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Matter of Quail (2016 NY Slip Op 01679)
Matter of Quail
2016 NY Slip Op 01679
Decided on March 9, 2016
Appellate Division, Second Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on March 9, 2016
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department
RANDALL T. ENG, P.J.
WILLIAM F. MASTRO
REINALDO E. RIVERA
MARK C. DILLON
SYLVIA O. HINDS-RADIX, JJ.
2007-00123 ON MOTION
[*1]In the Matter of James J. Quail, admitted as James Joseph Quail, a suspended attorney. Grievance Committee for the Tenth Judicial District, petitioner; James J. Quail, respondent. (Attorney Registration No. 3012267)
DECISION & ORDERMotion by James J. Quail for reinstatement to the Bar as an attorney and counselor-at-law. Mr. Quail was admitted to the Barat a term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Second Judicial Department on January 12, 2000, under the name James Joseph Quail. By decision and order on application of this Court dated March 9, 2007, the Grievance Committee for the Tenth Judicial District was authorized to institute and prosecute a disciplinary proceeding against Mr. Quail based on acts of professional misconduct alleged in a verified petition dated December 28, 2006, and the issues raised were referred to John P. Clarke, Esq., as Special Referee, to hear and report. By opinion and order of this Court dated September 29, 2009, Mr. Quail was suspended from the practice of law for a period of five years based on 26 charges of professional misconduct (see Matter of | {
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People v Calinda (2016 NY Slip Op 06227)
People v Calinda
2016 NY Slip Op 06227
Decided on September 28, 2016
Appellate Division, Second Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on September 28, 2016
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department
RANDALL T. ENG, P.J.
JOHN M. LEVENTHAL
JEFFREY A. COHEN
HECTOR D. LASALLE
BETSY BARROS, JJ.
2015-03879
(Ind. No. 2025/14)
[*1]The People of the State of New York, respondent,
vEric Calinda, appellant.
Lynn W. L. Fahey, New York, NY, for appellant.
Richard A. Brown, District Attorney, Kew Gardens, NY (John M. Castellano, Johnnette Traill, and Merri Turk-Lasky of counsel; Lorrie A. Zinno on the memorandum), for respondent.
DECISION & ORDER
Appeal by the defendant, as limited by histhe doctrine of last clear chance.
4
We briefly state the facts, as we gather them from the evidence and from the physical situation. On the evening in question Darryl Bates and his brother Schuyler, who was about one year older, lived with their parents at 1519 New Hampshire Avenue, N.W., four doors beyond Que Street and about one and one quarter blocks from Dupont Circle. After dinner that evening when it was still light, and with their father's permission, they went to a drug store on the south side of P Street, at its corner with Dupont Circle. In doing so it was necessary for them to cross Que Street, Connecticut Avenue and P Street. As the boys were going home from the store they | {
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masses in, for example, tunnel, foundation,
or slope construction.
The level of a fault's activity can be critical
for locating buildings, tanks, and pipelines
and assessing the seismic shaking and tsunami
hazard to infrastructure and people in the
vicinity.
In California, for example, new building construction
has been prohibited directly on or near faults
that have moved within the Holocene Epoch.
Also, faults that have shown movement during
the Holocene plus Pleistocene Epochs may receive
consideration, especially for critical structures
such as power plants, dams, hospitals, and
schools.
Geologists assess a fault's age by studying
soil features seen in shallow excavations
and geomorphology seen in aerial photographs.
Subsurface clues include shears and their
relationships to carbonate nodules, translocated
clay, and iron oxide mineralization, in the
case of older soil, and lack of such signs
in the case of younger soil.
Radiocarbon dating of organic material buried
next to or over a faultshear is often critical
in distinguishing active from inactive faults.
From such relationships, paleoseismologists
can estimate the sizes of past earthquakes
over the past several hundred years, and develop
rough projections of future fault activity.
See also
Mitigation of seismic motion
Mountain formation
Orogeny
Seismic hazard
Striation
Notes
References
External links
Fault Motion Animations at IRIS Consortium
Aerial view of the San Andreas fault in the
Carrizo Plain, Central California, from "How
Earthquakes Happen" at USGS
LANDSAT image of the San Andreas Fault in
southern California, from "What is a Fault?"
at USGS
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somewhat larger
than the official balls used, and livelier, using strands
of shoe rubber for the core.
The balls had a four piece
cover all equal, with each
point of the cover meeting, and
sewn together. Like quartered
Orange peels. (we'll get to that
later)
It was also common for a kid to unravel their mother's woolen stockings for
winding a ball, then go to the
village shoemaker and get him
to cut out with his knife, four
pieces of leather to sew on for
a cover. Waxed ends were used
to sew the four pieces of
leather on the ball. The boy
that had a pull with the
shoemaker and could get him to
sew the cover on was the most
popular boy in that section of
the country.
The illustration
to the left shows the shape of
one of the quarters used for
the cover which today is
commonly referred to asnamed Harry Ross, maker
of the "Ross" Ball.
History fails to
attribute the inventor of the
two piece “figure 8” cover.
Some historians claim it was
first developed by a
shoemaker’s son named Ellis
Drake, who supposedly put the
design together with some of
his father’s scrap leather in
an effort to create a more
resilient cover. Others,
including Al Reach, give credit
to Colonel William A. Cutler,
who may have invented
the
familiar stitching in 1858 and
sold it to one of the first
baseball manufacturers, Harwood
& Sons. (1885 accounts by Al
Reach to the left)
The following accounts are
excerpts taken from an 1891
baseball manufacture that was "building Base Balls" with
figure 8 covers.
The making of a league ball was a most careful and skillful job, and it
required good judgment to
follow accurately the league
rules as to measure and weight
while the ball is in process of
being made. Working by a | {
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between her legs.
Siegler then testified that
the physical examination revealed a fresh tear posterior to the anus containing
frank blood that was an inch and a half in length.[5] She observed Doe=s injured area with both a colposcope and with the naked eye. Siegler testified that State=s Exhibit 11 was a photograph of the genital area of Doe, and that it
showed a tear that was very close to the entrance of the anus. Siegler
testified that it was significant that there was a tear in that area, as
positive findings are found in less than 10% of examinations. Siegler testified that the tear was
consistent with Doe=s history of
sexual assault, although that type of injury was consistent with blunt force
trauma, which could be caused by things other than a male penis.
Estes testifiedhad been
dispatched on June 5 in the evening on a report of possible sexual assault that
had occurred on June 4, and that the alleged victim was Doe. Officer Tofte testified that she took Doe to
the hospital, waited while the exam was performed, and then took Doe to the
child advocacy center, where Tracy Anderson of CPS interviewed Doe. Officer Tofte stated that Doe=s interview was recorded and that she watched the interview through a
two-way mirror. Based on Doe=s statement and the medical exam results, she obtained a search
warrant, served the warrant at Banks=s residence, and arrested him.[7]
Officer Tofte testified that
after she arrested Banks, she Mirandized[8]
him and then obtained a videotaped statement.
Tofte further testified that she did not threaten, coerce, or abuse
Banks, nor promise him anything or deny him water | {
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are likely literary creations
of Lutheran theologian Johann Valentin Andreae
(1586–1654). However, they inspired much
public interest, with various individuals
coming to describe themselves as "Rosicrucian"
and claiming that they had access to secret,
esoteric knowledge as a result.A real initiatory
brotherhood was established in late 16th-century
Scotland through the transformation of Medieval
stonemason guilds to include non-craftsman:
Freemasonry. Soon spreading into other parts
of Europe, in England it largely rejected
its esoteric character and embraced humanism
and rationalism, while in France it embraced
new esoteric concepts, particularly those
from Christian theosophy.
=== 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries ===
The Age of Enlightenment witnessed a process
of increasing secularisation of European governments
and an embrace of modern science and rationality
within intellectual circles. In turn, a "modernist
occult" emerged that reflected varied ways
in which esoteric thinkers came to terms with
these developments. One of the most prominent
esotericists of thisperiod was the Swedish
naturalist Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772),
who attempted to reconcile science and religion
after experiencing a vision of Jesus Christ.
His writings focused on his visionary travels
to heaven and hell and his communications
with angels, claiming that the visible, materialist
world parallels an invisible spiritual world,
with correspondences between the two that
do not reflect causal relations. Following
his death, followers would found the Swedenborgian
New Church, although his writings would influence
a far wider array of esoteric philosophies.
Another major figure within the esoteric movement
of this period was the German physician Franz
Anton Mesmer (1734–1814), who developed
the theory of Animal Magnetism, which later
came to be known more commonly as "Mesmerism".
Mesmer claimed that a universal life force
permeated everything, including the human
body, and that illnesses were caused by a
disturbance or block in this force's flow;
he developed techniques which he claimed | {
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73 Stat. 4),
by—
(A)
ceding to the
State of Hawaii title to the public lands formerly held by the United States,
and mandating that those lands be held as a public trust for 5 purposes, 1 of
which is for the betterment of the conditions of Native Hawaiians; and
(B)
transferring the
United States’ responsibility for the administration of the Hawaiian Home Lands
to the State of Hawaii, but retaining the exclusive right of the United States
to consent to any actions affecting the lands included in the trust and any
amendments to the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, 1920 (42 Stat. 108, chapter
42) that are enacted by the legislature of the State of Hawaii affecting the
beneficiaries under the Act;
(22)
the United
States has continually recognized and reaffirmed that—
(A)
Native Hawaiians
have a cultural, historic, and land-based link to the aboriginal, indigenous,
native people whoexercised sovereignty over the Hawaiian Islands;
(B)
Native Hawaiians
have never relinquished their claims to sovereignty or their sovereign
lands;
(C)
the United States
extends services to Native Hawaiians because of their unique status as the
indigenous, native people of a once-sovereign nation with whom the United
States has a special political and legal relationship; and
(D)
the special
relationship of American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians to the
United States arises out of their status as aboriginal, indigenous, native
people of the United States; and
(23)
the State of
Hawaii supports the reaffirmation of the special political and legal
relationship between the Native Hawaiian governing entity and the United States
as evidenced by 2 unanimous resolutions enacted by the Hawaii State Legislature
in the 2000 and 2001 sessions of the Legislature and by the testimony of the
Governor of the State of Hawaii before the Committee on | {
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as French
macarons. In addition to her selection of macarons, Chang offers
puddings such as black sesame,
salty caramel and buttermilk panna cotta. The salty caramel pudding
is her signature, and it helped to
propel her from a portable stand
in Suburban Station to her current storefront, which opened last
Wednesday.
After a member of Yelp’s Elite
Squad — a group of particularly
active reviewers — raved about the
pudding on Yelp’s website, demand
for Audabon treats escalated and
Chang could not keep up. People
waited in lines before her stand was
open for the day and everything
would sell out within three hours.
“At some point I reached my
maximum capacity. I could only fit
so much in the fridge,” Chang said.
She moved into wholesale, supplying Sweet Ending, Chapter House,
and the cafes in Rodin College
House and Williams Hall before
finally finding a place of her own.
Audabon Bakeshopeveryone was having a lot of fun.
Alumnus honored by White House for activism in Philadelphia
BY CLAIRE COHEN
Deputy News Editor
Since coming to Philadelphia 28 years ago, 1993 College
graduate Helen Gym has been
praised as one of the most
prominent city activists.
The White House seems to
agree, and on Thursday announced they will honor Gym,
a former City Editor at the
Daily Pennsylvanian, with a
Cesar Chavez “Champion of
Change” award.
This award is given to those
“who have committed them-
selves to improving the lives
of others in their communities and across the country,”
according to a White House
press release.
Gy m is a co -founder of
Parents United for Public
Education, a Philadelphia organization that gets parents
involved with the budget process to ensure that schools
receive the minimum level of
resources required to provide
proper education. She also
serves as the vice president
of Asian Americans United
and previously | {
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in her own
marriage, and a promising newcomer named
Charlie Tahan as her shy son.
Do laptops not exist
in this sun-dappled,
fairy-tale vision of
Manhattan artists
and intellectuals?
Love is Strange is the fifth feature from
writer-director Ira Sachs, whose Forty Shades
of Blue took home a Grand Jury Prize at the
2005 Sundance Film Festival. However, it is
only the second Sachs film I have seen besides
his awful 2007 movie Married Life, which
wasted several good actors on a tone-deaf
study in plastic cynicism. The Chopin strains
and winter-blanket vibe of Love is Strange suit
Sachs (who co-wrote the film with Mauricio
Zacharias) a lot better, and there is an elegant
confidence to the storytelling and visuals that
felt forced before. Next time, he just needs to
avoid forcing the premise.
Ω
The title refers to the odds against
Mine That Bird, the 2-year-old gelding
that won a surprise victorytheaters last weekend
after lying on a shelf for several years,
Hilary Brougher’s low-bar hurdler Innocence
turns out to be a nifty piece of teenage neofeminism, at least until the scratch marks
from a troubled post-production start to
emerge in the final act. Sophie Curtis gives a
nuanced lead performance as Beckett Warner
|
A high-school football team with the
longest winning streak in the history
of any sport—151 games over 13 years—has
to cope with what happens when it finally
loses a game. Based on the story of De La
Salle High School in Concord, Calif., and coach
Bob Ladouceur (Jim Caviezel), the movie
can blame sportswriter Neil Hayes’ book for
its clumsy and borderline-nonsense title
(how does a game “stand tall,” exactly?),
but the dreary parade of nonstop clichés
has to be laid squarely at the feet of writers
Scott Marshall Smith and David Zelon (the
latter | {
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raising
and farming. They are a friendly people, although often
(Continued on page 36)
Chief Watahomogie of the Havasupai
Page Seventeen
The Story Of The Pow-Wow
THE word celebration
i s ambiguous. Indians
were holding
gatherings like the PowWow
(sports and ceremonial
events) at least 2,000
years before white men
came to the shores of the
new world. They held
celebrations during colonial
times and in the southern
United States before
the Indians were gathered
together and forced to emigrate
to the then wilderness
of the Indian territory
(0 k I a hom a) on a
larger scale than in New
England.
The Pow-Wow is not
the oldest Indian celebration
nor the only one in
America.
There is one celebration
in Oklahoma called a "reunion"
by the related Choctaw
and Chickasa Indians
attending that has been
taking place three to four
days during the first week
of July on Blue river near
Tishomingo, since at least
1845. The total number
of Indians attending this
celebration has va ri e d
from 200 to 1,000 since
1900. The largest family
assisting with this reunion
celebration are descend-ants
.' of John Colbert, a
famous chief and once governor of the
Chickasa Nation.
Nearer to the Pow-Wow is the Gallup,
New Mexico, Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial.
The 1939 show will be its 19th
consecutive. There are many others, all
established for a good many years. The
Crow Tribal Fair, Crown Agency, Montana;
the Anadarko, Oklahoma, American
Indian Exposition; the Moencopi
Hopi Fair, Tuba City, Arizona; the
Apache, Arizona, and the Mescallero
Fair, New Mexico. One of the few established
in recent years is the Navajo
Tribal Fair at Window Rock, Arizona.
The roots of the Pow-Wow begin far
in the past. Indians were an integral
part of the first celebr ation ever held
at what is now Flagstaff, but for almost
fifty years whites recognized only their
participation, not the need of a celebration
strictly for | {
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is based on histories presented in the Startrek
Spaceflight
Chronology by Stan Goldstein, Fred Goldstein, and Rick
Sternbach. Please
keep in mind that this is a history developed based on canon
information
presented in various sources and filled in with logical conjecture.
The Akira
Class starship entered
service in 2364 and has quickly become the pride of
Starfleet’s next generation
of starships. Akira Class vessels are part of the
new belief that smaller,
faster, more maneuverable Starships are needed to better serve
Starfleet's, and,
by extension, the Federation's needs.
Initial
production of the Akira class
began at the ASDB Integration Facility, New Aberdeen Fleetyards,
Aldebaran, and
has since expanded to include the ASDB Integration Facility, Utopia
Planitia,
Mars where nearly 15 of these vessels enter service each year, and the
newly
revamped Atlas V Assembly Facility, Deneb V along with the Antares
Fleetyard.
Unlike many
larger starships of its
development era, with saucer separation as aprerequisite, Akira
Class vessels
to date cannot separate into two vessels. As a result, the Akira
Class no longer
has the twin hull design that has been seen in vessels such as Excelsior,
New
Orleans, Galaxy and Ambassador Classes.
This means that the primary hull and the
engineering hull are no longer separate, with no "neck" section. While
this
division of Saucer and Stardrive has been blurred, it does allow the Akira
Class
to make a smoother, less polluted entry into subspace during Warp.
Also, because
of this "no stardrive" design, the surface between the two hulls has a
much more
gradual descent and streamlined appearance; the dorsal mid-ships
section, which
slopes up where the two hulls connect. The Akira
spaceframe appears very similar
in design to that of an ancient earth sailing boat known as a
Catamaran. With
the Nacelles parallel to the main hull, they can be more | {
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atomic weapons. Suddenly,
and much faster than expected, the Soviets
had access to weapons that could wreak havoc
and destruction in the flash of an atom. What
was sparked from this was an ever-escalating
quest on both sides of the iron curtain to
build more, bigger, and more destructive weapons
of war as well as the tools to try and thwart
them.
The arms industries on both sides of the conflict
were working overtime, churning out jets,
tanks, submarines, missiles and rockets, all
with the stated intent of defending their
nations from the imminent attack expected
from the “other side”. That attack actually
came in 1950, but not in Europe as expected
but rather when North Korean forces crossed
the 38th parallel sparking the Korean War.
It is notable how seriously the use of nuclear
weapons was considered but ultimately deemed
too much of a risk of causinga global calamity.
Three years of fighting eventually ended,
the stalemate transforming into a defacto
peace. But that didn’t mean that planning
for war was suspended.
Alliances were formed on both sides; NATO
in the West, a defensive alliance born from
the wartime alliance but with a clear and
stated mission of standing up to the Soviet
Union. On the other side, The Warsaw Pact
was formed, not only as a counterweight to
NATO but also to help the USSR maintain its
own dominance over its European satellites.
When Stalin died in 1953, the wheels of change
were set in motion. The hardline authoritarianism
sponsored by Stalin began to fall to the wayside
as Khrushchev consolidated his power and tried
to liberalize somewhat. Well, at home anyway.
While the thaw took hold inside the Soviet
Union, bringing with it a flurry of internal
criticism, the same tried to | {
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Mescalero Apache girl; the Zuni
"Water Carrier's Song"; the Hopi "Buffalo
Dance"; the Zia "Crow Dance";
the "Devil Dance" of the Apaches the
Zuni "Rainbow Dance," and the "Clown
Dance" of the Hopi.
Out of this contrasting pattern of the
American Indian at his native best
came a climax that was packed with utmost
significance.
Without a word of warning the brief
seconds of silence that followed the final
acts of the dancers and chanters were
thrillingly punctuated by the famous
Hopi Indian Band playing that allAmerican
favorite, the "Stars and
Stripes Forever." A beautiful pinto
stallion pranced toward the center of
the ceremonial ring proudly bearing perfect
reminders of America's yesterday
and today; Chief Taptuka of the Hopi
tribe, magnificently garbed in white
buckskin and feathered headdress. In
his strong right hand he gripped the
oak of a staff that carried the red,
white and blue of his flag and ours.
Yes, itwas Fourth of July eve, and
what a privilege it was to say so as the
National Broadcasting Company carried
our "good night" to the people of Austria,
Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Denmark,
France, Germany, Holland, Hungary,
Italy, Norway, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland
and the Americas.
Blue Water Canyon
Continued from page 22)
and are repeated night after night. After we left the canyon
we learned the boy had died. He was popular, a great rider
and son of the chief medicine man. A big pow-wow was
held all night. N ext morning the men and boys rode up
and down the canyon, crying out their grief. The body was
dressed in finest cowboy regalia, ornamented chaps, silk
shirt, neck 'kerchief and sombrero. Two beaded and a N avajo
silver belt were placed with him, also revolver, quirt,
spurs, four pairs of pants, a suitcase of other clothes, camera
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obvious that, despite the fact that
these baby boys are not communicating
with words, they fully understand how
a communication exchange works,”
Ramsdell said.
Mark Allen, the college’s electronics
specialist, and 11 undergraduate
students have helped Ramsdell set
up the lab and prepare for its first
participants. Dr. Andrew Stuart will
evaluate hearing with the infants who
are part of the research.
