorff) Interview Classic is an overused term, but when you smell the scents of Von Eusersdorff – there is no other word that can better describe them. Created by Camille Henfling, whose love of scent traces back to his childhood spent playing with the scents of his grandfather’s apothecary, the line began with patchouli and was expanded to include myrrh, vetiver, and mimosa. I spoke to him in Amsterdam and was fascinated by his stories and how his life journey has lead him full circle back to his roots. You can read the reviews of his scents and watch out for his forthcoming Orange scent set to be released next in September. Ron Slomowicz: I read that your family tradition goes back to apothecaries. Camille Henfling: Yes, my family comes from them. My grandfather always made creams and salves for the people that were in the shop. As a little boy I would come from school and wait for my father, I remember the combinations of the scents- especially the peppers, the vanillas, and the saffrons. I started to learn about herbs and oils and I did all of that as a little boy. When I was seven years old, I remember the other kids got blocks and Legos and I got a box with all the herbs in it. It was sitting in a paper box with plastic around it and there was a name on the side of it, but I had to teach myself. There were things like red pepper, black pepper, anise, and spices, and I had to learn what they were and their Latin name. When I grew up I worked for my father’s company and eventually became the boss. About 25 years ago he asked me to take the company over, and I told him that I could do it for a couple days out of the week. I eventually left his company but ended up coming back to help him. I was sitting in the office at the pharmacy one day and I realized that I really didn’t like it. I flew to Gibraltar and told my father that I was sorry but I wasn’t the man to take it over. It was very sad for my father because the pharmacy had been in the family for a long time. I sold it to a larger company in the Netherlands and from there I started working at a company with fine jewelry. We wanted to introduce people to the market of fine jewelry and we traveled all around to London, Paris, and went to the fairs. Every year we had a new designer to join the group and that is when I met my partner. We split the companies and I started another company dealing with fine jewelry. Five years ago my partner told me that he was going to stop working for me in 2012 because of his age. We had known each other since we were little boys; we worked together in the family store. He handled everything for me, all the money, the paperwork, and the taxes so I told him that if he stopped working in 2012 I would stop as well. That was four years ago and I started to think about what I was going to do with my life. I knew that New York was very nice but there were mostly young people and or those who had a lot of money. RS: Were you worried at all about moving to New York and starting your business there? Camille: At that time I was forty years old and I decided that I could start my business there but there was a possibility of losing my money and at that point if I lost my money it would be too hard to build it up and get it back again. I decided that I would travel and spend a couple months in each country. Eventually I started to travel from New York to Amsterdam and it became too tiring, there were always problems with the train and it was not fun. I knew that I wanted to live in New York and found a house about twelve years ago. Around six years ago my parents were in a very bad accident and I stopped my business. It took me two years to arrange my parents’ business and get everything taken care of. My family had land in Spain and a plantation business in Costa Rica so I went there to take care of everything. It used to be a large plantation but it turned into a small business. It was in my family’s name and I told my nephews that they could have it but I needed to keep my name. My name is of Von Eusersdorff of 1700 and it is a blue blood line. In 1700, Protestant people from my family became Catholic, and if you are Catholic you won’t have the Von Euserdorff name anymore, so it is really special to me. RS: So how did you go from making jewelry to making perfume? Camille: About five years ago I was thinking that I had to do something with my name. I originally was going to stop in 2012, but I realized that I was too young to stop working and do nothing. I wanted to start doing something that I really liked. The strange thing with my family is that I always felt that I never wanted to do what my father did. I wanted to do something with the name and started to think of perfume. I wanted to make a new collection of jewelry but I realized that I would have needed too much help to do that. A few years ago, I was with four friends in Paris and one of my friends said to me “Do you like this smell?” I told him that I didn’t know and the man from the shop gave me a little tester. We walked to the other side of the street in the Marais to get lunch, and the smell from houses reminded me of the houses that I played in during my childhood; it was the smell of pepper, coriander, and vanilla. At the beginning I didn’t know if I liked the smell but all of a sudden it was the smell of my past. I pictured myself as a little boy playing and the smell brought back so many memories. At that moment I realized that I wanted to make perfume. I already had the whole history of oils, spices, herbs, and petals because of my family, so I started. I always had talks with my grandfather and father about oils and spices and where they came from – Costa Rica, India, and Morocco. I already knew everything as a little boy. My grandfather taught me so much and taught me what ingredients I needed. I always thought perfumes were roses and lavender, but now people are using more spices. RS: Did you aim to start with a line of four fragrances? Camille: I decided that I wanted to have one perfume and I started with patchouli. I wanted to make a very good Patchouli. It is a very strange smell, and you either hate it or love it. I have a friend that I gave a bottle to and he gave it back, like I said, you either hate it or love it. It took me two years to find the quality products and find the company in Grasse who could produce it. There are so many different patchouli plants and I make a very nice one. Do you have one? RS: Yes, I love your patchouli and have reviewed all four of your scents. Camille: I decided just to do Patchouli and then people asked for more perfumes. RS: Going back to patchouli, patchouli usually has a dirty kind of hippie scent to it, but I remember when I smelled it it came off very comforting and envelopes you – it’s very warm, is that what you were going for? Camille: It is a little strange, it started off very strong and most people didn’t like it at first. I was also like that but it turned into a beautiful, soft perfume. If you use patchouli it can last for 6 hours or longer. Somebody asked me to make a perfume and it took me over a year to finish, that was a long time since I usually make it in seven months To find the best bergamot, black patchouli, and high quality tonka bean, it takes you a lot longer to make. RS: As you are blending and testing your perfume, do you let other people test it on their skin? Camille: I have two men and two women that I discuss the scents with and we test them amongst each other. My perfumes are constantly changing, and when I originally made the patchouli we changed it a couple times and tried new ingredients and combinations. We start seeing how much percentage of alcohol is in it and from there we take a tester home and come back to find a perfect combination. With the new combination we go to the laboratory in Grasse and make a couple more bottles from there we test it again. RS: How many mods were there? I’ve read in books about one fragrance that had 140 mods and one had 23 mods. Camille: I don’t know exactly how many mods there are but there were about 6 for the Classic Patchouli. It always changes, though, so there may have been 10 and then with the alcohol another 4. So all together there were about 15. It is very hard to make other smells once you have the smell that you love. I love the patchouli, it’s my baby, but it’s not selling as much as Mimosa or the others. I can make smells that everyone loves, but this smell is for people that really love that scent. You don’t like the Vétiver do you? RS: On me Vetiver doesn’t work well, it gets very cumin and spicy in an almost skanky and raunchy type of way, the scent association just isn’t very good, it doesn’t burn but it has the smell of burning. Camille: Did you let anyone else try it? RS: I gave it to other people and they liked it. Vetivers just don’t work on me; the only one that has worked on me is a Grey Vetiver from Tom Ford. Camille: Yeah, sometimes that happens. RS: If your Classic Patchouli took about 15 mods, how many mods did the other ones take? Camille: They took between 12-20 mods. RS: You have four perfumes