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Wednesday Plenary Wednesday, July 25, 2018: 10:30am – 12pm, Westin Harbour Convention Center, Harbour Ballroom Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Conservation Jacqueline Patterson, Senior Director of the NAACP Environmental and Climate Justice Program Jacqui Patterson has worked as a researcher, program manager, coordinator, advocate and activist working on women‘s rights, violence against women, HIV&AIDS, racial justice, economic justice, and environmental and climate justice. Since 2007 Patterson has served as coordinator & co-founder of Women of Color United. Patterson holds a master’s degree in social work from the University of Maryland and a master’s degree in public health from Johns Hopkins University. She currently serves on the International Committee of the US Social Forum, the Steering Committee for Interfaith Moral Action on Climate, Advisory Board for Center for Earth Ethics as well as on the Boards of Directors for the Institute of the Black World, Center for Story Based Strategy, GRID Alternatives, the River Network, the American Society of Adaptation Professionals, Fresh Coast Capital, and the National Black Workers Center. Charles Orgbon III, Business Consultant, Deloitte & Touche LLP Charles Orgbon III is a recent Presidential Leadership Scholar graduate from the University of Georgia, where he obtained an undergraduate degree in environmental economics and management. Charles’s journey as an environmentalist began in 2008; he was only 12-years-old. Charles noticed his school’s littering problem, and wanted to organize a student-led effort to resolve the problem. He later developed Greening Forward, which would become a leading organization in the United States that’s devoted to training and funding student environmental leaders, ages 5-25. Greening Forward helps students tackle environmental challenges in their own communities and around the world. Most recently, Charles completed an Arctic Science Expedition which has helped informed his role as an informal environmental educator, and has integrated his award-winning blueprint for youth environmental leadership into Chilean and Colombian school systems. Charles’s work is validated by over 31 local, national, and international awards, five book mentions, and over 100 speaking engagements since 2010. In February 2018, Charles began working at Deloitte & Touche LLP as a business consultant, where he will bring his non-profit sector experience to the business world. The example that Charles sets has inspired countless youth to follow his footsteps. photo credit: Arezou Taeed Ana Luz Porzecanski, Director, Center for Biodiversity and Conservation (CBC), American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) As Director of the American Museum of Natural History’s Center for Biodiversity and Conservation (CBC), Dr. Porzecanski oversees strategic planning, project development and a multidisciplinary staff leading conservation research and capacity development initiatives worldwide. As a conservation biologist, researcher, and professional educator, her primary interests relate to understanding biodiversity and how to sustain it effectively for the future through evidence-based management and capacity development. Dr. Porzecanski joined the CBC in 2003, and since 2010 has also directed its Network of Conservation Educators and Practitioners (NCEP) which produces peer-reviewed, open educational resources, and advances conservation practice worldwide. Through NCEP, she leads experimental education research on the development of critical thinking and related skills in undergraduates. Dr. Porzecanski co-curated ¡Cuba!, AMNH’s 2016 groundbreaking exhibition on Cuba’s biodiversity and culture, the largest exhibition of its kind ever presented in the US. Dr. Porzecanski has taught at Columbia University and New York University. She studied biological sciences at the Universidad de la República, Uruguay, and earned her Ph.D. from Columbia University, researching systematics and historical biogeography of South American aridland birds, as well as international environmental policy issues. Moderated by Sergio Avila-Villegas, Outdoors Coordinator, Sierra Club Sergio Avila-Villegas is the first regional Local Outdoors Coordinator for the Sierra Club. For twenty years, Sergio has worked on local and regional conservation efforts along the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, as a conservation scientist, wildlife researcher and facilitator of bi-national conservation projects. He has led collaborative efforts on connectivity for wildlife, habitat restoration, public education and interpretation in the U.S. southwest and northwest Mexico. Sergio graduated from the University of Baja California with a Master’s degree in Arid Lands Management, and the University of Aguascalientes with a B.S. in Biology. Sergio Avila is Conservation Science Fellow of the Wilburforce Foundation (2015), a member of the Sonoran Joint Venture Management Board since 2013, and a certified wildlife tracker with CyberTracker (2013). Sergio serves as interim officer for the Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity Committee of the SCB North America Board.
2023-14/0008/en_head.json.gz/25670
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HomeMilitary Aviation75 Years Ago Today: Invasion Stripes Became the Markings That Saved Allied Lives. 75 Years Ago Today: Invasion Stripes Became the Markings That Saved Allied Lives. June 6, 2019 Military Aviation, Military History Composite image showing, on the left, invasion stripes being applied to aircraft like this Spitfire only days before the D-Day invasion (Photo: Archives/Royal Air Force); right, an F-15E Strike Eagle assigned to the 494th Fighter Squadron painted in the World War II color scheme of its P-47 predecessor. (U.S. Air Force photo/ Master Sgt. Eric Burks) Markings Continue in Homage of The Greatest Generation in the Greatest Invasion. As special commemorative events in Normandy, France and around the world are held to observe the 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion, both modern and vintage military aircraft will take part in massive flyovers and parachute drops. One of the most unique things many of these commemorative and modern aircraft will share is bands of alternating black and white stripes around their wings and fuselage, the distinctive markings called “invasion stripes”. Invasion stripes, the black and white bands hastily painted on aircraft in the days prior to the June 6, 1944 D-Day invasion, have become a hallmark of what was one of the greatest armed conflicts in human history, “Operation Overlord”. Invasion stripes were roughly applied to aircraft like this Spitfire only days before the D-Day invasion. (Photo: Archives/Royal Air Force) The idea for invasion stripes was born out of the need to avoid “fratricide” or “friendly fire”, the accidental shooting down of allied aircraft by friendly forces during and immediately following the massive D-Day invasion. This was a threat in air-to-air combat and especially dangerous as allied aircraft overflew ships equipped with anti-aircraft guns as they transited the English Channel during and in support of the invasion forces in the day and weeks that followed. The plan to use the alternating black and white bands was first finalized and approved on May 17, 1944. This left only 20 days for allied air forces to receive the specifications for how the markings were to be applied, and then to apply them to a boggling number of different types of aircraft. According to one historical account, a staggering 11,590 Allied aircraft flew 14,674 sorties on D-Day. Nearly all of the aircraft wore invasion stripes. Among the last aircraft to receive the special “IFF” or “Identification, Friend or Foe” markings were the massive fleet of more than 1,200 C-47 Dakota transport/paratroop delivery and glider tug aircraft. According to most historical accounts, invasion stripes were conceived and approved by then-Air Chief Marshall Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory. Leigh-Mallory was a sometimes-controversial commander of the Allied Expeditionary Air Forces in 1944, but his idea proved to be not only effective, but has gone on to signify the remembrance of the D-Day invasion on aircraft to this day. Air Chief Marshall Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory, who authorized the use of contrasting black and white bands as a means of avoiding friendly fire incidents. (Right) The markings being hastily applied. (Photo: Archives/Royal Air Force) This remains true even though the first invasion stripes on aircraft were actually ordered to be removed a month following the D-Day landings. The unique, one-time markings were entirely gone from allied aircraft by the end of 1944 since the bright, contrasting markings interfered with the effectiveness of camouflage schemes. But for the 75th anniversary of D-Day, invasion stripes on aircraft have made a big comeback. An F-15E Strike Eagle painted in the heritage colors of its P-47 Thunderbolt predecessor takes off from Royal Air Force Lakenheath, England Feb 6. The 48th Fighter Wing officially unveiled the aircraft publicly during a ceremony on Jan 31. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Matthew Plew) While invasion stripes on WWII aircraft were roughly applied by ground crews hand-painting aircraft with brush or roller, modern interpretations of invasion stripes are meticulously applied to aircraft like the three F-15s of the USAF’s 48th Fighter Wing and the C-130 Hercules tactical transports of the 123rd Airlift Wing from Kentucky Air National Guard Base in Louisville, Kentucky. Each of these aircraft will participate in special events commemorating D-Day air operations 75 years ago this week. Members of the 123rd Maintenance Squadron apply decals to a 123rd Airlift Wing C-130 Hercules at the Kentucky Air National Guard Base in Louisville, Ky., May 15, 2019. The C-130 will fly in the 75th anniversary of D-Day over Normandy, France, in June. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Phil Speck) Eventually, and somewhat sadly, the invasion stripes will come off most of the operational USAF aircraft during regular depot maintenance when paint schemes are overhauled. The next time we see so many aircraft wearing invasion stripes will likely be a quarter century from now when we commemorate the 100th anniversary of the D-Day landings. That is a long time to wait, and makes the appearance of all these specially marked aircraft, and the preservation of the historical aircraft that wear invasion stripes, all the more special. The Belgian Air Force has also prepared some F-16s in Special heritage color scheme that includes invasion stripes. This photo was released by the BAF’s 1st Squadron on their Facebook page. (Image credit: BAF) Invasion stripes This Is The First F-35C Carrier Variant Joint Strike Fighter For The U.S. Marine Corps VMFA-314 Spandahlem’s F-16 Jets Have Deployed To Poland for Joint Training Activities with the Polish Air Force Bring on some bandits! Combat pilots to fight against computer generated aggressors. During actual training flights. Even if WVR (Within Visual Range) contests made famous by Top Gun movie, are still the most exciting (and disputed….) part of a combat pilot’s training, future wars’ most likely scenarios are those played on […] Behind the Scenes Look at Refueling of the Blue Angels and Thunderbirds During America Strong Flyovers May 16, 2020 Airshows Randy Jennings During the America Strong salute to COVID-19 healthcare workers, America’s two flight demonstration teams were required to conduct more air-to-air refueling missions than normal. As compared to a normal air show season, air-to-air refueling was […]
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Vitamin Em Spring concert! Vitamin Em is a collective of some of the top musicians in the Bay Area - creators and performers with well-established careers, drawn to collaborate with each other in new and exciting ways. The goal - to create joyful, uplifting, and moving performances of original and diverse music. The Band, founded in 2016 by violist Emily Onderdonk, includes Grammy®-nominees and award-winners who bring a wealth of experience, creativity and fearless improvisation to each performance. Members are steeped in an abundance of musical traditions – jazz, funk, blues, Klezmer, indie, rock, Balkan, fiddle, classical - and it shows. This band of strings, bassoon and accordion delivers its wonderfully eclectic body of first-class music with a fun-loving spontaneity and infectious enthusiasm. Vitamin Em has appeared around the Bay Area as featured artists with Mason Bates and Mercury Soul, Berkeley Symphony & Friends, Crowden Music Center’s Sundays @ 4, Epworth Community Concerts, NPR's Says YOU! and at the Piedmont Piano Company, Throckmorton Theater, Pt. Richmond Jazz, The Back Room, Piedmont Center for the Arts.Vitamin Em musicians can also be found performing, recording or touring with artists like Jon Batiste, The Who, Beyoncé, Santana, Bob Weir, Hot Club of San Francisco, Brothers Comatose, Wayne Shorter, the Klezmatics…or with the San Francisco Opera and Ballet orchestras, at SF Jazz, and recording movie soundtracks at Skywalker Sound. Composers in their own right, Vitamin Emmers have contributed works to the SF Symphony, the SF Chamber Orchestra, Turtle Island Quartet, Cirque du Soleil, and many others. Here's information about our program. I have included a couple of music clips here in case you are able to use them. Some of the pieces we will perform include: Hasse A’s: Emily Onderdonk's arrangement of a Swedish fiddle Polska, (waltz), performed by Väsen and composed by Mikael Marin, the VIOLIST in the group. In 3/4 time, very lively and rousing with elements that mimic guitars...a really festive tune. https://youtu.be/JmU2J2RyRi0 Fancy Lady: A hip, soul tune arranged by Emily Onderdonk and based on the Billy Preston song with the same name. Billy Preston, the great gospel and soul keyboardist not only wrote several hits of his own but performed with many musical notables such as Sam Cooke, Little Richard, the Beatles, Rolling Stones and Ray Charles, just to name a few. Tongue in Cheek: A piece by Emily Onderdon, written in a mixture of styles, including fiddle, rock, R&B and classical elements. Dan Cantrell, Vitamin Em's wonderful accordionist is featured with an amazing solo at the heart of the piece. Seven Corners Country: A piece by Paul Hanson. This is an arrangement of the first song he wrote for his first album. This upbeat piece, generally in a jazz fusion style, includes Balkan and Bulgarian influences. Its a Numbers game: A jazz piece by Evan Price in mixed meter but mainly in a lively 7/8. The piece is driving and rhythmic with a beautiful lyrical section in the middle. Beautiful Child: by Emily Onderdonk. Simple and heartfelt, dedicated to the memory of her brother Matt, a wonderful musician who was a big influence on her love of the blues, rock, R&B and soul music. Shake it Up: arranged by Emily Onderdonk. A fun, toe-tapping dance tune, in a 60's pop style. https://youtu.be/zZ19cmYuKo0 vitaminemband.com
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RaceOff / Teja Arboleda, M.Ed This live, multimedia and musical, beat-entrenched audience interactive program is based on Teja Arboleda’s wildly successful, national touring video, RaceOff. Arboleda challenges the audience to wipe away assumptions about racial identity and jumpstart a cultural revolution that will turn the word race into a four-letter word! The main feature of RaceOff is a video which “morphs” between 13 faces so slowly that you can’t tell the difference between them. Arboleda then takes the audience on a charged tour of the history of racial categories, the impact of race in society, and the future of identity. Teja Arboleda is a television producer, director, writer, actor and public speaker. He also is the founder and president of Entertaining Diversity, Inc. Entertaining Diversity, Inc. provides consulting and education programs on cross-cultural and diversity issues for educational institutions, companies, and civic groups all over the United States. Using entertainment-based formats, Entertaining Diversity’s unique mix of theater performance, lectures and multimedia presentations has won high critical acclaim by institutions and at professional gatherings such as the National Association for Multicultural Education. Arboleda’s highly regarded performance-lectures Ethnic Man® and Healing Racism have taken him to over 500 cities and towns in the U.S. as keynote to international organizations such as TESOL, and national institutions such as Yale University. Recognition of the importance of Arboleda’s vision includes an appearance before the Senate committee on racial classification where he testified for changes in federal racial and ethnic categories, and hundreds of news stories in the media including the New York Times, Associated Press and National Public Radio. Arboleda is a prolific television producer and director. He also acts as a liaison producer between television and video production companies in Japan and the US. In addition, he has made outstanding contributions to public television in the United States. In 1994, he won an Emmy Award for Public Affairs Programming. From 1990 to 1992, he was staff editor for the nationally acclaimed PBS documentary series FRONTLINE. From 1990 to 1994, he was assistant director/editor for minority affairs programming at WGBH-TV in Boston, MA where he was awarded an excellence distinction for service as a faculty member in the Public Affairs program production training courses. Since 1985, he has produced, directed and filmed music videos,including 500 corporate sales and training videos, commercials, PSA’s and independent films. Recent clients include: Verizon Wireless, MEDITECH, JJWild, Valco, Partners Health Care, Massachusetts General Hospital, Historical Entertainments and CELT Corp. As an actor and comedian, Arboleda often uses a fast paced comedy style, focusing on ethnic and culturally related topics. In 1990, he played the leading role in the PBS television docudrama “Matzeliger.” Arboleda is the author of In The Shadow of Race (Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., 1998), an account of his personal experiences as a multicultural, multiethnic and “multiracial” American. Recently he created, produced, directed, wrote and starred in the six part, first through fourth grade educational video series, Diversity Elementary, which aired on PBS in early 2001, and is distributed by AGC/United Learning. He has produced segments on cultural diversity issues for WCVB-TV’s (ABC) Chronicle and has recently completed web marketing videos for Verizon Wireless. Arboleda is adjunct professor, teaching Race & Ethnic Relations and Media Production at The New England Institute of Art in Brookline, Massachusetts. He received his B.A from Clark University, and his M.Ed from Lesley University, Cambridge, MA. Thank you so much for presenting yesterday. The audience was very impressed and found your approach to such a delicate issue very creative, entertaining and educational. You highlighted so many important points, which made us think over our world view. Thank you again for your personal and professional contribution to the important issue of race and ethnicity in this country. Liliana A. Zagaria Coordinator Interpreter Services Lawrence General Hospital Teja was great…we had about 200 people at his presentation. I received overwhelmingly positive feedback about him. Diane Wisnewski Manager, Student Activities Macomb Community College Things went extremely well. Matter of fact, the faculty and students loved his presentation so much, some have already mentioned trying to get him back here next year. Thanks so much for your help. Kisha Watts Diversity Director Thayer Academy NERSC, Providence, RI – Keynote & Workshops Audience Response: – Great! Wonderful keynote. – Very touching & poignant but made me think and ask what’s behind the smile. – Great presentation. – Excellent choice for NERSC. – It was inspirational, moving, amazing. – He is awesome. Teja is an amazing person and felt very inspiring to me. – He spoke from his heart and own experiences. Truly touching and meaningful. – The best presentation and talk on racism. – Awesome, inspirational story. – Great presenter. – Longer presentation – more!! – I think the statement “racism is a disease: is huge. It was fabulous. – He was excellent. – Very good presenter. – Great session. Really enjoyed his stories and life as an example of a diverse life. – Amazing story. Very excellent message. – Enjoyed Teja sharing his life with everyone – Amazing life story. – He can help by sharing his experiences. – He was an excellent presenter, very informative and interesting. – Hope you have him back! – Wonderful, funny man. Category : Diversity and Multicultural &Speakers &Teja Arboleda
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/14
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Home Current Affairs Ensuring social security to boost human rights Thu Hoa Wednesday, December 19, 2012 | 16:15:19 (VOVworld) – Among many issues relating to human rights, the Vietnamese government gives top priority to ensuring social security. In the context of the global economic recession, Vietnam has concentrated more on social security and considered it an important factor for improving human rights. Ensuring social security is important for improving human rights Social security is associated with such human rights as the right to have a job, income, housing, access to education, healthcare, and safe water, and live in a secure environment. Social security is for all people - people with disabilities, the poor, the lonely elderly, homeless children, natural disaster victims, and other vulnerable groups. It’s in line with Party and State targets at all revolutionary stages and during the current renewal process. The Party and State’s policy of promoting social security is shown through commitments and socio-economic management. Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung underlined the issue at the ASEM ministerial conference on labor and employment in Hanoi in October. "Economic development attached to ensuring social security is a consistent policy of the Vietnamese government. In recent years, despite limited resources, the Vietnamese government has reinforced and implemented policies on employment and social security. The policies have been revised and amended to expand the categories of beneficiaries and increase the level of assistance. The government has imposed coordinated measures on employment, vocational training, and human resources development, and achieved significant results, helping to improve people’s living standard, guarantee social equality, and maintain social consensus and political stability." Vietnam has had encouraging achievements in ensuring social security and human rights. From 2003 to 2011, Vietnam allocated an average of 6.6% of GDP for social security, of which 51% was from the state budget. The government issued 20 credit incentive regulations for the poor and people with disabilities, overseas workers, unemployed people, and poor households in disadvantaged areas. Last year, 10 million people had compulsory insurance. 100,000 had optional insurance. 7.6 million people registered for unemployment insurance. 57 million people, 62% of Vietnam’s population, bought health insurance. Vietnam’s social security indexes - eliminating extremely poverty and hunger; universalizing primary school education, enhancing gender equality, and reducing child fatalities - were acknowledged by the UN in 2000, when Vietnam completed its Millennium Development Goals ahead of its 2015 targets. National Assembly Vice Chairman Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan talks about gender equality in Vietnam: "Gender equality implementation results in Vietnam have been ranked higher than in other countries with the same level of development and income. Vietnam was recognized as the fastest nation to narrow the gender gap in 20 years in Southeast Asia. The Party and State’s policies and the people’s efforts, Vietnamese women have been able to make important contributions to the nation in governance, production, trade, external affairs, science, technology, and family building." Vietnam has developed a diverse and thorough social security system, which is more compliant with the UN charter. Vietnam hopes to have a welfare network for all people by 2020. The country plans to allocate 13.5% of GDP for social security from now until 2020 and accelerate the resolution on sustainable poverty reduction. Vietnam will make a national report on social security and the social security index as a foundation for evaluating social security performance in each period. human rights social security global economic recession employment vocational training Vietnam- an active member of the Francophonie community Western countries ban TikTok on government devices International community intensifies efforts to promote Palestine-Israel reconciliation Vietnamese version of book on My Lai massacre published
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Home / Military / United States Army (USA) / 1st First United States Army Shoulder Sleeve Insignia Patch 3.25 x 2.25 in. w/ Black Border 1st First United States Army Shoulder Sleeve Insignia Patch 3.25 x 2.25 in. w/ Black Border 1st First United States Army Shoulder Sleeve Insignia Patch 3.25 x 2.25 in. w/ Black Border quantity SKU: USA-PTCH-2 Categories: The Quartermeister, United States Army (USA) Tags: 21st Army Group, American Expeditionary Forces, Army, Army Group B, Battle, Battle of the Bulge, Beach, Corps, Courtney Hodges, Elbe, European, First United States Army, German, Germans, Germany, Infantry, Japan, Japanese, Korean War, Lieutenant, Ludendorff Bridge, Luxembourg, Mulberry harbour, Nagasaki, New York, New York City, Omaha Beach, Operation Downfall, Paris, Remagen, Rhine, Uniform, United States Army, V Corps, Vietnam, War, Washington, Wehrmachtbefehlshaber, World War I, World War II 1st First United States Army Shoulder Sleeve Insignia Patch 3.25 x 2.25 in. Because we have multiple of this item, the one you receive may not be the same one pictured. The item you receive will be of the same type (same book title but different edition for example) and of a similar or better quality to the one in the photograph. If you have questions, please ask before purchasing. First Army is the oldest and longest-established field army of the United States Army.3.25 x 2.25 in. It served as a theater army, having seen service in both World War I and World War II, and supplied the US army with soldiers and equipment during the Korean War and the Vietnam war under some of the most famous and distinguished officers of the U.S. Army. It now serves as a mobilization, readiness and training command. Establishment and World War I The First Army was established on 10 August 1918 as a field army when sufficient American military manpower had arrived on the Western Front during the final months of World War I. The large number of troops assigned to the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) required the activation of subordinate commands. To fill this need, First Army was the first of three field armies established under the AEF. The first commander was General John J. Pershing, who also served as Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the AEF. The headquarters planned and directed the first major American offensive, the St Mihiel Offensive (September 12 to 16, 1918). It later went on to fight in the largest and deadliest battle in the United States Army’s history, the Meuse–Argonne offensive. Serving in its ranks throughout World War I were many figures who later played important roles in World War II. First Army, now under Lieutenant General Hunter Liggett, was inactivated on April 20th, 1919, five months after the Armistice with Germany which ended hostilities. First Army’s entry into World War II began in October 1943 as Bradley returned to Washington, D.C. to receive his command and began to assemble a staff and headquarters to prepare for Operation Overlord, the codename assigned to the establishment of a large-scale lodgement on the European Continent following Operation Neptune, which was the invasion of Normandy. The headquarters were activated in January 1944 at Bristol, England. Upon going ashore on 6 June 1944, D-Day, First Army came under General Bernard Montgomery’s 21st Army Group (alongside the British Second Army) which commanded all American ground forces during the invasion. Three American divisions were landed by sea at the western end of the beaches, and two more were landed by air. On Utah Beach, the assault troops of VII Corps made good progress, but V Corps on Omaha Beach came nearest of all of the five landing areas to disaster. The two American airborne divisions that landed, the 82nd and 101st, were scattered all over the landscape, and caused considerable confusion among the German soldiers, as well as largely securing their objectives, albeit with units completely mixed up with each other. First Army captured much of the early gains of the Allied forces in Normandy. Once the beachheads were linked together, its troops struck west and isolated the Cotentin Peninsula, and then captured Cherbourg. When the American Mulberry harbour was wrecked by a storm, Cherbourg became even more vital. After the capture of Cherbourg, First Army struck south. In Operation Cobra, its forces finally managed to break through the German lines. The newly established Third Army was then fed through the gap and raced across France. With the arrival of more US troops in France, the Army then passed from the control of 21st Army Group to the newly arrived 12th Army Group which commanded the First Army and the newly formed Third Army under Lieutenant General George S. Patton. General Bradley assumed command of the 12th Army Group and Lieutenant General Courtney Hodges was placed in command of the First Army. First Army followed Third Army, the American armies forming the southern part of the encirclement of Germans at the Falaise pocket. After capturing Paris (the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber von Groß-Paris, Dietrich von Choltitz, capitulated 25 August, ignoring Hitler’s Trümmerfeldbefehl), During the Battle of the Mons Pocket VII Corps took approximately 25,000 prisoners. First Army headed towards the south of the Netherlands. First army liberated most of Luxembourg in three days from 9–12 September 1944. When the Germans attacked during the Battle of the Bulge, First Army found itself on the north side of the salient, and thus isolated from 12th Army Group, its commanding authority. It was, therefore, temporarily transferred, along with Ninth Army, back to 21st Army Group under Montgomery on 20 December. The salient was reduced by early February 1945. Following the Battle of the Bulge, the Rhineland Campaign began, and First Army was transferred back to 12th Army Group. In Operation Lumberjack, First Army closed up to the lower Rhine by 5 March, and the higher parts of the river five days later. On 7 March, in a stroke of luck, Company A, 27th Armored Infantry Battalion, part of Combat Command B, 9th Armored Division, found the Ludendorff Bridge across the Rhine at Remagen still standing. It quickly captured the bridge and established a secure bridgehead. in the next 15 days, over 25,000 troops and their equipment crossed the river. By 4 April, an enormous pocket had been created by First Army and Ninth Army, which contained the German Army Group B under Field Marshal Model, the last significant combat force in the northwest of Germany. While some elements of First Army concentrated on reducing the Ruhr pocket, others headed further east, creating another pocket containing the German Eleventh Army. First Army reached the Elbe by 18 April. There the advance halted, as that was the agreed demarcation zone between the American and Soviet forces. First Army and Soviet forces met on 25 April. In May 1945, advance elements of First Army headquarters had returned to New York City and were preparing to redeploy to the Pacific theater of the war to prepare for Operation Coronet, the planned second phase of Operation Downfall the proposed invasion of Honshū, the main island of Japan in the spring of 1946, but the Japanese surrender in August 1945 thanks to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki terminated that effort. First United States Army details courtesy of Wikipedia. 3.25 x 2.5 in. Sew-on 1st First United States Army 4th Infantry Division Unit Insignia Shoulder Sleeve US Army Subdued Patch 2.25 X 2.25 In. Used US Army World War II WW2 Era US Army in Europe Flaming Sword Patch 2nd Second United States Army Pre-1950s Shoulder Sleeve Insignia Patch Us Army 11th Infantry Brigade Patch
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Top Alben Free Sampler Ambient dub Bluesy Rock Contemporary Blues Delta Blues Contemporary Bluegrass Contemporary Country Country Pop Traditional Bluegrass Traditional Country Meditation Musik Electro-Pop Film and TV Music Traditional Folk Alternative Rap Avantgarde Jazz Contemporary Jazz Crossover Jazz Mainstream Jazz Trad Jazz Alternativo & Rock Latino Contemporary Latin Nu-Jazz Britpop Hip Hop Soul Rap Rock Adult Alternative American Trad Rock Moderner Rock Alternative Folk Contemporary Folk New Acoustic Traditional Pop Vocal Pop Celtic Folk Worldbeat Interpret "The Isley Brothers & Jimi Hendrix" The Isley Brothers & Jimi Hendrix Label: Legacy Recordings In the Beginning (Remastered) Biographie The Isley Brothers & Jimi Hendrix Born and raised in the suburbs of Cincinnati, Ohio, The Isley Brothers--O'Kelly Isley, Jr., Rudolph Isley, Ronald Isley and a fourth brother, Vernon Isley (who died a couple of years after their first incarnation)--began performing as a gospel-based vocal group in 1954. Moving to the New York City area in the late 1950s, The Isley Brothers scored some modest regional chart successes before their fourth single (and first for RCA Victor), "Shout"--written by O'Kelly, Rudolph and Ronald--catapulted them into the pantheon of pop immortality in 1959. One of the most immediately identifiable and infectious party anthems ever written or recorded, The Isley Brothers "Shout"--with its irresistible call-and-response structure--combined gospel heat and doo-wop soul with a high-powered rock 'n' roll energy. The much-covered "Shout" was inducted into the Grammy® Hall of Fame in 1999 and placed No. 118 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The Isleys followed up "Shout" with a variety of tracks (including their Top 20 single, "Twist & Shout," a song later famously covered by The Beatles). Perhaps the most musically adventurous vocal ensemble in American pop history, The Isley Brothers were adding rock, funk, R&B, soul and ballad elements into the gospel and doo-wop music at the foundation of their sound. In the 1960s, while The Isley Brothers bounced between various labels (including Atlantic, United Artists and Motown), they briefly employed a then-unknown Jimi Hendrix (aka Jimmy James) as their lead guitarist, buying him a white Fender Stratocaster guitar and moving him into the Isley home. Though Jimi's stint with the Isley Brothers was brief, his musical sensibilities remained in the group, with younger brother Ernie Isley carrying the fiery experimental rock 'n' soul guitar sound they shared into the Isley Brothers future. Tired of labels that didn't fully understand or support their R&B/rock fusion musical vision, The Isley Brothers launched their independent T-Neck imprint with distribution through Buddah Records. At T-Neck, the Isleys finally enjoyed the freedom to make music the way they wanted, recording and producing their own material as well as assisting in the distribution and promotion process. The T-Neck label's lead single, the irresistible Grammy Award®-winning funk hit "It's Your Thing," instantly established the band and label as a commercial powerhouse, its lyric a mantra for the trail The Isley Brothers would blaze in the next decade. The Isleys' ever-expanding musical repertoire in the 1970s included funky covers of pop/rock favorites ("Love The One You're With," "Lay, Lady, Lay") that helped spread these songs through urban markets. The group would hit a new peak with the album 3+3 and single "That Lady" in 1973. They added younger brothers Ernie Isley (lead guitar, drums) and Marvin Isley (bass guitar) and Rudolph's brother-in-law Chris Jasper (keyboards, synthesizers) into the mix, turning The Isley Brothers vocal trio into a self-contained pop/rock/R&B/funk ensemble, writing, producing, performing, arranging, distributing their own works on T-Neck Records throughout the 1970s into the early 1980s. With Ernie, Chris and Marvin leading the way creatively, the group pushed the barriers of soul music, bringing funk and laid-back quiet storm into the mainstream and earning the band three gold and seven platinum or multi-platinum albums--including 3+3 (1973), the #1 chart-topping The Heat Is On (1975) and 1983's Between The Sheets--and 14 Top 10 R&B albums (seven of which hit No. 1). In the world of R&B, only Parliament-Funkadelic and Earth, Wind & Fire have achieved success rivaling the Isley Brothers. The Isley Brothers have had 19 Top 10 singles (7 of those at #1) in the US Billboard R&B chart, with 16 Isley albums hitting the Top 40. 13 of their albums have achieved RIAA gold, platinum or multi-platinum status. The Isley Brothers were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. They got their star on the Hollywood Rockwalk in 1997 and were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2003. The Isley Brothers, through an unprecedented seven decades, have remained one of the most consistently successful groups of all time. The Isleys were present at the birth of rock and roll, their biggest hits have influenced R&B, rock and roll and funk music from the 1950s onward while their deep grooves helped form the rhythmic backbone of hip-hop, a sound the Isleys would embrace in the 1990s and 2000s.
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John Cheek John Cheek- Bass-Baritone John Cheek made his Metropolitan Opera debut in 1977 and has been a member of that company ever since, singing many of the leading bass-baritone roles in Don Giovanni, La Bohème, The Magic Flute, Marriage of Figaro, Cosí Fan Tutte, Aida, Pelleas et Melisande, Faust and La Clemenza di Tito. Highlights for season 1999/2000 include five performances of Berlioz The Damnation of Faust with the Finnish National Opera, La Clemenza di Tito with the Dallas Opera, an appearance with the Met Chamber ensemble conducted by James Levine, a premier of The Pulitzer prize winning opera Life is a Dream by Lewis Spratlan at Harvard and Amherst University, the world premiere of Stephen Paulus’s opera Summer with the Berkshire Opera plus orchestral engagements with the Atlanta, Milwaukee, Kansas City, Asheville and Cincinnati orchestras. Season 1998-1999 included The Flying Dutchman (title role) with the Houston and Columbus Opera. Other performances included Faust with Seattle Opera, King Philip in Don Carlo with Montreal and The Magic Flute (Sprecher) with the Metropolitan Opera. Orchestral engagements included the Montreal Symphony, American Symphony Orchestra in Avery Fisher Hall, Harrisburg Symphony, Vancouver Symphony, Rotterdam Radio Orchestra, Phoenix Symphony, Brevard and Aspen Festival plus the Cincinnati Symphony in the regular season and for the May Festival. Season 1997-98 included returning to the Metropolitan Opera for many performances of The Magic Flute (Sprecher) and La Clemenza di Tito (Publio). He also sang his first performances of The Flying Dutchman (Title role) with the Florentine Opera (Milwaukee), Lodovico in Otello in Brussels, Mephistopheles in Faust with Quebec Opera and Friar Lawrence with Pittsburgh Opera in Romeo et Juliette. Orchestral engagements include the orchestras of St. Louis, National Symphony, Madrid, Montreal, Vancouver, Princeton and Brooklyn Philharmonic. Season 1996-97 included engagements with the following orchestras: National Symphony of Washington, St. Louis Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, Oregon Symphony, Minnesota Orchestra, Columbus Symphony, Kansas City Philharmonic, Phoenix Symphony, Houston Symphony, Madrid Radio Orchestra and the Cincinnati May Festival. Mr. Cheek also made his debut with La Monnaie in Brussels singing Lodovico in Otello. In season 1995-96, after his Metropolitan Opera performances in Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute, he performed with the New York Philharmonic under Kurt Masur, the Minnesota Orchestra, the National Symphony with Leonard Slatkin, the Utah Symphony, the Milwaukee Symphony, the Vancouver Symphony, the Cincinnati Symphony (May Festival) with James Conlon and the San Jose Symphony. John sang his first Don Pasquale with the Cincinnati Summer Opera, sang the title role of Don Giovanni with the Florentine Opera of Milwaukee and sang his first Nick Shadow in The Rake’s Progress with the Berkshire Opera. He also recorded Stravinsky’s Renard with Hugh Wolff and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra which was released in April 1995. Select engagements for the 1994-95 season included Boito’s Mefistofele at Opera de Nice, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis with San Francisco Symphony, the Verdi Requiem, Bach’s B Minor Mass with the St. Louis Symphony, Berlioz’s Damnation of Faust at the Stockholm Konserthussifatelse, Britten’s War Requiem at the Cincinnati May Festival, Haydn’s Creation with the Collegiate Chorale, Mahler’s Symphony No 8 with Cleveland Orchestra, Schoenberg’s Survivor from Warsaw, Martinu’s Field Mass, Martin’s In Terra Pax with the Orchestre Symphonique de Montreal, and Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius with the Indianapolis Symphony. Mr. Cheek’s engagements for the 1993-94 season included the title role of Boito’s Mefistofele in a new production at the Basel Opera, I Lombardi at the Metropolitan Opera, the title role in Verdi’s Attila at the Opera de Nice, Zaccaria in the same composer’s Nabucco at the Bregenzer Festspiele in Austria, a return to Opera de Nice for performances in the title role of Don Giovanni, Jacopo Loredano in Verdi’s Due Foscari and early in the 1994-95 season, in Boito’s Mefistofele, Dvorak’s Stabat Mater with the New Jersey Symphony, Herod in L’Enfance du Christ with the orchestra of St. Lukes, Renard with St. Paul Chamber which has been recorded on BMG, the Verdi Requiem with the New Jersey Symphony and the Milwaukee Symphony, Schubert’s Mass No. 6 and the Mozart Requiem with the Indianapolis Symphony, Mephistopheles in Damnation of Faust with the St. Louis Symphony, Schoenberg’s Survivor of Warsaw and Martinu’s Field Mass at the Mann Music Center. The 1992-93 season brought Mr. Cheek much critical acclaim, notably for The Rake’s Progress with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s at Avery Fisher Hall, which was also recorded by Music Masters. Beethoven Symphony No. 9 brought Mr. Cheek together with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Indianapolis Symphony with Leppard, and the National Symphony with Macal. Other concert performances included Damnation of Faust with the Minneapolis Symphony under Gergiev, Rachmaninoff’s The Bells with Milwaukee Symphony and Dvorak’s Stabat Mater with the New Jersey Symphony. In 1991-92, select concert performances included Berlioz’s Romeo et Juliette with the San Francisco Symphony, the Verdi’s Requiem with the New Jersey Symphony and the same composer’s Don Carlos with Opera de Nice, Bach’s St. Matthew Passion with Dennis Russell Davies in Bonn and St. John’s Passion with Helmuth Rilling in Stuttgart as part of a concert tour with Rilling through Germany and Austria and the 25th Anniversary Gala of Collegiate Chorale at Carnegie Hall. In past seasons, John Cheek’s appearances included a world premiere of Ned Rorem’s Goodbye, My Fancy with the Chicago Symphony (Slatkin), the world premiere of Sir Michael Tippet’s The Mask of Time with The Boston Symphony (Colin Davis) a return to the Ravinia Festival for Missa Solemnis (Levine), scenes from Goethe’s Faust at the Caramoor Festival, Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 14 with both New Jersey Symphony and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra conducted by Hugh Wolff, Metropolitan Opera productions of Fidelio and Salome and Aida at Cincinnati Opera. At New York City Opera, he was Don Giovanni in the new Harold Prince production. In February/March 1990, Mr. Cheek made his debut with the Stuttgart Bach Academy and Helmuth Rilling in performan ces and a recording of Franck’s Les Beatitudes. John Cheek has appeared with almost all of the major orchestras in North America, in an astounding variety of oratorios and symphonic works. He has sung repeatedly with such distinguished conductors as Leonard Bernstein, Andrew Davis, Sir Colin Davis, Charles Dutoit, Erich Leinsdorf, James Levine, Zubin Mehta, Leonard Slatkin and Sir Georg Solti. He also appears regularly in recital and, on two notable occasions, his pianist-collaborator was James Levine in New York and again at the Ravinia Festival. He has also been recognized as a star bass in such European Centers as London, Paris, Berlin and Zurich. John Cheek’s recordings include Stravinsky’s Renard with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and Bernstein’s Songfest with the St. Louis Symphony both on BMG, The Rake’s Progress with Orchestra of St. Luke’s on Music Masters, Dvorak’s Stabat Mater with Zdenek Macal and the New Jersey Symphony, Schoenberg’s Gurrelieder on SONY Classical, and Haydn’s Creation with Robert Shaw and the Atlanta Symphony and Chamber Chorus on Telarc. Born in Greenville, South Carolina, John Cheek grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina and attended the North Carolina School for the Arts. It was there that Cheek first studied voice, and after graduating he furthered his studies in Siena, Italy and at the Manhattan School of Music.