8 Alliance 2011 2011 Alliance 9
In photo at left, physical therapy doctoral
students Josh Hefner, left, and Justin Pretzel,
stand on center ice before game time. Top right,
Hefner prepares ice bags for athletes.
By Crystal Baity When the Carolina Hurricanes suit up
at home on game day, two East Carolina
University physical therapy doctoral
students are part of the training team.
Students Josh Hefner and Justin
Pretzel along with associate professor
Dr. Blaise Williams and clinical assistant
professor Kevin Youngs were asked to
help conduct pre-season screenings last
summer fora research study on hockey
player injuries. The invitation came
after Jaime Holt, an ECU alumnus and
physical therapist with the official team
orthopedist of the Hurricanes, spoke to
Dr. Walt Jenkins’ ECU sports physical
therapy class. Williams also participated
in a conference hosted by Peter Friesen,
head athletic trainer and strength and
conditioning coach for the Hurricanes.
The research project led to the
students serving as home game day assis-tants
for the 2010-2011 season, where
they primarily work with Friesen and
assistant athletic trainer Doug Bennett.
Hefner and Pretzel arrive at the RBC
Center three hours before game time,
where they ready equipment, organize
bench and emergency supplies, meet
with the opposing team’s athletic trainer,
and assist with the treatment and
training needs of athletes throughout
the game, Friesen said.
Those needs may range from admin-istering
ice bags and hot packs to
cleaning up blood or taking someone
for X-rays. Hockey is fast | {
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the country tributary to Enid.
BROTHER OF
LOCAL MAN
IS RILLED
F. Johnson, of 120 South 6th street,
received word last night of the killing
of his brother, in Denison, Texas, aild
left this morningwith his wife and
children for the scene of the tragedy.
At the time of his departure he had
been unahje to learn the details of
the unfortunate affair, except that his
brother, who was a night cook in a
restaurant there was shot by the day
cook, and that the shooting was be
lieved to have been accidental.
Mr. Johnson is agent for the Okla
homa Life & Accident Insurance Co.,
with headquarters in Oklahoma City, j
but moved to Chickasha about two t
months ago to make this city his
home. His wife joined him here last
week. Because of his being a new
comer and comparatively unknown,
several hours passed before his sad
message was delivered"Links Hijinks"), he was portrayed as the mirror image of Donald: an obstinate braggart, perhaps just a little bit more arrogant, but didn't yet have his characteristic luck. In his next two appearances, "Rival Beachcombers" and "The Goldilocks Gambit", Gladstone is portrayed as merely lazy and irritable, and also gullible. The breakthrough of his lucky streak occurs in 1949, within the adventure story "Race to the South Seas!" (March of Comics #41). In that story Donald and Huey, Dewey and Louie set sails on a rescue mission from Duckburg to a remote Pacific island on which Scrooge McDuck is believed to have stranded, in an attempt gain their uncle's favor. For the same reason Gladstone is in hot pursuit as well but because he was "born lucky" as | {
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stability
than that which may be expected in a strict
realist view. Prominent English School writer
Hedley Bull's 1977 classic, The Anarchical
Society, is a key statement of this position.
Prominent liberal realists:
Hedley Bull – argued for both the existence
of an international society of states and
its perseverance even in times of great systemic
upheaval, meaning regional or so-called "world
wars"
Martin Wight
Barry Buzan
=== Neorealism or structural realism ===
Neorealism derives from classical realism
except that instead of human nature, its focus
is predominantly on the anarchic structure
of the international system. States are primary
actors because there is no political monopoly
on force existing above any sovereign. While
states remain the principal actors, greater
attention is given to the forces above and
below the states through levels of analysis
or structure-agency debate. The international
system is seen as a structure acting on the
state with individuals below thelevel of
the state acting as agency on the state as
a whole.
While neorealism shares a focus on the international
system with the English School, neorealism
differs in the emphasis it places on the permanence
of conflict. To ensure state security, states
must be on constant preparation for conflict
through economic and military build-up.
Prominent neorealists:
Robert J. Art – neorealism
Robert Gilpin – hegemonic theory
Joanne Gowa – neorealism
Robert Jervis – defensive realism
Christopher Layne - neorealism
John Mearsheimer – offensive realism
Barry Posen - neorealism
Kenneth Waltz – structural realism
Stephen Walt – defensive realism
===
Neoclassical realism ===
Neoclassical Realism can be seen as the third
generation of realism, coming after the classical
authors of the first wave (Thucydides, Machiavelli,
Thomas Hobbes), and the neorealists (esp.
Kenneth Waltz). Its designation of "neoclassical",
then, has a double meaning:
It offers the classics a renaissance;
It is a synthesis of the neorealist | {
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content comes from a Full-Text Transcript of the program.
BRIAN WILLIAMS, anchor:She was the first woman to serve as dean of
Harvard law school
and the first woman solicitor
general
, the
government
's lawyer at the
Supreme Court
. If
President Obama
has his way, she'll be just the fourth woman in
US history
to take a seat on the
Supreme Court
. She is
Elena Kagan
. She's from
New York
, and while she's never been a judge, she has that in common with a host of justices on the
court
throughout history. Today the president praised her legal mind. Now we wait and see how tough a fight this will be. We begin our coverage here tonight with our justice correspondent
Pete Williams
at the
Supreme Court
.
Pete
, good evening.
PETE WILLIAMS reporting:Brian, the president today called her a woman of many firsts, but one thing she's never been isADAMEC (Former Classmate):She would speak up and talk to the teachers as if she was much older. She knew far more history and far more of the news events that
the rest of us
had not started paying attention to.
P. WILLIAMS:After
Princeton
and
Harvard law school
, she clerked for
Supreme Court
Justice
Thurgood Marshall
, who called her "Shortie." For most of the
1990s
she taught law at the
University of Chicago
, where she met a young
Barack Obama
, a part-time faculty member. She served
President Clinton
as a lawyer and policy adviser and later became the first woman dean of
Harvard law
. She diversified the faculty, hiring prominent conservatives. But her tenure included controversy; she enforced a long-standing anti-discrimination policy there, blocking
military recruiters
from the
law school
because of the
Pentagon
's ban on
gays in the military
. Last year
President Obama
appointed her solicitor
general
, responsible for arguing the
government
's position before | {
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Kearney says that before the
weekend Auckland were the favourites in
Open grade because their team was made
up of four international players, but the
Wellington Team made up by Alan Grant,
Nigel Kearney, Kyle and Anthony Ker
pulled off the incredible feat of winning
ning the girls’ 100m, long jump and
high jump, while Gabrielle Healey took
out the girls’ 200m and 1500m, Phoebe
Gray the girls’ discus and Hugo Jones
the boys’ high jump. Also George Te
Matapuna was joint winner of the boys’
long jump.
Year 8 athletes also fared well, with Ilaria Stefanidis winning the girls’ 200m,
Lachlan Stefanidis the boys’ 100m and
200m, Eliza Squire the girls 1500m and
Phoenix Hague-Smith the girls’ Vortex.
Sports talk
with Jacob Page
That schoolboy rugby
debate blow-up
Simon Louisson celebrates with the
Dougal McLean Trophy and the top Intermediate trophy. PHOTO: Supplied
all their 12 matches and had the event
wonbefore the last three matches on the
final day.
Outstanding results were achieved
by athletes from the Newtown-based
Wellington Harrier Children’s group at
last month’s inter-zone primary schools
athletics championship.
Among the winners at the November
29 event were Xavier James in the
year 4 boys’ 100m and high jump and
George Gray in the year 5 boys’ 800m
and Vortex.
Year 7 athletes did particularly well:
Lucy Skogstad was the standout, win-
The high school rugby player poaching scenario has been a powder keg
waiting to explode for a long time.
Auckland’s St Kentigern College will
now be the scapegoats for this.
If you watched any First XV rugby
game anywhere in the country, rest
assured there were players there playing
purely for their on-field abilities.
Whether it’s players changing schools
in their own regions or players coming
from overseas, nearly every school I
can think of has enticed schoolboy
prospects to play | {
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transported in the wind
Forever cycled through the absolute zero
Warping, twisted through the mental fabrication
Stemming from star fused active biochemistry
....then spiral, centre, radiate
This new state of matter... its conscience
Track Name: Symbiosis
It is as a drug to the senses
A dependence to destroy hope and elation
To welcome the invader with open arms
Is to evolve beyond the husk of man
It survives with the pulse of two hearts
Perceive the energies with two sets of eyes
And interprets in unison with the negative charge
Embrace the philosophy with exultation
It eludes the voice that requests it to close
Dependent upon the destruction of within
Coalesce
Fuse, join
Combine
Synthesise
Unite
Coalesce
Fuse, Join
Combine
Synthesise
Divide
The conflict of the multiples
Is seen in the expansion of the one
Its born by accepting the pointless
Tied to the advancement of the selfless
It has a partner
And it accepted the one
Its name is madness
Andits symmetry
Complete
It is that same instance...
The reoccurrence of a moment
Many times endured
Each deluge an undertow
To burn for that instinct
Is to suffer a mindless delusion
Repeated patterns projected upon the fabric of all
The particles release
Interference reflecting the hologram
Receive, interpret then act upon
Thus was the process to exist
Until eyes were burnt in their sockets
To endure that desire
Is to beckon a catalyst
Emanate into everywhere
The particles release
From the windows of perception
The particles release
Emanate into everywhere
Emanate into everything
This sphere, this release
Track Name: Dissipate
It has faded, relieved of function with this decrepit capsule
Standing, gazing from afar
Shifting the light weaved into completed patterns
No need for the passage of time
No reason to reflect broken silence
Seething, writhing from the sidelines
Neglecting any valour it owes to its species
The decipherer of the coded fantasy
It needs only to avoid making its | {
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degree of liberty retained even under septennial
elections, and all the other vicious ingredients in the
parliamentary constitution, we cannot doubt that a reduction of
the period from seven to three years, with the other necessary
reforms, would so far extend the influence of the people over
their representatives as to satisfy us that biennial elections,
under the federal system, cannot possibly be dangerous to the
requisite dependence of the House of Representatives on their
constituents. Elections in Ireland, till of late, were regulated
entirely by the discretion of the crown, and were seldom
repeated, except on the accession of a new prince, or some other
contingent event. The parliament which commenced with George II.
was continued throughout his whole reign, a period of about
thirty-five years. The only dependence of the representatives on
the people consisted in the right of thestation which requires the use of it. The
period of service, ought, therefore, in all such cases, to bear
some proportion to the extent of practical knowledge requisite to
the due performance of the service. The period of legislative
service established in most of the States for the more numerous
branch is, as we have seen, one year. The question then may be
put into this simple form: does the period of two years bear no
greater proportion to the knowledge requisite for federal
legislation than one year does to the knowledge requisite for
State legislation? The very statement of the question, in this
form, suggests the answer that ought to be given to it. In a
single State, the requisite knowledge relates to the existing
laws which are uniform throughout the State, and with which all
the citizens are more | {
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instead of the other
way around.
The counterpart of the Greek god Hephaestus,
Vulcan belongs to the most ancient stage of
Roman religion; dating all the way back to
king Titus Tatius, whom would have alters
constructed to honor the deities, Vulcan included.
Vulcan is associated with both the destructive
and the fertilizing power of fire; said to
be the smith of the gods and patron deity
of any trade involving an oven from bakers
to smiths.
Vulcan is still honored in the tradition of
erecting statues in his likeness, such as
in Sheffield, an English city famous for its
steel-making, where he sits proudly upon the
town hall.
5.
Vesta: Goddess of Home, Hearth and family,
Patron of Rome
Symbolized by the sacred fire that burned
at the hearths of her temples, Vesta was the
virgin goddess of home and family, bearing
close resemblance to that of her Greek counterpart,
Hestia.
Vesta'simportance is indicated by the prestige
of her devoted priesthood, the Vestal Virgins;
the only full-time priests of Rome.
Considered both the oldest and the youngest
of the gods, she was very beautiful and garnered
the attention of Apollo and Neptune both.
She would, however, plead to Jupiter to be
permitted to keep her virginity.
When Jupiter agreed, she became overjoyed
and took care of his home, and hearth, from
hence forth; thusly establishing her roll
in the pantheon.
Vesta is always shown as a fully-clothed woman
in the company of her favorite animal, the
ass.
She is often shown holding a kettle to represent
the hearth, and cut flowers to symbolize domesticity.
The protector of Rome's homestead, Vesta alone
was granted the honor of full time clergy
devoted solely to her rites.
4.
Mars: God of War and Justice, Patron to the
Roman Legions
Serving as the god of both | {
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to remove a
voter's name from the list and that
person chooses to vote after being
inactive, the vote will still count and
the registration is maintained. This
is where Flynn disagrees.
While be is disappointed in the
results of the recount, Flynn staled
that he was unsure if he would per-
sue the matter further. He also stated
that he only wanted to make sure
that everything was fair for
everyone.
He considers the narrow margin
of defeat against a 12-year incumbent a victory.
Family tree extends throughout
this neighborhood of friends
by JASON TOMASZEWSKI
News-Times reporter
There are people in this
world who have very large
families.
Often times they need to
rent party centers because
they can't fit the entire family in one home.
This is the case for Virgina
Jones of Amherst
However, the unique thing
about her "family" is that
many of the people are not
related to Jones by blood or
marriage Theyare simply a
group of very kind people
who help to look after the
kind woman.
"There is a gentleman who
lives across the street who
mows the lawn and rakes the
leaves," stated Jones. "There
is a woman down the street
who comes and tends to the
gardening. In the winter one
of the neighbors cornea and
clean the driveway."
Jones also has a neighbor
who picks her up and drive*
her to her water walking
This all seems wonderful,
but this group of people on
Valley Drive really showed
their worth when diaaster
tbe home of the
into the basement According
to Jones the water created a
large hole in the floor to the
basement
"I didn't know what to
do," stated Jones. "I called
911, and then ran across the
street to get some help. I
didn't know where the main
faucet was so I couldn't shut
off the water."
Luckily for Jones her
neighbor across the street | {
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198.
199.
200.
201.
202.
203.
204.
205.
206.
207.
208.
209.
210.
211.
212.
213.
214.
215.
216.
217.
218. vii
219. ii
220.
221.
222.
223.
224.
225.
226.
227.
228.
229.
230.
231.
232.
233.
234.
235.
236.
237.
238.
239.
Communications Secretary Martin Andanar said he has asked National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. to investigate the alleged ouster plot.
ADVERTISEMENT
Robredo resigned from the Cabinet after she was ordered by Duterte to desist from attending Cabinet meetings due to irreconcilable differences.
Duterte later said he asked Robredo to stop attending the meetings owing to allegations that she has joined protests against him, an accusation the vice president vehemently denied.
Robredo has criticized Duterte’s support for the burial of the dictator Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani, as well as the administration’s bloody war on drugs, which has claimed over 6,000 lives. JE/rga
Read Next
EDITORS' PICK
MOST READ | {
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Latinos.
Dr. Rivas-Rodriguez spearheads
the effort to ensure that the
contributions of
Mexican-Americans
will not be forgotten.
She and her staff at the
University of Texas at Austin
have interviewed hundreds of
World War II veterans-with key
parts of their oral histories
published in this book.
We have this fantastic photo of
these five brothers
around
their little mother on the
couch
and
all of them in their uniform.
And I think that's been the
amazing thing...is just to
realize that...um...you know,
these families gave so much and
did so much and put
up with so much!
And came out all
the better for it."
"It's the adventure
of your life good or bad..."
Pete Dimas is named
for his father,
a World War Two veteran who
spent time in a German POW camp.
His dad's stories inspired Pete
to produce his own documentary
about Post 41.
"Ifree.
Because of them our
nation lives..."
A nation's gratitude expressed
in both public and private
ways...
across the generations:
"This is a little essay
that my little grandson,
Michael Thomas Murphy wrote."
"My grandpa is a proud American
who served his country
bravely."
"He is an American hero because
he was in World War II
as an Air Force pilot.
He was one of the only Mexican
American pilots in the war."
"this love of this nation that
didn't love them for so long
is just amazing to me.
It's just amazing...
So, I know.
I'm getting all upset.
But you know, it's true."
♪
"The fathers are
proud of what their kids did.
My dad was... he was a man.
He thanked me.
He thanked me for
what I had done.
Imagine him thanking | {
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E-text prepared by David Clarke, Martin Pettit, and the Project Gutenberg
Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from digital
material generously made available by Internet Archive/American Libraries
(http://www.archive.org/details/americana)
Note: Images of the original pages are available through
Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
http://www.archive.org/details/ifyesperhaps00halerich
IF, YES, AND PERHAPS.
Four Possibilities and Six Exaggerations, with Some Bits of Fact.
by
EDWARD E. HALE.
Boston:
Fields, Osgood, & Co.,
Successors To Ticknor and Fields.
1869.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by
Ticknor and Fields,
in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District
of Massachusetts.
University Press: Welch, Bigelow, & Co., Cambridge.
DEDICATION.
I dedicate this book to the youngest of my friends, now two hours old.
Fun, fact, and fancy,--may his fresh life mix the three in their just
proportions.
MILTON, June 6, 1868.
PREFACE TO THE THIRDpossibility? Surely it is in the word PERHAPS.
"What of a fact?
"Surely it is YES.
"What of an exaggeration? Why, it is that which would be true If it
had not been overstated. Our title then, clearly, is
"PERHAPS, YES, AND IF."
I see that the critics would have been better satisfied with this.
But, on the principle of the little elephants sacrificing
themselves in the passage of a river, Mr. Fields and I determined
| {
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goods.
The third-year Sports Science and
Management (SSM) student bagged
the equaliser in the 2015 Southeast
Asian (SEA) Games finals against
neighbours and traditional rivals
Malaysia. The game ended with the
countries drawn at 2-2 after 70 minutes played and a penalty shoot-out
ensued, but the Republic eventually
lost 3-4 on penalties.
“Scoring the equaliser was definitely a highlight but my proudest
moment was the first time I played
for Singapore,” said the 23-year-old
centre forward, who has been playing hockey for the last 13 years.
Making the switch
Goh has come a long way since he
picked up his first hockey stick when
he was 10. At 20 years old, he was
handed his first international cap
during the Asian Games qualifiers in
Bangladesh.
But his versatility was put to the test
when the former Raffles Junior College player was asked to compete in
unfamiliar territory for last month’s
SEA Games— indoor hockey.
Indoor hockey made its debut in
last month’s Games, held from 19 to
30 Aug in Kuala Lumpur. Unlike field
hockey, which is played on an artificial turf field with 11 players on each
team, the six-a-side indoor hockey
is played on a parquet or synthetic
court, with downward sloping sideboards around the playing area.
Goh said: “At first, I was bit apprehensive having not played it (indoor
hockey) before. I thought it was a
lesser version of field hockey.
“But after the first few training sessions, the fast nature of the game got
me hooked."
Despite being a seasoned hockey
player, the Hall 16 resident took no
shortcuts and trained hard four times
a week – each session lasting four
hours or more.
On the challenges of picking up this
variant of the sport, Goh said indoor
hockey requires players to remain low
throughout the | {
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journey was far from complete,
that the exile would return to Wraeclast
and they were both still on the path
to prove themselves to the First Ones.
Where the story began is where the story returns;
again in the riverways along the King’s Road
did Exile meet Ezomyte. Though the world had changed
their bond of blood had not.
The Karui said little but he spoke of a new foe,
one who was once a mortal man
who gave himself to Craiceann,
First of the Deep,
now known as the Lord of Salt and Scale,
the Brine King Tsoagoth!
Upon the ‘Black Crest’ did they sail
to the reef that was his throne.
Einhar redoubled his resolve;
the First Ones would surely find him worthy
when he slew this self-proclaimed King of Brine!
Just as Craiceann teaches us to watch the tides
did the battle begin in earnest;
eachman striking and retreating
like the ebb and flow of the waves.
The First of the Deep teaches us
to seek no shelter but ourselves,
and so it was ultimately these two unyielding survivors
who withstood and cracked the King’s shell,
scattering his crustacean children
to the depths of Tsoatha.
During this time, many gods
in the forms of beasts
would have their blood spilled
and their divine soul consumed.
Abberath, the Cloven One,
Ryslatha, the Puppet Mistress,
Gruthkul, Mother of Despair,
all fell to these growing legends
survivors of Wraeclast,
and slayers of gods!
But there was another deity
who gave herself to the First of the Night, Fenumus.