finished; did it take you two years to finish all four? Camille: Yeah. RS: Are you working on any more now? Camille: Yes, I am working on two other ones. RS: Can I make a suggestion? Camille: Yeah RS: The reason why I like your Mimosa so much is because it is very violet on me and I am wondering what a classic violet would be like. Camille: I am very happy with the Mimosa; it is very French to me. Every year in March I am in France and mimosa is everywhere. If you sit in your car you can smell the mimosa and it is everywhere. It is so beautiful and I have memories of my mother, she loved the mimosa flower. The Mimosa is doing really well. RS: The Mimosa reminds you of your mother, do any of your other scents remind you of your family? Camille: Yeah, the Patchouli and the Myrhh really remind me of my whole family. The Vétiver is more what I like and wear; I have always worn Vétivers, like Creed. RS: All of your scents are called “Classic,” what does classic mean to you? Camille: Going back to the old way of making perfumes- and what I told you before; I can go to a company in France and ask for patchouli and they all have the same type of patchouli. I made a rule to find the best quality of ingredients. I have always said from the beginning that if I am going to start something it has to be the best quality. The prices for my perfume ingredients are a lot higher than most people’s, but it is because of the quality I use. The normal patchouli has had the alcohol in it for one month, but my perfumes have the alcohol in it for four months and that costs a lot more – in order to really have the smell of the patchouli in the alcohol. The prices are reasonable for the quality of my perfumes though. RS: Do you consider your fragrances all-natural, meaning there are no aroma chemicals in them? Camille: Yes, we only use quality products; you can see that there is no color in the perfumes. For example with the Mimosa if you hold it in the light you can see the mimosa working on the alcohol and that’s where the color comes from. With the Classic Patchouli there is a little caramel in it and that’s the oil. It is really the family way of making things. I said in the beginning that the only perfume that I knew was rose and lavender, but now with the spices and roses I try to find the difference between them and try to make a combination of everything. RS: When wearing your scents, I noticed that there is always a touch of patchouli in each one. Camille: There is always a little patchouli with other smells. It is like a base smell to make the flowers and other scents stronger. Twenty years ago people weren’t talking about patchouli, and it didn’t have a good name. Patchouli was used to bring very expensive cider from India to America and the patchouli was inside it to keep the animals away. People didn’t like it at first, but then started to use patchouli to make perfumes. I like it so much because my family used it when I was a little boy. It is so beautiful and to me it is the same as making good wine, it is an essential ingredient. RS: You are Dutch and Von Eusersdorff is a Dutch/German name, where does the New York come from? Camille: At the time I was living in New York and we had all the ideas when I was living in an apartment on 39th Street in Hell’s Kitchen. We moved to 42nd Street on the West Side and we loved our apartment there in the middle of New York, we started everything there. That was the basis, all in New York. RS: When you say “we” are speaking of you and the five people? Camille: Yeah my partner Darren Johnson and I started it all, and then we went further in Europe, in the south in Maastricht with the other people. I love New York, it is my city and it has given me so much strength. Amsterdam is very nice but the people there are slow. I love New York so much though and these four smells are my babies. To get the reaction from the market and all these people has been great. I have gone really slowly but everyone has other jobs as well, I work in the company full time but some people only work 1-2 days. It is a very little company and we have put a lot of work into it. I have traveled all around the world to find my smells; I am doing everything slowly but efficiently. RS: Right now your fragrances are available in Paris, Amsterdam, and Moscow. Camille: We are also in Belgium and New York. Belgium has been very good to us. Interview conducted October 2012 in Amsterdam. Von Eusersdorff Classic Mimosa Fragrance Review Von Eusersdorff Classic Myrrh Fragrance Review Von Eusersdorff Classic Patchouli Fragrance Review Tags patchouli, Von Eusersdorff Maria Candida Gentile Interview Fabrice Lecler, the creator of the innovation lab for L’Oreal Prestige, described Maria Candida’s creations as “reaching the heart because they come from the heart.” After graduating from the Perfumery School of Grasse, she learned more under the direction of Carol Andrew and went on to work with lines such as Sinfonia di Note, Farmacia SS, and Profumi del Forte. In her line, there are two groups – classic (inspired by the natural treasures of the Mediterranean) and exclusive. Using a large percentage of natural ingredients, she channels her energy to make them sing in a truly inspired way. Ron Slomowicz: Becoming a mother affected your love of perfumery and why you became a perfumer; can you explain more about that? Maria Candida Gentile: My grandfather was a pharmacist, and when I was a child I played in the pharmacy; I would distill the clair matin roses for fun. I didn’t know at that time that my real interest was in perfume, and after I became a mother I became even more interested in perfumery. When my son was born I went to live in the beautiful valley of Valle d’Aosta. My life changed, and when I was there I met some people that worked with perfumes. There was a woman who lived near my house that had a lot of experience with herbs. When I lived in the mountains I smelled the smell of the snow, the trees, and nature, and I understood that was my passion. I started to study at a university of cosmetology but only went for one year. One of my professors told me that I was so far advanced from the other students and asked me why I didn’t want to go to a school of fragrance in Grasse. I took her suggestion and started going to school in France, but still lived in Valle d’Aosta which was very hard for me at the time because I had two sons and it was such a long drive back and forth. Going to school is a lot easier for younger students. I started working in a laboratory with my professor, named Carol André, and once I started I didn’t want to go back to any other enterprises. It is so important for me to create my perfume with a lot of creativity, and that is difficult to do if you work for a large enterprise. Some of my best friends worked for large companies and they didn’t get to follow their heart and do what they really wanted to. Continue reading “Maria Candida Gentile Interview” Tags grasse, maria candida gentile Martine Micallef Interview M Micallef perfumes are about love. Martine Micallef and husband Geoffrey Nejman work together to combine art and perfume-making by creating beautiful compositions that are the true definition of niche. The fragrances are luxurious and complex, yet sensual and easy to wear. As Marine hand designs the bottles, Geoffrey does the chemistry for the combination of notes. The two explore ingredients and compositions with a unique artisanal voice that cannot be duplicated by a mass-market brand. I had the extreme pleasure of speaking with Martine on the phone and could completely feel her artistic passion with every word she said. It is this emotion that she brings to all of her creative work. Ron Slomowicz: I read that you started off being a beauty person and doing massage. I was wondering how being a masseuse has affected your fragrance-making. Martine Micallef: About sixteen years ago, I had a beauty salon and it was my dream to one day make and create perfume. I was also an artist. During my massages, I came up with some ideas and my husband and I decided to start the business. We started at our house, it was very small, and I decided to paint and create the bottles. The concept is really art and perfume- and all handmade. I started to paint in the cellar of my house, and we eventually made an exhibition. My husband is a lot more talented than me, speaking so many different languages, so he was in charge of developing the company and step-by-step we have made the business. Now we have a nice factory in Grasse, which is the capitol of perfume business. Continue reading “Martine Micallef Interview” Tags Martine Micallef Roberto Ferreira (Creed) Interview The house of Creed is world’s only private luxury fragrance dynasty. Currently under the leadership of perfumer Olivier Creed, the house will eventually pass through to the next generation with Erwin. With the rapid changes in the fragrance industry, Creed strives to maintain their classic traditions while modernizing to stay relevant and inspirational to the next generation. With the advent of the internet and fragrance