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Outskirts of Love Outskirts Of Love to be released on September 11 PRESS RELEASE (ALLIGATOR RECORDS) — Alligator Records has set a September 11 street date for Outskirts Of Love, the genre-smashing new release from trailblazing vocalist Shemekia Copeland. With a voice that is alternately sultry, assertive and roaring, Shemekia’s wide-open vision of contemporary blues, roots and soul music showcases the evolution of a passionate artist with a modern musical and lyrical approach. Whether she’s belting out a raucous blues-rocker, firing up a blistering soul-shouter, bringing the spirit to a gospel-fueled R&B rave-up or digging deep down into a subtle, country-tinged ballad, Shemekia Copeland sounds like no one else. The Chicago Tribune said Copeland delivers “gale force singing and power” with a “unique, gutsy style, vibrant emotional palette and intuitive grasp of the music.” NPR Music calls her “fiercely expressive.” Copeland’s return to Alligator Records with Outskirts Of Love (she recorded four albums for the label from 1998 through 2006) finds her at her most charismatic, performing roots rock, Americana, and blues with power and authority, nuance and shading. Produced by The Wood Brothers’ Oliver Wood, Outskirts Of Love is a musical tour-de-force, with Copeland rocking out on the title track, taking charge in Crossbone Beach, honoring her father, the late Johnny Clyde Copeland with her Afrobeat-infused take on his Devil’s Hand, tackling homelessness on Cardboard Box and showing off her country swagger on Drivin’ Out Of Nashville. She puts her stamp on songs made famous by Solomon Burke (I Feel A Sin Coming On), Jesse Winchester (Isn’t That So), Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee (The Battle Is Over), Creedence Clearwater Revival (Long As I Can See The Light), ZZ Top (Jesus Just Left Chicago), Albert King (Wrapped Up In Love Again) and Jessie Mae Hemphill (Lord Help The Poor And Needy). Friends including Billy F Gibbons, Robert Randolph, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Will Kimbrough and Pete Finney all add their talent with unbridled enthusiasm. The result is Copeland’s most decidedly contemporary and musically adventurous album of her still-evolving career. When Shemekia first appeared on the scene at age 18 in 1998 with her groundbreaking debut CD, Turn The Heat Up, she instantly became a blues superstar. Critics from around the country celebrated her music as fans of all ages agreed that an unstoppable new talent had arrived. News outlets from The New York Times to CNN took note of Copeland’s talent, engaging personality, and true star power. She followed up with 2000’s Grammy-nominated Wicked, 2002’s Talking To Strangers (produced by Dr. John) and 2005’s The Soul Truth (produced by Steve Cropper). In that short period of time, she earned eight Blues Music Awards, a host of Living Blues Awards (including the prestigious 2010 Blues Artist Of The Year) and more accolades from fans, critics and fellow musicians. Two highly successful releases on Telarc (including 2012’s Grammy-nominated 33 1/3) cemented her reputation as a singer who, according to NPR’s All Things Considered, “embodies the blues with her powerful vocal chops and fearless look at social issues.” USA Today says, “Copeland is a singer with fervor and funk, power and range.” Copeland has performed thousands of gigs at clubs, festivals and concert halls all over the world and has appeared on national television, NPR, and in newspapers, films and magazines. She is a mainstay on countless commercial and non-commercial radio stations. She’s sung with Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt, B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Carlos Santana, James Cotton and many others. She opened for The Rolling Stones and entertained U.S. troops in Iraq and Kuwait. Jeff Beck calls her “f*cking amazing.” Santana says, “She’s incandescent…a diamond.” At the 2011 Chicago Blues Festival, the City of Chicago and the State of Illinois officially declared Copeland to be “The New Queen Of The Blues.” In 2012, she performed at the White House for President and Mrs. Obama. Afterward, Jagger (with whom she sang) sent her a bottle of champagne. With Outskirts Of Love and a packed tour schedule, Copeland has her eyes fixed firmly on the future as she continues to break new musical ground. “I want to keep growing, to be innovative,” she says. “I’m a lifer, singing about things that bother me, using my music to help people. My dad always said ‘we’re all connected.’ I’m an old soul marching to the beat of my own drum,” she continues, “And right now I’m making the most exciting music of my career.” Read the press release on Alligator Records. © 2023 Shemekia Copeland All RIghts Reserved.
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Stereophonics Do Ya Feel My Love Miley Cyrus Releases First Ever Live Album Following an onslaught of headlining festival appearances across North America and South America, which saw her perform to a cumulative crowd of nearly one million, multi-platinum selling recording artist, songwriter and trailblazer Miley Cyrus has released her first ever live album. Titled ATTENTION: MILEY LIVE, the live album, a gift to her fans, features 20 songs and is available globally. ATTENTION: MILEY LIVE features classic Miley songs from every era and for the first time ever, her brand-new songs “ATTENTION” and “You”. Miley first treated fans to “You” at her NBC New Year’s Eve television special “Miley’s New Year’s Eve Special Hosted by Miley Cyrus and Pete Davidson.” All songs were performed by Miley including songs recorded at the Bud Light Super Bowl Music Fest - Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles, CA in February 2022. ATTENTION: MILEY LIVE Track List: We Can't Stop X Where Is My Mind? (SMS) Bangerz Dooo It! Never Be Me Bang Bang X See You Again Edge of Midnight (Midnight Sky Remix) Wrecking Ball X Nothing Compares 2 U Party In The USA Miley announced the album from stage during her headlining set at Lollapalooza Brazil in São Paulo. A post shared by Miley Cyrus (@mileycyrus) Miley recently completed major shows throughout South America for the first time in over a decade with headlining slots at Lollapalooza festivals in Argentina, Chile and Brazil. She drew the largest audience in the history of Lollapalooza Brazil with 103,000 in attendance. Her fans, known as the Smilers, flocked en masse to the airports to greet her posted up in the streets singing her songs and chasing her car, and gathered outside of her hotel in preparation for her shows. Miley, known for having a close relationship with her fans, went above and beyond in return, even updating her setlist based on their feedback. Showing strong engagement, “Miley Cyrus” trended on Twitter at #9 Global, #1 Argentina, #1 Chile and #INEEDATTENTION trended #10 US, #2 Brazil and more. About Miley Cyrus: Miley Cyrus is one of the most influential artists in pop culture with about 160 million Instagram followers. She has six #1 albums including her 2013 GRAMMY-nominated album Bangerz, which is also certified 3x platinum in the U.S. In addition, she has had an impressive five sold-out world tours throughout her career. In November 2020, Miley dropped her highly anticipated seventh studio album, Plastic Hearts. The critically acclaimed album debuted at #1 on Billboard’s Top Rock Albums chart and is her sixth #1 album. The album, which features collaborations with Billy Idol, Joan Jett and Dua Lipa, gives Miley the most top 10 album debuts on the chart for female artists this century. Tracks on Plastic Hearts have been streamed over 1 billion times worldwide. In 2021 Miley joined The Kid Laroi on a remix of his song “Without You”. The remix debuted at #1 on Billboard’s Rock Chart. Miley was also part of Metallica’s The Metallica Blacklist Album, offering a blistering cover of “Nothing Else Matters” featuring Elton John, Yo-Yo Ma, Robert Trujillo, WATT and Chad Smith. Recent collaboration and brand partners include NBC & Peacock, Gucci, T-Mobile, Hims & Hers, Cash App and Magnum Ice Cream.
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Fictional city A fictional city refers to a town, city or village that is invented for fictional stories and does not exist in real life, or which people believe to exist without definitive proof, such as Plato's account of Atlantis.[1] Cultures have always had legends and stories of fictional cities, and appear commonly in stories of early mythology. Some such cities are lost (Atlantis), hidden (Agartha, Shambhala[2]), destroyed (Ys[3]) or can only be reached by difficult means (Asphodel Meadows[4]). During the mid to late 16th century, several expeditions were made by various groups of people in order to locate what they believed to be a city rich with gold; El Dorado. In 1541 Gonzalo Pizarro, governor of Quito, Ecuador, banded together 340 soldiers and about 4000 natives and led them in search of the fabled city. That same year, Philipp von Hutten led an exploring party from Coro on the coast of Venezuela. Despite having been disproven by Alexander von Humboldt during his Latin-America expedition (1799–1804).[5] There are some people who still believe El Dorado is yet to be found. Other fictional cities appear as settings or subjects in literature, movies and video games. Most superhero and secret agent comics and some thrillers use fictional cities as backdrops, although most of these cities exist only for a single story, episode or an issue of a comic book. There are notable exceptions, such as Metropolis and Smallville in Superman, Gotham City in Batman, Stephen King's Castle Rock and Emerald City which appears throughout Frank L. Baum's Oz Books and appears in several film adaptations and animated films. Fictional cities often deliberately resemble, parody or even represent some real-world analogous location or present a utopian or dystopian locale for commentary. Variants of cities' names sometimes make it clear what city is the real basis, for example, Las Venturas from the video game Grand Theft Auto series based on Las Vegas, and includes a number of notable city landmarks including casinos. By making use of fictional towns, as opposed to using a real one, authors have a much greater freedom to exercise their creativity on characters, events, and settings while simultaneously presenting a somewhat familiar location that readers can recognize. A fictional city leaves the author unburdened by the restraints of a city's actual history, politics, culture and can allow for a greater scope in plot construction and also avoid vilifying any actual group of people. Fictional crossovers tend to be like this, some works of fiction will set in fictional city to another. In Fanfiction, fan-created or fan-made fictional (fan-made/fan-created) cities are not considered canonical unless they are authorized. Although cities based in real life usually have enough evidence to locate the real-world inspiration, writers sometimes are deliberately ambiguous in the locale such as the unlocatable Springfield from The Simpsons television program.[6] Notable examples Main article: List of fictional towns and villages These are cities from various works of fiction, legend, and other narratives that are good examples of notable fictional cities. Gotham City Batman #4 (Winter 1940) A fictional American city that is the home of Batman, and the principal setting for all Batman comics, films, and other adaptations. Generally portrayed as a dark, crime-ridden locale, writer/artist Frank Miller has described Gotham City as New York City at night. It was originally strongly inspired by Toronto, Ontario's history, location, atmosphere, and various architectural styles, and has since incorporated elements from New York City, Detroit, Pittsburgh, London and Chicago. Anton Furst's designs of Gotham for Tim Burton's Batman (1989) have been influential on subsequent portrayals: he set out to "make Gotham City the ugliest and bleakest metropolis imaginable."[7] Emerald City The Wizard of Oz The Emerald City is the fictional capital city of the Land of Oz based on L. Frank Baum's Oz books, first described in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. The city is sometimes called the City of Emeralds due to its extensively green architecture. Sunnydale, California Buffy the Vampire Slayer Sunnydale, California is the fictional setting for the U.S. television drama Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Series creator Joss Whedon conceived the town as a representation of a generic California city, as well as a narrative parody of the all-too-serene towns typical in traditional horror movies. Sunnydale is located on a "Hellmouth"; a portal "between this reality and the next", and convergence point of mystical energies.[8] Springfield The Simpsons Springfield is the fictional town in which the American animated sitcom The Simpsons is set. A mid-sized town in an undetermined state of the United States, Springfield acts as a complete universe in which characters can explore the issues faced by modern society.[9] The geography of the town and its surroundings are flexible, changing to address whatever an episode's plot calls for.[10] Springfield's location is impossible to determine; the show is deliberately evasive on the subject, providing contradictory clues and impossible information about an actual geographic location. Castle Rock Stephen King Castle Rock, Maine is part of Stephen King's fictional Maine topography and provides the setting for a number of his novels, novellas, and short stories. Built similarly to the fictional towns of Jerusalem's Lot (featured in the novel 'Salem's Lot) and Derry (featured in the novels It, Insomnia, and Dreamcatcher), Castle Rock is a typical small New England town with many dark secrets. Walmington-on-Sea Dad's Army Walmington-on-Sea is a fictional seaside resort that is the setting of Dad's Army, including the BBC Television sitcom, the BBC Radio 4 series and two feature films. Walmington is on the south coast of England which, following the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk during the Second World War, found itself on the front line against Hitler. Kakariko Village The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past Kakariko Village (カカリコ村, Kakariko-mura) is a fictional village of The Legend of Zelda Series that appears in A Link to the Past, Ocarina of Time, Four Swords Adventures, Twilight Princess, A Link Between Worlds and Breath of the Wild. Kakariko is often portrayed as a prosperous small town. List of fictional towns and villages List of fictional U.S. states List of fictional countries List of fictional universes Parallel universes in fiction Nesselrath (2005), pp. 161–171. The Tantra by Victor M. Fic, Abhinav Publications, 2003, p.49. YsThe Legend of the Sunken City in Welsh and Breton Tradition, James Doan, Folklore, Vol. 92, No. 1 (1981), pp. 77–83 W.H.D. Rouse, trans. The Odyssey: The Story of Odysseus. New York: The New American Library, 1949. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America by Alexander von Humboldt Richmond, Ray (2007-05-11). "Springfield of dreams". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2007-06-13. Anton Furst, Derek Meddings, Visualizing Gotham: The Production Design of Batman, 2005, Warner Home Video. Welcome to the Hellmouth (1.01) introduces the Hellmouth, which is referred to numerous times throughout the series. The entrance to the Hellmouth is seen under the school in The Zeppo, Doomed, Conversations with Dead People, and throughout the second half of season seven. Turner, p. 55 Media related to Fictional towns at Wikimedia Commons Fictional locations and Worldbuilding in animation in comics in literature Countries, counties and states Island nations Mythological places Planets, worlds and universes animation and comics Shared universe Character flaw Deuteragonist False protagonist Focal character Stock character Straight man Title character Tritagonist Chekhov's gun Dramatic structure Eucatastrophe Frame story Kishōtenketsu MacGuffin Plot device Self-fulfilling prophecy Subplot Fictional location Leitmotif Diction Figure of speech Narrative techniques Stylistic device Suspension of disbelief Linear narrative Nonlinear narrative Types of fiction with multiple endings Cantastoria Fabliau Action fiction Docufiction List of writing genres Magic realism Multiple narrators Stream of unconsciousness Diegesis Self-insertion Literary science Monomyth Tellability Literature portal
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{% } %} {% if ( model.get('cartCount') ) { %} ( {{ model.get('cartCount') }} ) {% } %} {% if ( model.get('isLoggedIn') ) { %} New World Center Support NWS Concert Hall and Music School in Miami Late Night at New World Symphony New World Center, Michael Tilson Thomas Performance Hall Friday, March 31, 2023 at 9:00 PM Matthias Pintscher, conductor Ensemble intercontemporain Jake Arditti, countertenor Nick León, DJ Neuwirth : Hommage à Klaus Nomi "One of Miami Beach's most popular events... This is a musical event unlike any other." - The Examiner Late Night at New World Symphony--our concert-meets-night-club mashup--is back! Roam the dance floor to be up close to the performers or immerse your senses in the lounge vibe from a seat upstairs as we celebrate the life and music of nightlife legend Klaus Nomi. A darling of the New York art world, Klaus Nomi went on to influence David Bowie, Basquiat and Lady Gaga. New World Symphony pays homage to Nomi when countertenor Jake Arditti embodies the New Wave icon, bringing to life Nomi’s pop songs and arias with sampled back-up vocals and music performed by New World Symphony, members of Ensemble intercontemporain and conductor Matthias Pintscher. Throughout the evening, enjoy sets from DJ Nick León, specialty cocktails and gourmet hot dogs. Late Night at NWS ticketholders must be 21+ in age. Upon arrival, all attendees must provide valid ID at the door and pass security screenings to enter. Due to heightened security measures, there will be no re-entry at this event. COMPOSE YOUR OWN SUBSCRIPTION PACKAGE! Choose this plus two more concerts to customize your own subscription. It’s the ultimate flexibility with all the subscriber benefits, including free exchanges when plans change! Click or call the NWS Box Office at 305.673.3331 to create your own series today. Loading Concert Information Approx. Duration: 40 minutes Hommage à Klaus Nomi: Nine Songs for Countertenor and Ensemble (1998; revised 2010) Wünsch dir nichts I like to be free Awake from winter Can’t help it Mr. Arditti Matthias Pintscher is the Music Director of the Ensemble intercontemporain in Paris. In the 2020-21 season, he began a three-season appointment as the Cincinnati Symphony’s new Creative Partner. Known equally as one of today’s foremost composers, his works are frequently commissioned and performed by major international orchestras. Mr. Pintscher opened his 2021-22 season as the “Theme Composer” of Suntory Hall’s 2021 festival, including the world premiere of his work neharot, which he conducted with the Tokyo Symphony. In January 2022, his violin concerto written for Leila Josefowicz, Assonanza II, was be premiered by the Cincinnati Symphony under Mr. Pintscher’s baton. This season he makes debuts with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Staatskapelle Dresden, Lahti Symphony and Musikkollegium Winterthur. He returns to the Houston Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Barcelona Symphony, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra at the Holland Festival, Academy of the Berlin Philharmonic and the Boulez Ensemble. In recent seasons, Mr. Pintscher has begun to conduct staged operas, and in the 2021-22 will return to the Staatsoper Unter den Linden in Berlin to lead Lohengrin, for which he gave the production’s premiere the prior season. Mr. Pintscher has held many titled positions, most recently as the BBC Scottish Symphony’s Artist-in-Association for nine seasons. During the 2018-19 season, he served as the Season Creative Chair for the Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich, as well as Artist-in-Residence at the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. He was Principal Conductor of the Lucerne Festival Academy Orchestra from 2016-2018. Mr. Pintscher began his musical training in conducting, studying with Pierre Boulez and Peter Eötvös in his early 20s, during which time composing soon took a more prominent role in his life. Mr. Pintscher's music is championed by some of today's finest performing artists, orchestras and conductors. His works have been performed by such orchestras as the Boston Symphony, Chicago Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, London Symphony Orchestra, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and the Orchestre de Paris, among many others. He is published exclusively by Bärenreiter. Mr. Pintscher has been on the composition faculty of the Juilliard School since 2014. In 1976 Pierre Boulez founded the Ensemble intercontemporain with the support of Michel Guy (who was Minister of Culture at the time) and Nicholas Snowman. The Ensemble’s 31 soloists share a passion for 20th- and 21st-century music. They are employed on permanent contract, enabling them to fulfill the major aims of the Ensemble: performance, creation and education for young musicians and the general public. Under the artistic direction of Matthias Pintscher the musicians work in close collaboration with composers, exploring instrumental techniques and developing projects that interweave music, dance, theater, film, video and visual arts. In collaboration with IRCAM (Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique), the Ensemble intercontemporain is also active in the field of synthetic sound generation. New pieces are commissioned and performed on a regular basis. The Ensemble is renowned for its strong emphasis on music education: concerts for kids, creative workshops for students, training programs for future performers, conductors, composers, etc. Resident of the Cité de la musique – Philharmonie de Paris, the Ensemble performs and records in France and abroad, taking part in major festivals worldwide. The Ensemble is financed by the Ministry of Culture and receives additional support from the Paris City Council. This 2023 tour has received support from the Jazz & New Music programme of the Villa Albertine and FACE Foundation, in partnership with the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States, with the support of the Ministry of Culture, the French Institute and the City of Paris, and SACEM (Société des Auteurs, Compositeurs et Éditeurs de musique), as well as the Centre national de la musique. Photo by Andy Staples Already a professional singer at the age of 11 when he sang Yniold in Pelléas et Mélisande for Glyndebourne Festival Opera and in several productions at English National Opera, Jake Arditti has had a meteoric rise to fame since his prize-winning performance at the 2012 Innsbruck Baroque Singing Competition. Mr. Arditti’s “… show-stealing riches of vocal colour and stage presence” (Daily Telegraph) have already brought him widespread critical and public acclaim, not only in such baroque virtuoso warhorses as Handel’s Rinaldo (titlerole at Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow), Serse (title-role at Longborough Festival Opera), Riccardo Primo (title-role at the London Handel Festival), Sesto in Giulio Cesare (Teatro Colón and Oper Halle), but also in such rarities as Emone in Traetta’s Antigone (Wiener Kammeroper), Euripilo/La Discordia/Polluce in Cavalli’s Elena (Festival d’Aix en Provence, Lille and Lisbon) and Apollo in Legrenzi’s La Divisione del Mondo with Christophe Rousset and Les Talens Lyriques (Strasbourg, Mulhouse, Colmar, Nancy, Versailles and Köln). Mr. Arditti’s extended vocal range has also seen him encompass such roles as Amore (Theater an der Wien and Zürich Opera) and Nerone in Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea (Pinchgut Opera Sydney), as well as Nerone in Agrippina (Theater an der Wien and Göttingen Handel Festival). He sung David in Handel´s Saul (Theater an der Wien, a role debut in a new production directed by Claus Guth and conducted by Laurence Cummings. Mr. Arditti most recently sung the title-role in Robert Carsen’s production of Handel’s Rinaldo for Glyndebourne, as well as the title-role in Corselli’s Achille in Sciro conducted by Ivor Bolton and directed by Mariame Clément at the Teatro Real Madrid. Mr. Arditti’s Romantic and modern roles include Hänsel in Humperdinck’s Hänsel and Gretel (Wiener Kammeroper), Voice of Apollo in Death in Venice (Stuttgart and Opéra National du Rhin), Prince Gogo in Ligeti’s Le grand macabre (Essen) and SUM by Max Richter and Wayne McGregor, premiered at the Royal Opera House’s Linbury Theatre in 2012. On the concert platform, Mr. Arditti has displayed a similarly remarkable versatility, from Ernesto in Vinci’s Gismondo, re di Polonia (Vienna, Moscow, Dortmund and Bayreuth), Contre-ténors with Il Pomo d’Oro (Sablé and Nice) and From Soul to Soul with the Pera Ensemble (Heidelberg and Cologne), to Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater under Ivor Bolton, or the premieres of Hilda Paredes’ Canciones Lunáticas and Sciarrino’s Cosa Resta with the Arditti Quartet in numerous other venues on both sides of the Atlantic. Most recently he performed Olga Neuwirth’s Hommage à Klaus Nomi along with the Ensemble intercontemporain (Philharmonie in Paris and Cité de la Musique in Strasbourg). During the 2021-22 season, Mr. Arditti sang the role of Sesto in a new production of Giulio Cesare under the direction of Ivor Bolton (Theater an der Wien). He will returned to Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea singing the role Amore under the direction of Ottavio Dantone (Oper Zürich), and Nerone under the direction of Leonardo Garcia Alarcon (Festival d’Aix-en-Provence). In spring, the countertenor sang Bach’s St Matthew Passion in Los Angeles with Musica Angelica conducted by Martin Haselbock. Nick León is an experimental electronic musician based in Miami, Florida. His dystopian club music samples the sounds of Florida’s diverse ecosystem, but his style has varied fearlessly along the way. Finding his way into the rap world at a young age, he collaborated with some of the biggest underground rappers in South Florida. He also gravitated early towards the Latin sounds coming out of Puerto Rico and Colombia, and as a self-taught producer and DJ in Miami, he felt compelled to shift his focus to his own work. After pivoting towards textural elements and buried melodies, Nick released a handful of projects, one of them being his Aguacero EP under Mexico’s celebrated NAAFI imprint. It encapsulates the growing anxiety in a city threatened by the very things that help make it beautiful, inviting you to dance through the impending storm of uncertainty ushered in by climate change. As of recent, Nick released his highly anticipated Xtasis EP on TraTraTrax which featured DJ Babatr and remixes by Doctor Jeep and Pearson Sound. He also started 2022 on a high note, claiming a production credit on one of the most well reviewed albums of the year – MOTOMAMI by Rosalía. With coveted spots on Miami’s III Points festival, various film scores, and further production for a slew of artists, Nick León’s hands are full and his music is teeming with real life. Privacy Policy News Contact Us Email Sign-Up Musaic Fellow/Employee Portal
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/7487
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Gabriel Hollander 2023 Conductor Mentee at Peter Eötvös Foundation The young Belgian conductor Gabriel Hollander, already “well-regarded” (MusiCultura), praised as a “magician of the text” (La Libre) and with “wide and attentive gesture” (Le Soir), recently was invited as the only conductor mentee for the 2023 Peter Eötvös mentoring program. His musical presence in the classical music scene is emerging on an international level, and his work has been acclaimed and appreciated by the press on numerous occasions. Gabriel’s career as a conductor and musical leader continues with musical projects throughout the current and the next seasons. In the 2022-2023 season, he continues to serve as the musical director of the Bruocsella Symphony Orchestra, and highlights of his guest conducting positions are his repeated invitations with the Ars Musica contemporary music festival, with the STYX ensemble, and the Midsummer Mozartiades festival, where he’ll conduct the Orchestre Royal de Chambre de Wallonie in a staged production of Mozart’s Zauberflöte. This season also means Gabriel’s debut with the Belgian-based youth orchestra Melomania. Being passionate about different musical genres, Gabriel’s repertoire goes from the baroque period to contemporary music and musical creations, in the domain of symphonic orchestras, choral repertoire and operas. Also, Gabriel’s love for imagining and creating things from scratch, made him create three full operas in the summer of 2022 — the “Scratch Operas“, leading three different teams simultaneously of over a hundred people. As a firm believer in the power of continued challenges, Gabriel recently participated to several international competition, where his work was clearly noticed and appreciated (semi-finalist of the International Opera Conductor Competition in Liège, Belgium, and Ionel Perlea International Conducting Competition in Romania). Also he has received many invitations to high-standard international masterclasses (amongst others by Peter Eötvös in Budapest and at the Royal Northern College of Music). Gabriel is classically trained in conducting, vocal coaching and piano. His musical mentors include Daniel Blumenthal, Boyan Vodenitcharov, Robin Engelen (Royal Conservatory of Brussels), Markus Tomas (Leipziger Hochschule Für Musik und Theater), Rodolfo Saglimbeni (Sherborne Summer School) and Kenneth Kiesler (Michigan University). Thanks to different assistant conducting positions, he’s had the pleasure to learn and observe different styles of conducting in symphonic, operatic and choir repertoires (amongst others, Peter Eötvös, Gregory Vajda, Gergely Madaras, Patrick Davin). His conducting debut was in 2014 in a Mozart piano concerto, with Severin von Eckardstein as soloist. Since then, he has worked with numerous a variety of orchestras and choirs, among others the Orchestre Philharmonique Royal de Liège, the Orchestre Royal de Chambre de Wallonie, the Szolnok Symphony Orchestra (Hungary), members of the Bucharest National Opera (Romania), the Berlin Sinfonietta (Germany), the Pazardzhik Symphonic Orchestra (Bulgaria), the Michigan University Students Orchestra (USA), the Orion Orchestra in Aberystwyth (Wales), the Orchestra Cupiditas (Italy), the Choir and Orchestra of the Minimes Cantat (Brussels), the Carloo Cantores choir (Belgium) and the A Chantar choir (Belgium).
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/8077
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Untitled Original Curated by Anna Hygelund 31 May - 1 September, 2018 Oliver Lee Jackson, No. 4, 2015, applied fabric, mixed media on canvas. Oliver Lee Jackson, Composite, 2012, intaglio print, mixed media on paper. Oliver Lee Jackson, Tapestry No. 1, 2011, linen, cotton canvas, mixed media. Oliver Lee Jackson, Striding Figure, 2004, steel, mixed media. Oliver Lee Jackson, Bust VI, 1998, steel, mixed media. Burning in Water - New York is pleased to present Untitled Original, a solo exhibition of recent work by Oakland-based artist Oliver Lee Jackson. featuring recent paintings, sculpture and mixed media works. Untitled Original will be the first solo gallery show of Oliver Lee Jackson's art in New York in over 25 years and precedes an upcoming major exhibition of the artist's work at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. Featuring 25 large-scale works, Oliver Lee Jackson: Recent Paintings will open at the National Gallery of Art in March 2019. The paintings and sculptures in Untitled Original were created between 1988 and 2016. Born in 1935, Oliver Lee Jackson's initial emergence as an artist occurred amidst the vibrant, cross-disciplinary arts scene of St. Louis in the mid-1960s where Jackson led a series of community arts programs. Though never formally a member, Jackson was closely affiliated with the landmark Black Artists Group (BAG), which fostered collaboration among black musicians, dancers, and theater performers in the St. Louis area from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s. Jackson was particularly influenced by his involvement with avant-garde jazz musicians at the center of the BAG movement, most notably the free jazz musician Julius Hemphill, who became a lifelong friend and collaborator. Nurtured by the spirit of mid-century artistic freedom characterized by modern jazz and abstract expressionism, Oliver Lee Jackson embarked on a decades-long trajectory of singular artistic experimentation. In parallel with his development as a visual artist, Jackson maintained a career as an educator teaching Art and Philosophy at universities throughout the United States and abroad. In describing his approach to art-making, Jackson repeatedly invokes the terms power and fierceness. His avowed intention for his art is to serve as a conduit towards archetypal, quasi-spiritual spaces that exist outside of the physical realm of materials, form, and line. Jackson employs sustained vehemence and rigor in his artistic labors in service of creating a setting for such transformations to occur. Preternaturally iconoclastic, Jackson has fervently resisted facile categorization of his work throughout his career and consistently rejected reductive labels. Although allusions to human form are elements that recur throughout Jackson's body of work, he recoils from characterization as a typically "figurative" painter. The bodily forms evident in his work, Jackson insists, are "paint people" who are defined solely by their materiality rather than as depictions of humans and whose "anatomy" exists only "in the paint." For all the avowed spiritually and other-worldly qualities of Jackson's work, humanity remains at the center of his artistic practice - not in the literal depictions of anatomical forms, but instead in the interaction between viewer and artwork which Jackson believes is the source of the transformative power of his art. Completion of the work, Jackson beileves, is only achieved through a direct experience that implicates the viewer as a participant rather than an observer.
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/9092
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Big Iron EVM: Implementation at AEDC – Initial Success Met Failure Earned Value Management & Hardware Track EVM&HW-1 Peeler Paper Big Iron EVM Arnold Engineering Development Center (AEDC) had “experimented” with Earned Value Management (EVM) for several years, under its support contract. With the source selection for FY04 consolidating the test and support contracts, several personnel recognized the opportunity to bring the entire center under the rubric of EVM. Understanding costs and particularly schedules has long been a supreme challenge to managers at AEDC. A focus on EVM would produce greatly enhanced insight into the test and maintenance aspects of Center operation. EVM had certainly helped transform the mission support aspect of things at AEDC. As the world’s largest complex of aerospace ground flight test facilities, AEDC’s mission is to have test ready facilities available when the national need arises. AEDC is funded as a Department of Defense (DoD) Major Range and Test Facility Base (MRTFB). Test services are provided to customers (DoD weapon systems program offices, non-DoD federal programs, and commercial entities) on a cost reimbursable basis. In the MRTFB context, “costs” are only those directly associated with the test activity. Thus, it is very important to understand cost, schedule, and performance to accurately distinguish test from non-test activity. With hundreds of simultaneously on-going jobs, with shared assets, both human and material, the challenge was to segment the costs of work budgeted/performed and identify scheduled actuals from planned. Fortunately, the AEDC Management Information System (MIS) is one of the most advanced in DoD. Unfortunately, most managers at AEDC don’t use the wealth of data available in the MIS. A great apathy exists with regard to analyzing the data to produce actionable information. In fact, hostility prevailed in terminating the larger EVM contract requirement, as both government and contractor management didn’t like the story EVM implementation was revealing. Dave Peeler Major David L. Peeler, Jr. is Commander of the 354th Comptroller Squadron at Eielson AFB Alaska. As Comptroller and Chief Financial Officer he is responsible and accountable for the 354th Fighter Wing’s $244M annual, recurring budget that supports $920.8M in aircraft and supporting infrastructure assets for the Air Force’s most northerly base. Additionally, the squadron handles military pay, civilian pay and travel issues for 3,800 personnel. BACKGROUND: Major Peeler was born and raised in Cherokee County South Carolina, where he graduated from Blacksburg High School. Subsequent to college and prior to commissioning, he worked as a manager in several private sector concerns. Peeler earned his commission via OTS in 1992 and received an assignment to Malmstrom AFB Montana, where he directly supervised 27 troops and was the Air Force liaison for 62 on-site DoD personnel. His primary responsibility was the provision of financial services to over 5,000 military and 460 civilians. After graduation from the Air Force Institute of Technology in 1996, Peeler was assigned to the Electronic System Center’s Financial Management Staff at Hanscom AFB Massachusetts and then as Chief, AWACS Architecture, Engineering, & C2 Cost. He led multi-functional teams in the development of cost inputs; built AWACS’ first-ever total ownership cost profile, documenting the programs $54 billion historical accounting and future budgeting profile; and served as Program Manager for AWACS’ participation in DoD’s Reduction in Total Ownership Cost effort. In 1999, he became Comptroller of the USAF’s only Fighter Group, supporting $509 million in A/OA-10 fighter aircraft assets. An assignment to Arnold AFB, in 2002, put Peeler in charge of rates and billing for the world’s largest complex of aerospace ground flight test facilities. He also led two cross-functional/government-contractor teams for configuration control of Arnold’s “test cost data” management information system, and as Government Program Manager for the full implementation of earned value management on Arnold’s 12-year, $3.8B contract. Peeler served 13 months as Commander, 379th Expeditionary Comptroller Squadron, supporting OEF, OIF, and CJTF HOA. Then in 2005/6, he attended Air Command and Staff College. He has also deployed in support of CJSOTF-A, spending 4 months with Special Forces in Afghanistan. Peeler is a Society of Cost Estimating and Analysis Certified Cost Estimator/Analyst, an Air Force Certified Financial Manager – Level II, and a Certified Acquisition Professional, Financial Management–Level III.
