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Thomas
Stanton
Jr. is
believed
to have
been
born abt
1707.
Thomas
married
Lettice
Bryan,
daughter
of
Richard
Bryan.
1728
Sept
Thomas
Stanton
Jr.
first
appears
on a
deed
with his
brother
Linn for
1000
acres. "Stanton,
Linn and
Stanton,
Thomas,
Jr
Spotsylvania
Co.1000
Pat 13
pg
367Beginning
and
extending
standing
on the
side of
a hill
on the
North
side of
North
River Of
the
Rappidan
River
near the
mountains.
"
In the
Book
Lost
Trails
and
Forgotten
People:
The
Story of
Jones
Mountain,
by Tom
Floyd
Tom
Floyd
stated
that
"Tom Jr.
was
active
in
business
affairs
buying
and
selling
and
helping
friends
draw up
legal
documents.
Evidence
suggests
that he
was also
a
worldly
man who
enjoyed
all the
pleasures
of life”
1735
Oct 10
Oct Resolved that Thos
Stanton, Gent./m be paid 832 pds
of
tobacco
for
nursing
a
bastard
child
and that
the said
Child by
bound to
Thos.
Stanton Junr
according as the Law direct.
1741
Oct 4
Thomas
received
from his
fathers
will: "Item I
give to my son Thomas Stanton my
still and all materials also the
Large Bible."
1742
Thomas
Stanton
JR was
appointed
guardian
of his
sister
Mary
Stanton
1745 Jan
11
Thomas
Stanton
of
Culpeper
Co to
Francis
Harvey
of same
.. Lease
of
land..
corner
to
Jeremiah
Early on
the
river..
to the
Yellow
Banks, a
place so
called
to the
patent
line.
For 21
year
from
Micklemus
next
ensuing.
Yearly
rent on
the
feast of
St Lukes
Oct 18,
450
pounds
tobacco.
(pages
30-32
Culpeper
Co Court
Records)
1745
Mathew
Stanton
appears
as a
Witness
to a
deed ,
Oct
18,1745
For Linn
(Leonard)
Stanton:
Indenture
April
23, 1746
Between
Thomas
Stanton
and
Jeremiah
Early
for 70
Acre,
land
part of
Patent
granted
Sept. 28
1728 to
Thomas
and Linn
Stanton
(
Original
grant
for 100
acres on
Stanton
River)
1749
Thomas
Stanton's
twenty
one year
lease to
John
Simpson,
for less
than 100
acres on
the
river
that
bore the
lessors
name.
Called
for a
rent of
450
pounds
of
tobacco.
With the
first
year of
rent
free....
Stanton
doth
agree to
find
timber
for
rails
and
firewood
on his
land for
the use
of
tenement
when all
timber
is used
for the
tenement.
The year
1749
from (Culpeper
Deed
Book A p
12-15,
186-187)
1753 Aug
8 page
27-30
Thomas
Stanton
of
Culpeper
Co to
Charles
Pierson
of same.
Lease of
land… at
the
mouth of
the
Wolfpen
branch.
to the
road
..on a
ridge.
in a
little
valley.
head of
the lick
branch
..on the
river
side of
corner
of
William
Pierson.
For 15
years
from Nov
15 next
ensuing.
Rent
yearly
onA psychiatric evaluation revealed that she had poor adjustment with peers at school and poor interest in academics. She did her skin lesions mechanically to get emotional support from her parents. Her parents brought her to us for treatment and also to get a medical certificate of her long absence in school. They did not know that the lesions were produced mechanically (by metallic object). She was diagnosed as a case of factitious disorder. Parents seemed overtly concerned about their child. She responded favorably to psychotherapy and her parents were counseled. There were no similar episodes during the 1 year follow-up.
DISCUSSION {#sec1-3}
==========
Induced mechanical purpura has been described more often as dummy purpura. However, the context of such occurrence remains poorly understood. In some cases, the mechanical lesions are | {
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Lady Storm Claims Second Tournament Title Of The Season
Published:
September 26th, 2017
By:
Meagan Schulz
OTSELIC
—
A
convincing
9-0
win
over
Cato-Meridian
followed
by
a
dominant
7-0
victory
DeRuyter
on
Friday,
Unadilla
Valley’s
girls
soccer
team
brought
home
another
piece
of
hardwood
for
the
trophy
case.
Last
Wednesday,
the
Storm
faced
Cato-Meridian
in
the
opening
match
of
the
First
Annual
Otselic
Valley
Varsity
Soccer
tournament.
Kyleigh
George
opened
up
UV’s
scoring
clinic
on
an
assist
from
Julia
Oglesby. UV’s
Shelby
Meade
then
recorded
the
next
two
goals
for
her
team
to
add
to
the
total.
Cearah
DaCostafaro
found
the
back
of
the
net
on
a
ball
from
George
for
goal
number
four
by
the
Lady
Storm.Oglesby
wanted
in
on
the
scoring
action
next
as
she
fired
a
shot
past
Cato-Meridian’s
keeper
Meghan
McCarthy.
McCarthy
was
shot
at
25
times
by
Unadilla
Valley,
stopping
19
on
the
evening.
The
last
goal
recorded
by
a
UV
player
was
from
Paige
Catena,
giving
the
Storm
a
total
of
six
goals
from
5
different
players.
Cato-Meridian
added
three
goals
on
to
UV’s
final
score as
their
defensive
mishaps
caused
the
ball
to
go
into
their
own
net
each
time.
The
second
game
of
the
girls
double
header
on
Wednesday,
September
20,
was
the
Lady
Vikings
against
DeRuyter.
A
matchup
that
has
happened
already
once
this
season,
DeRuyter
took
down
the
host
Vikings
with
a
score
of
3-1.
In
a
well-played
game
by
both
side,
OV’s
lone
goal
would
come
on
a
PK
from
Jessica
Comfort.
The
Lady
Vikings
did
create
13
shot
opportunities
through
the
contest
but
couldn’t
finish
on
any
of
them
–
an
MO
on
the
season
for
Otselic
Valley.
..
There's More to This Story!
You're only seeing a part of the story.
Subscribe now to get immediate access to the rest of the story as well as our whole online offering.than ten million inhabitants. Data from the website of Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences official website was used to conveniently sample two geographically spaced tertiary care public sector hospitals from Lahore, out of a total of nine \[[@CR24]\]. The two sampled hospitals have been named Hospital A and Hospital B. Both hospitals have high patient turnovers and large in-patient capacities, and are catering to a different set of patients from the rural and urban Lahore District and also from the surrounding villages of Lahore City. Combined, the two hospitals have a large daily out-patient turnover rate of more than 3,800 patients and an in-patient capacity of approximately 1,890 beds.
All registered female nurses who had been working in the hospital for more than one year were sampled. Each designation | {
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at the
rally as
observers.
If any of you
encounter any
threat from
anyone during
the rally,
either
physical or
verbal, please
refrain from
retaliating,
and notify the
police or our
legal counsel
as soon as
possible. If
possible,
please record
the encounter
as potential
evidence.
Hong Kong New
Yorkers are
not afraid. We
also believe
NYPD is there
to protect our
freedom of
assembly, and
that they will
do their job,
unlike their
Hong Kong
counterparts.
Say NO to
white terror!
Support Hong
Kong!" Which
side is
Guterres and his UN
on? The white
terror.
Now as the Hong
Kong police,
with the
Chinese
garrison
saying it is free
to join that
at any time,
tear gasses
the protesters, UN
Guterres is
silent, with
his financial
conflict of
interest with
CEFC
China Energy.
After
roughing up
and banning
Inner City
Press which
asks,
Guterres' July
26 noon
"press"
briefing had not
a single
question.
Very Xi.
On
June 6, banned
Inner City
Press asked Guterres
and his spokes- / hachetman
Stephane
Dujarric: "June
6-3: On China,
human rights
and the SG,
what is the
SG's response
to reports
that China has
announced
former Hong
Kong police
chief Andy
Tsang
Wai-hung’s
nomination for
the top post
at the United
Nations
organisation
fighting drug
crimes - Mr
Tsang's
nomination
could also be
controversial
for his
management of
the Occupy
protests,
during which
tear gas was
used on
pro-democracy
demonstrators.
That shone a
spotlight on
government
effortsto
clamp down on
activists in
the former
British
colony, with
the gatherings
of mostly
students
dubbed the
"Umbrella
Movement"
after they
used umbrellas
to shield
themselves
from the
pepper
spray.
Concerns over
the autonomy
of Hong Kong's
judicial
system have
increased, as
the
Beijing-backed
government
seeks an
extradition
bill that
critics say
could be used
to target
dissidents
living in the
city.
That
legislation
may have
helped drive a
record turnout
of more than
180,000 on
Tuesday night
for Hong
Kong's annual
vigil to
remember the
Chinese
military's
crackdown in
Tiananmen
Square. Police
put the number
of attendees
at 37,000. The
nomination is
China’s first
attempt to
fill a top
position at a
major
international
organisation
since it
detained Meng
Hongwei, then
the head of
the global
policing body
Interpol, last
year. It
was understood
UN Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres would
select a
successor in a
few months to
replace the
current
executive
director, Yury
Fedotov of
Russia, who
had been in
office since
2010"?"
More than two
weeks later,
no answer at
all despite
Dujarric's
promise that
there
would be
answers.
Guterres is
entirely
corrupt. And
this: "The
former
commissioner
of police,
Andy Tsang,
said on
Saturday the
level of force
used by police
during the
June 12
protests was
necessary and
restrained.
Tsang said
from what he
saw on live TV
broadcasts,
there was a
level of
violence
caused by
protesters
that was more
serious than
what had been
seen during
the 2014 civil
disobedience
movement, when
he was leading
the police
force.
He said it
would not have
been possible
for the | {
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now
that a cert
petition has
been filed to
put the UN's
impunity in
Haiti before
the U.S.
Supreme
Court?
June
6-3: On China,
human rights
and the SG,
what is the
SG's response
to reports
that China has
announced
former Hong
Kong police
chief Andy
Tsang
Wai-hung’s
nomination for
the top post
at the United
Nations
organisation
fighting drug
crimes - Mr
Tsang's
nomination
could also be
controversial
for his
management of
the Occupy
protests,
during which
tear gas was
used on
pro-democracy
demonstrators.
That shone a
spotlight on
government
efforts to
clamp down on
activists in
the former
British
colony, with
the gatherings
of mostly
students
dubbed the
"Umbrella
Movement"
after they
used umbrellas
to shield
themselves
from the
pepper
spray.
Concerns over
the autonomy
of Hong Kong's
judicial
system have
increased, as
the
Beijing-backed
government
seeks an
extradition
bill that
critics say
could be used
to target
dissidents
living in the
city.
That
legislation
may have
helped drive a
record turnout
of more than
180,000 on
Tuesday night
for Hong
Kong's annual
vigil to
remember the
Chinese
military's
crackdown in
Tiananmen
Square. Police
put the number
of attendees
at 37,000. The
nomination is
China’s first
attempt to
fill a top
position at a
major
international
organisation
since it
detained Meng
Hongwei, then
the head of
the global
policing body
Interpol, last
year. It
was understood
UN Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres would
select a
successor in a
few months to
replace the
current
executive
director, Yury
Fedotov of
Russia, who
had been in
office since
2010"? No
answers. #DumpGuterres.In a wide-ranging discussion, Rice reflected on American exceptionalism, her time in the Bush Administration, her childhood in the South, and how her life has changed out of the public eye.
"I still believe that the United States is exceptional in its conception, the American idea, no tie of nationality, ethnicity, religion to the territory. It's exceptional in the way that it has integrated people from around the world for generations. It's exceptional in the way that it's been willing to fight for the rights of others, even when they didn't know their names. You know, any ordinary country might not have stormed the beaches of Normandy to fight for the liberties of those people. And so, yes, I do think there's an exceptionalism," Rice told Couric.
But she added, | {
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Another group led by Henry
Barrow in London went
underground and some of them
eventually also emigrated to the
Netherlands where they enjoyed
religious freedom in the
Protestant areas of the
Netherlands.
Henry Barrow,
returning to England at one
point, was arrested and was
eventually hanged for sedition.
It was from amongst these
groups of radical separatists
who had broken completely with
the Church of England that some
of the Mayflower Pilgrims of
1620 were eventually to be
drawn.
So one legacy was separatism,
a tiny minority who broke away
completely.
Secondly, there was a much
broader legacy of activist
evangelism within the Church of
England.
Many Puritan sympathizers felt
that if they could not change
the structures of the Church of
England then they could at least
transform its spirit and thereby
leave their own distinctive
stamp on the nature of English
Protestantism.
They advocated a religion
heavily based upon the Bible:
advocating preaching,
practicing the sanctification
of the Sabbath,
insisting upon strict moral
behavior,
pursuingmoral reformation
where they had the power and the
opportunity,
and they constantly drummed
upon the theme of the failure of
England to live up to the--
to show proper gratitude for
God's deliverance of the
kingdom,
the need to turn to a more
strict religious observation in
return for God's favor.
So that was the second legacy.
Thirdly, there was a legacy of
a different kind.
Some of those who had defended
the Elizabethan settlement from
Puritan attacks began to develop
an altogether more positive view
of the Elizabethan settlement.
They began to see it not just
as a temporary compromise,
but as a distinctive and valid
alternative,
a distinctive middle way
between Catholicism on the one
hand and radical Protestantism
on the other.
Theologians like Richard Hooker
and Richard Bancroft saw the
retention of a traditionalist
structure in the Church of
England as not simply a matter
of convenience,
or political expediency,
but as a valid Protestant
alternative.
Indeed, | {
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Security
Council
stakeout,
first Ladsous
sought out a
softball
question in
French; then
when the Press
question about
MISCA in
Bozoum was
asked, he
shook his head
and said, ďI
give the floor
to Madame.Ē
So
Inner City
Press asked
that question,
politely but
audibly. Again
Ladsous
refused to
answer,
looking
desperately
around for a
friendly
question.
Ladsous
has adopted
this position
-- video
compilation
here --
since Inner
City Press
asked him
about his
history during
the Rwanda
genocide in
1994, as
France's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
in the
Security
Council
arguing for
the escape of
genocidaires
into Eastern
Congo, sample
memo here.
It was and is
a
straightforward
question, the
type public
officials
answer every
day. But
Ladsous has
refused, and
has gone
further.
Because
Ladsous is
protected --
was nominated
-- by the
French
government
which has
controlled UN
Peacekeeping
four times in
a row now,
this anamoly
is allowed to
go on inside
the UN.
More
seriously, UN
Peacekeeping
by most
accounts
brought
cholera to
Haiti, which
has killed
over 8,000
people. Inner
City Press
asked Ladsous,
loud and clear
(but nothing
but polite) if
his DPKO now
belatedly
screens
peacekeepers
from cholera
hot spots
before
deployment.
Ladsous
refused to
answer. To
this has the
UN descended.
The new Free
UN
Coalition for
Access has
formally
proposed that
UN Under
Secretaries
General not be
allowed to
take this
approach.
Watch this
site.
986 A.2d 467 (2009)
In the Matter of Michele SUKERMAN and William Sukerman.
No. 2009-216.
Supreme Court of New Hampshire.
Argued: November 4, 2009.
Opinion Issued: December 31, 2009.
*468 Cynthia M. Weston, of Londonderry, on the brief, and Legal Resource Strategies, PLLC, of Manchester (Nancy A. DeAngelis on the brief and orally), for the petitioner.
Law Office of Joshua L. Gordon, of Concord (Joshua L. Gordon on the brief and orally), for the respondent.
HICKS, J.
The respondent, William Sukerman, appeals the order of the Derry Family Division (Moore, J.) distributing the parties' marital property in a divorce proceeding filed by the petitioner, Michele Sukerman. The respondent contends the family division erred in awarding the petitioner a portion of his accidental disability pension benefit. We affirm.
The following facts were either found by the trial court or | {
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Each year in November, after regional heats in Belfast, Cork,
Derry, Dublin, Galway and Limerick have produced two finalists from each
province, the finals are held to judge who of Ireland's top eight performance
poets will walk away with the prestigious crown of All Ireland Poetry Slam
Champion.
As the event has no formal funding we are advertising our
project on the crowd-funding site fundit.ie, in the hope of raising €1000 to
cover prize money and expenses for travelling poets, plus the printing costs for
100 copies of a special commemorative edition chapbook of the 16-18 poems that
contestants bring to the final. A €10
donation secures you an Honourable Mention in the Special Edition Slam Final
Chapbook of Finalists' Poems, whilst €20 secures a mention and a copy of the
publication.
Founded on the idea of the old bardic circuit,with
or without electronics; it may be feasible to include additional
instrumental forces.
According to Wikipedia. Robert Ashley, is a contemporary American composer, best known for his
operas and other theatrical works, many of which incorporate electronics
and extended techniques. Along with Gordon Mumma, Ashley was also a
major pioneer of audio synthesis.
Friday, 27 July 2012
To
promote
writing,
reading
and
creativity,
DkIT
wishes
to
recruit
a
Writer
in
Residence,
based
in
the
Institute
Library.
The
Writer
in
Residence
will
engage
with
the
DkIT
community
of
staff
and
students,
and
with
the
local
community,
including
local
schools
The
Writer
in
Residence
will:
have
previously
published
work
have
skills
in
working
with
young
people,
students
and
institutions
have
the
capacity
to
produce
work
in
collaboration
with
others
have
the
capacity
to
encourage
and
inspire
others
be
flexible
and
able
to
respond
to
situations
and
the
different
needs
they
encounter
be
able
to
work
on
own
initiative
DkIT
recognises
the
importance
of
the
Writer
in
Residence’s
professional
development.
The
successful
writer
will
be
given
the
chance
to
develop
and
explore
their
own
writing
styles
while
participating
in
the
residency
and
the
scheduling
of
the
Residency
will
incorporate
time
for
the
Writer
to
develop
his
/her
work.
A
Working
Group,
drawn
from
the
Library
of
DkIT,
the
Arts
Service
of
Louth
Local
Authorities
and
community
interests
will
guide
and
support
Writer
during
the
Residency.
A
contract
not
exceeding
6
months
will
be
offered.
Thursday, 26 July 2012
The Penny Dreadful is a new Cork based literary magazine and is currently accepting submissions.
We accept all known forms of creative writing, and several that are sadly as of yet unknown to all but our editorial staff. And we want you. Yes, even you, as wretched and forlorn as you may well be. We want you to submit to us anything that you may happen to have written that you feel is of a certain quality | {
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19, health officials announced they would begin contacting 1,009 patients who received the injections that had previously been contacted for meningitis risk, but now will be told to be on the lookout for signs of an infection, reports The Tennessean.
"Tennessee is going to be very proactive," Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease researcher at Vanderbilt University who is assisting the state, told the paper.
Last week House lawmakers questioned Dr. Margaret Hamburg, chief of the Food and Drug Administration along with one of the owners of the New England Compounding Center, Barry Cadden about the current outbreak. They asked about the company's history of repeat violations and earlier FDA inspections of the firm that found non-sterile practices.
Hamburg called for more oversight of compounding pharmacies, which are regulated by statein
which he
lauded his
drones and
said, "The
most important
is that we
must be
available to
support the
political
processes. The
second is
human rights."
Human rights?
Ladsous' DPKO
has answered a
detailed human
rights report,
Ladsous
refused to
answer about
peacekeeper
killings in
the Central
African
Republic and
stonewalls for
months on the
130 rapes in
Minova by his
partners in
the Congolese
Army, video
here.
Back on July
16 in New York,
Ladsous said
he would take
questions
about
peacekeeping
in the Central
African
Republic,
Inner City
Press arrived
early to ask
about reports
the current
MISCA
peacekeepers
have killed
civilians, for
example in
Bozoum, here.
So on July 17,
Inner City
Press put the
same question
to UN deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq:
what does the
UN know, and
what has it
done about,
allegations of
killing by
MISCA
peacekeepers,
proposed to be
"re-hatted" in
September?
Haq told Inner
City Press to
"ask MISCA."
So the UN has
no role, and
will
automatically
put UN "blue
helmets" on
these troops?