She, too, had once been mortal,
before she was Arakaali, Spinner of Shadows.
But this spider queen did not follow
the lessons of the First Ones;
she was not worthy of the power
she now wielded!
The Exile and Einhar, together vowed
to annihilate this | {
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Matter of Princivil (2020 NY Slip Op 02032)
Matter of Princivil
2020 NY Slip Op 02032
Decided on March 25, 2020
Appellate Division, Second Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on March 25, 2020
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department
ALAN D. SCHEINKMAN, P.J.
WILLIAM F. MASTRO
REINALDO E. RIVERA
MARK C. DILLON
RUTH C. BALKIN, JJ.
2019-09706
[*1]In the Matter of Rony Princivil, a suspended attorney. Grievance Committee for the Tenth Judicial District,petitioner; Rony Princivil, respondent. (Attorney Registration No. 2864288)
DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDING instituted by the Grievance Committee for the Tenth Judicial District. The respondent was admitted to the Bar at a term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in theAD3d 23), based upon unrelated charges. By decisions and orders on motion of this Court dated November 3, 2016, and February 6, 2019, the respondent's first and second motions for reinstatement were denied.
Catherine A. Sheridan, Hauppauge, NY (Nancy B. Gabriel of counsel), for petitioner.
PER CURIAM
OPINION & ORDER
.On August 8, 2019, the Grievance Committee for the Tenth Judicial District personally served the respondent with a notice of petition and a verified petition, both dated July 31, 2019, and duly filed those papers with this Court together with an affidavit of service. The verified petition contains six charges of professional misconduct, which allege, inter alia, that the respondent, a suspended attorney, practiced law in a jurisdiction in violation of the regulation of the legal profession in that jurisdiction, failed to | {
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of business and professor of
finance in the Spears School of Business.
She also serves as director of NESI’s
Energy Policy Center.
Research at Oklahoma State University • www.research.okstate.edu
29
The
Possibilities
in Plants
D
Canna lilies
PHOTOS BY KEVIN MCCROSKEY
iscovering her interest for
science at an early age, Dr.
Jeanmarie Verchot found
herself in love with biology. Now at a
milestone in her career, that interest has
not changed.
As an associate professor in the
department of entomology and plant
pathology at Oklahoma State University,
her research has always included tissue
culture in a strategy to control diseases
in agriculture. During her career, she has
looked at everything from carrots and
celery to tobacco, corn and wheat, but
her current efforts focus on one of the
world’s most widespread landscape plant:
canna lilies. She focuses on perfecting
the method of tissue culture that
converts virus-carrying canna lily tissues
Cowboy Technologies helps
propel OSU start-ups to success
As the finalto our community,” he says. “This project
is one great example of the effectiveness
ment and sources co-funding partners
of that process. It’s a win for all parties
for each stage of development.
involved.”
“We are excited to be working with
David Purdie
Jeanmarie to commercialize her technology,” says Steve Wood, Cowboy Tech-
Research at Oklahoma State University • www.research.okstate.edu
31
Liuling Yan, an associate
professor in wheat molecular
genetics, has been named the
2012 recipient of the James A.
Whatley Award for Meritorious
Service in Agricultural Sciences.
PHOTO / TODD JOHNSON
Yan named 2012 OSU
Whatley Award recipient
Oklahoma State University’s Liuling
Yan has been named the 2012 recipient of
the James A. Whatley Award for Meritorious Service in Agricultural Sciences.
The award was initiated in 1982. It
is presented annually to the top young
scientist in OSU’s Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources.
An OSU faculty member since 2006,
Yan holds the | {
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The Tanquists
served with the American Baptists
in the Naga Hills from 1912 to
1948.
Centennial tapes, files from each
of the conference churches (some
now extinct), annuals from the
Baptist General conference dating
back to 1888 fill several shelves.
Hundreds of old Sunday school
papers ("Our Little Folks,"
"Youth Today"), unpublished
manuscripts and diaries of some
of the early men of the confer-ence,
minutes from early plan-ning
sessions, records from the
seminary and college, old scrap-books—
all these are part of the
Bethel archives and part of Tan-quist's
responsibility
"When I look back, it looks like
a lot of work," Tanquist laughed,
"but when you're in it, it doesn't.
When I'm down here the time flies;
it's never wearisome."
The purpose behind his work is
this: to conserve the history of the
Baptist General conference, its
background and historical matters
of interest to coming generations.
"There are probably more classi-cal
definitions," Tanquist said, "but
the CLARION Page 3
I thinkthe archives are for re-search
on the part of any respon-sible
person." They are open by
request to such a person.
Does he enjoy the work "sort of
hidden away?" "Indeed, indeed,"
he says with the usual Tanquist
twinkle in his eye.
Seniors Attend
English Event
Representing Bethel at the ninth
annual conference for English ma-jors
in Minnesota private colleges
held last weekend at Macalester
college were five seniors: Elizabeth
Carlson, Marcia Cecil, Carole Lund-quist,
Joan McNaughton and Karen
Neslund.
This year's program, organized
around the works of Joseph Con-rad,
featured presentation of pap-ers,
discussion groups, speakers
and an opportunity to meet stu-dents
from the fifteen colleges rep-resented.
Main address of the conference
was given on Friday evening by
Paul L. Wiley, professor of English
at the University of Wisconsin.
His topic was Conrad: the Sense
of the Story."
Bethel's participants discussed
"Destiny in Lord Jim—Conquered
or Conquering?" on Saturday mor-ning.
A luncheon at 1 p.m. in the
student union cafeteria officially
closed | {
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the agreement is
accomplished, affirming that security will be established in the neighborhood
and families will return to their home.
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13951229000138
------
South Asia
26 ISIS militants and weapons depot eliminated in East
of Afghanistan
Mon Mar 20 2017
At least twenty six militant affiliated with the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terrorist group were eliminated along
with a weapons depot of the group in East of Afghanistan.
The 201st Silab Corps of the Afghan National Army
(ANA) forces said the militants were killed in the past 24 hours in the
vicinity of Kot district.
The source further added that the operations were
conducted by the Afghan Commandos and with the support of the air force.
The Afghan security forces and the local residents did
not suffer any casualties during the operations.
This comes as the Afghan forces are busy conducting
clearance operations under the nameof Shaheen-25 operations which were
launched more than one ago to suppress the growing insurgency of ISIS terrorist
group in Nangarhar province.
The operations led by 201st Silab Corps of the Afghan
National Army (ANA) forces were launched after receiving approval from the
national security council of the country.
This comes as the officials were concerned that the
loyalists of the terror group are attempting to expand their foothold in
Nangarhar and turn the province into their regional operational base, forcing
the Afghan officials as well as the US administration to resume airstrikes
against the group.
The apex court on December 7, 2016 upheld the three
militants’ death penalty endorsing a previous High Court verdict in February
this year that had validated a lower court judgment handing them the capital
punishment.
Bangladesh Supreme Court Sunday upheld the death sentence
of banned Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami’s former | {
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the
alliance and, with their continuing
support, the committee could plan
the way forward with confidence.
A Bowls Drive was played in
dropping
temperatures
and
fortunately all ends were completed
before the appearance of rain. Barry
Woods presented prizes donated
by Cabrera to the winning team
of Roy Savage, Sue Mannall, Paul
Cartwright and Roy Tonkin. He
then closed the event by thanking
the organisers Ian Brewster and
David Jenkins, the bar staff, and all
who had helped to make the event
a success.
Report by Ian Brewster
the grumpy old
men of los
gallardos
Greetings from God's little waiting
room. I hope that you all survived
the little vesper that blew through
the area last week; it almost kept
me awake that night!
We have another candidate, along
with Clarence (Noah) and Cyclops
(Wallace) for the 20/20 vision
stakes, Trucker Tel. As we were
driving towards Asprodalba last
week, we were chatting about the
money that was being spent on our
localby
Sevilla last night.
A single goal from Xavi in the 63rd minute at the
Sánchez Pizjuan was not enough to keep Barça in the
competition after the 1-2 defeat from the first leg at the
Camp Nou.
Barcelona were the superior side on the night, but
Sevilla absorbed the pressure well only allowing the
single goal thanks greatly to Palop in the Sevilla goal.
The giantkillers Alcorcón who famously knocked
Real Madrid out of the competition last season, were
themselves put out by Racing, and Deportivo have
Simao opened the scoring and closed it too
with a dramatic final goal. They now meet
Celta in the quarter finals.
In the other second leg game played on
Thursday, Mallorca go through after beating
Rayo 3-1 and overturning the 2-1 from
Vallecas. The winning goal from Victor
came in injury time.
The former World Rally champion
finished the race two | {
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Matter of Hardy (2019 NY Slip Op 01705)
Matter of Hardy
2019 NY Slip Op 01705
Decided on March 7, 2019
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided and Entered: March 7, 2019
[*1]
In the Matter of BRETTNY ELAINE HARDY, an Attorney.
(Attorney Registration No. 4594586)
Calendar Date: March 4, 2019
Before: Lynch, J.P., Clark, Devine, Rumsey and Pritzker, JJ.
Brettny Elaine Hardy, Oakland, California, pro se.
Monica A. Duffy, Attorney Grievance Committee for the Third Judicial Department, Albany, for Attorney Grievance Committee for the Third Judicial Department.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Per Curiam.
Brettny Elaine Hardy was admitted to practice by this Court in 2008 and lists a business address in San Francisco, California with the OfficeStrategies Against Architecture IV, is the fourth album in the archival compilation series by Neubauten and collates the band’s output from 2002-2010, a period which saw Einstürzende Neubauten release Perpetuum Mobile (2004 / Mute), embark on the “Musterhaus” series (finalised in 2007), the release of Grundstück (CD & DVD, 2005), Palast der Republik (DVD, 2006), Alles wieder offen (2007) and their most recent release The Jewels (2008).
During this time, the band began their groundbreaking series of ‘Supporter Albums’.
For these releases, the band, via neubauten.org, engaged fans in a subscription model that entirely financed several releases and gave the ‘Supporters’ unprecedented exclusive access to the recording process.
The Strategies Against Architecture IV double disc release includes material from the band’s deeply symbolic appearance at Berlin’s Palast der Republik - the | {
"pile_set_name": [
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its facts.
Officer Guerra testified that the gun was found lying in the center of the truck's
seat in the same location where appellant had been sitting. Guerra testified that the
plastic wrapper containing the crack cocaine was in the crevice between the seat
cushions, approximately two inches from the gun. Thus, there was evidence to
support jury findings that the cocaine was conveniently accessible to appellant, that
it was on the same side of the car as the accused, and that it was found in an enclosed
space (the car).
Officer Guerra added that appellant raised his body, turned, and was moving
around as if he were putting something underneath him. Guerra testified that
appellant reached underneath himself and then turned forward. Guerra stated that he
took strong note of appellant's movements becausethe truck had just left a known
drug house and that appellant was the only person in the truck whom he saw move.
Officer Speckman testified that he saw appellant pull his hands from behind him.
Appellant's movements thus tend to show that he was conscious of the crack cocaine
and that he placed it in the crevice of the seat in an attempt to conceal it from the
officers.
After evaluating the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, we hold
that a rational trier of fact could have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, sufficient
affirmative links between appellant and the crack cocaine found in the truck. See
King, 29 S.W.3d at 562. We hold the evidence was legally sufficient to show
appellant possessed the cocaine found in the | {
"pile_set_name": [
"FreeLaw",
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millionaire. The robbery took place
not far from St Fancras' church Just
before the shops were lighted up
. As the summer sun brings forth
myriads of living creatures, so does a
Thames fog bring out upon the dark
and apparently deserted river a vast
horde of thloves. At least a dozen of
the wharf and lighter owners complain
of losing from their respective wharves
as much as from one to six hundred
pounds' worth of coal alone every year.
The reader can learn at any river
side house frequented by tugboat men
that there are scores, literally scores, of
tugs on the river that have never
bought a pennyworth of coal for great
numbers of years. The Thames police
would tell that same reader that men
have retired on competences who have
been reported to have made their whole
fortune out of coal stolen with Im
punity on thein South Africa,
And the English traders know it.
Six months ago the Dutch established
one such co-operative concern In every
available country town. The equip
ment for trade was generous enough to
include almost everything that could
come within the ordinary demand. Tbe
prices were reasonable, , and every
burgher had a modest share in the
stock.
The advantages of this were plain
enough. Every Dutchman grasped at
them. And the death blow to foreign
traders was struck. Tet Sir Alfred
Milhcr, sending home a dispatch at this
time, ridiculed the movement and de
clared that the Dutch by challenging
British commercial enterprise were in
juring themselves. Such statements
misled no one. At the end of August
thjere was held a meeting of the vigi
lance conmittee, whereat the new men
ace to trade was discussed. Many of
the Cape delegates confessed them
selves in "absolute despair." "In Cape
Colony," they told each | {
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command of Commodore Benedict Arnold, the 1776
Battle of Valcour Island had a profound impact on the
outcome of the Revolutionary War. During the War of 1812,
the U.S. again defended Lake Champlain against invasion from
Great Britain in the Battle of Plattsburgh Bay.
The Lone Sailor statue is made of bronze, stands
approximately seven feet, six inches tall, and weighs an
estimated one thousand pounds. It is placed in the center of
a compass rose made entirely of Vermont granite. Behind the
statue are six granite slants placed in a semicircle.
Narrative descriptions of critical naval actions, and those
Vermonters who have changed the course of history in those
actions, are etched on each slant.holograms
are obtainable from only
one source in the world,
which means that any
Elite product that
doesn't display the
stickers - once the
system gets going - will
probably be counterfeit.
The first Elite
software with hologram
stickers attached should
be in the shops by mid-
September. Look out for
their first offering
entitled Kokotoni Wilf.
A creative group
comprising
programmers, graphic
artists and musicians has
broken away from its
parent company, Softek
International, to form an
independent division.
Called The Edge, it's
already boasting four new
titles, two of which -
Starbike and Psytraxx -
are designed for the
Spectrum.
Costing £6.95,
Starbike is described as
taking place in a space
arcade setting; your
mission being to pick up
aliens and transport
them from planet to
planet. The other, and
certainly the more
interesting, package,
Psytraxx, uses a software
technique dubbed
'synergy' which,
according to The Edge's
Marten Davies, "is a
method of shovelling as
many screens as possible
into a game." And it
seems to work as you'll
find an amazing 1026
rooms in it! | {
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} | 42,159,993 |
of the Marion County Area
by Glen Lough (1969)
(This citation on West Virginia courtesy Dave Cain.)
Another of many examples, this one, collected by James
Mooney (1861-1921), tells of the visit of very tall
people from the west:
James Wafford, of the western Cherokee, who was born
in Georgia in 1806, says that his grandmother, who
must have been born about the middle of the last
century, told him that she had heard from the old
people that long before her time a party of giants had
once come to visit the Cherokee. They were nearly
twice as tall as common men, and had their eyes set
slanting in their heads, so that the Cherokee called
them Tsunil´ kalu´, "the Slant-eyed people," because
they looked like the giant hunter Tsul´ kalu´. They
said that these giants lived far away in the direction
in whichthe sun goes down. The Cherokee received them
as friends, and they stayed some time, and then
returned to their home in the west...
Dancing Figures Found on a Copper Plate in Union
County, Illinois.
This kind of recorded tradition did not start with
Mooney, rather beginning early in American history.
During the Colonial and post-Colonial era, the
information seekers were keen on gathering as much
knowledge of the forgotten past as feasible through
native sources. Some of it was woven into romantic
tales including verse, but the main of it went into
records, which, like the accumulation of earth and
debris over ancient village sites, became buried in
the musty stacks of old libraries-considered to have
no real "substance" in the emerging field of the white
man's science.
Of the very early history of the region which now
embraces Lake County but little can be | {
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al-
most every law book as it was issued.
This will form the nucleus of the Os-
wego county law library, as before his
death the colonel announced that he
would give his collection to the Bar
association, providing that adequate
funds could be secured to keep it up
to date.
Colonel Robinson until two weeks
ago never had a sick day. He was
84 years old and never wore an over-
coat, and until late years no gloves.
He daily arose at 5 o'clock and walked
several miles before breakfast. He
was the leading consulting lawyer of
his period, and in his active practice
accomplished a reputation beyond those
of the present period. He never took
part in politics, but was once a police
commissioner.
Sought Gold Three Years
He was born in Mexico in 1829, the
son of Orville Robinson, who was also
a noted local lawyer. He was gradu-
atedfrom Mexico academy and then
studied law with his father. When
gold was discovered in California
young Robinson was one of the first
forty-niners and was successful in his
quest after three years' hard work. He
then opened a law office here and had
since been in practice, except for the
period when as colonel of the 184th
New York volunteers, he went to the
front in 1862.
He was a member of Post O'Brien,
G. A. R., and president of the 184th
Reunion association. He was also a
member of the Oswego lodge, No. 127, F.
and A. M. He is survived by two
cousins, Mrs. Elsie Hollan of Jersey
City and Frank C. Thomas of this city.
Colonel Robinson had alsways been
rated as one of the wealthiest men in
the city. | {
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levels, the entire school will participate.
Students will design two mission patches to be worn in
space – one created by kindergarteners through third
graders, the other by fourth through eighth graders.
The Open Window School expects to hear what experiment has been selected to be tested in the International
Space Station in December. Although no official launch
date has been set at this time, Mission 9 will launch
sometime this spring.
Allison DeAngelis: 425-453-4290; [email protected]
In the wake of two shootings in the past 16 months
at Northwest college
campuses, Bellevue College
is in the process of reassessing and implementing
new security measures that
it hopes will help increase
safety while maintaining
the open, unencumbered
feeling of a community college campus.
The school notes it has
many safety measures and
contingencies in place,
including an alert system
and partnerships with the
Bellevue fire and police
departments along with the
North East Kingexemption that allowed
the parking requirement
to be waived for existing
buildings.
Due to a lack of clarity
around the definition of
“existing building” since the
1998 ordinance, the parking exemption has been
inconsistently applied, the
city reported. As a result,
the Main Place Apartments,
One Main and Borgata
developments received an
exemption they should not
have been subject to.
The mistake caused a deficit of 24 parking stalls, the
new ordinance shows, but
29 on-street parking stalls
added between Northeast
First and Fourth streets
over the last few years have
alleviated the deficit.
Under the ordinance
October 9, 2015 [5]
Brewpub planned for Spring District
BY ALLISON DEANGELIS
BELLEVUE REPORTER
adopted Oct. 5, the city
clarified that any building
in existence or vested in
as of Dec. 31, 2006 will be
allowed the exemption. The
Main Place Apartments,
One Main and Borgata developments were grandfathered in, and will not need
to construct new parking.
The new ordinance was
not without discussion, and
underwent three | {
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for 1964. The
Jobs Wfer college students oppor-tunities
to work with outstanding
scientists in specialized fields of
chemistry, physics, and mathemat-ics.
Students completing their fresh-man,
sophomore, or Junior years
in these scientific fields are eligi-ble
for summer employment in the
Federal Service. Interested stu
dents may meet with Dr. Allen
Alexander, a member of the scien
tiflc staff, and Mr. William F.
Long of the Personnel Division.
January 14.
GROUP INTERVIEWS
Individual Interviews with these
students are not desired since tney
will have to pass the civil service
examination for Student Trainees
to be eligible for consideration.
Aside from the opportunity to
work with leaders in the scientific
field, the Naval Research lab of-fers
excellent facilities for study
to future scientists. Available re-search
tools include: a nuclear
reactor, betatron and Van de
Graaff accelerator, a very high
field magnet facility, aircraft and
ship board laboratories, radio tele-scopes,
rockets and computers.
For further information includ-ing
the time and meeting place,
students should contactthe Place-ment
Office.
French Christmas carols and 15th century music are a
part of the L'NC-0 Theater and Chorale production of "The
Nativity", the story of the birth of Christ.
Students Delve Into Problems
Of European Community Unity
BY JUDY LACKEY
Sophomore Honors Seminar, in
its second year of operation, is
designed to make students more
aware of themselves and their
world through discussions, guided
readings, and lecturers. The semi-nar
this year is divided into two
sessions. The first part, given dur.
ing the first semester, is led by
Dr. Jordan Kurland of the history
department and deals with the
economic, political and defense
policies of modern Western Eu-rope.
