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he was never informed of the
reason for his arrest.
Defendant
Averill placed Plaintiff Cecil Jr. in the back
of his squad car despite
the
fact that the police station was directly across
the street.
At
the
time of this
incident, Plaintiff Cecil Jr. had a seven and
one-half centimeter tumor
on his
brain that caused him to have severe seizures
when his blood pressure
was at an
elevated level. Plaintiff Cecil Sr. informed
Defendants of Plaintiff
Cecil
Jr.’s condition and asked them to have a
paramedic check on him because
he was
hunched over in the back of the squad car. This
request was denied.
Plaintiff
Cecil Sr. request to go check himself was also
denied.
Plaintiff
Cecil
Jr., in
fact, had a seizure while sitting in the squad
car and was awakened by
Defendant Averill poking him in the chest with
either an object or his
fingers
and pulling him out of the car. The next day,
Plaintiff Cecil Jr. had a
bruise
in thatarea. Additionally, while in custody,
Sergeant Averill
repeatedly
denied medical attention to Plaintiff Cecil Jr.
despite knowledge of
his
existing medical condition.
Plaintiff
Cecil
Jr.
never falsely identified himself; he presented
his true California
Driver’s
License and his family does, in fact, own the
establishment in
question. On
October 18, 2003, the charges were presented to
and dropped by the
District
Attorney. Notice was immediately given to the
Defendant Hermosa Beach
Police
Department, who were responsible for forwarding
the dismissal to
Plaintiffs.
Instead, Defendants waited until the day of the
hearing to mail the
notice to
Plaintiff Cecil Jr.’s home address in West
Hills, CA. Relying on the
information on the citation, Plaintiffs believed
that Cecil Jr. was
scheduled
to appear in court and retained a lawyer to
represent him in the
matter.
Obviously, the attorney could not find the
matter on any calendar.
After
this
incident,
Defendants have constantly watched Plaintiffs.
They park their police
vehicles
directly across the street in front of the Point
705. Additionally,
Defendants
have routinely stopped vehicles directly in
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since 1965
by the Samuel H. Kress
Foundation, and here, you see
Dean Millon with one
of the early Kress Professors
in the 1980s.
Many distinguished senior men--
and here you see quite an array
of them--
held this position before 1980,
before the real opening
of CASVA, including Jakob
Rosenberg, Rudolf Wittkower,
William Chapin Seitz, and Sir
Ellis Waterhouse.
Finally, Agnes Mongan
was the first woman
to be appointed,-- again,
before the opening of CASVA--
and another would not come along
until 1988, when Sylvie Beguin,
from the Louvre,
took up the title.
Also rolled into the CASVA
community of scholars
were the David E. Finley, Samuel
H. Kress, and Chester Dale
predoctoral fellowships,
all of which had existed.
They would be joined immediately
by the newly endowed Robert H.
and Clarice Smith Predoctoral
Fellow.
Now, all of this history
merely brings us to a kind
of landing page to a beginning.
I think it's important, however,
to remember our history,
because we need tobe reminded
of how fortunate
and how extraordinary was
the creation of the Center
within a national museum
at a moment
when private and public support
for research in the arts
and humanities
was enlightened and adventurous.
The building in which we find
ourselves, with its human scale
and thoughtful integration
of public and restricted spaces,
is a place in which
creative thought is encouraged
and exchange possible.
Carter Brown, working with I.M.
Pei and Paul Mellon--
here we see the presentation
of one of the drawings
with Chief Justice Warren
Burger--
they've all hoped for this,
expressing a belief
that "a Center, physically
situated in the National Gallery
would make it
possible for scholars,
at a variety of levels
and from a variety
of academic and museum
backgrounds,
to pursue their own studies
in the atmosphere of a company
of scholars,
working day to day
in conjunction
with great original works
of art"--
Carter Brown's words.
And he concluded
that "the constituency thus
served will be far broader,
ultimately,
than the few | {
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revoking of
speed limits in accordance with the Hutt City Council Bylaw 2005 Speed
Limits, including the hearing of any submissions.
GENERAL
FUNCTIONS
Provide
their local communityís input on:
∑Councilís
Long Term Plan and/or Annual Plan.
∑Councilís
policies, programmes (including the District Roading Programme) and bylaws.
∑Changes
or variations to the District Plan.
∑Resource
management issues which it believes are relevant to its local community,
through advocacy.
∑The
disposal or acquisition of significant assets.
∑Road
safety including road safety education within its area.
∑Any
other issues a Board believes is relevant to its local area.
∑Review
Local Community Plans as required.
Reports may
be prepared by the Board and presented to Council Committees, along with an
officerís recommendation, for consideration.
Any
submissions lodged by a Board or Committee require formal endorsement by way of
resolution.
Co-ordinate
with Council staff:
∑Local
community consultation on city-wide issues on which the Council has called for
consultation.
Maintain:
∑An
overview of roadworks, water supply, sewerage, stormwater drainage, waste
management andtraffic management for its local area.
∑An
overview of parks, recreational facilities and community activities within its
local area.
Develop:
∑Community
Response Plans in close consultation with the Wellington Region Emergency
Management Office, emergency organisations, the community, residentsí
associations, other community groups, and local businesses.†† The Community
Response Plans will be reviewed on an annual basis.
Grant:
∑Local
community awards.
Promote:
∑Recreational
facilities and opportunities in its area with a view to ensure maximum usage.
∑Arts
and crafts in its area.
Appoint:
∑A
liaison member or, where appropriate, representatives to ad hoc bodies, which are
involved in community activities within the Boardís area, on which a community
representative is sought.
Endorse:
∑Amendments
to the Eastbourne Community Trust Deed (Eastbourne Community Board only).
††††
HUTT CITY COUNCIL
Wainuiomata Community Board
Meeting to be held in the Wainuiomata Community
Library,
Queen Street, Wainuiomataon
†Thursday 9 February 2017 commencing at 7.00pm.
ORDER PAPER
Public Business
1.†††††† APOLOGIES†
2.†††††† PUBLIC COMMENT
Generally up to 30 minutes is set
aside for | {
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Gentiles was
one of the primary places that
he traveled in his
missionary journeys was to
Ancient Greece to take
that message and when he got
to Greece, one of the
things he discovered was,
it was a, much
of Greece was stooped
in idolatry.
Polytheistic religions, multiple
gods, they had you know, most
of them had believed in
one god per month.
There was a god that they
honored for each
month in the calendar year.
And you have probably have
already heard that from some of
the other presenters that
have been here.
But this, but Paul, here
he comes, and
he is preaching a monotheistic
religion.
One God, the believe
in one God.
It is interesting however, some
of the famous people,
philosophers of ancient Greece
believe in one
God, but yet the society
believed in many gods.
Like, for example, Plato,
believed in only one
God, and he referred to,
Plato referred to
this God as form of the Good.
And then anotherone, Aristotle,
who was Plato's student,
referred to the supreme God
as the Prime Mover.
But they didn't know what
his name was.
They didn't, they knew, they
felt that there was a
supreme God, but didn't know
what his name was.
And so Paul comes, and he sees
the inscription in
Corinth, that says, To
the Unknown God.
And he said I see that you are
very superstitious,
he was telling the Greeks
of that day.
There's a lot of superstition
that you have here too.
The message to the unknown God.
They didn't know who he was,
and so Paul began to try
to enlighten them to cause them
to understand who the God was.
But let me first say this,
that there was several
cities that he visited
in Greece.
One of them was Philippi, in
Acts 16 and the other one
was Thessalonica in Acts 17
records the story of that.
And then he visited Athens the
capital | {
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Gentiles was
one of the primary places that
he traveled in his
missionary journeys was to
Ancient Greece to take
that message and when he got
to Greece, one of the
things he discovered was,
it was a, much
of Greece was stooped
in idolatry.
Polytheistic religions, multiple
gods, they had you know, most
of them had believed in
one god per month.
There was a god that they
honored for each
month in the calendar year.
And you have probably have
already heard that from some of
the other presenters that
have been here.
But this, but Paul, here
he comes, and
he is preaching a monotheistic
religion.
One God, the believe
in one God.
It is interesting however, some
of the famous people,
philosophers of ancient Greece
believe in one
God, but yet the society
believed in many gods.
Like, for example, Plato,
believed in only one
God, and he referred to,
Plato referred to
this God as form of the Good.
And then anotherone, Aristotle,
who was Plato's student,
referred to the supreme God
as the Prime Mover.
But they didn't know what
his name was.
They didn't, they knew, they
felt that there was a
supreme God, but didn't know
what his name was.
And so Paul comes, and he sees
the inscription in
Corinth, that says, To
the Unknown God.
And he said I see that you are
very superstitious,
he was telling the Greeks
of that day.
There's a lot of superstition
that you have here too.
The message to the unknown God.
They didn't know who he was,
and so Paul began to try
to enlighten them to cause them
to understand who the God was.
But let me first say this,
that there was several
cities that he visited
in Greece.
One of them was Philippi, in
Acts 16 and the other one
was Thessalonica in Acts 17
records the story of that.
And then he visited Athens the
capital | {
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|
| Composer
|
|-
| Randolph Churchill
| United Kingdom
|
|
| Journalist, Politician
| Lord Derby: King of Lancashire|-
| Carmelo de Arzadun
| Uruguay
|
|
| Painter
|
|-
| Kees van Dongen
| Netherlands
|
|
| Painter
| Woman with Large Hat|-
| Carl Theodor Dreyer
|
|
|
| Film Director
| Michael|-
| Marcel Duchamp
| France
|
|
| Artist, Writer
| Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2, Fountain|-
| Margaret Duley
|
|
|
| Novelist
| §Works
|-
| Edna Ferber
| United States
|
|
| Novelist, playwright
| So Big, Show Boat|-
| Red Foley
| United States
|
|
| Singer-songwriter
| Old Shep|-
| Lucio Fontana
| Italy
|
|
| Painter, Sculptor
|-
| Ruth France
| New Zealand
|
|
| Librarian, Poet, Novelist
| The Race|-
| George Gamow
|
|
|
| Physicist, Science writer
| One Two Three... Infinity and Mr. Tompkins series
|-
|Adele definitely knows the way to her son Angelo's heart.
The singer, who welcomed the toddler in October 2012, treated the little lad to a fun-filled day at Disneyland in Anaheim, California over the weekend.
Known as 'the happiest place on earth', the theme park certainly lived up to its reputation as the pair - also joined by Angelo's dad Simon Konecki - wandered around.
Adele had seemingly gone all out to make it a day the three-year-old wouldn't forget as she treated him to plenty of goodies.
(Image: Vantagenews.com)
Pushing his pram around the park, she rested heaps of bags on the back of the stroller after going wild in the giftshops.
Read more:Adele explains why her Grammys performance sounded out of tune
Just one of the many presents that she'd splashed out for | {
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is all it
takes to be entered onto the Registry.
Another fact not widely known is that
because Native Americans are still a
Founded In 1991
Volume 3 Issue 3
MayZB,1993
tribal people kin are known back for
generations, there is a very good
chance to find matches among
relations and tribe members.
The unique characteristics of an
individual's marrow are inherited in
the same way one inherits skin, eye
and hair color. This means that when
no match is found among the patient's
brothers and sisters, the best chance
of finding a matching donor is with
someone from the same ethnic
background. In most cases, a Native
American's best hope of finding a
perfect match is with another Native
Marrow/See Page 3
Copyright, The Native
1993
Legislators introducing bills that severely
modify the Indian Gaming Act
By Mel Rasmussen
Yesterday several legislators from
the states of Nevada and New Jersey
introduced legislation that will have
a major impact• af
forefront. This is the issue of
sovereignty and how will the United
States will deal with the growing
issues of Tribal Sovereignty.
Photo courtesy ofMinnesota Historical society
Portrayed is the parching phase of Wild Rice Preparation at the Historical Society.
MHS opens exhibit on wildricing utilizing
Indian Activists caught in Guatemala state ofthe art museum technology
insurrection
By Mel Rasmussen
Bill Means, the Executive Director
American Indian Opportunities
Industrialization Center ofMinneapolis,
along with several other prominent
Native American activists were
embroiled and caught in the coup that
occurred this week in Guatemala. Means
was in attendance at a International
Summit of Indigenous Americans that
was held in Guatemala over the
weekend.
According to sources who have been
in contact with Means who is in South
Dakota at the present, stated that he
managed to get out ofthe country on the
morning ofthe coup. Means stated that
he woke up and heard nothing but
music | {
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Welcome to The Rich Rabbit.
In a few minutes,
you will be watching a short documentary
video about the life of Elon Musk,
The World's Most
Innovative Billionaire.
Elon is a multi-talented
and focused man,
a frontline for many
groundbreaking inventions
and technologies
that shook the world.
He is an inventor,
astute businessman,
and investor in various industries.
He is a stakeholder in
multiple business ventures,
a man of high reputation,
and standing in the science
and space technology industry.
In one of his statements,
he said he would only be happy
when humans on Earth have
colonized and escaped Mars.
This is quite thrilling indeed!
If you've seen the
movie "Iron Man,"
you'll see that Elon Musk is
like Tony Stark in real-life.
He has produced space
rockets, electric cars,
solar batteries, and robots,
earning him billions.
He also displayed
his political prowess
and niche as an industry leader
when he assumed the
role of an adviser
in President Donald
Trump's administration.
In this video,
we will discussElon's entire managerial
and entrepreneurial career in detail.
And this is an exciting piece as you learn
from one of the most charismatic leaders
in the science and
technology industry.
If you enjoy this
short documentary film,
please give us a thumbs up
and subscribe to our channel.
Born in Pretoria, South
Africa, on June 28, 1971,
Elon Musk is the oldest
of three children,
with his brother Kimbal
and sister Tosca.
Elon's father, Errol,
was a wealthy South African engineer,
and the mother, Maye,
was a Canadian nutritionist,
model and the oldest star
for a CoverGirl campaign.
As a child, Elon was one of the
kids we can classify as unique.
He was always so consumed in
his inventions and daydreams
that his parents and doctors had a test
done to check his hearing abilities.
In his father's opinion,
Elon was a thinker who
often kept to himself.
In a gathering with lots of
people enjoying a great party,
you'll | {
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laughter, he bade farewell,
trusting that the Karui
would soon bolster his unflinching resolve.
Time passed, and the two reunited
on the edge of a boiling lake.
Einhar had tracked down the basilisk,
determined to claim it for his menagerie,
while the Exile needed some acid
for a purpose neither was quite clear about.
The one known as Sin tried to explain,
but neither man had the patience for detail
once the objective of their quest was known.
Effortlessly successful, the pair
continued to travel together,
defeating foes with ease
until they unexpectedly encountered
another devotee of the First Ones!
Einhar saw it first, a giant egg;
“could this be a roc,” he asked?
But no, a large humanoid emerged,
calling herself Garukhan,
and commanding the winds
as though she had called upon
Saqawal, First of the Sky!
Einhar was worried, for when the sky burned
it was Saqawal’s wings that ended theto Ezomyr,
others that he ventured north from Maraketh,
fishermen saw him near Ngamakanui,
pirates spotted him in Pondium.
Einhar traversed every mountain range,
crossed every lake and river,
scoured the wilds of Wraeclast,
but could not find Farrul’s tracks.
Eventually, he made his way to Oriath,
perhaps he would find his old friend
and together they would succeed
where alone he had failed.
Oriath square was crowded
with far more people than expected;
he had never been to a true city before!
However, his hunter’s instincts still served
and he spotted the Karui exile
speaking to a woman with blood-red hair.
Creeping closer, he heard the woman
speak of places not of this world:
verdant canopies that shroud the world in darkness,
colossal caverns, vast and silent,
fields of dancing flames that never rest,
mountain peaks perched on a meadow of clouds.
Einhar could not believe his ears!
But if these places | {
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home in the fjords.
For over a thousand years,
they endured and adapted
to the harshness of the weather
and the landscape.
KAREN: Our ancestors
were nomadic people
and traveled great distances
in their kayaks
in search of food.
NARRATOR: When the Russians
arrived on the Kenai Peninsula
in the late 1700s,
the Sugpiaq lifestyle
changed dramatically.
They began hunting sea otters
in large numbers
English:
to exchange their pelts
for trade goods.
With their way of life altered
and their population reduced
by disease,
the last of the Sugpiaq
left the Outer Coast
by the end of the 1800s,
settling
in established communities.
For the Moonin-Kvasnikoff
family,
a visit to the fjords is,
in some ways, a journey home.
♫
HERMAN: A lot of my family lived
out this area.
They traveled
all these coastlines.
A lot of good food
on the beach.
It's like, you know,
tide is out, the table is set.
NARRATOR: The foods
of these fjords
were first named in Sugpiaq.
HERMAN: We got mussels.
You callthem amyaks.
And the clams are salaq.
And you got cockles.
They're called taugtaaq.
Snails and, you know,
English:
to exchange their pelts
for trade goods.
With their way of life altered
and their population reduced
by disease,
the last of the Sugpiaq
left the Outer Coast
by the end of the 1800s,
settling
in established communities.
For the Moonin-Kvasnikoff
family,
a visit to the fjords is,
in some ways, a journey home.
HERMAN: A lot of my family lived
out this area.
They traveled
all these coastlines.
There's just a lot of good food
on the beach.
It's like, you know,
tide is out, the table is set.
NARRATOR: The foods
of these fjords
were first named in Sugpiaq.
HERMAN: We got mussels.
You call them amyaks.
And the clams are salaq.
And you got cockles.
They're called taugtaaq.
Snails and, you know,
pretty much
English:
anything off the beach --
kelp, pop kelp or ribbon kelp.
KVASNIKOFF: My ancestors
lived here,
and living here
and coming to visit | {
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ones being healthy
Dislikes:
Seeing death, people smoking
Colour:
Green
Music:
Clasical
Food:
Anything
Animal:
Those that dont kill
Book:
Medicine books
Quote:
You cant change the world if your on your bed complaining
Drink:
Non alcaholic (bad for health)
Song:
any
Movie:
not a fan
Sport:
Any
Other Favs:
WIP
Appearance & More Images
Model:
IDK
Gender:
male
Eye Colour:
Violet
Hair Colour:
Grey
Height:
Normal
Weight:
Normal
Ethnicity:
asian
Handedness:
right
Shoe Size:
Normal
Blood Type:
AB+
Voice:
Stern
Distinguishing Marks:
A few scars
Body Style:
Fit and muscular
One Word to Describe:
Dad
Best Physical Trait:
Meeting his teacher
Worst Physical Trait:
WIP
Mental/Emotional State:
None
Things to Change:
A bit slow
Mental/Emotional disorders:
None
Medical Problems/Ailments:
Healthy
Family & Childhood Info
Mother:
Keiko tokukawa
Father:
Kenji tokukawa
Creator:
None
Half-Siblings:
None
Full-Siblings:
None
Other Relatives:
None
Home:
Japan
Earliest Memory:
Being in Japan
Best Memory:
Meeting his teacher
Schooling:
Normal
First Kiss:
WIP
First Love:
WIP
First Sex:
WIP
Other Firsts:
WIP
General Info
Nicknames:
The tough Doctor
Native Language:
Japan
Character Flaw:
Personality
Fears/Phobias:
Those around him dying
Hobbies:
Medicine
Personal Motto:
Sometimes even poison can be medicne as like how medicine can be poison
Things He Won't Do:
Kill someone
Most Admires:
Apollo
Most Influenced By:
His brain
Moral Compass:
North
Most Important Person Before:
Family and friends
Most Important Person Now:
Those close to him
Reacts to Crises:
Calmly
Faces Their Problems:
Quickly
Reacts to Change:
A bit slow
Alignment:
WIP
Dream Job:
Become the best doctor
Current Job:
A doctor
Sometimes whatAustralia Day next year will come two days late for one West Australian council.
The City of Fremantle has decided to move its traditional January 26 events to January 28 because of cultural sensitivities.
The council will celebrate One Day in Fremantle on January 28, with musicians such as John Butler, Dan Sultan and Mama Kin.
Should Australia Day's date be changed? Yes 78543 No 38267
The council describes the event as "an opportunity for all Australians to come together and celebrate the multicultural diversity of our country".
Mayor Brad Pettitt said the council was not opposed to celebrations on January 26, but was offering an opportunity for all Australians to come together on another day.
Dr Pettitt said the council had heard "loud and clear" from local Aboriginal elders that it was not | {
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the hollow toward Stock
ton, visitors are shown Castle Rock,
where Murietta's lookouts were sta
tioned to warn their leader when
bands of grim, determined men rode up
the glen with rifles at "ready," praying
for a chance to get in the bullet that
would rid California of the dreaded des
perado.
CorraJ Ho!low -was so named because
Its precipitous sides made it a natural
enclosure from which even the hardy
hill- bred cattle could scarcely escape
except toward the river. Its enduring
fame, however, rests on the immensity
of the coal deposits that have been dis
covered on its sides and on the fact that
the greatest electrician of the age had
his name perpetuated by having the
place called after him.
Eight years ago it came to the ears
of the Treadwell brothers, who located
and developed the great Treadwell
mines in Alaska, that coal deposits ex
isted in CorralHollow, which is about
twelve miles from Livermore. Be
lieving that such deposits would be of
great value In such close proximity of
San Francisco, they began a quiet in
vestigation as to the extent and qual
ity of the coal. Becoming convinced
that an inexhaustible supply of fuel ex
isted in the interior of the mountain
they set about acquiring possession of
the rights and properties that would
A Portion of the New Town of Tesla. In the Foreground Are a Few of the Cottages That Have Been Built for the Accommodation of the Men of Family While in the
Background Appear Rooming-Houses in Which the Single Men Lodge. The Hotel Appears in the Right Background and the Company Store in the Left Foreground.
give them absolute control of the coal
fields. Without attracting any great
amount of attention they bought up | {
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years--those are the important things. Long ago, out of the blue, I became a Christian. It was something I never planned on, but what joy it has been. I do website development and I like to read and garden and paint and I love beauty and truth.