Inner City
Press also
asked about media
reports in
Nepal that
Ladsous will
visit that
country on
July 11, ostensibly
to "acquire
information on
the latest
political
situation
[and] the
progress made
in terms of
constitution
writing."
But do Ladsous
and DPKO have
any mandate to
review
constitutions?
Shouldn't
Ladsous if
there review
cholera
screening, in
light of
bringing the
disease to
Haiti? Ladsous
did not
answer, and
neither did
Haq.
On July 16 at
the | {
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and Evening
Standard. While she
has produced
exclusives and
interviews from the
Muslim world and
Arab Spring, Nabila
has also covered
issues that are
applicable to all
Muslims living in
western societies
such as Britain,
writing with acute
sensitivity to the
lives of Muslims
living in the UK and
in France.
In the Charlie Hebdo
debate, she argued
vigorously on the
BBC against the
magazine’s bigotry:
opposing terrorism
while also objecting
to hate
publications.
Nabila, who lives in
London, was also the
first journalist in
the UK to expose
poorly sourced
stories linking
refugees to attacks
against women.
Pilgrimage to
the Saudi
Arabian city of
Mecca is one of
many rituals
that are shared
by both Sunni
and Shia Muslims
The Sunni and
Shia muslims:
Islam's
1,400-year-old
divide explained
The divisions
date back to the
years
immediately
after the
Prophet
Mohammed’s death
Tensions between
Saudi Arabia and
Iran
fundamentally
boil down to two
things – the
battle to be the
dominant nation
in the Middle
East and the
fact the
countries
represent the
regional
strongholds of
two rival
branches of
Islam.
The Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia is
ruled by a Sunni
monarchy known
as the House of
Saud, with 90
per cent of the
population
adherents of
their leaders’
faith. The
Islamictherein.
The Deen family migrated to
Australia in the late 1860s.
Due to the conditions of the
White Australia policy their
women were not allowed into
the country if they were not
here before 1905. Their sons
were brought out when they
turned sixteen or older.
The early Deens were hawkers
who travelled the outback to
take goods to the wool and
cattle stations in towns
such as Longreach, Winton,
Blackall and Tennant Creek.
They sourced goods from
warehouses in Brisbane and
had their base in Blackall.
Foth Deen and his cousin
Naby Box were the first
Deens who worked in this
occupation. Their sons later
worked with them. The
property owners of the day
looked forward to their
visits as there was little
transport at the time as
roads were not paved and
many towns were isolated, in
what was then known as the
outback.
Fakir Deen, the son of Naby
Box married an Australian
girl named Dorothy Graves
and they had | {
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is performed in a hospital setting with
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Dr. LoMonaco
John LoMonaco
by the
Dr. John
is certifiisedcertified
by the American
Board of
Plastic
Surgery and
Board ofAmerican
Plastic Surgery
and
the American
Board
the American
Board ofof
Surgery.
He is a of
of Surgery.
He is a graduate
the University
graduate
of the
University
of Texas
Healthand
Texas
Health
Science
Center
in Houston
Science
in Houston
trained
trained
atCenter
the Texas
Medicaland
Center.
He at
spent
theasTexas
Medical
Center.of
Heplastic
spent surgery
two
two years
assistant
professor
years
as assistant
professor
of plastic
at Memorial
Hermann
Hospital
and surgery
as director
at Memorial
Hermann
Hospital
as
of the
plastic surgery
service
at LBJand
Hospital.
of theinplastic
service
Hedirector
is currently
privatesurgery
practice,
andat
hisLBJ
main
Hospital.
Heare
is currently
private
interests
in breastinand
bodypractice,
contouring
and his main interests are in breast and body
surgery.
Lisa Forster | Stylist
Stylist Lisa Forster has seen her share of the
behind-the-scenes workings it takes to create
a gorgeous magazine cover. With more than
15 years experience in wardrobe and makeup
styling, she has worked with Annie Leibovitz,
Albert Watson, Mark Seliger for Vanity Fair,
Vogue and GQ. A native of Carefree, Ariz., Lisa
enjoys getting back to nature, especially with rides
through the desert on her horse Whoa Mega.
Sandracondition for publications and clients
in Ohio, California, Arizona and Texas. A
self-proclaimed “foodie” (in the photo realm),
he specializes in food and dining photography,
but has been known to knock out a great
portrait, too. Mark is the founder of Shoot for
the Stars, a photo project showcasing the work
of adults with disabilities.
Dr. Nadya Hasham-Jiwa |
prime-living.com
Phoenix-based photographer Mark Peterman
shoots for a diverse stable of clients and his work
has been published in a wide variety of national
and international publications, including
Fortune, Rolling Stone and Runner’s World. He
recently was selected to participate in a photo
project sponsored by the Virginia C. Piper
Charitable Trust, a Phoenix-based trust that
works with and helps support local nonprofits.
Medical Oncologist
A medical oncologist and Medical Director
of Specialty Cancer Care (clinic and infusion
center), Dr. Nadya Hasham-Jiwa specializes
in the treatment of all types of cancers. She
is | {
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about the mindset of an
immigrant who comes to Canada
with bright eyes and an empty wallet in
search of
country has
all this
to offer, only to be disappointed
and disheartened when he finds out
it is only an illusion.
Kamran plays a
named Ali, and his
police
officer
friend and col-
league, Wais Hassan, plays Asad,
the oldest son of an immigrant
family that has been living in
CSI ready
is
Conestoga Students Inc. (CSI)
willing to meet with the college
discuss
to
the
relationship
between the two groups and
to
negotiate terms for the Student
Life Centre, the president of
CSI
life
so
as
many new
that their quality of
has definitely not changed for
The little money he is
work goes toward rent,
the better.
making
at
food and other
After giving up
exhausting
all
necessities.
life
hope,
and
other avenues,
Asad
all
decides to turn to the world of drug
After a few months of
dealing.
dealing drugs
all
money
his
prob-
lems disappear but this leads to
problems with family and friends.
The
loss
of love
Asad's
in
life
makes. him give up drug dealing,
but is it too late for2007-08
With
the recent
students living in residence.
Proving that eBay is not just for Internet junki^,
Connell has worked hard at obtaining items off the
popular Internet bidding
site in
order to spruce up the
building.
RAs not only get a portion of their residence fee paid
put on
but they also gain valuable skills that can be
A new condom
for,
a
a recent tour of the building, Connell pointed out
features that have been popular with
some of their new
dispenser
is
a student favourite, as
pinball
machine
application.
strong.”
Carlo Rodriguez,
first-year mechanical
engineering
Ryan Connell,
and
manager
residence
which
life
been
past
five
the
with
may
remember the
room simply
students
for
and said
an
becoming
RA has many
years
“Johnny Depp. He’s a
sexy beast!”
as “the base-
ment"
with
perks.
to expand
your leadership
first-sear general arts
and
Connell.
decision
big
many
has
rewards.”
“Jack Daniels. He
Keeps me warm.”
Kyle Gallagher,
first-year radio
broadcasting
not
Advisers
to
have
per
apply, but must submit a resume and maintain a 65
also
Connell
considered.
are
they
cent average before
first-vear general arts
and
students to
Conestoga Students Inc.’s (CSI)
manager has been appointed
interim general manager by the
board, the president of CSI said.
Matt Jackson said Janie Renwick
replaced Judy Dusick,
first-year radio
broadcasting
who
left
the
general | {
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settlement
extermination of
family life of
felt produced from
forests and
hunting methods for
as keystone species
kits
in legends and stories
lodges built by
Miocene
as pets
traps for
in Western fur trading
in winter
wood stored by
_Beaver World, In_ (Mills)
berries
Beverly, Robert
birds
bison:
_see_ buffalo
black blizzards
Blue Mountains
Boepple, Johannes
Bonneville Dam
Book of _ishing with Hook and Line, A_ (Mascall)
Boston
Boston Harbor Clean-Up
Bradford, William
Britt, Wilson
buffalo
brucellosis and
cattle and
grasslands habitat for
hunting of
meat from
ponds and wallows for
private herds of
railway expansion and
in Yellowstone National Park
Buffalo River
burial grounds
button industry
cadium
calichefication
California
Calumut River
Canada
cancer
Carey Act of 1894
Carson, Rachel
Caspian Sea
castoreum
catfish
Catherine the Great
Catlin, George
cattle
buffalo and
in colonies
drives
grazing
riparian zone and
cesspools
chamber pots
channeling
Charles VIII, King of France
chemicals
as hormone influences
synthetic organic
in water pollution
Chicago
Chile
China
chlorination
cholera
Christianity
churches
Cimarron National Grasslands
cities:
burial grounds in
cesspools in
drainage pools in
epidemics in
sludge recycled by
treatment plants in
water systems built by
wells in
Civilian Conservation Corps
Clark, William
Clean Air Act
Clean Water Act (1972)
_Closing Circle, The_ (Commoner)
coal mining
coecotrophy
Cole, Thomas
colonists, American:
deforestation and
farming by
population growth of
Colorado
Colorado River:
Hoover Dam on
rafting on
Columbia River
Columbia River Project
Columbus,Christopher
Commoner,I finish my brew in the ruin, shoulder my rucksack and clatter through the mounds of slate waste into the narrow, waterlogged ginnel of a quarry that some fellas will have toiled in from childhood to the grave.
Looking back along the ginnel of Ullstone Gill Quarry to the Kentmere quarries on the far side of the valley
This waterfall plunges down the innermost face of the quarry – not the most pleasant of places to work
Looking from the top of the quarry tip across the valley to the Kentmere quarries on the flank of Yoke
I’ve been unable to find a single reference to this quarry on the internet. I don’t know anything about it in a historical context other than it was, perhaps, called Ullstone Gill Quarry and exploited | {
"pile_set_name": [
"Books3",
"Pile-CC"
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} | 5,900,329 |
In the past, the basic stealing of
land and its inherent resources
were more or less the central
benefit of state wars.
Today, we can extend
these economic benefits
to the massive
military expenditures
that have huge impacts
on GDP and trade
the reconstruction of war-torn
areas by the conquering
state commercial subsidiaries
the slow prodding of a country's
integrity through trade tariffs
debilitating sanctions
and debt impositions
for the sake of
population subjugation
for the benefit of
transnational industries
and many other modern
conventions which universally
benefit mostly a very
small number of people
and again, the ownership
and investment classes.
This point was most
likely best expressed
by one of America's most decorated
Army officers of the 20th century
Maj. Gen. Smedley D. Butler.
He wrote a book after World War I
called 'War Is a Racket'.
French:
Autrefois, le simple vol des
terres et de leurs ressources
était le principal bénéfice
des guerres étatiques.
Aujourd'hui, nous pouvons étendre
ces bénéfices économiques
aux dépenses militaires massives
quibeen.
It is possibly the oldest
easily the most profitable,
surely the most vicious.
It is the only one international in scope.
It is the only one
in which the profits are reckoned
in dollars and the losses in lives.
I spent 33 years and 4 months
in active military service
and during that period I spent most
of my time as a high-class muscle man
for big business: for Wall
Street and the bankers.
In short, I was a racketeer,
a gangster for capitalism.
I helped make Mexico and
especially Tampico safe
for American oil
interests in 1914.
I helped make Haiti and
Cuba a decent place
for the national city bank
boys to collect revenues in.
I helped in the raping of half a
dozen Central American republics
for the benefit of Wall Street.
I helped purify Nicaragua
for the international banking house
of Brown Brothers in 1902 to 1912.
I brought light to the Dominican | {
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} | 53,017,296 |
of Fisherman (GB) (1853, twice winner of the Ascot Gold Cup), third dam of Gemma di Vergy.
Pedigree
Sire line tree
Bay Middleton
Bramble
Farintosh
Gaper
Bay Momus
Pastoral
Collingwood
Cowl
The Confessor
Cock-a-Hoop
The Friar
The Grand Inquisitor
Capucine
Joy
Gabbler
Planet
Aster
The Flying Dutchman
Ellington
Delight
Fly-By-Night
Peter Wilkens
The Quack
Benvolio
Flying Pieman
Old England
New Holland
Ignoramus
Purston
Sir Watkin
Bide-a-Wee
Amsterdam
Duneany
Glenbuck
The Rover
Cape Flyaway
Good Hope
Tom Bowline
Make Haste
Winton
Young Dutchman
Ellerton
Romulus
Walloon
Dollar
Dami
Il Maestro
Salvanos
Androcles
Cambyse
Saint Cyr
Pastisson
Salvator
Elzevir
Ossian
Fountainebleau
Phlegathon
Jouancy
Patriarche
Gettatore
Lutin
Beau Page
Thieusies
Greenback
Prologue
Vin Sec
Vignemale
Gil Peres
Merlin
Caudeyran
Louis D'Or
Saumur
Clamart
Cimier
Garrick
Oranzeb
Marzio
Onorio
Ulpiano
Martin Pecheur
Sansonnet
Courlis
Coq
The Condor
Tancarville
Cloridano
Souci
Upas
Omnium II
Elf
Ivoire
Acheron
Massina
Atleta
Ranquel
Bocage
Ob
Dauphin
Hero
Hareng
Cerbere
Tourmalet
Guillame Le Taciturne
Dutch Skater
Insulaire
Thomery
Burgomaster
Dutch Roller
Sherbrooke
Yellow
Daphnis
Dandolo
Accumulator
Massinissa
Jarnac
Old Tom
St. Aubyn
Hesperus
Sir Birtram
Diomedes
Parawhenua
Kakupo
Barbatus
Vanderdecken
Andover
Craymond
Harmonium
Post Haste
Walkington
The Hermit
Freetrader
Milton
Anton
See also
List of leading Thoroughbred racehorses
References
External links
Thoroughbred Bloodlines: Bay Middleton
Thoroughbred Heritage: Bay Middleton
Thoroughbred database.
Category:1833 racehorse births
Category:Racehorses trained in the United Kingdom
Category:Racehorses bred in the United Kingdom
Category:Epsom Derby winners
Category:Undefeated racehorses
Category:Thoroughbred family 1-s
Category:Byerley Turk sire line
Category:2000 Guineas winnersin the central and southeast United States, hurricanes and storm surge in coastal areas, and wildfires in arid climates. However, there is one natural disaster that can happen anywhere it rains: flooding, which happens to be the most frequent, deadly and costly natural disaster in the United States, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.READ MORE
BUILDINGSResearchers from the University of Trieste in Trieste, Italy, have uncovered a bit an unfortunate bit of news relating to people who have family members in the asbestos industry or custom building retrofitting at large.
The report, using data from the Italian Mesothelioma Register, determined that laundering clothes, touching equipment or even hugging someone who has worked with asbestos can result in a diagnosis of malignant pleural mesothelioma years later.READ MORE
InstallationIntegrated and intelligent | {
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What are
the personal and
professional obstacles
for women in reaching
their career goals in
these areas? Do the
voices of Asian American
women have an impact on
policy and decision
making? What does the
future hold for other
Asian American women who
want a meaningful role
in public administration
or to serve in public
office?
Science and
Engineering
Science and engineering
have traditionally been
dominated by men.
Although the number of
women working in these
fields is increasing, we
still hear of cases
where teachers, faculty,
and advisors actively
discourage female
students from studying
science and/or
engineering. With many
women actively
contributing as
scientists and
engineers, it is time to
ask how Asian American
women have negotiated
and become successful in
these traditionally
male-dominated fields,
and to examine the
challenges and obstacles
Asian American women
face in their academic
and professional
careers.
Health and Wellness
Asian American women
face distinct social,
cultural, and political
barriers to physical and
mental health and
wellness. The purpose of
this session is to
explore occupational,
genetic, environmental,
and cultural factors in
disease or health risks
for this population. We
willalso examine how
cultural beliefs,
traditional practices,
and linguistic
deficiency impact
healthcare delivery,
wellness education,
government policy, and
disease prevention for
Asian American women.
Media, Visual, and
Performing Arts
Representations of Asian
American women are
changing, and
examinations of racial
stereotypes are
insufficient in
representing the complex
position of Asian
American women in the
U.S. How are Asian
American cultural
producers seeking to
examine and complicate
the intricate
relationships between
popular culture,
artistic production, and
identity? What roles do
historical depictions of
this community play in
expanding our artistic
understandings of Asian
American women in the
present and the future?
Literature
No longer relegated to
the backdoor of
autobiography, Asian
American women writers
are charting new
literary maps through
formal and thematic
innovations that reflect
complex intersections
between gender, race,
class, sexuality,
religion, and language.
This session seeks to
examine how the arc of
Asian American literary
production informs these
writers, and what lies
ahead for emerging
authors.
New Demographics
The landscape of Asian
America is continuously
changing: How do we
understand these shifts
in our examinations of
new immigrants,
mixed-race identities,
and the dynamic
diasporic communities
that emerge as migratory
paradigms evolve? As
local communities | {
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} | 54,536,840 |
the materials
of choice for tall buildings for
A different view on building .. ‘plyscrapers’ made almost entirely
from wood.
over a century. In its recent
Timber Tower research project,
however, SOM explored the
possibility of recreating a 125
m-tall reinforced concrete
residential building in Chicago
using a combination of timber
columns, wooden panels and
concrete beams and joints.
That the project concluded
it was technically feasible,
economically competitive with
traditional building methods,
and could reduce the building’s
carbon footprint by up to
75% came as little surprise to
Michael Green, the Canadian
architect who kick-started the
‘tall wood/ concept in 2012.
Mr
Green
is
currently
overseeing the construction
of North America’s tallest
wooden building in northern
British Columbia. Expected to
be completed next summer,
when it will stand at a relatively
modest 30 m, it is a showcase
for Canada’s wood products
and building expertise.
The case for wooden high rises
is rooted in their environmental
benefits; while concrete emits
nearly its own weight in carbon
dioxidenew business
opportunities suitable for local
companies as well as raising
the technological level of the
region’s industry to meet the
requirements of a competitive
modern fibre-based industry.
In addition to the study, the state
government has launched the
South East Forestry Partnerships
Program which is a $27 million
state
assistance
package
designed to encourage a viable
and strong timber sawmilling
industry in the region.
The first phase of the project
executed by VTT Technical
Research Centre of Finland
examines the current business
structure in the Mount Gambier
region.
The second phase of the study
will chart the future pathways
for the forest industry in Mount
Gambier and the opportunities
for production with a higher
added value. During the
second phase, road maps will
be prepared with the goal of
guiding the development of
new, fibre-based industries in
the Mount Gambier region as
well as identifying business
opportunities utilising emerging
technologies.
Both the state and federal
governments have committed
the necessary resources for the
two phases of the | {
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} | 41,492,789 |
in his early 20s.
Sommer outlined
Cloverdale, showing
the magnitude of
maps of the Western
the slaughter in his
front during the war,
remarks, but it is hard
paintings, photos
to comprehend. More
taken after battles
than one million
and current photos
Commonwealth
of many of the bestsoldiers were killed in
known battlegrounds.
France and Belgium,
He and his wife, Bev,
former head of heritage and the photos
services for Surrey,
Sommer showed of
graveyards scattered
toured many of the
locations in France and across the peaceful
countryside are a
Belgium that many
stark contrast with the
Canadians know only
images most of us have
by name earlier this
seen of the First World
year.
War.
He also outlined the
Almost 60,000 of
history of the original
those killed were
First World War
Canadians.
cenotaph in Surrey,
Another point that he
which is now located
made bears repeating.
just a short distance
About one in 10 Surrey
from where it was first
erected, on the grounds young men went off to
war from 1914 to1918.
of what was then the
Those who signed up
Surrey municipal hall
early were concerned
in Cloverdale.
that the war would end
He showed photos of
too soon for them to
some of the individual
take part.
soldiers from Surrey
They were sadly
and Langley who
mistaken – it dragged
served in the war.
on for more than four
Most of those he has
years.
researched were killed
In its own way, the
in action. He told what
First World War was
he had learned about
almost as devastating
their backgrounds and
for Surrey as it was
families.
for many European
I got a much better
communities. While
sense of how the war
affected individuals last there were no battles
here or anywhere else
fall when reading A
in North America, the
Fine View of the Show,
level of commitment
a book based largely
and sacrifice was
on letters from the
incredible.
front by Aldergrove’s
With 10 per cent
Hector Jackson. His
of the population
nephew, Andrew, put
enlisting, and keeping
together the book after
in | {
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age group
of individuals who are out there
to defend the collective herds
of the group.