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Broadway San Jose Announces Its 2021-2022 Season Matthew Herzog Hamilton National Tour. Photo: Joan Marcus. Broadway San Jose (San Jose, CA) General Manager Gretchen Feyer has announced the updated season lineup that will make up the company’s upcoming season. The season opens with Hamilton (October 12–31, 2021), followed by the all-new touring production of Broadway’s Tony Award-winning musical, Hairspray (November 23–28, 2021) (replacing the previously-announced Anastasia). The season also includes the previously-announced Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (January 18–23, 2022); the hit musical comedy, Tootsie (April 19–24, 2022); the Tony and Grammy Award–winning pop culture phenomenon, Dear Evan Hansen (June 8–19, 2022); and Diane Paulus’s new staging of the Tony Award-winning musical, 1776 (May 16–21, 2023). Subscribers can also take advantage of six add-on productions, including the culinary variety show, Alton Brown: Live Beyond the Eats (November 15, 2021); the spellbinding new holiday production, A Magical Cirque Christmas (December 30, 2021); the sell-out hit musical, The Simon & Garfunkel Story (January 12, 2022); the international Irish dancing spectacle, Riverdance 25th Anniversary Show (February 25–27, 2022); the 25th anniversary farewell tour of the Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award–winning landmark rock musical, Rent (April 8–10, 2022); and the critically-acclaimed Tony Award-winning musical, Come From Away (July 12–17, 2022). “We are so excited to welcome audiences back to San Jose’s Center for the Performing Arts for a season full of Broadway hits, including several San Francisco Bay Area exclusives and can’t-miss returning favorites,” said Feyer. “We are working diligently behind-the-scenes to create and expand new safety protocols and on-site operations to ensure a positive experience for our patrons, staff, and cast and crew members.” Broadway San Jose season subscriptions start as low as $280 for the basic six-show package and can be purchased beginning Monday, May 3, 2021 by visiting broadwaysanjose.com or emailing [email protected]. A limited number of President’s Club memberships are available, which include center orchestra seats, access to the President’s Club Lounge with exclusive-use restrooms and bar, complimentary snacks, invitations to cast parties and other special events, a welcome gift (for full season subscribers), plus concierge service for purchasing theatre tickets in New York, Chicago, London, and Los Angeles. To purchase a President’s Club membership, email Sally Souders at [email protected]. Season ticket holders receive a significant discount versus regular single ticket prices. Other benefits include preferred seating, ticket exchanges, and special offers. In addition, season ticket holders will be invited to subscriber events and receptions held throughout the year, as well as access to Subscriber Lounges located on each side of the Center for the Performing Arts before every performance and at intermission. All performances for Broadway San Jose’s season will be held at the 2,600-seat San Jose Center for Performing Arts, unless otherwise noted. San Jose Center for Performing Arts is a mid-century modern architectural showcase designed by the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, at the corner of Park Avenue and Almaden Boulevard in downtown San Jose. Broadway San Jose’s Safe and Clean Commitment designed to enhance safety and minimize risk for patrons, the casts and crews of national tours that Broadway San Jose is hosting, and all of Broadway San Jose’s Team Members. It ensures the hygiene and sanitation practices of the theatres meet or exceed regulatory requirements and the recommendations of the CDC. This commitment also includes new cleanliness protocols that meet or exceed Broadway San Jose’s already rigorous standards. These protocols are based on the most current information available on sanitization and cleanliness for the live entertainment venue and hospitality industry, as well as other pertinent industries. As we move forward, Broadway San Jose will continue to monitor guidelines from the CDC and state and county officials for the latest public health innovations to continually update these procedures. The Broadway San Jose Safe and Clean Commitment covers all of the lobbies, seating areas, stage, backstage, and concession areas. Masks will be required of all patrons and Broadway San Jose Team Members. Social distancing is not required while in the theater. To learn about Broadway San Jose’s Clean and Safe Commitment, visit www.broadwaysanjose.com. Broadway San Jose is a partnership between the Nederlander organization of New York and Team San Jose, the managing entity for San Jose’s publicly-held performance venues and civic centers. Hamilton is the story of America then, told by America now. Featuring a score that blends hip-hop, jazz, R&B and Broadway, Hamilton has taken the story of American founding father Alexander Hamilton and created a revolutionary moment in theatre—a musical that has had a profound impact on culture, politics, and education. With book, music, and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda, direction by Thomas Kail, choreography by Andy Blankenbuehler, and musical supervision and orchestrations by Alex Lacamoire, Hamilton is based on Ron Chernow’s acclaimed biography. It has won Tony®, Grammy®, and Olivier Awards, the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and an unprecedented special citation from the Kennedy Center Honors. ALTON BROWN LIVE: BEYOND THE EATS Alton Brown is hitting the road with a new culinary variety show. Audiences can expect more comedy, more music, more highly unusual cooking demos, and more potentially dangerous sciencey stuff. Prepare for an evening unlike any other and if Brown calls for volunteers… think twice. You Can’t Stop the Beat! Hairspray, Broadway’s Tony Award-winning musical comedy phenomenon that inspired the blockbuster film and live television event, is back on tour! Join 16-year-old Tracy Turnblad in 1960’s Baltimore as she sets out to dance her way onto TV’s most popular show. Can a girl with big dreams (and even bigger hair) change the world? Featuring the beloved score of hit songs including “Welcome to the 60’s,” “Good Morning Baltimore,” “It Takes Two,” and incorporating “Ladies Choice” from the musical film adaption, Hairspray is “fresh, winning, and deliriously tuneful!” (The New York Times). This all-new touring production will reunite Broadway’s award-winning creative team led by Director Jack O’Brien and Choreographer Jerry Mitchell to bring Hairspray to a new generation of theater audiences. Don’t miss this “exhilaratingly funny and warm-hearted musical comedy” (The New Yorker). A MAGICAL CIRQUE CHRISTMAS The world’s greatest entertainers unite for a spell-binding and incredible holiday production—A Magical Cirque Christmas! Experience the magic of Christmas with dazzling performers and breathtaking cirque artists, accompanied by your favorite holiday music performed live. Get into the spirit of the season with this merry treat that’s perfect for the entire family. THE SIMON & GARFUNKEL STORY The Simon & Garfunkel Story returns to the stage after a sold-out worldwide tour and their latest blockbuster tour of North America where they received standing ovations everywhere. The immersive concert-style theater show chronicles the amazing journey shared by the folk-rock duo, Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel. It tells the story from their humble beginnings as Tom & Jerry to their incredible success as one of the best-selling music groups of the ‘60s to their dramatic split in 1970. It culminates with the famous “The Concert in Central Park” reunion in 1981 with more than half a million fans in attendance. Using state of the art video projection, photos and original film footage, the show also features a full live band performing all of their hits, including ‘Mrs. Robinson’ (featured in the 1967 film The Graduate), ‘Cecilia’, ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’, ‘Homeward Bound’ and many more. ROALD DAHL’S CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY JANUARY 18–23, 2022 Roald Dahl’s amazing tale is now San Jose’s golden ticket! It’s the perfect recipe for a delectable treat: songs from the original film, including “Pure Imagination,” “The Candy Man,” and “I’ve Got a Golden Ticket,” alongside a toe-tapping and ear-tickling new score from the songwriters of Hairspray. Willy Wonka is opening his marvelous and mysterious chocolate factory…to a lucky few. That includes Charlie Bucket, whose bland life is about to burst with color and confection beyond his wildest dreams. He and four other golden ticket winners will embark on a mesmerizing joyride through a world of pure imagination. Now’s your chance to experience the wonders of Wonka like never before – get ready for Oompa-Loompas, incredible inventions, the great glass elevator, and more, more, more at this everlasting showstopper! RIVERDANCE 25TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW FEBRUARY 25–27, 2022 RIVERDANCE 25TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW is Riverdance, as you’ve never seen it before! A powerful and stirring reinvention of this beloved favorite, celebrated the world over for its Grammy Award-winning score and the thrilling energy and passion of its Irish and international dance. Twenty-five years on, composer Bill Whelan has rerecorded his mesmerizing soundtrack while producer Moya Doherty and director John McColgan have completely reimagined the ground-breaking show with innovative and spectacular lighting, projection, stage and costume designs. Immerse yourself in the extraordinary power and grace of its music and dance–beloved by fans of all ages. Fall in love with the magic of Riverdance all over again. RENT 25TH ANNIVERSARY FAREWELL TOUR For a quarter of a century, Jonathan Larson’s Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece RENT has inspired us to choose love over fear and to live without regret. Its immeasurable emotional impact has forever changed the world of musical theatre. Rent follows a year in the lives of a diverse group of artists and friends struggling to follow their dreams without selling out. This powerfully resonant phenomenon has become more than a musical – it’s a cultural touchstone, a rite of passage and a source of joy and strength for millions. The extraordinary Rent fan community spans every continent and every generation – including many born over a decade after the show opened on Broadway. Whether you’ve never seen Rent or have completely lost count, you can’t miss it this time around—the 25th Anniversary “Farewell Season of Love” is your FINAL CHANCE to experience this illustrious touring production. Come join us to celebrate 25 years of “La Vie Bohème.” 13,140,000 minutes of the one and only Rent. Call it “musical comedy heaven” (Rolling Stone). Call it “the most uproarious new musical in years!” (The Hollywood Reporter). Call it Tootsie! This laugh-out-loud love letter to the theater tells the story of Michael Dorsey, a talented but difficult actor who struggles to find work until one show-stopping act of desperation lands him the role of a lifetime. Featuring a hilarious Tony®-winning book by Robert Horn and an outrageously clever score by 2018 Tony-winner David Yazbek (The Band’s Visit, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels), this New York Times Critic’s Pick is “a joyful delight” (The Washington Post) that’s “so packed with punchlines, it should be called a jokebox musical!” (Bloomberg). “In these turbulent times, when the world seems out of balance, we need a place to let the good times roll,” raves Rolling Stone. “Tootsie is it!” JUNE 8–19, 2022 A letter that was never meant to be seen, a lie that was never meant to be told, a life he never dreamed he could have. Evan Hansen is about to get the one thing he’s always wanted: a chance to finally fit in. Dear Evan Hansen is the deeply personal and profoundly contemporary musical about life and the way we live it. Dear Evan Hansen has struck a remarkable chord with audiences and critics everywhere, including The Washington Post who says Dear Evan Hansen is “one of the most remarkable shows in musical theatre history.” The New York Times calls it “a gut-punching, breathtaking knockout of a musical.” And NBC Nightly News declares the musical “an anthem resonating on Broadway and beyond.” Dear Evan Hansen features a book by Tony Award winner Steven Levenson, a score by Grammy®, Tony® and Academy Award® winners Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (La La Land, The Greatest Showman), and direction by four-time Tony Award nominee Michael Greif (Rent, Next to Normal). Broadway’s Come From Away is a Best Musical winner all across North America! This New York Times Critics’ Pick takes you into the heart of the remarkable true story of 7,000 stranded passengers and the small town in Newfoundland that welcomed them. Cultures clashed and nerves ran high, but uneasiness turned into trust, music soared into the night, and gratitude grew into enduring friendships. Don’t miss this breathtaking new musical written by Tony® nominees Irene Sankoff and David Hein, and helmed by this year’s Tony-winning Best Director, Christopher Ashley. Newsweek cheers, “It takes you to a place you never want to leave!” On 9/11, the world stopped. On 9/12, their stories moved us all. They knew they would make history, but not what history would make of them. Fed up with living under the tyranny of British rule, John Adams attempts to persuade his fellow members of the Continental Congress to vote in favor of American Independence and sign the Declaration. But how much is he willing to compromise in the pursuit of freedom? And to whom does that freedom belong? Tags: 21/22 Season, 21/22 Season Announcement, San Jose
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IndianOil starts selling petroleum products in Bangladesh Industry: Energy & Power, Oil & Petroleum The Indian Oil Company has resumed the long-term supply of refined petroleum products to Bangladesh using ocean-going vessels. This is the first shipment of oil from India’s state-owned entity to Bangladesh after 2020 According to a senior official at the state-run Bangladesh Petroleum Company (BPC), it already delivered a 33,000-tonne cargo of gasoil, or diesel, containing 0.005% sulfur last week.IndianOil has agreed to provide the BPC with about 390,000 tonnes of 0.005% sulphur gasoil, A-1 jet fuel, and 95 RON gasoline, or octane, until December 2023. Bangladesh is also planning to import gasoil through the pipeline connecting the two nations starting mid-March. The pipeline runs 125 kilometers across Bangladesh and 5 kilometers in India. The demand for electricity rising by 100MW per day The State Ministry of Electricity, Energy, and Natural Resources said that electricity demand is increasing by roughly 100MW each day. They are doing everything they can to control the problem. According to power sector sources, the country may face more than 3,000MW load-shedding this Ramadan due to increased demand for electricity. Despite having a capacity of more than 25,000MW, the country can only generate roughly 12,000MW due to primary fuel shortage. Due to the recent currency issue, the government was forced to suspend diesel-based power generation. In terms of renewable energy, the government plans to add 1,000MW of solar electricity to the national grid within a year. Solar energy might save Bangladesh $1 billion yearly The US-based National Bureau of Asian Research (NRB) discovered that Bangladesh could reduce its annual LNG and diesel imports cost by more than one billion dollars by rapidly expanding its 2,000 MW solar power capacity and replacing all diesel-run irrigation systems with solar electricity. According to the report, replacing diesel-fired irrigation systems with solar-powered systems and adding 2,000 MW of solar power capacity for daytime applications might help reduce 5.58 million tonnes of CO2 emissions each year. Electricity generation from rooftop systems presently costs Tk. 5.25 per kWh. Hence, as compared to the cost of grid electricity, industries can save 40% on per-unit electricity costs during the day. Similarly, utility-scale solar could generate electricity at Tk. 7.6/kWh, or 14% cheaper than the Bangladesh Power Distribution Board’s (BPDB) average electricity generation cost in FY 2021-22. Russia eager to export LNG to Bangladesh Russia offered to supply liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Bangladesh during the two countries’ intergovernmental commission online conference. The offer comes at a time when Bangladesh has been trying to purchase LNG from the foreign market to meet the expanding domestic natural gas demand. Authorities claimed that after hiking natural gas taxes by up to 178.88% in February, Bangladesh has increased LNG imports, particularly from the spot market. It intends to purchase a total of eight LNG cargoes in April, a 14.28% increase over March. Six of these LNG cargos will be delivered by long-term suppliers Qatargas and Oman Trading International (OTI), with the remaining two coming from the international spot market. The country will need an estimated US$450 million to import more LNG to meet rising fuel demand in industry and power plants. The Indo-Bangla Friendship Pipeline is ready to open The 130-km Friendship Pipeline between Bangladesh and India, which will transport gasoline or diesel, is ready for opening. The pipeline, known as the Indo-Bangla Friendship Pipeline has 126.57 km in Bangladesh and 5 km built in India. According to official sources, On March 18, the 131.57-km cross-border pipeline will be formally inaugurated via video conference between Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Under a 15-year government agreement with India, the BPC, the state agency in charge of marketing petroleum fuel under the Energy and Mineral Resources Division, has been carrying out the project, which entails importing between 250,000 and 400,000 tonnes of diesel from the neighboring country every year via a cross-border pipeline. Adani Power begins testing transmissions to Bangladesh Power transmission from Adani’s 1,600MW coal-fired power plant in the Indian state of Jharkhand to Bangladesh began on March 9, although power tariff issues remain unresolved. The power transmission was synchronized with Bangladesh’s national grid on a test basis, according to a Power Grid Company of Bangladesh (PGCB) Facebook status. More than 50MW of power from the Adani plant reached Bangladesh’s national grid via newly constructed transmission lines and substations. The company stated that it developed a 134km 400kV transmission line from the adjoining Mankasha area to Bogura via Rohanpur. A 400/230kV substation was also erected in Bogura to enable power evacuation. Experts urges to accelerate domestic gas and coal exploration Experts recommended that efforts to explore domestic natural gas and coal resources be increased in order to ensure the country’s future energy security, condemning the government’s ‘lethargic’ posture in this respect thus far. They made the observation at a session on “Energy Security” at the Bangladesh Business Summit, which was hosted by the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI) at the city’s Bangabandhu International Convention Centre (BICC). Bangladesh has around 3.30 billion tonnes of coal reserves, which are sufficient to supply the country’s total energy requirement for the next 300 years. According to the former senior SDG (sustainable development goal) organizer, if 25% of underground coal can be extracted, it will fulfill domestic demand for at least 75 years.
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/12133
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ALLIED PILOTS ASSOCIATION SUPPORTS CHANGES TO ADDRESS CONTROLLER FATIGUE, URGES REFORMS FOR PILOTS Captain Sam Mayer Fort Worth, Texas (April 29, 2011)—The Allied Pilots Association (APA), certified collective bargaining agent for the 11,000 pilots of American Airlines (NYSE: AMR), expressed support for the decision by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to institute changes in air traffic controller staffing and scheduling in an effort to alleviate fatigue, and urged similar regulatory reforms to commercial pilot scheduling practices. “We welcome the FAA’s actions to mitigate fatigue among air traffic controllers and look forward to additional measures that further address this critical safety issue for controllers and other aviation professionals,” said APA President Captain Dave Bates. “Earlier this week we were reminded of the danger posed by fatigue when the National Transportation Safety Board issued its report on the January 2009 crash of a cargo plane in Lubbock, Texas. The NTSB cited pilot fatigue as a contributing factor in the accident. “The NTSB has included the reduction of aviation accidents caused by human fatigue on its ‘most-wanted’ list of transportation safety improvements for two decades,” he said. “It’s well past time for pilot flight- and duty-time regulations to reflect current scientific knowledge about the impact of fatigue on performance and how to address it.” The FAA is scheduled to introduce revised pilot flight- and duty-time rules later this year following a lengthy rulemaking process. Existing flight- and duty-time rules have been in effect for more than 50 years, predating the introduction of jet airliners. The FAA reauthorization bill now being debated includes an amendment to exempt some airline operations from the forthcoming new regulations. “We also join the NTSB and the Air Line Pilots Association in urging lawmakers to refrain from agreeing to any carve-outs where updated pilot flight- and duty-time regulations are concerned,” Bates said. “Policymakers should adhere to the FAA’s stated goal of ‘one level of safety’ for all carriers, particularly in light of today’s complex operating environment. Congested airspace, ultra-long-range flights crossing numerous time zones and circadian rhythm disruption all highlight the need for updated, uniform regulations.” Founded in 1963, the Allied Pilots Association—the largest independent pilot union in the U.S.—is headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. APA represents the 11,000 pilots of American Airlines, including more than 1,200 pilots not yet offered recall from furlough. The furloughs began shortly after the September 11, 2001 attacks. Also, several hundred American Airlines pilots are on full-time military leave of absence serving in the armed forces. The union’s Web site address is www.alliedpilots.org. American Airlines is the nation’s second-largest passenger carrier and fifth-largest cargo carrier.
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Astronomy magazine writer wins planetary science journalism award Contributor James Oberg wins the 2014 AAS Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award for his December 2013 Astronomy article, “Torrid Mercury’s icy poles.” By Liz Kruesi | Published: Wednesday, July 2, 2014 RELATED TOPICS: SOLAR SYSTEM | MERCURY James Oberg The Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society has awarded the 2014 Jonathan Eberhart Planetary Sciences Journalism Award to James Oberg. In his winning entry, “Torrid Mercury’s icy poles,” from Astronomy magazine’s December 2013 issue, Oberg expertly explores the history of the search for the innermost planet’s water ice and what the MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft, launched in 2004, is revealing. The saga of water ice hiding in the shadows on Mercury ranks among the most fascinating chapters in the story of the solar system’s birth and evolution. (You can read the full award-winning text below.) Oberg is a science journalist, space consultant, and retired “rocket scientist.” He spent the first 22 years of his career as a space engineer at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, where he specialized in space shuttle operations and orbital rendezvous. Oberg has authored some two dozen books about all aspects of space flight for both the astronomy-interested layman and NASA’s training program. He also has written more than 1,000 magazine, newspaper, and website articles. His work has appeared in Astronomy, The Wall Street Journal, Scientific American, OMNI, Popular Science, Popular Mechanics, and others. In addition, Oberg has served as the NBC News space consultant for a decade. He is considered an expert on the Russian and Chinese space programs and U.S. space policy, and he recently spent 10 days inspecting the North Korean space and rocket program for NBC. Oberg earned a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics from Ohio Wesleyan University, a Master of Science in applied math from Northwestern University, and a Master of Science in computer science from the University of New Mexico. After his Northwestern education, he served in the United States Air Force until they loaned him to NASA and never got him back. Oberg has been a contributor to Astronomy since its second year. His most recent article for the magazine prior to the prize-winning Mercury piece was the June 2013 cover story about the Chelyabinsk fireball. Downloadable File(s) Torrid Mercury's icy poles (990kB) Problems opening this file? SAVE to your computer instead. Ask Astro: Will Pluto and Neptune ever collide? Watch: Meteorite strikes Earth when and where scientists predicted it would Dwarf planet Quaoar hosts a ring that shouldn’t be there In depth: James Webb Space Telescope's spectacular image of Jupiter Rising star of astronomy: Mark Moretto Snapshot: Frost-covered sand dunes decorate Mars' north pole How asteroids lost their planethood We asked ChatGPT your questions about astronomy. It didn't go so well. The 7 wonders of the solar system
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Legendary Jamaican talents to be honoured, remembered at the 3rd Annual CaribbeanTales Film Festival’s Night of Tribute Legendary Jamaican talents to be… Toronto – July 3, 2008 A number of renowned Jamaican filmmakers and actors will be honoured at a special awards ceremony on Saturday, July 12, 2008 as part of the 3rd Annual CaribbeanTales Film Festival. Founded by award-winning filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon, this year’s festival, entitled Fokus Jamaica, will highlight the works of Jamaican artists and celebrate the island’s internationally recognized culture. CaribbeanTales’Night of Tribute honourees and award recipients includeLeonie Forbes, Perry Henzell, Clement Virgo, Ras Kassa, Franklyn “Chappy” St. Juste and Peter Williams. The ceremony takes place at River Restaurant (413 Roncesvalles Ave.) at 5:30 p.m. Beloved long-time Jamaican actress Leonie Forbes will be honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award, which she will accept in person. Known as Jamaica’s First Lady of Theatre and Film, Forbes’ extensive film and television career have made her a cultural icon with fans all over the world. She has graced the silver screen in major Hollywood pictures, performed in dozens of theatrical productions, and worked as a radio broadcaster and programmer in Jamaica. Forbes’ film and television credits include: Shattered Image, Milk and Honey, Passion and Paradise, What My Mother Told Me,Children of Babylon and A Winter Tale. Also receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award is famed Jamaican cinematographer and director Franklyn St. Juste. “Chappy”, as he is popularly known, is one of the most experienced cinematographers working in the Caribbeantoday. Chappy has worked alongside great filmmakers like Horace Ove and Lennie Little-White, and on a number of films including The Harder They Come, King Carnival andChildren of Babylon. In addition to Forbes and St. Juste, CaribbeanTales will pay tribute to another trailblazer in Jamaican cinema – the late Jamaican filmmaker Perry Henzell. Made famous for directing, producing and co-authoring Jamaica’s first feature film The Harder They Come, Henzell will be remembered by his fans and peers when the festival screens his film at 9 p.m. on Saturday, July 12. Henzell is to be honoured with a Pioneer Award during the tribute ceremony. His award will be accepted by friend and colleague St. Juste, who worked closely with the late director on The Harder They Come. World-renowned film, television and music video director Ras Kassa will also be at the festival to receive his Innovation Award. A widely respected industry professional, Kassa earned international recognition for directing Damian Marley’sWelcome to Jamrock music video in 2005. Today, Kassa’s resume boasts nearly 100 music videos, in addition to establishing Jamaica’s cable music station Music Plus and his successful production company Guru Films. Other award recipients will include Jamaican-Canadian film and television director Clement Virgo and Jamaican-Canadian film and television actor Peter Williams. Virgo’s selected directorial credits include Soul Food, ReGenesis, Lie With Me, and most recently, the Genie Award nominated Poor Boy’s Game. For his work, Virgo will be awarded with the Jamaica National Building Society Award for Achievement in Cinematic Art. Peter Williams’ acting credits include the Gemini-nominated television series Neon Rider, Catwoman, Da Vinci’s Inquest,The Chronicles of Riddick, Stargate SG-1 and Dead Like Me. He most recently starred as Gene Wright in Solomon’s award-winning feature A Winter Tale, for which the Montreal Gazette dubbed him “one of the country’s finest actors”.CaribbeanTales will acknowledge Williams’ work with anExcellence in Dramatic Performance award. Festival Founder Frances-Anne Solomon is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, director and producer. She is the President and Artistic Director of the two companies she founded: Leda Serene Films and CaribbeanTales. The 3rd Annual CaribbeanTales Film Festival is generously sponsored by: Jamaica National Building Society, Appleton Estate Jamaican Rum, TD Bank Financial Group, Ontario Arts Council, The Art of Catering, SUN TV, Victoria Mutual Building Society, Flow 93.5FM, Now Magazine, b-side, Co-operative Housing Federation of Toronto, Big It Up, CKLN 88.1FM, CHRY 105.5FM, CIUT 89.5FM, The Caribbean Camera, We Magazine, Canadian Immigrant Magazine,Caribbean Uprising International, The Ethnic Umbrella and Ackee Tree Jamaican Cuisine. Category: Uncategorized July 4, 2008 PreviousPrevious post:Once more with feeling…NextNext post:Invitation to AFRICA UNITE – OUR OPENING NIGHT FEATURE
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Runa Capital invests 3M Euros in MariaDB Corporation World’s fastest-growing open source database continues technological expansion Runa Capital today announced that it has made an investment of 3M Euro in MariaDB Corporation, a global software vendor specializing in high availability, high performance and highly scalable open source database solutions. MariaDB Corp. will use the funds to further the development of its product and markets. MariaDB aims to become the world’s premier open source database platform. Much progress has already been made as the LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) stack which used to dominate in the web development is now turning into LEMP (where “E” stands for Nginx and “M” for MariaDB) as MySQL is being replaced with MariaDB in key Linux distributions and Nginx web-server is rapidly gaining market share among the top web sites. MariaDB benefits from Runa Capital’s technological and business connection with Parallels and early investments into Nginx, the fast-growing open-source web-server and Jelastic, a growing PaaS cloud-solution for Java, PHP and Ruby developers. “We look forward to collaborating with Runa and its first-class portfolio of open source businesses as we grow the company and further expand the adoption of MariaDB in crucial enterprise architectures,” said Patrik Sallner, CEO of MariaDB Corporation. “I have known Serguei Beloussov and his team at Runa Capital for a number of years and have huge respect for the work they are doing,” said MariaDB co-founder Michael ‘Monty’ Widenius: This investment seals a relationship that will help propel MariaDB to industry leadership.” “Runa Capital is a big believer in an open source model,” said Runa’s managing partner Dmitry Chikhachev. “We believe that open source stack has historically driven innovation in Web and database development. MariaDB has assembled the greatest tech talent in the community and keeps driving innovation in the database space; it’s obviously growing in the enterprise as well.” With this financing, Runa Capital managing partner and co-founder Dmitry Chikhachev will join the MariaDB Corp. Board of Directors. MariaDB is available in the software repositories of all leading Linux distributions including Red Hat Enterprise Linux, SUSE, Centos, Debian and Ubuntu and so used by millions of organizations of every size. Leading enterprise users of MariaDB include Google, Financial Times and Booking.com. About MariaDB Corporation MariaDB Corporation Ab (formerly SkySQL) is a global software vendor specializing in high availability, high performance and highly scalable MariaDB and MySQL solutions. With its head office in Espoo, Finland and team members circling the globe, MariaDB has over 500 customers in more than 40 countries worldwide. With its client base of global brands such Google, Fusion-IO, HP, Virgin Mobile, Craigslist, Harvard University and numerous businesses small and large. MariaDB suits the needs of the smallest web stores up to the largest corporations. MariaDB products and professional services bring ease of use and assistance 24/7, while providing an effective way to increase database productivity, reduce downtime, augment existing resources and prevent vendor lock-in. MariaDB Corporation was founded in 2010 under the name SkySQL — by the same team behind MySQL AB, including David Axmark, Michael ‘Monty’ Widenius and Kaj Arnö. The company merged with Monty Program in 2013, and SkySQL changed its name to MariaDB Corporation in Fall 2014. For more information visit: http://www.mariadb.com About Runa Capital Runa Capital is a $200M global venture capital fund established to pursue opportunities in the rapidly growing areas of Cloud Computing, Internet and Mobile. Runa Capital is run by a united team of successful entrepreneurs, most of whom have worked together for over 15 years (building Parallels, Acronis and other tech-companies). It combines a broad geographical and cross-industry experience with an extensive professional network. Runa Capital’s investment strategy focuses on cloud computing, hosted services, virtualization, complex software and IT-solutions for fintech, education, healthcare and public services. Its investments to date include: NGINX, Ecwid, Jelastic, Zopa, drchrono, Wallarm and others. For more info please visit www.runacap.com Source: www.runacap.com AK-Service Ltd heads west from Helsinki Lead Desk expands with EUR 5.5 million funding
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The Sierra Madre Occidental is a rugged mountain range that within Mexico runs from the Rio Grande de Santiago in the state of Jalisco, north through several other western Mexican states including Nayarit. This ecoregion boasts some of the richest biodiversity in North America, and contains two thirds of the standing timber in Mexico. There are 23 different species of pine and 200 species of oak. Tropical and temperate influences converge in this area to provide shelter to a unique and rich ecology and wildlife, to include 300 species of rare orchids, colorful bugainvillea (red, purple, orange, white), more than 350 species of birds, beautiful monarch butterflies, and a large number of interesting mammals and reptiles. The jungle vegetation throughout the Puerto Vallarta area is thick and lush, as abundant sun and summer rain produce humidity that nurtures the entire region. A diversity of trees can be found in this zone such as Amapa, Chilte, Palo de Brasil, and produce tropical strong wood (walnut, parota, cedar amapa, primavera) that can be used to make canoes and hard-wood furniture. Exotic fruit is also plentiful in this region to include coconut, pineapple, macho banana, guava, guamuchil, mango, jacka fruit, watermelon, and avocado. Mammals native to the area include: jaguar, jaguarundi, black bear, ocelot, margay, white-tailed deer, armadillo, badger, racoon, coati mundi, chipmunk, deer mouse, and rock suirrel. The Mexican grizzy that once roamed these mountains are now thought to be extinct from the region, and the Mexican gray wolf is one of this area’s most endangered species. Reptiles and amphibians flourishing in this region include: Green iguana, spiny-tailed iguana, Mexican beaded lizard, and crocodiles. There are at least three species of rattlesnakes to include ridgenose, twin-spotted, and rock rattlers. Unique and colorful birds of interest are: Amazon Parrots, Green Parakeet, Tropical Kingbird, Black-throated Magpie Jay, Yellow-winged Cacique, Blue-footed Booby, Great Kiskadee, Green-striped Brush Finch, Coppery-tailed Trogon, Eared Trogon, Violet-crowned Hummingbird, Mexican Jay, Spotted Owl, and the Golden Eagle. In Banderas Bay, and the Pacific Ocean that surrounds Puerto Vallarta, marine life is abundant. There are tuna, snapper, red snapper, blue marlin, black marlin, sailfish, and seabass. A variety of sea turtles swim the bay, and the shores of Banderas Bay are actually a turtle breeding ground. The government has established turtle conservatories and release sites, and strict laws are in place to protect these endangered animals. Banderas Bay is a dolphin breeding area, and therefore it is very common to see bottle-nose, spotted, and dusky dolphins swimming and frolicking about near Puerto Vallarta. Dolphins are very curious, friendly, and playful by nature. To the delight of onlookers, dolphins will often swim alongside boats and kayaks. For viewing and interacting with dolphins in their natural habitat, complete information is available on our Dolphin Swim Programs page. Banderas Bay is also an important breeding and calving ground for humpback whales. From December through March, in the vicinity of Puerto Vallarta, whales are often spotted swimming and leaping in the warm turquoise waters of Banderas Bay. These incredibly beautiful creatures often treat observers to their breaches, songs, courtship displays, and other innate behaviors. Lucky spectators may actually see a calf being birthed, and the sweet tenderness that is shown between mothers and their calves. Government regulations protecting the whales are strictly enforced. There are a variety of responsible tour operators that run excellent whale watching programs for viewing these gentle giants. Within Puerto Vallarta and Banderas Bay there are numerous adventure tours and excursions which give visitors excellent opportunities to explore this incredible area. A must-do activity for all ecology and wildlife lovers is a trip to the Vallarta Botanical Gardens, 30 minutes south of downtown Puerto Vallarta. Another excellent opportunity to immerse yourself in nature is the El Cora Crocodile Sanctuary in Nuevo Vallarta, a short 15 mintues north of Puerto Vallarta’s international airport (PVR). An excellent way to view the jungle canopy is by zip line, which is an exciting and thrilling adventure!
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Reba McEntire Plastic Surgery: Did She Undergo Surgery? Author Kane Dan Published on December 21, 2022 4 min read Reba McEntire, full name Reba Nell McEntire (born March 28, 1955, in McAlester, Oklahoma, U.S.), is an American singer and actress who achieved breakthrough success as a television personality. Reba McEntire grew up on the road between rodeos, as her father was a world-champion steer roper. Reba McEntire created a band with her brothers in the ninth school, aided by her mother’s encouragement of her musical talents on the travels. She had her first major break when she was invited to perform the national anthem during the 1974 National Finals Rodeo. Her performance wowed country music legend Red Steagall, who assisted Reba McEntire in recording a demo resulting in a contract with Mercury Records. Although neither her first song, “I Don’t Want to Be a One Night Stand” (1976), nor her self-titled first album (1977) gained an immediate audience, she continued recording and finally topped the Billboard country singles list with “Can’t Even Get the Blues” (1982). Other hits followed, but Reba McEntire yearned for greater professional autonomy and a return to a more classic country music sound. She switched to the MCA label in 1984, began coproducing her records, and had consistent financial success with albums such as Whoever’s in New England (1986). Reba McEntire earned her first Grammy Award for best female country vocal performance for the album’s title tune. By the end of 1986, she had achieved her eighth number one on the country singles chart. She set a record by winning the best female vocalist at the Country Music Association (CMA) Awards for four straight years (1984–87). Must read: Erin Moriarty Plastic Surgery: Erin Looks Different After establishing her musical fame, Reba McEntire ventured into business and acting. Reba McEntire’s empire comprised a talent-management organization, a construction company, a horse farm, and a jet charter service. Her second husband, Narvel Blackstock, also acted as her manager. Her first picture was the 1990 horror comedy Tremors. In March of the following year, a plane carrying her tour manager and seven band members crashed near San Diego, California, killing everyone on board. Reba McEntire paid tribute to the victims on her 1991 platinum-selling album For My Broken Heart. Reba McEntire continues to tour and release albums during her acting career, including So Good Together (1999), Room to Breathe (2003), Reba: Duets (2007), and Love Somebody (2015). She released Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope in 2017, which went on to win a Grammy for best roots gospel album. The next year, she was honored by the Kennedy Center. In 2019, she released Stronger Than the Truth, her 33rd studio album. Following it was the box set Revived Remixed Revisited (2021). Must read: Heather Altman Plastic Surgery: Altman Clarifies If She Had Plastic Surgery Did Reba McEntire Have Plastic Surgery Reba McEntire is expected to have various cosmetic treatments, including Botox, fillers, a facelift, and breast augmentation. Reba McEntire is 67, so when people see her, they anticipate seeing droopy cheeks, a face with lines and wrinkles, and eyes with crow’s feet. However, they are always shocked to discover a beautiful lady who appears to be in her 30s. Her youthful appearance has long sparked rumors of cosmetic surgery since no one her age could seem that young. Must read: Salma Hayek Plastic Surgery: Has Salma Had Breast Surgery The absence of wrinkles and crow’s feet on Reba McEntire’s face has led many to believe she has received Botox injections. In addition, the lack of drooping skin on her face and neck has fueled allegations that she has undergone fillers and a facelift. Fans believe the facelift has allowed her to defy gravity and maintain her youthful appearance. Reba McEntire has been the target of ridicule since reports of her plastic surgery began to circulate. But she has never admitted that she has undergone plastic surgery, even when people are confident they can see it on her face. She denied using Botox in 2009 only once, and that was all. “I don’t do Botox. I don’t do it. Everyone else may, and I have no objections. I don’t. It is botulism; therefore, I did not want to consume it. If you want to do that, plastic surgery is excellent. Regarding her cosmetic efforts, Reba McEntire concluded her remarks. She attributes her youthful appearance to Pilates and 30 to 60 minutes of daily walking, among other factors. Must read: Janet Jackson’s Plastic Surgery: Her Several Cosmetic Procedures “Every night, I remove my makeup and cleanse my face. In the morning, I thoroughly cleanse and moisturize my face. I consistently apply sunblock on my face. And use products and cosmetics that allow my skin to breathe as much as possible. I have facials as frequently as possible and consume plenty of water. I also consume fish oils. I use one contact lens. I have monovision, and the fish oil and EPA assist my eyes to retain moisture so that my contact lenses do not become dry.” And that, she maintains, is Reba McEntire’s beauty secret, not Botox, a facelift, or breast implants. Nobody believes her anymore, and everyone seems to assume she has undergone plastic surgery. There was a report that she once became so obsessed with Botox and facelifts that it threatened her relationship with Rex Linn. A few years ago, the National Enquirer said Reba McEntire and lover Rex Linn began to dispute after Linn “began imploring the wrinkle-free country queen to stop using Botox.” The publication also noted that she had denied using fillers even though her “fiberglass-like face” indicated otherwise. Her social media accounts are: Instagram, Facebook, Youtube. LeBron James Bio, Age, Career, Wife, Net Worth, Wife,… Jon Batiste Bio, Gay, Age, Height, Weight, Career, Wife, Net… Kevin Durant Bio, Age, Height, Weight, Career, Girlfriend,… Carrie Underwood Plastic Surgery: Did She Get Lip Surgery? Barry Gibb Bio, Age, Height, Weight, Career, Wife, Net… Erin Moriarty Plastic Surgery: Erin Looks Different Ashanti Weight Gain: Her Weight Gain Journey Anya Taylor-Joy’s Plastic Surgery: Did The Menu Cast Undergo Brow Lift Surgery, Buccal Fat Removal, or Blepharoplasty? Published on January 15, 2023 5 min read Heidi Pratt Plastic Surgery: Did She Have 10 Cosmetic Surgeries In Just A Day Amy Fadool’s Weight Loss: Know How Amy Lost Weight In 2022 Published on January 7, 2023 3 min read Jennifer Coolidge Pregnant: Jennifer Coolidge: Is She Pregnant? Or Is It Simply for Show?