Books Read in 2016
The Bible Tells Me So
The Thirteenth Tale
We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves
Into Thin Air
A Month in the Country
Father Melancholy's Daughter
Books Read in 2015
Orphan Train
An Altar in the World
The Nightingale
The Way We Live Now
The Magnificent Ambersons
Wolf Hall
An Unnecessary Woman
Unforgettable
Poking a Dead Frog
The Awakening
The Spy Who Came In From the Cold
Gone to Earth
Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
Ordinary Grace
True Grit
A Vintage Affair
The Persian Pickle Club
Fair and Tender Ladies
Books Read in 2014
And God Spoke
The Road
Single & Single
Riding Rockets
Living on the Border of the Holy
TheRapture of Canaan
State of Wonder
All the Light We Cannot See
Quartet in Autumn
The Chaperone
Speaker for the Dead
Introducing the New Testament
Unbroken
Call the Midwife
Gone Girl
Thirteen Moons
Books Read in 2013
Memoirs of a Geisha
Firstlight
Wuthering Heights
Bel Canto
Moonfleet
The Tiger's Wife
When You Are Engulfed in Flames
The Poisonwood Bible
What's So Amazing About Grace
Red Sparrow
The Fallen Angel
The Dark is Rising
City Boy
Year of Wonders
Books Read in 2012
Hannah Coulter
The Grapes of Wrath
Dracula
Keeping Faith: A Novel
The Honk and Holler Opening Soon
The Franchise Affair
A Game of Thrones
11/22/63
The Alto Wore Tweed
Bridge of Birds
Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont
The Weirdstone of Brisingamen
The Life of Pi
Snow Falling on Cedars
The Scarlet Pimpernel
Gilead
Emma
Books Read in 2011
Follow the River
7 Habits of Highly Effective People
God's Secretaries: The Making of the King James Bible
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
A Prayer for Owen Meany
My Antonia
The Last Word
The Woman in White
The Prisoner of | {
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the official LDS position is:
They were a typical New England family from England and Scotland who were grateful for their freedom
for which their ancestors fought
on both sides during the American Revolution in 1776.
they were religious people who read the Bible, although they did not belong to any church
Smith was from a poor family. His father was constantly looking for a job and often changed his place of residence
Around 1806, the whole family moved to West Lebanon
where typhus reigned
And then to Norwitch, New Hampshire
After moving, the financial situation did not change much
Smith himself wrote that due to hard childhood he devoted little time to science
He could hardly read and write andas he spoke he did not know mathematics
but he was interested in religion. Already then the Second Great Awakening began
While in Vermount, the Smith family had good relationships with congregationalists
but they did not get involved in religion
This situation changed after 1818.
after moving to Manchester
according to Mormons, from 1819 Joseph Smitch had prophetic dreams
From 1820, the Smith family sympathizes with Presbyterians
Smith claims that he was 14 years old and four family members (mother, sister and 2 brothers) converted to Presbyterianism
Joseph Smith did not know which church to choose
She began to read the letter of St. James 1.5, where there was an invitation to pray
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production
could be used on a “somewhat”
larger
scale
than
today,
in
appropriate
production
systems, according to the
report.
The report also suggests
focusing
on
technology
maturing and improvement,
for example making biogas via
fermentation or rot of organic
waste, which could even serve
as a way to recycle general
household waste. Moreover,
Sweden could increase its
use of land unsuitable for
agricultural production to grow
energy crops or rapid-growth
deciduous trees.
Lumber rises to new high as North America mills slow output
LUMBER
futures
have
rallied to a seven-week high
on speculation that North
American mills are slowing
output as demand increases
from home builders in the US
and China.
Some sawmills announced
plans in June and July to
reduce output, while exports
from the US jumped 7% in
May from April, including
a 34% increase to China,
according to Hakan Ekstrom,
Advertising: Tel +61 7 3266 1429 Email: [email protected]
the president of industry
researcher Wood Resources
International.
US builders started work
on new homes at a 914,000
annual rate in May, up 29%
from a yearto Jewishness first or to Israel's survival first. The reasoning and the willingness to negotiate some issues come second.
At the same time, it is not enough to be stubborn or to ignore the surrounding culture. This tactic works only when Jews are isolated. It was not working in the big cities of Judea in the second century B.C.E., and it will not likely work well in the highly magnetic culture/society of today.
The Chasidim of those days could not have won the battle alone. In the conflict, many HeIlenizing Jews decided to stand by their fellow Jews rather than by the Greeks. A coalition won the victory of Hanukkah-the traditionalists united with acculturating Jews who decided to come down on the Jewish side. Even as they fought the cultural | {
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documented on Showtime's A Season with Florida State Football.
Before the season
Returning
Offense
Sean Maguire
Dalvin Cook
Freddie Stevenson
Jesus Wilson
Travis Rudolph
Kermit Whitfield
Ermon Lane
Ryan Izzo
Roderick Johnson
Kareem Are
Alec Eberle
Wilson Bell
Brock Ruble
Chad Mavety
Ryan Hoefeld
Defense
DeMarcus Walker
Derrick Nnadi
Josh Sweat
Trey Marshall
Ro'Derrick Hoskins
Marquez White
Derwin James
Jacob Pugh
Nate Andrews
Matthew Thomas
Departures
Offense
Everett Golson
Mario Pender
Defense
Nile Lawrence-Stample
Reggie Northrup
Terrance Smith
Lamarcus Brutus
Javien Elliott
Tyler Hunter
Tyrell Lyons
Giorgio Newberry
Jalen Ramsey
Chris Casher
Lorenzo Featherston (Medical DQ)
Special teams
Roberto Aguayo
Cason Beatty
Recruiting class
Spring game
After the season
NFL Draft
The following players were selected in the 2017 NFL Draft:
Coaching staff
Media
Florida State football is broadcast on the Florida State University Seminoles Radio Network and the games are called by GeneGovernment Hill Apartment Blaze Leaves 40 Homeless
Anchorage firefighters responded to a multiple alarm fire at a Government Hill apartment house on Thursday afternoon. The blaze left about 40 people without homes. It is the second apartment fire in the city in a week.
APTI Reporter-Producer Ellen Lockyer started her radio career in the late 1980s, after a stint at bush Alaska weekly newspapers, the Copper Valley Views and the Cordova Times. When the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Prince William Sound, Valdez Public Radio station KCHU needed a reporter, and Ellen picked up the microphone.
Since then, she has literally traveled the length of the state, from Attu to Eagle and from Barrow to Juneau, covering Alaska stories on the ground for the AK show, Alaska News Nightly, the Alaska | {
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whole
stack of floors piled up on top each
other and then a spindle of core collins
tend to
the core of each of the twin towers
consisted of forty seven massive steel
columns
if the floors had broken loose from them
these columns will still be in sticking
up into the air thousand feet
the plane did not cut although
scorecards
redesign
city back
going since then
archangel internal condition
probably could sustain
multiple
impacts of jetliners
from the top of the world trade center
bombing tempting force out there it
would've taken eight to ten seconds to
hit the ground
in calendar resistance whatsoever went
hours came down and nearly three-fourths
speed
two hundred thousand tons of steel
shatters explodes outwards over five
hundred being this means that florist
shop where at an average rate
about ten floors per second
there is no scenario for a pancake
affect the buildings following that
allows them to follow the radar freefall
andwhich goes off
primarily as a blast
knows enormous dust clouds
you can imagine when u assembled these
chemicals on a large scale
fourteen metal
who will center
both hours after the class and building
seven of them and said was the even hit
and jack
part of the problem is that most people
simply don't know much about building
summoned due to the extraordinary
secrecy surrounding this collapse and
this was a forty seven story
skyscraper this having hit five twenty
five
it was not hit by a plane
this building had fires on only two or
three fours and it was brought down by
what we need
was a controlled demolition
malicious electives like that
i think in the middle
and in that building just come straight
down almost a free-fall speed they first
blow one of the central columns so the
building falls down itself building
seven had a classic crap
or where central | {
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lives. Their
much-anticipated field meet was
held in Pensacola on Saturday,
February 1, lasting the majority of
the day.
The tiny troop from Port St.,
Joe faced nineteen other schools,
i... ntimidatingly determined to con-
quer the number one spot. The
eompetiffion was divided irito s&v-
eral different categories. The
cadets shivered more from the
damp, cold morning than the
competition as they entered the
first few obstacles of timed push-
ups, sit-ups, and an academic
test. Personnel inspection and
relay races came later as more
adrenaline started pumping and a
militant edge became molded in
the contest. A knockout drill, or a
test of marching skills, ended the
duel of the schools, and the win-
ners were finally called to receive
their awards.
The cadets performed well as
a team, supported one another,
and stayed focused throughout
the entire experience. Although no
awards were given to the hopeful
cadets, no feeling of loss rained on
their day. Havingministry
team is touring the southern
United States this spring. The
members of the group are
students at Bob Jones University
in Greenville, South Carolina. Bob
Jones University is a Bible-
believing Christian liberal arts
i .
university with an annual
enrollment of 5,000 students from
every state in the Union and over.
.30 foreign countries. BJU offers
over 120 undergraduate majors in
its College of Arts and Sciences
and Schools of Religion, Fine Arts,
PSJ Fifth Graders Raise
Money for St. Jude
Children's Hospital
Fifth graders at Pqrt St. Joe,
Elementary School recently com-
pleted a Math-a-thon in support
of St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital. Thirty-six students par-
ticipated in the Math-a-thon to
raise a total of $2,420.60. Thanks
go out to each and every student
who collected donations, and
especially to all of the generous
citizens of Gulf County who gave
money for such an. important
cause.
Students raising over $75.00
earned a certificate, a free pass to
Six Flags, | {
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R. Sligar, EdD, CVE
Assistant Professor
Director of Vocational Evaluation
Mark A. Stebnicki, PhD, LPC,
CRC, CCM
Professor
Director of Rehabilitation Counseling
Sharon Shallow, MAEd
Clinical Instructor
Stephen W. Thomas, EdD, CRC, CVE
Professor
Paul Toriello, RhD
Associate Professor
Director of Doctoral Studies
Cathy Moore
Administrative Support Associate
Judy Harrison
Administrative Support Associate
34 Alliance 2011
36 Alliance 2011
in Florida and in the Onslow, Craven
and Pitt county school systems in
North Carolina. Her interests are in the
areas of autism and augmentative and
alternative communication.
Stephen Leierer, associate professor in
the Department of Rehabilitation Studies,
received his doctorate
from Florida State
University, and
worked at LSU and
the University of
Memphis before
joining ECU’s
faculty. Leierer will
work primarily in
the doctoral program in rehabilitation
counseling and administration.
Heather L. Ramsdell, assistant
professor in the Department of
Communication Sciences and Disorders,
received a bachelor’s degree in speech-language
pathology
and audiology from
Iona College, a
master’s degree in
communication
disorders from
Boston University,
and a doctorate from
The University of
Memphis. She previously worked as a
coordinator of thevocal and speech
development project at the University
of Memphis and as a speech-language
pathologist in the Memphis City
School District. Her research and
teaching interests span phonetics,
phonology and psycholinguistics. She
is developing a research laboratory to
study infant vocal development with
future hopes to better predict later
language outcomes and to identify early
anomalies in development.
Elizabeth Bunting, clinical assistant
professor in the Department of
Physician Assistant Studies, received
a bachelor’s degree in zoology from
North Carolina
State University
and a master’s
degree in physician
assistant studies
from East Carolina
University. She will
be concentrating on
clinical rotations
during the second year of the physician
assistant studies curriculum and guest
lecturing for other courses.
J. Patrick Carter, clinical assistant
professor in the Department of
Physician Assistant Studies, received a
bachelor’s degree
in biology from
the University of
Kansas, a bachelor’s
degree in physician
assistant studies
from Wichita State
University, and
a master’s degree
in physician assistant studies with a
concentration in emergency medicine
from the University of Nebraska.
Carter | {
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camping
stuff," said one camper.
"I wrote a paper," said
another. There's one in
every crowd.
At 6:15 a.m. the crew
moved camp to the main
level of the LRC. Their
presence seemed to attract
no special attention on the
part of early-morning li-brary-
goers, with the ex-ception
of one passerby,
who asked how soon they
were planning to leave.
Apparently satisfied with
the reply, he continued on
his way.
The campers' RA, asked
if he was forewarned of
the camp-out, replied,
"Camp-out?' What camp-out?"
Bethel Faculty and Administration:
The Clarion is now accepting entries
for the
First Annual
"Let Me Tell You About the Time..."
Contest
Submit your true recollections of
pranks, gags, or practical jokes from
your colege days by Feb. 19. Winning
entries will be published in the Clarion
on Feb. 26. (Names may be withheld
by request.)
RESIDENCE STAFF VIEWPOINT
What are AD's and RA's?
Larry Jacobs
RD Silvercrest
An AD is a maturing
Christian who is wil-ling
to reach out to oth-ers
with aheart of
compassion as well as
courage. He/she is not
expected to have it all
together but should be
an individual who is in
the process of growth
as a total person: phys-ically,
mentally and
spiritually. To put it
simply, an AD is a
friend.
Nona Ai
RA Arden Village West
An RA is a counselor
and a resource person
forming a vital link be-tween
administration
and students. Above all
an RA is a friend. An
RA is one who not only
has the opportunity to
share in the excitement
of academic, social and
spiritual growth among
his/her own guys/gals
but is also one who is
pushed to grow and ex-pand
in these areas
him/herself.
Rod Long
Director of Housing
RA's and AD's are ma-ture
third and fourth
year student leaders
who are also Housing
Staff Employees. As
trained paraprofession-als
RA's and AD's are
responsible, in conjunc-tion
with the Housing
Staff, for the growth of
whole persons in the
college residences by
facilitating the social,
spiritual, physical,
emotional and intellec-tual
development of
students.
Andrea Fair
RD Arden Village | {
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–94
krill harvesting at,
new fungi in,
oil and mineral resources of,
pack ice of, –95
penguins of,
Shackleton Centennial Expedition to,
update, –96
vulnerability of,
Antarctic Circle, crossing of,
Antarctic Treaty,
anti-Semitism, , , ,
Anufriev, Sergey, ,
Arab Spring, ,
Arakan (Rakhine) State, , –63
author's visit to, –68
Araujo, Cleber,
Argumenty i Fakty,
Aris, Michael,
armaments, development of,
Arman (Hope),
Arsenijević, Damir, –17
art:
for art's sake,
auction world of,
commercial expectations of, , –55, ,
conceptual, ,
and controversy, , ,
and craft, –45, , , ,
cultural vocabulary of,
as entertainment, , –47
figurative painting,
formalism,
interpretation of, –86
minimalism,
modernism,
painted miniatures,
performance art, , –77, , ,
and politics, , , –64, –85, ,
power to change the world, ,
and protectionism, ,
purposes of, , , ,
purposes of museums,
radical form in,
realist, ,
trompe l'oeil,
and truth, ,
visual,
Asefi, Yousof, , –74
Asian Americans, verbal abuse of,
Asian democracies, US support of,
Atatürk, Kemal,
Athens, Olympics in,
Attiga, Giumma,
Augustine of Hippo,
Aung Kyaw Naing,
Aung Min,
Aung San, , ,
Aung San Suu Kyi,of, –6
see also Islam, Islamophobia
Myanmar, –82
absence of basic services in, –48, –52, ,
artists in, –47, –75
blogging in, –72
Buddhist majority in, , , –59, , , –68,
censorship in, , , , –73, –80,
and China, , ,
constitution of, , , –58,
Cyclone Nargis in, –58
economy of, ,
education in, , –53
88 Generation in,
elections in, , –55, –58, –82
ethnic groups in, , , –64, , –70, ,
expatriates from, , –72
Golden Rock shrine in, –66
government move to Naypyidaw, , –54
hope in, , ,
idea of freedom in,
independence of, , , , ,
individual states in, –70
Inle Lake guesthouse in, –79
international sanctions in, , –49
Inthar Heritage House in,
Kyaiktiyo Pagoda in,
laws in, , , ,
military junta in, –46, , , –52, , , , , , , , ,
national identity in, , ,
Plain of Temples (Bagan), –67
political prisoners | {
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the family
bathtub he thought about rolling
over and drowning himself
in an act of suicide.
Now, he obviously
didn't do that.
But what's also obvious
is that his circumstances
didn't change.
He still lacks the limbs now
that he locked in that bathtub.
So what's changed?
His perspective.
Instead of thinking about
what his lack of limbs
prevents him from
doing, he started
to think about what his lack
of limbs enabled him to do.
In the afternoon
I spent with him
I spent also with another
family he had invited along,
and that family included
this 2-year-old girl, Brooke.
And, as you can see,
Brooke doesn't have arms.
Nick's lack of limbs was
not diagnosed in utero
by ultrasound.
It was only discovered
when he was born.
Brooke's lack of limbs--
or her lack of arms--
on the other hand,
was discovered while her mom
was pregnant via ultrasound,
and when the mom went
for a routine ultrasound
and they saw the fetus
didn't have arms,
themeans 25
years ago Lianna was 12.
And Leanna told me her
story, that growing up
in Mexico City, when she was 12
one day two men kidnapped her,
held her for two days,
and brutally raped her.
She got pregnant from that rape.
And when she went to the
doctor and discovered this,
the doctors offered
her an abortion.
And Lianna asked the
doctors if abortion
would help her forget the rape,
if it would help ease her pain
and suffering.
And the doctor said, well,
no, it won't do that.
And she realized in that moment
that if ending her baby's life
wouldn't benefit anybody,
she wasn't going to do it.
And Lianna said, if abortion
wasn't going to heal anything,
I didn't see the point.
She said, I just knew I had
somebody inside my body.
I never thought about who
her biological father was.
She was my kid.
She was inside of me.
And just knowing she
needed | {
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several major redevelopment projects, has
been nonchalant about the city's homeless problem, and
has presided over a spike in crime.
''With the right
leadership, I think this could be a great city and not
the halfway point between Tahoe and San Francisco,'' he told
the Associated Press on Monday. ''We've had tons of
missed opportunities.''
But from the
beginning, Johnson has been haunted by two previous
investigations into whether he behaved inappropriately with
teenage girls.
Phoenix police
investigated an allegation that Johnson, then 29, molested
a 16-year-old girl in 1995. No charges were filed. The
Sacramento Bee obtained a draft legal document
that showed Johnson paid the girl $230,000 in a confidential
settlement.
In 2007 a student
at the school Johnson helped develop, Sacramento
Charter High School, accused him of touching her
inappropriately. Police investigated after a teacher
reported the allegation and found the claims to be
without merit. As inPhoenix, no charges were filed.
Federal
authorities are investigating whether St. HOPE followed
proper procedure in reporting the California girl's
allegations. The nonprofit has received $807,000 from
the federal AmeriCorps program since 2004.
In addition,
Johnson was forced to apologize after the Bee
reported that half of St. HOPE's 37 properties had
been cited for code violations over a 10-year period.
Vacant lots were left barren and sometimes filled with
garbage. Johnson has since moved to clean up the
properties.
Johnson upset
local gay and lesbian activists recently when he said
marriage should remain restricted to a man and a woman.
Activist Steve Hansen said gay rights are a key issue
in California's seventh-largest city, where there have
been several high-profile hate crimes against gays.
Johnson told the
AP that voters have only rarely asked him about the
sexual misconduct allegations. That demonstrates they are
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keep
their own people in.
And you have to imagine, it
went through the city of Berlin
on the length of 27 miles,
more than a marathon distance.
And it stood for 28 years, more
than a life sentence in prison.
And it was designed
to keep and kill
everybody who was trying to
overcome it from the East.
Although the Eastern propaganda
said it was against fascism,
it was not.
And we will see the
border fortification later
in greater detail that points
directly to the purpose.
It was built as canyon
through a big city.
It had 300 watchtowers.
It was manned by
over 15,000 soldiers
at each moment in time.
The overall border control
in Germany was 47,000 people.
Most of the soldiers were
not in the border strip.
They were in the back land.
They were scouting
the area ahead.
So they didn't want people
to get anywhere near that.
5,000 people alone in Berlin
tried to overcome that.
136a little
bit into the history.
Everything of course starts
with World War II and Germany
being divided by the
four occupying forces,
splitting Germany up as they
decided in Yalta up front.
And Berlin, as a
microcosm of Germany,
was divided the same way.
So you had four zones of
influence by the four forces.
And pretty soon
the Western forces
agreed to work to govern and
form a common economic area,
at some point even to
form a common state.
And the main reason
that the Wall was built
is that people left the
eastern parts in the millions.
From the end of World
War II until the building
of the Berlin Wall, 3.5
million East Germans
left their country, starting
at a population of 18 million.
So it's a 1/6 that
had left the country.
It was mostly young.
It was mostly educated.
It was mostly workforce.
And why did they leave?
Well, first of all, there
was the standard of | {
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took the helm
as the Soviets'
General Secretary.
We'll see a bit more
from Mr. Gorbachev later.
Going from Russia across
the Bering Sea to Alaska,
Libby Riddles made history
when she became the first woman
to win the prestigious
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog
Race on March 31st.
At 29 years old, Riddles
mushed her 14 huskies
through 938 miles of snowy,
cross-country terrain,
with a time of 18 days, 20
minutes, and 17 seconds.
On the very same day, we go to a
sold out Madison Square Garden,
where the very first
Wrestlemania was
seen by one million rabid fans.
The event consisted
of nine matches,
including the Iron Sheik and
Nikolai Volkoff versus the US
Express with Captain Lou Albano,
Andre the Giant versus Big John
Stud, and somehow Cyndi
Lauper became a manager.