So you see that.
In the United States,
where that has had
an interesting
manifestation is where
people settled in the
original 13 colonies,
from which part of
the United Kingdom.
And some very influential
studies, really interesting
creative ones, pointing
out that the American South
was disproportionately
settled by sheep people
from the northern ends
of the British Isles--
in other words,
nomadic pastoralists.
Shifting to another realm of
anthropological designation,
these are people who
disproportionately have
come from cultures of honor.
Cultures of honor,
where people are
willing to kill over very
symbolic slights rather
than over material
conflicts, where there
are vendettas within
the group, there
are vendettas
between groups, where
it is honorific
to have to avenge
a death, which you
do not necessarily
find in agriculturalists.
Cultures of honor, and
that goes hand-in-hand
with nomadic pastoralism.
And what you get
there, typically,
are very clear rules
about enforced hospitality
for guests, and very clear
rules of the circumstances
ofaggression, retributive
ones, over symbolic affronts.
And that's really clear
difference regionally
in this country.
Interesting sociologist,
University of Michigan,
named Richard Nesbett.
And he grew up in the South.
And I actually heard
him once give a talk
where he talks about how
when he was about 18 or so,
he left the South
for the first time
and joined this very
strange culture at Harvard
University as an undergraduate.
And he was dumbfounded by how
different of a world this was.
People didn't shoot
relatives at picnics,
at barbecues, which
sounded totally facetious.
But when you look
at the higher crime
rates in the American
South, it is not
occurring in urban areas.
Urban crime is
roughly equivalent
all throughout
the United States.
It is not due to
higher rates of what
they call 7-Eleven robberies,
which is just material
gain, a robbery of that sort.
It is murders of honor.
It is people who know each
other at social settings,
people who have some insult,
have something | {
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Khajuraho Tour
Khajuraho is located in the Chhatarpur
district of Madhya Pradesh, Khajuraho is a
city well known for its temples and sculptures.
Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the monuments
of Khajuraho are extremely controversial yet
artistic. Tourists from all across the globe
visit the temples and monuments of Khajuraho.
The temples of Khajuraho follow the shikhara
style where the main deity if placed in the
centre on a sanctum. Some temples are dedicated
to Hindu deities while others are dedicated
to the Jain pantheon. It is believed that
originally there were 80 Hindu temples out
of which only 22 remain.
The biggest tourist attractions
in Khajuraho are undoubtedly the erotic sculptures
on the temples. Perfectly carved figurines
depict the scenes and postures straight from
Kamasutra - the ancient Indian erotica. But
the artists' imagination and aesthetics reign
supreme as the theme celebrates eroticism.
Delhi
- Jaipur
Morning drive
to Jaipur (260
km,approx 6
hrs drive).
On arrival check-in
at the hotel.
Rest of the
day at leisure.
Overnight at
the hotel in Jaipur.
DAY
03
Jaipur
Morning excursion
to Amber Fort,
the ancient
capital of the
State until
1728 AD. Visit
the Sheesh Mahal
or the Hall
of Victory glittering
with mirrors.
Jai Mahal and
Temple of Kali.
Ascent on Elephant
back, the hill
on which the
fort is situated.
Afternoon city
sightseeing
tour. Jaipur
the capital
of Rajasthan
was given a
colour coat
of pink a century
ago in honour
of a visiting
Prince. Ever
since it has
retained that
colour. Built
by Maharaja
Jai Singh, the
notable astronomer,
this city is
260 years old.
Visit the Maharaja's
City Palace
and the Observatory.
Albert Hall
and Museum,
Ram Niwas Gardens;
drive past Hawa
Mahal or the
Palace of Winds.
Overnight at
hotel in Jaipur.
DAY
04
Jaipur
- Agra
Morning drive to Agra
(235 km. Approx.4
½ hrs drive)
en-route visiting
Fatehpur Sikri built
by Emperor Akbar in
1569 to commemorate
the birth of his son
and later abandoned
due to scarcity of
water. Visit the remains
of its fortifications
within the city including
Jama Masjid, Tomb
of Salim Chishti,
Panch Mahal and other
Palaces. | {
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way that the laws have
evolved in the U.S.
was laid out I think fairly
well in Kessler's book.
The strategies that the
government has relied on have
included hazard warnings
predominately,
control over advertising claims
and the use of specific media
outlets,
age restrictions so that within
the United States right now the
use of tobacco products,
the sale of tobacco products is
restricted to those that are
eighteen years and older,
although there are some states
and some counties that now
demand that you need to be
nineteen years old.
For example,
in Nassau County,
Suffolk County in New York,
demand that you be nineteen
years old.
If you look around the world
too, there's quite a bit of
variability.
In some of the poorer nations
of the world,
you need to be ten years old.
In France, you need to be
sixteen years old.
In Japan, you need to be twenty
years old.
So that the idearole
in the control of lead.
They played a really important
role in the adoption of the
tougher particulate matter
standards for pesticide
restrictions.
So that in this case,
recognition that children are
especially susceptible to
persuasion by advertising has
similarly led to recent more
restrictive legislation.
So Joe Camel provides a pretty
interesting example.
This series ran between 1988
and 1997.
And about three thousand new
smokers less than eighteen years
were picked up per day.
And about a third of these
people, if they persist in their
habit, will die of
tobacco-related illness.
The appeals are well known to
everybody.
Here you see Joe Camel with a
woman, an attractive woman in
the background.
The image is tough,
the image is one of a fighter
pilot.
And there he is,
smoking his cigarette.
The idea of this series was
modeled after a television show
called Miami Vice,
really modeled after James Bond
and Don Johnson.
And one study showed that
nearly | {
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The
Running Man,
9
½ Weeks,
among many, many
others.
Mr.
Heuser currently
has several film
projects in active
development,
including bringing
to the screen Fay
Efrosini-Lellios’
original
screenplay Road
Narrows
alongside
co-executive
producers, the
Academy
Award-winning Emma
Thompson, and
best-selling
author and
producer George
Pelecanos, with
whom Mr. Heuser
has produced the
documentary film,
The
Long Haul of
A.I. Bezzerides.
Prior
to founding Storm
Entertainment,
Heuser was a
co-founder of and
remains an equity
partner in August
Entertainment,
where he served as
Senior Executive
Vice President for
eight years. Previously, in his long film
career, Mr. Heuser
has served as part
of the senior
management team at
Interaccess Film
Distribution, a
division of
Vestron.He has also
served in key
management roles
at Producer Sales
Organization
(PSO), the Motion
Picture
Association of
America (MPAA),
under the
legendary Jack
Valenti, and at
United
International
Pictures (UIP), a
joint venture
between Paramount,
Universal and
MGM/United
Artists.
Heuser
is a graduate of
Colgate
University,
completing degrees
in both Economics
and International
Relations.He is
fluent in English,
Spanish, French
and Italian, and
has conducted
business in, and
traveled to, over
40 countries.
In
his free time, Mr.
Heuser is an avid
reader, traveler,
aspiring cook and
gardener.He is also
an advocate for
patients’ rights
and medical
radiation reform,
and in 2011 was
named “Legislative
Advocate of the
Year” by the
Consumer Attorneys
of California.HisPrepare for Your Next UX Job Search Now (Even if You’re Happily Employed)
Me leading an exercise with my students during the Preparing for Your Job Search course at Center Centre.
I know a UX designer who unexpectedly lost his job about a year ago. Despite having experience in the field, he had to do a ton of work to find a new job.
While he was employed, he didn’t attend industry events. He neglected his web presence. He hadn’t tweeted in a year. His LinkedIn profile was scarce and out of date.
After losing his job, he spent countless hours on his portfolio (which he had also neglected while working). He went to industry events to build a network. Most people at the events didn’t know him. When talking with hiring | {
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optimism in a
new hybrid population which
might contain the best
qualities of both lineages,
even if the institutionalization
of these populations
as second-class citizens,
sequestered in missions
and government settlements
with substandard housing,
lack of employment,
and poor education
had greatly reduced
opportunities for these people
to express themselves
in that way.
One of the expedition's
paradoxical aspects
was that while on the surface,
the data gathered by Tindale
and Birdsell seems totally
infused by the racialism
of the early 20th
century, it's clear
that theirs was a
humanistic inquiry, running
like a red line through
the anthropological project
until the present day.
This was particularly the
case on Tindale's part,
for he went to
lengths to understand
the so-called problem through
the perspective of Aboriginal
people themselves, whom
he came to know briefly
enough during the expedition.
His journal-- and you may have
seen an extract or two from
it--
makes it clear that he
trusted the testimony
of those individuals, those
Aboriginal individuals
caught between cultures on
these missions and settlements,
oftenmore than he trusted
the advice received
from the missionaries
and the bureaucrats who
were directing their lives.
While we have no
direct indication
of how Tindale and Birdsell
explained their project
to Aboriginal people at
their 30 odd field stations,
the journals confirm that they
did present their research
as collaborative and as a means
of proving to that population
on those missions and
settlements-- which often
may have ranged
from 40 individuals,
to 200, to a 300 maximum.
The journals confirm that
they presented their research
as collaborative and a means
of proving to those populations
that there was nothing to
fear from miscegenation
scientifically.
As an aside, when I interviewed
Tindale during the 1980s
when he was in his
late 80s, he estimated
that by the end of
the 21st century,
most of rural South Australia
would have some component
of Aboriginal blood.
It was, he thought,
not only inevitable,
but something to be celebrated.
I mentioned Dorothy
Tindale and Bea Birdsell.
Unsurprisingly,
perhaps, they were
responsible for | {
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world-historical,
the production and reproduction
of an epistemic and affective
insecurity whose speculative
practices conduced
to favor the beleaguered
Assad regime's
counterinsurgency project,
or at least its survival.
Now, throughout the
talk is informed
by the thinking of Hannah
Arendt and Ludwig Wittgenstein,
and in the closing pages
I put Syrian artists whose
current work unsettles
the conventions
of documentary representation
into conversation
with these two
theorists, drawing out
mutual points of relevance
for understanding
of politics and
the local Syrian,
as well as more global--
including Indian-- present.
So in the early days of the
uprising and anti-Assad song
emerged that became a political
phenomenon in its own right,
recorded on cellphones,
uploaded on YouTube,
with simple rhyming
lyrics and a catchy rhythm
in joining Syria's president
to step down and leave
the country.
The song had a catchy chorus,
"go on, leave, oh Bashar.
[ARABIC],, Bashar," which
came at the beginning and end
of stanzas invoking
familiar conditions
of first-family corruption.
The song also responded to
current and changing events,
reproduced slogans from
variousparts of the country,
conjured up historical
references of regime betrayal,
and offered rejoinders to
the president's own speeches.
Exhilarating in its irreverence,
with crude insults leveled
directly at Bashar, his
notoriously brutal brother,
and his venal cousin, the song
was at once angry and joyful,
challenging the
self-evidence of tyranny
while paying homage
to lives lost.
Performing a new-found
sense of solidarity,
the lyrics invited
popular participation
which came in the form of
extemporaneous add-ons,
expanding and adapting
the song, giving license
to each singer,
author, and listener
to act in concert
in the acoustics
of revolutionary change.
Avoiding the
abstractions of earlier,
more elitist political
songs, the added stanzas
not only perpetuated
defiance, but worked
to air publicly what had
hitherto been predominantly
private grievances.
The proliferating stanzas
also beckoned diverse areas
of the country to
furnish new details,
alerting others to
specific injustices,
and making them
common knowledge.
The repeated recourse
to the straightforward
imperative, "go on, leave,"
and to the proper nouns
of failed leadership,
moreover, summoned
into being cross-class
identifications,
a soundscape of
national solidarity,
untethered to the | {
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was not
Qashoush but Rahmani.
The latter was alive
and well in Spain.
But Qashoush had, in fact,
died by the Orontes River--
a guard, not a fireman
at the station,
who did not sing revolutionary
songs or, for that matter,
any songs at all.
The article discusses
the circulation
of rumors, sins of omission
by both Rahmani and opposition
outlets, an effort to report
the truth by the late Anthony
Shadid of the New York
Times and, importantly,
the failure of
that story to stick
in an avalanche of
new media propaganda.
The Qashoush story
thus becomes exemplary
of a conflict in which
truth claims, rather
than accumulating a collection
of established facts,
recall something
more like a shifting
kaleidoscope of
possible alternatives,
registering both the
uprisings complexities
and the multiple efforts
to paper over them.
The regime not only helped
produce these conditions
of uncertainty by borrowing
professional journalists
from entering the country but
also repeatedly capitalized
on them, seizing on
moments of exaggeration
and misrepresentation to
discredit opposition positions,
polarize communities
of argument,
andof
truth in Wittgenstein's sense.
Not the truth of philosophical
a priori principles,
but the political truth
of empirical propositions,
by which I mean what
counts for purposes
of politics and political
discourse as matters of fact.
Wittgenstein's
insistence that what
allows our beliefs
to make sense is
the relational system in
which they are embedded,
points to the
difficulty involved
in judging evidence
or ascertaining
the nature of truth
claims circulating
in Syria's so-called "media
wars" since the uprising
began in March 2011.
In this respect, the
story of Qashoush
is more than an isolated
incident of mistaken identity.
The mystery about who might have
murdered the well-known singer,
or indeed whether he
was killed at all,
his contradictory deployment
as a symbol of oppositional
courage and regime brutality and
then later of regime cooptation
and the opposition's revenge--
all this is but a single
example contributing
to an entire economy
of uncertainty, which
works to dilute moral outrage
among addresses who otherwise
might be available for
political activation and call
standards of | {
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in Bancroft's view,
a divinely ordained form of
church government in which
England maintained the tradition
which descended from Christ's
apostles,
purified of the corruptions
which had crept in in the
Catholic Middle Ages.
So a new and more positive
notion of Anglicanism as a
middle way was also emerging
amongst the defenders of the
church.
Diarmaid MacCulloch said of
this that "perhaps the
Anglican gift to the Christian
story is the ability to make a
virtue of necessity."
>
But what finally about those
who were neither Catholics nor
radical Puritans nor Anglican
divines, the mass of the people
down in the parishes?
It's been said that for most of
them the reformation under
Elizabeth was essentially a
series of conforming
experiences.
A slow shift from the visual
and ritual and symbolic richness
of late medieval religion to a
somewhat plainer,
more verbal,
religion based on the English
Bible,
based on the Prayer Book of
1559, including such thingsas
more frequent preaching,
psalm singing,
and other novel practices.
That process of gradual shift
in religious culture was
probably aided by the elements
of continuity observable in
Church of England services and
gradually it did its work.
The older generation of both
the clergy and the laity who
could remember the old days had
largely died away by the 1580s.
An increasing proportion of the
population knew no other church
than that of Elizabeth.
They faced no serious threat
from the Catholic mission.
The Catholic missionary priests
concentrated their attention on
politically significant people.
Most of their work was done
amongst the gentry,
there was no real mission to
the common people,
and by 1603 the Church of
England had something like two
and a half million communicants
while there were only some 8,000
to 9,000 known Catholic
recusants,
most of them members of the
gentry or their immediate
tenants sheltered under their
protection.
To this extent one could say
that the | {
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Dick Scott
Donnie Scott
Ed Scott
Everett Scott
Jack Scott
Scott Scudder
Tom Seaver
Bob Sebra
Jimmy Sebring
Frank Secory
Charlie See
Kip Selbach
Bill Selby
Andy Seminick
Billy Serad
Dan Serafini
Scott Service
Hank Severeid
Chris Sexton
Socks Seybold
Cy Seymour
Brian Shackelford
Gus Shallix
Art Shamsky
Wally Shaner
Joe Shaute
Jeff Shaw
Mike Shea
Dave Shean
Tom Shearn
Jimmy Sheckard
Tom Sheehan
Jimmy Shevlin
Bob Shirley
Ivey Shiver
Milt Shoffner
Eddie Shokes
Bill Short
Chick Shorten
Clyde Shoun
Ed Sicking
Johnny Siegle
Candy Sierra
Rubén Sierra
Frank Sigafoos
José Silva
Al Silvera
Al Simmons
Alfredo Simón
Allan Simpson
Dick Simpson
Wayne Simpson
Bert Sincock
Dick Sipek
Dave Sisler
Dick Sisler
Dave Skaugstad
Bob Skinner
Gordon Slade
Walt Slagle
Mike Slattery
John Smiley
Bob Smith
Chick Smith
Elmer SmithGreg Tubbs
Michael Tucker
Jim Turner
Twink Twining
George Twombly
U
Ted Uhlaender
Maury Uhler
George Ulrich
Al Unser
Bob Usher
V
Mike Vail
Chris Valaika
Wilson Valdez
Eric Valent
Javier Valentín
Corky Valentine
Joe Valentine
Dave Van Gorder
Todd Van Poppel
Dazzy Vance
Johnny Vander Meer
John Vander Wal
Gary Varsho
Farmer Vaughn
Greg Vaughn
Max Venable
Lee Viau
Rube Vickers
Pedro Villarreal
Ron Villone
Frank Viola
Pedro Viola
Clyde Vollmer
Edinson Vólquez
Jake Volz
Fritz Von Kolnitz
Joey Votto
Rip Vowinkel
John Vukovich
W
Joe Wagner
Ryan Wagner
Kermit Wahl
Curt Walker
Duane Walker
Gee Walker
Harry Walker
Hub Walker
Mysterious Walker
Terry Walker
Todd Walker
Tom Walker
Lee Walls
Bucky Walters
Ken Walters
Jerome Walton
Lloyd Waner
Pee-Wee Wanninger
Jay Ward
Piggy Ward
Ray Washburn
Pat Watkins
Brandon Watson
Mark | {
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then showed up--
so note the circulation--
in Arabic language media,
becoming the majority of what
a reader still got in 2017
if she googled in Arabic "who
is responsible for the Ghouta
chemical weapons attack,"
both with an IP
address in Chicago
and an IP address in Beirut.
This still-popular question
and so many others like it,
"who was responsible for
the chemical weapons attack"
in Arabic, is made to order
for conspiracy theories.
Now, conspiracy
theorists view what
might be regarded as disparate
happenings as connected,
products of an overwhelming
logic or intentional force
whose interests are ultimately
served by and organized
through another's
victimization or ruin.
And they're not always wrong.
Hersh's investigation was
potent because it was plausible.
Structuring arguments in
terms of what some scholars
have termed pejoratively
a "paranoid functionalism"
that posits effects as
the product of purpose,
the question "who was
responsible for the chemical
weapons attack" could be
harnessed to a familiar regime
narrative of national
vulnerability and threat
in which the
nationalbecame once
again coterminous
with regime-oriented.
Now, questions of who
is behind a specific act
need not reduce to a
conspiratorial narrative,
of course.
For others the very
positing of such a question
conveyed a sense of
collaborative unknowability
in which doubt could
modulate affective registers
like outrage and disgust along
with the political judgments
that might ensue.
Phrasing like the
following was typical.
Now, the regime and
opposition groups
could plausibly deny
responsibility, at least
for those who were
open to skepticism.
It was not simply that
camps were polarized
with staunch
loyalists and people
in the ambivalent gray area
following regime-oriented sites
and tracking investigative
reports such as Hersh's
while official
opposition sources called
for US intervention
because the regime clearly
had crossed Obama's red line.
For as young people
identified with the uprising
became increasingly
disillusioned by both regime
and opposition, as the
impossibility of adjudicating
truth claims came to apply to
increasingly continuous acts
of unspeakable
cruelty, some in exile
sought to redefine and
radicalize the terms of debate,
conceding to a
situation in which | {
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or have read about,
the utter brilliance
of Nelson Mandela,
of having spent his
time in prison learning
to be completely
fluent in Afrikaans
so that when he was sitting
down and starting to negotiate
with these people, the fact that
he could sit there and speak
in their language,
a language that
is so laden with
symbolic importance
to Afrikaners, that that
was a gigantic symbolic coup
of Mandela embracing
the sport that
was the very symbol of
apartheid, of Mandela doing
very subtle things
that a number of people
pointed out who were
involved in the negotiations.