blogs/criticism, the open discussion and analysis of perfume is much more widespread. If you look at blogs, you will often see many threads discussing the Creed line of scents. I had the honor of speaking with Roberto Ferreira, the National Creed educator and the Curator of the Creed Collection for North America, and we discussed everything from vaulting, IFRA, naturals and yes, the effect of the blogosphere. Image Courtesy of Creed Ron Slomowicz: What is it that you do at Creed? Roberto Ferreira: I am the national trainer, which is my main title. I am also the curator, which means that I work in conjunction with the marketing department and I work in terms of fragrances by season. I avoid problems like promoting Love in Black in the summer. I avoid those kinds of problems that they can’t understand. I work in conjunction to help them promote fragrances and events through social media. I work with the public relations department making sure that the info coming from Paris is filtered through me before the public. Every time I go to the office, there are piles of questions and sheets that are missing information. I am the one that makes sure at the technical level that all the notes, words and descriptions are in their place. For instance, avoiding things like Mandarin listed as the base note and Musk as the top note. Continue reading “Roberto Ferreira (Creed) Interview” Tags creed, interview
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ADDICTED TO COLOR WITH ADIDAS ADDICTED TO COLOR WITH ADIDAS This season, the jogging comes out of the wardrobe and if I should mention only one, the most well-known one, I would answer with no hesitation the three-line jog, better known under its real name, Adidas. The retro jogging Adidas has come back in the street, but adorned with its most beautiful colors. I’m sure you have not missed it, if not try to find the hashtag #adicolor on social networks and you’ll see! The collection proposes its key pieces, derived in blue, red, yellow or green. Bright colors and well representative of the brand.… TREE DAYS IN BERLIN FOR THE BREAD & BUTTER A few weeks ago, I went to Berlin for one of the greatest events: the Bread & Butter, organized by Zalando. This festival is always an incredible event, Zalando sees big and we are never disappointed when we arrive there. The atmosphere of the B&&B is a mix of fashion, culture, lifestyle, music and even food. This year’s edition was under the theme of BOLD – Bold is what we are, without filter, honest, fearless, authentic! Basically, there is something for everyone and during the three days of the event, Berlin is bubbling with dynamism, both within the festival walls and… BASIC PIECES ARE ESSENTIAL IN EVERYBODY’S WARDROBE Basic pieces are essential in everybody’s wardrobe, not only because they come to the rescue of any outfit, but also, on days when you don’t know what to wear, they ensure you a perfect and ideal outfit for any occasion. The basic pieces in a wardrobe range from white t-shirts to dressed suits, yes, it’s also a basic! Take for example the black or navy blue suit that you probably also have in your wardrobe. Well, it is the basic par excellence that saves us every time for a stilted event or ceremony. In this article, I opted for the… MY NEW AIR JORDAN If there should be one mythical pair of sneakers, it is of course the Nike Air Jordan! And it is obviously because I am from the ’80 generation that when this piece was released on Zalando (here), I immediately rushed on their website and bought this re-edition of the famous basketball sneakers, the model Jordan B-Fly in white. The Nike Air Jordan are the ideal sneakers for any self-respecting sneakers fan and obviously it’s the pair to add to anyone collection. For my part, I am delighted to have my new pair of Nike Air Jordan that I show you… TAILOR MADE JEANS BY SELFNATION Hi guys ! Have you ever had a custom-made pair of jeans? Well, I hadn’t neither until some time ago. I tested the site Selfnation, a site where you can make your jeans by choosing the colour, the cut and the material, simply by taking some measurements on your morphology, and it is a perfect pair of jeans that suits you like a glove. Plus, you can even customize it with your initials. If we remove the ease use of the site, it is simply great because the result is top. I am very happy with these jeans because for me…
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Measures of Violent Crime: Select Reports from the Bureau of Justice Statistics
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Theory of Norm-Criticism for Nursing Education Contributor: Caitlin Nye Authors – Caitlin M. Nye, MSN, RN, NPD-BC, CHSE; Ellinor Tengelin, PhD, and Darryl Somayaji, PhD, CNS, RN, CCRC Year First Published – 2022 © 2023 Nye Major Concepts Critical reflexivity Anti-oppression Theoretical framework. This is a framework with which nursing scholars can conduct research, and which also has applications in pedagogical praxis. Norm-criticism is a theoretical framework that seeks to both reveal and interrupt the hidden “gears” of norms, power, and othering, functioning similarly to the hidden gears behind a clock face, to reinforce and reify inequity. These gears turn synchronously, hidden from view, characterized by a seamless and dynamic interlockingness that makes their movement seem both normative and inevitable. This theory’s application to nursing education is a relatively recent but important innovation as it provides the concepts and mechanism– the “equal and opposite force” of critical reflexivity– to disrupt the turning of the gears and therefore the taken-for-granted normativity of critical, structural injustices in nursing education. Nye, C. M., Tengelin, E., & Somayaji, D. (2022). Developing a theory of norm-criticism in nursing education. Advances in Nursing Science, DOI: 10.1097/ANS.0000000000000440 Caitlin M. Nye, MSN, RN, NPD-BC, CHSE Assistant Professor at the SUNY Upstate Medical University College of Nursing. At the time this theory was published, she was a 4th year PhD student at the SUNY University at Buffalo School of Nursing. She holds a MSN in Nursing Education from Drexel University and a BSN from the University of Pennsylvania. Caitlin’s intended doctoral research focuses on the knowledge, beliefs and experiences of pre-licensure nursing faculty for including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) topics in their curricula and teaching practices. Her goal is for faculty members to translate knowledge, preparedness, and self-efficacy into action in their classrooms, labs, and clinical teaching to increase cultural safety for LGBTQ+ patients, students and colleagues. Ellinor Tengelin, PhD Senior Lecturer at Mid-Sweden University, Department of Health Sciences, Sweden. With a background in public health, her research interests revolve around the manifestation of power in health, healthcare, and health education – and what can be done about health inequities. Her dissertation was about the pedagogical philosophy of norm criticism and its place in nursing education, and she wants to contribute to the development of norm criticism as a theoretical approach in nursing science. Darryl Somayaji, PhD, CNS, RN, CCRC Assistant Professor at the University at Buffalo School of Nursing and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Oncology, Cancer Screening & Survivorship at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center. She teaches PhD level courses in theory construction and development, philosophy, and dissertation seminar, and a graduate DNP and PhD course “Teaching in Nursing.” Her dissertation work focused on uniting postcolonial, discourse, and linguistic theory to complete an understanding of how individuals use language to construct identity as participants or nonparticipants in cancer research. Her program of research is focused on health disparities in cancer prevention and control
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The Fantasy Worlds of Nyki Blatchley The Traveller’s World Books Set in the Traveller’s World Published Traveller’s World Stories Maps of the Traveller’s World Welcome to the Fantasy Worlds of Nyki Blatchley Welcome to my website. Dive with me into into the worlds of my imagination, whether they’re extensively voyaged and charted or merely glimpsed in a flying visit. Meet wizards and warriors, gods and demons, kings and thieves, children and archaeologists On this website, you can learn about the books I have available and the stories published in magazines, on webzines and in anthologies. You can learn about my worlds and people, study maps and keep up with my (probably very irregular) blog posts. Welcome to my worlds. Learn about the Traveller’s World and the books and stories about it that have been published. Find links to my non-fiction articles about fantasy themes and authors. Check out the anthologies I’ve appeared in, most of which are still available. Check out my blog for news, views and updates. Contact me if you have any queries The Fantasy Worlds of Nyki Blatchley, Blog at WordPress.com.