The main event was a
battle for the ages,
featuring hulk Hogan and
Mr. T, who doubled up
to defeat Mr. Wonderful Paul
Orndorff and Rowdy Roddy Piper.
Patterson,he got [INAUDIBLE].
He got him.
And of course, who could forget
the honorary guest timekeeper
that night, Liberace?
From New York to
China, on April 7th,
when George Michael and Andrew
Ridgeley, the duo better
known as Wham!,
performed in China,
being the first band from
the west to ever do so.
The gig was actually
supposed to go to Queen.
Freddie Mercury wanted to be
the first ever to play China.
When Wham!'s manager
heard this, he
sent a video of Mercury's
flamboyant performances
to Chinese authorities.
When the event
organizers saw Mercury,
they opted for Wham1,
who was presented
far more conservatively.
Arriving in mid-April, we would
see boxer Marvelous Marvin
Hagler go toe to toe
with Tommy the Hitman
Hearns at Caesar's Palace.
Hagler won in the
third round by knockout
and, despite only going
such a short distance,
is still considered to be
one of the best fights ever.
[INAUDIBLE]
On April 23rd, New Coke was
introduced to the public.
And the public was | {
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to have offices In Broad Street.
Mlllc, who bad Invested all ha had In
the rubber company, waa out of
money aad had to cut down his plans.
Instead of having the drugs shipped
In large quantities at first, Mlllc, It Is
said, arranged to have bits of tha
stuff mailed la plain aavelopas to
Waldeek at No. 911 Sixth Avenue,
where ha also was known aa May,
Several of the letters confiscated
were found to contatn amall quan
tities of cocaine or opium.
The cocaine, Inspectors learned, cost
the alleged conspirators fifty cents
an ounco and waa to be aold here for
915 an ounce. Pending Waldeck'a
release, the business waa held to a
small scale, but waa to have opened
up when ha got out ot prison.
Agent Baterbrook ran onto the de
tails ot tha plot while he waa Investi
gating how Waldoe Came -by the
opium hewaa Imprisoned for selling
last summer. He found It waa being
smuggled Into this country in en
velopes containing an ounce each,
mostly mailed In Berlin, where the
drug can be bought for almost
nothing.
The opium, which It won planned
to slip Into tho ease bales without tha
knowledge of MUlc'a father, was a
f eraian product especially valued for
smoking.
Mlllo, It is said, formed the Peru-vlan-Cbamayro
Rubber Comnnnv
capitalised at .1700,000, to finance op
tions na naa on several south Amert
can rubber nlantatlona. He sold aev.
oral thousand dollars worth of stock.
His wife la a beautiful young Dal
matian, She knew nothing, tha au
thorities are convinced, of her hus
band's alleged smuggling operations.
NO SERVICE BOARD
REMOVALS TO BE ASKED
ALBANY, March 3. The Inquiry of
the Thompson Legislative Committee
into the workings of the up-State
Public Service Commission will begin
to-morrow. Members of the commit
tee worked over their report | {
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by the ancient Greeks dates back
to at least 500–400 BC, as uncovered at
the ancient city of Kameiros, Rhodes. In
subsequent centuries the practice spread
to the mainland and was eventually
adopted and further developed by the
Romans. The Romans used volcanic pumices
and tuffs found in neighbouring
territories, the most famous ones found
in Pozzuoli, hence the name pozzolan,
and in Segni. Preference was given to
natural pozzolan sources such as German
trass, but crushed ceramic waste was
frequently used when natural deposits
were not locally available. The
exceptional lifetime and preservation
conditions of some of the most famous
Roman buildings such as the Pantheon or
the Pont du Gard constructed using
pozzolan-lime mortars and concrete
testify to both the excellent
workmanship reached by Roman engineers
and to the durable properties of the
utilized binders.
Much of the practical skills and
knowledge regarding the use of pozzolans
was lost at the declineof the Roman
empire. The rediscovery of Roman
architectural practices as described by
Vitruvius in De architectura, also led
to the reintroduction of lime-pozzolan
binders. Particularly the strength,
durability and hydraulic capability of
hardening underwater made them popular
construction materials during the
16th–18th century. The invention of
other hydraulic lime cements and
eventually Portland cement in the 18th
and 19th century resulted in a gradual
decline of the use of pozzolan-lime
binders, which develop strength less
rapidly.
Over the course of the 20th century the
use of pozzolans as additions to
Portland cement concrete mixtures has
become common practice. Combinations of
economical and technical aspects and,
increasingly, environmental concerns
have made so-called blended cements,
i.e. cements that contain considerable
amounts of supplementary cementitious
materials the most widely produced and
used cement type by the beginning of the
21st century.
Pozzolanic materials
The general definition of a pozzolan
embraces a large number of materials
which vary widely in terms of | {
"pile_set_name": [
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} | 50,523,056 |
or to
court.
The rape relief centre has the
same basic function as WAVAW,
however, WAVAW counsels all
women who have been victimized
whether it involves chauvinism,
racial discrimination or assault.
AMS director of administration, Roma Gopaul-Singh, said
that while the AMS executive
agree there is a need to advertise
the women's support centres, they
found the stickers presented a potential for vandalism. To avoid
unsightly defaced stickers, the
AMS executives have suggested
putting up a more permanent advertisement, such as posters.
Protestors
demand ban
by Martin Chester
Tuesday morning, two
Greenpeace activists suspended
themselves and a large banner
from the side ofthe building that
houses Vancouver's British Consulate.
The action was to protest the
British plan to detonate a nuclear
bomb on Wednesday, November
14 in the Nevada desert.
Greenpeace spokesperson,
John Mate, said the organization's
intent was to present "a message
to both the British and Canadian
governments."
Mate said his organization
hopes the British government will
cancel the test, butthe premiums.
The interest earned from the
premiums will go towards covering
the bulk of the administrative
costs, but the GSS will need to
come up with another $5,000 to
pay off those costs.
Louis criticizes NPA Board's
poor environmental record
by Rebecca Bishop
Tim Louis, a candidate for the
Vancouver Parks Board and
member ofthe COPE slate, was in
the SUB Tuesday canvassing for
campus-student support.
Louis' biggest issue is the environment. He strongly criticized
the present NPA dominated Parks
Board for allowing the storage of
PCBs in Stanley Park. He also
criticized the use of carcinogenic
materials in the preservation of
wood used in children's playgrounds.
"The current NPA allows the
use of these materials which are a
type of arsenic," Louis said. "Tests
have indicated that a residue enters the pores of children's skin.
We say change it now and test
later. They say test now and change
it later."
He criticized the NPA | {
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100% vegetarian menu is hearty, designed
to fill you up, and maybe
even give you a little energy.
Making nearly everything
from scratch using the freshest ingredients of the highest
quality, the entire menu is free
of any artificial chemicals,
sweeteners or preservatives.
In every case possible, the
Labyrinth chooses organic
and local ingredients, with
its signature bold-flavored,
organic coffee topping the list.
Mayor Sam Teresi took the
opportunity to offer his
congratulations to James as
well. ìJeff James deserves to be
very proud for reaching this
anniversary milestone. The
first five years in business is
perhaps the most challenging
stretch for any business owner
to endure. Jeff James has not
only risen to the challenge,
he has exceeded expectations
ranging from classic American to multicultural cuisine.
�We are excited to mark our
Jeff James, owner of The
5-year
anniversary in business
Labyrinth Press Company, anthis
summer,
” said James. �It�s
nounced the downtown Jamemy
hope
to
continue
to make
stown coffeehouse and restauthis
spot
a
welcoming
place
rantís 5-year anniversaryHulett’s demThe Valley Historical Society
onstration was fascinating to
is the historical group for
all. Phyllis Ames of Stockton
the Cassadaga Valley area.
brought an old scrapbook kept
Organized in 1977, by the
of the articles when Stockton
late John and Ruth Smith, the was being considered to be a
group has a museum located
part of a dam in 1954. Stockat the corner of Main and
ton historian Helen Piersons
Lester Streets in the village
brought to show some old salt
of Sinclairville. Meetings are
and peppers shakers given
held on a monthly basis from to her when she was in the
April through Dec. on the first fourth grade. Charles Sylvester
Tuesday of each month.
showed some old postcards
and blotters from the Tarbox
Recently the group met for
Sales. Vice President Larry
the annual summer picnic
Barmore had previously talked
at the Sinclairville village
about an old clock that he had
ballpark. | {
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The Bchool
statistics show them to bo superior to
their former Spanish lords. They have
no larger percentage of illiterates than
Spain, of those who cannot read and
write. Ho quotes a bishop who was
astonlRhed to find In the Islands vil
lages hardly a person who could not
read and write. Ho says: "The pres
sure of tho colored people towards the
higher studies nnd the special schools
far exceeds the percentage which one
would anticipate from their propor
tion to the whole population." The
professions of medicine and law In Ma
nila have been crowded with Malays
and Mcstlza.t. Luna, a Filipino artist,
residing in Paris, was commissioned
some yoars ago by tho Spanish Sen
ate, to paint u portrait of Boabdll
Surrendering tho keys of Granada to
the Catholic Queen. Agulnaldo's War
Minister I.una, is pure blooded Ma
lay and a brother of this artist. He
studied In Spainhandled it
as though he was used to it. During
the trip from his residence to King
street and out along Punahou street
tho vehicle was tried at three differ
ent rates ot speed, first at four miles,
then at eight, and on Punahou street
at fourteen mites an hour. It worked
most smoothly and easily at all times,
was well under control, and, a most
Important point, It appeared to excite
no undue attention from horses,
though it was amusing at times to
note their drivers' preparations for the
expected calamity.
' Paris and London motor vehicles
aV "?c2mmo,n " cable and electric
cars in San Francisco. France and
En-und r awav nhn.n.i nt Amprin,
In the adapting of them to every-day
practical purposes, and society on the
less contrivances of every sort adapt-
able to a road Journey or the climbing
of mountains.
Few people have any idea of the
scope | {
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in the
video clip,
the rover, as initially deployed, was far from complete. It
seems to be
missing
such things as a floor pan, and seats, and cameras, and
antennae, and
battery
packs, and various other components – which raises a few
questions,
such as
where were all the other rover parts stowed? How many empty
equipment
bays were
available to accommodate all the various rover components? And
how long
exactly
did it take the astronauts, given the limitations imposed by
their
suits and
gloves, to deploy and fully assemble a Moon buggy?
GM’s crafty R&D team, led by project
manager
Sam
Romano and chief engineer Ferenc Pavlics, supposedly came up
with the
innovative folding rover concept in less than a month, and, in
July of
1969, as
Armstrong and Aldrin were allegedly taking man’s first steps on
the
Moon, GM
was awarded the contract to design and build the rovers. GM
quickly
teamed with
Boeing and got to work, with two significantchallenges to
overcome –
the rover
must fit into the assigned bay, and the total weight was to be
kept to
a
maximum of 400 pounds. Also, the team had to move from concept
drawings
to
mission-ready rover in just 17 months.
As with all other aspects of the Apollo
program,
those
lofty goals proved surprisingly easy to achieve. By early 1971,
GM and
Boeing
had already delivered their first mission-ready rover to NASA
for final
testing
and approval. On July 31, 1971, just two years after the
contract had
been
awarded, what remains to this day the only manned vehicle to
allegedly
land on
an extraterrestrial body began kicking up Moon dust.
The finished product looked not unlike an
Earth-based dune
buggy, albeit with the unique ability to neatly fold away. The
vehicle
featured
simultaneous front and rear steering and steel-mesh tires
mounted on
wheels
that were each driven by their own separate motors. Power was
supposedly
provided by an array of batteries | {
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} | 51,492,021 |
t trigger an Ebola
infection, researchers said.
"Witnessing the events in
Africa makes it clear that
developing new drugs and
vaccines against Ebola should
now be an urgent priority,"
said trial leader Adrian Hill of
Oxford University, in a state-
ment.
Hill and colleagues hope the
trial will finish by the end of
2014. If the vaccine is proven
safe, it could then be used to
vaccinate health workers in
West Africa in a bigger trial
to test its effectiveness. (AP)
1st UK volunteer gets experimental Ebola vaccine
WARSAW---Polish and
Israeli Holocaust
researchers say they
have discovered the
exact location of the
building that housed gas
chambers at Sobibor,
one of the death camps
operated by Nazi Ger-
many in occupied
Poland.
Israel s Yad Vashem
and the Majdanek State
Museum in Poland,
which oversees Sobibor,
announced the finding
yesterday, calling it an
important discovery in
the field of Holocaust
research.
Historians already
knew that the Germans
operated the gas cham-
bers at Sobibor from
April 1942 to October
1943, killingan estimated
250,000 Jews brought
from across Europe. But
they have many unan-
swered questions about
the operation of the site
because there were very
few survivors and most
of the site was disman-
tled during the war by
the Germans.
Photos released by the
researchers show a size-
able rectangular structure
with brick walls that was
divided into four cham-
bers. Haimi said they
have found a number of
personal items nearby,
including gold teeth and
jewelry.
The Germans closed
the camp after a prisoner
revolt on October 14,
1943, when about 300 of
the inmates killed several
German officers. (AP)
Site of
Nazi gas
chambers
located | {
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a
bastion of rent control.
For me enough said,
this is not good policy.
New York City invented
exactly 100 years ago,
the first comprehensive zoning ordinance
in the United States.
Actually it followed
the city of Los Angeles
by a little bit, but it's the most famous
of the zoning ordinances.
As Hayek himself noticed,
the value of a piece of land
depends on what's going next door.
And therefore there are externalities
and actually, that this
is a tricky problem,
worthy of a course in
land use that Richard
occasionally actually teaches.
On the other hand, my
own view is that zoning
in a place like New York
probably does more harm
than good in many ways.
There are real externalities
from land uses,
but Edward Glaeser is
the leading authority
on housing prices in New York.
And Glaeser thinks that
the lack of density
in New York has driven up housing prices.
It made it much harder for
younger people,in particular
to live here so I will not give New York
any positive points for
having invented zoning.
New York once had a senator
named Robert Wagner.
Robert Wagner invented a program,
borrowed a program that New York had
and took it national and it was a program
called public housing.
This was invented in the city of New York
in the state of New York
and was taken national
by Robert Wagner in 1937.
I will say as a conclusionary matter,
I can expand on this if you would like
that this is another demerit
in the history of New York policies.
The current mayor is in favor of something
called mandatory inclusionary zoning,
which is that anyone who
develops an apartment building
has to set aside a certain number of units
for lower income families.
I've written about this
before most of you were born
and was critical from the outset | {
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in en masse disappointing
instantaneous massive sell-off in the
market for everyone had to cover the
marin lands
it did trigger mass bankruptcy the same
reason intern collapsing over sixteen
thousand banks innately misfiring
international bankers to not only by a
rival banks at a discount to our survive
whole corporations and companies in the
dollar it was the greatest robbery in
american history
but that didn't stop there
rather than expanding the money supply
has recovered from his economic collapse
the fan actually contracted it feeling
on the largest depressions in history
once again outraged congressman lewis
mcfadden
a long time a part of the banks and
hotels began bringing impeachment
proceedings against the federal reserve
board saying of the crash in depression
it was a carefully contrived occurrence
international bankers sought to bring
about a condition of despair so that
they might emerge the rulers of the soul
not surprisingly and after twoabsolutely nothing is
worthless paper
deleting the gives our mind value
just how much of it is in circulation
therefore the power to regulate the
money supply it's also the power to
regulate its value which is also the
power to bring entire colonies and
society's to its knees
it's important to clearly understand the
federal reserve is a private corporation
it is about as federalist federal
express
it makes his own policies
and as a new virtually no regulation by
the u_s_ government
it is a private bank that loans all the
currency that interest to the government
completely consistent with the
fraudulent central banking model that
the country sought to escape from but
declared independence in the american
revolutionary war
now going back to nineteen thirteen the
federal reserve act was not the only
unconstitutional built push through
congress they also pushed the federal
income tax
it's worthwhile to point out that the
american public | {
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to perform their
music at the conference.
It s a creative way for
youth to voice our concerns
for the future, Mr Matafai
says.
That could mean anything
from unemployment and a
lack of job opportunities to
natural disasters.
It s a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity. You could be on
your way to showcasing your
music and your messages to
the world.
That s something the
23-year-old knows a lot
about.
He returned to New Zea-
land from Durban, South
Africa in December where he
represented New Zealand at
the United Nations Climate
Change Conference as a
youth delegate.
Mr Matafai hopes to boost
Pacific Island representation
at these events because of the
drastic effect climate change
has on that part of the world.
New Zealand youth dele-
gate co-convenor Rachel Dob-
ric worked with Mr Matafai
during the South African con-
ference and suggested he put
his name forward to be the
Global Youth Music Contest
national co-ordinator.
Simon has a great deal of
experience in music and
workingwith youth.
He has a great ability to
build networks and appeal to
people, she says.
Entries close on March 18.
Voting opens the following
day and closes on May 19.
Visit www.global-rockstar.net
for more information.
Chan a
finalist
for award
Great achievement: Elizabeth Chan has a one in three
chance of winning Young New Zealander of the Year.
By NICOLA MURPHY
A former west Auck-
lander has been selected
as a finalist for the
Young New Zealander of
the Year competition.
Elizabeth Chan lived
in West Harbour until
last year before moving
to Wellington for work.
The 22-year-old vol-
unteers as president of
UN Youth New Zealand
as well as being a
student advocate assist-
ing students with legal
support and the Refugee
Services.
She has also been
involved in a project tell-
ing the stories of
trailblazing women law-
yers.
I m really excited to
be a finalist, it s such an
honour, she says.
Miss Chan is up
against a Bluff resident
whose marine science
project has been | {
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bins
were filled with food still suitable
for human consumption.
“Everywhere I looked, we were
haemorrhaging food,” said Mr Stuart, who was speaking at NTU’s National Geographic Live! Talk at The
Hive last month.
“I began confronting businesses
about the waste and exposing it
to the public,” added the National
Geographic Emerging Explorer.
Mr Stuart shared his investigations into the food waste phenomenon in his book Waste: Uncovering
the Global Food Scandal.
He is the founder of Toast Ale,
a brewery that turns surplus bread
into beer.
Mr Stuart also established Feedback, an organisation that aims to
eliminate food waste globally.
The organisation’s campaigns
have included turning scraps into
food parties and encouraging the
use of leftover food to feed pigs.
Cut food waste on campus
At the National Geographic Live!
Talk, Mr Stuart also shared insights
on tackling food waste in NTU.
Food waste in NTU had increased
from 72 to 78 kilogramin three students
from NTU’s Class of 2017
found employment before
graduation, even as
unemployment rates rise
due to structural changes
in the economy
Adele Chiang
HAVING internship experience has
given graduating NTU students a
leg up in the job hunt.
More than half of the graduates
from the Class of 2017 secured jobs
before graduation despite rising
unemployment rates.
In January, The Straits Times reported that the overall unemployment rate in Singapore had continued its upward trend and had risen
to 2.1 per cent in 2016, its highest
level since 2010.
As of June, the annual average
overall unemployment rate stands
at 2.2 per cent.
Nevertheless, this statistic did not
faze NTU’s Class of 2017.
A preliminary survey done by
NTU, which involved more than
5,000 students, found that two in
three students secured a job before
graduation.
In NTU President Professor Bertil
Andersson’s address to the Class
of 2017, he said this statistic was
encouraging despite the | {
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the opposite effect.
Salamanca, population 6,500,
has come together in mourning the
victim, 39-year-oldPenny Brown,
a nurse and midwife who helped
delivered many of the town's
children.
Her killing was Salamanca's first
major crime in memory involving a
white victim and an Indian suspect.
District Attorney Edward Sharkey
cited his concern about interracial
violence in arguing forthe closure
of court records in the case.
Among the documents is a
statement that the suspect, Edward
Kindt, now 16, allegedly gave
police after his arrest, possibly
containingamotive. Thestatement
was presented during a pretrial
hearing thepublic was not allowed
to attend. Several news agencies
have gone to court seeking its
release.
A county judge ruled Monday
that reporters and the public can
attend future pretrial proceedings,
butwillhavetoleavethecourtroom
if evidence is discussed.
But instead of dividing over the
case, Salamanca's residents seem
to haveput the tensionsofthe past
behind them.
Several people, both Senecas
and non-Indians, gathered outside
the municipal building when Kindt,
described as a troub led boywith a
mean streak, was taken into
custody May 11, two days after
Mrs. Brown was killed. "Shewas
our friend!" they shouted as Kindt
was led inside.
Later that week, in a remarkable
outpouring of sympathy, the town
declared aday of mourning. About
2,000 people _ Indians and non-
By Jeff Armstrong
In a ruling that one member of a
three-judge panel warned would
have "serious ramifications," the
U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
this week rejected the Owens
Valley Indian Housing Authority's
(OVIH A) effort to establish federal jurisdiction to evict tribal tenants.
The case arose when the
OVIHA, apublic housing agency
serving four California tribes, attempted to terminate a lease to
Bishop Tribe member Gifford
Turner in 1995. Turner failed to
respond to the housing authority's
unlawful detainer action in federal
district court, but the
court nevertheless dismissed the
claim for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction.
In its appeal, the federally-
funded housing authority argued
that it | {
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]
} | 5,581,465 |
tested in glide flight for the first time.
..
A SpaceX
video about the Falcon
Heavy (FH) launch vehicle, the design of
which was unveiled in a news conference by Elon Musk
on April 5th:.
Highlights:
Apr.28: As
the 10 year anniversary of Dennis Tito's flight to
the ISS approached (April 28, 2001), the first genuine
space tourist flight, there were many articles and
reflections on the flight and on the prospects for
space tourism in general.
..
MDA and Intelsat signed
a contract for refueling of its GEO communication
satellite
with MDA's Space Infrastructur Servicing (SIS)
vehicle, which would be the first operational
orbital fuel depot as well as a space tug and inspection/repair
system.