OK, Mandela, just when
he's gotten out of prison,
and he's about to meet
with some of the leaders
of the government, and some of
the most right wing opponents
to any sort of peace.
And so we need a
conference room.
And, no, that's not what he did.
He insisted they would have the
meetings in his home, his home
that he had just returnedever been
exposed to human aggression.
This took place
when I was about 20.
And this was first
year that I was
doing research in East Africa.
During that time, the famed
notorious dictator Idi Amin
was running Uganda.
And he was a nightmare.
He was just killing
people left and right,
destroying the country, as
documented, cannibalizing.
Was a nightmare of a dictator.
Around the time,
he made a mistake.
This was spring of 1979, which
is he invaded Tanzania and took
over some of the
land there, thinking
the Tanzanians
wouldn't fight back.
And he miscalculated.
The Tanzania army
counterattacked, and drove them
out of Uganda, and decided to
drive all the way to Kampala,
the capital of Uganda.
And they overthrew Idi Amin.
He fled the country.
And the country was liberated.
They continued through there.
And they opened up a corridor
to the Kenyan border.
So it was now a swath all
through the southern part
of the country that was
controlled by | {
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problem
or characterizing it,
but essentially, it
was the question of whether what
had occurred physiologically,
as well as socially,
to an isolated people,
the Australian
Aboriginal people who
had developed their own unique
characteristics over the course
of millennia, when
suddenly confronted
with European culture and
European physiology, what
happened to
physiology and culture
under these circumstances?
Put that way, it
sounds innocent enough.
During the 1930s,
with a plethora
of theories regarding race,
miscegenation, degeneration,
and extinction, it was an
extremely loaded question.
In most regions of
the globe, contact
between Europeans and Indigenous
people, as in North America,
had occurred too
far back to analyze.
But in Australia, the
meeting of peoples
was quite recent,
less than a century,
and often within living memory.
Hooton played a key role
in obtaining the funding.
The money was
awarded, and Hooton
allocated his most outstanding
student to the task,
Joseph Birdsell, 33 years
old, graduate of Columbia,
who had already shown
great promise in genetics,
and had experience in
Native American archeology.
Tindale and Birdsell would
becomepurpose,
with social implications aimed
partly at informing Australian
policy towards an issue which
had become the principal topic
of discussion in Aboriginal
affairs since the early 1920s,
when the phrase
"half-caste problem"
began to recur frequently
in public discussions
and in newspapers.
It was exactly
this problem which
had attracted Hooton's
attention here in the US,
for it had risen
through the collision
and entanglement of two
starkly contrasting cultures
in Australia, European
culture, and the culture
of Australian hunter-gatherer
peoples, who had perfected
their way of life,
one might say,
during the course of
50,000 years in a continent
without domesticable
animals or cereal crops,
and therefore, without village
life, writing, the wheel,
or social hierarchy.
In the popular view, and the
view held by many scientists,
the yawning gulf
between these cultures
meant that the growing
numbers of people
born of unions between
Aboriginal people and Europeans
were by definition
degraded and problematic.
The genie could not be
put back in the bottle.
But with eugenics
and institutions
of social control on | {
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entities
controlled billions, trillions
of dollars behind an
untouchable intelligence
and counterintelligence
matrix designed
to keep the whole
world from knowing
about the alien
presence on Earth.
In June, 1997, Time
magazine did a cover story
on the 50th anniversary
of the Roswell crashes.
I was there to speak for
that 50th commemoration.
And there I met and talked with
Colonel Corso about his work
for General Trudeau.
When Colonel Corso
was introduced to me,
he extended his hand to shake
mine as he said, how the hell
did you get so much
classified information?
He meant the animal mutilations
that I had investigated
for my TV documentary,
"A Strange Harvest," that
was first broadcast May 28,
1980, on Denver's CBS station
KMGH-TV.
That is where I was director
of special projects.
And that is when sheriffs
and ranchers told
me the perpetrators
of the bloodless,
trackless animal
deaths were, quote,
"creatures from outer
space," close quote.
Ranchers had seen glowing lights
in night skies emit beams down
into their pastures.
A fewhad even seen a cow
lifted up in a beam of light,
or lowered to pastures,
dead and mutilated.
But none of those
eyewitnesses would
stand in front of my TV
camera, for fear of ridicule.
Before he died, Colonel
Corso talked to me
in private about the highly
classified documents that he
had read in Washington,
DC, dated as early as 1951,
about animals found
in several parts
of the world with
bloodless excisions
and no tracks around them.
Colonel Corso said
the classified reports
that he read specified that
the perpetrators of animal
mutilations were, quote,
"extraterrestrial biological
entities," close quote.
But why?
This illustration is by a
Missouri horse rancher in 1975
who saw this glowing
being at his gate
during a time when he
found several newborn foals
and young horses bloodlessly
mutilated in his pasture.
Eventually our
government would realize
that many of the UFO pilots
and other non-human entities
were cloned androids or
human ET hybrids produced
from genetic harvests
of Earth life,
including animal | {
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colonist is sitting
around at this point discussing
Bacon, Newton and Locke.
Okay. That's not what I mean.
This is very much a
Jeffersonian parlor with these
portraits up on the wall,
but those three men--Bacon,
Newton,
Locke--and others,
did contribute to an
intellectual atmosphere that the
American colonists tapped into
that shaped their thoughts about
rights,
about resistance,
and then eventually about
revolution.
So let's start by looking at
Jefferson's trinity of great
men.
Who were they?
Okay.
Sir Francis Bacon,
man of science who believed
that truth discovered by reason
through observation could
promote human happiness as well
as truth communicated through
God's direct revelation.
So basically Bacon's work
suggested that it was in
humankind's power to discover
truth by reason and that by
doing that,
humankind could better itself.
Okay. So that's Bacon.
Isaac Newton,
a second man of science who
studied gravity and the laws of
motion,
and Newton's work demonstrated
that it was possible through
reason and study tothe lessons that
Caesar certainly suggested to
Thomas Jefferson as suggested by
his response is a powerful
lesson that a lot of people were
focused on in the early years of
the American republic and in
this colonial period as well,
and that is the fragility of
liberties--
and in the republic also
obviously how fragile republics
are.
So the ancient world held
really valuable lessons but so
did the semi-recent past as
well, particularly for the
American colonists.
There was another period of
time that seemed to hold special
lessons for them,
the period of the Glorious
Revolution in Britain,
which would have been a period
when opposition to the King's
Court and ministers was on the
rise in Britain along with a
growing tradition of praise for
English liberties and the
glories of representation in
Parliament.
So political rhetoric from the
era of the Glorious Revolution
would have focused on attacking
corruption and corrupt
influence,
as when a monarch | {
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deploying troops in East
Ukraine. That's as anti-government self-defense forces launch a counter-offensive and
advance on key areas in the southeast. RT is joined by Tony Gosling,
an investigative journalist on the unfolding Ukrainian crisis.
POOR, POOR POROSHENKO
Poor
poor
Poroshenko
the chocolate king
oligarch
from Ukraine
made ruler
by US-NATO
His job?
"to do what
he's told"
Ukraine
is an instrument
to start war
with Russia
Reports in recent daysRussia invadesUkraine
come as self-defense forces
in the east are defeating
Kiev's Nazi-backed army
US-NATO needs pretext
"to protect and defend"
their project
in Ukraine
a NATO base
right on the Russian border
would be ideal
Final solution
is balkanization of Russia
break it into pieces
so fossil fuel extraction
corporations
can get at their nat gas
and the resources
in the Arctic
Russia has such a
long border
with Arctic
See the writing
on the wall?
Poroshenko
a drunk sadist
killing his own people
angry when they
defend themselves
doing the work
for Mr. Big
Poroshenko
is a bag man
easily expendable
We have one
like him
here in Maine
our Gov. LePage
an alcoholic
bagman
for the corporate
money machine
attacks the poor
destroys environment
pits one against
the other
a cruel and
bitter man
soul long ago
drowned
Poor
poor
Poroshenko
Poor
poor
LePage
Both
fat cats
who were given
the acting roles
of their life
just follow the script
MAKE A VIDEO AND WIN TRIP TO KYOTO
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
BLOCKING THE DRONE BASE IN NEW YORK
Mary Anne Grady Flores, a 58-year-old grandmother of three, was
sentenced to a year in jail after photographing an anti-drone protest
outside a military base near her home. While she waits on appeal, Grady
Flores and her fellow protestors speak on the dangers of drone warfare,
the right to dissent, and what she’ll do next.
NATO MEETING TO PLAN MORE WAR
NATO holds its annual war making confab in Wales on August 30 - September 5. It's evident to me that NATO is the global military arm of corporate capital - with the US | {
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all the madrassas. His
policies of ethnic cleansing
forever associated
secularism with the violence
of the Young Turks, a
secularist group who had
seized power in Ottoman
Turkey and committed the
Armenian massacres during
World War I. These rulers
wanted their countries to
look modern (that is,
European), even though the
majority of the population
had no familiarity with
Western ideas.
What about Egypt, the
motherland of Islamism?
Armstrong: After an attempt
on his life in 1954, Gamal
Abdel Nasser incarcerated
thousands of members of the
Muslim Brotherhood, the
innocent along with the
guilty minority. Most were
imprisoned without trial for
doing nothing more
incriminating than handing
out leaflets or attending a
meeting.
One of them was Sayyid Qutb.
As he saw the Brothers being
beaten, tortured and
executed in this vile prison
and heard Nasser vowing to
secularise Egypt on the
Western model and confine
Islam to the private sphere,
secularism seemed a great
evil. In prison he wrote
"Milestones", the "bible" of
Sunni fundamentalism, the
work of aman who has been
pushed too far and was
executed, at Nasser's
special request, in 1966.
The other Brothers were
radicalised in these
terrible prisons; when they
were released in the 1970s,
they took their extremism
into the mainstream.
END OF SERIES
Interview conducted by
Claudia MendeKaren Armstrong is a
British scholar of
comparative religion. She is
the author of several
bestsellers on the history
of religion. Her newest
publication deals with
violence in Judaism,
Christianity and Islam.
"Fields of Blood: Religion
and the History of Violence"
(2014).
The UK Muslim News Awards
for Excellence event was
held 27 March 2017 in London
to acknowledge British
Muslim and non-Muslim
contributions to the
society.
Ibn Battuta Award
for Excellence in
MEDIA:
For fair, accurate
and balanced
reporting on an
issue involving
Muslims nationally
or internationally.
Winner: Nabila Ramdani
Nabila Ramdani is an
award-winning
French-Algerian
journalist,
columnist, and
broadcaster who
specialises in
French politics,
Islamic affairs, and
the Arab World. She
has established a
long-standing
reputation for
producing fearless,
balanced and honest
reporting across a
wide variety of
media outlets.
Nabila’s bylines
have appeared in the
Daily Mail, Daily
Telegraph, The
Independent, The
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mutilations
and extractions of human sperm
and eggs.
Our government, according
to Colonel Corso,
learned that in spite of the
mutilations and abductions,
some ETs are friendly,
and they want humanity
to advance faster, to be more
protected from unfriendly ETs.
So, there was urgency in
General Trudeau's goal
to get alien technologies
back-engineered and patented
as fast as possible, to keep
them from Germany and Russia,
and to support a secret
space program that might have
to do battle in real star wars.
About secret ET
technology transfer
to American corporations for
back-engineering and patents,
Colonel Corso wrote,
quote, "General Trudeau
also had relationships
with the Army contractors
who were developing
new weapons systems
for the military within
one part of the company,
while another highly
secret part of the company
was harvesting some of the
same ET technology for consumer
products development.
And these were companies such as
Bell Labs, IBM, Monsanto, Dow,
RCA that became General
Electric and the aviation
and medical companies of
Howard Hughes," closequote.
At that July, 1997
50th-anniversary conference,
Dr. Jesse Marcel, Jr. Handed me
this replica of the thin I-beam
that he remembered holding in
the first week of July, 1947.
That's when his father,
Jesse Marcel, Sr.,
the head of intelligence at
the Roswell Army Airfield,
woke up Jesse and
his mother to show
them pieces of this strange
silver foil in I-beams
that Jesse Marcel,
Sr. Had picked up
at one of the three
UFO crash sites
that first week of July, 1947.
And that was the one
between Roswell and Corona.
Jesse Marcel, Sr. said
the metallic foil was
like cloth that could be
folded or crumpled up,
and it would always return to
its original flat unwrinkled
shape.
Jesse Jr. told me
his father said
that the debris, quote, "was
not of this Earth," close quote.
Young Jesse Marcel was so
curious about what he described
as metallic pinkish-purple
hieroglyphs or symbols that
ran along the entire length of
a tan-colored I-beam only | {
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get rid of traditional
vestments worn by the priests
during services.
They described them as the
"rags of Rome."
These, however,
had been retained in the prayer
book of 1559 and Elizabeth
insisted upon retaining
traditional clerical dress and
forced Archbishop Parker to
demand it of the clergy.
So what was England's religion
in the 1560s?
Ultimately, one could say it
was the Queen's religion.
With regard to the pope's
authority, it was emphatically
schismatic.
Papal authority had been
abrogated once again.
With regard to essential
doctrines,
it was essentially Protestant,
but nonetheless it retained a
latitude to make of the
settlement,
to read the prayer book,
as you chose provided you
conformed in general.
The only element of settlement
one could say which was totally
without ambiguity was the Act of
Uniformity;
conform and hold your peace.
Well, in an age of religious
partisanship,
in what was already becoming in
Europe an age of religious war,
that was not really atraditionalist
"survivalism."
To a considerable degree,
the early Elizabethan church
was attempting to accommodate
that traditionalism amongst the
population as a whole.
But the more committed,
more theologically aware and
more politically aware Catholics
knew that this was a recipe for
the gradual erosion of Catholic
principle.
There were a lot of people who
were described at the time as
"church papists"
in the 1560s,
people whose bodies were in the
Church of England,
as it were, but whose hearts
remained with the old religion.
Such people would gradually
become hopelessly compromised
over time unless something was
done to stiffen their resistance
to a gradual slide into
conformity and acceptance of the
new ways.
And in the eyes of those who
feared this there was,
after all, every possibility
that the settlement of 1559
would not endure any longer than
other changes.
It all hung on the life of one
young woman and in 1562
Elizabeth contracted smallpox
and almost died.
Her counselors | {
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literally dance
to their own beat --
wearing headphones,
you can select your favorite
style of music
at the silent disco.
It's a surreal experience
made even more so
by the graceful mermaid.
♪♪
[ Cheers and applause ]
♪♪
[ Cheers and applause ]
♪♪
The captain advised being up
early to enjoy the entry
to the Grand Harbor of Malta.
Clearly, this port
was well-worth
some serious fortifications.
Our ship just squeezes
into the historic harbor,
and in moments,
we're in the old center of town
ready for a busy day
of sightseeing.
Malta is a tiny
independent country
set between Sicily and Africa.
With a culture enriched by
a long parade of civilizations,
it's a strategically
placed island nation
with an extraordinary history.
The capital city of Valletta
is a stony monument
to this hard-fought history.
And the dramatic view
from the ramparts
of the heavily fortified harbor
reminds the visitor of Malta's
strategic importance
through the centuries.
Of the many cultures
that shaped it,
perhaps most obvious
is its Britishheritage.
Malta spent 150 years
as part of the British Empire.
While it gained its independence
in 1964,
Malta retains
its British flavor:
English-style pubs and food,
statues of queens...
and red phone booths.
♪♪
If this feels like
a fortress city,
it's because it was the capital
of the Knights of St. John,
also known as
the Knights of Malta.
Malta's stout walls --
many of them incorporated into
existing limestone cliffs --
survived a siege in 1565
of 40,000 Ottoman sailors.
After the Turkish threat passed,
the city was ornamented
with delightful architecture,
including characteristic
enclosed balconies,
called gallarija.
As you stroll,
you'll enjoy an inviting
and nostalgic patina of age
in its facades.
A short drive through Malta's
dry and timeless landscape
takes us to the fisherman's
harbor of Marsaxlokk.
A favorite with cruise
travelers,
it's home to a fleet of typical
Maltese fishing boats.
While Marsaxlokk has a fine main
square and church,
the action is along
the harbor --
especially during
the Sunday market,
when it's all about fish.
Tradition | {
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speed and endurance
as a predation method.
Covering large areas
in short periods,
he hopes
to bump into a potential meal.
He's a vicious predator,
and will attack
any insect or animal smaller
than his immense 8 inch body.
Upon finding the injured hopper,
he bites the victim
injecting him with venom
and devours him immediately.
Unlike his camouflaged
counterpart,
the Foam grasshopper
has evolved to fight back.
He gets his defense
from eating certain plants
the land has on offer.
Feeding mostly
on poisonous milkweed,
the foam grasshopper
ingests the toxins
and stores them in his joints.
When threatened,
he exudes this poison
in the form of lethal foam.
This striking insect
flaunts his colors boldly.
It's a commonly understood
rule in nature,
that the more brightly colored
an insect, the more venomous.
He forages through the flowers
of Namaqualand
without the fear of being eaten.
And if he is,
the foolish predator
will pay the ultimate price.
But not all defense adaptations
require poison.
More like the stone grasshopper,
theNamaqua speckled padloper
stays out of danger's way
by hiding.
Trudging
across the Namaqua landscape
takes an incredibly long time
for this pocket-sized resident.
Never growing bigger
than 3.5 inches,
he is the smallest tortoise
on earth.
His flattened, grey-brown shell
enables him to hide perfectly,
camouflaged in rocky crevices.
In the hot summers, he preys
on the hardy succulents.
In spring he is rewarded with
hoards of floral delicacies.
He doesn't hold back.
These flowers
won't be here for long.
The tortoise gorges himself
on the treats
that only appear once a year.
Like many others in Namaqualand,
he lives
nowhere else on the planet.
Along with his many other
endemic counterparts,
the Namaqua speckled padloper
is adapted to thrive in this
specific environment.
Species in Namaqualand have
developed over generations
to ensure that their adaptations
allow them
to live in this biome.
Spring here hosts
one of the most magnificent
natural transformations
the world has to offer.
From desert
to oasis for a short
spurt of time each year.
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Okay.
Well, as you know,
in 1528 religious change had
not been a significant issue in
English politics.
By 1558, it was in many ways
the central issue and it was
about to take another turn.
On the 17th of November,
1558, Elizabeth I was
proclaimed queen,
a young woman of twenty-five,
highly intelligent,
well educated and long schooled
in the necessity of caution,
discretion and even
dissimulation in order to
survive the dangers that she had
faced.
She was of course Anne Boleyn's
daughter,
and as Anne Boleyn's daughter
it was in a sense her conception
in December of 1532 that had
finally precipitated the
assertion of Henry VIII's royal
supremacy.
So you could say in a sense
that Elizabeth's whole identity,
and above all her claims to the
throne,
were bound up with the
rejection by her father of papal
authority.
Now the precise nature of her
personal beliefs remains
uncertain.
She didn't really disclose
them, but unquestionably she
identifiedherself with the
Protestant cause.
Shortly after her accession,
at Christmas 1558,
she very ostentatiously walked
out of mass in the royal chapel
at the point at which the host
was elevated.
A month later in January 1559
she very ostentatiously embraced
an English Bible which was
offered to her by the citizens
of London on her state entry to
London prior to her coronation.
So Elizabeth was making no
secret of the fact that she
inclined towards reform,
as indeed everyone expected.
But if she inclined towards
reform she was neither
dogmatically nor
straightforwardly Protestant,
and the religious settlement of
1559,
the first business of her
reign, very much reflected that
fact.
It was in part the product of
theological convictions,
but it was also very much a
settlement that reflected a
religious preference that was
tempered by sheer political
expediency.
What actually happened remains
rather cloudy--
some aspects of the
documentation are inadequate--
but the most convincing
interpretation of the settlement
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pattern to form
themselves by;
who unites the bravery of the
soldier with the most consummate
modesty and virtue."
Okay.