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talking about the weather Jan. 29, 2023 This Is a Snow Lover’s Nightmare The weather continues to be boring. Photo: ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images It’s January 29. By now, New Yorkers should have experienced at least one day of majestic and accumulating snowfall, followed by three days of straining our groin muscles while attempting to vault over five-foot-wide corner puddles. Or forget that major-winter-storm scenario: At least we should have seen the city covered in a thin, ephemeral layer of white once or twice, and heard the soul-nourishing crunch of snow underfoot. None of that has happened. Instead, as of Sunday, New York has broken the record for the latest first snowfall for a winter in the city’s record-keeping history, which stretches back to the era of President Ulysses S. Grant. No snow in the forecast today, so NYC will break the record for the latest first measurable snowfall of the winter season. pic.twitter.com/PKoEARvYst — Brittany Bell (@BrittanyBabc7) January 29, 2023 It’s a sad day for snow lovers, and for anyone who respects the fundamental laws of nature. It’s likely a troubling harbinger of winters to come (though as New York Metro Weather’s John Homenuk recently explained, climate change does not always mean less snow). And with no snow in the forecast, there’s no definitive end in sight to the flake-less nightmare. There aren’t any answers on the horizon, only more questions. Another ignominious moment looms. New York City’s mark for the longest stretch of days between snow stands at 332, a period that took place less than three years ago, with the streak finally ending on December 15, 2020. Given the uneventful immediate forecast, there’s a good chance that record will go down on February 4. And if this sad, snow-deprived situation persists for a few more weeks, we’re looking at seasonal records, too. The all-time mark for least snow in a New York City winter came in the slow-starting winter of 1973, when only 2.9 inches ultimately fell. It’s much too early to determine whether this record is in danger; there have been plenty of memorable February and March blizzards over the years, and even the occasional April snowstorm. But when it comes to disappointments, don’t put anything past the winter of ’22-’23. It’s not just the snow that’s been lacking in recent weeks, but the cold. The entire month of January has seen warmer-than-average temperature, including some weirdly, unsettlingly mild days (unless you’re one of those people who can set aside the specter of a warming planet and just enjoy a balmy winter afternoon). The two are intertwined, of course; 54-degree days are conducive to rain, which we’ve seen plenty of, not its frostier cousin. Today marks 31 consecutive days of above-average temperatures at NYC. The record of 32 days ending on January 9th, 2007 will be broken tomorrow when high temperatures reach into the upper 40s. pic.twitter.com/JuY3XB6XpQ — John Homenuk (@jhomenuk) January 27, 2023 The temperature is one thing that does look likely to change, at least: The forecast calls for colder conditions — slightly below normal to normal for this time of year — beginning on Wednesday. If the cold spell continues for any real length, it’s probably just a matter of time before snow finally appears. But for now, toboggans across the five boroughs are still gathering dust. Sign Up for the Intelligencer Newsletter Daily news about the politics, business, and technology shaping our world. Vox Media, LLC Terms and Privacy Notice By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice and to receive email correspondence from us. talking about the weather
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Coalition concludes London meetings as Khadafy troops show gains on the ground U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton meets with Mahmoud Jebril, right, a member of the rebel Libyan National Council, at the Foreign and Commonwealth office. REUTERS LONDON — International delegates from more than 40 nations, including seven Arab states, concluded meetings in London held to discuss the global response to the violence in Libya Tuesday as forces loyal to embattled leader Col. Moamar Khadafy pushed back against the rebel advances of recent days. Speaking to reporters at the conclusion of the conference, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said no decision had been made about arming the opposition and made it clear that one potential solution to the crisis involved Khadafy leaving the country. Meanwhile, on the ground, rebel forces saw their western advance halted as rockets and tank fire from Khadafy loyalists forced them to make a hasty retreat from the town of Bin Jawad, east of Sirte, Khadafy’s hometown. Rebels also fled Nawfaliya, a town 75 miles (125 km) east of Sirte, wiping out recent territorial gains amid heavy fighting. Battles also raged in Misrata, 130 miles east of the capital Tripoli, as Khadafy troops launched fresh assaults on the city, Libya’s third largest. Rebel leaders in the city said at least 124 people have been killed there in the past nine days. Tuesday’s developments reversed recent gains by the rebels, who aided by coalition airstrikes, had taken several important towns in their westward sweep from Benghazi including Ras Lanuf, Brega and Uqayla. Western journalists on the ground in Tripoli also reported hearing three large explosions early Tuesday evening. In London, delegates including Clinton and British Foreign Secretary William Hague, met Tuesday afternoon to discuss the progress of the military strikes against Khadafy’s loyalists. Clinton made it clear that allied strikes on Libyan forces would continue until Khadafy met the terms of a UN resolution calling for a cease-fire and authorizing a no-fly zone to protect civilians. “This is a volatile, dynamic situation that is unfolding,” she said at a press conference following the meeting. “Unfortunately we are seeing with Khadafy, a continuing pressure on the rebels, on his people, a willingness to use force.” Saying that Khadafy had lost the legitimacy to lead his country, Clinton reiterated that what happens next was up to the Libyan leader. “I’m not sure that we know exactly when we will get to any change in attitude by Khadafy and those around him,” she said, adding that one potential end to the conflict “could include him leaving the country.” Media reports earlier in the day had suggested that some countries, including Italy, were considering exile options that would grant Khadafy immunity from war crimes prosecution. Hague was also asked about the reports. “We’re (UK) not looking for somewhere for him to go, that doesn’t exclude others from doing so,” he replied. Clinton and Hague both insisted that no decision had been made about arming the rebels. “We have not made any decision about arming the rebels or providing any arms transfers,” Clinton said, adding, “There has been no need to discuss that at this point.” Asked if she believed that the rebels could be armed legally under UN Security Council Resolution 1973, Clinton said that she did. “It is our interpretation that 1973 amended or overrode the absolute prohibition of arms in Libya so there could be a legitimate transfer of arms if a country chose to do that,” she replied. Hague also confirmed that the option of arming the rebels was not brought up at Tuesday’s conference. He called Tuesday “a very important day for the future of Libya” and said that the talks had shown that the coalition of 40 countries was “united in its aims.” He added that the conference had resulted in “widened and deepened support” for the mission. The two announced that the North Atlantic Council, the principal decision-making body within NATO, had