Highlights:
Mar.21:
XCOR/ULA announce the successful demonstration of
an aluminum alloy rocket nozzle and the start of a
new collaboration on development of a new LOX/LH2
engine.
Mar.14:
TripAlertz
announced that it would offer group purchasing discounts
on tickets for rides on XCOR'sI for suborbital
research projects.
Feb.18:
SpaceX says it will put Falcon 1 development on low
priority and focus on Falcon 9 and Falcon 9 Heavy.
Feb.16:
The Virginia legislature passes a bill that would
transfer to the Virginia spaceport authority the tax
revenue obtained from commercial spaceflight activities
such as when Space Adventures sells tickets for flights
to the ISS.
Feb.10:
The SpaceX Dragon capsule launched and returned from
orbit last December is put on display in Washington
D.C. during the FAA conference.
Jan. 17:SpaceX
gave an update on its proposal to NASA's Commercial
Crew Development - Phase 2 program. They released
an animation of their proposed crew escape system
that needs to be developed for a crew capable Dragon
capsule. The system remains with the capsule throughout
the flight and allows for pinpoint powered landings
on a hard pad rather than a splashdown at sea.
Jan.
14: NASA and Bigelow | {
"pile_set_name": [
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junior partner
and I think his stuff is fantastic.
English:
and Wang Yu has always been
one of my favorite actors.
In America we call him Jimmy Wang Yu.
And,
and to actually go and Shang
Shei has been a hero of mine
and to actually go and
see "One Arm Swordsman"
in 35 millimeter here at the
festival for the first time
was fantastic.
(speaking Korean)
One of my fav, the Japanese
giant monster movies,
are, one of my favorite
directors is Ishirō Honda,
who directed those films.
Along with Steven
Spielberg, he's the greatest
science fiction director of
all time because he truly,
in movie after movie after
movie created his own world,
his own alternative
universe where apparently
Japan lost the war but one the space race?
And America's there but they're
kind of a junior partner
and I think his stuff is fantastic.
English:
Korean director of the '70s growing up
who's films I'd seen quitea bit
was a Korean martial arts director
who worked for Golden Harvest
a lot named Hon Phang.
And he particularly worked
with Angela Mauigay.
And movie after movie, "Deep
Thrust," "Lady Kung Fu,"
"Lady Whirlwind," and, but
they all had Korean concerns,
almost every single one of his movies
took place during a
Korean occupation of Korea
by the Japanese.
And usually always starring
Korean fighters in the film,
usually have an Angela
Maui or someone Chinese
who sat there helping them out.
But there's movie, like
"Taekwondo Strikes"
is one of my favorite martial art films.
You know but that's a
situation of Korean director
in Hong Kong, making Korean oriented films
for the Hong Kong film industry.
(speaking foreign language)
English:
Korean director of the '70s growing up
who's films I'd seen quite a bit
was a Korean martial arts director [sic]
who worked for Golden Harvest
a lot named Huang Feng.
And he particularly worked
with Angela | {
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many things to please his owners; but despite kind friends, he longs to return to Africa, the country where he was captured
The three Mulla-mulgars by Walter De la Mare(
Book
)14
editions published
between
1919
and
2014
in
English and Undetermined
and held by
325 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
A tale of the monkey folk
The forgotten daughter by Caroline Dale Snedeker(
Book
)8
editions published
between
1929
and
1954
in
English
and held by
298 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
The story of Chloe, abandoned by her Roman father, and orphaned by her Greek mother, tells of her slavery, her romance with the young Roman, Aulua, and a threatening tragedy, before events contrive to end the story happily
Let them live by Dorothy Pulis Lathrop(
Book
)3
editions published
between
1951
and
1954
in
English
and held by
273 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Discusses the effect man and civilization have had on animals and their habitat
Follow the brook by Dorothy Pulis Lathrop(
Book
)5
editions published
between
1960
and
1967
in
English
and held by
226 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Two pet raccoons escape from theircage and return to their real home in the woods where they learn how raccoons really live, eat, and play
Crossings : a fairy play by Walter De la Mare(
Book
)2
editions published
in
1923
in
English
and held by
213 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
"The cover and decorations designed by Randolph Schwabe, the typography and binding arranged by Cyril William Beaumont "
Bouncing Betsy by Dorothy Pulis Lathrop(
Book
)8
editions published
between
1936
and
1966
in
English
and held by
207 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Relates Betsy Lamb's eventful day with other animals when her mother leaves her alone
The dog in the tapestry garden by Dorothy Pulis Lathrop(
Book
)4
editions published
in
1962
in
English
and held by
200 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
A lonely greyhound jumps into the old tapestry hanging on the wall to play with a little white dog woven into its garden
A little boy lost by W. H Hudson(
Book
)8
editions published
between
1920
and
1955
in
English
and held by
189 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Relates a little boy's many strange adventures | {
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Her research and
teaching interests span phonetics,
phonology and psycholinguistics. She
is developing a research laboratory to
study infant vocal development with
future hopes to better predict later
language outcomes and to identify early
anomalies in development.
Elizabeth Bunting, clinical assistant
professor in the Department of
Physician Assistant Studies, received
a bachelor’s degree in zoology from
North Carolina
State University
and a master’s
degree in physician
assistant studies
from East Carolina
University. She will
be concentrating on
clinical rotations
during the second year of the physician
assistant studies curriculum and guest
lecturing for other courses.
J. Patrick Carter, clinical assistant
professor in the Department of
Physician Assistant Studies, received a
bachelor’s degree
in biology from
the University of
Kansas, a bachelor’s
degree in physician
assistant studies
from Wichita State
University, and
a master’s degree
in physician assistant studies with a
concentration in emergency medicine
from the University of Nebraska.
Carter has been a preceptor for ECU
for more than nine
years and has more
than 13 years of
clinical practice in
emergencyDisorders, received a
bachelor’s degree
and a master’s
degree in speech-language
pathology
and audiology
from Florida State
University. She
also received a
graduate certificate
in assistive technology at ECU. She
has worked as a speech-language
pathologist in various clinical settings
Three faculty members in the College
of Allied Health Sciences, from left to
right, Dr. Elizabeth Layman, professor
of health services and information
management, Dr. Marianna Walker,
associate professor of communication
sciences and disorders, and Dr. Beth
Velde, professor of occupational therapy
Allied Health Sciences
welcomes new faculty
Alliance is published annually by the
East Carolina University College of
Allied Health Sciences for alumni,
faculty, staff and friends of the school.
Send your story ideas or comments
to the Editor, ECU News Services,
Division of Health Sciences, Lakeside
Annex #3, 600 Moye Boulevard,
Greenville, NC 27834, 252-744-3764,
or e-mail [email protected].
Dean: Stephen Thomas, EdD
Editor: Crystal Baity
Graphic Designer:
Laura Davenport
Photographer: Cliff Hollis
Writers:
Crystal Baity
Pat Frede
Karen Shugart
Contributing Photographers:
Forrest Croce
Michelle Rabell
Editorial Assistant:
Kit Roberson
Editorial Committee:
Pat Frede
Gregg Givens
Lloyd | {
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it was his version
of the news conference,
which didn't happen in those
days.
It was his version of an
exclusive interview with
Anderson Cooper,
or whatever the hell it would
be today.
He wrote letters aimed at
certain newspapers which would
then be reprinted across the
country.
This was a letter to James
Conkling, Congressman from
Illinois, of his own party,
who was opposing emancipation,
who was at least wary of it and
worried about it.
The great worry about the
emancipation policy,
of course, was that white
Northerners would not accept it,
that white northern soldiers
would thrown down their arms and
say, "I ain't fighting to free
the slaves.
I'm fighting to preserve the
Union, thank you very much."
Lincoln had that great fear
himself.
But God, read that letter.
It's one of Lincoln's--it's
Lincoln the ironist;
it's also Lincoln the
persuasive lawyer.
On the second page of it he
says to Conkling--he's really
saying this to white northerners
now,
because this letter got
published everywhere--"You
dislike'62,
'63 and '64,
a war of conquest,
West and East.
But I want to especially stress
that the most important factor
in when and where a slave might
attain his or her freedom;
the first factor had everything
to do with where the armies
went.
It was proximity to the war
that made emancipation possible
in northern Virginia in 1862;
Sea Islands of Georgia,
South Carolina,
'62;
around the whole New Orleans
region in '62;
but not possible at all in
southern Georgia until after the
war was over;
not possible really at all in
the southern half of Alabama
until the whole war was over;
not possible at all in parts of
Mississippi until the whole war
was over.
Hence, that's why the large
majority of American slaves were
not actually within Union lines
or technically free,
in any way, until the war
ended.
I'll make one other point about
this.
There's a nice book by a
historian named Stephen Ash.
It's called When | {
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English:
Vietnam was part of French Indochina, a
French colony in Southeast Asia
established in 1887 for the French to
reinforce Catholic missionaries.
Indochina was controlled by France up
until World War 2 when France was
invaded by Nazi Germany and Japan
invaded Indochina. The Japanese ruled
through the former French protectorate
Emperor Bao Dai as a puppet. Ho Chi
Minh was the leader of the Viet Minh, a
communist army who rose up against the
Japanese occupiers. After the Japanese
defeat in 1945, the Viet Minh declared
Vietnamese independence with the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam and Hanoi
as its capital, and extended their war
against the French, becoming the First
Indochina war. During this time, the Cold
War was setting in and the USA were
backing anti communist regimes while the
Soviet Union and People's Republic of
China were backing Pro communist regimes;
the Korean War wasDiem became the prime
minister in the south as South Vietnam
prepared for a referendum on reuniting
North and South. Many northern Vietnamese
Catholics fled south while many Viet
Minh went north to plan ahead. The North
Vietnam regime sought to take power away
from the landlords and distribute the
wealth among the peasants. Many people
were executed and wrongly imprisoned. The
referendum was held but many were
skeptical about its fairness. Diem rigged
the votes, winning a ridiculously massive
majority in keeping the South separate.
Diem declared the south independent and
became the Republic of Vietnam with
Saigon as its capital. Thus Vietnam
would move into the Second Indochina War,
or simply known in the West as the
Vietnamese:
Mỹ sợ hãi và lo lắng xảy ra khả năng Cộng Sản sẽ lan truyền khắp thế giới,
nhất là khi Việt | {
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the
College would have to pay forit.
The decision on where the
money will go was made after
COR Treasurer sophomore Alec
Mackie solicited input from all
the departments on campus and
presented their responses to the
Council. After a debate on each
proposal, COR decided which
items would most benefit the
student body and adopted the
aforementioned plan
unanimously.
"We waited until the very last
moment to see how much funding
would be available. We pulled
together all the money that was
left in the non-investment
accounts and put it into a Capital
Improvement account," Mackie
said. Investment accounts are
those in which money is budgeted
during the fall semester for the
spring semester, such as
Speaker's Bureau, according to
Mackie.
"We decided earlier in the
semester to put aside $10,000 for
the spring semester in order to
ensure financial security of the
new COR," Mackie added.
The move to approve the
Capital Investment plan was the
final motion passed byEditor-in-Chief
The Council of
Representatives allocated
$16,500 for a Capital
Improvement Campaign last
night during its final meeting of
the year.
The money will go toward
installing telephones in front of
all residence halls at a total
estimated cost of $8,500, a new
pool table for the student union
($1,800), a proposed recycling
program for the campus ($1,000)
and a donation to the fund for
the improvement of the Club
($5,200).
"We worked hard to
distribute funds judiciously
during the semester," said COR
President senior Andy
McDonald, explaining how COR
managed to finish the year with
a large surplus.
"Whittier is financially
behind other institutions and
financial priorities of the
students are sometimes
unfortunately lost in the needs
ofthe entire campus," McDonald
added. He also said that a capital
campaign contribution by the
TO^Htissiite
■
Jenny ColviUc/QC Photo Editor
Campus telephones for the front of all residence halls are one
of the Items on which COR is spending surplus funds.
COR is a long-lasting tradition.
Associate | {
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water
The Barge And Towing Industry
— A Legislative Review —
Dena L. Wilson, Director— Legislative Affairs
Congress left Washington, D.C.
for the first part of its summer recess
after passing omnibus water
resources legislation, H.R. 3678,
on June 29, by a vote of 259-33.
The members who attended the regular
monthly meeting of the Long-Beach-Greater
Los Angeles Chapter of The American Society
of Naval Engineers in March were rewarded
by an evening of good fellowship,
fine food, and an excellent technical paper
by Dr.
October 17-20—Boston, Massachusetts
Fish Expo '84, projected to have
more than 450 companies exhibiting
their equipment and products and
some 10,000 commerical fishing industry
buyers attending, will be
held October 17-20 in Boston's
Hynes Veterans Auditorium.
Since Corroless International
launched its specialist corrosion control
systems into the marine industry
in the early part of 1991, one
particular aspect of the company's
service has made it stand out—
project management.
Corroless's in-depth
Michael Wager, president and
chiefexecutive officer of Robert H.
Wager Company, Inc., announced
the opening of a southern regional
office in Mobile. Mr. Wager also
said that the new director of sales
and marketing for the southern regional
office will be Nathan
Coarsey.
The Port of Iberia in Louisiana
recently completed the purchase of
70 acres of prospective new industrial
plant sites from Sterling Sugars,
Inc. of Franklin, La.
Transfer of the acreage, which lies
immediately east of the present port
property,
Richard W. Fetzner, president
of Sun Transport, Inc., has been
named president of its parent, Sun
Trading & Marine Transport, Inc.
(S.T.M.T.), succeeding the late
Fred E. Buchanan.
S.T.M.T., an operating unit of
Sun Company, located at 200
West Lancaster Avenue, Wayne,
Pa.
Since the worst-case scenario became
a reality with September's terrorist
attacks in the U.S.. organizations of all
kinds have been forced to re-evaluate
how security applies to their operations.
While the nation's focus has been primarily
on the aviation | {
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injuries, all of the stu-dents
involved in the car-truck
smash of March 10 were expected
back in school today.
The three male members of the
unlucky sextet were back in class
as early as last Wednesday. All
were sporting bandaged faces and
Ray Stolaas was adding names to
his wrist cast. Engstrom and Ell-ingson
still limped.
Little was known of the actual
condition of the Misses Ellison and
G•inager, but knowledge of the
injuries suffered led friends to be-lieve
they would be back on cam-pus
this week.
Miss Jurgenson, more seriously
hurt with a fractured jaw and
other injuries, was expected to
miss more school than the others.
A picture of the wrecked car in
which the six were riding back to
Sioux Falls from a Rock Rapids,
Iowa, music festival is shown
elsewhere this issue.
Students Attend
Church Meeting
Last night six Augustana stu-dents
returned from Iowa City,
Iowa, where they attended the
Midwest Ecumenical conference
held there lastweekend.
Going as delegates from Augus-tana
were: Wanda Severson,
Frances Iverson, Effie Larson,
Charlotte Scott, Paul Pierson and
Verlyn Smith.
Guderyahn Leads
Symphony Group
After a strenuous week of re-hearsal,
the Augustana Symphony
orchestra will play it's first con-cert
of the season, tomorrow eve-ning
in the gym-auditorium at
8:15.
Tomorrow evening's perform-ance
will mark the 22nd annual
concert under the direction of
Prof. Richard Guderyahn. Orga-nized
in 1927, it is one of the
few of its type in this section of
the country. Professor Guderyahn
received his training at the Ameri-can
Conservatory of Music in Chi-cago
where he was awarded his
Mus. B. and Mus. M. degrees. An
the fields of directing and playing,
accomplished musician in both
he was a student under such not-ables
as Dr. Roy Harris while do-ing
graduate work at Colorado col-lege.
A program of highlights is
promised in tomorrow's perform-ance.
Two movements from the
Haydn Click Symphony which re-quire
apt artistry and skill as well
as the Perpetuum | {
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to Churchyard's page, and he explicitly
concedes the historical point. He still believes in the agreement argument
-- his position seems to be that agreement failure is a complicated business,
but he knows it when he sees it. He may well be wrong, but at this point
we are putting one set of native-speaker intuitions (from Pinker and Churchyard)
up against another (from Lynch).
After two centuries of struggle, the anti-singular-their forces have
won the hearts and minds of an influential fraction of the population.
Thanks to Churchyard, Pinker and others, they can't get away with claiming
that "singular their" is an example of the decay of the English language,
or that it is a violation of the laws of logic.
Prohibition of "singular their" is an innovation, and both the logic
and the grammar behind it are shaky atAmerican coinage. Jefferson's use in this
passage is the earliest citation given in the Oxford English Dictionary.
In 1785, James Beattie objected vehemently to the use of reform
for reformation, approval for approbation,novel
for new, existence for life, and capture for
take militarily.
In 1837, the Englishman Captain Frederick Marryat ridiculed American
usage of fix for prepare, stoop for porch,
great for splendid, right away for at once,
and strike for attack.
In books like Words and Their Uses(1870) and Everyday
English (1880), Richard Grant White objected to "words that are
not words, ... a cause of great discomfort to all right thinking, straightforward
people." His examples include reliable, telegraph, donate,
jeopardize and gubernatorial.
White also objects to words that are really words, but are "constantly
abused":
Good
Bad
Comments
pitcher
jug
remainder
balance
overtake
catch
earth
dirt
"dirt means filth, and primarily
filth of the most offensive kind."
leading article
editorial
wharf
dock
"docks must be covered"
send
transmit
oversee
supervise
condemn
repudiate
home
residence
recover
recuperate
killed
executed
"a perversion"
settle
locate
"insufferable"
convince
persuade
"vulgar"
good
splendid
"coarse"
jewels
jewelry
"of very low caste"
iced | {
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with a 4-2 record.
The team beat squads from
Southern Illinois University
Eastern Illinois University
and Tennessee.
Of the 28 teams in atten-dance,
Bethel placed 11th
overall.
Future tournaments include
competitions at Ripon College,
William and Mary and the
University of Nevada-Reno. ***
Sweet tooths will find de-light
in the Ice Cream Social
Feb. 11 sponsored by the
Bethel Concert Band.
For one dollar, people will
get three scoops of ice cream
plus toppings. The sweets will
,be served outside the coffee
shop in the Kresge courtyard
from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Entertainment inside the
coffee shop will include jug-glers,
jazz band selections as
well as featuring jazz groups
from Bethel.
Many prizes will be award-ed
and the chances of winning
one are high, according to
Louise Hawes, publicity
chairperson.
Prize winners could receive
tickets to the Chanhassen
Dinner Theater, free hambur-gers,
a dinner at Lindy's Steak
House, and many more fun
places, added Hawes. ***
Paul Wiebe, professor of soc-iology,
has been awarded a
Fulbright exchangegrant
through the U.S. International
Communication Agency. He
began teaching in February at
the University of Madras in
India.
The Fulbright exchange
program is designed to in-crease
mutual understanding
between the people of the U.S.
and those of other nations.
Individuals are selected on
the basis of academic and
professional qualifications in
addition to their ability and
willingness to share ideas and
experiences with people of
diverse cultures.
Wiebe was born and raised
in India where his parents
and grandparents were mis-sionaries.
In India he taught
at universities in Penang,
Hyderabab and Madras. He
is the author of four books. ***
William Smalley, linguis-tics
professor, is part of a
Twin Cities study group
funded by the National En-dowment
for the Humanities
to do research and writing on
Hmong tradition and their
news, see page 5
***
Completion of the Seminary
library addition was cele-brated
Thursday, Jan. 27 at
dedication ceremonies and
naming of the entire resource
center as the Carl H. Lund-quist
Library in honor of
Bethel's president-emeritus.
The new | {
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Levittown and then affordable
housing. I really didn't appreciate
where affordable housing started.
And it wasn't, it didn't start
necessarily as a low income play.
It was a really, really a function
of World War Two. Can you talk about
that a little bit?
Yeah.
I mean, in there to the
FHA is relevant because
Levittown, which is
was the largest at the time.
Nineteen forty seven, the Long
Island, Levittown was the largest
suburban development ever
constructed by
a developer.
And that development
would not have been possible without
the backing of the FHA, the FHA
insured
loans, Levittown home
seekers. So the Levitts could take
certain risk without
risking financial
loss.
And they built homes that cost
about seven thousand
dollars, which is
in today's dollars would be about
eighty-four thousand dollars.
So it was an affordable
home. And for most
New Yorkers, moving to Levittown
was cheaper than paying
rent.
One of the things you know,
one of the other big pieces ofI said, the first
Levittown was constructed in 1947,
restrictive covenants or
outlawed in 1948
by the Supreme Court, who
said that restrictive covenants
were unenforceable as law
and contrary to public
policy.
But the FHA
dismissed that ruling
and continued to accept
applications from
homeowners who were seeking
to buy a house in homes
in communities governed by
restrictive covenants until 1950.
So for two years after
the practice was
rendered illegal, the FHA
continued to say,
we're fine with you
engaging in this discriminatory
practice. The Levitt brothers
actually were asked about
why they refused
to sell homes to Black
people, especially because
they had been innovators in so
many other ways in terms of
the construction of large
scale suburban developments
at a very rapid pace.
Right. They were having
prefabricated walls and flooring
and crews shipped into the community
instead of building houses one at a
time. They would snap together more
than 30 houses a day, which
were in 1947 was
phenomenal.
Today it's | {
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alien presence here on
Earth started not that far
from (in foreign language).
Not far from the first nuclear test site.
It started just outside
of Roswell, New Mexico,
where something crashed.
Clifford Clift, executive
director emeritus,
has been a long time member of MUFON,
the Mutual UFO Network, and
has thoroughly investigated
what happened on that faithful
evening over 72 years ago.
- July 7th, 1947, or
approximate date thereof.
Brazel, a rancher that
was northwest of Roswell,
out looking for his sheep.