The second session, which will
be led by Dr. Mortimer Guiney.
will be concerned with the culture
of western Europe. The seminar
meets for two hours every other
week and carries one semester
hour of credit. Students have de-scribed
the course as "a challeng-ing
experience," and a "marvel-lous
opportunity | {
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} | 41,302,969 |
on 23
million Korean people?
In thinking
strategically it is always necessary to begin with fundamental
assumptions. In terms of the situation
in north Korea I assume the following:
·Survival
of the Kim Family Regime is the vital national interest of north Korea.
·The
strategic objective of the north remains unification under control of the DPRK
(and thus the elimination of the ROK).
·The
key condition the north requires for successful execution of its campaign plan
to unify Korea is US troops off the Peninsula (thus splitting the ROK/US
military Alliance).
·north
Korea will not give up its pursuit of nuclear weapons (it deems this is
necessary for regime survival on multiple levels from deterrence to obtaining
political and economic concessions to procuring hard currency.
·The
north will not negotiate in good faith in accordance with international
standards.
·The
north has been deterred from resuming large-scale hostilities and executing its
campaign planFebruary nuclear
test confirm that the regime is resolute in its pursuit of these capabilities
and an examination of the history of negotiations with the north reveals that
the north will use negotiations to deceive, mis-direct, extort, and manipulate
the international community for its own tactical and strategic ends.
The regime will
continue to conduct provocations to attempt to gain political and economic
concessions. It continues to strengthen
its military capabilities though with a decided emphasis on its asymmetric
strengths. However, it still retains a massive conventional military force that
can inflict an extremely high degree of destruction and suffering on the Korean
people, particularly in the Greater Seoul Metropolitan Area, the largest
population center in Korea.
Kim Jong-un,
despite having attended military school and serving in symbolic military
positions, has no significant military expertise or an understanding of the true
capabilities of the | {
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position
of "a casualty of positivist and materialist
perspectives in the nineteenth-century" and
thus reinforces the idea that Western esoteric
traditions were of little historical importance.
Bogdan similarly expressed concern regarding
Hanegraaff's definition, believing that it
made the category of Western esotericism "all
inclusive" and thus analytically useless.
== History ==
===
Late Antiquity ===
The origins of Western esotericism are in
the Hellenistic Eastern Mediterranean, then
part of the Roman Empire, during Late Antiquity,
a period encompassing the first centuries
of the Common Era. This was a milieu in which
there was a mix of religious and intellectual
traditions from Greece, Egypt, the Levant,
Babylon, and Persia, and in which globalisation,
urbanisation, and multiculturalism were bringing
about socio-cultural change.One component
of this was Hermetism, an Egyptian Hellenistic
school of thought that takes its name from
the legendary Egyptian wise man, Hermes Trismegistus.
In the 2nd and 3rd centuries CE, a number
oftexts appeared which were attributed to
Hermes Trismegistus, including the Corpus
Hermeticum, Asclepius, and The Discourse on
the Eighth and Ninth. Although it is still
debated as to whether Hermetism was a purely
literary phenomenon, or whether there were
communities of practitioners who acted on
these ideas, it has been established that
these texts discuss the true nature of God,
emphasising that humans must transcend rational
thought and worldly desires in order to find
salvation and be reborn into a spiritual body
of immaterial light, thereby achieving spiritual
unity with divinity.Another tradition of esoteric
thought in Late Antiquity was Gnosticism,
which had a complex relationship with Christianity.
Various Gnostic sects existed, and they broadly
believed that the divine light had been imprisoned
within the material world by a malevolent
entity known as the Demiurge, who was served
by demonic helpers, the Archons. It was the
Gnostic belief that humans, | {
"pile_set_name": [
"YoutubeSubtitles",
"YoutubeSubtitles"
]
} | 4,740,624 |
research and service.
Dr. David Cistola, professor
and associate dean for research, was
among 67 faculty and staff and 24
students inducted into the Servire
Society, which began in 2008.
Members must perform a minimum
of 100 hours public service during
a year.
The UNC Board of Governors
Distinguished Professor for Teaching
Awards recognizes and supports
excellent teaching at each of the 16
constituent universities in the UNC
system. Dr. Robert J. Campbell,
professor of health services and
information management, was one
of six selected at ECU for the award.
Five faculty members who
received U.S. patents in the last year
were recognized, including four
professors from the Department
of Communication Sciences and
Disorders: Dr. Michael Rastatter,
Dr. Joseph Kalinowski, Dr. Andrew
Stuart, and department chairman
Dr. Gregg Givens.
Come home to ECU.
We look forward to
hearing your news!
The College of Allied Health Sciences and ECU will celebrate home-coming
Oct. 29. Make plans to join your classmatesand look for updates
on activities in the college at www.ecu.edu/ah. Remember to send us your
news throughout the year at www.ecu.edu/cs-dhs/ah/alumni.cfm.
East Carolina University
College of Allied Health Sciences
Health Sciences Building
Mail Stop 668
Greenville NC 27858
Change Service RequestedAlliance
Published annually by the East Carolina University College of Allied Health Sciences
for alumni, faculty, staff and friends of the school. www.ecu.edu/ah
Non-Profit Org.
U.S. Posta ge
PAID
Permit No. 110
Grenvile, NC
Alliance EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES
VOL. 20, NO. 1
2011
The science behind
baby talk
Treating those returning
from war
Leadership for all
2011 Alliance 1
Welcome to a new edition of Alliance. We trust that your year has been a successful
one so far.
In spite of our continuing budget reduction concerns, the College of Allied
Health Sciences has continued to grow in enrollment, course offerings, research,
development funding, service and engagement, student leadership, degree
programs, and clinical | {
"pile_set_name": [
"Pile-CC",
"Pile-CC"
]
} | 53,009,198 |
pledged to bring about
tax reforms and put France once
more on a paying basis
His next test comes Tuesday |
when he takes the list before the
National Assembly.
Observers said he had a fair
chance of survival then to lead-
er France's 15th post-war gov-
ernment.
Pinay'i cabinet would be the
first to be headed by a right-
winger.
Robert Schumann retained his
Foreign Affairs portfolio, al-
though many deputies felt he
had surrendered too mnch of
France's sovereignty by pushing
German rearmament under the
European Army plan.
Rene Pleven, premier two gov-
ernments ago appeared In the
Ministry of Defense Post, replac-
ing ailing Georges Bldault. Most
other top posts were unchanged.
The major Importance of Pl-
nay's government still Is the split
in Gen. Charles de Gaulle's party
which allowed the new premier
to win his position. Some 27
Gaulllst deputies disobeyed a di-
rect order from their leader by
voting for Pinay.
However, none of theGaulllst
rebels won cabinet posts, al-
though theirs Is the largest Ingle
party.
Waxey Gordon's
Narcotics Ring
Claimed Smashed
SAN FANCISCO, March >
(UP) The Indictment o 23
members of an alleged narco-
tics ring here will "crack the
heart of the nation's narcotics
racket," according to U. S. Nar-
cotic Commissioner Harry J.
Ansllnger.
The 23 persons were Indicted
yesterday by a Federal Grand
Jury on evidence they supplied
millions of dollars worth of
heroin to addicts from coast to
coast.
The single Indictment cairied
the names of alleged peddlers
in New York, New Jersey, Illi-
nois, Missouri, Minnesota, Ari-
zona, Nevada, Oregon and ca-
lifornia.
According to the Indictment,
the head of the ring was Iran?
Weqler, alias Waxey Gordon,
63, former "beer baron' of Hew
York City during Prohibition
days. Wexler is now serving 25
years to life In Sing J.ng
prison.
-
Captured Red
Escorted POWs
Beyond Korea
PANMUNJOM, Korea, March 8 (UP) Tha United
Nations accused the Communists today of holding Allied
prisoners, including | {
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great place to
bring the whole whanau and start to
share stories about your history and
how things have changed over the
years. Tours are on the hour during
weekends. Visit museumswellington.
org.nz for full details.
Art as part of history
In celebration with Suffrage 125, Wellington Museum presents ‘A Cameo
Appearance,’ by Genevieve Packer,
a newly-commissioned, textile-based
artwork celebrating the achievements
of 31 prominent New Zealand women
running through 2019. Set against the
backdrop of the all-male Wellington
Harbour Board, ‘A Cameo Appearance’ questions the acknowledgement
and recognition of women within the
wider history of New Zealand. For more
information visit: www.museumswellington.org.nz
Joy is... Holidays!
Visit us online at
Cookstraitnews.co.nz
This December, Capital E is bringing the wild wonderment of children’s
imagination to life with Joy is…
Holidays!
Visit the dream house (designed
by Wellington tamariki), make joyful
decorations and hang them in the
trees, wrap and un-wrap gifts, and
set the table for a Christmasenhance
the lives of physically disabled young New
Zealanders by enabling them to participate
in sport and recreation.
Forty-three sporting codes are represented
in the nominations, recognising achievements
in 2018 up to November 30.
The evolving international feats of females
in sport has been recognised with 22 nominations from 15 sports for High Performance
Sport New Zealand Sportswoman of the
Year — the most of any category.
The 2017 winner and 2016 supreme Halberg
Award winner canoe racing champion Lisa
Carrington is in the running again.
There are 18 nominations from 12 sports for
the Sportsman of the Year Award.
The list also includes Brodie Retallick (rugby union), Codie Taylor (rugby union) and
David Andrew Liti Olympic (weightlifting),
Five-time winner Sophie Pascoe has again
been nominated for the newly named ISPS
Handa Para Athlete/Team of the Year, with
support from Paralympics NZ.
The Para swimming champion is joined by
nine others.
There | {
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]
} | 44,931,013 |
will receive
a three-year Bible Diploma. She
has no definite plans yet where she will
be doing missionary work, but wherever
it is we wish her success.
She attended the Chambersburg High
School and later entered the York School
of Beauty Culture in York, Pa. Before
coming to Huntington College, she
clerked in a store. She must like elerk-ipg
since she spends Saturdays at Wool-worth's
in Huntington, plus working
PRESENT
several hours in the kitchen each day.
Lula is a member of Dr. Meadows’
church in Chambersburg. She is an
active person in Clericus.
Lula has no favorite song hut she
likes them all. Her favorite sport is
swimming and her hobbies are sewing
and reading. She is sure that she will
miss her dear college when she leaves.
CARL EDWARD SEELY
Carl Edward Seely ("Doc” to you)
was born in the city of Huntington in
the year one thousand nine hundred
twenty-five. Hewas the third child and
youngest son of Dr. Seely, Dentist.
Doc, or “Cod” as he was known in
those days due to his indulgence in cod
liver oil, was a member of the Riley
Poets basketball team. Doc was also interested
in boxing, after his father presented
him) with a set of gloves on
Christmas, and had a small arena in his
basement. The gloves ,ntere Doc’s so he
was crowned boxing champ of the neighborhood.
In 1939 Doc started his high s hool
education at H. H. S. He was one of
the very few frosh to play varsity ball.
He produced an excellent record in football
for the next two years, but spent
most of his senior year on the bench
due to a knee injury. In high school he
also belonged to the “H” Club, Student
Council, Hi-Y, and was a class officer.
Doc | {
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seventh grade
student from Faith Christian
School. After six rounds of compe-
tition between Victoria and
Karisa, the match ended when
Karisa misspelled the word "idol"
and Victoria spelled the words
"skillet".and "tangy" correctly for
her championship.
Other school champs partici-
pating in the bee were Chelsea
Flanagan of Port St. Joe
Elementary School, Jason Price of
Sea Oats and Dunes
Garden Club News
The Sea Oats and Dunes
Garden Club will hold its next
meeting on Tuesday, February 11
at 12:00 noon ET in the c.mmu--
fnit room ,of the, VolunLter ,Fjir.e.
Department in St. Joe Beach -(t
the corner of Alabama and Court).
The hostesses will be Flora Brown
and Sandy Yarborough. It will be a
pot luck lunch with meat and
desserts furnished by members.
At the February meeting, the
members will honor the charter-
ing members and the club's 24th
Anniversary. The club was formed
and accepted into the. Florida
Federation of Garden Clubs in
1979with thirty-seven members
in attendance. Of these thirty-
seven charter members, there are
seven left.
The present District Treasur-
er, Vesta Conley, has served six
years and will be serving the dis-
trict for two riore years.
This club has been an active
club in the. past, holding three
judged flower shows, three
District Two meetings and horti-
culture meetings.
Two of the club's past presi-
dents, Barbara Mannon and Sally
Malone, have been directors. They
have had eighteen garden clubs in
- Northwest Florida in their care.
Port St. Joe Middle School, and
Jerry Causey of Wewahitchka
Middle School.
Gulf County Schools would
especially like to thank Mrs..
Lloyd, who served as the pro-
nouncer, 'Mrs. Evelyn Cox and
Stanley P. Farmer
Stanley Paul Farmer, 94, of.
Wewahitchka, died February 1 at
his home. He was born on August
23, 1908 in Roncevert, West
Virginia.
He is, survived by Bob
Kimbrell and wife Elaine, grand-
daughter Sara Jane Johnson and
grandson | {
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all to the laugh-ing
delight of the audience.
And the giggling, undressing
wards who on the sight of
handsome Frederic sing in
orchestrated symphony of
costume, movement, piano,
and voice.
As unfair as it is to pick out
individual performers, some
mention is due. Kelli McNutt
did a tremendous job toward
the teamwork of movement
as the play's choreographer.
Diane Strandquist was a mil-lion
laughs with her theatri-cal
eye movements, gestures,
and voice as Ruth, Frederic's
nurse. Amy Koelz showed off
her stunning beauty and voice
as Edith, a ward. Krista Palm-quist
cleanly reached high
notes and performed as she
sang in her lead as Mabel, the
ward who liked Frederic.
Thomas Tuttle also had a
clean performance as Frederic.
Brad Bak as the Pirate King,
Jonathan Veeriker as the
Major-General, John and
Carolyn Nordquist on piano,
Mark Granlund on animation,
the list could go on and on. It
was truly a team performance.
A dedication ceremony was held Jan. 27 forcontinue
through the summer.
Dr. C. Weldon Jones, assis-tant
professor of biology, has
been awarded a $21,000 two-year
grant from the Research
Corporation of New York to
conduct molecular and genetic
analysis of the drosophila
fruit fly. Two students are
also involved in this study of
hormones and their effect on
DNA. Research will take place
primarily this coming sum-mer.
Dr. Stephen Wheeler,, as-sistant
professor of chemis-try,
has received a Petroleum
Research Fund grant from the
American Chemical Society.
This $4,000 is designated for
work with electrochemistry
of dithiolene complexes and
will be completed at Bethel
during the summer months.
***
This past weekend, January
28-29, Bethel College was rep-resented
at the Third Annual
Wheaton College Debate
Tournament in Chicago. Ac-companied
by coach Butch
Maltby, sophomores Debbie
Van Mark and Gordon Fowler
competed against teams from
nine states. In the six rounds
of competition on the topic
"Resolved: That individual
rights of privacy are more
important than any other
Constitutional rights," Fowler
and Van Mark ended the two-day
event | {
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and understand the processes involved
in teaching.
In 1963 he was the editor of the Handbook
of Research on Teaching, which became an influential
book in educational psychology.
The handbook helped set up research on teaching
and made research on teaching important to
educational psychology.
He also was influential in the founding of
the Stanford Center for Research and Development
in teaching, which not only contributed important
research on teaching but also influenced the
teaching of important educational psychologists.
Perspectives
Cognitive
Each person has an individual profile of characteristics,
abilities and challenges that result from
predisposition, learning and development.
These manifest as individual differences in
intelligence, creativity, cognitive style,
motivation and the capacity to process information,
communicate, and relate to others.
The most prevalent disabilities found among
school age children are attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder, learning disability,
dyslexia, and speech disorder.
Less common disabilities include intellectual
disability, hearing impairment, cerebral palsy,
epilepsy, and blindness.
Although theories ofnew concepts or solutions
to symbols that help one recall and mentally
manipulate them are just a few examples of
how mechanisms of cognitive development may
be used to facilitate learning.
Finally, the psychology of cognitive development
is concerned with individual differences in
the organization of cognitive processes and
abilities, in their rate of change, and in
their mechanisms of change.
The principles underlying intra- and inter-individual
differences could be educationally useful,
because knowing how students differ in regard
to the various dimensions of cognitive development,
such as processing and representational capacity,
self-understanding and self-regulation, and
the various domains of understanding, such
as mathematical, scientific, or verbal abilities,
would enable the teacher to cater for the
needs of the different students so that no
one is left behind.
Constructivist
Constructivism is a category of learning theory
in which emphasis is placed on the agency
and prior "knowing" and experience of the
learner, and | {
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new approach.
The pioneering American psychologist William
James commented that:
Psychology is a science, and teaching is an
art; and sciences never generate arts directly
out of themselves.
An intermediate inventive mind must make that
application, by using its originality".
James is the father of psychology in America
but he also made contributions to educational
psychology.
In his famous series of lectures Talks to
Teachers on Psychology, published in 1899
and now regarded as the first educational
psychology textbook, James defines education
as "the organization of acquired habits of
conduct and tendencies to behavior".
He states that teachers should "train the
pupil to behavior" so that he fits into the
social and physical world.
Teachers should also realize the importance
of habit and instinct.
They should present information that is clear
and interesting and relate this new information
and material to things the student already
knows about.
He also addresses important issues such as
attention,memory, and association of ideas.
Alfred Binet
Alfred Binet published Mental Fatigue in 1898,
in which he attempted to apply the experimental
method to educational psychology.
In this experimental method he advocated for
two types of experiments, experiments done
in the lab and experiments done in the classroom.
In 1904 he was appointed the Minister of Public
Education.
This is when he began to look for a way to
distinguish children with developmental disabilities.
Binet strongly supported special education
programs because he believed that "abnormality"
could be cured.
The Binet-Simon test was the first intelligence
test and was the first to distinguish between
"normal children" and those with developmental
disabilities.
Binet believed that it was important to study
individual differences between age groups
and children of the same age.
He also believed that it was important for
teachers to take into account individual students
strengths and also the needs of the classroom
as | {
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other daughter to me.
He wanted her to come to France.
And he said, send her
with a careful Negro
woman, such as Isabel.
And he means Isabel Hern,
who was about 28 years old.
Isabel is pregnant, and
they don't want to send her.
So they send Sally Hemings over.
At the time she's 14 years old.
And she is the nursemaid,
or companion, to Jefferson's
10-year-old daughter.
They go across the ocean, and
she's not supposed to stay.
Isabel was supposed to come
drop Polly off, and go back
to Virginia.
When Sally Hemings comes,
she doesn't go back.
And we don't know why
she doesn't go back.
I mean, I talk in The
Hemingses of Monticello,
and little bit in
this book, about why
it would have been a
mistake to do that,
to send a 14-year-old girl
back on a ship with a bunch
of sailors for five weeks.
But she ends up
staying in Paris.
And atsome point,
Madison Hemings,
the man who was their son,
says, during that time,
my mother became Mr.
Jefferson's-- because everybody
called him Mr. Jefferson,
his grandchildren,
his daughters everybody,
particularly if they're talking
to other people--
she became Mr.
Jefferson's concubine.
And while she's there,
she and her brother
are in a place where
they have the capacity
to petition for their freedom.
Because France, even though
they had slaves in the colonies,
they didn't like
slaves in Paris.
It's amazing how people
are ashamed of slavery.
I mean, they were living on it,
they're doing all this stuff,
but they do everything
to try to play it down--
in the Constitution,
"persons held to service."
The French did the
same thing, too.
They had documents.
And they didn't
want to put the word
"slave" in these documents.
But that's what they're doing.
So they didn't want
slavery in Paris.
And everybody who petitioned
for freedom had it granted.
So they could have done that.
And at some point, | {
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companion” this is
hardly
surprising.20 As a result, on
October
1, 1981, Gaddy opened her soon-famous Patterson Park Emergency Food
Center.21
Though it started off small and was driven by Gaddy’s solicitation of
local
food vendors with her wheeled-trashcan, the Center is now run as a
non-profit
corporation. True to its humble beginnings, the Center relies on
the work of volunteers and the donations of local companies as well as
private individuals. On any given day Gaddy’s center feeds
between
50-150 people, and since she began keeping records in 1981, Gaddy
estimated
that she had served more than 100,000 families.22
While her Emergency Food Center perhaps did more to help the poor of
Baltimore than any of her other efforts, Gaddy is best remembered for
her
annual free Thanksgiving dinners. Like her other work, the
Thanksgiving
Dinner relies on donations and volunteers and was at one point carried
out at herhome. The popularity of the event, however,
necessitated
a larger location and the dinner was moved to Dunbar Middle School.