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ADRIANA CISNEROS CEO OF CISNEROS TO CHAIR 44th INTERNATIONAL EMMY® AWARDS GALA NEW YORK, July 18, 2016 – Adriana Cisneros, Chief Executive Officer of Cisneros, the parent company of Cisneros Media, which includes Cisneros Studios, Cisneros Media Distribution and Venezuelan TV network Venevision, Miss Venezuela and Mobius.Lab- will serve as Gala Chair for the 44th International Emmy® Awards, which will take place on Monday, November 21, 2016 in New York City. Ms. Cisneros will preside over the Gala, during which the International Academy will recognize programming in ten program categories and present Special Awards to Shonda Rhimes, the Writer, Executive Producer and Creator behind global hit series Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder and The Catch (Founders Award) and Maria Rørbye Rønn, the Chief Executive Officer & Director General of Danish Broadcasting Corporation, which pioneered and drove the success of Nordic Noir drama around the world (Directorate Award). “Adriana is a visionary leader- with a keen handle on Cisneros’ digital strategy and all innovations in the media space,” said Bruce L. Paisner, President & CEO of the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. “We have been fortunate to have her counsel as an Executive Committee Member of the Academy for many years and we are delighted to have her Chair our International Emmy Awards Gala this year.” “It’s an honor for me to be part of an organization that showcases excellence in international television from around the world and to Chair the International Emmy Awards Gala this year, said Adriana Cisneros. “For a Latin American media company like Cisneros- which is constantly at the crossroads of multiple cultures and artistic sensitivities- it’s truly wonderful to see and recognize all the outstanding programming being produced around the world”, said Adriana Cisneros. Adriana Cisneros was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Cisneros- a third generation family owned and operated business with a global footprint and operations in Latin America and the United States- in September 2013. The company has three areas of focus: Media, Interactive and Real Estate. Adriana is also President of Fundaciòn Cisneros, the family’s educational not-for-profit organization dedicated to improving education in Latin America. She is the daughter of Gustavo Cisneros, the company’s Chairman, and granddaughter of Diego Cisneros, who founded the business in 1929. Cisneros Media creates, produces and distributes entertainment content across platforms worldwide. With over 60 years at the forefront of the industry and 30,000 hours of programming, today the company distributes content in over 100 countries and 20 languages. The organizations’ units are: Venevision, the leading TV network in Venezuela; Cisneros Media Distribution; a group of cable channels reaching 25 million subscribers in Latin America and the Caribbean; Cisneros Studios, the largest independent producer of Spanish-language programming in the United States; Miss Venezuela organization and Mobius Lab Productions. The 2016 International Emmy® Nominees will be announced late September. This year’s sponsors, to date, include, Dori Media, Ernst & Young, Globo, Mipcom, Phoenix Satellite Television, Semba, Sofitel and Variety. The International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences is a membership based organization comprised of leading media and entertainment figures from over 60 countries and 500 companies from all sectors of television including internet, mobile and technology. The Academy’s yearly schedule of events includes the prestigious International Emmy® Awards held in New York, The International Emmy® Kids Awards at MIPTV and a series of industry events such as Academy Day, The International Emmy® World Television Festival and Panels on substantive industry topics. The International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences recognizes excellence in television produced outside of the United States, as well as US Primetime programs produced in languages other than English, with the prestigious Emmy® Award. Currently celebrating programming across varied areas including: Arts Programming, Current Affairs, Comedy, Documentary, Drama Series, News, Non-Scripted Entertainment, Telenovela, and TV Movie/Mini-Series, it also recognizes excellence in Performances, Kids programming and Digital. For more information, go to www.iemmys.tv Matt Biscuitti
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Home/Financial News/Sports & General/British actor Julian Sands reported missing in California mountains British actor Julian Sands reported missing in California mountains The 76th Venice Film Festival – Screening of the film “The Painted Bird” in competition – Venice, Italy September 3, 2019 – Actor Julian Sands poses before an interview. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – British-born film actor Julian Sands, known for his starring roles in such films as “A Room with a View” and “Warlock,” has gone missing in the mountains of Southern California, media outlets reported on Wednesday, citing local authorities. The 65-year-old performer was reported missing by his wife on Friday evening, Jan. 13, after he had gone hiking in the Baldy Bowl area of the San Gabriel Mountains, according to Los Angeles television station KABC-TV and the Hollywood trade publication Variety. “From what I understand, he left sometime that day for a hike and when he did not return, his family reported him missing,” KABC-TV quoted Gloria Huerta, a spokesperson for the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department, as telling the news outlet. Ground teams immediately launched a search for the actor but the effort was called off about 24 hours later due to avalanche risks and poor trail conditions, according to Variety, which also cited the sheriff’s department. Intermittent aerial searches by helicopter and drone aircraft have continued, however, and authorities planned to resume a ground search once conditions allow, Variety said. The Baldy Bowl, about 50 miles northeast of Los Angeles just below the Mount Baldy ski area, is a popular destination for skiers, climbers and hikers. But the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department issued an advisory on Thursday warning that severe winter weather, following weeks of storms that dumped torrential rain and heavy snow across California, has made the area dangerous for outdoor recreation. Over the past four weeks, the sheriff’s search teams have been dispatched on 14 rescue missions on Mount Baldy and surrounding areas for lost or stranded hikers, two of whom perished after falling or injuring themselves, the advisory said. The sheriff’s department, which made no mention of the actor in its advisory, did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for further information. Sands’ Los Angeles-based representative could not immediately be reached for comment. Born in England, Sands moved to California in the 1980s to pursue a Hollywood career after the success of the 1985 film “A Room with a View,” a period romance in which he was cast as the leading man opposite Helena Bonham Carter. He also starred as the son of Satan in the 1989 supernatural thriller “Warlock” and its sequel “Warlock: The Armageddon.” Other film credits include supporting roles in “The Killing Fields,” “Arachnophobia” and “Leaving Las Vegas.” Abortion bans limit training options for some future U.S. physicians Reversing abortion drug’s approval would harm public interest, U.S. FDA says Factbox-Restrictions vs. protections: How states are taking sides on abortion Minnesota ex-officer resentenced to 57 months in prison for Australian woman’s shooting death – NBC news Civil rights groups sue Tennessee for banning transgender athletes in school sports Amid homeless crisis, New York to step up forced hospitalization of mentally ill Top U.S. envoy brought up Khashoggi in talks with Saudis -US official
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New Photographs Show China’s South China Sea Artificial Islands Like You’ve Never Seen Them A look at China’s militarization of its artificial islands in high resolution. Credit: (U.S. Navy Photo By Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Kryzentia Weiermann/ Released) The Philippines-based Inquirer has gotten its hands on high resolution aerial photographs of China’s seven artificial islands in the Spratly group in the South China Sea. The images are among the best we’ve seen of the remarkable facilities and equipment China has emplaced on these islands, which didn’t exist just five years ago. The photographs underline the extent of China’s militarization of the islands — particularly since 2016. That year marked two important milestones in the South China Sea. First, the Hague-based tribunal at the Permanent Court of Arbitration convened after the Philippines filed a case against China in 2013 ruled in Manila’s favor on nearly all counts and invalidated China’s nebulous nine-dash line claim. Second, just days before the award was granted, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte assumed office, and brought a healthy contempt for the United States with him. Duterte would immediately pursue rapprochement with Beijing and turn a blind eye to Chinese activities on the artificial islands, giving Beijing a major opportunity to press on despite the award. The photographs acquired by the Inquirer were taken between June and December 2017 and show in remarkable detail China’s fighter-ready hangers, shelters for anti-ship cruise missiles, ammunition storage depots, and a range of electronic and signals intelligence equipment, including over-the-horizon radars, various radomes, and communication towers. The photographs, interestingly, also capture the presence of several Chinese People’s Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) and China Coast Guard (CCG) vessels. While the regular presence of and patrols by both CCG and PLAN vessels in the vicinity of these artificial islands have long been known, it’s interesting to see the precise classes of vessels China has chosen to deploy in the Spratlys. The images show multiple transport ships, an amphibious transport dock, and multiple classes of missile frigates. By mid-2017, when these images were taken, China’s fig leaf of non-militarization — one that was stated by Chinese President Xi Jinping alongside U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House in 2015 — had gone away. There’s no question anymore than China’s seven artificial islands in the Spratlys have been militarized. Beijing has three — Fiery Cross, Subi, and Mischief reefs — ready to service any aircraft in the Chinese military’s inventory with 3,000 meter runways. The power projection capacity is there. In the coming months and years, Beijing will begin to make the most of its improved position in the South China Sea. 2016 PCA Award Fiery Cross Reef Mischief Reef Philippines-China relations Philippines-US relations South China Sea disputes Subi Reef China Deploys Long-Range Anti-Ship and Anti-Air Missiles to Spratly Islands For First Time By Steven Stashwick Missiles are unambiguous 'militarization' of disputed islands. It's Official: Xi Jinping Breaks His Non-Militarization Pledge in the Spratlys In China's own words, Beijing is now building what it sees as "necessary military facilities" in the South China Sea. Next US Navy South China Sea Freedom of Navigation Operation: Mischief Reef The U.S. Navy will likely sail within 12 nautical miles of Mischief Reef soon. Chinese J-11 Fighters Exercise in the South China Sea After US Navy Patrols After protesting a U.S. Navy freedom of navigation patrol, the PLA flexes its airpower muscles in the South China Sea.
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/16271
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13 Beautiful Trees Native to Massachusetts Written by Heather Hall © iStock.com/A-Shot-of-Bliss Early Girl Tomato vs. Better Boy Tomato Which Plants Keep Copperhead Snakes Away? Jonquil vs Daffodil: Is There a Difference? Narcissus vs Daffodil: Is There a Difference? Discover 15 Different Types of Cactus The Best Flowers to Plant in Texas:… Massachusetts is located in the northern part of the United States, bordered by Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Vermont to the north, Connecticut to the south, and New York to the west. It has three major mountain ranges: the Berkshire Mountains in western Massachusetts, the Taconic Mountains in central-western Massachusetts, and the Green Mountains that extend from northwestern Massachusetts into southern Vermont. The state also includes several inland lakes, such as Quabbin Reservoir, Wachusett Reservoir, Long Pond, and Lake Chaubunagungamaug. Within this beautiful landscape, there are also many beautiful trees native to Massachusetts! Let’s take a closer look at this beautiful state, and what it has to offer. Geography and Climate The climate of Massachusetts is generally humid continental with mild summers and cold winters. In summer months, temperatures can range from 40°F up to 90°F. Winter temperatures often dip below 0°F. Snowfall totals vary significantly throughout the state due to its topography, with higher elevations receiving more snow than lower-lying areas. Precipitation levels are consistent year-round, ranging anywhere between 30″ – 50″. The fauna of Massachusetts is incredibly diverse, with over 200 species of mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. Among these are the white-tailed deer, coyote, red fox, and bobcat. There is also a variety of waterfowl, such as ducks, geese, and swans. Massachusetts also has plenty of invertebrates, such as butterflies, moths, and grasshoppers, that live in its forests and wetlands. Additionally, there are more than 50 species of fish native to its rivers and streams, including salmonids like trout and bass. With so much biodiversity, it’s clear why Massachusetts is considered one of America’s most ecologically diverse states! Massachusetts is home to a wide variety of native trees, including maple, oak, birch, and pine. These species are found throughout the state in various habitats ranging from woodlands and wetlands to prairies and urban areas. Each tree species has its own unique characteristics that provide beauty as well as many benefits to our environment, such as providing food sources for wildlife or helping to reduce air pollution. Additionally, many of these native trees have inspired local folklore stories that further demonstrate their cultural importance in Massachusetts. Below are a few of our favorite trees that are native to Massachusetts. 1. American Holly (Ilex opaca) The long-lived, broad-leaved, evergreen American holly tree grows to 25 to 60 feet tall and provides good cover and nesting sites for birds. It has dark green leaves, stiff horizontal branches, and bright red berries that ripen in October and last through the winter. These berries and evergreen leaves make this tree a great choice for winter interest. They are often used for wreaths, cuttings, and other ornamental purposes. American holly is a popular plant during the Christmas holiday. ©Bonnie Taylor Barry/Shutterstock.com 2. Atlantic White Cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides) The Atlantic white cedar is an evergreen tree native to Massachusetts that grows up to 75 feet high. It has short branches and blue-green leaves that spread out in a fan-like appearance. The brown cones contain winged seeds and are popular with local wildlife, who survive during winter by munching on them. The tree usually grows in dense, solid stands in wet areas. Atlantic white cedar trees prefer wetland habitats. ©iStock.com/indigojt 3. Black Cherry (Prunus serotina) Black cherry is a deciduous tree native to Massachusetts that grows quickly, reaching up to 90 feet tall. In the spring, it produces fragrant white flowers followed by berry-like fruits. Black cherry is popular with furniture and cabinet makers, and the fruits are crucial food for numerous bird species and mammals. Black cherry trees are also called mountain black cherry trees, rum cherry trees, and wild black cherry trees. ©iStock.com/TeleMakro Fotografie (Ina Hensel) 4. Black Tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica) The black tupelo tree is a native species to Massachusetts that is perfect for areas of your yard that experience periodic flooding. This tree grows to be about 30 to 60 feet tall, with horizontal branches and a conical or flat-topped crown. The black tupelo is also a rich source of nectar for bees, pollinating insects, and many species of birds. Black tupelo trees have dark green, glossy leaves in the summer, but in the fall they transform into bright colors like yellow, bright red, orange, and purple. ©iStock.com/A-Shot-of-Bliss 5. Downy Serviceberry (Amelanchier arborea) Downy serviceberry is a deciduous tree or shrub native to Massachusetts that reaches between 12 to 25 feet. The leaves emerge as a soft gray and turn darker green with age. The fall colors are a gorgeous blend of red, orange, and gold. White flowers grow at the very tips of the branch before the leaves, and the fruits are sweet and tart. As you can imagine, many animals and birds find the fruits delicious! Downy serviceberry fruits are reddish-purple, have an apple-like shape, and ripen in summer. ©iStock.com/weisschr 6. Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus Virginiana) Eastern red cedar is a native evergreen to Massachusetts that grows 10 to 40 feet high. It doesn’t mind salty or dry soil and makes a good choice for exposed coastal areas. Its small, blue-colored berries are an important source of nutrition for many animals and birds. In addition, cedars have dense foliage that is ideal for nesting, roosting, and staying cozy and warm all winter. The eastern red cedar is a coniferous evergreen tree. ©iStock.com/Lyudmila Chetvertnykh 7. Gray Birch (Betula populifolia) The gray birch is a small to medium-sized deciduous tree native to Massachusetts that grows quickly, reaching 20 to 40 feet in height with a 10- to 20-foot spread. It is known for its ability to grow on sandy soils or in early colonized areas on nutrient-deficient and dry sites. This tree usually has multiple trunks branching off from the main trunk. The dark green summer foliage fills out early and is yellow and showy in the fall. Birch seeds are a favorite with many birds, such as finches and other small-seed eaters. In the fall, the leaves of gray birch trees turn a beautiful yellow color. ©iStock.com/Nadya So 8. Green Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica) Green ash is a tough, fast-growing tree native to Massachusetts that can reach 50 to 75 feet tall. It has a rounded or irregular crown, and its leaves turn yellow in the fall. Green ash prefers moist, rich soils but is adaptable to other conditions. It is tolerant of seasonal flooding but not of shading. You can plant green ash as a shade tree or windbreak and enjoy its beauty for many years to come. Green ash is also called downy ash, water ash, and swamp ash. ©Denis Pogostin/Shutterstock.com 9. Pitch Pine (Pinus rigida) The native pitch pine is a variable tree native to Massachusetts that can grow in a variety of conditions, from dry, sandy uplands to swampy lowlands. The tree is known for its ability to survive fires. Pitch pine provides shelter, food, and nesting sites for many animals, and its seeds are eaten by birds such as crossbills, sparrows, woodpeckers, grouse, and quail. The average pitch pine grows an irregular trunk. ©Danita Delimont/Shutterstock.com 10. Red Maple (Acer rubrum) Red maple trees are native to Massachusetts and can grow to be quite tall. They change color in the fall before many other trees, with their leaves turning a range of different autumn colors. The flowers of the red maple tree bloom in late March or April and can be either red or orange in color. The tree’s fruit, which are winged seeds known as samaras, are quite small and provide food for squirrels and birds. Red maple prefers moist soils along stream banks and swamps, but it also does well on upland sites if there are no competing trees or shrubs. ©AngieC333/Shutterstock.com 11. Sassafras (Sassafras albindum) Sassafras is a deciduous tree native to Massachusetts that grows between 40 to 50 feet high. It has reddish-brown bark with furrows and ridges. The bright green leaves turn yellow or red-orange in the fall, and the flowers smell so sweet! Many birds, bees, and butterflies are attracted by the sweet flower nectar, and the small, blue fruits are delicious snacks for small mammals. Humans have found a use for all parts of Sassafras albidum plants, including its leaves, stems, bark, roots, wood, flowers, and fruit. ©ForestSeasons/Shutterstock.com 12. White Oak (Quercus alba) White oak is a large, durable deciduous tree native to Massachusetts that can grow over 100 feet tall and up to 60 to 80 feet wide. It has a wide, round crown with heavy foliage that turns a beautiful red color in the fall. White oak is tough and will tolerate many soil conditions. It is also resistant to salt spray, making it a good choice for areas near the coast. The acorns are a primary source of food for squirrels, chipmunks, raccoons, and other small mammals. White-tailed deer also browse on this tree, as do many birds. Some white oak trees have been known to live for over 450 years! ©iStock.com/Cris Andrei 13. State Tree of Massachusetts: American Elm (Ulmus americana) The American elm was adopted as the state tree of Massachusetts in 1941. General George Washington took command of the Continental Army beneath a large American elm tree in 1775, and the state tree is in remembrance of him. The American elm is a large tree with flaky gray bark and can grow to be 120 feet tall in the forest. In the open, it is shorter and has a wide spread. The leaves are oval, dark green, and turn to a clear yellow in the autumn. The American elm tree benefits local wildlife in Massachusetts by providing a source of food and shelter. Its leaves, flowers, and fruits offer sustenance for birds and other animals. The bark is also rich in nutrients which attract squirrels and chipmunks who feed on it year-round. In addition to serving the local wildlife population, this majestic tree also beautifies neighborhoods with its stately presence! The American elm tree was designated as the state tree of Massachusetts in 1941. ©iStock.com/marekuliasz Summary of 13 Trees Native to Massachusetts American Holly Atlantic White Cedar Black Tupelo Downy Serviceberry Eastern Red Cedar Gray Birch Green Ash Pitch Pine American Elm- State Tree The 12 Biggest Lakes in Massachusetts The Flag of Massachusetts: History, Meaning, and Symbolism The Longest Biking Trail in Massachusetts The 10 Best Perennial Vegetables That Come Back Every Year How to Grow Cilantro: Your Complete Guide The 10 Best Bonsai Trees for Beginners 10 Incredible Trees Native to the Philippines Don’t Touch These 10 Dangerous Plants That Grow in Texas I am a freelance writer with 22 years of experience. I live in the Pacific Northwest and am surrounded by nature. When I go for my daily runs I often see herds of elk, deer, and bald eagles. I am owned by two dogs who take me on hikes in the mountains where we see coyotes, black bears, and wild turkeys. Mass.gov, Available here: https://www.mass.gov/service-details/coastal-landscaping-in-massachusetts-plant-list Ipswichma.gov, Available here: https://www.ipswichma.gov/DocumentCenter/View/11229/Native-Trees-of-Massachusetts Mashpeema.gov, Available here: https://www.mashpeema.gov/sites/g/files/vyhlif3426/f/uploads/native_plant_list.pdf Westford Massachusetts, Available here: https://westfordma.gov/151/Information-on-Common-Wildlife-Species The Best Flowers to Plant in Texas: 17 Flowers that Survive Heat Waves
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/17131
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Professor Good Ales A Place to Gather and Talk Posted on December 1, 2009 by Professor Good Ales Monopolizing America: Big Beer Takes Over Written by Don Monkerud Forget about kicking back and enjoying an American beer; a massive wave of consolidation is transforming the industry. According to a recent report by the Marin Institute, a California-based alcohol industry watchdog, a rush of buyouts and mergers in the last years of the Bush Administration has left two overseas giants in control of 80 percent of American beer consumption. “How beer is marketed and sold in this country will never be the same,” said Charisse Lebron, corporate responsibility & advocacy manager at the Marin Institute. “Anheuser-Busch InBev and MillerCoors, controlled by parent companies SABMiller and Molson Coors Brewing Company, are all that really matter in the U.S.” America is the world’s most profitable beer market, yet the U.S. has lost what was once a competitive industry. As recently as 2004, ten companies fought over world consumption; today Belgium-based InBev (Anheuser-Busch InBev) controls 25 percent of the world’s beer market. SABMiller, the second largest brewer with 15 percent of the market, is a London-based conglomerate that formed when South African Breweries acquired U.S.-owned Miller in 2002. From 1947 to 1995, the number of large brewers in the U.S. fell 90 percent. As recently as 2003, American-owned Anheuser-Busch was the world’s largest beer company, with 12 breweries in the U.S. and 15 overseas, producing the world’s most popular beers: Bud Light and Budweiser. In 2004, the world’s third and fifth largest brewers, Belgian Interbrew and Brazilian AmBev, merged to create the world’s largest beer producer, AmBev. In the buyout frenzy of 2008, AmBev bought Anheuser-Busch for $52 billion to become InBev and control the popular beers: Budweiser, Michelob, Stella Artois and Bass. Yearly sales for InBev topped $40 billion in 2008, surpassing SABMiller-Miller Lite, Miller Draft, Henry Weinhard’s-with $21 billion in revenue. Today InBev is a behemoth with 151 beverage plants and 120,000 employees worldwide. The new company sells four of the top ten beers in the world, produces the first or second most popular beers in over 20 markets and ships beer to over a hundred countries. In 2007, to better compete with InBev, SABMiller announced a joint venture with Molson Coors, the world’s fifth largest beer producer. Headquartered in Chicago, the newly formed MillerCoors is controlled by its parent companies, London-based SABMiller and Canada-Colorado-based Molson Coors, which reported gross profits of 70 percent in March 2009. SABMiller corporate leadership forms half of MillerCoors’ board and receives 58 percent of the profits. Although microbreweries are growing in popularity-there were 1,300 in 2006-they represent a mere ten percent of total beer sales. There’s no way they can compete with the giants, who dominate the market. Approved in record times by President Bush’s Federal Trade Commission, these beer mergers have a number of drawbacks. Charisse Lebron, author of the Beer Duopoly Report, predicts that American shareholders will have difficulty attending annual meetings overseas. Less shareholder involvement could lead to lower environmental and labor standards, while InBev and MillerCoors replace local beer distributorships with direct distribution from the brewery. The current three-tier system of alcohol sales and distribution was established 75 years ago to prevent aggressive sales tactics and give states oversight of alcohol. “We advocate for the distributors because they are community based, have been around a long time, and are attuned and accountable to consumers and regulators,” Lebron said. An even more troubling problem arises over taxes, especially with government facing reduced tax revenues. Federal alcohol excise taxes haven’t been raised since 1991 and, adjusted for inflation, have lost 40 percent of their value. State taxes are similar: Wisconsin hasn’t raised its alcohol tax to keep up with inflation since 1969 and has lost 83 percent of its value. Maryland’s alcohol excise tax was set in 1972 at 9 cents a gallon, but would be 38 cents a gallon if it were adjusted for inflation. “Increasing taxes is the number one most effective way to reduce underage drinking and overall harm,” said Lebron. “The beer companies know that and are fighting it, despite the fact that alcohol harm in California alone amounts to $38 billion a year. In the U.S., it’s over $200 billion a year. Industries that cause harm, such as alcohol and tobacco, should be financially responsible for some portion of that harm.” The beer duopoly is spending large amounts to prevent tax increases. The Marin Institute estimates that in 2009 alone the beer lobby defeated bills to raise alcohol taxes in 14 states that cost taxpayers $2.6 billion in revenue. If alcohol taxes were adjusted for inflation nationwide, it would add $6 billion to tax coffers. Beer producers spend lavishly to defeat tax bills: On the national level, InBev spent over $1.5 million in 2008. Additionally, InBev, MillerCoors, and its parent companies, spent almost $6 million lobbying state and local governments. They threaten state legislatures with closed breweries and lost jobs if taxes rise. Americans are discovering that companies that once served their interest now determine their lives. Although some continue to support unregulated “free enterprise,” others find that powerful monopolies now determine government policy. It’s time to limit political contributions and control lobbying. Don Monkerud is an Aptos, California-based writer who writes about culture and politics. He can be reached at [email protected]. CategoriesBeer Previous PostPrevious Mr. and Mrs. Moron Brew Beer Next PostNext Beer Profile: Middle Ages Druid Fluid The Celebrity Cafe Bluff City Brewers Clarksville Carboys Embrace FUNK!!! Escambia Bay Brewers Escambia Bay Homebrewers mid state brew crew Niagara Association of Homebrewers Salt City Brewers DJ Allyn Jack Rice in the Crosshairs The Skeptic’s Annotated Bible Your Morals Betty Bowers: Religious Satire BJCP Cap and Hare Homebrew Forum Music City Brewers Saratoga Thoroughbrews Canadian Perspective
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/17730
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Kentucky Colonel: Honorable & Official Title Nominate a Colonel WebSite(s) Bluegrass 1965 Marse Henry Why the Colonel Badge (Shield) Credential (ID Card) List of Colonels Seal of Authenticity Uniforms/Costumes Wikipedia Citations Celebrity Colonels Famous Kentuckians First Colonels Historic Colonels Myth of 1813 US Newspapers Warrant Deeds Well-Known Colonels American Colonels Kentucky Colonelcy Colonel in Congress US Court Case Virginia (Dominion) Colonels in History Historic Colonels of Kentucky Before Kentucky became a state it had its colonels. Most significantly, Kentucky was founded by colonels, they were responsible for appointing the first justices, sheriffs, surveying the counties, establishing a government and even selected one of their own as its first governor. This section is currently under development. Most Notable Colonels Colonel Daniel Boone — Colonel Richard Henderson — Colonel James Harrod — Colonel John Bowman — Colonel Leonard Helm — Colonel Benjamin Logan — Colonel Thomas Slaughter — Colonel Richard Callaway — He took part in organizing the short-lived colony of Transylvania. In 1776, two of Callaway's daughters, along with Daniel Boone's Jemima, were kidnapped outside Boonesborough by Native Americans. Callaway led one of parties in the rescue of the girls. His nephew Flanders Callaway later married Jemima Boone. In April 1777, Callaway and John Todd were elected to the Virginia legislature as burgesses from Kentucky County, Virginia. In June 1778, he was appointed a justice of the peace and made colonel of the county's militia. On November 8, 1780, Colonel Richard Callaway was ambushed about a mile outside of Boonesborough by a Shawnee war party. He was killed and scalped, and his body was mutilated. Calloway County, Kentucky, was named after Callaway. Colonel Henry Skaggs — Colonel Abraham Hite — Colonel John Todd — Colonel Arthur Campbell — Colonel Robert Campbell — Colonel John Floyd — Colonel John Sevier — Colonel Evan Shelby — Colonel James Robertson — Colonel Robert Patterson — Colonel Stephen Trigg — Colonel James Knox — Colonel William Preston — Colonel Charles Lewis — Colonel William Fleming — Colonel John Field — Colonel William Pope — Colonel Joseph Crockett — Colonel Thomas Marshall — Colonel John Hardin — Colonel James Wilkinson — Colonel William Oldham — Colonel Joseph Hamilton Daviess — Colonel Abraham Owen — Colonel Samuel Wells — Colonel John Allen — Colonel J. M. Scott — Colonel William Lewis — Colonel Richard M. Johnson — Colonel William Cocke — As a colonel of militia in 1776, he led four companies of men into North Carolina's Washington District for action against the Indians. Later that year, he left Virginia and moved to what was to become Tennessee. During the organization of the State of Franklin, Cocke was elected as the would-be state's delegate to the Congress of the Confederation. Colonel John Marshall Harlan — (June 1, 1833 – October 14, 1911) was an American lawyer and politician who served as an associate justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. He is often called "The Great Dissenter" due to his many dissents in cases that restricted civil liberties, including the Civil Rights Cases and Plessy v. Ferguson. His grandson John Marshall Harlan II was also a Supreme Court justice. Colonel James Edward Pepper — known as a Master Distiller, was a bigger-than-life, flamboyant promoter, who was very proud of his distilling heritage – the third generation to produce Old Pepper whiskey. He claimed the oldest distillery – founded in 1780 – in the United States, the largest distillery in the world and the “best” whiskey in the United States. He was the original prototype of the "Kentucky Colonel" and lived life to the fullest, traveled in a private railcar and visited all the fashionable resorts in the United States and Europe. He bred and raced thoroughbreds on both sides of the Atlantic. He dreamed of building a stone castle on his farm outside of Lexington to rival the castles of Europe. More about Colonel Pepper Colonel Samuel Taylor Suit — was a Maryland businessman, entrepreneur, and agriculturalist. In 1867, he purchased some 300 acres of land just outside of Washington, DC, an estate that is now the basis for Suitland, Maryland. President of the Washington and Chesapeake and Washington City and Point Lookout Railroads, Col. Suit made his fortune from marketing whiskey in little brown jugs. His honorary title, "colonel,” seems to have been awarded during a stint at a Louisville, Kentucky distillery where he worked for a time as a young man. Col. Suit operated his own distillery, near the present site of the Census Bureau, and was responsible for building Suitland Road (one of the boundaries of the current Federal Center) as a shorter route to Washington. More about Colonel Suit Colonel Fain W. King — a Paducah lumber magnate and relic collector, purchased the site and began excavating the mounds and developing a tourist attraction. King, later joined by his wife, Blanche Busey King, opened the site to public visitation from the beginning of his work, calling the site at first the “King Mounds” and eventually naming it the “Ancient Buried City.” King directed excavations from 1932 until 1939. Some of their excavations followed proper archaeological techniques, but their field notes and other records have disappeared. In 1946, the Kings retired and donated the site to Western Baptist Hospital in Paducah. The Western Baptist Hospital owned the Ancient Buried City from 1946 to 1983. Read more about Colonel King Earle "The Kentucky Colonel" Combs — was born on May 14, 1899 in Pebworth, KY. He stood 6 feet tall and weighed 185 pounds. Combs batted left-handed, however, threw and wrote with his right hand. He received his teaching certificate in Tennessee while he served as player /manager for a local semi-pro team prior to a two year minor league stint in Louisville that began in 1922. By 1924, he finished the season with the New York Yankees where he would remain their starting "ball hawk" center fielder and leadoff hitter until 1935. Col. E. R. Bradley — Kentucky Colonel, Kentucky Legend, self-proclaimed gambler, bookmaker, and owner/manager of several casinos—was informed by his doctor that a more outdoor lifestyle might be beneficial to his health. Born on Dec. 12, 1859, Colonel Bradley wasn’t really a colonel. Although he partook in many different enterprises and activities during his younger days, military life was not among them. The “colonel” part of his name was actually an honorary title; he was a classic “Kentucky Colonel.” Thanks to his achievements in horse racing, he soon became a Kentucky legend. Charles W. Anderson Jr. — born 1907. He became an attorney and a civil rights leader, elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives, in 1935. He secured legislation improving education for all students, white and black, consideration for teachers, white and black, and is credited with the repeal of Kentucky’s public hanging law. Gov. A. B. Chandler commissioned him a Kentucky Colonel, the first African American so honored. Charles Stewart Todd — Well-known as a Kentucky colonel, however in searching for records of Todd's commission we could not find any documentation to support this, apparently he was recognized as a Kentucky colonel by some because he went to war and returned to Kentucky a colonel. Todd served in the US Army in the infantry in the War of 1812 under General William Harrison as a captain and aide-de-camp until 1814. When General Harrison retired, Todd came under the command of General Duncan McArthur as his adjunct, the following year he was made the Inspector General of the Michigan Territory with the rank of colonel, shortly thereafter Col. Todd returned to his home in Kentucky. More about Colonel Todd Colonel Harland Sanders — Homepage Header Image: Colonel David Wright of Tennessee internationally recognized work "Gateway to the West" hangs in numerous collections, as well as in the Booth Western Art Museum in Cartersville, GA and the Tennessee State Museum in Nashville. The Colonel's commissioned painting for Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, titled Gateway to the West – Daniel Boone Leading The Settlers Through The Cumberland Gap, 1775 has been made into a breathtaking wall-size mural that is on display at the Cumberland Gap Visitor’s Center." -Boone SocietyCumberland Gap (Poster); Image Size: 24" x 20"; Type: Poster; Price: $ 35; Category: American Frontier | Posters Social MediaFacebook Page Facebook Groups YouTube Channel Twitter Account LinkedIn Profile Colonel Quora ComPinterest BoardCrunchbase SU Kentucky Colonel Title and Law It is unlawful to impersonate a Kentucky Colonel™, punishable by a fine, imprisonment, or both. Kentucky colonels receive letters patent in their own name, recognize them honorably. Kentucky colonels (as individuals) may use "Kentucky Colonel," "Kentucky Colonel Commission," "Kentucky colonels" and/or "Kentucky colonelcy" as words or terms to describe [themselves], as an a honorary title, or for editorial, educational, informative, journalistic, literary , lawful or other non-commercial purposes. See Disclaimer. Popular LinksBibliographyTitle Mark (TM)ResourcesMyth of the ColonelUS NewspapersImage GalleryList of ColonelsWikipedia Article Kentucky Goodwill Ambassadors © 1998-2023 KENTUCKY COLONEL™ TITLE MARK, PEOPLE AND CIVIL OFFICE IN LAW, ESTABLISHED IN 1775 Copyright, Terms and Conditions, Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA 4.0) Freebase website is the Office of the Colonelcy. Archive #kycolonel
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/18274