That's exactly the point that
he's trying to make,
right?--that I'm going to take
this large command,
that I'm not looking personally
to profit by it,
and there we have witnesses
that are exactly getting that
message.
Shortly thereafter he made yet
another symbolic gesture,
another example of the way in
which he's so good at appeasing
people's fears.
He gets a letter from the New
York Provincial Congress with a
little nervous passage in it
reminding him that when the war
ends he's expected to resign his
position and return to civilian
life.
Okay.
This is a little nervous letter
from New York saying,
'Please don't be a military
dictator after the war.
Sincerely, the New York
Provincial Congress.'
I don't know what they thought
they would accomplish with that
letter, but it's a valid fear.
It'sthe time by
British writer Joseph Addison
titled Cato,
which is based on the life
of Cato the Younger who defended
Rome and Roman virtues against
the tyrant Caesar,
and that was highly popular in
America at this time and not
surprisingly,
it's Washington's favorite play.
Washington has it performed for
the troops.
It's reprinted again and again
and again in revolutionary
America.
And Nathan Hale's famous last
words,
"I regret that I have but
one life to lose for my
country,"
are adapted from that play.
That's the sort of ideal that
Washington's trying to live up
to,
and any wise man assuming a
position of leadership--
and particularly military
leadership--
would have done the same thing.
Modesty, self-sacrifice,
not lusting for power.
The best way to be trusted and
beloved as a leader was to
modestly surrender power again
and again,
and people would then be sure
to come back and offer you more.
Now it's worth mentioning at
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Mastro
Silje Norendal
Hannah Teter
Alena Zavarzina
Soccer
Michelle Akers
Nadine Angerer
Yael Averbuch
Lauren Barnes
Denise Bender
Verónica Boquete
Shannon Boxx
Brandi Chastain
Stephanie Cox
Joy Fawcett
Jess Fishlock
Mia Hamm
Lori Henry
Marbella Ibarra
Nahomi Kawasumi
Ali Krieger
Haley Kopmeyer
Sydney Leroux
Kristine Lilly
Kim Little
Shannon MacMillan
Marta
Kate Markgraf
Merritt Mathias
Jessica McDonald
Sharon McMurtry
Alex Morgan
Heather Mitts
Heather O'Reilly
Ann Orrison
Cindy Parlow
Emily Pickering
Christen Press
Christie Rampone
Megan Rapinoe
Cat Reddick
Briana Scurry
Eudy Simelane
Christine Sinclair
Hope Solo
Aly Wagner
Abby Wambach
Kim Wyant
Surfing
Keely Andrew
Heather Clark
Courtney Conlogue
Johanne Defay
Sage Erickson
Sally Fitzgibbons
Maya Gabeira
Stephanie Gilmore
Bethany Hamilton
Coco Ho
Malia Jones
Silvana Lima
Malia Manuel
Caroline Marks
Carissa Moore
Lakey Peterson
Nikki Van Dijk
Tatiana Weston-Webb
Tyler Wright
Swimming
Rebecca Adlington - 4 Olympic medals
Inge de Bruijn - 8 Olympic medals
Krisztina Egerszegi - 7 Olympic medals
Dawn Fraser - 8 Olympic medals
Jenny Thompson - 12 Olympic medals
Stephanie Rice - 3 Olympic medals
Keena Rothhammer - Olympic champion (800-mDeputy Editor Dana Brown and Digital Director Mike Hogan as possibilities. GQ Editor-in-Chief Jim Nelson has been lobbying for the job internally.
One name making the circuit recently is Tyler Brule, the founding editor of Wallpaper, which was bought by Time Inc. Brule is editor-in-chief of Monocle in London.
Then there are the purely silly names that have surfaced on the rumor mill, including Huma Abedin, Anderson Cooper and Jon Stewart — none of whom has a shred of editing experience and a serious chance of getting the nod, insiders say.
The search for a VF editor-in-chief is further complicated by Wintour also conducting the search for a new editor-in-chief to replace Cindi Leive at Glamour, and that title is nearly as important a profit-generator in the Condé orbit as VF.
Compounding | {
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banks
and the last preacher’s still a witness,
his stories rise
from the fresh steam of that open heart,
his grey hairs are mine,
my infinite balcony.Three preachers in a cozy room
voices as wide as the American sky
eyes as keen as the eagle
dignity as tall as the mountain top
in the range of humanity,
the soul that left the balcony
of the Lorraine Motel spreads out
like his mushroom bullet
that devastates the fear
they were born into,
those trees won’t grow back
for the tossed ropes
and the burnt crosses
and the tears that followed are
his marathon of miles
dripping from the foreheads
way up in the chiseled mountains
down into the flooded Mississippi
gushing milky brown water where
the ocean’s circulation disperses like
a salt gargle in a rotten mouth,
but white tipped hats still peek on the banks
and the last preacher’s still a witness,
his stories rise
from theshields,
a red star on black,
Hornets and Hawkeyes,
Vipers and Tomcats,
a closet of uniforms, green and tan,
commanders and majors on
operations and missions..
A malfunction he noticed
before the flight,
his friend, an ejection too late.
To almost die once a month
what used to be once a week,
To land a fifty million dollar plane
onto an aircraft carrier
in the middle of the ocean
at night.
The real top gun,
a Lieutenant in the Navy,
trust,
trust in the chain,
crawl-walk-run,
In memory of
the dream of a five-year-old boy
whose
mountain lion always trails above
whose
great white shark always trails below.Transitions into Nevada
waving goodbye to namaste and karma
straight into pumping iron
a new dynamic
nothing soft about the cross.
A sharp, whipping wind
white caps to port
down the slope
into the vast purple valley
held down by the heavy open sky.
Our handsome pilot
from the backyard ponds of North Carolina
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it
was published,
I believe, in 1984,
and the edition you have
includes an afterword where he
responds to critics of the
original book.
So who is Alasdair MacIntyre,
and how does he relate to the
historical anti-Enlightenment
thinkers we've already
discussed, namely Burke and
Devlin?
Well, he is very much in the
spirit of the tradition in which
they both wrote,
although, as you could probably
guess from his historical
trajectory,
one thing that differentiates
him is that at least for much of
his life he thought of himself
as somebody on the political
left,
whereas they were people on the
political right,
and we'll come back to the
significance of that later.
He is part of a general
undertow or reaction against the
Rawlsian enterprise in political
theory.
Other thinkers,
which you're not reading but
with whom he would naturally
have some elective affinities,
are the philosopher Richard
Rorty who died recently,
who wrote a fabulously good
book called Philosophy and
the Mirror ofWestern intellectual project
went badly off the rails.
And in some way his argument is
an analog of the argument I made
to you about Locke and
workmanship.
Because, after all,
think about what I said about
Locke and workmanship.
I said there was basically a
coherent story.
God created the world.
He has workmanship knowledge
and rights over it.
He creates humans with the
capacity to act in a god-like
fashion,
miniature gods,
although they're constrained by
God's will,
and it all fits together as a
kind of coherent whole.
Once you buy into the premises
it all fits together,
but then what happens in the
history of the workmanship model
is people start to secularize
it,
and so start taking on bits and
pieces of the original
workmanship idea without the
unifying assumptions that gave
that model its coherence.
And we saw the various
difficulties everybody ran into
in doing that,
Marx, and Nozick,
and Rawls and many others.
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the
university.
In 1571, in Parliament,
one member, William Strickland,
introduced a bill to revise the
prayer book and purge it.
Members of the council sitting
in Parliament opposed this move.
He was called before the royal
Privy Council and warned not to
trespass on the Queen's
prerogative in matters of
religion.
But a year later when
Parliament met again John Field
and Thomas Wilcox,
two leading Puritans,
published the "Admonition
to Parliament,"
an outspoken attack upon the
structure of the Church of
England as not being a truly
reformed church,
calling on Parliament to take
steps to further reform it.
Indeed, it was so extreme in
some of its statements that it
greatly scandalized moderates
amongst Protestants and there
was no successful action in
Parliament.
In 1576, there came a further
attempt to discuss the church in
Parliament,
and on that occasion Elizabeth
had to intervene personally to
ban discussion of religion in
Parliament.
The Queen also became convinced
in that year thatthe
prophesying meetings were a
destabilizing influence on the
church in the localities.
She ordered Archbishop Grindal
to put a stop to them.
The Archbishop protested.
He thought they were doing good
work;
they were beneficial to the
clergy.
As a result,
the Queen simply suspended him
and the Archbishop of Canterbury
himself was suspended from
exercising his duties from 1577
through to his death in 1583.
Well, at that point,
Grindal's death in 1583 could
be said in a sense to symbolize
the passing away of the first
generation of Elizabethan
bishops,
many of them people who half
sympathized with the desire for
further reformation within the
church,
men who had been willing to
serve, willing to bear with the
Elizabethan compromise for the
time being,
but in their hearts would have
liked to have seen more.
The phrase that was often used
for people like that was that
they were willing to "tarry
for the magistrate,"
they were willing to wait | {
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water reactor
functions in this environment
is unknown.
On the deck of the
power room there
are what resembles
typewriter keys, possibly
reactor/power plant controls.
There were no
conventional electronics
nor wiring to be seen
connecting these controls
to the propulsion turret."
I have been told those keys
had strange hieroglyphic type
symbols on them.
The 1952 "MJ-12 First
Annual Report" said, quote,
"The technology may be eons
ahead of us," close quote,
meaning thousands of
years beyond us on Earth.
Another military insider from
World War II and the Eisenhower
and Kennedy presidencies did
a 1997 book entitled, "The Day
After Roswell."
It was about what
he knew firsthand
of UFO extraterrestrial
technologies and ETs
while he was working
in the Pentagon.
Lieutenant Colonel
Philip J. Corso
worked as chief of the
Pentagon's Foreign Technology
desk for General Arthur Trudeau.
He was handpicked by President
Dwight Eisenhower in 1958
to be director of Army
Research and Development
in the Pentagon.
General Trudeau, on the right,
handpicked Colonel Corso
after their trusted days
togetherin World War II.
Colonel Corso told me he
met with General Trudeau
in his Pentagon office,
where the general handed
over extraterrestrial artifacts
retrieved from crashed
or landed UFOs.
The general asked Colonel Corso
to secretly hand-deliver ET
artifacts to selected contacts
in a few American corporations.
General Trudeau and
President Eisenhower
wanted ET technologies
back-engineered
and patented as a top-secret
national security priority.
No one-- not in Congress,
the Supreme Court,
or the taxpaying American
public was to know anything.
General Trudeau
and Colonel Corso
were the beginning of the
United States' serious efforts
to develop a secret
space program that
would use retrieved
extraterrestrial technology
for advancement.
Meanwhile, NASA was
created on July 29, 1958,
allegedly as a public agency.
But insiders have long reported
that NASA has been under CIA
control from the beginning.
NASA would be the public
camouflage for what
was behind the scenes--
a dark and growing underbelly
of American secret authorities
not accountable to either
Congressional oversight
or to the American people.
These above top-secret | {
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English:
even if no one in the country
knew what pro wrestling was.
Today, he stands as the nation's
ultimate anti-imperialist patriot,
and just like the Kims,
is a revered national hero,
heavily featured in North Korean media,
propaganda posters, monuments,
with people all over the country
traveling to pay their respects.
Which is why 30-odd years after his death,
it was a monumental occasion
when Rikidozan's protege,
Antonio Inoki, on behalf of his mentor,
returned to the homeland
to once again
conquer and defeat an imperialist
American scoundrel.
As Flair made his way to the ring
looking as American as can be,
with his blonde hair, blue eyes, and
star-studded robe, he was nervous.
The crowd was treating him
with a sense of quiet disdain.
But then it was time for Inoki's entrance.
He came out, and for the first time,
the crowd came alive.
It didn't matter that he was Japanese,
because he wasseisomaan ja antoivat aplodit kun Pohjois-Korea oli taas ylivoimainen.
Päätapahtuma oli menestys.
Kim oli iloinen, ja kun koko tapahtumalla Pyongyangissa
oli ennätykselliset katsojalukemat,
paljon suuremmat kuin mikään painiottelu siihen päivään saakka,
tämä oli julistetusti suurin
ammattilais-paintapahtuma historiassa.
Vai oliko se?
Se oli Pohjois-Korealainen kertomus,
mutta Erakkokunnan ulkopuolella
English:
As the match started, it became very clear
that this wasn't America versus Japan.
This was America versus North Korea.
- [Announcer] We hear the crowd for one
of the few times at Collision in Korea
really responding to Inoki.
- [Kento] The people truly loved Inoki,
chanting his name, and
hanging on his every move.
Flair too played his part well
with his classic cowardly antics.
And after about 15 minutes
of back and forth action,
Inoki nailed a cartwheel kick,
a devastating top-rope kneedrop,
and finally, his signature Enziguri kick.
And it was over.
The hero had triumphed.
Fans stood up and applauded as
North Korea once | {
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committee
took up action on Mexican Inter
temion resolutions.
Indian affairs committee con
tinued bearing on Osage land
leases.
Senator Cummins spoke In fav
or of government armor plate
and munitions factories.
HOUSE.
Met at noon.
Gardner, Tavenner and Hensley
unred rules committee to Inves
titrate individual and organiza
tion urging and opposing preparedness.
NewTrickof
ScienceMay
Spare a Life
Chicago, Jan. 19. Gustave Mussell,
who underwent a transfusion opera
tion yesterday when at the point of
death from gas poisoning, today was
said by physicians to have a good
chance for recovery.
Mussell was the first person in the
United States to undergo the treat
ment, which consists of substitution of
healthy blood for the gas-impregnated
blood of the patient.
Doctors expressed the opinion that
the transfusion treatment will prove
of great value in treating cases where
the ordinary methods of resuscitation
have proved unavailing.
MAKE EFFORT TO
FIX BASIC SCALE
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 19. Vaan
Bittner of Pittsburgh, president of the
Western Pennsylvania miners, was
madechairman of the scale commit
tee of the United Mine Workers of
America, appointed today by John P.
White, international president of the
organization. The committee's duty is
to fix a basic scale on which negotia
tions are conducted with the mine op
erators throughout the country. Tin
committee is made up of the presidents
of the 24 districts.
The report of the auditing commit
tee, made today, contained the state
ment that $13,876 was expended to
purchase shoes for Ohio miners and
their families during the 13 months'
strike that ended last year. The total
membership of the union on Dec. 1,
1913 was 35S.498, of whom 79.44S are
anthracite miners.
NO RELEASE FOR
UPDIKE BROTHERS
Chicago Jan. 19. A writ of habeas
corpus for the release of Civing Up
dike who with his brother Herbert
confessed to having plotted to kill
their millionaire father, Furman D.
Updike, was dismissed in the criminal
court | {
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BRIAN MILLSAP V. SHOW TRUCKS USA, INC.
NO. 07-04-0230-CR
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
AT AMARILLO
PANEL D
DECEMBER 23, 2004
______________________________
ROSE M. YOUNG, a.k.a. GRAVES,
Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Appellee
_________________________________
FROM THE 140TH DISTRICT COURT OF LUBBOCK COUNTY;
NO. 2003-404531; HON. JIM BOB DARNELL, PRESIDING
_______________________________
ABATEMENT AND REMAND
__________________________________
Before QUINN, REAVIS, and CAMPBELL, JJ.
Rose M. Young, a.k.a. Graves (appellant) appeals her conviction for the
manufacture and delivery of a controlled substance and possession with intent to deliver
a controlled substance. The clerk's record was filed on August 9, 2004, and the reporter's
record was filed on September 30, 2004. Thus, appellant's brief was due November 1,
2004. That date passed without appellant filing a brief, however. So, on November 9,
2004, this Court notified appellant that neither the brief nor an extension of timeto file it
had been received by the court. Appellant was also admonished that if he did not respond
to the court's letter by November 19, 2004, the appeal would be abated to the trial court.
On November 19, 2004, counsel for appellant filed a motion for extension of time to file
appellant's brief, which was granted to December 15, 2004, with the admonition that no
further extensions would be granted. No brief was filed by that date. Yet, a week after the
deadline passed, that is, on December 22, 2004, counsel for appellant again moved for
and extension of time, contending that he had deadlines approaching in three other cases.
Why appellant's counsel deemed the briefing deadline in this appeal secondary to those
in the three other matters he mentioned went | {
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of
the situation represented by the
work of Christopher Marsh.
People were now only too aware
of the existence of alternatives
in religion, alternatives which
hadn't existed back in the
1520s.
Some of them hankered after the
old ways,
some of them were drawn to the
attractive features of the new
doctrines,
but everyone knew the danger of
religious conflict.
They'd witnessed enough of that
under Mary.
As a result,
Marsh suggests they "held
their peace,"
and as you know he uses that
term in a double sense:
negatively in the sense that
they were compliant,
they remained silent before the
demands of authority;
positively in the sense that
they preserved the peace of
their own communities as best
they could.
One could say that that was an
attitude that had developed as a
result of the turmoil of the
late 1540s and early 1550s in
particular.
Even under Mary,
the mayor of Exeter in the
west,
down here in Devon,
wasa man who although a devout
Catholic in his own practice
regarded Protestant sympathizers
among his neighbors with some
discretion and tolerance.
It was said of him that he did
"friendly and lovingly bear
with them and wink at
them," he shut his eyes to
their practice.
And one could say that
Elizabeth was winking at people
too.
She winked at people in many
ways.
>
She was the Supreme Governor of
the Church of England.
She was the head of a
confessional state but she also
said early in her reign,
"I will not make windows
into men's souls";
a striking metaphor,
"I will not make windows
into men's souls."
What she and her counselors
wanted was order,
outward conformity,
stability, and in pursuit of
those objectives the ambiguities
of 1559 were in many ways
advantageous and they could be
developed.
Soon after the passage of the
settlement through Parliament,
a set of injunctions concerning
worship were issued.
They permitted the | {
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fragile.
History taught that
constitutional principles
defended customary contractarian
rights against government
assertions of arbitrary power.
So arbitrary power is the
ultimate threat to good
government;
political liberties are fragile;
and it's constitutional
principles that defend against
government asserting arbitrary
power.
So yes, Rome had been great,
but arbitrary power had sent it
spiraling into tyranny.
The Glorious Revolution had
been a moment where ancient
liberties had been restored by
restraining the power of the
monarch.
So clearly history taught
liberty is fragile,
and power is the natural
enemy--arbitrary power--
and power naturally grows,
by nature power grows,
and as it does it encroaches on
liberties in a free society.
So power has to be restrained;
British liberties must be
defended;
and British liberties,
as defined by generations of
constitutional precedents.
Now it's important to remember
that the British constitution is
not a written document like
American state and federal
constitutions.
It's a way of thinking about
authority largely based on
precedent,
based on existing institutions,
based on lawsthe colonies.
Vice-Admiralty courts were
composed of a single judge,
they had no jury,
and they were becoming
responsible for enforcing
parliamentary legislation and
new legislation.
Logically, many colonists would
have seen this--
again--really dangerous
precedent violating fundamental
British constitutional rights,
violating past precedents.
The presence of a standing army
in the colonies:
also,
same kind of threat,
same kind of fear,
something new is happening
here, and certainly history
ancient and modern taught about
the dangers of a standing army.
And Samuel Adams summed up
prevailing ideas about standing
armies in a newspaper essay that
he wrote in 1768 and he wrote,
"It is a very improbable
supposition,
that any people can long remain
free,
with a strong military power in
the very heart of their country:
Unless that military power is
under the direction of the
people,
and even then it is
dangerous.-- History,
both ancient and modern,
affords many instances of the
overthrow of states and kingdoms
by the power of soldiers,
who were rais'd | {
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these, but these
are the destinations
of those expeditions
during the 1930s, which
gathered an extraordinary
amount of material.
The board was based at the
University of Adelaide,
but Tindale, as mentioned, was
at the South Australian Museum,
and that's where the
material gathered
on these expeditions ended up.
And by 1938, he'd developed
a remarkable capacity
for correlating the variations
he was observing in Aboriginal
cultures across the country.
And here, you can see--
I mean, all of these
dots are basically
representing where Tindale
was in this period from 1921,
and that's his first
expedition, through until 1938.