Since its inception, the crowd at the annual event grew steadily to
nearly 20,000 and requires a massive amount of donation and
organization. The
Washington Post reported in 2001 that the meal consisted of 80
tons
of food, 30,000 paper plates, 50 cases of aluminum foil, 2,000 pumpkin
pies and 100 cases of sweet potatoes. According to The
Post, the 2001 dinner relied on 3,500 volunteers who fed 20,000
people.23
In addition to her daily work at the Emergency Food Center and her
yearly
dinners, Gaddy also became involved in running a furniture bank,
renovating
and refurbishing abandoned row homes, running summer youth programs and
speaking out on the necessity of voter education. Shortly before
her death, Gaddy also became an ordained minister so that she | {
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scheme to manipulate the company into firing
Llampallas because of her sex—Blanch made a "fake" threat knowing that Kaylie would choose her
over Llampallas. We do not, however, need to decide whether Mini-Circuits could be held liable
based on Kaylie's unwitting compliance in Blanch's manipulative plan, because such is not the case
before us.
When Kaylie received Blanch's phone call, he did not take action against Llampallas based
on that threat. Instead, he summoned Llampallas to New York to investigate the situation. Kaylie
"Disappointment
stalks like a mange ridden feline
ready to disembowel little
Susie's birthday soirée,
Mrs. Jones's mah jong trist or
Nikola Tesla's 60 cycle
generator."-- says,
GoodTime.-----Josie
Cory, also the transparent voice
of Amber, the pragmatist of
Ddiaries says, "The theory behind
"brain fingerprinting" makes it
essential that there's a clear
cut motive behind the crime. To
disembowel little Susie's
birthday soirée, the
perpetrator must have had the
motive and image of the cake
stored in his/her memory.
-----
The
same with Tesla's generator.
Someone must have had a reason to
turn it into an electro healing
machine. In 1986, the Chinese
called this technology Zygomatic
VATS
Synchronization.
-----Dr.
Lawrence Farwell, calls this
technology "brain
fingerprinting," which Josie
prefers, because it's more to the
point and is the name generically
used by law enforcement and our
court system in their quest to
prove up forensic science by
utilizing evidence such as,
finger printing, DNA and "brain
fingerprinting".
-----
"Do
you get the
picture?"
-----Our
five senses, vision, audio,
taste, touch and even smells can
detect | {
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in population.
The small populations were then hunted out
by Paleolithic humans. The global warming
that occurred during the end of the Pleistocene
and the beginning of the Holocene may have
made it easier for humans to reach mammoth
habitats that were previously frozen and inaccessible.
Small populations of woolly mammoths survived
on isolated Arctic islands, Saint Paul Island
and Wrangel Island, until c. 3700 BCE and
c. 1700 BCE respectively. The Wrangel Island
population became extinct around the same
time the island was settled by prehistoric
humans. There is no evidence of prehistoric
human presence on Saint Paul island (though
early human settlements dating as far back
as 6500 BCE were found on the nearby Aleutian
Islands).
== Human way of life ==
Nearly all of our knowledge of Paleolithic
human culture and way of life comes from archaeology
and ethnographic comparisons to modern hunter-gatherer
cultures such as the !Kung Sanwho live similarly
to their Paleolithic predecessors. The economy
of a typical Paleolithic society was a hunter-gatherer
economy. Humans hunted wild animals for meat
and gathered food, firewood, and materials
for their tools, clothes, or shelters.Human
population density was very low, around only
one person per square mile. This was most
likely due to low body fat, infanticide, women
regularly engaging in intense endurance exercise,
late weaning of infants, and a nomadic lifestyle.
Like contemporary hunter-gatherers, Paleolithic
humans enjoyed an abundance of leisure time
unparalleled in both Neolithic farming societies
and modern industrial societies. At the end
of the Paleolithic, specifically the Middle
or Upper Paleolithic, humans began to produce
works of art such as cave paintings, rock
art and jewellery and began to engage in religious
behavior such as burial and ritual.
=== Distribution ===
At the beginning of the Paleolithic, hominins
were found primarily in eastern Africa, east
of | {
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building an education center to tell the stories of the names on The Wall.
FOLLOW POSTINGS FROM THIS PAGE
Enter your email address to begin following this service member.
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To locate a profile, enter information into one or more of the areas below.You do not have to fill in every box to conduct your search.
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About VVMF
Based in Arlington, Virginia, VVMF (the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund) is the nonprofit organization authorized by the U.S. Congress in 1980 to build a national memorial dedicated to all who served with the U.S. armed forces in the VietnamIn physical cosmology, the hadron epoch was
the period in the evolution of the early universe
during which the mass of the universe was
dominated by hadrons.
It started approximately 10−6 seconds after
the Big Bang, when the temperature of the
universe had fallen sufficiently to allow
the quarks from the preceding quark epoch
to bind together into hadrons.
Initially the temperature was high enough
to allow the formation of hadron/anti-hadron
pairs, which kept matter and anti-matter in
thermal equilibrium.
However, as the temperature of the universe
continued to fall, hadron/anti-hadron pairs
were no longer produced.
Most of the hadrons and anti-hadrons were
then eliminated in annihilation reactions,
leaving a small residue of hadrons.
The elimination of anti-hadrons was completed
by one second after the Big Bang, when the
following lepton epoch began.
== See also ==
Timeline of the Big Bang
Chronology of the universe
Big Bang
| {
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actively participating in international
endeavours to combat this global
issue and is a party to several international treaties,” the minister remarked.
Besides, Rana Tanveer said he
was confident that the PEC Think
Tank on Water what he called a ‘big
initiative’ would further integrate
the national efforts and response to
tackle the challenges.
Prominent Urdu poet, humorist, travelogue
writer and columnist Ibne Insha was remembered on his death anniversary on
Wednesday. Ibn-e-Insha’s real name was
Sher Muhammad Khan and he was born in
Jalandhar district of Indian Punjab in 1927.
He later migrated to Pakistan.
His poetry style was sophisticated and had
depth; but the cause of his popularity was
his humorous poetry and columns.
His most famous ghazal ‘Insha Ji Uttho’ is
a modern-day classic. Ibne Insha’s poetic
works are Chand Nagar and Dil-e-Wehshi
while travelogues are “Awara Gard Ki
Diary”, “Dunya Gol Hey”, “Ibn-e-Batoota
Kay Taaqub Main”, “Chaltay HoDr Mohammad Aslam. The
board also gave approval for the purchase
of MRI machines for Holy Family Hospital
and operation theatre equipments for the
Benazir Bhutto and District Headquarters
hospitals of the city.
comprehensive CSR plan for provision of quality education, state of art
health facilities and clean drinking
water facilities to the host communities with population of over 10,000
inhabitants,” Shamsudin Shaikh said.
“Provision of scholarship to deserving students and Thari Trainee
Engineers program is also an added
initiative for Thar Coal Block II residents,” Shaikh added.
Rizwan Tiwana was of the view
that they have gone extra mile to lay
a fibre optic cable for Thar Block II,
which was not an easy task, technically. He was of the view that Wateen
proudly owns a network of 25,000
kilometres of fibre optic cable across
Pakistan, which is being extended to
the far-flung areas of Tharparkar.
APP
APP
ISLAMABAD
RAWALPINDI
given the | {
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People v Muicela (2018 NY Slip Op 06943)
People v Muicela
2018 NY Slip Op 06943
Decided on October 17, 2018
Appellate Division, Second Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on October 17, 2018
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department
REINALDO E. RIVERA, J.P.
ROBERT J. MILLER
BETSY BARROS
FRANCESCA E. CONNOLLY, JJ.
2016-11030
(Ind. No. 453-15)
[*1]The People of the State of New York, respondent,
vLouis Muicela, appellant.
Laurette D. Mulry, Riverhead, NY (Alfred J. Cicale of counsel), for appellant.
Timothy D. Sini, District Attorney, Riverhead, NY (Elizabeth Miller of counsel), for respondent.
DECISION & ORDER
Appeal by the defendant, as limited by his brief, from a sentence of the County Court, Suffolk County (Fernando Camacho,Toremifene
Ursodeoxycholic Acid
Ursodeoxycholic Acid
Ursodeoxycholic acid or shortly UDCA is an initial component of the naturally occurring bile acid and it is produced by the small amount in the body. It is about 5% of total bile acid pool. It is used to treat the increased production of the cholesterol in the body and to control the high level of the cholesterol. Since it has immunomodulatory, cholelitolitic, choleretic and hepatoprotective properties, it can stimulate the liver to increase an output of bile, dissolve gallstones with high cholesterol content, stabilize membranes of hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. As a result of the action of UDCA on the gastrointestinal circulation of bile acids, it decreases the content of potentially toxic acids such as endogenous, hydrophobic bile acids. By having biochemical effects as reducing the | {
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to
dominate the field by making deliberate
efforts to force their female counterparts out.
Among other things, they formed male-only
professional associations and encouraged
hiring requirements that benefited men, who
were more likely to have studied math at
school and university. Male programmers also
pushed for the introduction of personality
profiles for job candidates, which were
slanted toward male applicants. Incidentally,
those same personality profiles argued that
the ideal programmer would be disinterested
in people, helping to create the stereotype of
the antisocial computer nerd so prevalent
today.
6 Firefighters
Firefighting itself began as soon as humans
started living in packed-together, flammable
houses. However, the first professional
firefighting outfit we know of dates back to
Ancient Rome, where the famously wealthy
Marcus Licinius Crassus formed his own
private outfit. Whenever there was an
outbreak of fire, his team would rush to the
scene and begin negotiations with the owner
of the property. If bothsides agreed on a fee,
they would put out the fire. It not, Crassus’s
team would simply leave, allowing the
property to burn.
Possibly inspired by Crassus, the Emperor
Augustus eventually formed his own fire
brigade, known as the Vigiles or “bucket
brigade.” Unlike Crassus and his men, the
Vigiles’ services were free. Later, firefighting
was mostly left up to the local watch, who
were often more concerned with catching
criminals than fighting fires. In 1666, the
Great Fire of London prompted English
insurance companies to form their own fire
brigades. Policyholders would be given a
badge to attach to their building. Whenever
there was a fire, local fire brigades would be
called out, but would only put out the fire if
the building was insured with the right
company . As a result, houses were frequently
left to burn until the correct fire brigade
arrived.
Edinburgh finally formed the | {
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142 skiers
that participated.
Rain mixed with snow the
night before the Jan. 29 race
caused slushy conditions on
the Lake Valentine portion of
the course. That forced race
director Brian Bohne and his
Bethel Ski Club troops to
make the race a three-loop
february 4, 1983 the Clarion
Placing 25th overall and the
first woman was Maren Wat-son,
who clocked a 69:35 to
finish well ahead of second
place Ellen Anderson of
Carleton who completed the
course in 72:22.
The top Bethel skier was
freshman Matt Simpson who
was 23rd overall with his time
of 68:58.
Many Bethel Ski Club mem-bers
were unable to race as
race pFeparations forced them
to do duty as timers or course
marshalls.
_ Palke did not feel that his
team felt any pressure from
the Royal's winning streak or
that the two defeats would
result in a letdown for his
squad.
"I hope we won't have any
letdowns," he said. "What has
happened is history andconference in scoring
with a 17.2 points per game
avPr4gq•
page 7
events
course instead of the original
two-lap race.
"The snow conditions were
a bit of a drawback," said
Bohne. "But the best of the
skiers gave us high critiques
and indicated that they would
be back for next year's race."
Walt Huemmer of St. Paul
was the first to complete the
16-kilometer race as he skied
across the finish line with a
time of 56 minutes and 26
seconds. Second place went
to John Ingdahl with a time of
56:52.
mbb, from page 8
don't know the reasons. If I
knew the reasons it (the loss)
wouldn't have happened."
Palke said a major factor
was Bethel's 37 percent shoot-ing
from the floor. Prior to the
game, Bethel had been aver-aging
over 50 percent from
the field.
Despite the loss to the
Tommies, Bethel still had a
shot at first place two nights
later when the Royals took on
Concordia. Although Bethel
led | {
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of these
fundamental emotions. A third the-
ory connects aesthetic enjoyment with
wishful thinking, iir wish fulfillment,
Cop'lnuefl on Page Two
All-College Problems
Debated At Vassar
Plans for Library
Addition Published
� ���'
Memorial Wing to Increase
Stack Space and Feature
Redding Room
Final plans for the new Quita
Woodward Memorial Wing of the
Library have been published by the
college authorities, and construction
will begin shortly. The three-story
structure is planned to contain stacks,
classrooms, office space, and a gallery
for display of art material.
Total stack space in the college li-
brary Will be greatly increased
thiough the provision in the new wing
of a standard three-tiered stackroom,
with space for 60,000 volumes. Under
the care of a special librarian and oc-
cupying a major proportion of the
basement and first floors, the stacks
will contain all books, publications and
manuscripts in the field of art and
archaeology and their allied subjects.
It is possible that the entirewith the
help of a committee composed of
Babe Black, Eleanor Wood and
Helen Macintosh, all '41, has
planned decorations to follow
the Gondolieri theme of the eve-
ning.
Bryn Mawr Portrays
Rumania at League
Rosenheim Heads Delegation
To Bucknell University
Political Parley
Leviisburg, April IS, 14, 15. �
Headed by Joy Rosenheim, '40, presi-
dent of the International Relations
Club, a group of Bryn Mawr students
represented Rumania at the Model
League of Nations at Bucknell Uni-
versity. They reported a successful
trip, both diplomatically and socially.
Joy Rosenheim served as rapporteur
at one of the conferences and also read
a paper entitled Thoughts from Gene-
va by Louise Morley, '40. Haverford
College, as France, won first prize, a
cup, for the presentation and prepara-
tion, while Temple University, The
United Kingdom, took second place.
The meeting was opened by a report
from the president of the council, a
delegate from Denmark (Cornell),
who showed the decline of | {
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the students a broader rep-
Gleuck Finds
Copper Mines
by Dr. Anton Pearson
Dr. Nelson Gleuck, rabbi, archae-ologist,
author and president of
Hebrew Union college, Cincinnati,
related to a capacity crowd at Mac-alester
college convocation on
Thursday, Jan. 23, the thrilling ac-count
of his discovery of King
Solomon's copper mines.
In locating archaeological sites
and data, Gleuck's chief tool is
the Bible. While the archaeologist
is not interested in proving the
Bible, "no well understood state-ment
in the Bible is contradicted
by archaeological discovery," he
declared.
After noting the allusion to
mineral resources available to
Israel (Deut. 8:9), he studied
every Biblical passage relating
to copper, iron, and the Kenites
("smith"). The rift of the Wady
Arabah, extending from the
Dead Sea to the Red Sea, seem-ed
to fit the required location.
A settlement must have water—
a spring, well, or cistern. Every
road and path in Palestine leads to
ancient sites. Even destroyed cities
can be identified and dated by
potteryfragments extracted from
tells—the flat mounds containing
remains of buried cities.
Styles of pottery change with
each generation and thus a pot-tery
chronology has been empiri-cally
determined, more exact than
carbon 14 with its span of 200
years plus or minus.
Gleuck paid high tribute to his
mentor, the world-renowned Dr.
Kenneth Albright, and also to
his Arab guides in the Negev,
south of Beersheba. The latter
led him to the unidentified
KHIRBET NAHAS, "copper
ruin," where Gleuck saw heaps
of slag, fragments of ore, and
remnants of ancient smelters.
An open end copper refinery was
stationed to take advantage of the
strong northwest winds. Pottery
dated the settlement from the time
of Solomon to the sixth century
before Christ.
South of the mines, Gleuck dis-covered
Solomon's sea port, "Ezion
Geber which is beside Elath on the
shore of the Red Sea in the land
of Edom." (I Kings 9:26).
He had maintained from Bibli-cal
data that the Negev | {
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high-water mark and
six lakes in Island County,
were first drafted in 1976
in response to the state
Shoreline Management Act.
It was passed by the state
Legislature in 1971 and
adopted by voters the following year.
Guidelines with advancements in science and best
management practices were
adopted in 2003 and all
municipalities, from cities to
counties, were required to
update their plans with the
new state standards.
Stewart, a specialist who
has worked on five other
updates, was hired in 2010 to
lead the county in the revision process. Over the past
two years, the document has
been worked by a technical
advisory group, the planning
commission and been talked
about in at least 15 public
meetings.
A host of issues and concerns from the community
have been broached through
the process but cries for
dedicated or reclaimed public beach accesses have been
by far the loudest.
Mike McVay, founder of
Island Citizens For Public
Beach Access, has beenleft
Waterman Field with another
Cascade Conference victory
Tuesday.
In the first half, the ball
rarely left the Lady Knights’
possession. King’s relied on
its fast forwards and quickpassing midfielders to move
around South Whidbey’s
defenders. The plan worked
as King’s hit a dozen shots
on goal in the first 40 minutes. With the Lady Knights’
offense rolling, it was a matter of time before they scored
against a depleted Falcon
defense. South Whidbey
(3-6 Cascade Conference;
Ben Watanabe / The Record
Falcon freshman Annie Lux chases Lady Knight Beth Stella in the first half Tuesday.
King’s won the Cascade Conference match with South Whidbey, 4-0.
3-7-1 overall) was without
senior defender Jenna Kaik,
who was out sick, and several
OBITUARY
Joy Lee Alice
McClellan
Joy Lee Alice McClellan
(78) passed away surrounded by family on September
28th, 2012 in Everett, Wash.
Joy was born in Neosho,
Missouri on January
6th, 1934 to Roy & Della
Slaughter. On February
12th, | {
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Clarion 1960-03-17 Vol 36 No 11
the CLARION
Volume X XXVI—No. 11 Bethel College and Seminary, St. Paul, Minn. Thursday, March 17, 1960
The Macalester college choral
readers, under the direction of
Mary Gwen Owen, will appear in
Bethel chapel at 8 p.m. Friday,
March 18.
Although there will be vocal
Warnholtz
Displays Art
Focal point of Fine Arts inter-est
on campus recehtly has been
the display of art by Dean Warn-holtz
in the student lounge area
of the college building. Art work
includes oil paintings, wood-cuts,
and silk-screen drawings. The ex-hibition
may be seen until April
1.
Artist Dean Warnholtz, from
Carleton college, Northfield, has
been associate professor of art
since 1949. He earned his bachelor
of fine arts degree from the Uni-versity
of Iowa in 1947 and his
master's degree in 1949.
In hopes of starting a perman-ent
collection, the cultural council
has purchased a print by Eugene
Larkin, "The Violinist." This ar-tistic
work was shown insixteen
major museums last fall; one copy
is in the permanent collection of
the National gallery in Washing-ton,
D.C. Walker Art center in
Minneapolis owns a wood-cut of
"The Violinist."
To expand the proposed collec-tion,
the cultural council also plans
to purchase one of the Dean Warn-holtz
compositions now on display.
appeal, this performance has vis-ual
attraction as well. They do
both total and semi-chorus work,
a type of choral reading unique in
the United States.
This group of fifty performers
was founded two decades ago by
the director, Miss Owen. The
group has traveled extensively
throughout the upper midwestern
United States.
The program will include selec-tions
by James Thurber and Carl
Sandburg. Such essays as "My
Romance" and Miss Owen's "Cas-ual
Approach to Violence" will be
performed. The light touch will be
provided by "The Beau That
Wasn't" and "Some Gaities."
Miss Owen is the chairman of
the speech department at Macal-ester
as well as the director of
the Macalester | {
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books and
other print materials,
and the largest rare book collection in
North America.
Included in the collections is the
personal library of Founder,
Thomas Jefferson,
author of the Declaration of Independence,
and a lifelong admirer of Adam Smith.
His library at the time numbered 6,487
volumes.
Mark Dimunation is chief of the Rare
Book and Special Collections Division at
the Library of Congress.
Certainly, one thing you can learn by looking
at Jefferson's library is the pervasiveness
of Enlightenment philosophy and
intellectual conversation that plays
throughout the creation of the American
government.
In fact, you could claim that Jefferson's book
collection brings the Enlightenment to America.
In 1814, the British attacked and
burned Washington.
On learning of the burning of the
capital and the loss of the 3,000-volume
Italian:
della Biblioteca del Congresso,
Jefferson offre al Congresso la propria
biblioteca in sostituzione.