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HAVANA FILM FESTIVAL NEW YORK HFFNY CELEBRATES ITS 15th ANNIVERSARY PAYING TRIBUTE TO CONTEMPORARY AND CLASSIC CUBAN CINEMA Photo courtesy of HFFNY 45-Latin American Film Line-Up Features a Record 24 Cuban Films Spanning 55 Years of Filmmaking in the Island 16 Films Compete for the coveted Havana Star Prize NEW YORK - Havana Film Festival New York (HFFNY), a project of American Friends of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba (AFLFC), will celebrate its 15th anniversary April 3-11, 2014, with a first-rate program showcasing 45 films from and about Latin America, the Caribbean, and Latinos in the United States. This year's line-up includes a record 24 Cuban films spanning 55 years of filmmaking in the island. The festival also features films from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, Spain, Guatemala, Panama, Puerto Rico and the U.S., screening throughout Manhattan, Queens, and The Bronx, with Quad Cinema in Manhattan as the main venue. All foreign language films are subtitled in English. "We want to celebrate our 15th anniversary by emphasizing the need to strengthen that meeting point where Latin America and the United States are perceived beyond the clichés and stereotypes usually assigned to each region through programming that highlights divergent and daring genres," said Diana Vargas, artistic director of HFFNY. "Along these lines, we welcome a unique open dialogue with the presence of over 17 Cuban filmmakers that represent the different generations and ways of producing films in today's Cuba." Photo courtesy of The Bronx Museum of the Arts HFFNY will warm up its engines on March 28 at 6pm with a free screening of 100 Sones Cubanos by composer and musician Edesio Alejandro as part of the First Fridays! event at The Bronx Museum of the Arts. This entertaining documentary traces the roots of Son, one of the most popular music rhythms in the island, through a travelogue to identify the 100 most representative songs of the genre. "The strength of our 15th edition clearly reflects the continuity and endurance of American Friends of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba's mission," said Carole Rosenberg, President of AFLFC. "By sharing with our New York audience and visiting filmmakers such a wide range of cinematic stories from all over the continent, HFFNY continues developing cultural bridges between the United States and Cuba within a Latin American context," added Ines Aslan, Executive Director of AFLFC. On Thursday April 3, starting at 5:45pm at the Director Guild Theater, HFFNY will roll out the red carpet to officially start off its 15th year anniversary with the U.S. premiere of Conducta / Behavior, the second feature by acclaimed Cuban director Ernesto Daranas (Los Dioses Rotos). Conducta, a box-office hit that had moviegoers flocking to theaters in Cuba for weeks, sending attendance records through the roof, tells the story of Chala, an 11-year-old boy who faces a difficult family situation. Fortunately he can count on Carmela, his six-grade teacher, who is convinced that Chala should have a second chance through education. Actors Alina Rodríguez, Armando Valdés, and Idalmis García will attend the screening, followed by a party at the Copacabana Nightclub. Photo courtesy of Copacabana On Friday, April 11, at 6:30pm, HFFNY will wrap up with the Havana Star Awards ceremony and the NY premiere of the Argentine film The German Doctor / El doctor alemán, written, produced and directed by Lucía Puenzo. The film chronicles the time period that Josef Mengele, the Nazi officer and physician known as the "Angel of Death," spent in Argentina's Patagonia region. In that remote land Mengele meets a local family with whom he might continue his human experiments in search of the "pure race." The German Doctor was Argentina's submission for this year's Foreign Language Oscar. The Closing Night party will feature live performances by Cuban luminaries Kelvis Ochoa and CuCu Diamantes, and her band members coming from Cuba. Sixteen films will be competing for Havana Star Awards for Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Documentary. The Best Picture winner will receive atheatrical run at Quad Cinema, our main hosting venue. Fiction Competition: Los dueños (Agustín Toscano, Ezequiel Radusky, Argentina), O lobo atrás da porta (Fernando Coimbra, Brasil), Las analfabetas (Moisés Sepulveda, Chile), Esther en alguna parte (Gerardo Chijona, Cuba), Conducta (Ernesto Daranas, Cuba), Melaza (Carlos Lechuga, Cuba), Se vende (Jorge Perugorría, Cuba), No robarás... A menos que sea necesario (Viviana Cordero, Ecuador), Tercera llamada (Francisco Franco, México), and La jaula de oro (Diego Quemada Díez, México-Guatemala). Documentary Competition: La Gorgona, historias fugadas (Camilo Botero, Colombia), Hay un grupo que dice (Lourdes Prieto, Cuba), Angels and Dust (Héctor Herrera, Panamá), Of Kites and Borders (Yolanda Pividal, U.S. - México), I Will be Murdered (Justin Webster, Guatemala - U.K.), and Sobre las olas: A Story of Flamenco in the U.S. (Carolina Loyola-Garía, U.S). Other festival attractions include the special presentation of Heli, the latest feature by Mexican festival-circuit darling Amat Escalante. The film, which garnered awards at Cannes and other important international festivals, depicts the struggles of a young couple whose love gets intertwined with Mexico's drug traffic violence. Cuban Indie Jirafas, by Kiki Álvarez, is the story of 3 youngsters who while sharing an apartment in La Habana get to know unexpected aspects of each other. NEW CUBAN CINEMA This year's HFFNY will pay tribute to Cuban cinema with New Cuban Cinema: 55 Years of a Shared Dream, a sidebar featuring 14 works spanning over five decades of production by the renown ICAIC. Curated by film critic and director of Cinemateca de Cuba Luciano Castillo, this special program presents a wide panorama of film production in the island through emblematic works little known in the U.S., some of which were subtitled and restored to near mint-condition especially for this occasion. The festival will also honor Cuban filmmaker Daniel Díaz Torres, who died last September, by showcasing two of his most famous works: his latest feature La película de Ana, whose leading actress Laura de la Uz will attend the NY premiere, and the classic Hacerse el sueco, a hilarious comedy. The Borough of Queens will get its share of the festival with screenings at the Museum of the Moving Image. On Friday, April 4 at 7:00pm, O lobo atrás da Portaby Brazilian Fernando Coimbra, will have its NY premiere followed by a Q&A with the director. On Saturday, April 5 at 6:30pm, Esther en alguna parte, by Cuban Gerardo Chijona, pays homage to stars of Cuban cinema such as Reinaldo Mirabales. OnSunday, April 6 at 5:00pm, a Guatemala - Mexico co-production directed by Diego Quemada-Diez that has won over thirty awards, La jaula de oro is the story of three Guatemalan kids trying to cross the border into Mexico. Opening Gala at Copacabana (Photo courtesy of HFFNY) On April 4, HFFNY will welcome to Quad Cinema three US-based Latino filmmakers: Yolanda Pividal, whose moving documentary Of Kites and Borders tells the lives of children living close to the border between Tijuana and San Diego; Cuban-American Lina Sarrello brings her Lobo, un cuento orisha, her own version of the Little Red Riding Hood with a tinge of santería; and the second short film by actress and director Laura Gómez, Hallelujah, where love might get a divine intervention that was probably not asked for. HFFNY is proud to welcome one of the most prestigious educational entities in the city: School of Visual Arts (SVA) and its BFA Film and Video Department. On Monday, April 7, SVA will present a special program on contemporary Cuban cinema. At 6:00pm, a retrospective of short films by young Cuban directors that exemplifies the work of a new generation of filmmakers will include Camionero by Sebastián Miló, La Trucha by Luis Ernesto Doñas, and Tarde para Ramón by Daniel Chile. At 7:30pm, an exceptional open dialogue discussing the modes of production in today's Cuban cinema for the first time in the U.S., New Horizons of Contemporary Cuban Cinema will feature Cuban directors Gerardo Chijona (Esther en alguna parte), Carlos Lechuga (Melaza), Jorge Perugorría (Se vende), Kiki Álvarez (Jirafas) producer Claudia Calviño (Juan de los muertos), and casting director Libia Batista (7 Days in Havana, Ché). On Tuesday, April 8, at NYU's King Juan Carlos of Spain Center, two films will share unknown chapters in Latin American history. Starting at 6:00pm, Cesó la horrible noche, by Ricardo Restrepo (Colombia), uses virgin footage to depict the heated climate and events that led to the violence on April 9 in Bogotá; and Coro de Silencio, by Roberto Rodríguez (Cuba - Puerto Rico), shares the director's experience as part of Operation Peter Pan. At 7:30pm, the round table Meet the industry: A look at the State of the Film Industry: International Markets and Distribution in the U.S., will feature industry experts Alfredo Calvino, director of Habanero Films, Elliot S. Kanbar, author of the book You Finally Finished Your Film. Now What?, and Louie Perego, director of Prime Latino Media. Last but not least, in association with Bildner Center for Western Hemisphere Studies at CUNY, HFFNY presents three iconic works of Cuban cinema included in the sidebar New Cuban Cinema: 55 Years of a Shared Dream: the Historias de la revolución by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Now! by Santiago Álvarez, and El Cowboy by Jesús de Armas. The screening will be followed by a talk by Luciano Castillo, curator of the series and director of Cinemateca de Cuba; and Jerry Carlson, Bildner Center Senior Fellow. Detailed information about all festival screenings and special programs is available at www.hffny.com. About the American Friends of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba American Friends of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba (AFLFC) is a leader in cultural exchange between the U.S. and Cuba. Its programs, including visual arts, film, and dance initiatives, enable American and Cuban artists, art students, professionals, and academics to interact with each other, providing rich and rewarding experiences that are fundamental for the development of their careers while building cultural bridges between both nations. For more information, visit www.aflfc.org. About the Havana Film Festival New York AFLFC's flagship project, Havana Film Festival New York (HFFNY) annually premieres exceptional films from and about Latin America, the Caribbean, and Latinos in the U.S.HFFNY collaborates with Havana's International Festival of New Latin American Cinema to introduce its audience to prominent and emerging filmmakers by showcasing the latest award-winning films and classics from and about Latin America, the Caribbean and the U.S. Latino community. HFFNY seeks to cultivate audience-artist dialogue through panel discussions designed to give a behind-the-scenes look at an industry that continues to gain global recognition. The festival program offers directors, actors and producers an opportunity to exchange ideas, enriches and expands the vision of Latino culture and provides a multi-cultural experience for a diverse audience. HFFNY FESTIVAL VENUES Directors Guild Theater - 110 West 57th St. (Bet. 6th & 7th Aves.), Manhattan Quad Cinema - 34 West 13th St. (Bet. 5th & 6th Aves.), Manhattan Museum of the Moving Image - 35th Ave. at 37th St., Astoria, Queens The Bronx Museum of the Arts - 1040 Grand Concourse at 165th St., The Bronx King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center, NYU - 53 Washington Square South, Manhattan SVA (School of Visual Arts) Theatre - 333 West 23rd St., Manhattan CUNY Graduate Center - 365 Fifth Ave. (Bet. 34th & 35th St.) #C204, Manhattan Download PDF program here Passes & Ticket information Labels: American Friends of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba, Copacabana, Cuba, Cuban Cinema, Diana Vargas, Events in New York, Film Festivals, Havana, Havana Film Festival New York, Havana Star Prize, HFFNY, New York
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WATER CARNIVAL EventsGifts for Kids (December)Gun Bingo (April)Pitch, Hit, and Run (May)Water Carnival (July)Stagette (October)Smaller Events History of the US Jaycees Henry Giessenbier The U.S. Junior Chamber founder Henry Giessenbier’s vision of providing young people with leadership through community service can be broken down into four Areas of Opportunity: Business, Individual, Community, and International. Business: embodying the line of the Jaycee Creed, which states “Economic justice can best be won by free men through free enterprise,” this area provides an opportunity for individual members to contribute to the development and enhancement of the economic infrastructure, prosperity, and well-being for their community as well as all nations. Individual: embodying the line of the Jaycee Creed which states “Earth’s great treasure lies in human personality,” this area provides an opportunity for individual members to realize their personal potential through training programs. Community: embodying the line of the Jaycee Creed which states “Service to humanity is the best work of life,” this area develops the sensitivity of individual members to societal problems and community dynamics by providing experience in community problem solving. International: embodying the line of the Jaycee Creed which states “That the brotherhood of man transcends the sovereignty of nations,” this area provides an opportunity for individual members to contribute to the development of goodwill, understanding, and cooperation among all peoples. The Junior Chamber organization is: “a constructive action organization of young persons who devote a portion of their time to community service in the public interest, developing young persons as leaders in their communities.” (Taken from The U.S. Junior Chamber Bylaws Manual.) The purpose of the Junior Chamber is: “to promote and foster the growth and development of young persons’ civic organizations in the United States, designed to inculcate (to teach and impress upon) in the individual membership of such organization a spirit of genuine Americanism and civic interest, and…to provide them with opportunity for personal development and achievement and an avenue for intelligent participation…in the affairs of the community, state, and nation, and to develop true friendship and understanding among young persons of all nations.” (Taken from The U.S. Junior Chamber Bylaws Manual.) Simply put, the purpose of the local chapter is to become a force for good in the community, determining community needs and providing solutions by planning and facilitating community service projects. In the act of serving, members receive hands-on experience, which translates to the enhancement of personal growth and the development of valuable leadership skills. This is the total Junior Chamber Concept. Henry “Hy” Giessenbier visualized an organization that would allow young men to develop their business skills and reputations in the community. In his era, most young men were out of school and working by the age of 15. Their first jobs were most likely the jobs they held throughout their lives. With luck and hard work, some might reach executive positions by their forties. Giessenbier felt that young men were not receiving the opportunities necessary to develop their skills at a younger age, thus depriving our nation of an important resource, and so he formed the founding ideals of the U.S. Junior Chamber. 1915 Mission Inn St. Louis Mo – Birthplace of the Jaycees The origin of Junior Chamber can be traced as far back as 1910 to the city of St. Louis, Missouri, in the United States of America. A young man named Henry Giessenbier and his friends formed the Herculaneum Dance Club, a social outlet for the community’s youth. Unknown at the time, Giessenbier was laying the foundation for what would become a global movement. On October 13, 1915, the first JCI Movement was founded when 32 men joined to form the Young Men’s Progressive Association (YMPCA) at the Mission Inn located in their hometown of St. Louis, USA. Five years later, in 1915, Colonel H.N. Morgan, a prominent St. Louis citizen, inspired the members of the dance club to become more involved in civic issues. Giessenbier and 32 other young men formed the Young Men’s Progressive Civic Association (YMPCA) on October 13, 1915. This organization grew to a membership of 750 in less than five months. THE BIRTH OF JUNIOR CHAMBER The very next year, 1916, saw another change of name as the YMPCA became Junior Citizens, commonly called JCs, which later became Jaycees. The year 1918 marked another change as the JCs were affiliated with the St. Louis Chamber of Commerce and officially became the St. Louis Junior Chamber of Commerce. After WWI, Giessenbier contacted other cities in the United States with similar young businessmen’s groups, and, subsequently, 29 clubs from around the nation formed the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. Henry Giessenbier was elected the first President of the national organization. CROSSING THE ATLANTIC The international chapter of the organization began in 1923 with the Winnipeg Board of Trade’s becoming the first Junior Chamber outside the United States. By 1928 the idea of an international body crossed the Atlantic Ocean to England. In 1940 a resolution was passed by the United States Junior Chamber approving a program to further mutual interests among countries in Central and South America. This lead to the establishment of Junior Chambers in Mexico City, Guatemala City, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama City in 1943. The realization of Junior Chamber International had begun. In 1944 the first international conference was held in Mexico City. Raul Garcia Vidal of Mexico was elected the first President. The countries which formed Junior Chamber International were: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama and the United States of America. THE FIRST WORLD CONGRESS Two years later, in February of 1946, the first World Congress was held in Panama City. This congress was attended by 44 delegates from 16 different countries. The international organization was formally constituted, a temporary constitution was approved, and the word “Commerce” was omitted from the official name. Erasmo Chambonnet of Panama was elected the second JCI President at that Congress, and Australia and Canada were officially affiliated. In 1948 the JCI Creed was officially adopted at the IV JCI World Congress in Rio de Janeiro, and in 1952 a permanent Secretariat was established. In 1972 the name was changed to Jaycees International; however, in 1988 the name was changed back to Junior Chamber International. U.S. Junior Chamber History 1920 – The United States Junior Chamber of Commerce (USJCC) was formed in St. Louis, Missouri, with 3,000 members. 1923 – Get Out The Vote was the first Jaycee program to receive national endorsement. 1925 – Beginning of national projects Know America First and Fire Prevention. Birth of EXPANSION, the first USJCC national magazine. 1926 – Development of aviation adopted as national project. 1927 – Jaycee Charles A. Lindbergh made the first solo flight between New York and Paris. Jaycees worked with Lindbergh to develop the U.S. Air Mail Service. 1931 – Distinguished Service Awards program established at the chapter level. 1935 – Death of founder Henry Giessenbier. 1936 – National Wildlife Federation established with guidance of USJCC. 1937 – Programs begun at state and national level to inform public of need for diagnosis and treatment of venereal disease. 1938 – Future Magazine established. USJCC name Ten Outstanding Young Men for the first time. 1939 – Safety with Light campaign gained national attention as thousands of street lights were donated to communities by Jaycees. 1940 – USJCC endorsed the principle of a military draft. 1941 – The Wilmington Junior Chamber of Commerce is Charter in March 1944 – Junior Chamber International (JCI) formed at Pan American Congress in Mexico City. 1946 – USJCC established permanent headquarters in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Junior Golf program begun. 1947 – Official approval of Jaycee as synonym of organization. Adoption of Jaycee Creed. ‍1951 – War Memorial Headquarters in Tulsa dedicated. At urging of Andy Mungenast, the reference to “Faith in God” was added to the Jaycee Creed. ‍1953 – Jaycees sponsored stops on Professional Golfers’ Association tour for first time atGreensboro, North Carolina, and Hartford, Connecticut. ‍1954 – First Outstanding Young Farmer and Junior Tennis programs held. ‍1959 – Jaycees supported statehood for Alaska. Hawaii gained statehood the following year due to Jaycee efforts. ‍1961 – First Governmental Affairs Leadership Seminar conducted. ‍1962 – Jaycees urge adoption of Uniform Vehicle Code, with emphasis on state action resulting in adoption nationally. ‍1963 – Clean Water Program launched to improve water quality in communities across America. Shooting Education adopted as a national program. ‍1964 – Project Concern adopted as International Relations activity. Program raised money and equipment for clinics providing medical care to Chinese refugees in Hong Kong. ‍1965 – Jaycees presented first annual National Award of Distinction from National Clean Up-Paint Up-Fix Up Bureau. 1966 – Name of organization officially changed to U.S. Jaycees. ‍1970 – Do Something campaign sparked national interest in volunteerism. Jaycees’ cooperation with other service organizations resulted in the founding of the National Center for Voluntary Action. ‍1971 – More than 3,000,000 volunteer hours were provided by Jaycees to help administer seven million doses of rubella measles vaccine. ‍1972 – Jaycees undertook model Operation Identification program to combat burglaries and aid crime prevention efforts. Five million stickers were distributed nationally through Operation Red Ball to reduce fire fatalities. Bylaw change admitted 18-year-olds as regular members. ‍1973 – The United States Jaycees’ Center for Improved Child Nutrition opened in Bloomington, Minnesota. ‍1977 – Operation Threshold, a program dedicated to reducing alcohol abuse, reached more than 23 million Americans. Muscular Dystrophy Fund Raising adopted as national program. ‍1980 – Daisy/U.S. Jaycees Shooting Education program honored with National Safety Council Award for Youth Activities. ‍1982 – Healthy American Fitness Leaders adopted as national program. ‍1984 – Bylaw change admitted women as full and regular members. Sign Up America campaigncollected 1.5 million signatures supporting America’s Olympic athletes. ‍1985 – The U.S. Jaycees endorsed Campaign for Liberty to encourage public support for restoration of Statue of Liberty. St. Jude Fundraising adopted as national program. ‍1986 – First woman honored by Congress of Ten Outstanding Young Americans. ‍1987 – Bylaw change established membership age as 21 through 39. Name of U.S. Jaycees’ official publication changed to JAYCEES MAGAZINE. ‍1990 – Name of organization officially changed back to The U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce. ‍1992 – National Wake Up America program urged communities to get involved in politics by coordinating voter registration campaigns, hosting debates, and embracing pertinent community issues. Jaycees responded to devastating hurricanes in the southeast with national support. ‍1993 – GreenWorks! environmental education and community action program adopted by USJCC. Jaycees Against Youth Smoking (JAYS) adopted as national program. Junior Chamber members were instrumental in bringing relief to the flood-stricken Midwest. ‍1994 – Junior Chamber Mission Inn Foundation created to build a nationwide network of care facilities for children and adolescents affected by HIV/AIDS. ‍1995 – The Jaycee Alliance was formed as a non-partisan, educational, grassroots governmental advocacy organization to give young Americans a voice in government. The Jaycee KidCare I.D. Program was organized to provide identification to aid in the recovery of missing children. ‍1996 – The Jaycees Wake Up America Tour bus began a journey through the 48 contiguous states promoting programs and membership. Social Security Reform Town Hall Meetings program initiated. ‍1997 – Junior Chamber Center for Entrepreneurship and Career Advancement begun — a program designed to train young entrepreneurs and improve local economies. ‍1998 – Junior Chamber Center for Entrepreneurship and Career Advancement name changed to Junior Chamber Center for Business Advancement. Two new programs, National Business Network and Virtual Networking, added to encourage Junior Chamber members to business network via the Internet both nationally and internationally. 1999 – JAYS program reintroduced as an educational program that informs children about the dangers of smoking. Value Investing and Career Advancement added to the Junior Chamber Center for Business Advancement. 2000 – First female elected National President. Junior Chamber Center for Business Advancement develops web-based video seminar training. For more insight on how the Junior Chamber has affected the lives of its members, the following book is recommended: A Legacy of Leadership, by John W. Clark, USJCC Historian. This book can be obtained by contacting The Junior Chamber Products Department. You can e-mail them at: [email protected] or visit them at www.juniorchamber.org HomeEventsmEMBERSHIPGALLERYHISTORYDonationsContact water carnivalbASH ON THE BEACH PO Box 456, Detroit Lakes, MN 56502 2023 © Detroit Lakes Jaycees | Nonprofit Corporation| All Rights Reserved.
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Road Infrastructure Rail Infrastructure Port Infrastructure Innovation in modular construction: Leading companies in paving material distributing machine Innovation in robotics: Leading companies in vacuum-insulated glazing for the construction industry Innovation in Internet of Things: Leading companies in smart toilet for the construction industry India’s NHAI uses steel slag in road construction on trial basis 105 Victoria Street Redevelopment, London, UK Gioia 20 Towers, Milan, Italy Bosco Verticale (Vertical Forest), Milan, Italy Atlassian Central, Sydney, Australia Who’s saying what? Mentions of internet of things decreased by 61% in the construction industry in Q3 2022 Who’s saying what? Mentions of robotics decreased by 70% in the construction industry in Q3 2022 Who’s saying what? Mentions of social responsibility decreased by 35% in the construction industry in Q3 2022 Wood solutions for the construction industry How smart technology is making cities more sustainable Singapore infrastructure spending set to exceed $10bn per year The quality of infrastructure in Singapore is among the highest in the world, reflecting high levels of investment supported by years of political stability and general economic prosperity. The government is continuing to invest in developing the country’s infrastructure, particularly its transport networks, and low levels of risk ensure Singapore remains an attractive destination for private institutions investing in infrastructure projects through public-private funding initiatives. The government aims to expand the length of the country’s railway network, from 230km in 2018 to 360km by 2030, increasing the density and reach of mass rapid transit (MRT), so that eight out of ten households will be within a ten-minute walk from a train station. The two main MRT developments are the Cross Island MRT line and the Thomson-East Coast MRT Line (TEL). Construction of Phase 1 of the Cross Island MRT line (CRL1) is due to start in 2020, and be completed by 2029. It will stretch 29km, out of the full length of the project of 50km. TEL will add 43km to the MRT network, with Phase 1 of the project set to be completed by 2019, with the remaining four phases all under construction and set to be completed by 2024. The government plans to build a new terminal at Changi International Airport by 2030, named Terminal 5, which will increase the passenger handling capacity from 85 million per year in 2018 to 135 million per year by 2030. It will also involve the construction of three runway and tunnelling systems on a 1,080ha area, with a total investment of SGD7.5 billion (US$10.0 billion). Of the total investment of US$10 billion, the government will directly fund around 70% of the project, with the remainder being provided by Changi Airport Group, which is held by the Finance Ministry. In addition to transport, Singapore is also investing in water infrastructure, with Deep Tunnel Sewerage System: Phase II, which includes a conveyance system comprising 40km of deep tunnels and 60km of link sewers to create an interconnected network that channels used water by gravity to a new water reclamation plant (WRP), the Tuas WRP. The US$4.8 billion project is due to be completed by 2025. In total, GlobalData is tracking infrastructure projects in Singapore with a total value of US$95.2 billion, of which close to 80% comprises publicly-funded projects. If all the projects in the current pipeline proceed as planned, spending could reach US$9.8 billion in 2020 and US$10.7 billion in 2021, with spending on railway projects accounting for 45% of the total. @globaldataplc ECO/Satarem ÔÇô Tha Rong Chang Waste-to-Energy Plant 10 MW Ô... ECO/Satarem – Tha Rong Chang Waste-to-Energy Plant 10 MW – S... Agni – Bera Biomass Power Plant 10 MW – Pahang Reform – Fleetwood Energy-from-Waste Plant 10 MW – Lancashire TEL Ltd WRP Pty Ltd India announces budget, with significant boost for capital expenditure US residential construction weakness bears down on construction spending After stability in late 2022, the UK construction industry is set to weaken UK construction shows resilience, but major challenges ahead The leading site for news and procurement in the construction industry
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Horror » » » "Jaws," one of the most riveting sea dramas in motion picture history and one of the most technically difficult films ever attempted, was personally produced by Richard D. Zanuck and David Brown, whose presentation of "The Sting" won the Academy Award as Best Picture of the Year. Directed by Steven Spielberg, acclaimed by film Critics for his earlier Zanuck/Brown production, "The Sugartand Express," "Jaws" stars Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss as three men who become allied in a life-and-death hunt to destroy a killer embodying nearly three tons of instant white death. Benchley wiote the screenplay with Carl Gottlieb, Co-starred are Lorraine Gary, Murray Hamilton, Carl Gottlieb, Jeffrey C. Kramer and Susan Backlinie. For his second theatrical feature picture, Steven Spielberg took on the most complex film assignment in many years, with technical challenges and technical problems that would have staggered an assortment of veteran directors. Roy Scheider, starred as Amity's police chief, won an Academy Award nomination for his performance in "The French Connection," and vaulted to stardom in "The Seven Ups" and "Sheila Levine is Dead and Living in New York." The lean, intense actor's theatrical film credits include "Klute," "Paper Lion," "Puzzle of a Downfall Child," "The Outside Man" and "L'Attentat." the latter two filmed as French language motion pictures with Jean LouisTrintignant. The role of Quint, the colorful shark fisherman with a touch of the manic, marks British actor Robert Shaw's third successive film characterization as an American, following his Chicago gangster in "The Sting," and his New York master criminal in "The Taking of Pelham One, Two, Three." One of England's reigning theatre stars, he faced film cameras in "A Man For All Seasons," for which he received an Academy Award nomination, "Royal Hunt of the Sun," "Custer of the West" and "Battle of the Bulge." Shaw is also a gifted novelist and playwright. Richard Dreyfuss took a giant step toward stardom in "American Graffiti," and negotiated the remaining distance as the opportunistic hero of "The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz," The Brookly n-born actor began his career on the stage in New York and has been seen importantly in segments of television series. Among his movie credits is "Dillinger," for which he was recommended to director John Milius for the role of Baby Face Nelson by "American Graffiti" director George Lucas. Pre-filming began in the waters off the South coast of Australia with Ron and Valerie Taylor, who photographed Peter Gimbel's "Blue Water, White Death," the definifive film documentary on sharks, obtaining rare live shark footage to fit the story line. Principal photography began at Martha's Vineyard, Mass., the largest island in New England and, like the fictitious Amity, a mecca for summer tourists. Lorraine Gary, the Ellen Brody of "Jaws," is no stranger to television viewers, having guest starred in more than 40 series episodes, among them "Ironside," "McMillan & Wife," "Kojak" and "The Rookies," before moving over to the theatrical film side. She recently formed her own New Hope production company and is producing, in association with Robert Stigwood Productions, four feature-length movies about women from her own original stories for the NBC Television Network. Murray Hamilton, who was in "The Way We Were," and "The Graduate," essays the role of Amity's mayor, who puts his own interests as a businessman before those of the townspeople. Both novelist Peter Benchley and his co-screenwriter Carl Gottlieb play roles in the film - Gottlieb, who appeared in "The Long Goodbye," as editor of the Amity Gazette, and Benchley, a newcomer to acting, as a television newscaster who interviews beach people on the shark attacks. Gottlieb, an Emmy-winning writer, is the author of "The Jaws Log," an account of the filming at Martha's Vineyard, published by Dell. The jackhammer excitement and suspense of "Jaws," along with the brooding mystery of the eternal sea and its creatures great and small, are heightened by John Williams' original music score. Richard D. Zanuck and David Brown acknowledge the cooperation of the National Geographic Society and Mr. L.J.V. Compagno, of Stanford University's Department of Biological Sciences, in the production of "Jaws." Click here for more Lobby Cards 7 cards 11x14 Jaws 1 poster Yugoslavia 15.75x21 folded Jaws 1 1-Sheet Italian 39x55 folded Jaws 1 Pressbook Jaws 1 1-Sheet Rerelease 27x41 Jaws 1 B2 JPN Japanese 20x29 Folded Jaws 1 1-Sheet Intl Linen 27x41 Tri-Folded
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RADIANT REFLECTIONS Rio de Janeiro or just simply Rio, is one of the most visited cities in the Southern Hemisphere and is known for its natural settings, Carnival, samba, bossa nova and balneario beaches such as Barra da Tijuca, Copacabana, Ipanema and Leblon. The city has a remarkable architectural heritage, some of the country’s best museums and galleries, superb restaurants and a vibrant nightlife. With so much to see and do, Rio can easily occupy a week and you may well find it difficult to drag yourself away. As Rio achieved independence from the Portuguese rulers, the city expanded politically, culturally, economically and architecturally. Montevideo is the largest city, the capital, and the chief port of Uruguay. The settlement was established in 1726 by Bruno Mauricio de Zabala, as a strategic move amidst a Spanish-Portuguese dispute over the platine region, and as a counter to the Portuguese colony at Colonia del Sacramento. According to the census of 2004, Montevideo has a population of 1,325,968. It has an area of 200 square miles and extends 12 miles from west to east. The southernmost cosmopolitan capital city in the Americas and third most southern in the world, it is situated in the southern coast of the country, on the northeastern bank of the Río de la Plata. The city was under brief British rule in 1807 and was involved in the first major naval battle in the Second World War: the Battle of the River Plate. Punta del Este is a city and resort on the Atlantic Coast in the Maldonado Department of southeastern Uruguay. Although the city has a year-round population of about 9,280, municipality to which the city belongs. It includes Punta del Este proper and Península areas. It is a beach resort town complete with casinos, beaches, yachts and lots of tourists. Many of these tourists come from the other side of the Rio de la Plata from Argentina to get some nice fun in the sun on a beach away from the brown waters of the Rio de la Plata. Buenos Aires F.D. One of South America‘s booming capitals and major cities, Buenos Aires is a seductive and cultured city with an eclectic mix of people and places. Elegant yet always bustling, Buenos Aires also encapsulates the very essence of Argentina. The city is known for its European atmosphere, passionate tango and vibrant nightlife. MEDITERRANEAN FLAIR Barcelona, Pisa, Taormina, Dubrovnik, Monte Carlo, Toulon, Venice, Kotor, Cannes, Civitavecchia, Corfu, Positano ENCHANTING PEARLS From Los Angeles MEDITERRANEAN CROSSROADS Barcelona, Ibiza Town, Bandol, Palma, Monte Carlo, Cagliari, Corsica, Valencia SPRINGTIME CROSSING Barcelona, Nassau, Miami, Motril NORTHERN FRONTIERS From Harstad Harstad, Bergen, Justvik, Geiranger, Bodø, Skagen, Southampton, Hellesylt, Ålesund, Norway, Oslo, Haugesund GLAMOROUS RETREATS From Portofino Portofino, Bandol, Monte Carlo, Toulon, Terranova, Civitavecchia, Saint-Tropez PACIFIC PALETTE PACIFIC RENDEZVOUS From Ushuaia Ushuaia, Rio de Janeiro, Coquimbo, Lima, Montevideo, Ilha Grande, Punta del Este, Santos, Paraty, Pisco, Costa Rica, Arica, Porto Belo, Chek Chue, Mission San Rafael, Búzios, Rio Grande, Puerto Montt, City of Valparaiso, Buenos Aires F.D., Puerto Chacabuco
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7-DAY GLACIER BAY FROM SEATTLE About Victoria State You will visit the following 5 places: Skagway is a first-class borough in Alaska on the Alaska Panhandle. The port of Skagway is a popular stop for cruise ships, and the tourist trade is a big part of the business of Skagway. The White Pass and Yukon Route narrow gauge railroad, part of the area's mining past, is now in operation purely for the tourist trade and runs throughout the summer months. Skagway is also part of the setting for Jack London's book The Call of the Wild and for Joe Haldeman's novel Guardian. The City and Borough of Juneau is a unified municipality located on the Gastineau Channel in the panhandle of the U.S. state of Alaska. It has been the capital of Alaska since 1906, when the government of the then-District of Alaska was moved from Sitka as dictated by the U.S. Congress in 1900. Juneau is home to Perseverance Theatre, Alaska's only professional theater. The city hosts the annual Alaska Folk Festival and Juneau Jazz & Classics music festivals, and the biennial Celebration. The Juneau Symphony performs regularly. Downtown Juneau boasts dozens of art galleries, which participate in the monthly First Friday Gallery Walk and the enormously popular December Gallery Walk held in the first week of December. The Juneau Arts & Humanities Council coordinates events while fund-raising, distributing some grant money, and operating a gallery at its office in the Juneau Arts & Culture Center, 350 Whittier Street. On summer Friday evenings open-air music and dance performances are held at Marine Park. Ketchikan is an Alaskan city facing the Inside Passage, a popular cruise route along the state's southeastern coast. The city is named after Ketchikan Creek, which flows through the town, emptying into the Tongass Narrows a short distance southeast of its downtown. Civic boosters have dubbed the community the "Salmon Capital of the World". The Misty Fiords National Monument is one of the area's major attractions, and the Tongass National Forest has long been headquartered in Ketchikan, mostly in the city's historic Federal Building. Seattle is the northernmost major city in the contiguous United States, and the largest city in the Pacific Northwest and in the state of Washington. A seaport situated on a narrow isthmus between Puget Sound (an arm of the Pacific Ocean) and Lake Washington, about 100 miles (160 km) south of the Canada – United States border, it is named after Chief Sealth "Seattle", of the Duwamish and Suquamish native tribes. Seattle is the center of the Seattle–Tacoma–Bellevue metropolitan statistical area, the 15th largest in the United States, and the largest in the northwestern United States. Seattle is the county seat of King County and is the major economic, cultural and educational center in the region. The 2010 census found that Seattle is home to 630,320 residents within a metropolitan area of some 3.4 million inhabitants. The Port of Seattle and Seattle–Tacoma International Airport are major gateways to Asia, Alaska, and the rest of the world. Victoria State Victoria is a state in the south-east of Australia. It is Australia's most densely populated state and its second-most populous state overall. Most of its population is concentrated in the area surrounding Port Phillip Bay, which includes the metropolitan area of its capital and largest city, Melbourne, which is Australia's second-largest city. Politically, Victoria has 37 seats in the Australian House of Representatives and 12 seats in the Australian Senate. At state level, the Parliament of Victoria consists of the Legislative Assembly (the lower house) and the Legislative Council (the upper house). The economy of Victoria is highly diversified: service sectors including financial and property services, health, education, wholesale, retail, hospitality and manufacturing constitute the majority of employment. 14-DAY EASTERN AND WESTERN CARIBBEAN FROM PORT CANAVERAL From Georgetown University Georgetown University, Charlotte Amalie, Tortola Island, San Miguel de Cozumel, Ocho Rios, Port Canaveral Trailer Park 16-DAY FROM SEATTLE TO TOKYO: ALASKA, JAPAN & RUSSIA Tokyo, Seattle 7-DAY WESTERN CARIBBEAN FROM MIAMI (VARIATION) From Falmouth Falmouth, Miami, San Miguel de Cozumel, George Town, Great Stirrup Cay 11-DAY WESTERN CARIBBEAN FROM PORT CANAVERAL From Belize Belize, Riviera Maya, San Miguel de Cozumel, George Town, Coxen Hole, Ocho Rios, Great Stirrup Cay, Port Canaveral Trailer Park 12-DAY DENALI/ALYESKA EXPLORER - NORTHBOUND CRUISETOUR Skagway, Juneau, Vancouver, Seward, Ketchikan 7-DAY BAHAMAS ROUND-TRIP NEW YORK: GREAT STIRRUP CAY, ORLANDO & NASSAU From Cape Canaveral Cape Canaveral, Nassau, New York, Great Stirrup Cay 13-TRANSATLANTIC FROM NEW YORK From An Cobh An Cobh, Le Havre, New York City, Zeebrugge, The Convent Amsterdam 7-DAY ADRIATIC & GREECE FROM VENICE From Dubrovnik Dubrovnik, Venice, Piraeus, Split 10-DAY EASTERN CARIBBEAN FROM NEW YORK From San Juan San Juan, Charlotte Amalie, Tortola Island, New York City, Philipsburg More about Norwegian Cruise Line
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Strategic Advisory & Government Enforcement (SAGE) Ethan Ma Discusses Improvements in China IP Law Orrick partner Yufeng (Ethan) Ma recently spoke with Corporate Counsel on China’s changing attitudes towards intellectual property. The country has long been thought of as having little respect for IP, but with new courts and laws focused on addressing infringement, much has improved. One highlight is the establishment of three dedicated IP courts, and the staffing of 3,000 judges in different levels of courts throughout the country who hear exclusively IP-related suits. According to Ma, “They're probably the best judges in China.” Ma noted that China has also significantly altered its existing IP laws, including allowing rights owners to appeal administrative infringement rulings to judicial courts, which provides them with more protection. In addition, the judicial interpretation on patent infringement litigation has been revised to allow courts to award higher damages in infringement cases. “China is headed in the right direction,” Ma said. The greater emphasis on IP has made life easier for foreign companies who do business in China as well as domestic companies. Ma pointed out that 95 percent of all IP litigation in China is between Chinese companies and does not involve any foreign multinationals. However, one regulation that could greatly affect multinational corporations concerns the compensation paid to domestic employees for their inventions, as many companies have launched research centers in China. “This regulation is making companies nervous,” said Ma, continuing, “Companies still have the right to set the amount of the reward, but if it is not deemed reasonable, they could be required to pay an amount that is dictated by statute.”​ Yufeng (Ethan) Ma Partner, Intellectual Property, Trade Secrets Litigation D: +86 21 6109 7108 Trade Secrets Litigation IP Counseling & Due Diligence International Arbitration & Dispute Resolution Yufeng (Ethan) Ma Partner Yufeng (Ethan) Ma, a partner and the chief representative in Orrick’s Shanghai office, has over 18 years of experience assisting clients in intellectual property (IP) related matters including IP litigation before the US International Trade Commission (ITC) and the US federal courts. In addition to specializing in complex IP litigation relating to patent infringement, ITC 337 investigations, trade secrets misappropriation and unfair competition, Ethan has extensive experience advising clients on IP administrative disputes and reexamination, IP strategies, IP due diligence, and IP aspects of strategic transactions, including licensing or transfer, mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and collaborations. His clients cover a wide range of industries, including medical devices, hardwares, softwares, internet, semiconductors, electronics, telecommunications, AI, automobile, chemical, materials, energy, etc. His recent clients include Baidu, Tencent, SMIC, JD.com, Bianlifeng, Shanghai Sansi Electronic Engineering, Yaham Optoelectronics, CreateLED Electronics, Coolpad, vivo, Shenzhen Howshow Technology, Huayi Mechanical and Electrical, Shenzhen INFiLED Electronics, Applied Materials, Synopsys, Carbon, Inc., etc. Over the years, Ethan has represented dozens of Chinese companies in resolving their IP disputes in the U.S. Ethan and his litigation teams won a number of high-profile ITC investigations involving Chinese companies and earned clients’ long-term trust. In one investigation (337-TA-623), his clients are four subsidiaries of a large state-owned company in China, who were sued for patent infringement. The Commission reversed the late Chief Administrative Law Judge’s unfavorable decision and found that Ethan’s clients were not infringing and did not violate Section 337. In another investigation (337-TA-655), he represented the complainant and its subsidiaries in China suing a group of Chinese respondents for trade secret misappropriation. The ITC issued a 10-year exclusion order against these respondents. This landmark decision represents a new development of trade secret law and ITC jurisdiction in the U.S., and was upheld by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Since then, Ethan has won case after case on behalf of his clients, keeping his undefeated record to this day. He is also committed to resolving disputes in the most cost-effective and timely way. “Ethan always tries to resolve matters for clients at the lowest cost possible,” said a client who won a case as he recommended Ethan to his peers. For instance, in 2017, Ethan successfully defended Shenzhen Howshow Technology against Kent Displays, Inc. in an ITC 337 investigation (337-TA-1035) involving alleged infringement of patents relating to liquid crystal e-writers and components. Orrick secured a complete victory for the client by forcing the complainant to unconditionally withdraw after four months of active litigation. The case was named “Deal of the Year 2017 – Disputes and Investigations” by China Business Law Journal. In another case, Ethan successfully defended Shanghai Sansi Electronic Engineering Co., CreateLED Electronics Co., Yaham Optoelectronics Co. and other Chinese respondents against Ultravision Technologies in an ITC Section 337 investigation (337-TA-1114) filed on 27 March 2018 involving alleged infringement of patents relating to certain modular LED display panels and components. The complainant was forced to withdraw the complaint unconditionally during the expert discovery period in November 2018, which led to a final termination by the ITC on 21 February 2019. Prior to joining Orrick, Ethan served as Director of IP, Asia of a world leader in specialty glass and ceramics, where he was in charge of the company’s daily IP matters in China and throughout Asia. Before that, he was a partner and member of the Board at McAndrews, Held & Malloy in Chicago, Illinois. Ethan was the first non-US born lawyer of that firm. In the past 18 years, Ethan has been committed to building bridges and facilitating understanding between China and the US on IP protection and exchange. In addition to being a frequent speaker at various seminars and conferences in China and the US, Ethan regularly publishes articles and has been interviewed by numerous media. He served as a committee member of the Asian Legal Committee of Intellectual Property Owners Association (IPO) for many years. Ethan is also actively involved in the “One Belt One Road” and “Going Out” initiatives led by the PRC government and non-profit organizations. He participated in Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce’s “Going Overseas Service Portal” project in 2019, and acts as a special advisor to Wisdom IP - Overseas Intellectual Property Alliance (WIPA), Nanjing, Jiangsu.