And the next morning after,
a severe thunderstorm,
discovered this debris in the field
and it wasn't something
that he had seen before.
Having lived in the desert like that,
he had seen numerous weather balloons
that the military had sent up.
This objects that he saw on the ground
were not of the weather
balloon type that he had seen.
So he went to town and
talked to the sheriff
about having discovered some objects
inthe field out by his ranch,
and he didn't think that they looked
like anything that he'd ever seen before.
They might be something more than debris
from a weather balloon.
The sheriff, Wilcox, then told him to go
to the Air Force base, which he did,
and then Jesse Marcel Sr. went out
with another gentleman to the
site and discovered that it
was something maybe a little
bit more than what he thought.
On the way back to town that
night, very late at night,
he stopped at his house.
This is Jesse Marcel Sr., and
showed it to his wife and son
and told them that this
was extraterrestrial.
Well, the Air Force came
out with their first,
in 1947, said that they
had captured a flying disk.
And that went out all
over the radio stations
and the press, everybody got it.
All of the world were calling
the local Roswell | {
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could learn more about art.
He went from a
painter's workshop
to then studying within
a powerful rich elite
family within Florence,
the Medici family.
Did I mention they were
the rulers of Florence?
Yeah, they were.
Working with this family
gave him special privileges.
One of those was being able to
study dead bodies at the church
waiting to be buried.
This fueled his passion to
understand human anatomy.
And unfortunately, the stench
and nastiness of the experience
started to make him sick.
Enough of that.
Just a few short years
later when Michelangelo
was only 25 years old,
it was apparent he
had a black belt in sculpture.
After relocating to Rome,
one of the cardinals
within the Catholic
church commissioned
him to create a sculpture.
Michelangelo, being pretty
cocky at this time, said--
It will be the most
beautiful work in marble
Rome had ever seen.
A bit confident, right?
Actually, it's this
sculpture, "La Pieta."
Have you ever seen
this one before?
You bet youbecomes
the pride of Florence.
And they even nicknamed
it 'the giant."
After Michelangelo
finishes this sculpture,
his fame starts to build.
In fact, word got around to
the pope, Pope Julius II.
Immediately, Pope Julius
commissions Michelangelo
to create his tomb.
This was huge for Michelangelo,
especially since all
he wanted to do was sculpt.
And designing the tomb for
the Pope was a huge honor.
Michelangelo is so
pumped to get going
he starts gathering a team,
pouring the stone needed,
and working on his idea.
Of course, right in the
middle of this the pope
turns his attention
in funding to rebuild
St. Peter's Basilica,
which was falling apart.
You have to keep in mind
that Rome has basically
turned into a cow
pasture at this point.
And the pope wants
to return Rome back
to its powerful roots, a very
Renaissance idea, I might add.
Needless to say, he is super
frustrated with the pope.
And when he wouldn't pay
Michelangelo back for | {
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French Quarter
was bordering the
Russian Quarter.
We see the subway is roped off.
And the other one is where
the hip area of Kreuzberg
is meeting [INAUDIBLE] Park on
the other side, where actually
the street belonged
to Eastern Germany.
The walkway to Western Germany.
And people had to live
with that ugly thing
of a wall for over 28 years.
Why do I say mostly
a German problem?
The West Berliners hoped for
the intervention of the Allied
forces, of America, as of
the English or the French.
But they didn't.
They didn't for a good reason.
At the end of the day--
and Kennedy's quote
brings it to a point-- a wall
is a lot damn better than a war.
And tearing down
that wall by force
with the American soldiers
would have brought a war.
And the soldiers weren't
even affected by it.
The Allied forces,
both the Russians
as the Western Allied forces
had complete free of roaming.
Germany--the Wall
didn't exist for them.
They could go obviously
over border crossings.
It wasn't that easy anymore.
But they could go around
where they wanted.
There was the incident of
Checkpoint Charlie, where
the Russians were
pushing their luck
and trying to force border
controls of Western allies.
And suddenly tanks
rolled on both sides,
and they stood there
for a week or two.
And then both sides
decided that it's not
worth of killing each other
over a couple Germans.
So the Wall stood, and
the Wall became reality.
One of the most spectacular
last places where the Wall stood
was Bernauer Strasse, where
actually the buildings were
the East, but the walkway
was already the West.
So people were jumping
out of their windows.
Armed forces were going
from house to house,
closing the windows, starting to
brick them off, guarding them.
And you see a
77-year-old lady trying
to jump out the
window into a sheet.
The police ordered
the fire department
hold for her | {
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Eternal Truth #19**_
When you're up to your neck in alligators,
it's difficult to remember that your original
objective was to drain the swamp.
But you must.
**Other Books by This Author**
_No B.S. Sales Success for the New Economy_ (Entrepreneur Press)
_No B.S. DIRECT Marketing for NON-Direct Marketing Businesses_ (Entrepreneur Press)
_No B.S. Marketing to the Affluent_ (Entrepreneur Press)
_No B.S. Ruthless Management of People and Profits_ (Entrepreneur Press)
_No B.S. Wealth Attraction for Entrepreneurs_ (Entrepreneur Press)
_No B.S. Time Management for Entrepreneurs_ (Entrepreneur Press)
_Ultimate Marketing Plan_ (Adams Media)
_Ultimate Sales Letter_ (Adams Media)
_NO RULES: 21 Giant Lies about Success_ (Plume)
_How To Make Millions with Your Ideas_ (Plume)
_The New Psycho-Cybernetics_ (Prentice-Hall)
_Zero Resistance Selling_ (Prentice Hall)
**Websites Associated with the Author**
www.FreeGiftFrom.com/business
www.DanKennedy.com
www.NoBSBooks.com
www.RenegadeMillionaire.com
Index
## **A**
Accountants
need for good
numbers assembled by
working with
Advertising. _See also_ Marketing; Selling
antidoteto
direct-mail
in national publications
making use of old
need for substance in
of others, examining
promises
providing a platform
word-of-mouth
Assets, protection of
_Atlas Shrugged_ (Rand)
Attitudes
about competition
about selling, changing
as risks
giving up long-held
needed for entrepreneurial environment
Autonomy
decision of
developing your
having strong sense of
website for discussion of
## **B**
Barrows, Sydney
Behaviors
giving up long-held
need for willingness to change
needed for entrepreneurial environment
Bezos, Jeff
Blank spaces, eliminating
Branson, Richard
Breakthroughs
creating exciting sales and marketing
strategy #1
strategy #2
strategy #3
strategy #4
strategy #5
strategy #6
Buffett, Warren
Bureaucracy
entrepreneurs suffering from
government
Business(es)
agile
best reason for adding people to
cash-flow crunch
comparables
competitors, keeping close eye on. _See also_ Competition
contributing to, without sacrifices
failure of
government interference in
helping, to mature
horizontal and vertical synergy opportunity
importance of selling to
independence, as point of
launched during recession
making use of old ads in
naming
news, connecting business to
not being owned by
one, as worst number in
prosperity, challenges to
questions for owners of
redefining and reinventing
removal of geographic boundaries from
single-function
transcending traditional geographic boundaries of
troubled, turning around
using, | {
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all they talked
about was cockfighting and
horses and alcohol.
Horses are in there in the top
three.
So horse--being a good horseman
was very valued and Washington--
some called him "the
finest horseman in the
country"--
so he was impressive as--I
think I--
Did I mention--I did mention
last time at Mount Vernon when I
saw him on that horse and said,
"My, he's impressive on
the horse,"
and then basically repeated
what I'd read a thousand times
in everyone else's letters.
He really looked impressive on
the horse.
He did. I can vouch.
A somewhat less impressive but
expected one:
Washington was a good dancer.
Things you never knew about
George Washington:
he was a good dancer,
which sounds seemingly trivial,
but again as a gentleman
generally and as a Virginian
specifically being a good dancer
is a way--
another way of sort of publicly
displaying your superior
breeding.
Adams mentions grace,
dignity--all of these things
that would make a gentleman
noticeableand someone who would
seem to be superior.
Dancing is one of them and
luckily he was a good dancer and
he liked dancing--not the image
we have of George.
Also like other gentlemen of
the time, Virginian and
otherwise, Washington was
ambitious.
And this is going to come up
again.
He doesn't necessarily always
look ambitious,
but he was ambitious.
He did want to earn status and
reputation.
He was ambitious to better
himself.
During the French and Indian
War, he struggled to raise
himself within the ranks of the
army,
and for the entirety of his
life he was very focused on
protecting and preserving his
reputation.
He talks about it a lot.
When he makes a big decision
about should I do this or should
I not do this,
it's clearly--part of that
decision is what will this do to
my reputation?
And Alexander Hamilton,
who served in one way or
another at Washington's side for
many years--
first as | {
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help
during the chase,
and Gaia helped her
by taking her in
and placing a laurel tree
in her place.
According to Roman poet Ovid,
the chase was brought
about by Cupid,
who hit Apollo with
golden arrow of love
and Daphne with
leaden arrow of hatred.
The myth explains the
origin of the laurel
and connection of Apollo
with the laurel and its leaves,
which his priestess
employed at Delphi.
The leaves became
the symbol of victory
and laurel wreaths
were given to the
victors of the Pythian games.
Asclepius is probably
Apollo’s most well-known son,
although he had many offspring.
Coronis, was daughter of Phlegyas,
King of the Lapiths.
While pregnant with Asclepius,
Coronis fell in love
with Ischys,
son of Elatus and
slept with him.
When Apollo found out
about her infidelity
through his prophetic powers,
he sent his sister, Artemis,
to kill Coronis.
Apollo rescued the baby
by cutting open Coronis' belly
and gave it to the
centaur Chiron to raise.
The raven is a symbol
of Apollo'sanger.
Once all ravens
were white birds
or so goes the myth,
but after delivering
bad news to the god
he scorched the wings of the raven
so that all ravens
going forward were black.
The bad news
brought by the bird
was that of the infidelity
of his lover Coronis
who, pregnant with Asclepius,
fell in love and
slept with Ischys.
When the raven told Apollo
of the affair,
he became enraged
that the bird had not
pecked out Ischys' eyes,
and the poor raven
was an early example
of the messenger being shot.
Hyacinth or Hyacinthus was
one of Apollo's favorite lovers.
He was a Spartan prince,
beautiful and athletic.
The pair was practicing
throwing the discus
when a discus thrown by Apollo
was blown off course
by the jealous Zephyrus
and struck Hyacinthus in the head,
killing him instantly.
Apollo is said to be
filled with grief.
Out of Hyacinthus' blood,
Apollo created a flower
named after him
as a memorial to his death,
and his | {
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University Village’s International
Food Court.
Sponsored by the USC Fisher Gallery’s
Art in the Village outreach program,
Joint Educational Project and the USC
Francophone Resource Center, the proj-ect
treated the students to a semester’s
worth of instruction
from Cullman, an
accomplished French
photographer who has
compiled two photog-raphy
books.
Cullman, who spent
two hours a week with
the students, related to
them the importance
of components such as
lighting, angles, per-spective
and theme.
The next part of
the project was left
entirely to the discre-tion
of the students.
Issued disposable cam-eras,
the sixth graders
were told to capture
photographs of a theme of their choice.
Dillard said while some of the students
chose subjects such as nature and cars,
many of the students decided to capture
their family members and other significant
people in their lives.
Foshay student Daisey Bravo was a
member of last year’s study-hall class and
chose to focus her photography on images
Foshay students display candid works
| see Foshay, pageJackson.
The letter, which was published in the Daily Trojan,
stated that all undergraduate students would be guaran-teed
the opportunity to buy home football game seats for
the 2007 season.
Athletics and Student Affairs announced before the
An approved Senate resolution urges for
more student seating, safety and better
communication with Athletics.
Senate
votes on
seating
| see USG, page 14 |
By DIYA CHACKO
Staff Writer
A flu-like illness is sneaking up
on students, infecting dorms and
apartments from one end of the
campus to the other.
Students have reported being
sick in Webb Tower, Trojan Hall,
Marks Tower and other dorms and
apartments.
Andrew Young, a junior living
in Cardinal Gardens and majoring
in creative writing, said his illness
came without warning.
“I got it, and then my friends
started getting it, too,” he said. “I
woke up on a Sunday and felt like
there was no point in even getting
up. I ended up getting better | {
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been a fringe
movement started to gain
more converts.
The people who ruled Mecca
feared that their control was
slipping from their grasp, and
they feared that this new
movement was popular
with a lower class.
The leading clan of Mecca
were the Quraish.
These are the people who are
most powerful in Mecca and
begin as the enemies of Mohammed
and are responsible
for driving him out, if indeed
he was driven out.
In 622 the city of Medina,
another merchant center,
invited Mohammed to come as a
kind of arbiter or ruler who
was above factions and who
could then settle their
internecine disputes.
This is not an uncommon
pattern.
You'll see it in late
medieval and
Renaissance Italy, in fact.
The podesta in Italian cities
is an outsider who is
empowered with very extensive
police powers to quell feuds.
In Romeo and Juliet, for
example, there's a podesta,
but he's not able to
solve the feud.
But that's the kind of scene
thatcity that he had
fled, if not under cover of
darkness at least under
murky circumstances.
A victory in battle in 624 gave
Mohammed the confidence
to expel Jews and Christians
from Medina and to take on
this title of Seal
of the Prophets.
And by 627 Medina gained the
upper hand, and in 630 Mecca
fell to Mohammed
and his forces.
And all of the tribes of Mecca
and of the surrounding areas
submitted to Mohammed.
They recognized him as
a political as well
as religious leader.
Again, the two things not easily
to be distinguished.
And then Mohammed died.
In 632 he died, and what is
remarkable is that the
momentum he established was able
to survive his demise.
Because most of the tribes
probably thought that their
loyalty was to him as a prophet
and a person, and not
to some sort of institution that
would survive his death.
And indeed, his death would
usher in a period of
incredibly | {
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will both appear in the
Blenheim District Court on
May 25.
Sunday 12 May
Sunday began with the early arrest of a 36-year-old male part-time
security guard. He was arrested at
the Loft on Kinross st for common
assault and possession of cannabis
utensils. He was held in custody
and later released when sober and
appeared in court on Monday.
At 2:38am a 19-year-old male was arrested for disorderly behaviour on Scott
St. He received a precharge warning and
was released when sober.
Better living, but don’t take our word for it!
S
outhlanders Judy and Trevor Grey moved to
Blenheim early 2012 to be close to family.
Judy says moving to Blenheim and building their
first home was beyond their wildest dream for these
retirees.
“We looked at showhomes in Invercargill, but didn’t see
the right plan for us.
So Trevor decided to draw our own plans.
“We contacted Rowan atAnnabe
grass betweennow knowslle Latz
that sausage his toes, the sensation
and
of
The four rolls were just used to think
hilariou
year ago year-old arrived
s.
in Blenhei
their homewith his mum,
m
dad
in ruins city 60km from and sister, aftera
2011. after the earthqu Tokyo was
ake on March left
His parents
12,
in the South Katrina and
taken them Island, but Kent were born
Kent’s work
in Singapo to Japan, although
had
will be speaking.
afterwa re and moved Ben was born
David Bain
rds.
to Japan
His 14
shortly
in Japan.month-old sister
Isabella
They joined
was born
their grandm
Milmin
mother e here in Blenhe other Lorrain
who lives
e
im,
nese.
in Christch and Kent’s
urch is
The Breeze
Japafamily had
the top
floor
kyo’s Internat of a 16-store an apartment
Kent was ional Airporty building at on
Today their involved in the in Narita, where
lives changed hotel busines
Ben was
s, the
.
was playinghaving an afternoo
Ben Breeze
come upstairswith Isabella n nap, Katrina
n will be speaking.
his family. 4 years and
, and Kent
Lindy Chamberlai
for an | {
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there.
the law for three Roanoke County high
school students, who are now facing
nine felony charges each.
ENG#=2 VO-NAT
VO-NAT
*CG locator New York City, NY
It all happened here at the
Doubletree Metropolitan Hotel in New
York City....it was on the roof of this
building that police say two Cave
Spring Seniors, 18-year-old Sean McGhee
and 18-year-old Tyler Moore, known by
friends as Moses, along with a
17-year-old girl from Hidden Valley,
who is not being identified because of
her age, tossed gallon paint cans over
the roof early Sunday morning.
The cans hit a police officer in the
eye, struck two police cruisers,
damaged three police scooters and an
officer's personal vehicle also struck.
Not only are these teens looking at
criminal charges, Cave Spring
Principal, Martha Cobble says they are
also subject to punishment from their
schools.
(END VO) (END VO)
Light says that means less people
but downtown Roanoke businesses are
pitching inbeen home on leave, but
will soon return to Iraq to complete
his service there.
He and his young pen pal, say
they hope to continue their
correspondence.
(END VO) (END VO)
students are facing nine felony charges
each after a field trip in New York
City. Police say two Cave Spring
Seniors, 18-year-old Sean McGhee and
18-year-old Tyler Moore, along with a
17-year-old girl from Hidden Valley,
tossed gallon paint cans over the roof
of the Doubletree Metropolitan Hotel
early Sunday morning .One of the cans
struck a patrolman in the eye.
VO-NAT VO-NAT
ENG#2
The Roanoke City school system plans
to announce this week that all Patrick
Henry and William Fleming home football
games for the 2006 season will be
played either at Franklin County or the
opponent's field.
Administrators point out it is only
for one year, until a new football
stadium is ready at Patrick Henry.
VO-NAT VO-NAT
ENG#3
"Car Crazy" is coming home | {
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has placed at the dis-
posal of Gen. Dwight Elsenhow-
er.
During the last two years
more than a quarter of a mil-
lion young men have received
compulsory military training
each year. i
loaay, the majority of young
men in their late twenties in
Britain are fully-trained for
war, and Britain also has an
Invaluable reserve of trained of-
ficers ready to take over com-
mand of units at very short
notice.
INDEPENDEN1^
DAILY NEWSPAPER
Panama American
"Let the people know the truth and the country is /" Abraham Lincoln.
TVVENTV-SEVENTH YEAR
PANAMA, R. r SATURDAY, MARCH S, 1958
FIVE CENTS
Shipping Agent: Intelligence
Nodded At China Oil Trade
WASHINGTON, March 8 (UP)
Senate investigators today
summoned Presidential clean-
up chief Newbold Morris for
questioning next week on oil
shipments to Soviet-controlled
ports by companies represented
by his law firm.
At the same time, a witness
said the Chinese-financed
firms that made the ship-
ments In 1949 and early 195*
had the tacit agreementDamage
He was Richard Burrell Miller,
22, who received painful injury
In his left leg and his stomach
when h lost control of his car
which landed in a nine-foot
ditch on Madden Road.
Miller's Oldsmobile coupe was
completely demolished, and the
two other passengers in the car,
James Frances Hesllp and
George Berezny, both sailors,
were slightly shaken up.
Eye-witnesses said that the
coupe was travelling north fast
when the driver obviously lost
control of the car. It travelled
about 435 feet before It stopped
In a nine-foot ditch.
Two other allegedly reckless
drivers, both Americans, were
called before the Balboa Magls-
rate yesterday afternoon, but
their cases were continued until
Monday afternoon.
They were Beatrice Marguerite
Hakala. 31. and William Lee
Cox. 20. Hakala wot released
on her own recognizance, and
Cox was released on $25 ball.
mime Commission again the
shipments.
Houston H. Wasson, Morris'
law partner, has testified that
United Tanker chartered sev-
eral of its ships to the | {
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1001 things to spot on the farm by Gillian Doherty(
Book
)28
editions published
between
1998
and
2016
in
8
languages
and held by
1,164 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
" ... This charming picture book will provide hours of puzzle-solving fun."
1001 animals to spot by Ruth Brocklehurst(
Book
)8
editions published
between
1998
and
2010
in
English
and held by
931 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Teeming with animals to find, count and talk about, this picture book helps develop basic word and number skills
1001 bugs to spot by Emma Helbrough(
Book
)14
editions published
between
2005
and
2016
in
4
languages
and held by
909 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
With scenes from the garden above and below the ground, this book offers bugs to find, count and talk about, including beetles
scurrying across desert dunes, butterflies flitting through the jungle, and caterpillars munching on cabbage leaves
1001 things to spot in the town by Anna Milbourne(
Book
)14
editions published
between
1998
and
2012
in
3
languages
and held by
852 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
The reader is invited to find and count various things in the illustrations oftowns
1001 things to spot in Fairyland by Gillian Doherty(
Book
)8
editions published
between
2005
and
2010
in
3
languages
and held by
752 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Young readers are given various scenes associated with Fairyland, each containing many objects associated with fairies to
find and count
The Usborne book of tractors by Caroline Young(
Book
)10
editions published
between
1992
and
2003
in
English and Spanish
and held by
705 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
Colorful illustrations depict the many types of tractors and their us es
1001 things to spot in the sea by Katie Daynes(
Book
)10
editions published
between
2003
and
2009
in
English
and held by
694 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
The reader is invited to find and count various things in the sea
1001 pirate things to spot by Rob Lloyd Jones(
Book
)16
editions published
between
2007
and
2016
in
6
languages
and held by
691 WorldCat member
libraries
worldwide
This swashbuckling puzzle book is packed with things to find and count. Search pirate ports, stormy seas, and sunken ships
to see if you can spot all the hidden treasure. Just look out for | {
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over a
compact that allows the tribe to offer
up to 200 casino-type games at its
Bingo Hall in the Menomonee
Valley. The city has strenuously
opposed any casino games in the
valley.
Norquist has asked Langley for
help in getting the matter before the
court.
Langley said several members of
his staff were reviewing the matter,
both for matters of merit and
procedure.
"There are those that would like to
use the spread of Indian gaming to
justify spreading gaming among
non-Indian owners, tavern, dog track
owners," Norquist said.
"If Ellis and I can get this before
the Supreme Court, it will put the
genie back in the bottle."