E nel 1815, arriva un gentiluomo,
in una carrozza a cavalli,
portando una collezione che Jefferson
impiegòwent to Washington again.
But a second fire,
on Christmas Eve in 1851 destroyed
two-thirds of those volumes.
Through a private grant,
the Library of Congress is now
reassembling Jefferson's library,
as it was when he sold it to Congress
200 years ago.
It was the entire world
of Thomas Jefferson's mind,
the understanding of the roots of so
much of what influences American culture;
the nature of the Constitution;
the nature of the revolution;
the foundation of separation
of church and state;
the whole philosophy of politics as it
is in the United States is embedded in
that collection.
English:
One book that has survived is Thomas
Jefferson's original copy of
The Wealth of Nations.
This is the three-volume set of Inquiry
into the Nature and Causes of the
Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith.
These are books that belonged to
Thomas Jefferson.
He writes a lot about his reading but he
very rarely marks his | {
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will include people
from SMC, the Twin City Draft
Information Center, and an active
duty GI. At 1 p.m. participants
will march down University Av-enue
to the New Federal Build-ing
and encircle the building with
a massive symbolic picket line.
In the evening the New Mobil-ization
Committee is sponsoring a
sendoff rally in the Minneapolis
Armory. Buses headed for Wash-ington
will leave at that time and
early Friday morning.
SMC, which is a member of the
New Mobilization Committee seems
to be receiving significant sup-port
in its attempt to mobilize
students for the moratorium. The
Mac Community College of Mac-alester
College has voted to en-dorse
the strike and is buying
three buses to transport students
to Washington. The Minnesota
Student Association (University of
The "Magic of the South Sea
Islands" will entrance your ears
at the 9th annual Bethel Band
Pops Concert occuring tonight at
8:00 in the fieldhouse.
A South Sea Island Motiff will
set off the bandas they play
through numbers presenting sea-sonal
settings, nationalistic flavor,
holiday moods, and South Sea
Island Music.
To highlight the atmosphere of
the concert, band members will
don Island costumes during the
second part of the program.
Minnesota) has also endorsed the
strike and agreed to co-sign a let-ter
which will be sent to high
school and college student govern-ments
throughout the state urg-ing
them to support the strike.
Momentum for the November
13-15 Moratorium seems to be
building up on the same scale
nationally as it is locally. An ad
scheduled to appear in the Novem-ber
9 issue of the New York Times
which calls for immediate with-drawal
from Vietnam and asks
the American people to support
the March on Washington has al-ready
been signed by 1500 GI's,
190 of whom are in Vietnam.
Colleges throughout the state
which plan to send a contingent
to Minneapolis for the Moratori-um
include University of Minne-sota-
Duluth, Northfield, St. Cloud,
Moorhead, Gustavus | {
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in place it would
have not prioritized the budget and
instead recognized the need and provide
the appropriate resources to reinforce
or replace the infrastructure and this
benefit would not end with roads
facilities would stay maintained as well
as underground infrastructures like
pipes for sewage and water for instance
the governor of Michigan Rick Snyder
commissioned the Flint water advisory
task force which issued its final report
on March 2016 the following is an
excerpt of the background summary and
timeline of key events on April 16 2013
after a symbolic Flint City Council vote
that accompanied the Flint emergency
managers decision the city joined the
Carib nandi Water Authority kwa which
had been established to develop a raw
water supply pipeline from Lake Huron
after being advised of the city of
Flint's intent Detroit water and sewer
Department DWS D notified the city of
the termination of its then-current
water supplycontract terms effective
April 2014 although the state of
Michigan was in control of both cities
at the time efforts to arrive and an
agreement between the parties during the
final year of service for the city of
flint ultimately failed in April 2014
the city of flint began treating Flint
River water at the Flint water treatment
plant WTP on a full-time basis and
distributing the treated water to its
customers
a critical element of that treatment
corrosion control as required under
EPA's lead and copper rule LCR was
incorrectly determined by Michigan
Department of Environmental Quality MDEQ
not to be required immediately instead
Flint could complete two six-month
monitoring periods and the MDEQ would
then determine whether corrosion control
was necessary
soon after the city began distributing
treated water from the Flint water
treatment plant Flint residents began to
complain about its odor taste and
appearance numerous water quality
problems and operational challenges
resulted | {
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associate
dean of the law school, the
school does not look at the
report because it is not an
ABA accredited report, and
is therefore not "appropriate
or accurate."
Raisch said potential
students look at different factors in deciding which institution to attend, making the
US News ranking useless in
the decision-making process.
The fourth annual ranking by US News ranks Yale
as the top law school in the
country followed by Harvard
and Stanford with scores of
94.5 and 92.7 respectively.
Only the top 25 law
schools have a ranking, the
rest of the schools fall into
four quartiles. Quartile four,
the one in which Whittier is
listed, includes schools
ranked 133 through 176, out
of a total of 176 schools
ranked.
The ranking is based on
student selectivity, placement success, faculty resources and the reputation
of each institution according
to the deans and faculty of
each school as well as 3,000
practicing lawyers, hiring
partners and seniorjudges.
Last year the law school
was also ranked in the fourth
quartile.
The law school also had
the lowest pass rate of ABA-
State Accredited law schools
for students taking the bar
exam.
According to information
from the state bar of California, a total of 164 students
from Whittier took the test,
56.7 percent passed, while
63.1 percentof the 130 Whittier law students who took
the exam for the first time
passed.
UCLA had the highest
pass rate for law schools in
California, with 83.3 percent
of their students passing the
Please see LAWpg. 6
Three Faculty Members
Hired for Next Fall
by Nicole Mastridge
QC Staff Writer
After extensive searches
three new professors were selected recently and will be added
to the college faculty in the fall
of 1993.
Ginette Ishimatsu, who has
a recent doctorate awarded from
the UC Berkeley, has accepted
a one-year apointment in the
religious studeies Department.
The position for Ishimatsu will,
in part, temporarily replace
professor of | {
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general who has
the vice president for a father, not on the day he was
taken to Christiana Hospital with a mild stroke and the
family there, too.
This, even though Bifferato is a good Democrat.
Bifferato's motivation was rooted in events from the
fall of 1998, when he was a 31-year-old lawyer in his
early years of practice. One day he was working at his
law office after working out.
"I got an excruciatingly unbearable headache,"
Bifferato said.
It was so bad, he had another lawyer take him to an
emergency room. A 16-year-old messenger at the law firm
was the son of a neurologist and jawboned his reluctant
father into showing up. It was a good thing.
Bifferato had a brain aneurysm, life-threatening no
matter what. He could die if he did not have surgery, or
he could die if he did.
The Bidenfamily knew about aneurysms. Joe Biden had
two that nearly killed him in 1988. Naturally the Biden
and Bifferato families were well-acquainted. Connor
Bifferato had even been a campaign volunteer for Joe
Biden, then in his fifth Senate term. The Bidens sprang
into action.
"Beau was one of the first people, with the exception
of my wife, who was with me," Bifferato said.
The episode turned into one of the more dramatic
moments in the memory of the state's legal circles.
Bifferato was stricken on the day marking the 75th
anniversary of women being admitted to the Delaware bar.
There was a huge celebratory dinner in Wilmington with
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and Joe Biden squiring her
around.
Bifferato's predicament was announced at the dinner
to heartfelt gasps and groans. As soon as Joe Biden
could leave the event, he went to be with Bifferato.
Bifferato | {
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Zeller
The Humans by Stephen Karam
Best Revival of a Musical
Fiddler on the Roof
She Loves Me
Spring Awakening
The Color Purple
Best Revival of a Play
A View From the Bridge
Blackbird
Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Noises Off
The Crucible
Best Leading Actor in a Musical
Alex Brightman, School of Rock
Danny Burstein, Fiddler on the Roof
Zachary Levi, She Loves Me
Lin-Manuel Miranda, Hamilton
Leslie Odom Jr., Hamilton
Best Leading Actress in a Musical
Laura Benanti, She Loves Me
Carmen Cusack, Bright Star
Cynthia Erivo, The Color Purple
Jessie Mueller, Waitress
Phillipa Soo, Hamilton
Best Leading Actor in a Play
Gabriel Byrne, Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Jeff Daniels, Blackbird
Frank Langella, The Father
Tim Pigott-Smith, King Charles III
Mark Strong, A View From the Bridge
Best Leading Actress in a Play
Jessica Lange, Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Laurie Metcalf, Misery
Lupita Nyong’o, Eclipsed
Sophie Okonedo, The Crucible
Michelle Williams, Blackbird
Best Featured Actor in a Musical
Daveed Diggs, Hamilton
Brandon VictorDixon, Shuffle Along
Christopher Fitzgerald, Waitress
Jonathan Groff, Hamilton
Christopher Jackson, Hamilton
Best Featured Actress in a Musical
Danielle Brooks, The Color Purple
Renée Elise Goldsberry, Hamilton
Jane Krakowski, She Loves Me
Jennifer Simard, Disaster!
Adrienne Warren, Shuffle Along
Best Featured Actor in a Play
Reed Birney, The Humans
Bill Camp, The Crucible
David Furr, Noises Off
Richard Goulding, King Charles III
Michael Shannon, Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Best Featured Actress in a Play
Pascale Armand, Eclipsed
Megan Hilty, Noises Off
Jayne Houdyshell, The Humans
Andrea Martin, Noises Off
Saycon Sengbloh, Eclipsed
Best Direction of a Musical
Michael Arden, Spring Awakening
John Doyle, The Color Purple
Scott Ellis, She Loves Me
Thomas Kail, Hamilton
George C. Wolfe, Shuffle Along
Best Direction of a Play
Rupert Goold, King Charles III
Jonathan Kent, Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Joe Mantello, The Humans
Liesl Tommy, Eclipsed
Ivo van Hove, A View From the Bridge
Best Score
Sara Bareilles, Waitress
Steve Martin and Edie Brickell, Bright Star
Lin-Manuel | {
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religion Glenn
Yocum, who will be traveling to
South India with Whittier College students in the fall.
Not only will Ishimatsu be
involved with the Religious
Studies Department, but she
will also be adding to the cur
riculum of the Asian, African
and Latin American Civilizations (AALAC) with new pairs
as well. Ishimatsu will also be
involved with the Freshman
Writing Seminar program.
Paul Kjellberg is currently
completing his doctorate in philosophy at Stanford, concentrating on Eastern Philosophy. He
graduated summa cum laude
from Yale, and will significantly
contribute to Whittier's academic programs. Kjellberg too
will be teaching an AALAC pair
and have involvement in the
Freshman Writing Seminar.
Kjellberg will be in part replacing Michael Praetorius who
has recently been named one of
the new Faculty Masters for
the 1993-94 school year.
Please see FACULTY pg. 6
Twenty-four out of 66 players on this year's football team are on academic probation.
File photo
One-Thirdof Football Team
Placed on Academic Probation
In order to play in the '93 football
season twenty-four returning players
must raise their grades. Questions arise
about how players are balancing
academics and football.
by Alec Mackie
QC News Editor
More than one-third of the
66-person football team is on
academic probation this year,
head coach Ken Visser confirmed.
Accordingto Visser, 24 players are having academic difficulty. Of those, 12 are on full
academic probation (a semester
GPA between 1.00 and 1.49)
and unless they raise their GPA
to 2.0 or higher, they will be
ineligible for the '93 football season.
The remaining 12 players
are on partial probation, which
means they received a semester
GPA of 1.50 to 1.99. If the players fail to raise their GPA this
semester then they will be put
on full probation next semester,
according to Gerald Adams, the
registrar.
At a player's meeting two
weeks ago, Visser expressed
concern about grades | {
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run through worker committees, agrarian
areas became collectivised and run as libertarian
communes. Anarchist historian Sam Dolgoff
estimated that about eight million people
participated directly or at least indirectly
in the Spanish Revolution, which he claimed
"came closer to realising the ideal of the
free stateless society on a vast scale than
any other revolution in history". Spanish
Communist Party-led troops suppressed the
collectives and persecuted both dissident
Marxists and anarchists. The prominent Italian
anarchist Camillo Berneri, who volunteered
to fight against Francisco Franco was killed
instead in Spain by gunmen associated with
the Spanish Communist Party. The city of Madrid
was turned over to the Francoist forces by
the last non-francoist mayor of the city,
the anarchist Melchor Rodríguez García.
=== Post-war years ===
Anarchism sought to reorganise itself after
the war and in this context the organisational
debate between synthesis anarchism and platformism
took importance once again especially inthe
anarchist movements of Italy and France. The
Mexican Anarchist Federation was established
in 1945 after the Anarchist Federation of
the Centre united with the Anarchist Federation
of the Federal District. In the early 1940s,
the Antifascist International Solidarity and
the Federation of Anarchist Groups of Cuba
merged into the large national organisation
Asociación Libertaria de Cuba (Cuban Libertarian
Association). From 1944 to 1947, the Bulgarian
Anarchist Communist Federation reemerged as
part of a factory and workplace committee
movement, but was repressed by the new Communist
regime. In 1945 in France the Fédération
Anarchiste and the anarchosyndicalist trade
union Confédération nationale du travail
was established in the next year while the
also synthesist Federazione Anarchica Italiana
was founded in Italy. Korean anarchists formed
the League of Free Social Constructors in
September 1945 and in 1946 the Japanese Anarchist
Federation was founded. An International Anarchist
Congress with delegates from across Europe
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miles eastward
to civilization as represented by
the still young United States of America.
There were other trails south and west
into then Spanish country. Northward
others entered the Indian country of
the high Rockies. On these threads of
trails extending into the far spaces,
known and unknown, they saw caravans
of Indians, trappers, hunters and wagon
trains. Perhaps also the dark lines of
troopers riding in the dust behind flapping
pennons.
All these things meant trade to the
Bents.
"This is the place," said William Bent.
Thus in 1830 the ground was broken
and adobe walls erected that for twenty
years was to be known as Bent's Fort
on the Arkansas, and when those same
walls crumbled to dust, "Bent's Old
Fort." On the edge of the far Indian
country Bent's Fort was the first of the
American Indian trading posts in the
great Southwest.
Some historians write that civilization
followed steel rails.But the progress
of civilization did not follow steel rails,
the American Army, the noted trail
blazers such as Fremont, the trappers
and hunters, nor yet the settlers who
scarred the fertile land with the plow
and built homes. All these things were
civiliza tion.
The traders, particularly the Indian
traders, were the trail blazers and the
fore-runners of the march of civilization
across the American continent in the
PHOTOS ON OPPOSITE PA.GE
3 winners in the 1938 Better Indian
Babies Contest.
Apache Indians watching the rodeo.
(Photo by Carson Studio)
Sioux baby and mother.
Part of the line-up of papooses in
the Better Indian Babies Contest.
Navajo mother with baby cradle.
Zuni girl singers (2)
Top to ' bottom: Inscription House Lodge
T'rading Post, Tonalea; Crownpoint
Trad'ing Post, Crownpoint, New Mexico;
Redlake Trading Post, Tonalea; Tuba
Trading Post, Tuba City, and Kerley's
Trading Post, Tuba City.
wmning df the great we:::;t. Ail elsE- t ollowed
them.
The | {
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Company until
1980.
Once they
reached Australia
both ships embarked on a programme of
cruises out of Sydney.
The Fedor Shalyapin remained in Far Eastern and Pacific waters. By
June, she
was scheduled to be in Yokohama.
She sailed to a variety of fascinating ports before arriving back in
Fremantle
and then Sydney.
It would
appear that there
were no clauses in the contract of sale of the former Carmania and
Franconia
restricting their areas of operation, as had been the case with their
sisters Sylvania and Carinthia.
While her sister Leonid Sobinov divided her time between Europe and Australia.
Fedor Shalyapin was employed mainly out of Australia
and in the Orient.
Between May and November 1976, she undertook a series of Pacific
cruises under
charter to Shaw Savill Cruises of Australia. It was during this charter
that a
much reported but unverified incident took place. Fedor Shalyapin was
crossing
the Tasman Sea on herway from Auckland
to Sydney
when, in the early
hours of the morning, the ship suddenly stopped and all her lights went
out.
The ship’s cranes started up and a submarine came alongside. There was
a
transfer of goods and personnel between the two vessels. The incident
was of
course denied by the Soviet Embassy and Shaw Savill denied any
knowledge. So
this unusual incident remains a mystery.
In
December 1979, Soviet
troops invaded Afghanistan.
As a result the Australian government banned all Russian passenger
ships from
calling at Australian ports. The ban took effect from February 1980.
The Leonid
Sobinov was the first to leave to return to Vladivostock. Because of
the internationally illegal restrictions of civil merchant ships made
by U.S. and Australian governments and others preventing USSR ships in
their ports because of the political and military assistance to
Afghanistan's internationally recognized government with their cruel
fight against that | {
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taken to Mid Island
Hospital and treated for exposure.
While all the rescue was going
on the dog swam safely to shore.
Call Hearing To Air
Eel Grass Problem
Town Councilman Philip B.
Healey has called for a meeting
on Friday, March 15th at the
Marjorie Post Park, Community
Room at 8: 30 p. m. to discuss eel
grass as it effects the Massapequa
area.
At the meeting Healey will
present a plan the Town feels
will effectively reduce the
nuisance of eel grass. Members
of the Beach and Marine Division
will be present, along with officials
of the Department of Public
Works and Engineering Department.
Interested persons are invited
to attend so that they may participate
in the discussion.
School Offers New Information
Service On Choosing Career
Leonard C. Marino, Director
of Guidance, announced that
Farmingdale Senior High School
has been invited to participate
in a new occupational information
service to aid students in
choosing an occupation or a
career.
Underthe direction of the newly
formed Board of Cooperative
Educational Services of Nassau
County, the New York State Department
of Labor has written
approximately ?.{) 0 occupational
guides of interest to students
in the Nassau - Suffolk I^ abor
Market. The guides will contain
national and local information
about job descriptions, requirements
and job outlook.
The occupational information
ser\ ice is a demonstration project
designed by the New York
State Education Department to
test the effectiveness of specially
prepared / occupation i information
materials for use in career guidance.
For the students at Farming-dale
High School a microfilm
reader has been provided that enables
the student to read on a
screen any occupational brief
that interests him. He may also
receive a printed copy of this
brief to take with him for study
or for discussion with parents
and counselors. The entire cost
for the project will be funded
under the Federal Vocational Education
Act of 1963. Students
also will | {
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with conditions
favorable for a further Increase of
commodity and security prices, in
the opinion of , the financial com
munity. Unfavorable and unsus
pected developments in the Dolit-
ical and economic situation abroad
are generally considered . as the
only probable obstacles to arrest
the improvement in the business
and financial world, which began
in the summer of 1921 and has
continued, with few temporary in
terruptions, until the present
time. .
Improvement Forsecn.
The prediction of further busi
ness prosperity is based on sever
al well known facts. Foremost
among these is the easiness of the
money market and the huge sum
available for commercial credit.
In addition, most stocks of mer
chandise are low, railroad traffic
fs close to record levels, exports
are Increasing, the principal ex
changes are heading back to par
and the European economic situa
tion shows signs of improvement.
Exports are increasing ana un
filled orders for railroad equip
ment are thelargest in years. Oth
er favorable signs are seen in the
(Continued on Page Nine.)
Chicago. Dec. 80. A policeman
was killed and one of three men
who accosted and fired upon a par
ty of high school students, slightly
wounding a girl, was fatally shot
here early today in the ensuing
pistol fight with police.
The high school students were
returning home from a dance. One
of the trio was Bald to have ac
costed Minnie Finkelstein, 17, the
wounded girl, who resented his re
marks. The man's two companions
joined him and he then was re
ported to have begun firing.
William J. O'Malley, probation
ary noliceman was shot as he gave
chase to the men. A companion
shot one of the running men. ai
the hospital the man said he was
John Reeves of Harvey, 111. He
died In the hospital.
TWO PAY ROLLS
ri.vp1and. Ohio. Dec. 30. Arm
ed bandits today | {
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found guilty
of stealing classified records from the US
government.
To this day, the Church of Scientology denies
the existence of the operation.
3. Guatemala Syphilis Study
Between 1946 and 1948 the USA landed in Guatemala
City and secretly infected 1,500 people with
syphilis to test the effectiveness of penicillin.
At least 83 people died in these experiments,
which had the approval of The Rockefeller
Foundation and Johns Hopkins University.