been tasked with determining all military actions by the alliance, while on the diplomatic side, a Libyan contact group was set up to discuss the political options going forward. Qatar had agreed to hold the contact group’s first meeting. In a letter addressed to those attending Tuesday’s conference, Khadafy – who last appeared publicly a week ago when he addressed supporters from a balcony at his Tripoli compound — took the coalition to task for aiding an al Qaeda plot to take over the country. “We are a people united behind the leadership of the revolution [Col. Gadhafi] confronting terror from Al Qaeda on one hand and the terror of NATO that is now directly supporting Al -Qaeda on another,” it read in part. Earlier Tuesday, Clinton met the senior Libyan opposition figure Mahmud Jibril. Clinton’s meeting was her second with Jibril — the foreign affairs spokesman for Libya’s Interim Transitional National Council (ITNC) — following an earlier meeting March 15 while she was in Paris attending a G-8 meeting. The ITNC issued a statement Tuesday vowing to work for free and fair elections in a “modern, free and united state.” France and the Arab state of Qatar are alone in officially recognizing the Libyan opposition as the official government of the country. Meanwhile, a NATO spokesman said Tuesday that there was “absolutely no delay” in the alliance’s takeover of all military operations in Libya and the transition was to begin as scheduled Wednesday. “There is absolutely no delay,” said NATO Deputy Spokesman Carmen Romero. “We have always said the transition of this complex operation will take a matter of days and we are on track. There is no change of plans. NATO allies are transferring assets as we speak.” Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee in Washington Tuesday, US Admiral James Stavridis, the NATO Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, was asked about recent African media reports that al Qaeda may haves stolen some surface to air missiles from Khadafy storage sites in the early days of the rebellion. Stavridis declined to answer, instead asking if he could brief the committee in a “classified response.” Answering a separate question, Stavridis confirmed that US efforts in Libya had already cost “hundreds of millions of dollars.” Read Next Libyan rebels retreating after Khadafy onslaught
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Home / Shop / Better Relationships / Men, Women, and the Mystery of Love: Practical Insights from John Paul II’s Love and Responsibility Men, Women, and the Mystery of Love: Practical Insights from John Paul II’s Love and Responsibility This updated and expanded edition of Edward Sri’s classic meditation on Pope John Paul II’s Love and Responsibility includes a new introduction, new chapters for single people and engaged couples, and the stories of people whose lives have been transformed by Pope John Paul II’s foundational teaching on relationships. SKU: 1632530805 Categories: Better Relationships, Forgiveness of Self & Others, Other, Personal Responsibility Tags: Books, Catholicism, Christian Books and Bibles, Christian Living, Dating and Relationships, Family, Marriage, Religion and Spirituality, self help, Sex, Subjects Be the first to review “Men, Women, and the Mystery of Love: Practical Insights from John Paul II’s Love and Responsibility” Cancel reply Forgive and Be Free: A Step-by-Step Guide to Release, Healing & Higher Consciousness Forgiveness will heal you, free you, and catapult your life into a completely new territory of blessings and miracles. This comprehensive guide offers a step-by-step approach to forgiveness with the spiritual foundation that is necessary for ultimate healing… not rated $16.99 Forgiveness: 21 Days to Forgive Everyone for Everything Too many of us feel trapped in stagnant romantic, family, or workplace relationships. Weighed down by toxic thoughts and emotions, we might be quick to judge and slow to pardon, and self-righteous about our feelings as we dwell on memories of what we or others did (or failed to do)… not rated $15.99 $10.43 You Just Don’t Understand: Women and Men in Conversation Women and men live in different worlds…made of different words. Spending nearly four years on the New York Times bestseller list, including eight months at number one, You Just Don’t Understand is a true cultural and intellectual phenomenon… How Can I Forgive You?: The Courage to Forgive, the Freedom Not To Until now, we have been taught that forgiveness is good for us and that good people forgive. Dr. Spring, a gifted therapist and the award-winning author of After the Affair, proposes a radical, life-affirming alternative that lets us overcome the corrosive effects of hate and get on with our lives—without forgiving… not rated $15.99 $6.62 Forgive to Live: How Forgiveness Can Save Your Life Everyone has a “grievance story”-we’ve all been hurt or rejected by someone who mattered to us. Unfortunately, while most of us have been told to forgive, we’ve never been told how or why to forgive. Dr… Forgive for Love: The Missing Ingredient for a Healthy and Lasting Relationship Finding the love of your life and holding onto that relationship is more difficult than ever. The problem hasn’t gone unnoticed. From relationship therapists to speed-dating, self-help books to online matchmaking, an entire industry has developed to help us navigate the bumpy road of relationships… Forgive for Good: A Proven Prescription for Health and Happiness Based on scientific research, this groundbreaking study from the frontiers of psychology and medicine offers startling new insight into the healing powers and medical benefits of forgiveness. Through vivid examples (including his work with victims from both sides of Northern Ireland’s civil war), Dr… Forgive and Let Go!: A book about forgiveness (Being the Best Me Series) For young children, learning to forgive—when they’ve been let down or had their feelings are hurt—can take time. Help children develop their forgiveness skills and learn how to accept an apology and move on without holding grudges… not rated $9.99 Seen enough? Ready to Purchase? © 2023 Obstacle Blaster - WordPress Theme by Kadence Themes
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Home/brave Brave The Game Save Game Brave is an quest game adaptation based on the film of the same name developed by Behaviour Interactive and published…
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Genuine Case of Generalized Amnesia I almost forgot to bring you this one... okay, okay. A 50-something man, fluent in three languages (English, German, and French) with a "professorial knowledge" of European cultural history, awoke dehydrated in Seattle with $600 in his sock and few memories of his past or identity. He knew the names of several professors he said he had worked with in the 1980s -- as well as the troubling memory of a young wife whom he'd found dead in 1985 -- but little else. And he wasn't too keen on knowing more, he said. The story puzzled doctors, police, and experts worldwide for several weeks. According to them, generalized amnesia is basically a movie ailment; it is possible, but the sufferers are often exaggerating for their own benefit, and thoroughly legitimate cases are extremely rare. "Jon Doe"'s ("Jon" is fine with him) appears to be a genuine case. An update to this story is that the man has been identified as Edward Lighthart, a professor who once taught English in China. Online pictures verified his identity and the newspaper was trying to catch-up to him when I posted this entry. Follow the Seattle Times Online for more developments on this story. Posted by Manodogs at 12:30:00 PM Labels: america, health, medical, mental processes, psychology, unexplained
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12526