In 1936, he was awarded
a Carnegie fellowship
to examine Aboriginal
collections in Europe and North
America.
And by the time he
reached America,
he was already inclining
towards the emerging
cultural relativism
of Franz Boas.
But his key references
remained with
the empirically-grounded
physical anthropology
of the Adelaide group.
And that's why and how he found
common ground with Earnest
Hooton here at the Peabody.
As many of you will be
aware,Hooton's career
was built upon the
knowledge, or the notion,
rather, that it was
possible, indeed, desirable
to investigate and document
the physiological differences
between human cultures.
If only, as his
defenders might say,
to demonstrate how
those differences do not
extend to the
shared commonalities
of social and
intellectual culture.
And that point is
arguable, of course.
And we need to be aware
that Hooton was continually
courted, largely unsuccessfully,
by eugenics groups
at this time, whose views
were contributing worldwide
to forms of scientific
racism during the late 1930s.
By the mid-1930s,
Hooton's students
were measuring and
documenting Indigenous peoples
from the Caucasus
to South America.
Tindale's visit to
Harvard reminded
Hooton of an entire
overlooked continent.
Tindale's record of
intense fieldwork
among a series of
Aboriginal groups
and his knowledge of the
field provoked an entirely new
project.
And Hooton encouraged Tindale
to apply for Carnegie money
for a collaborative expedition
between Adelaide and Harvard
aimed specifically
at what Hooton
considered to be a key
research problem for the time.
There are various ways of
describing that | {
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fought certainly
have. My parents’ activism
was localised, talking to
issues that at most would
affect the surrounding
region and segment of
Sudanese society. Theirs was
a fight for just governance
within a single country,
rather than an ideological
battle across nations. It
was also an analogue
challenge. The nature of
communication meant that
individual reach was limited
and therefore individual
exposure appropriately
throttled. This lent itself
to a collective front,
buffering individuals
somewhat from personal
criticism and opposition.
Today a public advocate’s
platform is digital and
greatly magnified. An issue
or debate unfolding in one
place can be amplified
through a video or tweet to
gain international support
or condemnation – sometimes
both – simultaneously. News
travels almost instantly,
and the feedback is equally
as swift. Individuals can be
rewarded with incredible
highs – a following that
spans the globe, the ability
to easily create content
that reaches millions,
membership of an online
community that “gets it” –
but also with floods of
criticism and personal,
pointed abuse.
The way thistimes as much media
coverage as those carried
out by non-Muslims in the
United States, according to
an academic study.
Analysis of coverage of all
terrorist attacks in the US
between 2011 and 2015 found
there was a 449 per cent
increase in media attention
when the perpetrator was
Muslim.
Muslims committed just 12.4
per cent of attacks during
the period studied but
received 41.4 per cent of
news coverage, the survey
found.
The authors said the finding
suggests the media is making
people disproportionately
fearful of Muslim
terrorists.
Scientists studied US
newspaper coverage of every
terrorist attack on American
soil and counted up the
total number of articles
dedicated to each attack.
They found that the 2013
Boston Marathon bombing,
which was carried out by two
Muslim attackers and killed
three people, received
almost 20 per cent of all
coverage relating to US
terror attacks in the
five-year period.
In contrast, reporting of a
2012 massacre at a Sikh
temple in Wisconsin that
left six people dead and | {
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by them.
The second example is the
chemical weapons attack.
On the night of August
21, 2013, videos
began to circulate online of
civilians gasping, convulsing,
and foaming at the mouth
in the eastern Damascus
suburb of al-Ghouta,
showing every sign
of having been poisoned.
Doctors Without Borders
confirmed three days later
that staff had observed
at least 355 deaths
from neurotoxic symptoms
at three medical centers
in the neighborhood.
Regime forces agreed to a
ceasefire in the Ghouta area
on August 25 to allow
UN inspectors to conduct
on-site investigations,
which took place
during a series of
five-hour cease-fire periods
from August 26 to 29.
It was during this time that
Secretary of State John Kerry
issued a statement
appearing to commit
the US to some form of
direct military intervention
against the regime, which
in Kerry's narrative
was known to have been the
perpetrator of the atrocity.
Well before the UN
investigation was concluded
he described his certainty about
the regime's responsibility as,
quote, "grounded in facts
but informedby conscience
and guided by common
sense," unquote.
He also alluded to
secret information
that would settle the
matter once and for all,
and which he promised would
be revealed in due time.
Four different
kinds of warrants.
The factual, the moral,
the census communus,
and the classified converge
to produce what Kerry claimed
was undeniable evidence.
But as time wore
on, Kerry's failure
to produce decisive proof
generated the very conditions
of deniability that his
assertions of incontrovertibly
sought to discount.
Now, despite Kerry's
initial insistence
on certainty, or perhaps in
some instances because of it,
what was supposedly
"already clear
to the world," in his terms,
namely that the Syrian regime
was behind the attack,
became increasingly
difficult to discern amid
the inundation of claims
and counterclaims prompted
by the Secretary of State's
statement.
And the more information
that emerged,
the more uncertainty
it seemed to generate,
both in and outside
of Syria-- and I
should say that this
project is the product of 24
years of fieldwork in
Syria back and forth,
but | {
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space amenities have also been added
unlike anywhere else in the world. Visitors,
to the streetscape of a Home Zone. Public seating,
scholars and politicians travel from around the
flower beds, play areas, street lights and trees offer
world to Augustenborg to witness the use of various
several community benefits beyond traffic calming.
environmental techniques. Malmö is continuing
Home Zones also enhance the aesthetics of the
to develop its approach to sustainability, as
street and have been shown to have increased the
not only good for the environment, but also in
value of adjacent homes.
strengthening the image and brand of the city.
Vision
Vision
Neighborhood
Greenway?
Neighborhood
Greenway?
Physical
Elements
Physical
Elements
Putting
it Together
Putting
it Together
Take
Action
Take
Action
9
What do
Neighborhood
Greenways mean?
The City of Seattle is working to enhance transportation options in the city
and Neighborhood Greenways will become an integral part of the process.
Reducing vehicle speeds and traffic volume is necessary for safe Neighborhood
Greenways, but byto absorb the
rainfall that lands on it. London, UK
effectiveness and appearance.
•
Native and drought tolerant
plants, Street trees,
Infiltration
Greenroofs, Green screens
Infiltration techniques are designed
to hold standing water for a period
of time before eventually infiltrating
or flowing into the sewer system.
Bioswales run parallel to traffic lanes and
can be used to narrow the road and provide
small habitat corridors. Seattle, WA
Interlocking permeable pavers allow water
to infiltrate between and into the pavement.
Denver, CO
This cleans polluted water and
slows the time it takes for water to
reach the sewer, which prevents
system overload during large storm
events.
•
Infiltration strip filters water before
discharging into the sewer system. Portland,
OR
Raingardens, Bioswales,
Stream daylighting, Infiltration
This raingarden takes advantage of the
reclaimed space used for traffic calming.
Portland, OR
trench, Detention basin,
Permeable pavement, Planted
Water Reuse
pavers
Water Reuse captures and stores
rainwater that would normally
run directly into the sewer. This
treats water as a resources | {
"pile_set_name": [
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} | 43,822,807 |
feet of snow
to these mountains every year.
The snowflakes amass
and, over time, compact
into dense ice
thousands of feet thick.
More than 30 glaciers spill
off of this icefield
towards the valleys
and sea below.
From the highest peaks
to the deep, finger-like fjords,
a complex, interconnected
ecosystem thrives.
On bare rock
English:
and ocean meet.
The Harding Icefield sits
at the top of the park,
covering 800 square miles
of the Kenai Mountains.
Formed more than
23,000 years ago,
it is part of the ice sheet
that covered much
of North America
during the last Ice Age.
Winter storms can bring
over 100 feet of snow
to these mountains every year.
The snowflakes amass
and, over time, compact
into dense ice
thousands of feet thick.
More than 30 glaciers spill
off of this icefield
towards the valleys
and sea below.
From the highest peaks
to the deep, finger-like fjords,
a complex, interconnected
ecosystem thrives.
On bare rock
English:
at a glacier's edge,
tiny plants find a foothold.
Stands ofa fall and winter
on Fox Island back in 1918.
The book and paintings
that were inspired by his stay
brought the beauty
of this remote place
to public view.
But long before
any adventurers came here,
the Sugpiaq --
a maritime people --
made their home in the fjords.
For over a thousand years,
they endured and adapted
to the harshness of the weather
and the landscape.
KAREN MOONIN: Our ancestors
were nomadic people
and traveled great distances
in their kayaks
in search of food.
NARRATOR: When the Russians
arrived on the Kenai Peninsula
in the late 1700s,
the Sugpiaq lifestyle
changed dramatically.
They began hunting sea otters
in large numbers
English:
Fishermen and entrepreneurs.
Explorers and artists
like Rockwell Kent,
who spent a fall and winter
on Fox Island back in 1918.
The book and paintings
that were inspired by his stay
brought the beauty
of this remote place
to public view.
But long before
any adventurers came here,
the Sugpiaq --
a maritime people --
made their | {
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such as these,
each work contains
about 30 individual colors
all applied through --
by hand, through stencils and
then color corrected by Duchamp,
who would reject several proofs
before reaching the exact hue
that he felt most accurately
reproduced the original color
in each painting.
Unimaginable as this may seem
today, this meticulous process,
which took six years
to complete,
gave Duchamp the result he
desired, namely a series
of miniature facsimiles of
his most important works
that precisely replicated
their colors.
Multiple in number yet
singular in appearance,
these paradoxical works
transcend the facile mechanical
replication of images through
their fetishistic attachment
to the colors of the original.
No mechanical process
had yet been invented
that could rival the outstanding
quality of the colors
in these uncanny simulacra.
Yet the sheer scale
of the project
for which the artist created
some 23,000 reproductions would
have been impossible to have
been conceived before the age
of mechanical reproduction.
The concept of mass reproduction
thus becomes for Duchamp,
a newway of thinking
about the work of art.
Rejecting Benjamin's
notion of the importance
of an object is based on
its singular identity,
its uniqueness, its originality,
Duchamp instead celebrates the
plurality of copies available
through mass reproduction
as the most salient
and pervasive manifestation
of modernity.
The artist delighted in
the fact that the Boix
in Valise was not
recognized as a work of art
when it first appeared
in the early 1940s
and was even regarded as proof
that he had ceased
to be an artist.
Basically no critic could
accept this as a work of art.
It was either described
as a print edition
-- and that happened.
Or it was seen as
some sort of joke.
You know, they had
no critical language
with which to engage this.
Holding onto the notion of
the erratic original artwork,
critics simply had no
vocabulary with which to deal
with these works which
offered a profound challenge
to the accepted codes and
practices of artmaking
as they | {
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England to
do God's work amongst the
Catholic faithful as they saw
it,
were inevitably regarded by the
government as the traitorous
servants of a foreign power.
Between 1581 and 1603,131
Catholic priests were arrested
and executed together with sixty
of the lay people who had hid
them,
all of them being executed as
traitors.
These are those who are
regarded in the English Catholic
tradition as the Catholic
Martyrs.
And in a nation that was
increasingly prone to regard
itself as a beleaguered island
threatened by mighty enemies,
Catholicism almost inevitably
became tainted by its
association with that threat.
Of course, that was mistaken.
Many of the Catholic nobility
and gentry went out of their way
to stress their loyalty to
Elizabeth;
that they would not support any
foreign invasion;
that they would indeed
sometimes openly declare
themselves as sufficiently loyal
to oppose it.
They were well known.
They were often trusted as
individuals by their Protestant
neighbors.
The fines levied uponthem for
their Catholic recusancy were
often very selectively and
intermittently enforced.
Amongst the Catholic population
as a whole there were only a
tiny number of zealots who were
ever actively involved in
treasonable plots,
especially against the Queen's
life.
Nevertheless,
be that as it may,
in the situation after 1570,
and especially after the
outbreak of war in 1585,
the Catholic community as an
entity lay under the shadow of
distrust and it was subject to a
developing prejudice which would
take centuries to dispel.
As Patrick Collinson has
written, anti-Catholicism became
almost "a sheet anchor of
English nationhood"
and the Catholic community
within England became in a sense
aliens within their own land.
What about the other
threat?--the radical
Protestants, those who we think
of now as Puritans but that was
not a term they used initially.
It was a term of insult that
was sometimes thrown at them.
They were described usually at
the time as "the hotter
sort | {
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the members of
the Board of Directors
for their hard work in
the selection process.
Selecting the new members
from the many nominations
that we receive annually
is truly a challenging task.
Members are selected
based on several criteria,
but in short, those
qualifications
are risk, vision and
strategic growth.
Members must have
taken personal risk
in starting a new enterprise,
had a vision for a new company
that they started and built,
or they took an
existing business
and strategically grew it
beyond all expectations.
I am proud of the
work that was done
to select these
outstanding new members.
Congratulations to Craig
Brewer, Edith Kelly-Green,
Chris Woods and Kent Wunderlich.
Now I would like to welcome
past Master Entrepreneur
and Founder and CEO
of Church Health,
Dr. Scott Morris, to start
the induction process.
- So Craig Brewer has always
seen himself as a filmmaker.
Early in the 2000s, my
wife who's an actress
took lessons from
him to be an actor,
and she will tell you, he
couldteach a camel how to act.
Now, that led to his first film,
the Poor and the Hungry,
at the time where,
I think he himself
was poor and hungry.
I mean, he's an example
of a true entrepreneur.
He invested literally
everything he had
into making this film.
And then it was a success.
And then we go on
to Hustle and Flow,
and he wins the Academy Award,
and you understand what
happens after that.
Now, here's what I find
most appealing about Craig.
He never left Memphis.
He could have gone to LA, he
has a lot of friends out there,
but Memphis is his home.
He lives at Crosstown Concourse,
and he's making
really big movies.
Now next year, if COVID lets us,
Coming 2 America
with Eddie Murphy
will almost certainly
be a huge film,
but what I know is that Craig
will still call Memphis home.
[dramatic music]
[upbeat blues music]
- There's this thing
that we do | {
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to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Aaron (biblical figure)
Aβ42/Aβ40 ratios
Abraham (biblical figure)
accelerating returns, law of
Actium, Battle of
Adam (biblical figure)
African Americans
afterlife. See also heaven; immortality; resurrection
anomalous psychological experiences and
atheists and
belief in, globally
biologists and
burial and
children's concept of
Christianity and
death row statments on
early conceptions of
Egyptians and
finding meaning without
Islam and
Judaism and
monotheism and
near death experiences and
plurality of ideas about
reincarnation and
spiritual traditions and
Afterlife Experiments, The (Schwartz)
agenticity
Age of Intelligent Machines, The (Kurzweil)
Age of Spiritual Machines, The (Kurzweil)
aging
"Aging Is Reversible" (Weintraub)
"Aging Process and Potential Interventions" (Tosato)
agnostics
Ahmari, Sohrab
Albini, Andrea
Alcor
Alcor Life Extension Foundation
aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation (ASC)
Aldrich, Donald
Aleppo
Alexander, Eben
Alexander Gray Associates
Alexandrian man
algor mortis
Allah
Allen, Woody
Altamira
Altea, Rosemary
"Altered States" (Sacks)
altered states of consciousness
alt-left
AltRight.com (website)
alt-right nationalism
Alves, Filipe
Alzheimer's
Amboseli National Park
American Cryonics Society
American Indians
amyloid plaques
Analytical Engine
Anchor Bible
Anchor Bible Dictionary
Andromeda galaxy
anesthesia awareness
Angel, Leonard
Angel of Death
animal125.
126.
127.
128.
129.
130.
131.
132.
133.
134.
135.
136.
137.
138.
139.
140.
141.
142.
143.
144.
145.
146.
147.
148.
149.
150.
151.
152.
153.
154.
155.
156.
157.
158.
159.
160.
161.
162.
163.
164.
165.
166.
167.
| {
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the Women's Studies Program
at Utrecht, established
the first official PhD program
in Women's and Gender Studies,
and for 17 years, directed
the Utrecht Women's Studies
Center--
a center whose enrolled
student cohort now
numbers in the hundreds.
She helped establish
and later directed,
for 10 years, the
Athena Network--
an extensive community of
European scholars and activists
committed to women's studies--
that included, at its height,
over 130 member institutions
all over the EU.
And in 2010, Athena was
awarded with the Erasmus Prize
for its outstanding
contributions
to fostering social
inclusion through education.
Rosi was born in
Italy and grew up
in Australia, where she
received first class honors
degree from the Australian
National University in Canberra
in 1977, and was awarded the
university medal in Philosophy.
She then moved on to do her
doctoral work at the Sorbonne,
where she received her
degree in Philosophy in 1981.
Her publications
have consistently
been placed in
continental philosophy
at the intersection with
social and political theory,
cultural politics,
gender feminist theory,
and ethnicity1792.
Almost immediately, a woman by
the name of Olympe de Gouges
Notices that the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
only applies to
free men and writes
the alternative, a Universal
Declaration of Women's Rights.
Does anybody know what
happens to Olympe de Gouges?
Anybody knows that heroine?
Her grave is up on the
[INAUDIBLE] of Paris.
She was sent to the
guillotine immediately,
because life is short, and
we've got a revolution to run.
Thank you, brothers.
1792, Toussaint
Louverture in the middle
of the French Revolution,
Universal Declaration
of Human Rights.
He says, well, does this
apply to the slaves?
Aren't they humans, too?
Sojourney Truth will
have the same speech
in the 19th century, but in
1794, Toussaint Louverture
triggers the Haitian Revolution,
liberates all the slaves,
establishes a free
democratic republic
on the basis of the principles
of the French Revolution.
What happens to
Toussaint Louverture?
The French Imperial Army goes
in, squashes the whole thing,
and he dies in captivity.
Thank you, brothers.
The critique of | {
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As pandemics wreak
havoc across the globe,
it's hard not to wonder how
our founding fathers might
have handled the
situation, but we know how.
Just six months after
the second inauguration
of George Washington,
yellow fever
ripped through the
city of Philadelphia.
So what did our
founding fathers do?
Today we're going to
take a look at how
America's founding
fathers reacted
when an epidemic struck,
but before we get started,
be sure to subscribe to
the Weird History channel,
and let us know in the
comments below what
other founding father history
you would like to hear about.
Now, this is a story
all about Philadelphia,
where the Constitution
was born and raised,
about the founding fathers when
the yellow fever was happening
and everything was crazed.
Yellow fever is believed to
have originated in Africa
before being spread to North and
South America via slave trade.
The first verified
outbreak in the new world
occurred in Barbados in
1647, and by 1744, it
had acquired the
nameroam the streets.
One wandering man even waded
into a river and drowned.
It was late August of
1793 when a physician
named Benjamin Rush,
who also happened
to be one of the United States
founding fathers and signer
of the Declaration
of Independence,
realized the epidemic
sweeping through Philadelphia
was no simple virus.
It was yellow fever.
As the news spread, people
left the city in droves.
One witness to the
events recorded
that the disease had
created a universal terror
in which citizens fled the city
by whatever means they could--
coach, wagon, or cart.
Business grinded to a halt,
and the streets emptied.
Writing over a century later,
historian Lillian Rhodes
would observe that "the hearse
and the doctor's carriage
were the sole vehicles
on the street."
And no wonder, for
as Rhodes also notes,
the hospitals were in
a horrible condition.
Nurses could not be
had at any price.
Despite the outbreak,
President George Washington
and his cabinet continued
to meet in Philadelphia
as late as | {
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sophisticated.
A twenty-fold increase in death
from lung cancer was attributed
to environmental tobacco smoke
as stated in EPA's 1992 Passive
Smoking Report.
William Riley was the
administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency
at that point in time and he
also is a Yale graduate and
returns to Yale quite often.
And I spoke to him about his
effort inside the Environmental
Protection Agency in the early
1990s to have environmental
tobacco smoke declared to be a
dangerous substance and more
heavily regulated.
And he thought that that was
one of the most difficult fights
that he had as administrator
during the early 1990s.