Doyle said he has not seen what
Norquist or Ellis were proposing and
declined to comment.
Accountability to the people is
number one on the agenda of
newly elected Leech Lake Tribal
Chairman Al "Tig" Pemberton.
In an inaugural address to a
packed Mission Community
Center, Tig outlined theissues
which will take priority during the
first year of his chairmanship.
Preventive health care available
to all Leech Lake people ranked
high on the list. This means
improved maternity and early child
care, facilities that will provide
better health care for elders, and a
revitalized hospital for Leech
Lake.
Tig went on to pledge support
for the tribal education system
from Head Start through the Chief
Bug-O-Nay-Ge-Shig School to the
new Tribal College.
In addition, the new chairman
plans to resist pressure from forces
outside the reservation to
implement hazardous waste
storage on reservation land and to
assure that a tribal voice leads the
way in decisions affecting other
tribal resources. The wishes ofthe
people will be made known to
federal, state, and local agencies
concerning lake front
development, timber harvesting,
and game and fish management.
However, accountability to the
people, highlighted by new
procedures in the administration of
gaming funds, was the most
encouraging news.
Tig acknowledged the fact that
profits | {
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was a major
factor in the defeat of two
Independent-Republican
House members, the last time
an incumbent congressman
was defeated in Minnesota
was in 1970 when DFLer Bob
Bergland upset six-term
Republican Odin Langen in the
7th District.
Bergland held the seat until
he resigned to become U.S.
secretary of agriculture in the
Carter administration.
Republican Arlan Stangeland
won a special election in 1977
and has held the seat since.
Stangeland has won four
close re-election races,
including a 121-vote squeaker
in 1986 in the 23-county area
that stretches from the
Canadian border across the
northwestern part of the state
into central Minnesota
DFL leaders say the 7th
District again represents their
best chance of unseating a
Republican. Former state Sen.
Marv Hanson of Hallock, a
farmer and lawyer, is running
against Stangeland this year.
"That's a race that always
seems to slip through our
hands in the last days of the
campaign," said Esala, "We're
going to get it right one of
these timeseight
incumbents have outspent
their challengers by an
average of more than 2-1,
according to the latest
Federal Election Commission
spending reports filed with the
secretary of state's office.
That doesn't include figures
from two IR challengers,
Raymond Gilbertson in the 5th
District and Jerry Shuster in
the 8th District, who
apparently have not raised or
spent $5,000, the level which
requires the filing of spending
reports.
The fiscal disparity between
incumbents and challengers is
far more pronounced when
debts and cash on hand are
taken into account.
The eight incumbents had
an average cash balance of
about $247,000 heading into
the final weeks of the campaign, ranging from $147,191
held by DFL Rep. Bruce Vento
of the 4th District to the
$408,292 bank balance of IR
Rep. Bill Frenzel of the 3rd
District.
Only two of the incumbents,
IR Rep. Vin Weber of the 2nd
District and DFL Rep. Gerry
Sikorski of the 6th District,
listed any debt, and their
combined total was | {
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} | 3,208,545 |
reasons I didn't
bring a PowerPoint and show you
a lot of pictures and things
like that, but hopefully, you'll
find this presentation
interesting, in spite of not
having the presentational aids
here with me today.
But the Apostle Paul, getting
to him, he
was one of the, he wasn't one of
the original twelve apostles
that Jesus had selected.
But he referred to himself
as one who
was selected out of season.
And there were eleven
apostles that
continued the gospel.
The twelfth disciple Judas who
had hung himself,
committed suicide because of
the remorse he felt
for betraying Jesus, but the
apostle Paul had a
tremendous influence on
the ancient Greece.
He was a person first of all
that was a devout Jew.
He was so committed to Judaism
that he persecuted
the Christians initially.
And I wanted Wanda Kay first of
all to read, it give a
description, Paul's description
of himself and his
qualifications as or his
credentials for speaking to
thechurch at Philippi, and it
was in Philippians 3:4-6.
>> Wanda Kay:
4 Though I might also have
confidence in the flesh.
If any other man thinketh that
he hath whereof he might
trust in the flesh, I more: 5
Circumcised the eighth day,
of the stock of Israel, of the
tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew
of the Hebrews; as touching the
law, a Pharisee; 6 Concerning
zeal, persecuting the church;
touching the
righteousness, which is in
the law, blameless.
>> Dr. Robinson:
So the apostle Paul had all the
right credentials of religion.
He was a Pharisee, he referred
to himself as the
Hebrew of the Hebrews, of the
tribe of Benjamin, and so
all the credentials for
persecuting the church and
stamping out Christianity, he
had that, and that was his
number one goal, when he first
heard about Christianity,
because he took letters
from the
governor with him to have
Christians martyred.
You know, to kill them | {
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reasons I didn't
bring a PowerPoint and show you
a lot of pictures and things
like that, but hopefully, you'll
find this presentation
interesting, in spite of not
having the presentational aids
here with me today.
But the Apostle Paul, getting
to him, he
was one of the, he wasn't one of
the original twelve apostles
that Jesus had selected.
But he referred to himself
as one who
was selected out of season.
And there were eleven
apostles that
continued the gospel.
The twelfth disciple Judas who
had hung himself,
committed suicide because of
the remorse he felt
for betraying Jesus, but the
apostle Paul had a
tremendous influence on
the ancient Greece.
He was a person first of all
that was a devout Jew.
He was so committed to Judaism
that he persecuted
the Christians initially.
And I wanted Wanda Kay first of
all to read, it give a
description, Paul's description
of himself and his
qualifications as or his
credentials for speaking to
thechurch at Philippi, and it
was in Philippians 3:4-6.
>> Wanda Kay:
4 Though I might also have
confidence in the flesh.
If any other man thinketh that
he hath whereof he might
trust in the flesh, I more: 5
Circumcised the eighth day,
of the stock of Israel, of the
tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew
of the Hebrews; as touching the
law, a Pharisee; 6 Concerning
zeal, persecuting the church;
touching the
righteousness, which is in
the law, blameless.
>> Dr. Robinson:
So the apostle Paul had all the
right credentials of religion.
He was a Pharisee, he referred
to himself as the
Hebrew of the Hebrews, of the
tribe of Benjamin, and so
all the credentials for
persecuting the church and
stamping out Christianity, he
had that, and that was his
number one goal, when he first
heard about Christianity,
because he took letters
from the
governor with him to have
Christians martyred.
You know, to kill them | {
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very much a rarity in
today's Venezuelan society.
Just to give you an idea how
old this company is, it was
actually founded the same
year George Washington
was re-elected president
of the United States.
Beyond being a prominent
businessman in Venezuela,
Alberto has done something
remarkable that goes against
the trend of any landowner or
business person in that
country, which is he has
founded, along with his wife,
an organization called Project
Alcatraz, which takes reformed
criminals and works to
reintegrate them into society,
something for which the notion
of having to socialize a
society to be comfortable
with taking criminals back
after they've reformed is
quite the undertaking.
Alberto is going to talk to you
about his experiences, and
I know you'll enjoy it as
much as I did last night.
Alberto Vollmer.
Alberto Vollmer: Thanks.
It's going to be a tough
one after Geoffrey.
I should have brought
some of the rum and Coke
and Black Eyed Peas.
It would berestore the
caliphate and create a global
state of political Islam.
Maajid was imprisoned in
Egypt for four years,
and he got out in 2006.
I remember this because I was
working -- I was working in
the Bush Administration
at the time.
Maajid's defection from Hizb
ut-Tahrir shocked the world.
It was the most high-profile
defection from a radical
Islamist group that we
had ever seen before.
He founded, along with another
former member of Hizb
ut-Tahrir, the first think tank
of former Islamists that seeks
to go into the chatrooms, go
into the doldrums where young
people are recruited and really
counter the narrative from the
perspective of somebody who was
part of radical Islam, saw it,
didn't like it and left and is
now fighting against it.
I'm pleased to welcome to the
Maajid Nawaz and Paul Carrillo.
[ Applause ]
Jared Cohen: Let's
get right into it.
This question what
it's all about.
Both of you were recruited into
violent | {
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officers had an
information session
about ALDPES for
prospective new
members.
Officers stuffing
letters to send out
to new members!
February Member Meeting
2-21-18
Members learned about
Ascend - internship headhunters
With SamStrong quickly
approaching, officers made
final announcements
encouraging members to
attend.
Pictured here is Sam Featherstone,
some of his drawings made during his
battle, and his parents telling their story
to those in attendance. Below are all of
those who attended SamStrong and
contributed to the amazing cause.
IUPUI's ALD/PES Chapter has had the
SamStrong dance since 2013 in
memory of fellow ALD/PES member
and IUPUI student, Sam Featherstone,
who passed away from brain cancer in
January of 2013. He received all of his
treatment at St. Jude. Ever since 2013,
ALD/PES has made an effort to raise
money for St. Jude. This year, ALD/PES
raised over $3,000 for St. Jude
Children's Hospital through ticket sales,
a silent auction, and sponorships. At the
dance, there was a DJ, a photobooth,
refreshments, aevening of April 7th in IUPUI's
Campus Center. Current officers and student advisers as
well as new inductees and families joined together to
celebrate our new members as well as our current
members. ALD/PES inducted 370 members; the room was
filled to its capacity of 800 with initiates and their guests as
well as many IUPUI faculty and staff members. During the
ceremony, Alyssa Wickham, a student advisor for the past 2
years and a graduating nursing student, spoke as well as Dr.
Jay Gladden, IUPUI Associate Vice Chancellor for
Undergraduate Education, Dean of Universty College, and
Acting Dean of the Honors College. We made Dr. Gladden
an honorary ALD/PES member. Some graduating seniors of
the chapter were awarded the Maria Leonard Senior Book
Award and scholarships winners were announced. Officers
for the 2017-2018 school year were also recognized and
presented with framed certificates | {
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drops wherepolished ultra-violet lensesof the retractable pocket telescopemagnify strands of ice crystals toinspect the geometry of flattened minutescontracting like deep breaths in high altitudeand slipping into the crevice of biological mourningswhere nature mirrors the mind's captivityon the mountain of hidden clues,one needs a polarized helmet,a temper meter, and a peak filterto melt the snowdrift six feet below.
12/05/09an hypnotic sensation
when the quiet owl calls you
to push out
to push up
and get something back
that was not a wheeled toy
to pull around in the driveway
but a distant orb in a new sphere
pulling metallic gloves on
to swing light rods blazing
lines through the air
in liquid galaxies farther away
from earthly terrain your pretty ponies trod
in the red mud of a rhubarb pie
where fork hooves sink and stick
into a cinnamon whinny
leaving your head vibrating
and spinning forzero gravity
like the royal king with claws
like the black panther with a crown
batting his mouse around
with purring delight and growling terror
green eyes lit by his emerald heart
tongue slapping and salivating
messages his noisy stomach
cannot deny the stress lines
of a christmas aura patterns
underneath the smile of a thousand smiles
forever lips have corners
unless opened wide. -Aan hypnotic sensation
when the quiet owl calls you
to push out
to push up
and get something back
that was not a wheeled toy
to pull around in the driveway
but a distant orb in a new sphere
pulling metallic gloves on
to swing light rods blazing
lines through the air
in liquid galaxies farther away
from earthly terrain your pretty ponies trod
in the red mud of a rhubarb pie
where fork hooves sink and stick
into a cinnamon whinny
leaving your head vibrating
and spinning for zero gravity
like the royal | {
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a dairy farmer."
Well, Hill didn't become a
dairy farmer. He became a cran-
berry grower in the more centrally
located cranberry country of
New Jersey.
On a recent cool, gray morning,
Hill sat in the comfortable living
room of his home in the hamlet
of Lower Ban
in Washitown
of Lower Bank i Washington
Cvarieties
Township, Burlington County,
and discussed events that have
shaped life in New Jersey's Pine
Barrens. His wife, Mae, prepared
for another busy day as the well
respected 2nd grade teacher in
neighboring Woodland Township's
Chatsworth Elementary School.
THE HILL HOME, a former
' st, is
stagecoach stop, is a picturesque,
.three'whie, e
f
three story, white frame house
made of native pine and Atlantic
white cedar. It was built when
lumbering, glassmaking and iron
smelting drew many people to
the Pines. A weathered millstone
flecked with mica supports a
large chunk of glass slag in the
sideyard. Both were taken from
Bulltown, an old glassmaking
Bulltown, an toldglassmakingcommunityin the Pines and the
site of Hill's former lumber mill.
Today Bulltown is one of the
region's forgotten communities.
Hill recalls that he "hand
scooped cranberries in Leektown
cat in Leektown
for 25 cents a 40 pound scooping
box and a person harvesting a
poor crop in the early 1930's
might earn only $1.50 a day."
In 1940 he invested in his first
600 acre parcel of land complete
with cranberry bogs.
His outlook on the cranberry
industry in New Jersey today is
tempered by 41 years as a Pine
Barrens cranberry grower, 35
years as a school board member,
20 years as Washington
Township's mayor and three years
as the mayor's representative to
the often embattled Pinelands
Environmental Council.
Currently, Hill, a member of
the Ocean Spray Cooperative,
owns bogs at Lower Bank, Bull-
and Weekstown. Cranberry
in his bogs include Early
Black, Richards planted in 1890
and Howes planted in 1914. The
Howes have garnered a | {
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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 with a 4-2 record.
The team beat squads from
Southern Illinois University
Eastern Illinois University
and Tennessee.
Of the 28 teams in atten-dance,
Bethel placed 11th
overall.
Future tournaments include
competitions at Ripon College,
William and Mary and the
University of Nevada-Reno. ***
Sweet tooths will find de-light
in the Ice Cream Social
Feb. 11 sponsored by the
Bethel Concert Band.
For one dollar, people will
get three scoops of ice cream
plus toppings. The sweets will
,be served outside the coffee
shop in the Kresge courtyard
from 11a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Entertainment inside the
coffee shop will include jug-glers,
jazz band selections as
well as featuring jazz groups
from Bethel.
Many prizes will be award-ed
and the chances of winning
one are high, according to
Louise Hawes, publicity
chairperson.
Prize winners could receive
tickets to the Chanhassen
Dinner Theater, free hambur-gers,
a dinner at Lindy's Steak
House, and many more fun
places, added Hawes. ***
Paul Wiebe, professor of soc-iology,
has been awarded a
Fulbright exchange grant
through the U.S. International
Communication Agency. He
began teaching in February at
the University of Madras in
India.
The Fulbright exchange
program is designed to in-crease
mutual understanding
between the people of the U.S.
and those of other nations.
Individuals are selected on
the basis of academic and
professional qualifications in
addition to their ability and
willingness to share ideas and
experiences with people of
diverse cultures.
Wiebe was born and raised
in India where his parents
and grandparents were mis-sionaries.
In India he taught
at universities in Penang,
Hyderabab | {
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could allow in
unscrupulous businesses, said Alan
Fedman, enforcement director for the
National Indian Gaming Commission,
the agency responsible for regulating
tribal casinos.
He said the White Earth solicitations
illustrate a weakness in federal tribal-
casino regulations. The requests began
after attorney Miles Lord, a former
federal judge supporting some
incumbents, advised band officials
there was nothing illegal or unethical
about asking vendors to contribute to
campaigns.
In federal elections it's unlawful for
corporations to contribute directly to
candidates, although they can join
political action committees that raise
contributions.
Corporations also can give "soft
money" to national political parties.
Individuals who contract with the
government aren't allowed to make
contributions.
But the 1988 Indian Gaming
Regulatory Act doesn'tprohibit casino
vendors from giving directly to the
campaigns of candidates for tribal
offices.
The solicitations
Earlier this year Helen Klassen, the
campaign treasurer for tribal Secretary-
Treasurer Erma Vizenor and Council
Questions/to pg. 3
FBI reportedly investigating White Earth
absentee ballot seizure
By Gary Blair
The June 7takeover and subsequent
theft of absentee ballots at White Earth
was allegedly promoted by three
imprisoned former tribal council
members who led supporters into
believing that an appeal of their
convictions would be successful.
Once released from prison, the trio
planned to regain control ofthe tribal
council and return the reservation to
its former status (which would not
include mandatory employee drug
tests). However, on June 9, those
followers learned that their leaders'
appeals had not been successful and
this week only a handful remain inside
the reservation's administration
building. The main promoters of the
takeover and ballot snatch have since
gone home in the wake of a federal
probe that could bring criminal
charges.
PRESS/ON sources say that earlier
this year, a three page letter was sent
to Norman Deschampe, president of
the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe from
former White Earth secretary-treasurer,
Jerry Rawley and Dist. I Rep. Rickie
Clark. "They asked him (Deschampe)
to settle things | {
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represent her manic phases.
And it's just all
bright colors and--
So he had all these
things in mind,
and he just wanted to
make sure that that
would be something that was
accurate to her experience.
And there's a part of the
middle of that episode where
she imagines herself as the star
of her own sitcom in a title
sequence, like a Mary Tyler
Moore kind of title sequence.
And that came straight out
of her conversation with him.
And he was saying,
well, what does it
feel like when you're a manic?
And she said, I feel
like I'm in the title
sequence of my own sitcom.
SPEAKER 1: Wow.
DANIEL JONES: And he wrote
that into the script because
of that.
SPEAKER 1: Did you find that
the episodes are pretty faithful
to the stories?
DANIEL JONES: They vary a lot.
Some of them are very
faithful, and some, it really
just takes the situation and
creates astories.
And you don't live your
story absent of other people.
And there was a piece
that was done about--
one of my favorite ones--
about a Canadian soldier
in Afghanistan who comes back
to Vancouver to discover his--
and he's young, 20s--
his wife is having an
affair with her co-worker.
And they end up
getting divorced,
and it has all these
wonderful scenes
where he finds himself in the--
I hope we can make a TV
episode out of this one too.
He finds himself in the waiting
room of a therapist's office
in Vancouver with the
wife of the guy who
his wife had an affair with.
And she's seeking therapy
for her divorce, and he's--
and they're in
the room together.
And the therapist comes out.
And she's like, oh, my god.
I didn't realize this was
the same relationship.
That one, the people,
those other people,
were not at all happy about
having that story come out.
But people | {
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Engineering
on deck 15. Damage Control Teams are mustered here, as well
as internal
ship maintenance teams. Numerous consoles and replicators
line this
section, serving as auxiliary consoles for Main Engineering, along with
providing engineering research space and secondary computer core
support.
Access to
the Jeffries Tubes is provided in various places on both the First,
Second and
Third Tier of the Engineering Spaces.
Typical crew compliment in Main Engineering consists of twenty
engineers and
forty technicians of various grades. During Red or Yellow Alert, that
number is
increased.
Phaser
array arrangement: Two dorsal phaser arrays on the primary
hull, extending from just aft of the bridge to
almost midway around the saucer section. The arrays converge to
intersect at the
bow of the ship, giving them an almost oval appearance. Two ventral
phaser
arrays on the primary hull, extending from the very back of the primary
hull
almost to the bow. These arraysfor one on
one
sessions, as well as a large, group therapy room, consisting of several
couches
and chairs, are located adjacent to the Counselor's office.
In the
event of a crewmember suffering a psychotic episode, and needing to be
isolated
from the crew, the ill crewman is kept in sickbay, in the isolation
unit, or in
the intensive care units, as determined by bed availability.
General
Overview: All crew and
officers' (except for the Commanding officer's and Executive Officer's,
which
are located on deck 2) quarters are located on decksA,
B, 2-5, 13-15 and deck
17.
Individuals
assigned to the Akira
Class for periods over six months are permitted to reconfigure their
quarters
within hardware, volume, and mass limits. Individuals assigned for
shorter
periods are generally restricted to standard quarters configuration.
Crew
Quarters: Standard Living Quarters
are provided for both Starfleet Non-Commissioned Officers and
Ensigns.
These persons are expected to share their room with another crewmate
due | {
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not always easy and was very hard during the
Bush administration. But progress is
continued and we're very proud of what
all governments agreed to last year in
September which is the new global
development agenda and I epitomized in
the sustainable development goals. These
are a set of 17 goals that were approved
by 193 governments to tackle poverty to
tackle climate change and
environmental justice as well as social
and economic justice so as you see if
covers topics like health, education,
sanitation, hunger, poverty, but also
sustainable cities, consumption and
production, decent work, oceans, forest,
climate change, peace and security, and so on.
Very comprehensive agenda it took three
years to negotiate. The women's movement
organized and was there for three years
it was an incredible labor but it was
worth it because this applies to all
governments including the US government.
All governments agreed that they will
taketo play a critical role he
is already at work and he is himself
a very conservative Catholic. He has a
policy record because he served in the
House of Representatives between 2001
and 2013
and then after that
as governor of Indiana until now. And
during that time he's been a vocal
proponent of anti-women legislation and
anti-women executive action. In Congress
he attempted to have the House
Republicans reinstate the global Gag Rule,
which prevents foreign agencies that
receive our USAID funding for family planning
to speak about abortion, thats why its called a global gag rule. They tried
to reinstate it legislatively in 2011 of
course they couldn't do it because
President Obama vetoed that, but he led the
charge on that, he also led the charge to
defund Planned Parenthood that's been
one of his signature moves in Indiana.