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Baxley - William REPUBLIC FIDUCIARY, INC. President 21-AUG-2000 30-SEP-2012 29-JUN-1998 United States of America - Paradise Papers International Automotive Group Insurance Company, Ltd. President 11-SEP-2000 23-OCT-2001 30-MAR-1998 Bermuda - Paradise Papers International Automotive Group Insurance Company, Ltd. Chairman of the board 11-SEP-2000 23-OCT-2001 30-MAR-1998 Bermuda - Paradise Papers
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12527
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US rock legend David Crosby dies aged 81 Veteran US folk-rock star David Crosby has died aged 81, his representative has confirmed. He helped set up two major bands in the 1960s: The Byrds, and Crosby, Stills and Nash. He was renowned for his guitar-playing and vocal harmonies. His career saw him achieve the rare feat of being inducted to the revered Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice. Former bandmates saluted Crosby’s creative talents, while acknowledging the conflicts they had endured. Crosby’s wife told showbiz site Variety that he died “after a long illness” while surrounded by family. “His legacy will continue to live on through his legendary music,” her statement added. Crosby was born in California on 14 August 1941, the son of Oscar-winning Hollywood cinematographer Floyd Crosby. He joined The Byrds in 1964 – a folk-rock group which scored its first hit with a cover of Bob Dylan’s Tambourine Man. His tempestuous tenure – a period during which he also briefly dated singer Joni Mitchell – culminated in his being fired from the group three years later. Crosby, Stills and Nash came together as a supergroup soon afterwards, and performed at the legendary Woodstock festival in 1969. They were later joined by Canadian singer-songwriter Neil Young. This band, too, was beset by in-fighting and broke up after a few years – though has periodically reformed for concerts since. Hits written by Crosby during his time in the band included the hippy anthems Almost Cut My Hair and Deja Vu. He became known for his countercultural politics and trademark moustache as well as his musicianship. A six-decade career culminated in his final album, For Free, released in 2021. The record saw him team up with one of his children, James Raymond, who had been put up for adoption soon after birth and only became acquainted with his father three decades later. Off-stage, Crosby had multiple run-ins with US law enforcement, including an arrest in 1982 on drug and weapons charges. His substance abuse had reportedly intensified after the death of a girlfriend in a car crash when he was a young man. There followed periods of ill health, and a liver transplant in 1994. Crosby’s reputation for a hedonistic lifestyle saw him named two decades later as “rock’s unlikeliest survivor” by Rolling Stone magazine. Crosby later expressed regret over his addictions and altercations with co-stars, telling the Los Angeles Times in 2019 he was “ashamed” of some of his past behaviours. Following the musician’s death, bandmate Graham Nash expressed his “profound sadness” despite the two men’s often “volatile” relationship, adding that Crosby left behind a “tremendous void”. Stephen Stills agreed, writing that his late collaborator was “without question a giant of a musician”, even though they had “butted heads a lot of the time”. Another tribute came from Beach Boys singer Brian Wilson, who wrote on Twitter that he was “heartbroken” at the news – as his fellow star had been an “unbelievable talent” and a “wonderful person”. Tweets were sent from Crosby’s own account the day before his death was announced – with one stating that Eleanor Rigby was his favourite Beatles to song to play on a rainy day. The exact cause of his death was not immediately specified. <<BBC>> Al Nassr: Cristiano Ronaldo faces major problem Burna Boy, Rema, Asake top Soundcity Awards nominee list
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Naira redesign plot to scuttle elections, install interim govt – El-Rufai The Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, on Thursday described the current scarcity of naira notes as part of an alleged plot to disrupt the forthcoming general elections to ensure an interim government takes over. The governor made the allegation in a state broadcast. He alleged that the development was meant to ensure that the presidential candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress, Bola Tinubu, and other candidates of the party lose. He claimed that those who lost out in the party’s primaries were behind the plot. He said, “It is important for the people of Kaduna State, and indeed Nigeria, to know that contrary to the public pronouncements and apparent good intentions, this policy was conceived and sold to the President by officials who completely lost out in the gubernatorial and presidential primaries of the APC in June 2022. “Once Asiwaju Bola Tinubu emerged as the candidate in June 2022, and subsequently did not pick one of them as his running mate, this currency redesign policy was conceived to ensure that the APC presidential candidate is deprived of what they alleged is a humongous war chest. “They also sought to achieve any one or more of the following objectives: create a nationwide shortage of cash so that citizens are incited to vote against APC candidates across the board resulting in massive losses for the party in all the elections; ensure that the cash crunch is so serious, along with the contrived and enduring fuel shortage existing since September 2022, that the 2023 elections do not hold at all, leading to an Interim National Government to be led by a retired Army General; sustain the climate of shortage of fuel, food and other necessities, leading to mass protests, violence and breakdown of law and order that would provide a fertile foundation for a military take-over.” In pursuit of the objectives, El-Rufai claimed the Central Bank of Nigeria and those he described as “other disgruntled federal officials” had convinced the President that it was fine for ordinary citizens to be dispossessed of their hard-earned money, and starved if need be, while small and medium-sized businesses were deprived of access to their capital, thereby bringing trade and exchange to a grinding halt. He said all efforts by state governors to modify the implementation of the policy to avoid what they assumed were unintended consequences were unsuccessful. El-Rufai said politicians that the officials had convinced the President to regard as the real targets of the currency redesign policy have not been impeded in any way by it so far. He added, “Indeed, two of the presidential candidates and a running mate of the opposition parties own or have preferred access to some of the licensed banks. For that reason and by various clandestine arrangements, these politicians have access to hundreds of millions of these new notes, while the traders, merchants, students and other citizens are queuing for days to withdraw a few thousand naira just to buy food and necessaries. “Within two to three weeks of implementation, it was clear to everyone that the architects of this policy can see that it is our people that are being affected and not the politicians. It is quite unfortunate that many politicians who either own banks or have privileged access to money are so insulated from the pains of talakawa that they are recklessly endorsing a policy that is being badly implemented.” The governor said there was no reason why the old and new notes should not coexist until the old notes are gradually withdrawn over the years as it is done in the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia and other countries. El-Rufai faulted the position of the President on the matter, saying, “The address by the President earlier this (Thursday) morning limiting the legal tender status of old notes to only N200 amounts to total disregard and disobedience of the ruling of February 8 which was extended further yesterday (Wednesday) by the Supreme Court. “The misguided action of the Attorney-General to mislead the President into engaging in this public violation of the order of the highest court of the land shows how desperate the policy architects are to cause national chaos, by showing open contempt for the judiciary. “The decision to recognise only N200 as legal tender till April that the President announced this morning was offered to the state governments as part of proposals for an out-of-court settlement three days ago.” Fitch: Naira shortage may trigger forex demand Window of settlement between G-5, Atiku closed, says Wike