The chemicals found inside
tobacco smoke are all chemicals
that you'll recognize as
hazardous substances.
Carbon monoxide,
nicotine, carcinogenic tars,
ammonia, nitrogen dioxide,
vinyl chloride,
cyanide, formaldehyde,
radionuclides,
benzene, nitrosamines,
aromatic hydrocarbons,
benzoate, pyrene,
and arsenic,
all of these compounds are the
target of regulation under
different statues.
So it's quite remarkable that
we've been allowed to burn
cigarettes in indoor
environments.
So why hasplayed in giving the Food
and Drug Administration,
and particularly Kessler,
guidance in how to get access
to some of this information that
was not in the public domain.
He continued:
"We are of the conviction
that the ultimate explanation
for the perpetuated cigarette
habit resides in the
pharmacological effect of smoke
upon the body of a smoker.
Think of a cigarette pack as a
storage container for a day's
supply of nicotine...think of
the cigarette as a dispenser for
a dosed unit of nicotine...
think of a puff of smoke as the
vehicle for nicotine...smoke is
beyond question the most
optimized vehicle of
nicotine..."
So going back to these original
transcripts of meetings held
within the tobacco industry,
Kessler felt that he had
discovered yes,
they believed that this was a
drug.
They believed that it was
addictive, and they were
thinking themselves that the
cigarette and cigar wrappers
were drug delivery devices.
"In a sense,
the tobacco | {
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About this book
Gives detailed information on over 350 different species and includes Seahorses, Pipefishes, Seadragons, Shrimpfishes, Trumpetfishes and Seamoths as well as a list of all known species of the World. With more than 1000 spectacular photographs, most taken in the fishes' natural habitats, the book contains a wealth of information about habitats and behaviour.
Write a review
There are currently no reviews for this product. Be the first to review this product!Lives in the Yiddish
TheatreSHORT BIOGRAPHIES OF THOSE INVOLVED IN
THE yIDDISH THEATRE
aS DESCRIBED IN zALMEN zYLBERCWEIG'S "lEKSIKON FUN YIDISHN TEATER"1931-1967
L. Mates
(Mates Lunyansky)
Mates was
born in
February
1897, in
Bialystok,
Poland. Till
the age of
fourteen, he
studied in
various
cheders. At
the same
time, he
also studied
in a
Russian-Yiddish
primary
school. Following
that he
apprenticed
as a
compositor.
In 1913, he
arrived in
America. He
worked in
Chicago in a
cigar
factory and
in the
evenings he
continued
with his
studies.
In 1916, he
became ill
with
consumption
and was
placed in a
sanatorium.
From 1918,
he lived in
Denver
Colorado
under the
care of Dr.
Chaim
Spivack. After
that he
arranged to
become the
librarian in
a Colorado
Sanatorium.
In 1918 he
made his
debut in the
Chicago
“World” (Velt).
He was
frequently
published in
various
periodicals
and produced
a number of
books.
Mates
published
some one-act
plays, in
the “Fraye
arbeter shtime”
(The Free
Workers
Voice). In
a different
publication
he published
his drama “A yidishe
tragedie”
(A Jewish
Tragedy).
According to
Jacob Mestel
this was
based upon
events from
the authors
own life.
On November
2, 1929
Mates died
in a a
sanatorium
for
consumptives
in Los
Angeles. | {
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of Protestants";
"the hotter sort of
Protestants."
To them the accession of
Elizabeth in 1558 had been a
providential deliverance,
a divine intervention in
English affairs.
November the 17th,
the Queen's accession day,
was celebrated with the ringing
of bells;
it became almost like a
Protestant holy day.
But though they regarded the
Church of England which she
established a year later in 1559
as undoubtedly a true church,
it seemed to these Protestant
radicals that it was a church
which was only half reformed,
and they too were worried about
what might happen next.
They could have no certainty
that it would last.
They were anxious to push
ahead, to consolidate the
position,
to move urgently to what they
described as "further
reformation."
Especially they wanted
reformation of some of the
traditionalist structures of the
Church of England and the
removal of some of the more
traditional aspects of its forms
of worship.
They wanted to get rid of the
"rags ofRome"
or the "dregs the
popery."
This is the sort of language
they used.
So there was from the beginning
an element of dissidence even
amongst those who could be
regarded as Elizabeth's most
enthusiastic supporters.
And that was especially true
amongst the younger clergy who
were emerging from the
universities,
now thoroughly trained in
Protestant doctrine,
and who were becoming,
if anything,
more emphatically Protestant
even than those who had led the
church in the later years of
Edward VI.
This younger generation were
moving beyond the doctrinal
position which had been
established by Archbishop
Cranmer in the early 1550s and
was enshrined in the prayer
book.
Increasingly,
they felt the influence of John
Calvin, the great Protestant
leader of Geneva,
and his successor there,
Theodore Beza.
In terms of the doctrine of
salvation, they increasingly
adopted the doctrine of
'predestination' championed by
Calvin;
the notion that only an elect
minority would find salvation.
Many also adopted the doctrine
of double predestination
championed by Beza;
the view that God | {
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English:
President Obama:
Thank you so much.
Good afternoon.
I am honored to be
in the timeless city of Cairo,
and to be hosted by two
remarkable institutions.
For over a thousand years,
Al-Azhar has stood as a beacon
of Islamic learning,
and for over a century,
Cairo University has been a
source of Egypt's advancement.
Together, you represent the
harmony between tradition
and progress.
I'm grateful for
your hospitality,
and the hospitality of
the people of Egypt.
And I'm also proud to carry with
me the goodwill of the American
people, and a greeting of peace
from Muslim communities in my
country: "assalaamu alaykum."
French:
Un nouveau départ: Président Obama
s’adresse au monde musulman
Le Caire, en Égypte, 4 juin 2009
Président Obama:
Je vous remercie.
Bonjour à tous.
C’est pour moi un honneur de me trouver
dans cette ville intemporelle qu’est le Caire
et d’être reçu par deux
institutions remarquables.
Depuis plus de mille ans,
Al-Azhar est un haut lieuבכל מקום שיופיעו.
English:
Universities, they've
excelled in our sports arenas,
they've won Nobel Prizes,
built our tallest building,
and lit the Olympic Torch.
And when the first
Muslim-American was recently
elected to Congress, he took the
oath to defend our Constitution
using the same Holy Koran that
one of our Founding Fathers --
Thomas Jefferson -- kept
in his personal library.
(applause)
So I have known Islam on three
continents before coming to the
region where it
was first revealed.
That experience guides my
conviction that partnership
between America and Islam must
be based on what Islam is,
not what it isn't.
And I consider it part of my
responsibility as President of
the United States to fight
against negative stereotypes of
Islam wherever they appear.
Indonesian:
perguruan-perguruan tinggi kami,
unggul dalam arena-arena olah raga kami,
memenangkan Hadiah Nobel,
membangun gedung-gedung kami yang tertinggi,
dan menyalakan obor Olimpiade.
Dan ketika warga Muslim-Amerika
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tempted
to locate the morality of an act in the consequences
in the results, in the state of the world that
it brought about.
We called is consequentialist
moral reason.
But we also noticed that
in some cases
we weren't swayed only
by the results
sometimes,
many of us felt,
that not just consequences but also the intrinsic
quality or character of the act
matters morally.
Some people argued that there are certain things
that are just categorically wrong
even if they bring about
a good result
even
if they save five people
at the cost of one life.
So we contrasted consequentialist
moral principles
with categorical ones.
Today
and in the next few days
we will begin to examine one of the
most influential
versions of consequentialist
moral theory
and that's the philosophy of utilitarianism.
Jeremy Bentham,
the eighteenth century
English political philosopher
gave first
the first clear systematic expression
to the utilitarian
moral theory.
And Bentham's idea,
his essential idea
is a very simple one
with atest it and to examine it
by turning to another case
another story but this time
not a hypothetical story,
a real-life story
the case of
the Queen versus Dudley and Stephens.
This was a nineteenth-century British law case
that's famous
and much debated in law schools.
Here's what happened in the case
I'll summarize the story
and then I want to hear
how you would rule
imagining that you are the jury.
A newspaper account of the time
described the background:
A sadder story of disaster at sea
was never told
than that of the survivors of the yacht
Mignonette.
The ship foundered in the south Atlantic
thirteen hundred miles from the cape
there were four in the crew,
Dudley was the captain
Stephens was the first mate
Brooks was a sailor,
all men of
excellent character,
or so the newspaper account
tells us.
The fourth crew member was the cabin boy,
Richard Parker
seventeen years old.
He was an orphan
he | {
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specialists
fortunate enough to work there."
And I can't resist adding here
that it was extremely
fortunate for all of us
that Rusty Powell, who became
director in 1992,
was present as Carter Brown's
right-hand man
in the final stages
of the planning of the Center.
Once given a building
with a library
and beautiful offices,
some financial support,
and a broad mandate,
all reflecting optimistic times,
what did CASVA actually set out
to do, and what is it doing
today?
Hank Millon-- you see here again
on the left with an early group
of fellows--
and his board laid out
a basic plan for activity that
was flexible from the beginning,
and it's worked well, even
as the history of art itself
has taken new directions.
The first issue of "Center,"
our annual report, spells out
that the field of study at CASVA
will not be limited
geographically, chronologically,
methodologically, or according
to discipline.
The original four programs--
which you see, more or less,
inand talent
without parallel anywhere.
Chosen
through national competition,
with the finalists interviewed
by members of the CASVA board,
and the successful candidates
approved by the board
of trustees,
these outstanding young scholars
come with new ideas and lots
of energy.
Time at the National Gallery
gives them so many opportunities
for direct engagement with works
of art,
as well as for discussion
with outstanding senior members
of the profession.
In return, staff
throughout the gallery
have the chance to find out
what's going on
among the new generation.
The predoctoral fellows pursue
many different careers
in museums, universities
and colleges, journalism,
and education in the broadest
sense.
This year each of our fellows
in residence-- and here they all
are--
is going
on to a permanent position,
and we celebrate that.
These emerging colleagues also
benefit immensely
from the collegiality
of the senior fellowship
program.
You've been seeing some Samuel
H. Kress Professors as we go
by these images,
and they provide leadership
in this.
In fact, that is their only duty
while at | {
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one of Cook county's
coroner's physicians.
Washington, Jan. 19. Secretary
Dauicls, In transmitting to the
senate natal committee Admiral
Fletcher's annual report for the
year ending June 30, 1915, states
that steps have been taken to rem
edy specitic complaints as to the
condition of the Atlantic fleet.
SWEDE MINDS
INFLAMED BY
KING'S STAND
Newspapers of the Country
Clamoring Over Utterance
of the Ruler.
ARE BITTER AT BRITISH
Numerous Mistreatments at
Hands of Great Britain
Are Reviewed.
London, Jan. 19. The Politiken of
Copenhagen, as quoted by the Ex
change Telegraph correspondent there,
says that anxiety has been aroused in
Stockholm by the speech at the open
ing of the Swedish parliament by King
Gustave, who urged vigorous prepara
tion of national defenses in view of the
disregard of the belligerents of neu
tral rights. The speech is a subject of
concern in Stockholm the correspond
ent says because of the seizure by the
British authorities last week of alarge
quantity of provisions from the Swedish-American
steamship Stockholm
from New York to Stockholm. The ac
tion of the British authorities Is criti
cised sharply by the Swedish press,
which expresses the opinion that the
value of the goods seized cannot be
regarded as anything like an adequate
offset to the effect of the incident on
relations between Sweden and Great
Britain. Some of the Swedish news
papers state that such actions are
worse than an open rupture.
Hjalmar Branting, socialist leader
in the second Swedish chamber, who
recently visited the allied front in
Flanders, is quoted by the Social Dem
okraten as saying that he prefers de
cisive action a day too early rather
than a day too late, in order to save
Sweden from complications.
"It is noted that King Gustave, in
his speech from the throne, did not
make the usual reference to the good
relations of Sweden with foreign | {
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for her
success. Just as her father in his heyday
was feted by high society and dubbed
"the Bouncing Czech" because of his
resilience, so she is every bit as steely.
The similarities between Robert
Maxwell and Ghislaine are striking. Like
her father, Ghislaine has verve and
energy but above all she shares his
lethal brand of charm.
Even Maxwell’s
enemies have been forced to concede
that he had an unbridled charisma
which was in part responsible for his
success.
"She is able to entrance anyone she
chooses. She is very manipulative and
winds people round her finger," a friend
reveals.
However, it was not until Maxwell’s
death that she began to exhibit her
father’s ambition. Ghislaine had always
preferred socialising to working.
Yet
when left with virtually nothing after
her father drowned, she came into her
own.
Boarding the yacht with her mother
Elisabeth, shortly after her father’s
death, Ghislaine appeared
griefstricken, yet totally in control.
Wearing a
redtartan suit, she coolly walked into
her late father’s office and — according
to journalist John Jackson who is said
to have witnessed the scene —
shredded all incriminating documents on
board.
Ghislaine denies this ever took place,
but Jackson has never retracted the
claim.
If true, those documents were the key
to Maxwell’s financial empire and
Ghislaine, astutely, was making sure they
would never come back to haunt the
Maxwell family.
In the aftermath of his death, she was
defiant in the face of the criticism and
jibes levelled at her father — such as
the joke made by a Maxwell employee
that, on the morning he left for the
boat, he was "buoyant".
Like Maxwell,
who never betrayed the fact that his
empire was crumbling, Ghislaine was
adept at masking her emotions.
But today, just as Ghislaine’s social
cachet is enjoying an all-time high, her
association with Epstein threatens once
again to mar | {
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Green
Jenny Greene
H
Erika Hamden, US
Heidi Hammel
Fiona A. Harrison
Marjorie Hall Harrison
Lisa Harvey-Smith
Margaret Harwood
Martha P. Haynes
Mary Lea Heger
Eleanor F. Helin
Amanda Hendrix
Caroline Herschel
Elisabeth Hevelius
Jacqueline Hewitt
Catherine Heymans
Dorrit Hoffleit
Helen Sawyer Hogg
Ann Hornschemeier
Joan Horvath
Nancy Houk
Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld
Margaret Lindsay Huggins
Hypatia
I
Violeta G. Ivanova
J
Louise Freeland Jenkins
Carole Jordan
K
Vicky Kalogera
Lyudmila Karachkina
Victoria Kaspi
Lisa Kewley
Pamela M. Kilmartin
Maria Margarethe Kirch
Margaret G. Kivelson
Dorothea Klumpke
Gillian R. Knapp
Heather A. Knutson
Gloria Koenigsberger
Bärbel Koribalski
Lenka Kotková
Reiki Kushida
L
Elizabeth Lada
Marguerite Laugier
Gemma Lavender
Nicole-Reine Lepaute
Henrietta Swan Leavitt
Isabel Martin Lewis
Helen Lines
Sarah Lee Lippincott
Jane Luu
M
Maeriam al-Ijliya al-Astrulabi
Amy Mainzer
Esmeralda Mallada
Rachel Mandelbaum
Karen Masters
Janet Akyüz Mattei
Annie Russell Maunder
Antonia Maury
Claire Ellen Max
Margaret Mayall
Jaylee Burley Mead
Karen Jean Meech
Maria Mitchell
Linda A. Morabito
Jean Mueller
N
Sultana N. Nahar
Joan Najita
Yaël Nazé
Heidi Jo Newberg
O
Carolina Ödman-Govender
Sally Oey
Kathleen Ollerenshaw
C. Michelle Olmstead
Liisi Oterma
Mazlan Othman
Feryal Özel
P
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
Ruby Payne-Scott
Louise du Pierry
Carle Pieters
Paris Pişmiş
Elena V. Pitjeva
Carolyn Porco
Helen Dodson Prince
Mary Proctor
Q
Elisa Quintana
R
Katharine Reeves
Emily Rice
Christina Richey
Julia Riley
Constance M. Rockosi
Elizabeth Roemer
Nancy Roman
Vera Rubin
S
Penny Sackett
Anneila Sargent
Caterinadesired voltage characteristic of monovalent silver oxide, while having a constant low internal impedance.
In addition to the above listed references, there are other references pertaining to the properties, formation and stability of AgO. "Electrode Phenomena of Silver-Silver Oxide System in Alkaline Batteries" by Yoshizawa and Takehara published in the Journal of the Electrochemical Society of Japan, Volume 31, Number 3, pages 91-94 (1963) reports the effect of various metallic additives on the oxidation of silver electrodes. Among the additives suggested, gold was reported to increase the rate of formation of divalent silver oxide during the electrochemical formation of silver electrodes, e.g. oxidation of silver.
Another article entitled "The Electric Resistivity of Silver oxide" by Tvarusko published in the Journal of the Electrochemical Society, Volume 115, Number 11, pages 1105-1110 | {
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they hit a nice
sweet spot
in the middle for people.
Kim: Dishes like Applebee's
boneless buffalo wings
became a fan favorite,
and promotions like
half-priced appetizers
made Applebee's a
popular spot
for customers looking
for a good deal.
But then, at the
end of 2007,
the recession happened,
and people stopped
eating out as much.
Katie Couric: We are
in a recession.
News anchor: The longest
recession since World War II.
Couric: But the question
now: When will it end?
Kim: As Applebee's
sales struggled
in the post-recession
economy,
it attempted to
reinvent itself
as a modern bar and grill
to draw in up-and-coming
millennials.
But it didn't work.
Taylor: Applebee's tried
to be a little bit trendy,
a little bit cool.
And it just came off as kind
of corny for most people,
where it felt like they
were trying too hard
to win over millennials.
Kim: New menu items
like hand-cut $20 steaks
and brisket nachos
not only failed
to bring in new
millennial diners;
they alienated
the very customers
who had made Applebee's
successfulin the first place:
People looking for a
reliable, affordable meal out.
By 2015, Applebee's
sales were falling.
And only continued to
fall, year after year.
In 2017, the company
closed 99 locations
and announced plans to
close 60 to 80 more
the following year.
Julia Stewart, the CEO of
Applebee's parent company,
Dine Brands Global,
reportedly stepped down
because of Applebee's
poor performance.
The former waitress was
one of the industry's
most celebrated and
longest-serving executives.
For a brief time,
it looked like
Applebee's was done for.
But instead of folding,
it turned things around.
Taylor: Starting in
late 2017, 2018,
Applebee's parent
company, Dine Brands,
had new
leadership come in,
and this new leadership
was very, very focused
on being inexpensive and
not trying to be too trendy.
Basically, they
took Applebee's
back to the basics.
They're not gonna try
and win over millennials
with these fancy
new menu items.
They're gonna find
something that's inexpensive
that people are
proven to like.
The biggest thing that kind
of kicked off the turnaround
for Applebee's was the
Dollarita, | {
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water supplies
are very poor,
but we cannot go
away from the town,
for our children's
education would suffer.
We don't want charity, but
a chance to live decently."
This sentiment was
repeated over and over,
and it was not a sentiment that
had penetrated to the broader
Australian community.
Perhaps it still hasn't.
Excuse me.
But Tindale wove this sentiment
into his final report, which
did ultimately contribute to
a major shift in government
policy away from segregation
and towards assimilation,
which was, he noted,
happening in any event.
These were people
of mixed ancestry,
unsure of whether they
and their children
would find a place
in white society,
but well aware that the old ways
and the ancient cosmologies,
integral and familiar to their
parents and grandparents,
would not be available in
anything like the same form
to their children
and grandchildren.
Their uncertain future rested
partly with unsympathetic
governments who shared the
apprehension regularly aired
in newspapers of the period
concerning this expanding--
and it was a rapidlyexpanding
population of half-castes,
as the term went--
while simultaneously,
those newspapers
were promoting the idea of
reserves with buffer zones
to protect the
remaining populations
of uncontacted Aboriginal
groups in central Australia,
as though there was no
connection between the two
populations.
This combination of
policies and actions
is difficult to
unravel, but it lies
at the heart of understanding
the Harvard-Adelaide
expedition.
How a hybrid population forming
just two or three generations
after first contact
could and should
relate to the dominant
European population, and how,
or even whether it should,
be regulated or controlled.