And he's the man who brought us | {
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quite severe it like he's he's capable
of kindness but he's also
harsh and judgmental and that's what
society is like that's what the
super-ego is like and what that means is
that he's integrated his aggression and
I've seen this happen in my clinical
clients when they come in and they're
too agreeable they look like Simba looks
later in the movie when he's an
adolescent and he's sort of like a deer
in headlights everything is coming in
and nothing is coming out but when the
person integrates their shadow and gets
the aggressive part of themselves
integrated into their personality their
face is hardened and if you look at
people you can tell because the people
who are too agreeable look childlike and
innocent and the people who well a hyper
aggressive person will look you know
mean and cruel but uh let's see if
that's goodthe eternal wise
man that's a way of thinking so is the
king but
he's sort of a superordinate king or an
outside king in some sense he's the
repository of ancient wisdom and the
king is the manner in which that wisdom
is currently being acted out in the
world and so they're friends and that
means that the king is a good king
because if they if the king was a bad
King he would be alienated from himself
and that would make him shallow and
one-dimensional and that would make him
a bad ruler no Union with the traditions
of the past to be a good ruler you have
Slovak:
Je to stred kríža, pretože to je v katedrále a stred je miesto prijatia dobrovoľného utrpenia. To je to, čo to znamená.
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folk
cashing in on popular trends,
a pair of untimely deaths,
spies, intimidation, sexual
harassment allegations,
and multiple lawsuits that created
a toxic battle for the company's soul.
Plus, there's a story about
someone shouting penis a lot,
so you'll at least want
to stick around for that.
But to set the stage,
let's talk about two families
at the heart of Archie Comics,
The Goldwaters and the Silberkleits.
John L. Goldwater was a New York orphan
who hitchhiked around the country during
the Great Depression,
working mostly as a reporter
when he wasn't too busy
being a ladies man.
Eventually, he found
himself back in New York
where he started a shipping company called
Periodicals for Export, Inc.
with an interesting idea.
Goldwater would buy old
magazine issues from publishers
for cheap and sell them
overseas for a decent profit.
But he would need a magazine
publisher with whom to partner.
Enter Louis Silberkleit.
Silberkleit had a ton of
experience workingfor and even
creating his own publishing
companies for pulp magazines.
The two struck a deal to work together
and saw a surprising successful business.
Unfortunately, their
success was short-lived
thanks to a war brewing in Europe
that would make international
shipping a bit tricky.
Goldwater and Silberkleit
continued to work together
as the two men witnessed
the phenomenal popularity
of a brand new comic book
about an alien dressed in
brightly colored spandex who would fight
as the champion of the oppressed.
The comic book superhero market exploded
as Superman stories started
flying off the stands.
Figuratively, of course.
Superman couldn't actually
fly when he first debuted.
Just jump real high.
Goldwater and Silberkleit saw,
along with many other publishers,
that the superhero comic
market was where the money was.
Together, along with Maurice Coyne,
a business manager who worked
closely with Silberkleit,
they set off on their
new business venture.
With their powers and names combined,
they founded MLJ Magazines in | {
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Velez
Betancourt
Cuba
7
Germán Herrera
Venzuela
8
IM Oladapo Adu
Nigeria
9
Ariel Marichal
Cuba
10
Martyn Del Castilho
Barbados
Perhaps one footnote was the
performance of 11-year-old Josh Colas, the scholastic All-American
player from White Plains, New York. He entered the Open section with
fanfare and did not disappoint. Colas played enterprising chess
culminating with a win over four-time Trinidadian champion FM Ryan
Harper. In the interview, he stated that he wanted to avoid Harper’s
preparation in the mainline Sicilian Dragon.
In the under-20 section, two FIDE
Masters dominated the event clearing the field by 1.5 points. FM
David Finol Berrueta of Venezuela won on tiebreaks over hometown
favorite FM Keron Cabralis due his win in their head-to-head
encounter. He suffered one loss against 3rd place winner Vishnu
Singh of Trinidad.
The under-14 section saw Trinidad’s
Joshua Johnson dominate the section with a blistering 8.5/9. He
surrendered only one draw to fourth place Pierre Chang ofthe
Netherlands and beat secondnd place winner Christian Ammon and third
place Jarryon Paul, both of Trinidad.
Wasudha Malgie analyzing with IM Nestor Velez, the Suriname
coach
Suriname made a strong showing in
the tournament entering their top juniors in each section. Led by
Wasudha Malgie, President of the Combinatie Sport Vereniging (CSV)
Chess Club, they belong to a club of about 80 members. Malgie was a
member of Suriname’s women’s Olympiad team in Turin, Italy in 2006.
One of her students won third place in the under-10.
Ashwari Akloe (above) of Suriname
started with five straight wins and led the section until she
suffered successive losses to Jamaican Lawrence Foreman and
Trinidadian Justin Labastide in rounds six and seven. Labastide
sprinted past both of these players with seven straight wins to take
first with 8/9. Foreman ended on 7/9 and Akloe took third | {
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be in some
place that could challenge me
rather than carry a rifle,
say, across Germany or wherever.
The young
cadet flew a twin-engine bomber.
It was noisy, but the
very first mission I went on,
they blew off a wingtip,
and I thought, is this thing
going to get back?'
Well, it did great!
(Airplane Noise)
While discrimination in the
armed forces was uncommon,
it reared its ugly head on
occasion like the time
Lieutenant Orrantia was asked
to work with a young man named
Ramirez.
So he reported to me and
he became my radio gunner,
because the other pilots
didn't want him.
They didn't want him
because he was Hispanic,
and Hispanics were not
supposed to be that intelligent.
Well, and the same thing
happened with my crew chief.
No one would take him
because his name was Torres,
and he
was the best crew chief we had.
Another Air Corps volunteer,
Joe Hernandez from San Antonio,
landed in ajob,
not for the faint of heart,
as a turret-gunner, flying
bombing missions over Germany.
Another really bad experience
happened to me
on Friday the 13th.
One of our airplanes came up
right in front of us,
and the prop wash, you know,
the propeller flipped us over.
We fell down about 5,000 feet.
We were at about 20,000 at that
time, and (we) went down
to about 14-15,000
when finally the plane
....the pilot
and the co-pilot, pulled it out.
As part of the famed
82nd Airborne Division,
Daniel Ramirez worked
on board C-47s,
planes that towed gliders across
the English Channel during
the harrowing D-Day invasion.
They had 35 paratroopers
in one of those gliders,
and some of those guys
never got out.
They went in and shot them even
before they hit the ground.
D-Day, June 6, 1944 marked the
Allied invasion of Europe,
and John D. Luna from
Ceres, California was there.
Well, when I first
went in, that was | {
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would help me create
what would become known
as the POP Program,
the Pretrial Opportunity Program.
We had a nice conversation.
He told me he'd work on it and
I didn't hear from him for,
really, a couple of months which I thought
was his gentle way of
telling me that I was crazy.
But then he showed up one day in my office
with a Pretrial Services
Officer, Laura Fahmy,
and a written proposal
which we worked on together.
And we were basically making
it up as we went along
which made it kind of fun.
By January of 2012,
so four years ago,
I had enlisted my friend and
colleague who's right here,
Chief Magistrate Judge, Stephen Gold,
and we told our brother and
sister judges at a meeting,
at a Board of Judges
meeting in Eastern District
about the newly created POP Program.
We gave them the history of
the program where the idea
ofare arrested
for behavior that arises
out of their addictions,
and but for those addictions they wouldn't
have found themselves enmeshed
in the criminal justice system.
And the POP Program provides a framework
for intensive supervision
of these defendants,
combining judicial involvement
as the defining
characteristic of a drug court
as the regular judicial involvement
in the rehabilitative efforts
of the participants in the court.
In addition to their
more frequent meetings
with the pretrial services officer
and the drug treatment providers,
the participants meet
monthly with the judges
around the table in a courtroom.
In our Brooklyn Courthouse
they meet with me,
with Judge Gold,
Pretrial Services Officer, Laura Fahmy,
and one another.
These group meetings address
each participant's progress
in the preceding month,
the problems they faced,
the goals for the upcoming month.
The participants support
and strengthen each other
in these meetings.
And it's hands-on
involvement of the judges
is an important source of
support and motivation.
The social science in the
States makes it | {
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recording of
the inculpatory conversation and a transcript of the relevant
portions at Auch's trial. During trial, Auch's counsel questioned
the credibility of both Tracy and Connolly, suggesting that the
witnesses had an incentive to lie about Auch's involvement in the
Charlestown robbery to receive more favorable treatment from the
government on the various charges they faced.
In the government's opening statement, the prosecutor
told the jury that they would hear testimony from Auch's friends,
i.e., the people with whom Auch had chosen to associate and work.
Then, during the government's direct examinations of Tracy and
Connolly, the prosecutor repeatedly referred to a separate crime in
Hudson, New Hampshire, involving the murder of two persons during
the robbery of an armored car (the "Hudson robbery"). Tracy
admitted to having participated in that robbery, and the prosecutor
asked Connolly why theFBI had interviewed his girlfriend about the
Hudson robbery. Despite Auch's repeated objections, which the
district court sustained, the prosecutor continued to ask questions
concerning the Hudson robbery and referred to the crime again
during closing argument.
During closing and rebuttal arguments, the prosecutor
made a further series of questionable and troubling remarks.
First, the prosecutor made various assertions in support of the
credibility of the government's witnesses. The prosecutor asserted
that Tracy had no motive to lie, that Tracy knew that if he lied
"his life is done," and that Tracy had told the truth about Auch
and his own crimes, "like the honest man that he has been in this
court." The prosecutor suggested that if Tracy had wanted to curry
favor with the government by testifying falsely against Auch that
he would have fabricated a | {
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Cleveland to coach the secondary. In 2005-06, he was defensive backs job at Oakland, then served as defensive coordinator at North Carolina before joining the Ravens when John Harbaugh became head coach four years ago.
"Chuck is unorthodox," Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs said. "He's like The Joker. You never really expect what he's going to do, and everything has a motive."
---
AP Sports Writer David Ginsburg in Baltimore contributed to this report.could indicatea
fair beginningbut
under this climate senseits
scarcityI
promisedI
will never return there.I
go againstand
stand upright
againstthe
furnace abysswhat
a hiccupfrom
singular approachingto
have itconditioned
in the mindthe
broken timethe
used up timewe
are on loannow.The
solitary night adumbratesthis
sound that is alreadytwentieth
centurywhat
are the little pearls doingadorningus
who sweatfrom
every pore sadnesswhat
patternof
relentless spots.There
would be another courseto
followlong
difficult imperviousswallowingto
senddownsalivabilemorselsthat
sometimes happenthey
happen sometimes.Low
key notes all of themabysmal
deterioratedthe
air is scorchingwhen
it burns youthe
bitter sun in black.Brooches
fissureschapletsour
the sandal incense riseseveryone
stands uplike
flowers in linein
their ascension the heightin
extendingin
unfolding.
The
first time was in Florence, and it remained the last. The bloodthen
was clearbeating
on the heart never triedfew
the adepts and the scared neophytesto
find out and catch the sense.In
the dark house, so underground,the
light is on even during the daythe
windows are covered with oriental curtainsand
barred, a basement, made forfugitives,
he said, dearly bought,reassuring
architectonic frame,Mitteleuropean,
the Polish man added,sweating
in the soaked bed twelve hoursuninterrupted
"my legs, señor,my
legs!" are you sleeping?ARE
YOU STILL SLEEPING? A stinking agony,in
the | {
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named
star child who had these
special powers, whose
birth is really a mystery.
And so this child,
Astraios, was perhaps
one of the early
extraterrestrial children
sent to planet Earth.
NARRATOR: Could
this peculiar child
have actually instructed
one of the greatest
minds of the ancient world?
And considering the Greeks
described powerful beings who
came down from the
sky, is it possible,
as ancient astronaut
theorists suggest,
that Astraios was the
offspring of the gods--
part human and part divine?
Many ancient cultures,
among them the ancient Greeks
and the Egyptians
and many others,
describe how some
children were born from
humans and the so-called gods.
Star children are what some
consider a new breed of people.
NARRATOR: Is the
story of Astraios
really an early account
of a star child?
And if the star children
have existed here on Earth
throughout our history,
what is the source
of their superior intelligence
and unexplainable abilities?
BRET OLDHAM: Science
tells us that in addition
to the two-strand
double helix DNA,
there's anFor indispensable reporting on the coronavirus crisis, the election, and more, subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily newsletter.
Ron Paul deserves representation at the Republican national convention in proportion to the support he received in the primaries. And his supporters are prepared to fight like hell to make sure he gets it.
Across the country, at state and county GOP conventions, diehard supporters of maverick Ron Paul are staging uprisings in an effort to secure a role for Paul at the national convention in Minneapolis-St. Paul….
In Minnesota, Paul loyalists captured seven delegate slots at congressional district meetings, and in Nevada, the convention abruptly recessed on April 26 after balloting showed Paul supporters winning at least half of the initial contests for delegate slots to the national convention….
People are catching on.
Last | {
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daughter, Lauren, who
has cerebral palsy.
The hospital proved to be a
place where her daughter had
fun, met friends and learned some
life skills.
Lauren Allison, now 22,
came to the McCarty Center on
an inpatient and outpatient basis
from the time she was a preteen
to a 21-year-old. She also visited
the hospital's orthopedic and
neurology clinics and received
assistance from the staff with her
equipment needs.
Lenore Allison, of Goldsby,
said she was impressed with
the care shown by the hospital
employees and how they worked
to create fun experiences for the
children.
She also noticed that
her daughter developed more
independence after visiting the
hospital. Lauren Allison improved
her driving skills with her electric
wheelchair. She learned how to
make decisions and advocate
for herself. She became stronger
and could assist as her family or
aides transferred her from her
wheelchair to a bed. The skills she
learned also seemed to boost her
self-esteem, her mother said.
Continuedthe
hospital's respite program.
This year marks the 65th
anniversary of the McCarty
Center, which is a pediatric rehab
hospital that specializes in the
care and treatment of children with
developmental disabilities from
birth to age 21.
The McCarty Center provides
medical care and physical,
occupational, speech and
language therapy for children on
an inpatient and outpatient basis.
More than 10,000 families
have been served by the center.
Here are a few of their stories.
Lauren Allison, left, with her mom, Lenore, came
to the hospital for inpatient and outpatient services
from the time she was a preteen to a 21-year-old.
She developed close bonds with McCarty Center
employees and fellow patients during her visits.
Developing friendships, life skills
Lenore Allison learned
about the McCarty Center when
she was looking for resources to
help her daughter, Lauren, who
has cerebral palsy.
The hospital proved to be a
place where her daughter had
fun, met friends and learned some
life | {
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Clarion 1982-02-12 Vol 57 No 18
the Clar10110
Vol. 57, No. 18 Bethel College, 3900 Bethel Dr., St. Paul, MN 12 February 1982
Bethel given
social work
accreditation
Bethel College's bacca-laureate
social work pro-gram
has been granted ac
creditation by the Council
on Social Work Education
of New York City. "This
significant achievement is
the happy outcome of
years of effort by faculty,
students, and administra-tion,"
said . John Bower,
A.C.S.W., director of Beth-el's
social work program.
Andy Pratt, formerly on the professional rock circuit, will be playing for one of his first Christian
audiences tonight at Bethel.
Pratt/Heard concert starts weekend fun
Mark Heard, a contemporary Christian artist, will appear in
concert tonight, Feb. 12, at 8 p.m.
Strong community sup-port—
involving numerous
social service agencies,
their administrators and
professional staffs—was
also a factor leading to
accreditation, he stated,
for which Bethel is grate-ful.
Currently, more than
60 junior and senior level
students have community-based
field placements
which involve nearly 45
professionals as fieldis a conven-ience
for the students but
involves workers going to
the window four times for
each book sold. Someone
has to receive the book
from the seller, give the
book to the buyer, receive
the money from the buyer
and then give the money
to the seller. Past prob-lems
have also included
money being stolen.
Brice Russell, Senate
treasurer, said the Senate
is not sponsoring the book
buy-back board because
of the overload it places on
the post office.
Cheryl Thomas, vice-president
of the Senate,
explained an alternative
by Steve Penner
Andy Pratt and his band
are in concert tonight, Feb.
12, at 8 p.m. in the gym.
Sponsored by the Campus
Coordinators, the concert
also features Mark Heard.
Tickets cost $4 in advance
and $5 at the door.
Andy Pratt's name may
not be recognized by those
familiar with contempor-ary
Christian music. He
to the book buy-back
board as a book exchange.
With a book exchange sys
tem the students would
bring the books they | {
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of Point 705 and/or
have had
vehicles pull behind the club and into
Plaintiffs private parking
garage. This
harassment was done, and continues, to
intimidate Plaintiffs and the
scare the
patrons inside. Any onlooker would think that
police activity was
constantly
occurring at the club.
The
next
incident
occurred on October 26, 2003. The promoter
hosted a Hip Hop party and
most of
the patrons were African American. An
intoxicated patron was standing
on the
street in front of Point 705 trying to hail a
cab. Plaintiff Grace
Roberts
noticed him and immediately told her security to
get the man out of the
street
and help him get a cab. When the patron’s
friends saw the man, they
also
attempted to get him out of the street. On his
own, the man fell over
pulling
his friends and security to the ground with him.
As soon as they got
up,
Defendant Averill drove his car up to the front
of the club. At that
time,
Plaintiff Gracehas really good music.” The officers
parked their vehicles in
the
middle of the street directly outside of the
front of the club with
their
lights on.
Later
that
night,
Plaintiff Cecil Jr. arrived at the club. As soon
as he stepped outside
of the
club to speak with an employee, he was
approached by HBPD officers.
They told
him that they had received complaints of loud
music and wanted to go in
to
check it out. Plaintiff Cecil, Jr. told them
that the event was a
private party
closed to the public and the building was
locked. He further told the
officers
that he would tell the DJ to lower the volume.
Before the officers
left, one
opened up a small notebook filled with paper to
make notes. Both
Plaintiff Cecil
and an employee noticed that Plaintiff Cecil
Jr’s business card was
stapled to
the inside of the notebook.
That
night,
a fight
broke out in the club. The manager called the
police to assist in
getting
people | {
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town's
children.
Her killing was Salamanca's first
major crime in memory involving a
white victim and an Indian suspect.
District Attorney Edward Sharkey
cited his concern about interracial
violence in arguing forthe closure
of court records in the case.
Among the documents is a
statement that the suspect, Edward
Kindt, now 16, allegedly gave
police after his arrest, possibly
containingamotive. Thestatement
was presented during a pretrial
hearing thepublic was not allowed
to attend. Several news agencies
have gone to court seeking its
release.
A county judge ruled Monday
that reporters and the public can
attend future pretrial proceedings,
butwillhavetoleavethecourtroom
if evidence is discussed.
But instead of dividing over the
case, Salamanca's residents seem
to haveput the tensionsofthe past
behind them.
Several people, both Senecas
and non-Indians, gathered outside
the municipal building when Kindt,
described as a troub led boy with a
mean streak, was taken into
custody May 11, two days after
Mrs. Brown was killed. "Shewas
our friend!" they shouted as Kindt
wasled inside.
Later that week, in a remarkable
outpouring of sympathy, the town
declared aday of mourning. About
2,000 people _ Indians and non-
By Jeff Armstrong
In a ruling that one member of a
three-judge panel warned would
have "serious ramifications," the
U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
this week rejected the Owens
Valley Indian Housing Authority's
(OVIH A) effort to establish federal jurisdiction to evict tribal tenants.
The case arose when the
OVIHA, apublic housing agency
serving four California tribes, attempted to terminate a lease to
Bishop Tribe member Gifford
Turner in 1995. Turner failed to
respond to the housing authority's
unlawful detainer action in federal
district court, but the
court nevertheless dismissed the
claim for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction.
In its appeal, the federally-
funded housing authority argued
that it was bound by U.S. law to
assure the collection of rent and to
take civil action to enforce its
leases.
However, citing district court
rulings | {
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full
and illustrious bios
on the Center for the Humanities website.
We've just finished
celebrating the seventh year
of August as Women in Translation Month,
which aims to highlight
women and non-binary writers
and translators to
address gender disparity
in the field of literary translation.
The past year saw the
publication of more classics
appearing in their first
translations by women,
including Michael Nylan's
"The Art of War" by Sun Tzu,
and Maria Dahvana Headley's "Beowulf".
In her translator's note to
her edition of "The Odyssey",
Emily Wilson rejects the,
quote, "Gendered metaphor
"of the faithful translation, whose worth
"is always secondary to that
of the male authored original".
Instead, she points to
a translator's, quote,
"Responsibility to
acknowledge her own agency
"and wrestle in explicit
and conscious ways,
"not only with the multiple meanings
"of the original in its own culture,
"but what her own text may mean
"and the effects it may
have on its readers".
Because "The Odyssey" and, I mightthe conference's
originally planned dates
in late September, several marvelous
larger-scale events will happen.
We'll be here every Tuesday
through the rest of this month,
with the week's hour-long conversation.
Please join us next Tuesday, September 8,
for Translating Trauma
with Ellen Elias-Bursać,
Aaron Robertson and Julia Sanches,
moderated by Queenie Sukhadia.
And, keep checking the Center
for the Humanities site
for future events.
Translating the Future is convened
by PEN America's translation committee,
which advocates on behalf
of literary translators,
working to foster a wider
understanding of their art
and offering professional resources
for translators, publishers,
critics, bloggers
and others with an interest
in international literature.
The committee is currently co-chaired
by Lyn Miller-Lachman and myself.
For more information,
look for translation resources at pen.org.
If you know anyone who
was unable to join us
for the livestream today, a recording will
be available afterward on the HowlRound
and Center for the Humanities sites.
Before we turn it over to
Gopal, Laurie and | {
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the object,
it suddenly came at the plane
head-on before peeling away.
Although the fighter pilots were no longer
able to detect the object,
the radar controller at
the nearby USS Princeton
was able to follow the alien aircraft
for a few minutes before disappearing.
The next incident we know
about occurred 10 years later
off the east coast of the United States
and is known as the
USS Roosevelt Incident.
It is reported that many
strange aerial objects,
one of them like a spinning
top moving against the wind,
appeared almost daily from the
summer of 2014 to March 2015.
Navy pilots reported to their superiors
that the objects had no visible engine
or infrared exhaust plumes,
but that they could reach 30000
feet at hypersonic speeds.