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/21872
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Swantham Bharya Zindabad 2010 Indian film Theatrical poster Biju Vattappara Biju Vattappara, Raaffi Mathirra Raaffi Mathirra Guinness Pakru Mukesh Sruthi Lakshmi Sreejith K Anbu Mani Samjith Mhd. Kaithapram Viswanathan, I. John Chitranjali Beebah Creations & Sayujyam Cine Release Swantham Bharya Zindabad (Malayalam : സ്വന്തം ഭാര്യ സിന്ദാബാദ്‌) is a 2010 Malayalam film produced by Raaffi Mathirra under the banner Ifar International and directed by Biju Vattappara, starring Guinness Pakru, Mukesh and Sruthilakshmi in the lead roles. [1] [2] [3] Pakru plays a Communist Vettoor Sivankutty in the film. He marries, who doesn't believe in Communist ideals. She is a big fan of superstar Pavan Kumar. The movie develops Sivankutty's plight when Pavan Kumar arrives in the village for a film shooting. Guinness Pakru as Vettoor Sivankutty Mukesh as Pavan Kumar Harisree Ashokan as Uthaman Sruthi Lakshmi as Meenakshi Suraj Venjaramood as Dr. Ulpalakshan Salim Kumar as T.K Vipin Kumar Mala Aravindan as Party Secretary Sreejith K as Meenakshi's Brother Jaffar Idukki as Balan Saju Kodiyan as Film Director Kalabhavan Haneef as Production Executive Thesni Khan as Ambujam Raghavan as Shivankutty's Father Manka Mahesh as Shivankutty's Mother Meena Ganesh as Vasanthi Mafiya Sasi as Himself Albhutha Dweepu is a 2005 Indian Malayalam-language fantasy film directed by Vinayan. The plot is set on an otherworld island where all men are dwarfs and women are of normal height, and humans are considered monsters. The film stars Prithviraj Sukumaran and Guinness Pakru alongside Mallika Kapoor, Jagathy Sreekumar, Jagadish, Indrans, Kalpana, Ponnamma Babu and Bindu Panicker in supporting roles. Harisree Ashokan is an Indian actor and director who is known for his comedy roles in Malayalam films. Ashokan has acted in more than 200 Malayalam films. He started his career as a mimicry artist in the troupe Harisree and then worked in Kalabhavan. Salim Kumar is an Indian actor, comedian, director and writer in Malayalam cinema. Mostly known for his comic and comedy roles, Salim Kumar is considered one of the best and most prominent comedians in the history of Malayalam cinema. In his later career, Salim Kumar also found success in playing character roles and won the National Film Award for Best Actor in 2010 for his role in Adaminte Makan Abu. His directorial film Karutha Joothan won the 2017 Kerala State Film Award for Best Story. He has also won the Kerala State Film Award for Second Best Actor for Achanurangatha Veedu (2005) and a Kerala State Television Award for Best Actor (2013). Ajay Kumar, popularly known as Guinness Pakru, is an Indian actor. He has made an entry into the Guinness World Records for being the shortest actor to play a character in a full-length film. He played the lead role in Athbhutha Dweepu, a Malayalam movie directed by Vinayan. The movie was later dubbed in Tamil and Telugu versions. Pappayude Swantham Appoos is a 1992 Indian Malayalam-language film, written and directed by Fazil.It stars Mammootty and Master Badusha while Shobana, Suresh Gopi and Seena Dadi also appeared in important supporting roles. The music of the movie was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.The movie explores the relationship between a father who is depressed after the death of his wife and his neglected son. Badusha won the 1992 Kerala State Film Award for Best Child Artist. The film was the commercial success at the box office and was the highest grosser of 1992 and played for more than 250+ days in theatre. Black Cat is a 2007 Indian Malayalam action thriller film written and directed by Vinayan and starring Suresh Gopi and Meena in lead roles. The film also features Mukesh, Karthika, Rajan P Dev, Indrans, Harisree Ashokan, Jagadeesh, Nedumudi Venu, Ashish Vidhyarthi and Thilakan in supporting roles. Venu Nagavally was an Indian actor, screenwriter and director best known for his work in Malayalam film industry. He has directed 12 films. Son of writer, commentator, and broadcaster Nagavally R. S. Kurup, Venu has acted in about fifty films, directed films such as Sukhamo Devi (1986), Sarvakalashala (1987), Lal Salam (1990), and Aye Auto (1990), and scripted the commercially successful Kilukkam (1991). Duplicate is a 2009 Malayalam-language comedy drama film directed by Shibu Prabhakar and produced by Sajai Sebastian and Joji K. John under the banner of Zion International Film Factory with Suraj Venjaramoodu in the lead role. This is Suraj's first movie as a hero and he plays a double role in the movie. The film received mixed to negative reviews but highly positive reception from the public mainly due to the comedy and performance of the lead actors. Bharya Onnu Makkal Moonnu is a 2009 Malayalam film directed by Rajasenan and starring Rajasenan and Sithara. This is Rajasenan's debut film as an actor. Rasikan is a 2004 Malayalam film directed by Lal Jose and written by Murali Gopy starring Dileep in the lead role with Murali Gopy, Biju Menon, Samvrutha Sunil, Sishwa, Siddharth, Sukumari, Kalabhavan Abi, Aniyappan and Jagathy Sreekumar in the supporting roles. This was Samvrutha Sunil and Murali Gopy's debut film. The movie was an average hit. Nadakame Ulakam is a 2011 Malayalam-language comedy film directed by Viji Thampi and starring Mukesh, Vinu Mohan, Sarayu, and Saranya Mohan in the lead roles. Its songs are composed by veteran music director Johnson with lyrics penned by Kaithapram Damodaran Namboothiri. The film released on 25 February. Outsider is a 2012 Malayalam thriller film written and directed by Premlal, starring Sreenivasan, Indrajith, Ganga Babu and Pasupathy in the lead roles. It is produced by Gireesh under the banner of Gowri Meenakshi Movies, and is shot in Chalakudy in Kerala and Nagercoil in Tamil Nadu. Lisammayude Veedu is a 2013 Malayalam drama film written and directed by Babu Janardhanan and starring Meera Jasmine, Rahul Madhav and Salim Kumar. The film is a sequel to the 2006 film Achanurangatha Veedu. The film was initially titled Samuvelinte Makkal but was later renamed Lisammayude Veedu based on the name of the central character. Zindabad is a suffix in Odia, Punjabi, Bengali, and Urdu of Persian origin which is used as a shout of encouragement or as a cheer, and literally means "Long live [idea or person]". It is often used as a political slogan, to praise a country, movement or leader may refer to: Parvathy Parinayam is a 1995 Indian Malayalam film, directed by PG Vishwambharan, starring Mukesh, Premkumar and Annie in the lead roles. It was a superhit comedy movie run over 80 days. Badai Bungalow is an Indian Malayalam sketch comedy and celebrity talk show hosted by Ramesh Pisharody / Mithun Ramesh / Kalabhavan Navas, launched on Asianet from 2013 on every Saturday and Sunday at 8:00 PM. The second season of the show aired on every Friday at 9:30 PM. Saju Kodiyan is an Indian mimicry artist, comedian and actor who works in the Malayalam Film Industry. He started his career as a mimicry artist and has acted in more than 20 movies. Fancy Dress is a 2019 Indian Malayalam Language comedy film directed by Ranjith Saccariya and produced by Guinness Pakru. The film starring Guinness Pakru, Swetha Menon and Kalabhavan Shajon was released on 2 August 2019. The film had musical score composed by Ratheesh Vega. Lintu Rony, previously credited as Nila Raj, is a British actress who appears in South Indian films and TV serials. She is known for her role in the television series Bharya. Lion is a 2006 Indian Malayalam language political thriller film written by Udaykrishna-Sibi K. Thomas and directed by Joshiy. The film stars Dileep, Kalasala Babu, Kavya Madhavan and Vijayaraghavan alongside a supporting cast that include Jagathy Sreekumar, Innocent, Sai Kumar, Shammi Thilakan, Riyaz Khan and Karthika. The film was produced by Noushad and distributed by Shan Entertainment. The film was a blockbuster at the box office. It was remade in Tamil as Nam Naadu and in Telugu as Evadaithe Nakenti. ↑ "Swantham Bharya Zindabad is insipid". ↑ "Swantham Bharya Zindabad review. Swantham Bharya Zindabad Malayalam movie review, story, rating". ↑ "Swantham Bharya Zindabad Review | Swantham Bharya Zindabad Malayalam Movie Review by Veeyen". 29 November 2010. Nowrunning article OneIndia article Cinecurry article This article about a Malayalam film of the 2010s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
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Does depression contribute to the aging process?<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> A new study in Biological Psychiatry answers Philadelphia, PA, USA (February 21, 2012) – Stress has numerous detrimental effects on the human body. Many of these effects are acutely felt by the sufferer, but many more go ‚unseen‘, one of which is shortening of telomere length. Telomeres are protective caps on the ends of chromosomes and are indicators of aging, as they naturally shorten over time. However, telomeres are also highly susceptible to stress and depression, both of which have repeatedly been linked with premature telomere shortening. The human stress response is regulated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, or HPA axis. This axis controls the body’s levels of cortisol, the primary stress hormone, and it generally does not function normally in individuals with depression- and stress-related illnesses. Scientists of a new study published this week in Biological Psychiatry sought to bring all this prior work together by studying the relationships between telomere length, stress, and depression. They did so by measuring telomere length in patients with major depressive disorder and in healthy individuals. They also measured stress, both biologically, by measuring cortisol levels, and subjectively, through a questionnaire. They found that telomere length was shorter in the depressed patients, which confirmed prior findings. Importantly, they also discovered that shorter telomere length was associated with a low cortisol state in both the depressed and healthy groups. First author Dr. Mikael Wikgren further explained, "Our findings suggest that stress plays an important role in depression, as telomere length was especially shortened in patients exhibiting an overly sensitive HPA axis. This HPA axis response is something which has been linked to chronic stress and with poor ability to cope with stress." "The link between stress and telomere shortening is growing stronger. The current findings suggest that cortisol levels may be a contributor to this process, but it is not yet clear whether telomere length has significance beyond that of a biomarker," commented Dr. John Krystal, editor of Biological Psychiatry. Future studies will be needed to determine whether normalizing telomere length is an important component of the treatment process. The article is "Short Telomeres in Depression and the General Population Are Associated with a Hypocortisolemic State" by Mikael Wikgren, Martin Maripuu, Thomas Karlsson, Katarina Nordfjäll, Jan Bergdahl, Johan Hultdin, Jurgen Del-Favero, Göran Roos, Lars-Göran Nilsson, Rolf Adolfsson, and Karl-Fredrik Norrback (doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2011.09.015). The article appears in Biological Psychiatry, Volume 71, Issue 4 (February 15, 2012), published by Elsevier. Notes for editors The authors‘ affiliations, and disclosures of financial and conflicts of interests are available in the article. John H. Krystal, M.D., is Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine and a research psychiatrist at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System. His disclosures of financial and conflicts of interests are available here. About Biological Psychiatry Biological Psychiatry is the official journal of the Society of Biological Psychiatry, whose purpose is to promote excellence in scientific research and education in fields that investigate the nature, causes, mechanisms and treatments of disorders of thought, emotion, or behavior. In accord with this mission, this peer-reviewed, rapid-publication, international journal publishes both basic and clinical contributions from all disciplines and research areas relevant to the pathophysiology and treatment of major psychiatric disorders. The journal publishes novel results of original research which represent an important new lead or significant impact on the field, particularly those addressing genetic and environmental risk factors, neural circuitry and neurochemistry, and important new therapeutic approaches. Reviews and commentaries that focus on topics of current research and interest are also encouraged. Biological Psychiatry is one of the most selective and highly cited journals in the field of psychiatric neuroscience. It is ranked 4th out of 126 Psychiatry titles and 15th out of 237 Neurosciences titles in the Journal Citations Reports® published by Thomson Reuters. The 2010 Impact Factor score for Biological Psychiatry is 8.674. About Elsevier Elsevier is a world-leading provider of scientific, technical and medical information products and services. The company works in partnership with the global science and health communities to publish more than 2,000 journals, including The Lancet and Cell, and close to 20,000 book titles, including major reference works from Mosby and Saunders. Elsevier’s online solutions include SciVerse ScienceDirect, SciVerse Scopus, Reaxys, MD Consult and Nursing Consult, which enhance the productivity of science and health professionals, and the SciVal suite and MEDai’s Pinpoint Review, which help research and health care institutions deliver better outcomes more cost-effectively. A global business headquartered in Amsterdam, Elsevier employs 7,000 people worldwide. The company is part of Reed Elsevier Group PLC, a world-leading publisher and information provider, which is jointly owned by Reed Elsevier PLC and Reed Elsevier NV. The ticker symbols are REN (Euronext Amsterdam), REL (London Stock Exchange), RUK and ENL (New York Stock Exchange). Elsevier, 21.02.2012 (tB).
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ARTS & LEISUREEntertainmentEVENTSMOVIES The Sisters Brothers, winner of four César Awards to premiere at the American Independent Film Festival (April 12th-18th) The third edition of the American Independent Film Festival wil take place between April 12-18 at Cinema PRO and Cinema Muzeul Țăranului. The festival will present, in Romanian premiere, the newest film by Jacques Audiard: The Sisters Brothers. The western, filmed almost entire in Romania, was awarded the Silver Lion for Best Director at the Venice Film Festival in 2018. The Sisters Brothers is a French-Romanian-Spanish-Belgian-American co-production, which brought the multi-awarded French director to Romania, along with some of the most well-known actors from Hollywood: actors John C. Reilly, Joaquin Phoenix, Jake Gyllenhaal and Riz Ahmed. The film will be released in Romania on the 19th of April by Voodoo Films. On the 22nd of February, 2019, The Sisters Brothers won four César Awards, for Best Director, Best Cinematography (Benoît Debie), Best Production Design (Michel Barthelemy) and Best Sound (Brigitte Taillandier, Valerie de Loof, Cyril Holts). Earlier that month, the film was awarded Best Film, Best Director, and Best Cinematography at the Lumière Awards (France’s equivalent to the Golden Globes). Following the international success of Deephan (winner of the Palme d’Or, Cannes 2015), The Sisters Brothers is Jacques Audiard’s first film in English, and is based on the book of the same name by Patrick DeWitt, published in 2011. The western tells of Charlie Sisters (Joaquin Phoenix) and Eli Sisters (John C. Reilly), who, always on the hunt, find themselves on a journey that puts their special bond in peril. Part of a wild and hostile world, both Charlie and Eli live with the blood of criminals and civilians on their hands. Charlie, the youngest, was born to kill, while Eli dreams of a normal life. Both are employed with the Commodore to find and kill a man. Audiard started his career as director assistant to Roman Polanski on The Tenant (1976), debuting as a director 18 years later, in 1994, with See How They Fall. The eight films he has since directed have premiered at festivals such as Cannes and Venice, bringing him a number of international awards. He has written over 20 screenplays for film and TV, some of them in collaboration with his father, the writer Michel Audiard. Initiated on the basis of the tradition of grand American narratives, the American Independent Film Festival continues to present a selection of the most recent made in the USA productions – lauded by critics and the public alike, and presented at the most prestigious film festivals on the international circuit, such as Sundance, New York, Tribeca, Telluride, Toronto, Cannes and Venice. The first two editions of the festival welcomed guests such as: Ethan Hawke, Joaquin Phoenix, John C. Reilly, Sebastian Stan, as well as Kent Jones, film critic and director of the New York Film Festival. Directors Barry Jenkins, (winner of the Best Film Oscar for Moonlight in 2017), and Sean Baker (The Florida Project) joined audiences at the American Independent Film Festival via Skype. The third edition of the American Independent Film Festival will take place between April 12th-18th, 2019, with tickets becoming available soon on Eventbook.ro and on the Eventbook network. The screening program and all updates about the third edition will be posted on filmedefestival.ro, on the American Independent Film Festival Facebook page and on Instagram @AmericanIndependentFilmFest The American Independent Film Festival is organized by Asociația Cinemascop with the support of Catena. The festival is a cultural project financed by the National Center of Cinematography. Partners: American Chamber of Commerce in Romania – AmCham Romania. Main Media Partners: Pro Cinema, Radio Guerrilla. Media Partners: Radio România Cultural, AaRC, CineFan, Senso TV, Ziarul Metropolis, Nine O’Clock. Photo source: http://filmedefestival.ro/american-independent-ff/ four César AwardsThe American Independent Film FestivalThe Sisters Brothers Romania-France Season launched in Bucharest. As of April 18, the event will feature exhibitions, theatre & film festivals, concerts in over 30 cities. Ambassador Ramis: The Season was a huge success in France President Iohannis: I will trigger a referendum on 26 May. “Issuing a GEO in the judiciary would be illegitimate”. Polemics among politicians over polling centers Porumboiu, Tocilescu, Ciulei receive public radio awards Test March 25, 2010 Romanian-Russian agreement on ICR establishment in Moscow approved Nine O' Clock October 27, 2013 Oana Moraru – Helikon School founder and one of the most well-known education experts, Radu Savopol – founder 5 to go, Andra Pintican – founder Scoala de HR and Mihai Zant – Cofounder Careershift.ro are coming to FUN Bucharest, Vol. XI
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The Enclave Richard Mosse Texts by Jason Stearns and Anna O’Sullivan. Softcover. One copy comes in a blue box. IBSN 9781597112635 For the last three years, Richard Mosse has photographed in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, a region in which a long-standing power vacuum has resulted in a horrifying cycle of violence, a Hobbesian “state of war,” so brutal and complex that it defies communication, remaining stubbornly outside global consciousness. The Enclave is the culmination of Mosse’s recent efforts to radically rethink traditional representations of conflict photography, drawing on artistic and documentary strategies in equal measure. The Enclave publication presents images shot by Mosse with a large-format camera, as well as selections from the 16 mm film installation presented at the Irish Pavilion during the 55th Venice Biennale. With both still- and 16 mm-cameras, Mosse uses a discontinued military surveillance film, which registers an invisible spectrum of infrared light. The resulting surreal palette describes these isolated, jungle war zones and the soldiers that inhabit them in disorienting psychedelic hues of scarlet, lavender, cobalt, and puce. Working with collaborators Trevor Tweeten (16 mm cinematography) and Ben Frost (sound design), Mosse has captured a landscape that is deceptively seductive, alluring. Ultimately, however, the resulting images and film map the otherwise invisible edges of violence, chaos, and incommunicable horror. At the heart of the project, as Mosse states, is his exploration of the contradictions and limits of art’s ability “to represent narratives so painful that they exist beyond language—and photography’s capacity to document specific tragedies and communicate them to the world.” Richard Mosse (born in Kilkenny, Ireland, 1980) holds an MFA in photography from Yale University School of Art, and additional degrees from Goldsmiths, London; King’s College London, and the London Consortium. His work has been widely exhibited internationally, including at the Palais de Tokyo and the Tate Modern. In 2011, Mosse was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, with a supplemental stipend from the Leon Levy Foundation. Mosse is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery. 2 Aperture, a not-for-profit foundation, connects the photo community and its audiences with the most inspiring work, the sharpest ideas, and with each other—in print, in person, and online. Created in 1952 by photographers and writers as ‘common ground for the advancement of photography’, Aperture today is a multi-platform publisher and centre for the photo community. From their base in New York, they produce, publish, and present a program of photography projects, locally and internationally. 3 https://www.lensculture.com/books/6784-richard-mosse-the-enclave https://imma.ie/artists/richard-mosse/ https://aperture.org/about/ 2013Anna O'SullivanApertureDemocratic Republic Of CongoInfraredIrishJason StearnsMilitaryPhotoIreland Festival 2022ReportageTopographyVenice BiennaleWar Previous PostNew Irish Works Next PostVolunteer
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New York Fed and Co-Sponsors Announce Winners of Workforce Development Video Campaign in the Greater Rochester Area NEW YORK—The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Farash Foundation, Greater Rochester Chamber of Commerce and Rochester Area Community Foundation announced the finalists and winners of Leading the Way: A Greater Rochester Workforce Development Video Campaign (Leading the Way) during an awards ceremony last night which included keynote remarks via video by Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren. Leading the Way, the second workforce development video campaign held by the New York Fed, intends to foster a deeper understanding of in-demand industries and the skillsets they require, by challenging students to create public service announcements about skills needed for local career opportunities. The first-place team is from P-TECH Rochester, which created a video about cybersecurity. In her remarks, Mayor Warren underscored the Greater Rochester Area’s deep experience in workforce development and its important impacts on the region’s economic future. "The middle skills gap is one of the greatest issues facing our economy. That’s why youth and workforce development is one of my top priorities," said Mayor Warren. "… We work tirelessly [with organizations like the New York Fed and P-TECH] to help ensure that this generation of employees and the next have access to safer neighborhoods and quality educational opportunities." By educating students and the public, the campaign builds on the New York Fed’s continued support for workforce development efforts in the region, which are designed to equip workers with skills to compete in the evolving job market. "Workforce development is a top priority for us. The economy is changing rapidly, and active investment in education and training for young adults is critical," said Tony Davis, director of Community Engagement at the New York Fed. "The Rochester area has key assets such as a diverse economy, top educational institutions, and strong public-private partnerships that have enabled it to reinvent itself and spur future growth." 2016 Leading the Way Campaign The awards ceremony last night marked the conclusion of a contest that ran throughout the fourth quarter of 2016 and involved P-TECH (Pathways in Technology Early College High School) students. The P-TECH model is a 6-year program (covering grades 9-14) that focuses on career readiness and involves a partnership between at least one school district, college and employer—making up a "P-TECH school." Students who complete the program receive a high school diploma and an associate college degree at no cost. The program includes comprehensive training in science, technology, engineering and math, as well as access to industry mentors, with the goal of providing a pathway to full-time employment after graduation. This year’s campaign drew submissions from three P-TECH schools in the Greater Rochester Area—Wayne Finger Lakes P-TECH, P-TECH Rochester and Western New York Tech Academy. Videos were required to highlight one technical skill associated with a P-TECH career pathway (such as designing and implementing computer network systems, as needed in the information technology industry) and two professional skills (such as personal traits or group experience) in a 30-second segment. 2017 Awards Ceremony The first-place team is from P-TECH Rochester. The winning video focuses on cybersecurity, highlighting security measures in information technology and the importance of teamwork and dependability in this field. 116 students participated in the campaign, submitting 47 videos. During the preliminary judging rounds throughout the fourth quarter of 2016, the pool was narrowed to the top nine finalists. All three participating schools were represented among the nine finalists. Finalists from P-TECH Rochester and Wayne Finger Lakes P-TECH schools focused on the information technology and instrumentation and control technology industries. Finalists from Western New York Tech Academy focused on the importance of good management practices in food processing and problem solving in accounting. Following several remarks—by Mayor Warren, Kate Washington, deputy commissioner of Neighborhood and Business Services for the City of Rochester, and the New York Fed’s Tony Davis—the finalists were announced and their videos were aired before a panel for live judging. The judges on the panel were Rajesh Barnabas, producer at Rochester Community Television; Staci Henning, executive vice president and chief marketing officer of Greater Rochester Enterprise; Dave Phillips, training manager of G.W. Lisk Company, Inc.; and Robin Willner, director of New York State P-TECH Leadership Council. John Kucko, anchor at WROC News 8 First, hosted the event, and Jennifer Leonard, president and CEO of Rochester Area Community Foundation, provided concluding remarks. Watch the finalist videos from the campaign. Download the program of the awards ceremony. Learn more about the Leading the Way campaign. Betsy Bourassa [email protected] Campaign Deepens Awareness about Necessary Skills for Today's Evolving Job Market, and Workforce Development's Critical Role in Supporting Rochester and the Regional Economy
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Trump’s EPA Ignores Threat of Hazardous Spills WASHINGTON – The Environmental Protection Agency made clear today that it will continue ignoring its responsibility to curtail chemical spills from industrial facilities, a decision that is in blatant disregard of the Clean Water Act and a settlement the agency agreed to in court. The following is a comment from Michele Roberts, National Co-Coordinator at the Environmental Justice Health Alliance (EJHA): “For many decades now, black, brown and poor communities, who often suffer first and worst from toxic chemical spills, have been abandoned by federal regulators. While we continue to deal with toxic floodwaters and contaminated soil, the Trump administration simply flaunts its duty to keep toxic chemicals out of our drinking water. This reckless neglect should end now.” The following is a comment from Pam Nixon, President of People Concerned About Chemical Safety (PCACS): “I know what it’s like to wonder if my water is safe to drink. In my town of Charleston, W.V, 300,000 people lost access to safe drinking water for weeks after 10,000 gallons of a coal processing chemical leaked into the Elk River. Other communities face similar risks. The EPA should prevent toxic chemical spills from getting into people’s drinking water, but instead it’s ignoring the problem.” The following is a comment from Erik Olson, senior director for health and food at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC): “The Trump administration is – yet again – giving polluters a free pass at the expense of people who live near industrial sites that pollute lakes, streams and rivers. Toxic chemical spills pose an unnecessary risk to poor and disadvantaged communities who rely on these water bodies for their drinking water. We intend to continue fighting to ensure EPA issues regulations to prevent spills, as Congress ordered it to do more than 45 years ago.” EPA announced today that it won’t issue new regulations requiring industrial facilities that store toxic chemicals near water bodies to take measures to prevent chemical spills. Congress required those regulations in 1972, but EPA has failed to issue them. EJHA, PCACS, and NRDC sued EPA in 2015 over its decades-long failure to act. In 2016, EPA agreed in a court-ordered settlement to finalize spill-prevention regulations by this summer. The agency has now announced its plan to continue shirking its duty to regulate to prevent chemical spills. There are thousands of hazardous substance spills from industrial facilities each year. Low-income communities and communities of color face the greatest risks from these spills as facilities that manufacture, store, and use hazardous substances tend to cluster near those areas. EJHA documented the disproportionate risk that environmental justice communities face from cumulative health hazards, including chemical disasters, in its 2018 report, Life at the Fenceline: Understanding Cumulative Health Hazards in Environmental Justice Communities. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) is an international nonprofit environmental organization with more than 3 million members and online activists. Since 1970, our lawyers, scientists, and other environmental specialists have worked to protect the world's natural resources, public health, and the environment. NRDC has offices in New York City, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Bozeman, MT, and Beijing. Visit us at www.nrdc.org and follow us on Twitter @NRDC.​ The Environmental Justice Health Alliance (EJHA) is a national network of communities of color, Indigenous communities, and low-income communities that are disproportionately impacted by toxic chemical hazards. EJHA works to address the multiple harms caused by the hazardous chemical and energy industries — including waste, pollution, and health hazards — and support community-based solutions that improve health and well-being. Visit us at www.Ej4All.org. People Concerned About Chemical Safety (PCACS), located in Charleston, West Virginia, is the corporate successor to People Concerned About MIC. PCACS serves as grassroots watchdogs to ensure existing environmental laws are enforced by government regulators at facilities in our communities. We advocate for human rights relating to the environment and chemical safety through education; and promote environmental justice for vulnerable populations being disproportionately impacted by toxic and hazardous chemicals. Visit us at ToxicsFresh WaterEquity & Justice NY Becomes Second State in the Nation to Reduce Plastic Waste in Hotels ALBANY, NY -- Governor Kathy Hochul made New York the second state in the nation to eliminate millions of single-use bottles in hotel rooms. Bill S543/A5082 prohibits hotels and motels with more than 50 rooms from providing single-use plastic toiletry… 360,000 Lead Pipes May Deliver Water to Homes in New York July 19, 2021 Press Release President Biden’s American Jobs Plan Aims to Remove Every Lead Pipe from the Ground
2023-14/0009/en_head.json.gz/26823
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Budville Trading Post is permanently closed. Budville Trading Post Cibola County, New Mexico In 1967, murder and mayhem disrupted the tranquility along this quiet stretch of Old Route 66. Along Old Route 66 near Budville, New Mexico. syabek (Atlas Obscura User) Budville cemetery. syabek (Atlas Obscura User) Budville Trading Company. syabek (Atlas Obscura User) Vintage vehicles and home, Budville, New Mexico. syabek (Atlas Obscura User) icatsstaci (Atlas Obscura User) Top Places in New Mexico Socorro Isopod Socorro, New Mexico Santa Fe Shatter Cones Dawson Ghost Town Raton, New Mexico Howard Neal “Bud” Rice was a commanding personality in Budville (his namesake), a tiny community along a quiet stretch of Route 66, 46 miles west of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Beginning in 1928, two years after the establishment of Route 66 as part of the U.S. Highways System, Rice and his wife, Flossie, began building and operating a number of businesses catering to travelers along the Mother Road. These included a grocery, trading post, gas station, and the only automotive repair shop and wrecking service between Albuquerque and Grants. They also operated the Continental Trailways bus depot and local office of the New Mexico Department of Motor Vehicles. Rice was effective in cultivating close relationships with local law enforcement and political operatives. During the 1950s, he became the local Justice of the Peace and considered himself the “law west of the Pecos River.” While Rice was beloved locally, he wasn’t entirely scrupulous, and often used his position to further his various business interests by exploiting travelers along Route 66. He frequently overcharged for auto repairs and imposed onerous “fines” for speeders caught in his various speed traps. In the 1960s, when construction of Interstate-40 threatened to bypass Budville and adversely affect his business interests, Rice and his political cronies somehow ensured that the highway plans included an exit and on-ramp for tiny Budville. But Rice’s crooked ways soon came to an end. On a quiet evening in November of 1967, a stranger entered the trading post and brutally shot and killed Rice and a part-time employee, 82-year-old Blanche Brown. The assailant escaped with $450. He left behind a horrific scene, which the locals dubbed “Bloodville.” Several months later, based on the testimony of three felons, the assailant was identified as Billy Ray White. In August of 1968, he was apprehended in Illinois and brought to New Mexico to stand trial. Because of insufficient credible evidence, he was quickly acquitted of the murders. He was, however, extradited to Louisiana and stood trial for similar crimes committed before the murders in Budville. He was convicted and sentenced to a long-term facility in the Louisiana state penitentiary. Before his death by apparent suicide in 1974, White allegedly confided to a fellow inmate that he was, in fact, guilty of the Budville murders. Few people place credence on the confession and for the most part, the murders are still considered unsolved. After Rice died, his widow continued to run the trading post and other family businesses for another 12 years until her death in 1979. The property was sold and re-sold a number of times since then. It was briefly re-opened as the Budville Trading Company. In 2006, there were plans to once again open the Trading Company, but that was never successful. It continues to be abandoned, but the adjoining house, where the Rices lived, is occupied by the current owners. Because of its tawdry history, the building today is probably one of the most frequently photographed landmarks along the New Mexico stretch of historic Route 66. While not immediately visible from the highway, Budville is located along Route 66 which is adjacent to and just north of Interstate-40. Thanks to Bud Rice, there is an exit and on-ramp to Budville; Exit 104 about 46 miles west of Albuquerque. Turn left on Route 66 and drive approximately one mile to the Budville Trading Company on the left. route 66 wild west murder ghost towns abandoned syabek Beth1116, icatsstaci http://1dustytrack.blogspot.com/2012/12/route-66-sad-story-of-budville.html https://themountainvoice.com/2017/08/06/the-1967-killing-of-bud-rice-budville-new-mexico/ http://www.route66news.com/2008/07/25/the-story-of-budville-part-1/ State Rd 124 Ice Cave and Bandera Volcano New Mexico Mystery Stone Cabezon Peak Grants, New Mexico A frozen oasis lies beneath the scorching New Mexico desert. On the side of a remote mountain, a stone face bearing an inscription of mysterious origin. This towering volcanic plug stands out among the dramatic formations that dot this otherworldly desert valley. Thousands of pieces of art have been carved into the rock at the site of an ancient volcanic eruption. Central City, Colorado Nevadaville Ghost Town This deserted Gold Rush town is home to a Masonic lodge that, strangely enough, still holds meetings. San Jon, New Mexico Glenrio Ghost Town The old Route 66 town straddling Texas and New Mexico died along with the Main Street of America. Leupp, Arizona Canyon Diablo The remains of this hell for leather wild west town can still be found in the Arizona desert. Nipissing District, Ontario Kiosk Ghost Town All that remains of this former mill town is a ranger station and some crumbling buildings.