In many ways,
Tindale and Birdsell
were practicing
empirically-based forms
of anthropology
founded on the fiction
of a timeless ethnographic
present, which
could be conjured up in
publications and museum
exhibitions as the appropriate
context for presenting
the other.
The expedition marked a shift
in Tindale's own practice,
though, partly
through his exposure
to the personal and
deeply corrosive
effects of colonialism which
he and his expedition partners
observed during
1938, '39, but also
because the cataclysm
of World War II
precipitated enormous change
across Aboriginal | {
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by the same token there is
an agency, that is to say a
capacity, to circulate power in
discourse in turn.
Call it "literature":
"I am Richard II,
know you not that?"
says Queen Elizabeth when at
the time of the threatened Essex
Uprising she gets wind of the
fact that Shakespeare's
Richard II is being
performed,
as she believes,
in the public streets and in
private houses.
In other words,
wherever there is sedition,
wherever there are people who
want to overthrow her and
replace her with the Earl of
Essex,
the pretender to the throne,
Richard II is being
performed.
Well, now this is terrifying to
Queen Elizabeth because she
knows--
she's a supporter of the
theater--she knows that
Richard II is about a
king who has many virtues but a
certain weakness,
a political weakness and also a
weakness of temperament--
the kind of weakness that makes
him sit upon the ground and tell
sad tales about the deathof
kings,
that kind of weakness,
who is then usurped by
Bolingbroke who became Henry IV,
introducing a whole new dynasty
and focus of the royal family in
England.
Queen Elizabeth says,
"They're staging this play
because they're trying to
compare me with Richard II in
preparation for deposing me,
and who knows what else they
might do to me?"
This is a matter of great
concern.
In other words,
literature--Fredric Jameson
says "history
hurts"--literature hurts,
too.
>
Literature, in other words,
has a discursive agency that
affects history every bit as
much as history affects
literature: literature "out
there," and theater--
especially if it escapes the
confines of the playhouse
because,
as Greenblatt argues,
the playhouse has a certain
mediatory effect which defuses
the possibilities of sedition.
One views literary
representation in the playhouse
with a certain objectivity,
perhaps, that is absent
altogether when interested
parties take up the same text
and stage it precisely for the
purpose of fomenting rebellion.
Literature, especially when
escaped from its conventional
confines,
becomes | {
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we're just
delighted that the Kress
Foundation, like the Safra
Foundation,
has recently determined to endow
the historic position
of the Kress Professor
in perpetuity.
In recent years, the Mellon
Foundation has also provided
support for seminars in modern
and contemporary art, which
resulted in "The Dada Seminars"
and "The Cubism Seminars"
in the new seminar series--
which you see here, flanking
the volume edited by Peter
Lukehart--
as well as supporting
a publication endowment
and an endowed
postdoctoral fellowship.
I also want to call attention
to the expanded and continuing
support we've received
over the past fifteen years
from the Wyeth Foundation
for American Art.
Our Wyeth predoctoral fellows
have had a significant impact
on the field of American Art.
A new funding
for a distinguished Wyeth
Lecture and a Wyeth Conference
in alternating years
guarantees a lively conversation
at the Gallery around American
Art.
This year's Wyeth Symposium on
"The African American Art World
in Twentieth Century Washington,
DC," was an important event
for the Gallery.
The incorporation
of aa close
after making some more general
observations about the Center.
It's important first,
I think, to recognize that there
are now many research institutes
dedicated to art history
in the United States
they each have their own very
different histories
and characters.
The Yale Center for British Art,
for example, also created
by Paul Mellon,
has its own specialized
collections, which are available
not only for research purposes
but also for teaching and public
viewing.
The same is true of Harvard's
Dumbarton Oaks, here in DC.
Other collections, such as those
of the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum
and the Huntington Library, Art
Collections, and Botanical
Gardens, by contrast,
have generated
their own institutes.
The research
and academic program
at the Clark Art Institute
is part of a private museum set
in the beautiful landscape
of the Berkshires,
housed within it
and sharing its library.
The Getty Research Institute
is just one of several programs
of the J. Paul Getty Trust
in California,
independent of the museum
and with its | {
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the
Revolution had confirmed
Americans' worst fears about
tyranny and power.
To Americans,
first Parliament and then the
King had become tyrannical and
had used their power to destroy
the liberties of American
colonists.
So now, enter George Washington
who is given command of the
American army and,
as you've already seen and
discussed in the course,
one of the most obvious and
deadly tools of tyranny is a
standing army.
And history has plenty examples
of what happens when the wrong
man gets control of an army,
and of course the most famous
example would be Julius Caesar.
And in Caesar you have this
brilliant warrior whose army was
loyal to him and not to the
Roman state,
and eventually Caesar took his
army,
marched on Rome,
seized power,
basically destroyed the Roman
republic and installed himself
as emperor.
That's not ancient history to
Americans or to anyone in the
period.
That's a lesson.
That's a warning.
Look at whataware
of all of these prevailing fears
about power-hungry tyrants and
armies,
so he did literally everything
that he could do to prove to
Americans inside the Continental
Congress and outside of the
Continental Congress that he was
not seeking power.
Rather, he was accepting power.
It was being given to him but
he was not seeking it.
And here you can see his good
judgment as well as his skillful
self-presentation in play.
He's really sensitive to these
prevailing fears and he's really
skilled at appeasing them.
So for example listen to what
he says in his address to the
Continental Congress after he's
nominated as Commander-in-Chief
of the Continental Army.
Okay. This is his address.
He makes a very brief address,
a statement,
to the Congress:
"Tho' I am truly sensible
of the high Honour done me,
in this Appointment,
yet I feel great distress,
from a consciousness that my
abilities and military
experience may | {
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or less--
of Southeastern Australia,
to the more recent
encounters in Central Australia
during the early to mid-20th
century.
Unlike the circumstances of
collection being discussed
at the Berlin Conference,
these encounters
were not characterized by
violence or intimidation,
generally, even if those
factors were present
during the colonial period
and should never be dismissed.
But if those factors are
diminished or put to one side,
another factor emerges as
the dominant force in those
encounters, and
that is reciprocity,
a principle of reciprocity.
It's the common trait
characterizing human encounters
across and within
cultures, and it's
impossible without
agency on both sides.
Until recently, we've
tended to recognize
agency only in the actions
of European collectors
rather than the Indigenous
makers and owners
of cultural material.
What may appear as a
lopsided exchange of objects,
a beautifully crafted
shield or a basket bartered
for a stick of
tobacco, for example,
can also be understood
as a transaction entered
into by each party, each
with their own motives
and expectations.
These transactions
occurred on uneven ground,
unevenhere at the Peabody,
and this was the
expedition known
by the rather cumbersome
title of the Harvard-Adelaide
University's Expedition
of 1938 to '39,
henceforth, the expedition.
The main protagonists
were the Harvard
physical anthropologist,
Joseph Birdsell--
he's shown here in his pajamas--
who was really one of
Earnest Hooton's star
graduates here in Harvard
and at the Peabody.
And he would go on to
an outstanding career
as a geneticist based at UCLA.
And his colleague, the South
Australian Museum's Norman
Tindale, whose 50-year
career in Adelaide
was hugely influential
in the development
of Australian anthropology.
Tindale deserves
a book on his own.
And that's on my list.
But his most
obvious contribution
is right in front of
you here, and that's
the Tindale map, the
first comprehensive map
of Aboriginal language groups
to be compiled in Australia.
And really, it was
his life's work.
This is the 1974 version.
And I opened with
the 1940 version.
And if you look at
them closely, you'll
see the gaps and what he did
in | {
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colonists
had assumed was free trade.
And that's where you get the
broadsides that I was just
talking about,
telling people not to buy or
sell East India tea and to act
now,
defend your liberties.
And then eventually you end up
with the destruction of tea in
Boston Harbor.
And as I mentioned in the last
lecture, "Boston Tea
Party" is actually later in
the nineteenth century.
They didn't call it this at the
time.
They probably called it
"the destruction of the
tea," but it was not a
party [laughs]
at the time.
That was later they decided it
was a tea party.
So now clearly,
having had that happen,
North felt that something
really needed to be done about
the colonies,
or obedience to British law and
order,
in his mind,
would collapse in the colonies.
As he put it,
and I think I quoted this right
at the end of the lecture,
that if they didn't risk
something,to be
approved by the governor,
and if the governor wanted he
could simply forbid town
meetings;
and any additional meeting
besides the one in which
officers were chosen--that
meeting needed to post an agenda
in advance and stick to the
agenda;
and the governor also now could
appoint or remove sheriffs,
judges, attorney generals,
marshals.
So basically the governor is a
royal official and the governor
is now in Massachusetts being
given a lot of power.
So I'll repeat the four
Intolerable Acts:
the Boston Port Act,
the Quartering Act,
the Administration of Justice
Act,
and the Massachusetts
Government Act.
So having described those acts,
you can see why there would
have been some in Parliament who
were sympathetic to what was
going on in the colonies who
would have protested that these
acts were depriving colonists of
some pretty basic British
constitutional rights,
but these protestors were in
the minority.
Now on top of these acts the
King sent a new governor to
Massachusetts,
Massachusetts General | {
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which
specify candidates from ac-credited
programs. Accre-ditation
also entitles gra-duates
to membership in .
the National Association
of Social Workers.
Three full-time and
three part-time social
work faculty members,
plus the supporting staff,
comprise Bethel's on-cam-pus
program personnel. In
addition, more than a do-zen
other instructors teach
primary support courses
as part of the social work
program.
by JoAnn Watkins
As each semester beg-ins,
many students want
to sell their used books.
This year there was no
book -buy-back board.
Transactions for buying
and selling books were not
allowed through the post-al
system.
Bruce Kunkel, director
of administrative services
in business affairs, in-structed
Elaine McCleary,
post office coordinator,
that the post office was
not to become invoved
with a book buy-back
board. "We don't have
enough people to handle
the work it involves," Kun-kel
said.
McCleary stated that
using the PO system for
selling books is a conven-ience
for the students but
involves workers going to
the window four times for
each book sold. Someone
has to receive the book
from the seller, give the
book tothe buyer, receive
the money from the buyer
and then give the money
to the seller. Past prob-lems
have also included
money being stolen.
Brice Russell, Senate
treasurer, said the Senate
is not sponsoring the book
buy-back board because
of the overload it places on
the post office.
Cheryl Thomas, vice-president
of the Senate,
explained an alternative
by Steve Penner
Andy Pratt and his band
are in concert tonight, Feb.
12, at 8 p.m. in the gym.
Sponsored by the Campus
Coordinators, the concert
also features Mark Heard.
Tickets cost $4 in advance
and $5 at the door.
Andy Pratt's name may
not be recognized by those
familiar with contempor-ary
Christian music. He
to the book buy-back
board as a book exchange.
With a book exchange sys
tem the students would
bring the books they were
selling to a specified place
with a triplicate form stat-ing
the book and price.
Senate would handle the
transactions involving de-livering
the money from
the buyer to the seller.
A record of | {
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western ports
and eastern ports.
We're sailing east,
into the Greece's Aegean Sea
for three more stops.
Next up: Athens.
The port of Athens is Piraeus,
another industrial springboard
serving a popular destination.
While Athens
is perfectly tourable
for the independent traveler,
many opt for
the cruise line's excursion.
Cruise lines excel
in efficiency.
Before leaving the ship,
tourists meet in the theater,
get their tour group number,
are escorted
to their awaiting bus,
and meet the guide.
Within minutes,
they're on their way
as he narrates the ride into
town with information
about the leading city
of ancient Greece --
the home of Socrates and Plato.
Today, Athens is
a sprawling metropolis
of four million people.
But, in the 19th century,
it was just a small town
huddled at the base
of its once mighty acropolis.
That old town is today's
touristy shopping quarter,
called the Plaka,
with its fun eateries,
colorful markets,
and shops filled
with knickknacks.
Next to the modern markets
you find the ancient
market -- the Agora,
with oneof the best
surviving temples
from ancient Greece --
the Temple of Hephaestus.
But everyone's got their sights
set on the Acropolis.
Our group converges
with other groups,
and everyone clamors
up the famous hill.
While cruisers are unavoidably
a part of this crush,
guides do a good job of managing
the cruise ship rush hour
each morning.
Once on top, tourists marvel
at the iconic Parthenon
as guides do their best
to bring the ruins to life.
And from the summit
of this historic bluff,
all are rewarded
with a commanding view
of sprawling Athens.
After each day of sightseeing,
back at the ship, passengers
enjoy the ritual welcome.
A cool cloth
and a refreshing drink,
and they're back home
in their floating resort.
Cruise lines employ
a lot of people:
a ratio of about one worker
for every two passengers.
A typical crew comes from dozens
of developing world countries.
A fun and extra dimension
of cruising
is getting to interact
with people
whose cultures you know
almost | {
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Opinion issued September
29, 2011.
In The
Court of
Appeals
For The
First District
of Texas
————————————
NO. 01-10-00515-CV
———————————
RUSSELL THOMAS BOYD, Appellant
V.
CHRISTINA MICHELLE PALMORE, Appellee
On Appeal from the 280th District
Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 2010-11113
OPINION
This
is an appeal from a protective order granted by the trial court against
appellant, Russell Thomas Boyd. In a
single issue, Boyd challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence
to support the grant of the protective order.
We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Appellee, Christina Palmore, had
a daughter named Tessa with Boyd. In
December 2009, after their relationship ended, Palmore
and Boyd agreed to the entry of an order that established visitation and
possession for Tessa.
In
late February 2010, Palmore filed her first amended
application for a protective order against Boyd.[1] A week later, the court issued a temporary ex
parte protective order against Boyd. Two
weeks after that, the trial courtheld an oral hearing on the application. At the hearing, Palmore
testified that she was afraid of Boyd, that his “threats ha[d] become
increasingly worse,” that he had been “verbally abusive” to her, and that she
felt like he was stalking her. Palmore then recounted several particular incidents
involving Boyd that caused her to fear for her safety.
She
testified that in October 2009 (the “October 2009 incident”), Boyd followed her
to her mother’s office in Travis County, got out of his car, blocked her with
his body so she could not leave, and ended up jumping onto the hood of her
car. Palmore
stated that she feared for her life during this incident and reported it to the
police. She affirmed, however, that Boyd
was also delivering medication for Tessa at the time and that this was the | {
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church
related vocations as worth-while
jobs because they
are low paying, most stu-dents
break family rela-tions
in attending the
seminary.
Anderson enjoys teach-ing
at Bethel, yet is less
enthusiastic about the
evaluation and testing
that comes with the job.
He is concerned about
objectivity and fairness.
In returning to Bethel
Anderson said with a
chuckle, "the students are
getting younger." He is
pleased with the growth
of the faculty and admin-istration.
He is impressed
with "the spectacular tal-ent
of the students," he
said.
Anderson graduated
from Bethel in 1953. Later
he served as director of
Christian Activities (now
Campus Ministries) and
taught Greek and Intro-duction
to Bible Litera-ture
during 1962 -64. And-erson
earned his B.A. from
Fuller Theological Semi-nary
and a Th.M. from
Princeton Seminary.
Anderson lives in Ano-ka
with his wife, Nancy.
His daughter, Dawn, is a
senior in high school and
his son Scott is a sopho-more.
They all enjoy
camping, canoeing and
cross-country skiing. An-derson
also enjoys tennis
and swimming. Apart
from his family activities,
he sees studying as his
second vocation.
In fifteenis filled with a
group of strategically
placed columns which
emanate sound. Two gal-lery
lights are the only
illumination. The sound is
a series of synthesized,
computer-prompted tones
and silence. It is called
"Sculpture/Sound" and re-quires
participation rather
than mere viewing.
The work was created
by Stewart luckman, pro-fessor
of art at Bethel, and
David Held, sound artist,
in collaboration with a
group of four students
from the interim course
"Pursuit of Excellence."
The students (Andre
LaBerge, Beth Langstaff,
Chris Anible and Steve
Mills) "were artists who
worked with artists to do
a major work," said Luck-man.
Luckman explained
that the students "got into
my head about my inten-tions
and made important
decisions about the piece."
Luckman made it quite
clear that the students did
not just install the piece;
they actually built and in-stalled
it. "The show,"
Luckman said, "grew out
of the CELL experience I
was responsible for. The
people worked with me as
apprentices." (CELL is
Bethel's Center for Excel-lence
in Living and Learn-ing.)
The idea for this | {
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aerodyne.
Continuing from the
September 19, 1947,
white-hot intelligence
briefing, it says, quote,
"Even the recovery
case of 1941"--
Cape Girardeau-- "did not create
a unified intelligence effort
to exploit possible
technological gains
with the exception of
the Manhattan Project,"
close quote.
The reference to the
Manhattan Project
means physicist
Robert Oppenheimer
had the Cape Girardeau
neutronic power
plant to study during his
development of the atomic bomb
that we first dropped on
Japan in August, 1945,
ending World War II.
That also implies that
presidents Roosevelt and Truman
already knew about an alien
presence during World War II,
before the July,
1947 Roswell crashes.
And they had made a decision
to keep everything secret--
about UFOs, the alien
bodies they had retrieved,
both dead and alive.
Much of the content
in those early reports
was drawn from what
Lieutenant General Nathan
Twining discovered on his secret
mission for President Truman
soon after the New
Mexico crashes.
That's when General
Twining viewed
the five alien bodies and
craft found at Landing Zone Two
near Oscura Peakand
the Trinity site.
In 1947, General Twining was
commander of the Air Materiel
Command.
10 years later,
President Eisenhower
would appoint him chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
By July 16, 1947, only one
week after the "Roswell Daily"
headline, General Twining
sent President Truman
a two-page report about what he
saw for himself at the Landing
Zone Two crash site
near Oscura Peak,
and that was on the White
Sands proving ground.
Quote, "Upon examination of
the interior of the craft,
a compartment exhibiting
a possible atomic engine
was discovered."
In the power room was
"a doughnut-shaped tube
approximately 35
feet in diameter,
made of what appears to be
a plastic material, that
is surrounding a central core.
This tube was translucent,
approximately one inch thick.
The tube appeared to be
filled with a clear substance,
possibly a heavy water.
This activation of
electrical potential
is believed to be the
primary power to the reactor,
though it is only a
theory at present.
Just how a heavy | {
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saturated
by claims already
at work, resubstantiating
communities of agreement
in place.
These were not conspiracy
theories of the caliber
that Shaaban and others
brought to the fore,
but their very existence
as disagreements
made it possible for those
whose minds had been made up
in advance of circulating
evidence, which was itself
confusing to stay that way.
US President Barack
Obama's prime-time speech
on September 10, and Russian
president Vladimir Putin's New
York Times op-ed the following
day, looked like a throwback
to a Cold War politics in which
political posturing trumped
all curiosity.
Facts, already
hard to adjudicate,
became pared down to an
acknowledgment that something
bad had happened--
a chemical attack--
while attributions
of responsibility
broke down on classical
political fault lines,
with Obama assuring the American
people that the regime was
behind the attack,
and Putin recommending
caution by placing
blame on the opposition.
The UN's own authority
as a fact-finding team
and its careful
language regarding
what it could and
could not ascertain
was undercut by its
own past mistakes.
Its reputationas a partial
international body rather than
an objective arbiter
of truth claims
produced doubts about
its conclusions,
as tenuous and as
carefully-worded as they were.
The appearance of an
investigative report
by the well-known journalist
Seymour Hersh in the London
review of books,
entitled "Who's Sarin,"
raised additional doubts.
In counteracting American
administration claims,
Hersh contended that Obama
failed to acknowledge something
known to the US
intelligence community,
"that the Syrian army is not
the only party in the country's
civil war with access to
sarin, the nerve agent
that a UN study concluded
without assessing
responsibility, had been
used in the rocket attack."
That's a quote from Hersh.
Faulting various studies
circulating online
and through conventional
news channels,
Hersh maintained
that it was known
that Jabhat al-Nusra, the
al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria,
also had access to the necessary
ingredients to make sarin
and had demonstrated
interest in using it.
In a follow up piece
published in April 2014
Hersh went further, suggesting
that Turkey was in fact
behind the Ghouta attacks.
These claims | {
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