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Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation Takumi Abe, Hiroyuki Takeda, Yumi Takahashi, Yoshihisa Miwa, Koji Yamada, Minoru Ishikura Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one was successfully performed by applying microwave irradiation. Heterocycles https://doi.org/10.3987/COM-08-11483 10.3987/COM-08-11483 Dive into the research topics of 'Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint. 2-azabicyclo(2.2.1)hept-5-en-3-one Medicine & Life Sciences 100% Rhodium Medicine & Life Sciences 71% Microwaves Medicine & Life Sciences 46% Arylation Chemical Compounds 43% Microwave Irradiation Chemical Compounds 38% Acids Medicine & Life Sciences 30% Acid Chemical Compounds 13% Abe, T., Takeda, H., Takahashi, Y., Miwa, Y., Yamada, K., & Ishikura, M. (2008). Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation. Heterocycles, 75(12), 2931-2936. https://doi.org/10.3987/COM-08-11483 Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation. / Abe, Takumi; Takeda, Hiroyuki; Takahashi, Yumi et al. In: Heterocycles, Vol. 75, No. 12, 01.12.2008, p. 2931-2936. Abe, T, Takeda, H, Takahashi, Y, Miwa, Y, Yamada, K & Ishikura, M 2008, 'Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation', Heterocycles, vol. 75, no. 12, pp. 2931-2936. https://doi.org/10.3987/COM-08-11483 Abe T, Takeda H, Takahashi Y, Miwa Y, Yamada K, Ishikura M. Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation. Heterocycles. 2008 Dec 1;75(12):2931-2936. doi: 10.3987/COM-08-11483 Abe, Takumi ; Takeda, Hiroyuki ; Takahashi, Yumi et al. / Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation. In: Heterocycles. 2008 ; Vol. 75, No. 12. pp. 2931-2936. @article{b8fd6739a537412e87c4ee979a9807e4, title = "Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation", abstract = "Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one was successfully performed by applying microwave irradiation.", author = "Takumi Abe and Hiroyuki Takeda and Yumi Takahashi and Yoshihisa Miwa and Koji Yamada and Minoru Ishikura", doi = "10.3987/COM-08-11483", journal = "Heterocycles", publisher = "Japan Institute of Heterocyclic Chemistry", T1 - Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one with arylboronic acids under microwave irradiation AU - Abe, Takumi AU - Takeda, Hiroyuki AU - Takahashi, Yumi AU - Miwa, Yoshihisa AU - Yamada, Koji AU - Ishikura, Minoru N2 - Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one was successfully performed by applying microwave irradiation. AB - Rhodium-catalyzed arylation of 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one was successfully performed by applying microwave irradiation. U2 - 10.3987/COM-08-11483 DO - 10.3987/COM-08-11483 JO - Heterocycles JF - Heterocycles
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913: Feeling Unloved: “You Don’t Love Me, Nobody Loves Me” by Vironika Tugaleva on What We Tell Ourselves About Love Vironika Tugaleva talks about how self-love doesn't ever rely on others. Episode 913: Feeling Unloved: “You Don't Love Me, Nobody Loves Me” by Vironika Tugaleva on What We Tell Ourselves About Love Vironika Tugaleva was born in Donetsk, Ukraine in 1988. Her early years as a misfit began her painful struggle with mental health. As she struggled with self-acceptance, anxiety, and identity, Vironika found solace in words and music. Her first book, The Love Mindset, won the Readers' Favorite silver medal for Best Self-Help book of 2013. Driven by an urge to spread light in the world, Vironika began to do life coaching, speaking, and writing in the personal growth field. In 2014, Vironika sold her things, left Toronto, and became a digital nomad. She launched her 2nd book in 2017, The Art of Talking to Yourself. Currently, Vironika is working on a poetry book, writing and peforming spoken word, and planning arts-related events. The original post is located here: https://www.vironika.org/nobody-loves-me/ Calm is offering a special limited time promotion of 40% off a Calm Premium subscription at Calm.com/ORD Join the Ol' Family to get your Free Gifts and join our online community: OLDPodcast.com/group
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Fully embrace the return of ’90s fashion Fashion Sweaters Gucci’s Men’s Cruise Collection 2018 Lookbook Has Arrived Awkwardness gives me great comfort. I’ve never been cool, but I’ve felt cool. I’ve been in the cool place, but I wasn’t really cool – I was trying to pass for hip or cool. Fashion never stops. There is always the new project, the new opportunity. Awkwardness gives me great comfort. I’ve never been cool, but I’ve felt cool. I’ve been in the cool place, but I wasn’t really cool – I was trying to pass for hip or cool. Fashion never stops. There is always the new project, the new opportunity. I always say: To be well dressed you must be well naked. A girl should be two things: classy and fabulous. I am convinced that there can be luxury in simplicity. I wanted to dress the woman who lives and works, not the woman in a painting. It’s hard to balance everything. It’s always challenging. My relationships with producers or photographers – these are relationships that took years. I can’t get sucked into that celebrity thing, because I think it’s just crass. My aim is to make the poor look rich and the rich look poor. Vanity is the healthiest thing in life. I believe that my clothes can give people a better image of themselves – that it can increase their feelings of confidence and happiness. You can hide so much behind theatrics, and I don’t need to do that any more. I don’t really know how to do casual clothes. Breaking Up With Fast Fashion Has Been Easier Gucci’s Men’s Cruise Collection 2018 Lookbook Has Arrived If I fell in love with a woman for an artistic reason, or from the point of view of my work, I think it would rob her of something. We live in an era of globalization and the era of the woman. Never in the history of the world have women been more in control of their destiny. Awesome, Beachwear, Cool, Nice You can wear them with just about anything The art of dressing up Sweeten your summer wardrobes