America kept quiet for 6 decades until Professor
Susan Reverby uncovered the experiment in
2005. Both Rockefeller and Hopkins have denied
any connection.
However, government officials have since reported
that their researches used US taxpayers’
money to pay prostitutes with syphilis to
infect unknowing subjects, and bribed others
with cigarettes to be injected with the disease.
2. Gulf of Tonkin
The Vietnam War was started because of a lie.
On August 2nd 1964 America and North Vietnam
engaged in military combat inthe Gulf of
Tonkin.
According to official reports, North Vietnam
also initiated an attack on August 4th, prompting
the USA to respond with military action. Only
this second attack never happened.
In 2005 it was revealed that President Lyndon
B. Johnson falsely claimed that Vietnam had
attacked the USA in order to go to war and
declare that South Vietnam was jeopardized
by 'communist aggression'.
1. Operation Mockingbird
In the 1950s the CIA launched a secret campaign
to control the media, recruiting top journalists
so they would have power over the New York
Times, CBS, and Newsweek.
By 1953 they influenced over 25 newspapers
and radio stations and could promote big business,
positive US government messages, and anti-communist
agendas.
They even attempted to buy every copy of a
book critical of the CIA, but decided against
it when the publisher revealed that this would
lead to a second edition being printed.
After | {
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People v James (2017 NY Slip Op 02814)
People v James
2017 NY Slip Op 02814
Decided on April 12, 2017
Appellate Division, Second Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on April 12, 2017
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department
REINALDO E. RIVERA, J.P.
RUTH C. BALKIN
CHERYL E. CHAMBERS
JEFFREY A. COHEN, JJ.
2015-07172
(Ind. No. 7478/13)
[*1]The People of the State of New York, respondent,
vDeshawn James, appellant.
Lynn W. L. Fahey, New York, NY, for appellant.
Eric Gonzalez, Acting District Attorney, Brooklyn, NY (Leonard Joblove, Rhea A. Grob, and Roger T. Yu of counsel), for respondent.
DECISION & ORDER
Appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County (D'Emic,Cover Artist
Interior Artist(s)
Realm year(s)
Binding
Released
Pages
ISBN 10
ISBN 13
The Savage Frontier, the Barbaric North, the Cold Wastes, the Uneducated Backyard. These, among many others, are nicknames for the North. This is a land of rabid monsters and ruthless barbarians, where nature is the strongest force for leagues in any direction. The North campaign expansion for the FORGOTTEN REALMS setting is the authority on the lands from Daggerford in the south to Ten Towns in the north, from Anauroch in the east to the Ice Peak in the west.
This new campaign expansion contains everything a player or Dungeon Master needs to adventure in this savage and perilous territory, including:
The Wilderness – A 96-page timeline and geographical overview of the north, featuring a description of the land's natives and monsters and including out-of-print | {
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Olympic water polo and
The site of the equestrian
events, a military zone in the diving events. The legendary
north of the city, is thought to Maracana football stadium,
be dotted with explosives left which was overhauled for the
Pan Am Games, is undergoover from trainings and will
ing another upgrade ahead of
require a three-to-six month
the World Cup.
sweep to remove the forgotRio native Joao Carlos de
ten ordnance.
DunkirkPoster2012.ai
8/13/2012
12:29:28
Figueireiro
saidPMthat despite
An Olympic-sized pool built
the
“mess”
that
was sure to
for the 2007 Pan American
home for breakfast, a quick
nap and a change of clothes
— a bright red shirt, no less —
McIlroy looked solid as ever.
After pulling his approach on
the par-5 second hole under
a tree, he hit wedge off the
wood chips to 6 feet for birdie.
He came up just short of the
green at No. 3, where the tees
were moved up to play 293
yards,the officiating — Spain in
particular when Marc Gasol
was called for his fourth foul
while going for a rebound with
5:29 remaining in the first half.
The Spanish scored their final
seven points on free throws,
cutting the U.S. lead to 59-58.
"Of course we did. We
wouldn't be playing if we
didn't think we had a chance,"
Marc Gasol said. "Give them a
lot of credit. They made a lot
of shots — tough shots. They
have so many options, great
players and they made shots."
Size was always the Americans' biggest obstacle, and the
7-foot-1 Pau Gasol dominated
them to start the second half,
scoring Spain's first 13 points
to give them a 71-70 lead
at the midpoint of the third
quarter. Serge Ibaka at 6-10
also hurt the U.S. inside, and
the Americans led only 83-82
heading into the fourth.
Chris Paul's basket while
drawing a foul near the end
had Krzyzewski | {
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reserved
for the littlest players.
That's what made him Magic.
From school to even his
earliest days in the pros,
Magic Johnson ranked
among his teams' leaders
in points, rebounds and assists.
His production pushed the NBA
to start keeping track of triple doubles,
which they hadn't even
done for Oscar Robertson,
but Earvin Johnson didn't buy his nickname
with production alone.
The Magic was in his unmatched flair,
the palpable joy with which he played
and in his undeniable stardom.
This is Magic in the 1977
Michigan High School championship.
He's one of the biggest
players on the floor,
but here he is flicking a
touch pass to a teammate
who's just become open.
Here he is dribbling
the length of the court
and perfectly timing an
entry to a backdoor cutter.
A couple of years later,
Johnson led the Michigan State Spartans
to the 1979 NCAA Championship.
Here he is flashing some signature
magic in the Elite Eight.
Hefreezes the Notre Dame
defender with his eyes,
then whips a no-look
assist to the trailer.
Later that year, Magic arrived
as a pro on a Lakers team
already featuring multiple stars,
including a legendary center
in Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Playing point guard on these Lakers
was a daunting assignment
for a 20-year old,
and yet here's Magic
in his first NBA game,
anticipating a pass, slipping traffic
with a full speed wraparound dribble,
then leaping to feint one
way and pass the other.
Magic could take over as finisher
and post presence when called upon.
Just look how the rookie
performed without Kareem
to clinch his first championship.
But for much of his career,
Johnson wasn't the first scoring option.
His chief role was ball
handler and distributor,
quarterback of the offense,
not a point forward,
but a true full-time one.
Intrigued by this anomaly,
observers went fishing
for the future version.
It became kind of cliche to anoint
any tallish basketball | {
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land use development took
place from the bottoms up.
For those of you who don't
know what Levittown is,
it was put together by
Levitt and Sons Builders.
And this was this huge post
World War II community,
which transformed very large
segments of Long Island
in a highly provocative,
imaginative and successful way.
And having the experience
of working for an outfit
like that, I think probably shaped Robert,
for the rest of his career,
because he never opposed
or approached law as a field to be studied
in opposition to practice.
It was a field to be studied
as a complement to practice.
Now, when he came out to Los Angeles,
the thing I first remember about Robert,
and it was not listed in
any of his biographies
but I'ma tell you about it anyhow,
was the brown Nash Rambler that he drove.
This was a man who shall we say,
had no commonsense whatsoever.
He drove this dilapidated
car across the country,
comes to the Los Angeles freeways,
and essentially his first
major land use adjustment
was to trade that car
in for a newer model,
because it could have not made
it anywhere on the freeways.
And he and I were colleagues
at USC for two years,
'70 to '72.
He remained there if I'm
not mistaken until 1981.
And in the middle, he came and visited me
when I was at the University
of Chicago on 1974 and 1975.
And he used to say how much he
loved his Sundays in Chicago
in the cold, the winter and
return to USC, then to Stanford.
When he is with Stanford,
he undertook what I think
is one of the most remarkable
pieces of empirical research
ever undertaken by any academic.
He was close to the Shasta
County, and on weekends
starting on Friday, whatever it was,
he would drive | {
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interest in student
government. Election would not
solve all of the communication
problems of the senate, but the re-sponsibility
of electing the plan-ners
of campus life should create
a greater need than is now felt by
the students to know about the sen-ate.
Although some of the evils of
appointment might be eliminated
by other means than election of
committee chairmen, a revised sys-tem
of appointment would not in-sure
the permanent elimination of
the shortcomings evident in the
senate.
It would not improve the repre-sentation
of the student body on
the senate, nor would it improve
communication between the sen-ate
and the student body. Election
would be one step toward solving
these problems permanently.
June Erickson
'Honest to God' Isn't
Dear Editor:
As a believer in the orthodox
philosophy of the Christian church,
I wish to declare some irrelevan-cies
and errors that constituted
Dean Woodard's and Linden Nel-son's
rebuttals to Jim Spiceland's
review of Honest to God.
First, Bishop Robinson's "grow-ing
concern,""perspective of criti-cal
analysis of over 200 years," and
"two drastic wars" is irrelevant in
judging whether his metaphysics,
as exposited in Honest to God, are
intrinsically consistent or consis-tent
with the revelation of God
through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Dean Woodard's insertion of Rob-inson's
niceties is redundant to an
objective evaluation of the book.
Second, our orthodox theology
was not "hatched on the hot end
of the middle ages." The formu-lation
of our theology began in
the early church with Judaic
background, Hellenistic scholar-ship,
and the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit; prime examples are
the writings of Paul and Augu-stine.
Evangelical orthodox theology
was later rejuvenated by the testi-mony
of Luther, the writings of
Calvin, and the activities of Wes-ley.
None of the mentioned church-men
lived on "the hot end of the
Middle ages."
Third, the world does not need
a gospel "that will live with real-ity"
(it already has Tillich). Ra-ther,
the world and the Church
need | {
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later
recalled, “she never saw so happy a man
as father was when she described the vision
and told him she was satisfied and knew it
was from God.”
Lucy Walker recalled her inner turmoil when
Joseph Smith invited her to become his wife.
“Every feeling of my soul revolted against
it,” she wrote.
Yet, after several restless nights on her
knees in prayer, she found relief as her room
“filled with a holy influence” akin to
“brilliant sunshine.”
She said, “My soul was filled with a calm
sweet peace that I never knew,” and “supreme
happiness took possession of my whole being.”
Not all had such experiences.
Some Latter-day Saints rejected the principle
of plural marriage and left the Church, while
others declined to enter the practice but
remained faithful.
Nevertheless, for many women and men, initial
revulsion and anguish was followed by struggle,
resolution, and ultimately, light and peace.
Sacredexperiences enabled the Saints to move
forward in faith.
Conclusion
The challenge of introducing a principle as
controversial as plural marriage is almost
impossible to overstate.
A spiritual witness of its truthfulness allowed
Joseph Smith and other Latter-day Saints to
accept this principle.
Difficult as it was, the introduction of plural
marriage in Nauvoo did indeed “raise up
seed” unto God.
A substantial number of today’s members
descend through faithful Latter-day Saints
who practiced plural marriage.
Church members no longer practice plural marriage.
Consistent with Joseph Smith’s teachings,
the Church permits a man whose wife has died
to be sealed to another woman when he remarries.
Moreover, members are permitted to perform
ordinances on behalf of deceased men and women
who married more than once on earth, sealing
them to all of the spouses to whom they were
legally married.
The precise nature of these relationships
in the next life is not known, | {
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release of the figures comes days after a Plymouth nursery
school worker, Vanessa George – together with Angela Allen from
Nottingham and Colin Blanchard from Rochdale – pleaded guilty to
sexually abusing young children.
Young woman, who was 15 when she was arrested, led operation that trafficked
other teen girls
CBC News Nov 04, 2014 - An 18-year-old female who led an operation that trafficked other
female teenagers using
social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter today received an adult
sentence of 6½ years in a correctional facility. The young woman was given
credit for time she's already served in pre-sentence custody, meaning she
will only serve another two years and 325 days.
The 18-year-old was arrested
in 2012, when she was 15, for leading the operation with two other teens as
they recruited other girls through social media sites likeFacebook and
Twitter, before drugging and beating them and forcing them into
prostitution.
The 18-year-old was the only one who pleaded not guilty in her trial, but
she was found guilty this January. The two other teens entered mid-trial
guilty pleas in September 2013 for their roles in the violent pimping
operation.
Under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, the 18-year-old faced a
maximum sentence of three years. Under the adult Criminal Code, she faced a
minimum sentence of five years. More ...
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. USA -- The mother of a 10-year-old New
Mexico girl found dead and dismembered told police she
sought men online and at work to sexually assault her
daughter, according to warrants obtained by the
Albuquerque Journal.
Michelle Martens told police that she had set up
encounters with at least three men to sexually assault
her daughter, the Albuquerque Journal reported. The | {
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admission confer-
ences are supplemented by personal counseling between the students
and the orientation instructor or Dean. Periodic checks are made
on the student's class and laboratory work as well as the social
adjustments involved. If results are not satisfactory immediate
steps are taken to rectify the situation.
19
Recognition and Transfer Privileges
Williamsport-Dickinson Junior College is a member of the
American Association of Junior Colleges, is accredited by the Uni-
versity Senate of the Methodist Church, the Pennsylvania State
Council of Education, and the Middle States Association of Colleges
and Secondary Schools. Graduates from the Junior College are
accepted with advanced standing by the leading colleges and uni-
versities to which they apply for admission and usually make high
scholastic records.
Individual cases naturally depend on the student's preparation,
the calibre of his work and the course which he desires to pursue.
Upon registering atWilliamsport-Dickinson the student should fully
acquaint the Dean with his future plans so that credit requirements
of the college to which he plans to go may be anticipated in advance.
Junior College Curricula
Williamsport-Dickinson offers instruction on the college level
leading to degrees or diplomas in the following fields:
Art
Medical Secretarial
Commercial Art
Costume Design
Illustration
Interior Decoration
Medicine
Merchandising
Ministry
Commerce and Finance
Dentistry
Dramatics
Engineering
Music
Organ
Piano
Public School Music
Violin
Voice
Forestry
Home Economics
Homemaking
Nursing
Physical Education
Secretarial Science
Journalism
Social Work
Junior Engineering
Law
Stenography
(Certificate)
Liberal Arts
Teaching
Library Science
Veterinary Medicine
20
I. Arts and Science.
This course comprises the first two years of a standard four-year
course in a senior college leading to a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of
Science degree.
II. General Course.
This course is intended for students who do not look forward to a
four-year college course or to advanced study. It provides the essential
intellectual background of an educated person, and lays the foundations
upon which may be built a solid structure of | {
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Colombia, Once Consumed by Violence, Became a Tourist Destination - baristaGeek
https://www.cntraveler.com/story/how-colombia-once-consumed-by-violence-became-your-next-destination?mbid=social_facebook
======
Grazester
My dad had a business in Colombia and had worked between Colombia and other
South and Central American countries all his life. In the mid 90's they killed
his business partner while he was out of the country. When he went back for
the funeral an attempt was made on his life. He was approached and gun point
on the ports had to jump into the water and dive understand the docks to
escape gun fire.
My dad fled the country and left his business and all his assets never to
return. My mom told his it wasn't worth his life, which it wasn't. My dads
business partner's wife was at the time was trying to install herself into the
day to day operations and have moreof a role in the business. He thought she
was simply greedy and harmless. My dad now feels different about that because
she was the only one that knew my dads schedule and where he was going to be
that day. She was also the only one that knew that her husband was going to be
without his body guards that time of day.
My dad has lots of stories of Colombia and it's violence in the 90's, most of
which was drug influenced. It wasn't the media blowing anything up and
exaggerating.
My parents loved Colombia and it's people though. It would be great now that
it's safer so he can maybe visit the place he loved and worked most of his
life.
~~~
tryingagainbro
How much money we're talking about in your dad's business?
Couple of hundred dollars to a | {
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Erdogan and his party
bear direct responsibility [for the attack]."
Reports
of chemical weapons use by both Damascus and the Syrian opposition
have surrounded the conflict in Syria for months.
In
March, the Syrian government invited the United Nations to
investigate possible chemical weapons use in the Khan al-Assal area
of rural Aleppo. Military experts and officials said a chemical
agent, most likely sarin, was used in the attack which killed 26
people, including government forces.
Damascus
claimed Al-Qaeda linked fighters were behind
the attack,
further alleging Turkey had a hand in the incident.
“The
rocket came from a placed controlled by the terrorist and which is
located close to the Turkish territory. One can assume that the
weapon came from Turkey,”
Zoabi said in an interview with Interfax news agency.
US
President Barack Obama has
warned
any confirmed use of chemical weapons by Damascus would cross a "red
line"
which would promptfurther action. Both Washington and London claimed
there was growing evidence that such chemical agents had been used.
A
day before the Reyhanlı bombing, Erdogan released a statement
claiming he had evidence the Syrian government had had used chemical
weapons, crossing the red line set by President Obama.The accusation
contradicted a statement made at the time by a leading UN
investigator.Carla Del Ponte, who heads
The
Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria, said there
were “concrete suspicions
but not yet incontrovertible proof of the use of sarin gas”
in Syria.
"This
was use on the part of the opposition, the rebels, not by the
government authorities,"
Del Ponte continued.
Exposure
to large quantities of sarin gas, whose production and stockpiling
was outlawed by the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993, causes
convulsions, paralysis, loss of respiratory functions and potentially
death.
In
an interview with a Lebanese TV channel, he said there | {
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dollars to settle
in a u.s. gold price-fixing case not
claiming responsibility of course
investors sued Deutsche Bank Barclays
Plc Bank of Nova Scotia HSBC Holdings
plc and Societe Generale in 2014
claiming that they conspired to fix gold
prices from 2004 to 2013 in early June
of last year
the US Commodity Futures Trading
Commission CFTC filed and settled
charges against former trader David Liu
for engaging in numerous acts of
spoofing and manipulating the gold and
silver futures market the CFTC stated
that Liu coordinated this trading with
another precious metals trader at
another large financial institution the
intent of triggering the customer
stop-loss orders was to allow the
traders to buy precious metals futures
contracts at artificially low prices or
sell precious metals features contracts
and artificially high prices these
market manipulations occurred during the
time
former congressman Ron Paul was mocked
for attempting to pass a bill that would
completely audit aninsolvent and will
undergo procedures similar to the
protocols of insolvency used today
economics professor and longtime
advocate of public banks
Richard Wolffe often refers to North
Dakota's thriving public state bank
called the Bank of North Dakota launched
almost a hundred years ago in 1919 mr.
Wolfe stated that those who promoted the
Bank wanted the money that flowed into
the state county and city governments of
North Dakota to be deposited in the
people's banks any interest earned on
that should be folded back into the
coffers of the state to help the state
do the things it does for its people and
moreover the state should favor North
Dakotans who need money for their
personal needs for their small
businesses and so on since their profits
don't go to the hands of private
shareholders in 2011 there were enough
profits to rebate 70 million dollars to
the state of | {
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all of the uplift occurs during
major earthquakes when the fault
ruptures.
The last major earthquakes in the region
occurred around 4,600 ,
8,000 , and 10,000 years
ago - suggesting a reoccurrence interval
of 2 to 6 thousand years.
Geoscientists use the timing and
magnitude of past earthquakes to
estimate the probability of future
earthquakes
and to help with natural hazard
assessment and preparedness.
Based on the previous episodes of
faulting, geologists have
warned that an earthquake as large as
magnitude 7.5
could strike the area. Nearby normal
faults in the Basin and Range province in
Montana and Idaho ruptured in 1959 and
1983, producing magnitude 7.3 earthquakes.
These quakes are among the top 20
strongest earthquakes in the United
States in the last 100 years.
In some ways, the entire face of the
Teton Range is one gigantic fault scarp,
but the Teton fault can be seen in many
places where itoffsets young geomorphic
features including glacial moraines.
A moraine is an accumulation of
unconsolidated rock and debris
pushed along or carried by a glacier.
When a glacier melts or retreats it
leaves the moraine behind like a high
tide line.
Many of the lakes in Grand Teton
National Park including Jackson and
Jenny Lake
formed when moraines left behind by
glaciers dammed up streams and rivers.
Where these moraines cross the Teton
fault, they're offset
by up to 30 meters. The youngest glacial
episode in Grand Teton National Park
is locally called the Pinedale
glaciation and occurred from around 30,000 to 10,000 years ago. The Pinedale is
part of a global climatic event called
the Last Glacial Maximum or LGM.
The LGM is one of five major glacial
periods in the last half million years
and it's likely one of tens of thousands
of glaciations in earth history
that have advanced and retreated | {
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a member of the First
Baptist Church in Zavalla.