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/202
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Home Science Technology China’s Experimental Reactor Breaks Fusion World Record Length China’s Experimental Reactor Breaks Fusion World Record Length China’s nuclear fusion reactors continue to make significant progress toward achieving controlled and limitless energy output. On December 30, the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) broke its own record of 1,056 seconds by keeping plasma at 120 million degrees Celsius (216 million degrees Fahrenheit) for an astonishing 1,056 seconds. This the longest time high-temperature plasma has been confined, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Plasma Physics (ASIPP). It was also a tremendous accomplishment for the reactor. The previous record was set in May when the reactor maintained a temperature of 120 million degrees Celsius for 101 seconds. The reactor has previously reached higher temperatures, but only for a short period. In May, plasma was created at a temperature of 160 million degrees Celsius for 20 seconds. Those are tremendous temperatures. To give you an idea of how hot they are, the Sun’s core, where hydrogen fusion takes place, is 15 million degrees Celsius (27 million degrees Fahrenheit). These reactors can withstand temperatures that at least six times higher. In fact, in fusion, the key figure is 100 million degrees Celsius. To make fusion happen on Earth, that is what has required in reactors. Incredible pressures keep hydrogen confined to the Sun’s core, allowing for lower temperatures. Because nuclear fusion reactors lack the ability to generate those pressures, they rely on strong magnetic fields to hold the plasma together and allow it to fuse into heavier elements. The fusion process produces enormous amounts of energy, which researchers want to extract and convert into power. The tokamak is one of two common designs for nuclear fusion reactors, with the stellarator being the other. A tokamak resembles a large empty donut (technically speaking a torus). Plasma containing deuterium and tritium (a kind of hydrogen with additional neutrons) is pumped into the doughnut and held in place magnetic fields. It becomes superheated and starts to fuse, releasing energy. That is a simplistic description, and it does not do honor to the vast and difficult work of accomplishing these milestones. Every part of nuclear fusion in the lab has been a tremendous engineering achievement, and there is still much more work to do before self-sustaining nuclear power plants become a reality. “ASIPP has a fantastic group of people. No matter how bad the situation is, we will overcome it!” ASIPP Director-General Professor Yuntao Song said in a statement. EAST’s work will be critical in informing the operation of ITER, a worldwide partnership supported by the European Union with contributions from China, India, Japan, South Korea, Russia, and the United States. ITER is a full-scale nuclear fusion reactor whose purpose is to test technology that will employ in commercial facilities in the future. Optical mesh network – a type of optical telecommunications network Who Knew You Could Magically Finger Copy Stuff From Iphone to Ipad Not Us Review about Sony Xperia XZ Premium As Dropbox Heads into Earnings, It Desperately Needs a Win Instacart Hires Facebook Executive as New CEO Ahead of Expected IPO Transparent Phones IAB Europe says it’s expecting to be found in breach of GDPR How do you select the right tech stack? Sequoia, Binance and A16z Back Elon Musk’s $44 Billion Twitter Bid Apple launches its Siri-only Apple Music Voice Plan with iOS 15.2 Cadillac Begins Production of Lyriq Crossovers, The GM Luxury Brand’s First EV What Are Tactical Nuclear Weapons Twitter Explains the Real Reason Why they Changed their Cropping Tool Netflix launches ‘Fast Laughs,’ a TikTok-like feed of funny videos Predicting Performance on in-class Exams using a Wearable Dataset Younited Credit Raises $170 Million for its data-Driven Credit Offering Andesine Audit Note Book What are the Respiratory Infections Effects to Consider for Corporate Identity Creating Computer Programs Annual Report (Director’s Report) 2011-2012 of Godrej Consumer Products Limited
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01. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Noch lange nicht 02. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Freue mich auf dich 03. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Warte 04. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Sei still 05. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - A-i Akcam La 06. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Que Pa 07. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Als wäre nichts gewesen 08. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Begehre dich 09. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Nur noch Beben 10. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Mach mit mir was du willst 11. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Urlaub für ganz Berlin 12. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Längst fällig 13. Sprung Aus Den Wolken - Gong A Minute SPRUNG AUS DEN WOLKEN BUREAU B BB 415LP BB 415LP LP version. The Berlin project Sprung Aus Den Wolken was part of the "Geniale Dilletanten" movement in the early 1980s, along with Einstürzende Neubauten and Mechanik Destrüktiw Komandöh. The band first released an EP on ZickZack in 1981, followed by further releases on the band's own record label Faux Pas in 1982 and 1983, then on the French outlet Les Disques Du Soleil Et De L'Acier until 1991. The track "Pas Attendre" was part of the soundtrack of Wim Wender's movie Der Himmel über Berlin (Wings of Desire) (1987) and thus became an underground hit. Founder of the band Kiddy Citny is also a painter. His paintings of the Berlin Wall have been exhibited around the world and are now in private collections in the US, France, and Japan. Bureau B finally make the long out-of-print, self-titled album from 1982 available again. Carefully remastered, with reconstructed original artwork, numerous photos and liner notes by Alexander Hacke. "How do you feel, Kiddy?" "I feel free!" "A leap from the clouds is the ultimate expression of joie de vivre. Implicit trust in one's own powers, confidence in a positive outcome, surrendering to fate without delay or hesitation, ripping up any restrictive barriers, eyes front, unwaveringly so. That's what it's all about. The ever-changing line-up of Kiddy Citny's group thrived on the liberating anarchic energy of noise and poetry, the spirit of reinvention. We hung out in the West Berlin district of Schöneberg, in bars and clubs like Café Mitropa, Dschungel, and das Risiko, before heading down to the cellar of the Cassetten Combinat in Naumannstraße. Here we let our inspirations run free in wild all-night sessions. Something to remember, something we value and can be proud of: the music. The cassette was our medium, the four-track recorder which had just appeared on the market was a cornerstone of the studio. Our fresh recordings were duplicated in the shop upstairs and slipped into covers we made in the copy shop. Hey presto, a new piece of work, direct from the creator to the people's playback devices, without further ado. Sprung Aus Den Wolken and hip-hop are children of the same generation, not so remarkably similar and yet somehow related. Cousins rather than siblings. They share a symbiosis of music and art, rhythm and color, loudness and light, all combining to underpin the integrity and authenticity of the end product. They were the happiest years of my teenage life in West Berlin, oh how we laughed!" --Alexander Hacke Other releases on BUREAU B Other releases by SPRUNG AUS DEN WOLKEN
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August 10 – 16: “Is setting or location an important element of your stories?” Thriller Roundtable This week we’re joined by ITW Members Laura Elvebak, Mauro Azzano, Laura McNeill, Tim Tigner, R. G. Belsky, Bernard Maestas, A. D. Garrett, Jason M. Hough and Diane Kelly, as they discuss setting. “Is setting or location an important element of your stories? Why?” Bernard Maestas lives in paradise. A police officer patrolling the mean streets of Hawaii, he has a background in contract security and military and civilian law enforcement. When not saving the world, one speeding ticket at a time, and not distracted by video games and the internet, he is usually hard at work on his next book. Mauro Azzano was born in Italy, north of Venice. He grew up in Italy, Australia and finally Canada, settling on the west coast outside Vancouver, Canada. He has a broad experience to call on as a writer, having worked as a college instructor, commercial pilot and a number of other unusual occupations. Currently, he is working on the Ian McBriar Murder Mystery series and training as a distance runner. After six years behind the anchor desk at two CBS affiliates, Laura McNeill moved to the Alabama Gulf Coast to raise her family. Her accolades in broadcasting include awards from the Associated Press, including Best News Anchor and Best Specialized Reporter. Laura was recently awarded a 2-book deal with Thomas Nelson Publishing, a division of HarperCollins. Her novel, Center of Gravity, set in Mobile, Ala., will be published in July of 2015. Her writing awards include those from William Faulkner-Wisdom Creative Writing Competition, Writer’s Digest, RWA, and the Eric Hoffer competition. Tim Tigner writes fast-paced espionage thrillers with the tagline: Devious Devices, International Intrigue, and the Deadly Mistake of Messing with the Wrong Guy. A Soviet Counterintelligence Specialist and Veteran of the Green Berets, Tim worked out of Moscow throughout perestroika, Brussels during the formation of the EU, and more recently Silicon Valley as a startup CEO. Please visit his website to download one of Tim’s thrillers for free. R. G. Belsky is an author of crime fiction and a journalist in New York City. His suspense thriller, THE KENNEDY CONNECTION, was published by Atria in August 2014. It is the first in a series of books from Atria featuring Gil Malloy, a New York Daily News reporter. Belsky himself is a former managing editor of the Daily News; metropolitan editor of the New York Post; news editor at Star magazine and – most recently – managing editor at NBCNews.com. A.D. Garrett is the pseudonym for the writing collaboration between author, Margaret Murphy, and forensic advisor, Professor Dave Barclay. Under her own name, Margaret’s novels have received starred reviews from Publishers’ Weekly and Booklist in the USA. She has been shortlisted for the First Blood critics’ award for crime fiction, and the Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) Dagger in the Library, and she is a CWA Short Story Dagger winner. She is an RLF Writing Fellow, is founder of Murder Squad, a touring group of crime writers, and past Chair of the CWA. Diane Kelly is the author of funny, romantic mysteries, including the Paw Enforcement K-9 series and the Death and Taxes white-collar crime series. She is a former state assistant attorney general and tax advisor who spent much of her career fighting, or inadvertently working for, white-collar criminals. She is also a proud graduate of the Mansfield, Texas Citizens Police Academy. Diane has combined her fascination with law enforcement and her love of animals in her K-9 cop Paw Enforcement series. Jason M. Hough (pronounced ‘Huff’) is the New York Times bestselling author of The Darwin Elevator, The Exodus Towers, and The Plague Forge. His next novel, Zero World, is coming in September 2015. In a former life he was a 3-D artist, animator, and game designer. Jason lives near Seattle, Washington with his wife and two young sons. Laura Elvebak studied writing at UCLA, USC, Rice, and Beyond Baroque. She has penned several magazine articles, co-wrote, directed and acted in a one-act play, optioned three screenplays, and co-wrote a script for the 48 Hour Film Project. She is the author of the Niki Alexander mysteries, Less Dead and Lost Witness. A standalone, The Flawed Dance, is due from Black Opal Books on July 18, followed by the third Niki Alexander mystery, A Matter of Revenge. She is the treasurer and newsletter editor of the Southwest Chapter of MWA, a member of Sisters-In-Crime, The International Thriller Writers, and The Final Twist Writers. Previous ArticleAugust 3 – 9: “What do you look for when selecting a critique group?”Next ArticleCuriously Dark Tales by Debbie Christiana
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Popeye Volume 2: Wimpy & His Hamburgers (The E. C. Segar Popeye Sundays) (Paperback) By E. C. Segar, Kevin Huizenga (Introduction by) The incorrigible Wimpy takes center stage in the second volume of Fantagraphics' spectacularly packaged comic strip collection, The E.C. Segar Popeye Sundays. An irresistible alchemy of screwball comedy, tender romance, and rags-to-riches fantasy, Elsie Crisler Segar's newspaper comic strip, starring Popeye the sailor man, captivated readers of the Roaring Twenties and beyond. Fantagraphics is thrilled to bring Segar's whimsical world back into print, collecting the complete Popeye Sunday stories in four gorgeous full-color volumes, each packaged in a deluxe vertical slipcase. Volume one highlighted the mercurial relationship between Popeye and Olive Oyl, while volume two shifts the focus to an even more dynamic connection, between that of J. Wellington Wimpy and his one true object of desire: a delectable hamburger. A notorious chiseler without a penny to his name, Wimpy is forever scheming new ways to bamboozle the local diner out of a mouth-watering morsel of his favorite meal. And the audacious chicaneries Wimpy employs in pursuit of his greatest love are as riotous today as they were when these strips first appeared in the '30s. Featuring laugh-out-loud gags, sensational slugfests, and an endearing cast of characters, this Wimpy-centric volume of classic Popeye adventures emphatically answers the question: Where's the beef? Plus, an illustrated appreciation/deconstruction of this legendary comic character by acclaimed cartoonist Kevin Huizenga! E.C. Segar (1894-1938), creator of Popeye, is a member of the Will Eisner Awards Hall of Fame. He was born in Chester, IL in 1894 and passed away in his longtime home of Santa Monica, CA. The National Cartoonists Society created the Elzie Segar Award in his honor, which was awarded annually to a cartoonist who has made a unique and outstanding contribution to the profession. Kevin Huizenga is a cartoonist living in Chicago. He has won awards for various comics and graphic novels starring his signature everyman, Glenn Ganges. His work has been featured in the Best American Comics anthologies and he currently publishes a monthly electronic magazine named “F” where he serializes new stories. His latest book is The River at Night. Nearly every episode collected here reveals Segar to be an absurdly hilarious master draftsman and wildly entertaining storyteller. … An essential volume of both graphic storytelling and early 20th-century art. — Library Journal (Starred Review) Perfect for a classic cartoon fan. Its focus on relatable themes like love, romance, and daffy humor make it a series readers should not miss. — Screen Rant Publisher: Fantagraphics Series: The E. C. Segar Popeye Sundays
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A Mixed Record on Urban Renewal Published: Jan. 22, 2023, 6:02 a.m. This 2019 file photos shows the view from the Hyatt Hotels at Portland's Oregon Convention Center. The hotel was built as part of the urban renewal plan for the Convention Center area. Mark Graves/The OregonianMark Graves Gosia Wozniacka | The Oregonian/OregonLive Franklin Roosevelt inspired the policy of urban renewal, which launched after World War II with the passage of the Housing Act to revitalize “blighted” neighborhoods. In many cases, the program targeted minority neighborhoods for redevelopment and forced out residents. When federal dollars for urban renewal dried up in the 1970s, states adopted a mechanism called tax increment financing or TIF. In a TIF district, a community’s property values are frozen as the city invests public dollars, encouraging business and housing development and leading property values – and property taxes – to rise. That tax increase, or increment, is then used to pay off the bonds sold to finance the revitalization efforts. In Portland, urban renewal has funded 17 major redevelopment areas since 1958. Here are the most noteworthy projects: South Auditorium: The city’s first urban renewal project, it encompassed 110 acres on the southern fringe of downtown. The project displaced a neighborhood of older Jewish and Italian immigrants, as well as Chinese, Greek, Italian and Irish residents. More than 50 blocks were bulldozed, destroying homes, businesses, churches and synagogues. They were replaced with high-rises, offices, parks and fountains. Portland State: Launched in the 1960s, it involved the demolition of most buildings, except for structures belonging to the then-college, including multiple apartment buildings, many occupied by elderly residents. It led to the relocation of hundreds of families and more than 50 businesses. The project helped the university emerge and expand its campus and made significant improvements to the park blocks. Emanuel Hospital: Launched in 1970, it included 55 acres in the Albina area, a predominantly Black neighborhood and the heart of the Black commercial district. The city demolished several hundred properties – homes, businesses and churches – to expand the hospital and build related facilities, parking and employee housing. Most of the demolished properties were owned or rented by Black families. Albina citizens, supported by the American Friends Service Committee, created the Emanuel Displaced Persons Association in 1970 to express anger about the forced relocation. Downtown Waterfront: Launched in 1974, it aimed to revitalize downtown and covered about 300 acres of the city center, from Union Station to the Marquam Bridge. Funding supported new public open spaces, such as construction of Pioneer Courthouse Square and Tom McCall Waterfront Park, the new RiverPlace development in the South Waterfront, new parking garages and expansion of the transit mall and improvements to Union Station. Central Eastside: The project, adopted in 1986, focused on maintaining and creating jobs in a 681-acre area of warehouses, distribution centers and manufacturing near the Willamette River. The project invested in public street and access improvements to ease travel to businesses and the new OMSI campus. It supported industrial and commercial redevelopment of vacant or underused land and created the Eastbank Esplanade. Lents Town Center: Adopted in 1998 for 2,846 acres, the district aims to improve the economy, housing and infrastructure in the distressed outer Southeast Portland neighborhood. Funding has helped build light rail and affordable housing, turn an abandoned auto wholesaler into the Latino food cart court Portland Mercado and create other spaces for retail and local nonprofits. Gateway: Created in 2001 for 650 acres, the district has partially funded the MAX Green Line and major street improvements. It also paid for the development of the award-winning Nick Fish building, which provides affordable housing and commercial space, and the adjacent 3-acre Gateway Discovery Park. Interstate Corridor: Approved in 2000 for nearly 4,000 acres, the city’s largest urban renewal district encompasses some of Portland’s most racially diverse neighborhoods and has one of the highest concentrations of low-income residents. While the initial plan promised anti-displacement measures and money for affordable housing and small business development, the city initially spent much of the funding on building the MAX Yellow Line. After resident protests, the second phase dedicated 70% of the remaining district money for affordable housing.
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5G: Application of Future Information Era December 4, 2022 February 20, 2023 / By Ravi Bandakkanavar / GENERAL TECHNICAL PAPERS, TECHNICAL PAPERS, WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY The full name of 5G is the fifth-generation mobile communication technology, which means that mobile communication technology has developed to the fifth-generation stage on a global scale, and it is further optimized and expanded on the basis of 4G technology. The current 4G has been difficult to meet the needs of Internet technology development and scale expansion, and the new generation of 5G technology can provide sufficient technical support for its development, so 5G technology will play an extremely critical role in the future information age. 5G Features and Benefits 5G has the characteristics of large capacity, high speed, low latency, and high mobility. The 5G system can provide connection support for more than one million devices per square kilometer, providing a communication foundation for the Internet of Everything. Due to the advent of the 5G network era, optical modules are an important part of the communication network, and the demand for optical modules has also increased significantly. It is expected that 5G will bring tens of millions of 25/50/100Gbps optical modules. The 5G system will achieve a peak rate of 10 Gb/s, which can meet the needs of industrial customers for high-speed data collection and transmission. The 5G system will provide an ideal delay of less than 1 ms and a typical end-to-end delay of 5-10 ms, thus supporting some real-time applications in industrial scenarios. The 5G system can support user communication in a mobile scenario of up to 500 km per hour, so as to adapt to the increasing trend of communication in a fast-moving environment. 5G technology has significant advantages over 4G and earlier communication technologies. In terms of data transmission, 5G has a higher rate, shorter delay, and longer transmission distance. 5G supports a peak rate of 10 Gb/s to 20 Gb/s and a user experience rate of 1 Gb/s. As low as 1 ms, the transmission distance is as long as 2 km. In terms of system efficiency and capacity, 5G has lower power consumption and operating costs, higher spectrum utilization and information utilization, and supports more users. 5G has stronger stability and encryption and can browse pictures and videos without freezing, bringing users a better experience. 5G itself has good compatibility and can be connected with wireless, Bluetooth, etc. Read more on the key features of 5G. 5G Application Scenarios 5G uses scenarios to promote communication standards, and 5G communication scenarios can realize the mutual connection between people and people, and between people and things. The International Organization for Standardization 3GPP defines three typical application scenarios of 5G systems: eMBB (Enhanced Mobile Internet) mMTC (Massively Connected Internet of Things) and uRLLC (Ultra-Low Latency Highly Reliable Communication) eMBB The eMBB scenario aims to provide a consistent user experience within the coverage area, which requires high-speed data transmission at the Gb/s level and low access delay. This scenario mainly carries high-speed data transmission and high-traffic mobile broadband services, such as 3D/UHD video, virtual/augmented reality, and edge computing deployment. The mMTC scenario requires the network to support over 100 billion connections, a connection density of one million devices per square kilometer, and ultra-low power consumption and ultra-low cost of terminals. This scenario mainly carries services targeting sensing and data collection, such as smart cities, smart enterprises, and environmental monitoring. uRLLC The uRLLC scenario places high reliability and low latency requirements on the network. The network must not only ensure nearly 100% transmission reliability but also support end-to-end latency at the millisecond level. This scenario mainly carries timely services with strong real-time requirements, such as unmanned driving and industrial automation. In addition, 3GPP also defines 8 capability indicators of 5G to describe the capability requirements of application scenarios for 5G systems: peak rate, user experience rate, spectral efficiency, mobility, air interface delay, connection density, network energy efficiency, and traffic density. Different application scenarios of 5G have different requirements for these indicators. Further, the major application areas of 5G like AI, AR & VR, IoT, and automation have been discussed here. 5G Wireless Technology Insustrial Applications of 5G 5G Industrial Internet is the future development trend and the core of competition among countries. It has attracted great attention all over the world. New technologies and new network models will also be integrated into the development process of various industries and enterprises, bringing real value enhancement.
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/3829
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Customs & Excise Department The Customs & Excise Department (CED) is one of the oldest tax-collecting organisations and border protection agencies in Singapore, having started operation as the Government Monopolies Department in 1910. It has undergone numerous changes in its 90-year history. The first duties CED imposed were on hard liquors and opium. Over the years, the range of dutiable goods expanded to include motor vehicles, liquor, tobacco products and petroleum. Aside from collecting revenue, CED worked closely with other government departments, such as the Central Narcotics Bureau, to safeguard Singapore’s welfare and security. The introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on 1 April 1994 further broadened CED’s job scope. CED introduced a dual-channel traveller clearance system at Changi Airport in 1991 to simplify the passenger clearance process and save travellers' time. The Red and Green Channels system of clearing incoming travellers was subsequently extended to all entry checkpoints in Singapore. In the Very Beginning (mid-18th Century to 1940s) The ruling colonial government established the Opium Commission. The opium trade provided a steady income to the British Government. The first customs tariff – a tariff on hard liquors – came into effect. The Monopolies Department was established on 1 January, taking over control of opium imports and sales. To raise additional funds for the war in Europe, tobacco – including cigars and cigarettes – was taxed on import. Customs headquarters shifted from Cecil Street over to Customs House. The Excise Department replaced the Monopolies Department, reflecting a decreasing reliance on revenue earned from the opium trade. Duties on tobacco, petroleum and liquor were now the major sources of funds. The Excise Department was renamed the Department of Customs & Excise, headed by the Comptroller of Customs. To bolster funds for the war effort, duties were imposed on new commodities and a temporary entertainment duty was introduced. The British Government announced the total prohibition of opium. The Opium and Chandu Proclamation was passed. Those in possession of opium, chandu, pipes, lamps or utensils had to surrender them. Unfortunately, the prohibition failed to deter addicts, and the huge demand for opium persisted. Traffickers, quick to cash in on widespread cravings, resuscitated the lucrative opium smuggling trade. Changing with the Times (1950s to 1970s) Mr Tan Soo Chye became the first local Chinese Comptroller of Customs and Excise. The Police Force took over responsibility for internally suppressing drug trafficking and consumption. Customs adopted the procedure of stamping ‘Singapore Duty Not Paid’ or ‘SDNP’ on duty-free exports of cigarettes and liquor. The Control of Imports and Exports Ordinance was passed, enforcing proper trade documentation and controls, and thus upholding Singapore’s economic interests. The departure of the last expatriate officer marked the full ‘Malayanisation’ of the Department. The Free Trade Zones Act was established in August, allowing free trade zones to be established. A new Research and Commercial Intelligence Section was tasked with meeting international obligations that arose from agreements made at international customs conventions. The Government announced a six-year modernisation plan, which covered the period between 1973 and 1978, to make sure Singapore could meet the anticipated demand for Customs clearance during the 1980s. The Customs (Liquors Licensing) Regulations required operators of coffee shops, provision shops, hawker centres and other shops to take up beer licences. From 31 December onwards, an import duty of 15 per cent applied to motorcycles, scooters and other similar machines. A Narcotics Detection Dog Unit was formed within the Investigations Division. Moving into the Millennium (1980s to 2003) On 1 July, the Airports Division moved its headquarters from Paya Lebar to the newly opened Singapore Changi Airport. The Department moved its headquarters to the World Trade Centre. The Red and Green Channels system of clearing incoming travellers was successfully implemented at Singapore Changi Airport. This dramatically sped up the Customs clearance process for incoming visitors. The Goods and Services Tax came into effect on 1 April. A Customs Call Centre was set up to handle all telephone enquiries relating to customs matters. The Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal commenced operations. The Department launched its inaugural website. Singapore Customs moved its current corporate headquarters to Revenue House. The Department received its first ISO 9002 Certification from the Singapore Productivity and Standards Board. The Tuas and Woodlands checkpoints adopted a paperless container clearance process. The Department launched an electronic filing facility for bulk transfer of baggage belonging to flight and cruise tour groups. In recognition of its outstanding performance and achievements, the Department received the Outstanding Quality Control Organisation Award at the 16th International Exposition of Quality Convention. The Sea-Cargo Electronic Acknowledgement System (SEA System) was launched. A survey conducted by Business Traveller UK ranked the Customs clearance process at Singapore Changi Airport first in the world in both the ‘Large Airports’ and ‘All Airports’ categories. Singapore Immigration & Registration History of SI History of NRD Last updated on 25 January 2019.
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/4478
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IQVIA Named to FORTUNE’s 2023 List of “World’s Most Admired Companies,” Ranked #1 in Its Category for the Second Consecutive Year RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–IQVIA™ (NYSE:IQV), a leading global provider of advanced analytics, technology solutions and clinical research services to the life sciences industry, has been named to FORTUNE magazine’s “World’s Most Admired Companies” list for the sixth consecutive year. Once again, IQVIA earned the first-place ranking within FORTUNE’s Health Care: Pharmacy and Other Services category and ranked number one for innovation, people management, use of corporate assets, social responsibility, quality of products and services, global competitiveness and long-term investment value. “It is an honor to be named to FORTUNE’s list of the World’s Most Admired Companies for the sixth year in a row. This distinction is a recognition of the impact our 86,000 employees have on driving healthcare forward. Their passion and expertise drive innovations that help improve patient outcomes across the world,” said IQVIA Chairman and CEO Ari Bousbib. FORTUNE’s World’s Most Admired Companies list is the definitive report card on corporate reputation. Since 1997, FORTUNE has identified, selected, and ranked the World’s Most Admired Companies, identifying the business practices that make these companies highly regarded among their peers. Most Admired Company Survey Methodology FORTUNE collaborated with Korn Ferry on this survey of corporate reputation. They began with a universe of about 1,500 candidates: the 1,000 largest U.S. companies ranked by revenue, along with non-U.S. companies in the Fortune Global 500 database that have revenues of $10 billion or more. The list was then winnowed to the highest-revenue companies in each industry, a total of 645 in 27 countries, and the top-rated companies were picked from that pool. To determine the best-regarded companies in 52 industries, Korn Ferry asked executives, directors, and analysts to rate enterprises in their own industry on nine criteria, from investment value and quality of management and products to social responsibility and ability to attract talent. A company’s score must rank in the top half of its industry survey to be listed. About IQVIA IQVIA (NYSE:IQV) is a leading global provider of advanced analytics, technology solutions, and clinical research services to the life sciences industry. IQVIA creates intelligent connections across all aspects of healthcare through its analytics, transformative technology, big data resources and extensive domain expertise. IQVIA Connected Intelligence™ delivers powerful insights with speed and agility — enabling customers to accelerate the clinical development and commercialization of innovative medical treatments that improve healthcare outcomes for patients. With approximately 86,000 employees, IQVIA conducts operations in more than 100 countries. IQVIA is a global leader in protecting individual patient privacy. The company uses a wide variety of privacy-enhancing technologies and safeguards to protect individual privacy while generating and analyzing information on a scale that helps healthcare stakeholders identify disease patterns and correlate with the precise treatment path and therapy needed for better outcomes. IQVIA’s insights and execution capabilities help biotech, medical device and pharmaceutical companies, medical researchers, government agencies, payers and other healthcare stakeholders tap into a deeper understanding of diseases, human behaviors and scientific advances, in an effort to advance their path toward cures. To learn more, visit www.iqvia.com. Nick Childs, IQVIA Investor Relations ([email protected]) Trent Brown, IQVIA Media Relations ([email protected])
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EECS Faculty to explore implications of ChatGPT in new AI lecture series EECS Faculty will headline a new AI lecture series to explore the “paradigm shift” that ChatGPT and other large language models (LLMs) have catalyzed. CS Professors Jitendra Malik, Stuart Russell and Michael Jordan are among the seven speakers scheduled this spring to address the sensation that is ChatGPT and other related LLMs. CS Professor Ken Goldberg, who organized the lecture series on behalf of Berkeley Artificial Intelligence Research (BAIR), said, “Something changed very dramatically with the performance of ChatGPT, compared with previous large language models, and everyone, including experts, is asking, ‘What does it mean? Where do we go from here?’” The series will also feature John Schulman (Ph.D. ‘16; advisor: Pieter Abbeel), a co-founder of OpenAI and the primary architect of ChatGPT. “Everyone wants to hear from the experts,” Goldberg said. “There are so many misconceptions out there. In the series, we’ll hear from those who have been working in the field for many years who can provide valuable perspectives on the importance of ChatGPT.” AI lectures at Berkeley to explore possibilities, implications of ChatGPT The Berkeley lectures on the status and future of AI University College Dublin names EECS alumna as president EECS alumna Orla Feely is the first woman to be named President of University College Dublin (UCD). Feely (M.S. ’90, Ph.D. ‘92 EECS, advisor: Leon O. Chua ) will lead UCD for a ten-year term beginning in May. Feely, a Professor of Electronic Engineering, is currently the Vice President for Research, Innovation and Impact at UCD. At Berkeley, her Ph.D. thesis won the David J. Sakrison Memorial Prize for outstanding and innovative research, and she also received the Outstanding Graduate Student Instructor Award. Feely’s research interests are in nonlinear circuits and systems. She is a Member of the Royal Irish Academy, Engineers Ireland, the Irish Academy of Engineering, and an IEEE Fellow. UCD appoints Prof Orla Feely as new president Hari Balakrishnan wins 2023 Marconi Prize 2021 Distinguished CS Alumnus Hari Balakrishnan (Ph.D. 1998, advisor: Randy Katz) has won the 2023 Marconi Prize “for his fundamental contributions to mobile sensing, networking, and distributed systems.” The Marconi Prize, which is the highest honor of the Marconi Society, is given each year to innovators who have made significant contributions to increasing inclusivity through the advancement of information and communications technology. Balakrishnan is the Fujitsu Professor of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT. He is also the Founder, CTO, and Chairman of Cambridge Mobile Telematics (CMT). His graduate work at Berkeley won the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award in 1998. He was inducted to the National Academy of Engineering in 2015 and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2017; he received the Infosys Prize in 2020 and the IEEE Koji Kobayashi Award for Computers and Communication in 2021 for his important contributions to networks, mobile systems, and telematics. He is also a Fellow of both the ACM and IEEE. CREATING A SAFER, MORE RESILIENT SOCIETY: 2023 MARCONI PRIZE AWARDED TO HARI BALAKRISHNAN BESSA board members Bridget Agyare, Farhiya Ali, Jesus Wilkins, Mialy Rasetarinera, Megane Tchatchouang, and Laila Walker. (Photo: Rhett Jones Jr. Photography) BESSA, BGESS celebrate milestone anniversaries The Black Engineering and Science Student Association (BESSA), and Black Graduate Engineering and Science Students (BGESS), celebrated their 55th and 35th anniversaries, respectively. The anniversary celebration and community building event, which took place on February 11, 2023, was hosted by the Black Engineering and Science Alumni Club (BESAC), and began with a daytime speaker series, followed by a reception at Alumni House. Several EECS alumni were in attendance, such as UC Davis Chancellor and EECS distinguished alumni Gary May (M.S.’88, Ph.D. ’91 EECS) and Valerie Taylor (Ph.D. ’91 EECS), director of the mathematics and computer science division at Argonne National Lab. Other notable alumni who were present include Marie-Ange Eyoum Tagne (M.S. ’03, Ph.D. ’06 EECS), head of product at Yahoo! and Omoju Miller (Ph.D. ‘16 CS Education), CEO and founder of Fimio; Hakim Weatherspoon (Ph.D. ‘06 CS), now a professor of computer science at Cornell, participated in a Black faculty panel. The celebration also marked the 5th anniversary of BESAC. “Being with my fellow BESSA peers and hearing the inspirational stories of BESSA alumni was a very emotional experience for me,” said Bridget Agyare, who is an undergraduate EECS major and BESSA board member. “These successful and distinguished alumni were just like us– they invested time and effort into BESSA’s legacy, they were passionate about STEM, and they were leaders in their community– and seeing what they have achieved reassures me that one day our hard work will pay off and we will succeed as well." Black Engineering and Science Alumni Club to host anniversary celebration for BESSA, BGESS Berkeley EECS to honor Joseph Gier with memorial sculpture A community is defined by the heroes it chooses to celebrate. We invite you to join the EECS department in recognizing a previously overlooked hero, Berkeley EE Prof. Joseph T. Gier, the University of California's first tenured Black professor. Raised in Oakland by a single mother, Gier came to Berkeley as an undergraduate in 1930, and earned two degrees (B.S. ME '33 and M.Eng. '40) before becoming an EE lecturer in 1944, associate professor with tenure in 1952, and full professor in 1958. He was a world authority on thermal and luminous radiation, and an inventor of devices used in the early days of aerospace exploration and solar power harvesting. He was also said to be an extraordinary teacher and role model during a period of deep national segregation and social unrest. We have commissioned artist Dana King to create a bronze monument representing Gier and his contributions to ensure that his profound legacy is restored to the life of the Berkeley campus, and to permanently establish him as a mainstay in our cultural narrative. We hope to raise $150K to fund the creation, installation and upkeep of the sculpture, which will be placed at the entrance of Blum Hall. Learn more about the project and join our team effort! Sophia Shao, Prabal Dutta, and Deepak Pathak win 2022 Okawa Foundation Research Grants EECS Assistant Prof. Sophia Shao, Associate Prof. Prabal Dutta, and alumnus Deepak Pathak have won 2022 Okawa Foundation Research Grants. The Okawa Foundation for Information and Telecommunications recognizes "studies and analyses in the fields of information and telecommunications." Shao, whose research interests are in computer architecture, was awarded for her work on building domain-specific systems at scale. Dutta, whose research interests include energy-efficient cyber-physical systems and applications of sensor networks and Internet-of-things technology, was awarded for his work on a new kind of radio architecture, called “backsplatter,” and combining it with conventional radios. Pathak, who is now an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, was recognized for his work “Towards Continually Improving Robots in the Wild.” They comprise three of the seven U.S. recipients who were awarded $10,000 grants this year. The Research Grant Recipients 2022 Prabal Dutta wins 2022 ACM SenSys Test of Time Award EECS Associate Prof. Prabal Dutta has won the 2022 ACM SenSys Test of Time Award. The paper by Dutta, Dawson-Haggerty (Ph.D. ‘14), Chen, Liang, and Terzis titled, “Design and Evaluation of a Versatile and Efficient Receiver-Initiated Link Layer for Low-Power Wireless,” was recognized “for pioneering the use of synchronous transmissions in low-power protocols by exploiting their benefits at the MAC layer and pushing the limits of radio operation.” Established in 2014, the “ToTA” recognizes papers that are at least 10 years old and have demonstrated long-lasting impact on network embedded sensing system science and engineering. “It's a real testament that so much of the field traces its roots to Berkeley,” said Dutta. ACM SenSys ToTA Winners Design and evaluation of a versatile and efficient receiver-initiated link layer for low-power wireless Berkeley EECS mourns the loss of Dave Hodges EECS Prof. Emeritus and alumnus David A. Hodges (M.S. 1961; Ph.D. 1966) passed away on November 13th. He was 85. A former engineering dean and EECS department chair, Prof. Hodges began his career at Bell Telephone Laboratories before joining the EECS faculty in 1970 where his pioneering contributions to the design of integrated circuit (IC) chips and use of silicon-based metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) technology challenged the conventional wisdom of the era. His landmark research led to the rapid development of devices, technologies, and standards that not only were instrumental to the growth of the semiconductor industry in Silicon Valley but continue to have a tremendous impact today. After 28 years of active service wherein he supervised 27 completed doctoral dissertations, 91 completed master's degrees, co-authored 3 books, 130 technical publications, and 6 patents, Prof. Hodges remained a stalwart of the department, mentoring and championing new faculty and shaping the department culture for decades to come. Prof. Hodges was a Fellow of the IEEE and a member of the NAE. He won the IEEE Education Medal (1997), the Berkeley Citation (1998), and was inducted into the Silicon Valley Hall of Fame (2013). A tremendous teacher, collaborator, colleague, and mentor, Prof. Hodges will be dearly missed. David Hodges, former dean of engineering and pioneer in integrated circuit design, dies at 85 Constance Chang-Hasnain wins 2022 Welker Award EE alumna and EECS Prof. Emerita Constance Chang-Hasnain (Ph.D. '87) has won the 2022 Welker Award at Compound Semiconductor Week (CSW). She was cited “For pioneering contributions to VCSEL photonics, nano-photonics and high contrast metastructures for optical communications and optical sensing.” Vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers, or VCSELs, are used in many consumer electronics, including 3D smartphone sensors and cars. Established in 1976 in honor of Heinrich Welker, the pioneer of III-V compound semiconductors, the Welker Award is given to those who have made outstanding contributions to the field of III-V compound semiconductors. Prof. Chang-Hasnain currently serves as Chairperson and founder of Berxel Photonics Co. Ltd. She is an NAI Fellow, an IEEE Fellow, and an NAE member. In 2021, she was elected president of Optica (formerly known as the Optical Society of America). CSW-2022 Awards Paul Debevec to receive Emmy for Lifetime Achievement EECS alumnus Paul Debevec (Ph.D. ‘96, advisor: Jitendra Malik) will receive the Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award at the Television Academy’s 74th Engineering, Science & Technology Emmy Awards. The award recognizes Debevec for his pioneering work on high dynamic range imaging, image-based lighting, and photogrammetry–techniques that are now standard within the VFX industry for computer-rendered images and graphics. Debevec is also recognized for his work with LED lighting, which “further laid the groundwork” for its use in virtual production, and “has seen a rapid growth as a tool for lighting actors on virtual stages," according to the Television Academy. Debevec is currently the director of research, creative algorithms, and technology at Netflix, and is an adjunct research professor at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies. He received ACM SIGGRAPH's first Significant New Researcher Award in 2001, a Scientific and Engineering Academy Award in 2010, and the SMPTE Progress Medal in 2017. Debevec co-authored the 2005 book, "High Dynamic Range Imaging," chaired the SIGGRAPH 2007 Computer Animation Festival, served as Vice President of ACM SIGGRAPH, as well as co-chair of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Sci-Tech Council. Computer Graphics Innovator Paul Debevec to Receive Emmy for Lifetime Achievement Winners of 74th Engineering, Science & Technology Emmys Announced
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Nidec to Invest US$70 Million to Boost Production of Embraco Compressors By Ntsako Khosa, Jun 21, 2021, 10:16 • 4 minute reading The investment will increase annual production capacity for compressors and condensing units by 10 million units, including hydrocarbon models. Valter Taranzano, Nidec Global Appliance Nidec Global Appliance, a division of Japanese manufacturer Nidec, announced that it will invest US$70 million in new production lines for its Embraco brand compressors and condensing units, including propane (R290) and isobutane (R600a) models. Currently, Embraco produces 45 million compressors and condensing units per year. The new production lines – at plants in Brazil, Mexico, China and Austria – will increase annual production capacity by more than 10 million units. Nidec has three business units: one that provides solutions for commercial refrigeration equipment; another that makes compressors and motors for residential appliances; and a third that produces components for HVAC systems. A number of factors, including effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, motivated the investment decision. “As people all around the world are spending more time at home, it has become increasingly important to re-evaluate the level of quality and energy efficiency of residential appliances,” explained Valter Taranzano, CEO of Nidec Global Appliance. “In parallel, more people at home means more consumption of fresh food, increasing the demand for refrigeration in the food retail sector, such as supermarkets and convenience stores,” he said, adding that cooling is also a key factor in the health and scientific industries, two sectors that experienced an increase in demand for refrigeration due to COVID-19. Taranzano noted that the investment package also puts Nidec “ahead of the game to support the transition to natural refrigerants and to variable speed (more energy efficient) compressors, which are two movements that are ongoing in different stages in many parts of the world.” Additional production capacity is also required “to support our future growth plans,” he said. Investments in Brazil and Mexico Out of the US$70 million, an investment of US$21 million in a plant in Joinville, Brazil, will add a third production line of EM compressors and deliver additional 2.5 million units per year in response to high demand in Brazil and Latin America. This is on top of a US$4 million investment already made to increase productivity, Nidec said. The EM compressor – one of Embraco’s “best sellers, the company said – is a fixed-speed unit running on R600a and R290, and suited for a variety of applications, such as home refrigerators, supermarket’s refrigeration equipment, professional kitchens and merchandisers. The new production line will deliver the latest EM models, EM2 and EM3. At a plant in Itaiópolis, Brazil, Nidec is investing around US$2 million to increase production capacity for condensing units by 25%. In Apodaca, Mexico, the production facility is receiving US$35 million to build a new production line for ES compressors, increasing production capacity by 60%. The plant will supply North America, supporting the transition to hydrocarbon units with greater cooling capacity in the region. Investments in Austria and China In Austria and China, Nidec Global Appliance is investing in greater production of variable speed compressors, which “are a more environmentally responsible option that provides significant energy savings compared to traditional on-off compressors,” the company said, adding that the units have “the option of running on natural refrigerants. In a plant in Fürstenfeld, Austria, Nidec is investing US$5 million to start production of two variable speed models, FMX and VES, for the European market. [The investment puts Nidec] ahead of the game to support the transition to natural refrigerants and to variable speed (more energy efficient) compressors.”– Valter Taranzano, Nidec Global Appliance In Beijing China, US$3 million in funding will increase the annual production capacity of the VES, FMX and VEM variable speed compressors. The target markets for the products are China, Japan, Europe and the U.S., where they can be used in residential and some small light commercial applications, in segments such as merchandisers, food service and food retail. These compressors are especially suited for countries that have stricter energy consumption regulations for appliances, and those “where technology is a key buying criteria,” Nidec said. The units can also adapt to different voltage levels. The variable speed compressors “optimize energy consumption and give OEMs the flexibility to customize their product according to each market need,” said Guilherme Almeida, Strategic Planning Vice President at Nidec Global Appliance. “From the end users’ perspective, whether they are food retailers or homeowners, these compressors mean efficiency, reliability, sustainability and energy savings.” By Ntsako Khosa share this story on: ATMOsphere Europe Keynoter: NatRefs Outperform F-Gases in Efficiency By Devin Yoshimoto , Sep 30, 2021, 04:28 HFOs produce TFA and R23, putting the future sustainability of our planet at risk. NatRef Technologies Among First Contributions to Philippines Cold Chain Development... By Devin Yoshimoto , Oct 20, 2021, 03:48 The contributions include CO2 and propane refrigeration systems for transport and food retail applications.