In late 2014, a Super Hornet
pilot had a near collision
with one of the objects,
and an official mishap report was filed.
Some of the encounters
were captured onnature.
This kind of contact has been a big part
of most native cultures.
Bigfoot is known in North
America through ancient rock art
and stories of Native American encounters.
It's where the name Sasquatch,
or hairy giant, got it's origins.
It seems that native,
our First Nation people,
are more open to Bigfoot encounters,
both in the past and
even now in the present.
Winona Kirk, a Lakota,
had her own transformational
Bigfoot encounter.
- Some elders would say they're spirit,
part spirit, part animal, but
the First Nation's people,
my relatives, have kind of
a mystical or spiritual way
of looking at all creation, so.
I did talk to some elders who said,
"Oh, I had them around my camp."
- [Dennis] Research has
shown that after WWII,
reports of Sasquatch encounters
were growing in number,
but the big change in
the awareness of Bigfoot
occurred in 1967, when what became known
as a Patterson-Gimlin film
showed the | {
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as many of you know,
will be stepping down on March, 9th,
after 21 years on the federal bench.
And he's had a truly illustrious
career in public service.
Before being nominated
by President Clinton
to the bench he made a name
for himself as a federal prosecutor
in the Eastern District of New York.
He was best known for
securing the conviction
of mafia boss, John Gotti.
He was serving as the chief
of the office's criminal
division when he was appointed
to the bench in 1994.
Since 1995, Judge Gleeson has
also been an adjunct professor
of law here at NYU.
And this semester he's
teaching a sentencing seminar
that examines the theories
and purposes of sentencing
and how it has come to be known in the era
of mass incarceration
in the United States.
Judge Gleeson has garnered many headlines.
Judges don't seek them out
but he has made many important decisions
in his timeon the bench
and has really earned the deep respect
of his colleagues,
of the lawyers who
practiced in front of him
and of all others who attend to the work
of the federal judiciary.
He's also been a very prominent advocate
for alternatives to incarceration.
He has helped create two programs
in the Brooklyn Federal
Courts aimed at reducing
or eliminating prison time
for non-violent drug offenders
and young defendants.
These were among the first of their kind
in the federal court system
and this really innovative approach
is all the more timely coming now
when the Obama administration
is calling for an overhaul
or at least a rethinking
of federal sentencing laws,
and when the justice department
has supported additional changes
to the federal sentencing guidelines.
In this and in many other ways,
Judge Gleeson is not simply an expert,
he is a pioneer.
We are grateful to have
him with us this evening,
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ta
prperty
When not involved with civic
responsibilities or working on his bogs,
Hill will occasionally discuss possible
equipment designs that would increase
efficiency of cranberry cultivation
with Paul Burk, a neighbor and engineer.
He'd like Burk to develop a hand
operated weed wiper with rapid
rotation of the "roller" which could
possibly reduce herbicide dripping.
Although Hill insists that he is
"not a skilled cabinetmaker" he has
handcrafted book shelves and
paymenTt pfrom xown-cupboards for the family's living
the state toa t
payment from the state to the town-
room and dining room and three granddaughters
thoroughly enjoy the doll-
house he created for them. It's a unique
dollhouse, for inside and out it's a
scale model of their grandparents'
historic home.
Asked about the future of New
Jersey's cranberry industry, Hill
exclaims: "It'll go great guns if the state
doesn't regulate the water."
Then he thoughtfully concludes:
"Water shouldn't be taken from the
Pine Barrens. IfINDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT
AND OTHER EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURERS
(CRAWLERS, TRACTORS, EXCAVATORS, LOADERS, ETC.)
Can We Serve You? . .
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IRONWOOD MADISON MILWAUKEE
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Scientist boosted
Washington yields
Dr. Charles Doughty, who
retired last year, brought about
significant changes in the
cranberry and blueberry produc-
tion of the state of Washington
during his 29 years as a research
horticulturist.
at the Western Washington
Research and Extension Center
in Puyallup and at the Coastal
Washington Research and
Extension Unit near Long Beach.
He began his research career
at a relatively late stage in his
life but accomplished much,
according to his colleacygues,.
WoUrth plate mongBea,
L coancehis
trating on cranberry problems,
tratyernWashington rin lberry
rcan
Dr. Doughty researched and
recommended cultural practices
recommended cultural practices
that changed the industry,
Growers had been getting
heavy production one year and
ight production the next. He
ninnpprprlwnr5wi~hfer~ili~pr
pioneered work wit fertilizer
treatments spaced throughout
the growing season and soon the
bogs | {
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of
the events unfolding at ImClone,
including the details of the failed FDA
approval, at which point Stewart chose
to sell her stock and save tens of
thousands of dollars in potential losses.
She was fined approximately $200,000
and sentenced to five months in
prison, followed by five months of
house arrest, two years of probation,
and a five-year ban from
being the CEO, CFO,
Director, or any other
leading executive within her
own company that would
allow her to disclose,
report, audit, or control
financial statements.
The world watched as one of the most
celebrated names in domesticity and
homemaking head into the Big House,
and Martha Stewart didn’t disappoint.
She actually took a position
within the prison to act as a line
of communication between the
prison management and the inmates,
showing diplomacy, grace, and
intelligence even in an orange jumpsuit.
Five months later, having
“paid her debt to society”,
she dove right back into
building hertype of
money, and was forced
to declare bankruptcy.
This was also the largest bankruptcy
filing in US history at that point,
and it caused tremors throughout the
financial system and the world.
Pennzoil eventually settled with
Texaco for $3 billion in damages.
Texaco was down, but not
out, and the following
year, they merged with
Saudi Aramco, thus
beginning a 25-year
period of merging and
absorptions, disbandings and
gradual disappearances.
Texaco stations have all but disappeared,
replaced by Shell and Esso and Conoco.
You might still find the
occasional Texaco station in the
Deep South of the United States,
but it is a dying brand.
However, watching an oil empire
slowly crumble after being
dealt a single knockout blow
more than two decades earlier,
goes to show that the more money
and resources there are in play,
the less a scandal actually has
to do with righting a wrong.
In the case of Texaco,
Pennzoil, and Getty Oil, this
scandal | {
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areas,
boosting competition in
densely populated areas.
Tesla started in July 2003.
In February next year,
Elon Musk joined the company as
the Chairman board of directors
after conducting a Series A
investment round, which he led.
Elon became more active in its activities
and was a significant contributor
to the Tesla Roadster design.
In 2008,
he rose to the position of CEO and product
architect, which he holds to this day.
At this point, Elon Musk became
the CEO of two companies,
Tesla and SpaceX,
and has made tremendous
achievements since then.
Under his leadership,
Tesla has evolved to being
a world-class invention,
and not just your
regular car company.
The stylish Tesla cars are
mostly electric vehicles,
and they own the world's
largest battery plant.
They have built other power storage
devices like the utility grade power system
and the home Tesla PowerWall.
Tesla owns SolarCity and produces
solar roof tiles and solar panels.
Tesla announced a controversial $2.6
billion paymentfor Elon Musk in 2018.
Elon's continued
effort in promoting
and advancing products
and sustainable energy
for a broader consumer population
earned a solid $2.6 billion deal
in 2018
in combination with solar energy
companies and his electric cars.
His motor company,
Tesla Motors Inc.,
announced an all-stock
purchase of SolarCity Corp.
This was a company Elon
co-founded with his cousins,
and he is a significant
shareholder in the company.
A combination of the two companies,
solar and storage is outstanding.
As a single entity,
both Tesla (storage)
and SolarCity (solar) can fully
integrate a commercial, residential,
and grid-scale product to enhance
energy generation, storage,
and consumption.
The Boring Company, like other
business ventures owned by Elon,
is more than just
a business concept.
This business idea came to Elon
while he was stuck in traffic
in Los Angeles in December 2016.
His plan was about underground
tunnels that help to ease off traffic
in the infamous
LA highway system.
In January 2017,
he made a move | {
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hectares),
is one of the largest parks in any urban centre
in North America.
Gastown -
The fascinating little historic enclave of Gastown, in the
central core area of Vancouver alongside Chinatown, transports
visitors back in time to envision the city in days of old,
with its cobbled streets, antique gaslights, Victorian
architecture and maze of narrow alleys, courtyards and passages
wherein
hide boutiques and restaurants.
CN
Tower - Standing 1,815ft (553m) high, Toronoto’s landmark CN
Tower is the world’s tallest building, a celebrated
icon, an important telecommunications hub and the centre
of tourism
in Toronto.
Niagara
Falls - Straddling the Canadian-United
States border and sited between the province of Ontario
and the US state
of New York, the awesome
Niagara Falls attracts about 12 million tourists a year.
Museum
of Fine Arts - During the past 140 years the Montreal
Museum of Fine Arts has assembled one of North America's
finest encyclopaedic collections,
totallingmore than 30,000 objects.
Nahanni
National Park Reserve - Centred on the river valleys in the southwest
of the Northwest Territories, and accessible
only by air, is the 1,840 square
mile (4,766 sq km) Nahanni National Park, an outstanding
example of northern wilderness with rivers, canyons, gorges
and alpine
tundra.
British
Columbia Parliament Buildings -
Built in 1893, the British Columbia Government Parliament
Buildings were initially criticised as an unnecessary expense,
but
now form a major tourist attraction in Victoria, as well
as serving as the legislative centre for the province.
Green
Gables House - Nestled in the Prince Edward Island National
Park in Cavendish
is the charming and picturesque Green Gables House that,
in the early 1900s, inspired author Lucy Maude Montgomery
to create her much-loved story about a precocious red-headed
orphan Anne Shirley, entitled Anne of Green Gables.
Jasper - Affectionately known as the 'little town in the big | {
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because the university
said, I'm sorry,
we can't let you teach your
classes because the students
could get shot or
you could get shot,
we don't want to be
responsible, he basically
was pressured into quitting.
Where was his freedom of speech?
This remarkable author,
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor,
she wrote this book called
From Black Lives Matter
to Black Liberation.
She's probably the
best writer about--
together with Ta-Nehisi Coates--
about Black Lives Matter
in the current moment.
She's at Princeton
University, one
of the most prestigious
in the country,
in the African-American
Studies department.
And just is a
phenomenal speaker.
I've seen her speak
a couple of times.
She tried to come to
Town Hall in Seattle.
I don't know how many of
you have gone to Town Hall.
It's a really great place
to see public events.
She tried to do an event at
Town Hall earlier this year,
and had all these death
threats and bomb threats.
And the city, the same city--
well, yeah, the city
provided2014, he was angry
and wrote some angry tweets.
All of his tweets were only
criticizing state policy.
He wasn't saying anything about
any people and individuals.
He was saying the
things that the state is
doing are unforgivable, right?
And for that, he
was about to get
a-- he just quit-- he just
landed a job at University
of Illinois.
He quit his previous job.
He was moving to Illinois.
He'd already signed
the contract.
And he was notified
that he was un-hired.
There were protests,
especially at that college,
around the country.
People said this is outrageous.
They didn't even
give him a reason.
Although, finally they
came out and they said
it was because of these tweets.
And despite all of these
protests, even a lot of-- this
was actually at [INAUDIBLE].
A lot of people wrote
letters and everything,
but he did not get his job back.
Where was his freedom of speech?
So the inconsistency is
a really serious thing.
I | {
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seven feet. Femurs exceeding twenty inches
have been found however.
Though hindsight is said to be 20/20, Thomas'
methodology was little better than a
government-sanctioned dissolution of the sacred burial
places. He dismantled the sanctuaries and charnel
houses with the fervor of a man whose first priority
was to impress his employer. From Florida to
Nebraska-including twenty-three states and Canada's
Manitoba region-over the next seven years he and his
agents worked like men possessed of a deadline.
A large Indian mound near the town of Gastersville,
[Gastonville?-Ed.] Pa., has recently been opened and
examined by a committee of scientists sent out from
the Smithsonian Institute. At some depth from the
surface a kind of vault was found in which was
discovered the skeleton of a giant measuring seven
feet two inches. His hair was coarse and jet black,
and hung to the waist, the brow beingornamented with
a copper crown. The skeleton was remarkably well
preserved...On the stones which covered the vault were
carved inscriptions, and these when deciphered, will
doubtless lift the veil that now shrouds the history
of the race of people that at one time inhabited this
part of the American continent. The relics have been
carefully packed and forwarded to the Smithsonian
Institute, and they are said to be the most
interesting collection ever found in the United
States.
American Antiquarian, 7:52, 1885
Could this special burial have been another kingly
individual? In these increasingly hasty intrusions
into the native burial grounds' inherent sanctity, the
holocaust delivered its zenith under the officialdom
action of former Union Major Powell. This man who in
his youth had lived among the "Indians," somehow was
insensitive to the sanctuary of their graveyards. But
others came later to do a fair share of | {
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and Madras. He
is the author of four books. ***
William Smalley, linguis-tics
professor, is part of a
Twin Cities study group
funded by the National En-dowment
for the Humanities
to do research and writing on
Hmong tradition and their
news, see page 5
***
Completion of the Seminary
library addition was cele-brated
Thursday, Jan. 27 at
dedication ceremonies and
naming of the entire resource
center as the Carl H. Lund-quist
Library in honor of
Bethel's president-emeritus.
The new 10,200 sq. ft. ex-tension
allows doubling of the
library's book collection
which currently, 'numbers
100,000 volumes, provides 66
additional study carrels, and
contains the Archival Center
of Bethel as well as its parent
John W. Ivance Company
Since 1946
1618 Pioneer Bldg.
224-7358
John W. Ivance, Sr.
John W. Ivance, Jr.
John G. Chisholm
Russel K. Akre
John R. Chisholm
Gary Underwood
INSURANCE
Life—Auto—Home 4,
Business
St. Paul, MN 55101
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
774-8609 Rev. Hartley Christenson
Worship: 9:15-10:15
10:30-11:30
College Sunday School: 10:30-11:30 Room 8
Bus Schedule: SC 8:15
FT 8:25
NC 8:40
2920 Edgerton St. Paulrelates faith to healing
by Paul C. Davis
"Basically, I have a simple
personality. I'm a fairly seri-ous
person, and I tend to be
people-oriented," said Edith
Tankson, one of the new mem-bers
of Bethel's nursing de-partment.
Having grown up in inner-city
Chicago, Tankson under-stands
the tough life. She
faced her share of hard times.
"I look at nursing as a helpful
profession, one must be able
to accept and care for people
of various backgrounds," said
Tankson. Her background in
dealing with the problems
faced by kids in the inner city
has shaped her attitude to-ward
her profession.
Tankson holds the view
that faith, learning, and her
profession are closely inter-woven.
"God is able to heal,
and he has chosen to use peo-ple
as instruments through
which he can work," said
Tankson.
Tankson takes her career
seriously, and urges students
to do likewise. "Take school
seriously, but have a good
time at it," she said, "It is a
privilege in this | {
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by the re-ligious
council.
This film is the historical ac-count
of Scotland's stuggle for
religious freedom. It shows the in-troduction
of Christianity to the
Scots by Calumba, the feud be-tween
John Knox and Mary Queen
of Scots and the death of John
Brown, a priesthill. It was filmed
in Scotland with an all-Scottish
cast featuring the Billy Graham
team.
Defense Loan
Clifford Anderson, dean of stu-dents,
requests that students in-terested
in the National Defense
student loan should apply in the
student affairs office soon.
Recipients of the loan are se-lected
by the college and must be
needy full-time students. Special
consideration is given to students
with a desire to teach in elemen-tary
or secondary schools.
For further information consult
the college catalog or contact Dean
Anderson.
Fully aware of the reasons for
alarm at the idea of a Roman
Catholic being president of a demo-cratic
government, Walfred H.
Peterson, associate professor of
political science in the college, gave
two main reasons whyafraid of major-ity
democracy so they set up our
present system of an independent
executive, senate, and house of
representatives and state govern-ments
which are elected by the
people for a definite term of office
and the judicial branch which is
selected by the president for life.
"Due to these facts the govern-ment
can't change drastically, even
if a Catholic were elected."
Dr. Peterson reminded the group
that the important issues that in-volve
Catholics and Protestants
Contests for
Poets, Artists
Aspiring poets wishing to see
some of their work in print may
submit some of their original work
to the American College Poetry
society for publication in its third
semesterly anthology of outstand-ing
college poetry. Poems may deal
with any subject and may not ex-ceed
48 lines. Deadline is March
30.
Promising young artists on the
Bethel campus are now being giv-en
the opportunity to apply for a
$1,000 cash grant to defray ex-penses
of graduate school study.
It will | {
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of suffi
cient of the infantry into the other
arms to strike a balance. Any legisla
tion should carry with It provision for
a reserve to be given a limited amount
of field training under pay.
The strength of the militia at the
end of the fiscal year was 9,130 officers
and 111,672 enlisted men, a net de
crease of 12 oftcera and 1,038 enlisted
men as compared with the preceding
year.
For some unknown reason the de
partment has failed to secure an in
crease in the coast artillery militia,
and It Is suggested that the law be
amended to permit the secretary of
war to allot the militia funds among
the several arms of the service in
proportion to the strength in which
be considers they should be main
tained.
FIND GIANTS1 SKELETONS.
In Life They Averaged Twelve Feet In
Height.
Winnsboro. La.—Skeletons of a race
of giants who averaged twelve feetin
height were found by workmen engag
ed on a drainage project at Crowvllle.
near here.
There are several score at least of
the skeletons, and they He in various
positions. It is believed they were
killed in a prehistoric fight and that
the bodies lay where they fell until
covered with alluvial deposits due to
the flooding of the Mississippi river.
No weapons of any sort were found,
and it is believed the Titans must have
straggled with wooden clubs. The
skulls are in a perfect state of preser
vation, and some of the Jawbones are
large enoogh to lit around a baby's
body.
SPrOU"
«i,
*a \.Jiswuif WWWMAW JWT"*
9*% t"
WHISTLER STORIES
Audacity and Sarcasm of the Ec
centric Genius.
THE FAMOUS PEACOCK ROOM
Mimmie's" Offhand Hospitality, at His
Patron'a Expense, Whilo Decorating
It, the Clash It Lod to and the Way
tho Artist 8quared Accounts.
In Mrs. Alec Tweedie's "Thirteen
Years of a Busy Woman's | {
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have undergone
several radical changes to their
industry structures over the
last 10-15 years, and these will
reviewed at the DANA Oceania
Forest Plantation and Wood
Trade Conference in Melbourne
on August 8 and 9.
The industry starts at the forest
gate, and major ownership
changes have occurred – from
government and industry, to
institutional ownership in both
countries.
DANA director and industry
consultant Dennis Neilson
says the ‘musical chairs’ of
ownership is likely to continue,
especially
with
a
newly
announced New Forests $570
million ANZ II Fund, a planned
new overseas investment fund
being raised by a US TIMO,
and three major Chinese buyers
entering the industry in New
Zealand.
The conference will focus on
this trend and will ask – is this
trend going to become big-time
in both countries?
In Australia, the MIS industry
fallout still has a way to go.
Mr Neilson said the major
woodchip export trade for both
softwood and hardwood was
challenging in 2013 as high
Australian and NZ dollarrates
had pushed up costs. But some
relief might be on the way with
weakening currencies.
“On the other hand, the
softwood log export trade has
been booming in 2013, with
major expansions to Australian
ports, and large volume
increases,” he said. “And, a
fledgling hardwood log export
industry from Australia might
develop into sizeable business.”
The New Zealand sawn timber
sector is heavily reliant on
exports, and has suffered at
the hands of European timber
taking such a large share of the
Australian domestic market –
previously New Zealand’s major
customer. This competition
has also seriously affected
Australian domestic producers.
Two large softwood sawmills
changed hands in Australia
in late 2012, signalling a new
investment cycle in Australia.
The forestry and forest industry
sector of New Zealand is the
third largest product exporter
and plays an important part in
the country’s economy.
In Australia, it makes up a
smaller share of the economy,
Cont Page 9
The New Zealand sawn timber sector | {
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ranging from the gas giant
of Jupiter to the tiny ice-rock
of Pluto. The new definition
requires celestial bodies to
clear its orbit around the sun
of space debris such as asteroids,
as well as meet the previous
qualifications. Since Pluto
is located in a region of the solar
system with large amounts
of small icy material known
as the Kuiper Belt, it does not
meet the new requirements
because the Belt contains over
70,000 as yet unidentified bod
ies over 100 km in diameter.
Despite the official count
of planets in our solar system
dwindling from nine to eight,
the IAU also voted in two new
additions. Two new dwarf
planets, one named Ceres
and another only nicknamed ♦
“Xena."
See PLUTO, paqe 9
Deaf student's voice heard loud and clear
Kamran Mousavi inspires signs of
change in PRMdepartment
O L IV IA S C H U B E RT
T h e L u mb e r j a c k
With a passion for nature
and extensive work experience,
Kamran Mousavi,
a 29-year-oId transfer student,
was fueled by Flag
staff’s rich natural environ
ment to seek employment
with the Ecological Res
tdration Institute at NAU
this past year. As a deaf
individual, Mousavi not
only challenged himself,
but introduced a confrontation
of alternate communication
to those working
around him, establishing
the groundwork for new
policy at ERI.
(L E FT ) P A R K S AN D
Recreation management
major Kamran Mousavi
uses sign language
to spell "E.R.I." which
stands for the Ecological
Restoration Institute,
where he works as an
undergraduate research
assistant. Mousavi is
deaf but has been able to
work effectively with his
co-workers in the field
throuqh the use of sign
language and interpreters.
Originally from Massachusetts,
Mousavi transferred
to NAU last year,
with credits from the Roch
ester National Technical
Institute for the Deaf. Upon
commencing his education
at NAU, Mousavi, along
with an interpreter, glided
through orientation, and
into | {
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