Survivors include her daughter and
son-in-law Betty Jo Adler Griffin and
Charles Griffin, of Crockett; son Cecil
Martin, of Trinity; grandchildren and their
spouses Vida and Wade Sullivan, Jimmy and
Karen Sharp, Pam and Bruce Birdsong, Terrie
and Robert Heard, Gayle Bailey, Keeta and
Britt Keepers, and Phyllis Phillips; 12
great-grandchildren including Jade and Janna
Sharp and Stephanie Sullivan; seven
great-great-grandchildren; and numer-ous
nieces and nephews.
Graveside services for Mrs. Lola B. Martin
were held Saturday, December 31, 2005 in the
Zavalla Cemetery with the Reverend Linwood
Dykes officiating.
Gipson-Metcalf Funeral
Directors
Alta Lowe
Mrs. Alta Mae Ferguson Lowe was born on
June 1, 1924, to Julius and Ruth Ferguson in
Crockett, Texas and passed away on March 7,
2006, in Plano. Mrs. Lowe grew up on a farm
outside Crockett and graduated valedictorian
from Crockett High School. Mrs. Lowe re-ceived
a scholarship to and attendedMary Hardin
Baylor University in Belton majoring in
English.
During World War II Mrs. Lowe worked as a
clerk for the Army Air Corp at in Hondo,
Texas.
After the war she married Ray Cecil and
lived in Huntsville. They soon separated and
she returned to Crockett where she gave
birth to their son, John Larry. After her
divorce she worked as a bookkeeper for
Bennie Ellis Insurance. She later met and
married Milton Lowe and they eventually
moved to Ft. Worth where she worked for L.T.
Barton Insurance for 35 years before
retiring in 1988.
During her life she loved to sing in church
choirs and often served as a Sunday
School/Bible Study teacher. She also loved
writing, especially stories about the Bible
and her family heritage, quilting, painting,
knitting and embroidering, as well as other
hobbies. Mrs. Lowe had a passion for
reading, especially historical stories and
Christian literature.
Survivors include | {
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Fabulously wealthy and gilded by history,
the Principality of Monaco lies on the French
Riviera in Western Europe.
Smaller than New York’s Central Park,
this graceful destination is bordered by France
and the sparkling Mediterranean sea.
With ancient streets full of exotic cars,
a natural harbour filled with super yachts
and a glittering royal legacy,
Monaco is a tiny relic of medieval Europe
that has made itself at home in the 21st century.
It draws the rich, the famous
and those seeking the kind of lifestyle
usually only found on the silver screen.
There is no glamour quite like the old world style
still to be found under the soaring chandeliers
of Monaco’s magnificent Casino de Monte-Carlo.
Although it is open for tours during the day,
the real James Bond magic begins here
as the sun goes down and the roulette wheels
start to spin.
This architectural masterpiece,
with itswickedly decadent Opera Hall
was dreamed up by the wife of
Prince Florestan the first
in the late 19th century,
as the royal family teetered on the edge of
bankruptcy.
With gambling illegal in Italy and France,
the Casino became a triumph.
Known as a “health spa” to protect it
from church criticism,
the cream of European society flocked
to try their luck with lady fortune.
Times may have changed but not the nature
of Monte Carlo.
International visitors are still lured here
by the balmy weather and a calendar packed
with star-studded events.
Nearby streets in the Carré d’Or
remain a magnet for lovers of high-end fashion,
luxury jewellery and bespoke perfumes.
Follow ancient footfalls further back in time
down medieval alleyways into the old town.
This is where, 700 years ago,
Francois Grimaldi disguised himself as a monk,
murdered the guard and captured the fortress.
On that night, it became | {
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endowment of human life with new inventions
and riches", and he discouraged scientists
from pursuing intangible philosophical or
spiritual ideas, which he believed contributed
little to human happiness beyond "the fume
of subtle, sublime, or pleasing speculation".Science
during the Enlightenment was dominated by
scientific societies and academies, which
had largely replaced universities as centres
of scientific research and development. Societies
and academies were also the backbone of the
maturation of the scientific profession. Another
important development was the popularization
of science among an increasingly literate
population. Philosophes introduced the public
to many scientific theories, most notably
through the Encyclopédie and the popularization
of Newtonianism by Voltaire as well as by
Émilie du Châtelet, the French translator
of Newton's Principia.
Some historians have marked the 18th century
as a drab period in the history of science;
however, the century saw significant advancements
in the practice of medicine, mathematics,
and physics; the development ofbiological
taxonomy; a new understanding of magnetism
and electricity; and the maturation of chemistry
as a discipline, which established the foundations
of modern chemistry.
Enlightenment philosophers chose a short history
of scientific predecessors – Galileo, Boyle,
and Newton principally – as the guides and
guarantors of their applications of the singular
concept of nature and natural law to every
physical and social field of the day. In this
respect, the lessons of history and the social
structures built upon it could be discarded.
=== 19th century ===
The nineteenth century is a particularly important
period in the history of science since during
this era many distinguishing characteristics
of contemporary modern science began to take
shape such as: transformation of the life
and physical sciences, frequent use of precision
instruments, emergence of terms like "biologist",
"physicist", "scientist"; slowly moving away
from antiquated labels like "natural philosophy"
and "natural history", increased professionalization
of those | {
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variously known as
Marketing Underwriters Acquisitions, Inc. and W.D. Larson
Companies would invest $20
mdlion in a new casino on Highway 2, a 100-150 slot machine
facility, and public housing units
in return for 25% of revenues
and repayment for construction
costs.
Treuer ruled that complaints
regarding alleged violations of
federal law would be better directed elsewhere.
"It is not the job of die Tribal
Court to enforce federal laws
such as IGRA. Concerns regarding alleged IGRA violations
are better addressed to IGRA
officials. For that reason, those
portions of the petition are dismissed with prejudice,"Treuer
wrote.
Garbow on trial for Melvin Eagle Jr.'s murder
Mothers of victim and accused hug, cry in courtroom
by Joel Patenaude
Messenger Staff Writer
Too drunk to defend himself
from his three assailants, Melvin Eagle Jr. was beaten and
stomped so badly the coroner
couldn't tell which blow killed
him.
"Iliac was no fight following
their drinking togedier because
a fightrequires mutual combat,"
Assistant Attorney General
William Klump Jr. said in his
opening statement at the trial of
Roger Garbow, 20, on Aug. 7.
Defense attorney Barbara
Rudquist conceded her client,
Garbow, and two cousins "in a
frenzy of alcoholic rage, leaving
all reason to the wind, punched,
kicked and stomped Melvin
Eagle Jr. to death" on the night
of Jan. 4.
But she said Garbow and the
others did not intend to kill Ea
gle in the home of his girlfriend,
Debra Smith, sister of Garbow's
mother, Beverly. "This was a
tragedy to family and friends due
to alcohol abuse," Rudquist said.
Garbow and his cousins
— Coleman Lee Weous, 18, and
a 17-year-old juvenile, who are
similarly accused of ganging up
on Eagle — were friends if not
relatives of the victim.
All four men, members of
the close-knit community of the
MiUe Lacs Band of Ojibwe, were
allegedly drinking late that night
when Eagle said | {
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officially
condemn the heresy of Florinism.
1937
AD— Miraculous appearance of the Sign
of the Holy Cross occurs on Mt. Kophynas in Crete, thereby strengthening
the Genuine Orthodox Christians in their struggle against both New
Calendarism and Florinism, for the faithful to which the miracle
occurred were under the omophorion of Bishop Matthew of Bresthena.
1938 AD —
Council of Athens, convened and presided over by Bishop Matthew of
Bresthena, and attended by Bishop Germanus of the Cyclades and several
archimandrites and fathers, condemns Florinism, as preached by
Chrysostom of Florina (the belief that those who fall under anathema and
sever themselves from the Church are supposedly only potentially but not
actually in schism, and therefore possess sacramental grace; that
supposedly only a Pan-Orthodox Council has the power to condemn heresies
that have already been condemned by numerous Pan-Orthodox Councils in
the past; and thatthe official church, even if in schism and under
anathema, is supposedly the “Mother Church” and “source of
grace” simply because it is recognized as such by the state
authorities).
1939-45
AD— World War II.
1945
AD— The Bulgarian Church restores
communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate, adopts the new calendar and
the Metropolitan of Sofia is elevated to the rank of Patriarch.
1945
AD— Council of Athens (false council),
convened and presided over by Metropolitan Chrysostom of Florina and
attended by 2 bishops, officially endorses the false teachings of
Florinism (later known as Cyprianism). This decision is repudiated in
1950.
1948
AD— Council of Amsterdam (Syncretistic
Synod), at which the World Council of Churches (WCC) is established for
the purpose of ecumenical dialogue and joint prayer between Orthodox and
Protestants. The new calendarist Churches of Constantinople, Alexandria,
Antioch, Romania and Greece participate, along with countless Protestant
sects.
1948
AD— Council of Moscow | {
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main opposition council.
It has been angered by the suggestion that Mr Assad
could stay on as figurehead despite the deaths of
45,000 in the fighting.
The Christmas mission by Mr Brahimi, who has kept a
low profile for months, alongside a "softening" of
Russia's hardline support of Assad's regime, has
lifted hopes for a diplomatic end to Syria's civil
war.
Mr Brahimi said the regime must make once
unthinkable concessions to the leaders of the
21-month uprising.
"Change should not be cosmetic – the Syrian people
need and require real change, and everyone
understands what that means," said Mr Brahimi, the
joint UN-Arab League envoy.
"We need to form a government with all powers ...
which assumes power during a period of transition.
That transition period will end with elections."
Speaking before he prepared to fly to Moscow on
Friday, Mr Brahimi also warned, however, that there
mustnot be a "collapse of the state or the state's
institutions" during any power-sharing period.
Yasser Tabbara, a spokesperson for Syria Opposition
Coalition, said the terms outlined by the envoy were
unacceptable.
"It has been the position of the coalition that we
need to find a quick solution on the issue of Bashar
al-Assad stepping down. The priority of the
Coalition is to preserve lives and finish this with
the least casualties. However, the plans proposed by
Lakhdar Brahimi are out of touch with reality," he
said. "The plan takes us back months and months, if
not years."
One European official said there was "nothing that
gave credence" to suggestions that Russian was
moving closer to a joint approach with the US and
other opposition backers.
Grassroots rebel supporters believe the Brahimi
mission is a distraction at time when fighters have
advanced to the gates of the | {
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in* the
face. At the top of the stairs, a
blonde woman faced them. (She did
not wear dark glasses and she had
small feet.) Polite, but confused, she
answered their questions (without a
trace of a Swedish accent). Could
they see Stokowski? He wasn't back
yet from the Stadium.�Disney?�He
was out of town, too.�Mickey Mouse?
�well, she'd ask him when he came
in. Dana and Lewis, half-wriggling
their way up the steep, steep stairs,
/ Continued on Pace Six
Murder Play Stars
'Detective Whitaker
Rapid Action and Good Comedy
Sustained With Sleuthing
And Shooting
Goodhart Hall, April 14.�As their
yearly play, the maids and porters,
under the competent direction of Fifi
Garbat, '41, presented Murder in Re-
hearsal, a lively, action-filled mystefy
farce by Austin Goetz. Throughout
the intricate exposition of crime and
detection, the actors maintained a
rapid pace, seldom dropping out of
part and interspersing suspense with
some of the best straight comedy seen
onGoodhart stage in a long time.
To outline the plot-within-a-plot, a
director (Robert Bryan, Rhoads), is
poisoned while playing the part of the
hero in his play, when, at the same
moment, two offstage shots are fired
by his rival (John Warren, Pem-
broke). Shortly afterwards, Sheriff
Cullen (John Whittakcr, Denbigh),
arrives and takes control, spending the
rest of the three acts in unprofitable
sleuthing, accusing each of the cast
in turn, even himself. The climax
comes as a debacle when it is revealed
to the audience that this was no crime
at all, but merely the play in re-
hearsal.
From the moment he appeared at
the back of the auditorium in ten-gal-
lon hat and large gold badge, John
Whittaker was the outstanding per-
former of the evening. With much
head-scratching and suspender snap-
ping, he energetically and ingeniously
carried out his investigations despite
bad boy Chubby Forbes (Doris Davis,
Denbigh), who | {
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drama~
Uca and oral Engllsh; Mrs. Erma
Earp, instructor in piano; Mrs. Ha~
y,el Mundy, instructor of costume and
design; Mrs. Helen Flll Rhodes, instructor
in voice and Dr. Franklin
Johnson, Prot.-r of Social RelIearcb
.
.,c/
Guests
St udent
Student Go,,'t.
At Affair In Gymnaslwn
Almost two hundred guests at~
tended the dance which was given by
the Student Government in honor ot
the Freshmen Class in the gymnasium
Friday night.
Eddie Harris and his orchestra dis_
pensed melodic strains for dancing.
The music varied from the slow
waltz to the much more modern
"swing time". Almost everyone at
least tried the Big Apple. .
Girl stags composed most of the
group, and the few males were in
great demand. After intermission,
howev.:eJ:. __ the number of IDa]("s sur~
prisingly increased.
The gymnasium was decorated
with images of what the poor freshmen
have ' in store for them during
Duck Week. After intermission a
large rainbow shower of balloons
and confettiwere thrown from the
halcony.
Democracy was the keynote of the
dance. The dignified Seniors .could
not be distinguished from the fresh
Freshmen.
-Written by E. P.
___ .A~ __
Barnstormers Give
Several One-Act Plays
The first performance of the Dramatic
Club under the direction of
Mrs. Alice Jorg will be & . presentation
of several new one·act plays.
As is the usual custom, after the
presentation of the one-act plays,
the club will produce several long
plays in which many of last year's
actresses will continue' their stage
careers in such performances as
"Little Lord Fauntleroy" and "An
Old-Fashioned Girl."
The club's membership has in·
creased to such a great number that
it will soon have to be closed to
new members.
A.TLAS ANNOUNCES DATES
FOR PllBLICATION
October 6, 20.
November 3. 17.
December 1, 15.
January 12, 26. | {
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Professional ethics and esthetic dentistry.
Esthetic dentistry has assumed an integral position in the provision of oral health care for society. Esthetics is a branch of philosophy dealing with beauty. Beauty is both enjoyable (subjective and cosmetic), and admirable (objective and definable). Ethics is a branch of philosophy dealing with morality. Morality relates humans to one another in a responsible way using rationality. Dentists assume unique moral duties in presenting themselves to society as being uniquely qualified to care for their oral health. Three principles of ethics relate directly to professional duties in esthetic dentistry: beneficence, autonomy, and justice. These principles have moral force in committing dentists to gain informed consent and to execute therapy in keeping with professional standards of care. Practical application of issues deriving from estheticsand Trading Networks
The Formalist-Substantivist Debate
Marxist Anthropology
Marxism's Evolutionary View
The Household Unit
The Forms of Family
The Marriage Links
Marriage Contract Payments
The Study of Kinship
Kinship Codes
Classificatory Kinship
Fictive Kinship
Descent Theory
Marriage and Residence Rules
The Idiom of Kinship
What's the "Use" of Kinship?
Alliance Theory and Incest Taboo
Structures in Mind
Forms of Elementary Structures
Does Alliance Theory Work?
Politics and Law
Further Examples...
The Terminological Approach
Political Anthropology
Age Grade Societies
Synchronic vs. Diachronic Views
Other Social Stratifications
Transacting Identity
Problems of Ethnicity
Colonialism
Anti-capitalist Anthropology
Anthropology of Law
Mechanisms for Resolving Disputes
Religion
Shamanism and Cargo Cults
Sacred and Profane
The Anthropology of Magic
The Debate on Belief
Examining Ritual
Rites of Passage
The Study of Myth
Claude Lévi-Strauss
Binary Oppositions and Structure
Symbols and Communication
Symbols and the Social Process
Actor, Message and Code
Symbolism and New Perspectives
Anthropology of Art
Visual Anthropology
Disappearing World
A New Branch or an Old Root?
Writing Up the Field
Writing in the Present
Auto-Anthropology
The Dual/Duel of Tepoztlan
Tepoztlan Revisited
Is Anthropology a Science?
A Pretended Science
The Indians are | {
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} | 11,616,676 |
of a
Party.
Treatment and prevention
Article
22 allows Parties, in implementing the Convention's penal
provisions, to make exceptions for drug abusers by substituting
"treatment, education, after-care, rehabilitation and social
reintegration" for imprisonment. This reflects a shift in
focus in the war on drugs from incarceration to treatment and
prevention that had already begun to take hold by 1971. Indeed, in
1972, a parallel provision allowing treatment for drug abusers was
added to the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs by the Protocol
Amending the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
Article
20 mandates drug treatment, education, and prevention measures
and requires Parties to assist efforts to "gain an understanding of
the problems of abuse of psychotropic substances and of its
prevention" and to "promote such understanding among the general
public if there is a risk that abuse of such substances will become
widespread." To comply with these provisions,most Parties
financially support organizations and agencies dedicated to these
goals. The United States, for instance, established the National Institute on Drug
Abuse in 1974 to comply with the research requirement and began
sponsoring Drug Abuse Resistance
Education in 1983 to help fulfill the educational and
prevention requirements.
Recent
trends
Rise in stimulant
trafficking
Since the mid-1980s the world has faced a wave of synthetic
stimulant abuse, with approximately nine times the quantity seized
in 1993 than in 1978, equivalent to an average annual increase of
16 per cent. The principle synthetic drugs manufactured
clandestinely are the amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) which
include the widely abused amphetamine and methamphetamine, as well as the more
recently popularised methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), known
as ecstasy." It is estimated that throughout the world 30,000,000,
people use ATS. This is 0.5 per cent of the global population and
exceeds the number using heroin and probably | {
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made Osama bin
Laden the more likely choice that year.
The issue that declared Giuliani the Person
of the Year included an article that mentioned
Time's earlier decision to select the Ayatollah
Khomeini and the 1999 rejection of Hitler
as "Person of the Century".
The article seemed to imply that Osama bin
Laden was a stronger candidate than Giuliani,
as Adolf Hitler was a stronger candidate than
Albert Einstein.
The selections were ultimately based on what
the magazine describes as who they believed
had a stronger influence on history and who
represented either the year or the century
the most.
According to Time, Rudolph Giuliani was selected
for symbolizing the American response to the
September 11th attacks, and Albert Einstein
selected for representing a century of scientific
exploration and wonder.
Another controversial choice was the 2006
selection of "You", representing most if not
all people for advancing the information age
by usingthe Internet (via e.g. blogs, MySpace,
YouTube, and Wikipedia).
=== Withdrawn selections ===
In 1941, the fictional elephant Dumbo from
the Disney movie of the same name was selected
to be "Mammal of the Year", and a cover was
created showing Dumbo in a formal portrait
style.
However, the attack on Pearl Harbor on December
7 pre-empted the cover.
The U.S. president Franklin Delano Roosevelt
was named Man of the Year for a record third
time, although Dumbo's Mammal of the Year
profile still appeared on the inside pages
of the magazine.Film-maker Michael Moore claims
that director Mel Gibson cost him the opportunity
to be Person of the Year alongside Gibson
in 2004.
Moore's controversial political documentary
Fahrenheit 9/11 became the highest-grossing
documentary of all time the same year Gibson's
The Passion of the Christ became a box-office
success and also caused significant controversy.
Moore said in an interview "I got | {
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above, the attitude of the respondent wife in
openly declaring that she had no intention to remain with the
appellant, was sufficient to indicate that the marriage had
broken down irretrievably and in similar circumstances this
Court had invoked its extra-ordinary powers under Article 142
of the Constitution to grant a decree of divorce under
Section 13-B of the Hindu Marriage Act, even though one of
the parties had withdrawn consent before the passing of the
final decree. Reference was made to the decision in Ashok
Hurra's case(supra), which also involved a petition under
Section 13-B of the Act.7. However, the facts of the said case were a little
different from those in the instant case. In the said case,
after six months from the date of filing of the petition
under Section 13-B, an application was filed by the husband
aloneafter registration of such transfer of
property that she withdrew her consent for divorce. She
still continues to enjoy the property and insists on living
separately from the husband.
21. While, therefore, following the decision in Smt.
Sureshta Devi's case we are of the view that this is a fit
case where we may exercise the powers vested in us under
Article 142 of the Constitution. The stand of the respondent
wife that she wants to live separately from her husband but
is not agreeable to a mutual divorce is not acceptable, since
living separately is one of the grounds for grant of a mutual
divorce and admittedly the parties are living separately for
more than seven years.
22. The appeal is, therefore, allowed. The impugned judgment
and order of the High Court is set aside and the petition for
grant of mutual | {
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