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Tomatillo Milpero vs Tomatillo – Which One To Go For? There are two types of tomatillos, green and purple. The green ones are smaller and sweeter, whereas the purple ones are larger and less sweet. Both varieties are delicious, but which one should you go for? Tomatillos are native to Mexico, where they are known as “pipián” or “chile verde. ” They are also commonly grown in California and other parts of the United States. Both varieties of tomatillos are delicious, but the purple variety has a slightly stronger flavor. If you want to try out both varieties, then go for the purple ones 1 Tomatillo Milpero vs Tomatillo 2 Tomatillo 3 Milpero Tomatillo 4 What does a mature tomatillo plant look like? 5 How do you know if tomatillos are ripe? 6 What does a good tomatillo look like? 7 Why are tomatillos toxic? 8 What makes a tomatillo toxic? 9 What is the difference between a green tomato and a tomatillo? 10 What is a good tomatillo? 11 What are tiny tomatillos called? Tomatillo Milpero vs Tomatillo Tomatillos are green fruits that resemble tomatoes but are smaller and rounder. They are native to Mexico and Central America. Tomatillos are used in Mexican cuisine, especially in salsas and sauces. They are available year round and can be found in grocery stores. Tomatillos can be eaten raw or cooked. In Mexico, they are usually cooked in a stew called “salsa de tomatillo”. They can also be pickled or fried. Tomatillos are not related to tomatoes. They are actually members of the nightshade family. They are grown in tropical climates and are harvested during the summer months. They are picked when they are fully ripe and soft. They are then washed and peeled. They are then placed into containers and stored in a cool place until needed. Tomatillos are a type of fruit that looks similar to tomatoes but are smaller and have a different shape. They are native to Central America and Mexico. Tomatillos were originally cultivated in Mexico and Central America. They are now widely planted throughout the world. Tomatillos have been cultivated since pre-Columbian times. They are used in many dishes such as salsa verde, salsa roja, guacamole, tamales, and enchiladas. Milpero Tomatillo Tomatillos are not related to tomatoes. They are actually members of the nightshade family. They are a member of the Solanaceae family. They are grown commercially for their edible fruits. What does a mature tomatillo plant look like? Tiny tomatoes are known as tomatillos. These are greenish yellow fruits that resemble tomatoes but are smaller. They taste similar to tomatoes but are milder in flavor. They are used in Mexican dishes. How do you know if tomatillos are ripe? Tomatillos are members of the nightshade family, which includes tomatoes, potatoes, eggplants, peppers, and tobacco. Tomatillos are native to Mexico and Central America. In Spanish, the word “tomate” refers to any type of tomato, while “tomatello” refers specifically to a green or red fruit from the genus Physalis. Tomatillos have a thick skin that turns bright yellow when ripe. Inside, the fruit contains a single seed surrounded by juicy pulp. The flavor of tomatillos varies depending on where they were grown. Tomatillos can be eaten raw, but they are usually cooked to remove bitterness. What does a good tomatillo look like? Tomatillos are members of the gooseberry family tomato and are native to Mexico. Tomatillos are used in Mexican cuisine and are usually eaten raw. Green tomatoes are not related to tomatillos but are actually fruits from the nightshade plant family. They are grown commercially in many parts of the world and are available year round. They are typically used for making salsa and other sauces. Why are tomatillos toxic? Tomatillos are native to Mexico and Central America. They are green fruits that resemble tomatoes but are smaller and rounder. Tomatillos are used in Mexican cuisine and are usually eaten raw in salads or cooked into sauces. They are not poisonous if consumed in moderation. However, if you consume too many tomatillos, you could experience stomach upset. This is because tomatillos contain a compound called glycoside. Glycosides are found in plants and are known to cause gastrointestinal distress. What makes a tomatillo toxic? Tomatillos are not poisonous but they can cause stomach upset if eaten raw. Tomatillos are part of the tomato family and are related to tomatoes. They are green fruits that resemble cherry tomatoes. Tomatillos have a thick skin and are usually harvested while still immature. They are used in Mexican cuisine and are sometimes called “green tomatoes” because of their color. What is the difference between a green tomato and a tomatillo? A good tomatillo looks like a green tomato with a yellowish tint. It is usually smaller than a regular tomato. A good tomatillo is firm and juicy. What is a good tomatillo? Tomatillos are green fruits that resemble tomatoes but are smaller and rounder. Tomatillos are used in Mexican cuisine and are available year round. To determine whether tomatillos are ready to eat, squeeze them gently between your thumb and forefinger. A firm fruit will feel slightly squishy while a soft one will yield easily. Tomatillos can be stored in the refrigerator for several weeks. What are tiny tomatillos called? Tomatillos are native to Mexico and Central America. They are part of the nightshade family and are related to tomatoes. Tomatillos are used in Mexican cuisine and are eaten raw or cooked. They are usually found growing wild in tropical climates. Tomatillos can be grown from seed but are generally propagated by cuttings. A mature tomatillo plant looks similar to a tomato plant. It grows about 2 feet tall and produces green fruit. The fruits are round and resemble cherry tomatoes. Post Tags: #–#milpero#tomatillo Weber Briquettes vs Kingsford- Which One? American Woodmark vs KraftMaid: What’s The Difference? 2 Common Brick Oven Pizza Maker Problems (Troubleshooting) Have you ever tried baking pizza at home? If yes, then you probably know that it’s not always easy. There are several problems that can arise during the process. In this article, we’ll discuss two common ones. Pizza is one of the most popular foods around the globe. It has become a staple food for… Read More 2 Common Brick Oven Pizza Maker Problems (Troubleshooting)Continue 3 Common Toshiba Oven Problems (Troubleshooting) Have you ever had trouble with your Toshiba oven? If yes, then you probably know how frustrating it can be to try to fix these problems. Luckily, there are some common troubleshooting steps that you can take to get things back on track. The Toshiba brand has been around since the early 1900s. They’re known… Read More 3 Common Toshiba Oven Problems (Troubleshooting)Continue Curious About Pressure Cooker Weight? Read This What is pressure cooker weight? Is it safe to cook food in a pressure cooker? How much does it weigh? Pressure cooking is a method of cooking where water is heated under high pressure until boiling point. The steam generated from the boiling liquid creates a vacuum inside the pot, forcing out the air and… Read More Curious About Pressure Cooker Weight? Read ThisContinue How Long Does Sambal Oelek Last? (Answered) Sambal oelek is a spicy condiment commonly found in Southeast Asian cuisine. It consists of ground chili peppers mixed with salt and vinegar. The flavor is very hot, but it also has a tangy taste. How long does sambal oelek last? Sambal olek is a common ingredient in Indonesian dishes such as nasi goreng fried… Read More How Long Does Sambal Oelek Last? (Answered)Continue Can I Substitute Asiago For Parmesan? Parmigiano Reggiano PR is considered the king of cheeses. But did you know that PR cheese has a very short shelf life? If you want to enjoy its full flavor, you should store it properly. The Italian government protects PR cheese from being adulterated or substituted. This means that only authentic PR cheese can be… Read More Can I Substitute Asiago For Parmesan?Continue 3 Ways To Fix Instant Pot Heating Element Burn If you notice that your heating element is burning, you can try these three methods to fix it. First, turn off the power switch. Second, remove the bottom plate from the pot. Third, if the problem persists, replace the heating element. Can I Cook With my Instant Pot Heating Element Burn? Yes! It’s not a… Read More 3 Ways To Fix Instant Pot Heating Element BurnContinue
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12533
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