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Top firms land new infrastructure, government deals Companies such as AECOM and WSP have recently pulled in big-ticket contracts including work for NASA, the Navy and the Department of Energy. By Jeffrey Steele Permission granted by CalMod Has your firm recently been awarded a contract of $200 million or more? Email the Construction Dive editors to let us know. The country’s major construction companies have been busy over the past six months with new contracts for projects. These big-ticket contracts and large-scale infrastructure projects include work for NASA, the Navy and the Department of Energy. Here, Construction Dive takes a closer look at the scope, duration and budget of the top project contracts awarded to AEC companies since last fall— each involving budgets of $200 million or more. In late September, global design and engineering firm AECOM was tapped to deliver architectural and engineering services for the Kennedy Space Center in Merritt Island, Florida, as well as other NASA operational hubs. The multiple-award contract continues a relationship that extends back more than a half-century and is for indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity, with a program ceiling of $300 million for a five-year run. The project scope calls for AECOM to rehabilitate, modernize and develop new systems for facilities, utilities and ground support at a number of high-profile NASA locations across the U.S. These facilities include: The Kennedy Space Center. The Ellington Field and Sonny Carter Training Facility at Texas’s Johnson Space Center. New Mexico’s White Sands Test Facility. Alabama’s Marshall Space Flight Center. Louisiana’s Michoud Assembly Facility. Mississippi’s Stennis Space Center. AECOM is contracted to deliver a broad array of architecture, civil, structural, mechanical and electrical infrastructure services in all phases — including planning and feasibility, permitting, preliminary engineering, final design, engineering services during construction, activation and commissioning. Services will include field investigation and surveys, engineering and environmental reports, trade studies, design specifications, construction site inspections, scheduling and cost estimating. The Caltrain Electrification Project — which addresses the upgrade and electrification of Caltrain’s commuter rail service through San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties — will have its scope of work and project schedule modified as part of a $347 million contract amendment agreement with Balfour Beatty and the Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board announced in December. The joint commitment to complete the project (shown above) by September 2024 was solidified through this agreement. The $347 million agreement, which is exclusive to the construction scope of work, is the result of a partnership between Balfour Beatty and other project stakeholders to ascertain the most efficient and cost-effective ways to deliver Caltrain’s 25kv AC overhead catenary system. The initiative’s goal is to create a more sustainable rail service and will replace aging diesel trains with high-performance electric ones, which will use the OCS as a power source. The OCS will also boost commuter rail service to six trains per peak hour per direction at up to 79 mph train operating speeds. The project will focus on electrifying the rail corridor between Caltrain’s San Francisco Station and its Tamien Station in San Jose. The Balfour Beatty design-build team will electrify the remaining Caltrain corridor sections by continuing to work along 52 miles of dual-track alignment. Construction activities will include testing soil conditions, pinpointing underground utilities, inspecting signal and communication equipment, pruning and removing trees and handling foundation installation. Fluor Marine Propulsion, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fluor Corp., had its existing United States Department of the Navy contract extended through fiscal year 2022. The one-year, cost-plus-fixed-fee option is valued at $1.16 billion. The November announcement centered on a contract for Naval Reactors, a joint program overseen by the DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration and the Department of the Navy. Naval Nuclear Propulsion work is included in the contract. The work will take place at New York, Pennsylvania and Idaho Navy Nuclear Laboratory sites. In addition, a team including Fluor won an environmental management contract in October for the DOE’s Savannah River project, a 310-square-mile site bordering the Savannah River that encompasses parts of Aiken, Barnwell and Allendale counties in South Carolina. Savannah River Mission Completion is a joint venture led by a subsidiary of BWX Technologies and involving Fluor and Amentum; it was selected to execute the SRS Integrated Mission Completion Contract. Liquid waste stabilization and disposal are among the projects within the contract’s scope of work involving large-scale cleanup. Over a 10-year ordering period of performance, the single indefinite-delivery and indefinite-quantity contract is valued at up to $21 billion. In September, it was reported that a joint venture of Turner Construction Co. along with design and architectural firms AC Martin and HGA — known as Turner+AC Martin+HGA Design-Build — were awarded a $380 million design-build project for the California Department of General Services. The project involves a complete teardown of the 17-story, 657,000-square-foot Resources Building in downtown Sacramento. By the spring of 2025, the Resources Building is anticipated to provide office space for approximately 2,500 staff from a variety of California State departments and workplaces. They include Labor and Workforce Development headquarters, the Employment Development Department and onsite DGS Facilities Management Division. WSP USA has served as a general engineering consultant for the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority since 2017. Now, by inking in January a new five-year contract as the authority’s required consulting engineer, it has been selected to continue leading digital design delivery for Illinois Tollway through 2026. Operating five toll roads in 12 northern Illinois counties, the authority links inland ports, seven interstates, three international airports and the second largest network of rail lines in the U.S. In that capacity, it will support Move Illinois: The Illinois Tollway Driving the Future program — a 15-year, $14 billion undertaking intended to ensure the system is in good condition and maintain the authority’s standing as a leader in transportation and tolling design and construction. WSP USA supports Illinois Tollway’s mission by developing systems such as a breakthrough constant-slope barrier system that elevates safety standards, new temporary concrete barriers and other significant highway and tolling design enhancements. WSP also designed and crash-tested a barrier-mounted noise-abatement wall that meets test-level 5 criteria of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials’ “Manual for Assessing Safety Hardware.” Illinois Tollway was the first U.S. transportation agency to offer to motorists, roadside workers and first responders this critical safety benefit, which provides wider and safer shoulder space for disabled vehicles, reduces rollover accident risk and shortens accident cleanup time. WSP, with fellow global engineering and design companies Stantec and Moffatt & Nichol, is also part of the WSM Pacific SIOP Joint Venture, which was selected in September to lead multidiscipline architect-engineer services for Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command Pacific. The services will be part of a five-year, $500-million single-award indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract. The work will directly support the Navy’s Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program, a comprehensive effort to upgrade and improve facilities at the four remaining active shipyards operated by the U.S. Navy. The upgrades will support fleet maintenance and modernization, ultimately reinforcing the Navy’s combat readiness. Filed Under: Commercial Building, Corporate News Colorado Association of Black Professional Engineers and Scientists (CABPES) Partners with Bur… From Burns & McDonnell Colorado Association of Black Professional Engineers and Scientists (CABPES) Partners with Bur… From Burns & McDonnell
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Adapted from "Lieutenant Colonel Earl Richardson Chase, QMC, United States Army" [biography, dated 5 July 1948] in Modern Biographical Files collection, Navy Department Library. Marine Corps-USMC Earl Richardson Chase 22 June 1900-29 November 1978 Lieutenant Colonel Chase was born in Hillsboro, Texas, on June 22, 1900, son of A.M. Chase of Lady Lake, Florida, and Mrs. Mattie E. Chase of Houston, Texas. He was graduated from the Houston, Texas, High School, and attended night schools of that city. Enlisting in the US Marine Corps on May 20, 1918, during World War I, he held the rank of Gunnery Sergeant before receiving his honorable discharge on March 17, 1919. Resuming his studies, interrupted by the war, he completed courses in Business Administration and Higher Accountancy at the LaSalle Extension University, Chicago, Illinois, in 1920 and 1926, respectively. A member of the Officers Reserve Corps of the United States Army, he was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the Quartermaster Corps on August 21, 1930, and subsequently attained the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, to date from November 12, 1942. His civilian occupation, prior to active service in World War II, was Clerk, Production Department, Magnolia Petroleum Company, Dallas, Texas (Socony-Vacum Oil Company) Called to active duty on December 14, 1940, Lieutenant Colonel Chase (then in the rank of Captain) served successively as Quartermaster of Fort Sill Reception Center, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, and of Camp Swift, Texas. From August 23, 1943, to March 27, 1944, he had duty as Chief of the Fuels and Lubricants Division, Northwest Service Command, in Canada and Alaska, with Headquarters at Whitehorse, Yukon Territory. While in Canada, he scheduled and supervised petroleum pipeline distribution as well as all petroleum products for that command, which included the Canol System, supplying all airfields and posts, camps and stations on the Russian supply routes for airplanes. Lieutenant Colonel Chase proceeded, on orders from Washington to France, for duty as Supply Officer for Petrol Oil Lubrications for the Normandy Base Section at Cherbourg, where he supervised receipt and shipment of all petroleum products to the interior for all Allied forces, including receipt of tankers at Cherbourg, LaHarve, and Antwerp. There he also had supervision of all major pipeline systems starting from those points. A member of the Theater General Board Supply Division, he assisted in compiling the history of the invasion –on Petroleum. He returned to the United States on May 6, 1946. Lieutenant Colonel Chase served as Chief of the Resource Section, Armed Service Petroleum Board, until his recent appointment as Senior Army Member of that Board. He is also Deputy Executive Officer and Director of the Plans Division. For services during World War II, Lieutenant Colonel Chase has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster (in lieu of a Second Bronze Star Medal); and the Amr Commendation Ribbon. The Citation follow: Bronze Star Medal “Lieutenant Colonel Earl R. Chase (Army Serial # 0289089), Quartermaster Corps, United States Army, for meritorious service in connection with military operations as Chief,, G-4 Section, Petroleum, Oil and Lubricants, Cherbourg Command, Provisional, Base Section No.3, and Normandy Base Section, Communications Zone, European Theater of Operations, from 22 August 1944 to 8 May 1945. The success achieved by Lieutenant Colonel Chase through expeditions receipt, forwarding and issue of petroleum products was an outstanding example of what can be accomplished by ability, intelligence and thorough knowledge of the job. The immediate solution of gasoline, oil and lubricant problems aided greatly in the successful accomplishment of the Base Section mission of forwarding needed supplies to the armies. Lieutenant Colonel Chase’s conscientious and completely successful performance of duty is a credit to himself and was a definite contribution to the victorious outcome of the European conflict. Entered military service from Texas.” Oak Leaf Cluster (Second Bronze Star Medal) “For meritorious service in connection with military operations, from 23 March 1945 to 27 March 1945. Lieutenant Colonel Chase distinguished himself by personally supervising the necessary installations for the receipt of large trans-Atlantic tankers carrying gasoline to the port of LeHarve. His actions permitted in one instance a ship-shore connecting time of ten minutes, thus setting an example never before attained at any port on the European Continent.” Army Commendation Ribbon- The Quartermaster General. “During World War II the Quartermaster Corps successfully accomplished its mission of supplying the United States Army and many out Allies. This task was made possible only through the combined efforts of all Quartermaster personnel. Your service with the Quartermaster Corps has been exceptional when compared with others of the same grade in similar positions and I wish to commend you for your outstanding contribution.” Lieutenant Colonel Chase also has the following foreign decorations: Officer de L’Ordre de Leopord II, of Belgium, and Medaille d’Argent de la Reconnaissance Francaise, of France. In addition to the Bronze Star Medal with Cluster, the Army Commendation Ribbon, and the decorations from the Governments of France and Belgium, Lieutenant Colonel Chase has the World War I Victory Medal; the Navy and Marine Corps Medal; the American Defense Service Medal; the American Area Campaign Medal; the European-African-Middle Eastern Area Campaign Medal with one battle star: the Asiatic-Pacific Area Campaign Medal; the World War II Victory Medal; and the German Occupation Medal. Published: Tue May 04 15:22:53 EDT 2021
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Port NOLA Drives Local, State and National Economy, Creates Jobs and Tax Revenue NEW ORLEANS – The Port of New Orleans (Port NOLA), a multi-billion-dollar multimodal gateway for international trade and a bustling embarkation port for cruise passengers, creates and supports more than 119,500 jobs and $29.8 billion of economic output nationwide, according to a study conducted by the LSU Economics & Policy Research Group and JLL Ports, Airports and Global Infrastructure. “From thousands of jobs to hundreds of thousands of cargo containers and millions of cruise passengers, the Port of New Orleans helps to power the Louisiana economy,” Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “The port plays a fundamental role in generating economic activity for the New Orleans region and our state, supporting jobs and generating revenue that gets multiplied again and again across our economy.” The report determined Port NOLA-based activity, including tenant and cruise activity, directly creates 8,880 jobs, including $609 million in income, $1 billion in value-added services, and $2.3 billion of economic output. Within Port NOLA’s three-Parish jurisdiction, which includes Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard, Port NOLA activity generates 19,050 jobs and $3.9 billion of economic output annually. Statewide, those numbers increase to 21,700 jobs and $4.3 billion in economic output. “Port NOLA’s mission is to drive economic prosperity by maximizing the flow of international trade and commerce,” said Brandy D. Christian, president and CEO of Port NOLA and CEO of the New Orleans Public Belt Railroad. “Port related activity supports a wide range of family-supporting jobs, from skilled labor to professional, with an average salary of $74,000 – well above the local average.” Each of Port NOLA’s four lines of business – cargo, rail, industrial real estate and cruise – drives these economic opportunities. “Louisiana is the gateway to the global economy for 38 states, and activities around shipping are growing rapidly,” said Louisiana Economic Development secretary Don Pierson. “The Port of New Orleans is well-positioned to capture and support many emerging opportunities, from intermodal container growth to agriculture and many chemical commodities. We can always count on the Port of New Orleans as a great partner and valuable asset for the attraction and support of economic development in our state.” Nationally, Port NOLA’s impact grows substantially, as port activity serves as a gateway to global markets for a large swath of the nation’s interior. For example, raw materials arriving through the Port are used for appliances, tires, along with other manufactured products, and connects farmers in America with international customers. Port NOLA set new high marks in 2018 in several areas. A total of 591,253 twenty-foot-equivalent units (TEUs) moved through the Napoleon Avenue Container Terminal, up 12.3 percent compared to the previous year. Those numbers included a 58 percent surge in containers moved by barge on the Port’s growing container-on-barge service operated in conjunction with the Port of Greater Baton Rouge. The New Orleans Public Belt Railroad, which the port acquired in 2018, realized a 15 percent growth in intermodal cargo and new connections with domestic markets. “Although the economic impact report is new data, it actually captures the past,” Christian said. “Our strategic master plan forecasts significant growth throughout all of our lines of business and we expect our economic contributions to grow.” One segment continuing to grow is the port’s cruise business – both oceangoing and riverine. In 2018, Port NOLA recorded 1,182,111 cruise passenger movements, a new annual high. While overall numbers were up 2.3 percent, guests traveling on cruises on the Mississippi River grew by 23 percent compared to the previous year. Those guests and ship crew members spend an estimated $129.1 million in the regional economy, while the cruise lines spend another $125.2 million, according to the report. This activity is new money injected into the economy, as 90 percent of cruise passengers are from out of state and 73 percent spend multiple days in Louisiana either before or after their cruise. “These passengers generate more than 306,000 room nights in area hotels annually,” Christian said. “Port NOLA is truly a catalyst for local businesses and the hospitality industry. As we see more and more passengers – businesses, from hotels and restaurants to wholesalers and suppliers, realize increased benefits and help us fulfill our role as an economic engine for Louisiana.” Christian said Port NOLA’s growth is fueled by people – governance by Port NOLA Commissioners and NOPB Directors, Port and NOPB staff, tenants, stakeholders, economic development agencies, community partners and leaders at all levels of local, state and federal government. “Port NOLA is proud of the work the men and women do in our industry on a daily basis to drive prosperity regionally and nationally,” Christian said. “Each day we are working to fully realize the region’s potential on and off Port property. To accomplish this we are working with regional, state and federal partners to attract new freight-related jobs and to build and support Louisiana’s manufacturing, agriculture and logistics industries.” Michael Hecht, president and CEO of Greater New Orleans Inc., a regional economic development alliance serving 10 parishes (counties) in southeast Louisiana, praised Port NOLA’s momentum and role it has played in the region’s growth. “In recent years, the Port of New Orleans has emerged as not only a record-breaking cargo and cruise facility, but remains an economic development powerhouse,” Hecht said. “Thanks to the Port’s leadership and partnership, New Orleans is well on its way to reclaiming its economic and maritime preeminence.” T. Parker Host launches Avondale Global Gateway Fresh Food Factor Launches Co-Packing Services for Local and National Food Brands
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International Operation Takes Down Crypto Mixer Chipmixer — Creator Could Face 40 Years in Prison – Regulation Bitcoin News An international operation has taken down Chipmixer, a cryptocurrency mixing service that allegedly laundered more than $3 billion worth of cryptocurrency, according to the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). The operation involved national authorities in the U.S., Germany, Belgium, Poland, and Switzerland — with Europol’s support. International Operation Takes Down Chipmixer The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced Wednesday “a coordinated international takedown of Chipmixer,” which it described as “a darknet cryptocurrency ‘mixing’ service responsible for laundering more than $3 billion worth of cryptocurrency.” Europol, which provided support for the operation to take down the mixing service, independently announced: National authorities took down the infrastructure of the platform for its alleged involvement in money laundering activities and seized four servers, about 1909.4 bitcoins in 55 transactions (approx. EUR 44.2 million) and 7 TB of data. U.S. federal law enforcement seized two domains that directed users to the Chipmixer service and one Github account while the German Federal Criminal Police (the Bundeskriminalamt) seized the Chipmixer back-end servers and more than $46 million in cryptocurrency, the DOJ detailed. Chipmixer allowed its users to make bitcoin (BTC) deposits which it “then mixed with other Chipmixer users’ bitcoin, commingling the funds in a way that made it difficult for law enforcement or regulators to trace the transactions,” the Justice Department explained. “It primarily operated as a Tor hidden service to conceal the location of its servers and prevent seizure by law enforcement,” the DOJ noted, adding that while it has many U.S. users, the service did not register with the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and did not collect identifying information about its customers. The Department of Justice added that beginning in and around August 2017, Minh Quốc Nguyễn, 49, of Hanoi, Vietnam, “created and operated the online infrastructure used by Chipmixer and promoted Chipmixer’s services online,” elaborating: Nguyễn is charged with operating an unlicensed money transmitting business, money laundering and identity theft. If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of 40 years in prison. What do you think about this case? Let us know in the comments section below. Monero’s XMR Price Falters As Governments Around The World Regulate Crypto. Metacade’s Presale Remains Unaffected. Sam Bankman-Fried to propose revised bail package ‘by next week’ Crypto assets to become a separate category in UK tax forms Court Dismisses Former Monero Developer’s Bid to Have His Extradition to South… The US Government wants the Voyager-Binance deal to be halted
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Secrecy, Terrorism and Counterterrorism, Vol. 5 No. 2 The Continuing Quandary of Covert Operations In May 2011, shortly after a special operations team of Navy SEALs killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, there was a fresh surge of enthusiasm for covert operations. That is unfortunate because, behind the scenes, secret warfare is actually in crisis. We need to re-examine the suitability and constitutionality of covert operations and, among other things, devise a sound constitutional framework for conducting them. I. HOST COUNTRY REACTIONS: PAKISTAN A delegation of Pakistani officials recently completed a visit to Washington for very private talks about a secret war. Representing that nation’s premier spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and headed by its chief, Lieutenant General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the Pakistani delegation came to America to rein in the CIA. While CIA spokesmen put the best possible face on this event – calling the talks “productive” – there was no real meeting of the minds. The raid on bin Laden, executed without reference to Pakistani sovereignty, added insult to injury, since Pakistani demands to be kept fully informed of U.S. activities were clearly ignored in the SEAL operation. And just to pile on, American pundits, including former CIA director Leon Panetta, proceeded to accuse Pakistan of complicity or incompetence, given bin Laden’s presence in a Pakistani garrison town. Observers should be in no doubt that this moment marks a watershed in the South Asian secret war. Much like the Tet Offensive in the Vietnam conflict, the event signifies the instant when U.S. capabilities peak, past which further escalation on any plane becomes less probable. John Prados Dr. John Prados directs the Archive’s Iraq Documentation Project as well as its Vietnam Project and is a Senior Research Fellow on national security affairs, including foreign affairs, intelligence, and military subjects. He holds a Ph.D. in International Relations from Columbia University and has authored many books, most recently Vietnam: The History of an Unwinnable War and the forthcoming How the Cold War Ended. His work centers on subjects including the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Vietnam war, and analysis of international relations, plus diplomatic and military history more generally. His books Unwinnable War, Keepers of the Keys (on the National Security Council) and Combined Fleet Decoded (on intelligence in the Pacific in World War II) were each nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Among his seventeen books are Safe for Democracy: The Secret Wars of the CIA (Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2006, paperback 2009); William Colby and the CIA: The Secret Wars of a Controversial Spymaster (Lawrence: University Presses of Kansas, paperback 2009); and Hoodwinked: The Documents that Reveal How Bush Sold Us a War (New York: The New Press, 2004). His papers appear in many other books, and his articles have been in Vanity Fair, the Journal of American History, Diplomatic History, Intelligence and National Security, Scientific American, MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History, The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of East-West Studies, Survival, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe and The VVA Veteran. Secrecy2012.01.24The Continuing Quandary of Covert Operations AfghanistanAl QaedaCentral Intelligence AgencyIntelligenceWar on Terror Previous PostConducting Shadow WarsNext PostThe Great War Powers Misconstruction One thought on “The Continuing Quandary of Covert Operations” Pingback: The Counterproductive Consequences of America's Vicarious Wars | Contemporary Security Policy
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Bryan Adams at Liverpool’s M&S Bank Arena on May 18th Jack McGahan Known the world over for his signature brand of feel-good rock music, today acclaimed singer/songwriter Bryan Adams releases the title track from his forthcoming studio album, So Happy It Hurts via BMG. “The pandemic and lockdown really brought home the truth that spontaneity can be taken away. Suddenly all touring stopped, no one could jump in the car and go,” says Adams. “The title song ‘So Happy It Hurts’ is about freedom, autonomy, spontaneity and the thrill of the open road. The album of the same name, touches on many of the ephemeral things in life are really the secret to happiness, most importantly, human connection.” The album So Happy it Hurts, scheduled for release March 11th, 2022, marks Bryan Adams’ 15th release and features 12 new songs co-written by him. The album will be available on all digital platforms, as well as in a variety of physical formats including standard CD, deluxe CD with a lenticular cover and hardbound book and vinyl. Adams, whose live concerts have established him as one of the world’s best rock singers of our time, has announced an extensive 21-date UK headline tour running from May to July 2022 including London’s O2 Arena on May 26th. Adams has also been announced to headline the Cornbury Music Festival on July 9th. Ahead of the tour Adams will be completing a special residency at the Royal Albert Hall, London. Playing three consecutive nights starting on May 9th, Adams will devote each show to playing one of his classic albums in full, plus a selection of his greatest hits from a staggering back-catalogue. A full list of Bryan Adams live dates can be found below, and all global tour dates and ticket info can be found on his website: https://www.bryanadams.com/tours/ BRYAN ADAMS 2022 UK TOUR DATES 9th – London, Royal Albert Hall 10th – London, Royal Albert Hall 13th – Brighton, Brighton Centre 14th – Birmingham, Utilita Arena 15th – Nottingham, Motorpoint Arena 17th – Manchester, AO Arena 18th – Liverpool, M&S Bank Arena 20th – Newcastle, Utilita Arena 22nd – Aberdeen, P&J Live Arena 23rd – Glasgow, SSE Arena 25th – Hull, Bonus Arena 26th – London, The O2 Arena 29th – Cornwall, Eden Sessions 1st – Scarborough, Open Air Theatre 2nd – Widnes, Halton Stadium 3rd – Telford, QE2 Arena 5th – Durham, Emirates Riverside 6th – Kelso, Floors Castle 8th – Norwich, Blickling Estate 9th – Cornbury Music Festival 10th – Leeds, Harewood House 11th – Cardiff, Cardiff Castle Bryan Adams’ music has achieved #1 status in over 40 countries. He is a Companion of the Order of Canada and has been inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and Canada’s Walk of Fame. Adams has garnered many awards and accolades including 3 Academy Award nominations, 5 Golden Globe nominations, a Grammy award, an American Music Award, ASCAP Film and Television Music Award, and multiple Juno Awards among others. He is a recipient of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the Allan Waters Humanitarian Award for his charitable concerts as well as the Governor General’s Performing Arts Award for his lifetime contribution to the arts in Canada. In 2018, Adams, along with longtime collaborator Jim Vallance wrote all the music for Pretty Woman: The Musical, which continues to run on Broadway. LIVE AT LEEDS: IN THE PARK ANNOUNCES FULL STAGE SPLITS FOR FESTIVAL DEBUT Artist Focus: Anastasia Made Festival.. this weekend!!! Birmingham’s hottest music event returns to Digeth Triangle in the Irish Love covers Liverpool for the 8th city-wide There will be more than a sprinkling of love in Liverpool ‘The La’s – 1987’ Exhibition Launch at The Florrie filled up at the weekend for the launch party Rebecca Worthington SEABASS ONE with Jo Mary, Samurai Kip, Full disclosure, I play with most of these musicians on a “After the Screaming Stops” – Bros to I’ve got to admit, of all the press releases that hit
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The Best Attractions In Des Moines Des Moines Creek Trail Murhut Falls Saltwater State Park Lake Cushman Future of Flight Aviation Center & Boeing Tour Des Moines is a city in King County, Washington, United States. The population was 29,673 as of the 2010 census.Des Moines is located on the east shore of Puget Sound, approximately halfway between the major cities of Seattle and Tacoma. The city is bordered by the suburbs of Federal Way to the south, Kent to the east, SeaTac to the northeast, Burien to the north, and Normandy Park to the northwest. It is one of the few points along this shoreline where the topography facilitates access to the water, and a recreational marina operated by the city, with moorage, boat launching and pier fishing facilities, is located there. Forested Saltwater State Park ... Antique Store Art Museum Bar & Club Beaches Beer Tasting Biking Trail Breweries Civic Center Concert / Show Convention Center Entertainment Center Factory Tour Flea Market Food & Drink Fun & Games Garden Golf Course Government Building Historic Sites History Museum Jazz Bar Jogging Path Landmark Monument Mountain Museums Nature Neighborhood Nightlife Outdoor Activity Science Museum Shopping Specialty Museum Stadium & Arena Symphony The Best Theater Theme Park Tourist Spot Traveler Resource Water Body Water Park Waterfall Winery Zoos & Aquariums 1. Mount Rainier Mount Rainier National Park Mount Rainier is the highest mountain of the Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest, and the highest mountain in the U.S. state of Washington. It is a large active stratovolcano located 59 miles south-southeast of Seattle, in the Mount Rainier National Park. It is the most topographically prominent mountain in the contiguous United States and the Cascade Volcanic Arc, with a summit elevation of 14,411 ft .Mt. Rainier is considered one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world, and it is on the Decade Volcano list. Because of its large amount of glacial ice, Mt. Rainier could produce massive lahars that could threaten the entire Puyallup River valley, and poses a grave threat to the southern sections of the 3.7-million-resident Seattle metropolitan area. 2. Skyline Trail Mount Rainier National Park 3. Snoqualmie Falls Snoqualmie Snoqualmie Falls is a 268-foot waterfall in the northwest United States, located east of Seattle on the Snoqualmie River between Snoqualmie and Fall City, Washington. It is one of Washington's most popular scenic attractions, but is perhaps best known internationally for its appearance in the cult television series Twin Peaks. More than 1.5 million visitors come to the Falls every year, where there is a two-acre park, an observation deck, and a gift shop. Most of the river is diverted into the power plants, but at times the river is high enough to flow across the entire precipice, which creates an almost blinding spray. High water occurs following a period of heavy rains or snow followed by warm rainy weather. This can occur during the rainy season which lasts from November through March. ... 4. Murhut Falls Olympic National Park 5. Lake Cushman Olympic National Park Salt Lake City is the capital and the most populous municipality of the U.S. state of Utah. With an estimated population of 190,884 in 2014, the city is the core of the Salt Lake City metropolitan area, which has a population of 1,153,340 . Salt Lake City is further situated within a larger metropolis known as the Salt Lake City–Ogden–Provo Combined Statistical Area. This region is a corridor of contiguous urban and suburban development stretched along an approximately 120-mile segment of the Wasatch Front, comprising a population of 2,423,912 as of 2014. It is one of only two major urban areas in the Great Basin . The world headquarters of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is located in Salt Lake City and the city's street grid system is based on the temple constructed b... 6. Des Moines Creek Trail Des Moines Washington State Des Moines is the capital and the most populous city in the U.S. state of Iowa. It is also the county seat of Polk County. A small part of the city extends into Warren County. It was incorporated on September 22, 1851, as Fort Des Moines, which was shortened to Des Moines in 1857. It is on and named after the Des Moines River, which likely was adapted from the French colonial name, Rivière des Moines, meaning River of the Monks. The city's population was 217,521 as of the 2017 population estimate. The five-county metropolitan area is ranked 89th in terms of population in the United States with 634,725 residents according to the 2016 estimate by the United States Census Bureau.Des Moines is a major center of the U.S. insurance industry, and has a sizable financial services and publishing b... 7. Saltwater State Park Des Moines Washington State Saltwater State Park is an 87.4 acres plot of second-growth timber on Puget Sound in the City of Des Moines, Washington, United States halfway between Seattle and Tacoma. The main attraction is 1,445 feet of saltwater beachfront, including a sandy swimming beach in the southwest corner, and rocky tideflats along the west with a submerged artificial reef that is popular with scuba divers. A forty-person group camp looks down on the beach from a high bluff. Overlooked by most visitors is the steep ravine of McSorley Creek which winds inland in a gentle S curve joined by three tributary streams. Fifty-two campsites are situated on a road that parallels the creek, serving the public on a first-come-first-served basis. On both the north and south sides of the ravine there is a network of hiking... Des Moines Videos The Best Places to Visit in Iowa State, USA Iowa, a Midwestern U.S. state, sits between the Missouri and Mississippi rivers. It is the 26th most extensive in land area and the 30th most populous of the 50 United States. Its capital and largest city by population is Des Moines. Iowa has been listed as one of the safest states to live. Pastures and fields of corn cover much of the heart of the Heartland, but there's much more to Iowa than its famously green fields: dramatic bluffs along the Mississippi River, quintessential small towns, and vibrant midsize cities like Des Moines. Explore the capital city of Des Moines and discover other reasons to explore the Hawkeye State! 1.Iowa City 2.Des Moines 3.Iowa Great Lakes 4.Field of Dreams 5.Grotto of the Redemption 6.Effigy Mounds National Monument 7.Great River Road National Scenic Byway 8.Pikes Peak State Park 9.Maquoketa Caves State Park 10.Amana Colonies The 10 Best Places To Live In The USA For 2018 The 10 Best Places To Live In The USA For 2018. ► Subscribe for latest video ! ► The United States is one of the most powerful countries in the world in terms of politics, economics and trade. The cost of living in many cities within the country is relatively low and the majority of people who are based there find that they have a very comfortable standard of life. The US Dollar remains one of the strongest and most influential currencies in the world and it is this that has helped the country out of past economic slumps. The sheer size of the USA in comparison to its population means that there is an abundance of land. Many people make use of this by constructing their own houses outside the city. What’s the best place to live in your state? It should be someplace that pairs strong economic and educational performance with affordability, and then ticks other boxes as well: convenience, safety, a pleasant way of life. It may be the fact that it's easy to get around, there are plenty of job opportunities or that it attracts new residents every year. To determine the Best Places to Live rankings, U.S. News looks at data on the country's 125 largest metro areas, including the cost of living, job market, crime rates, quality of education and more. The data is weighted based on the responses from a survey of more than 2,000 people throughout the U.S. to determine what matters most to them when picking their next place to live. Read on for the 10 Best Places to Live in the U.S. in 2018, According to Realestate Usnews. 1. Austin, Texas. 2. Colorado Springs, Colorado. 3. Denver, Colorado. 4. Des Moines, Iowa. 5. Fayetteville, Arkansas. 6. Portland, Oregon. 7. Huntsville, Alabama. 8. Mercer Island, Washington. 9. Minneapolis, Minnesota. 10. Seattle, Washington. Thanks for watching this video. I hope it's useful for you. (This article is an opinion based on facts and is meant as infotainment) If you have any issue with the content used in my channel or you find something that belongs to you, please contact: ►Business email: [email protected] Top 10 Cities To Live In The United States For 2018 Top 10 Cities To Live In The United States For 2018. Generally speaking, living in the United States Of America is a dream come true for many. Not just the immigrants that have moved from all parts of the world, but the locals as well. However, like it is with all things, some parts of America are just better than others. While picking a city to spend the rest of your lives in can be quite difficult your choices just got easier. We’ve listed out the top 10 cities to live in the United States. 1. Austin, Texas 2. Ann Arbor, Michigan 3. Rochester, Minnesota 4. Colorado Springs, Colorado 5. Naperville, Illinois 6. Des Moines, Iowa 7. Olympia, Washington 8. Fayetteville, Arkansas 10. Huntsville, Alabama Wings by Nicolai Heidlas Music Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported— CC BY 3.0 Music provided by Music for Creators 10 Cheapest Places to Live in the US 10 Cheapest Places to Live in the US. There are a wide range of options when it comes deciding where to live in the US. Some people prefer to stay close to where they grew up. Others may venture further away to find affordability. There are other factors, such as climate, cost of living and job opportunities. Other things which weigh into finding the cheapest places to live also include: the local economy in general, property taxes and general living expenses, as well as the crime rate. Here’s what was found to be the cheapest places to live in the US based upon overall desirability and cost of living. 1: Fayetteville, Arkansas 2: Harlingen, Texas 3: Memphis, Tennessee 4: McAllen, Texas 5: Pueblo, Colorado 6: Louisville, Kentucky 7: Norman, Oklahoma 8: Idaho Falls, Idaho 9: Des Moines, Iowa 10: Tulsa, Oklahoma Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. Top Tourist Attractions in Des Moines: Travel Guide State Iowa Top Tourist Attractions in Des Moines: Travel Guide State Iowa: Capitol Building, Blank Park Zoo, Des Moines Civic Center, Des Moines Art Center, Downtown Farmers Market, Gray's Lake Park, Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden, Iowa State Fairgrounds, Pappajohn Sculpture Park, Science Center of Iowa, State Historical Museum Top 10 reasons NOT to move to Iowa. Cow tipping capital of the world. #top10 #worldaccordingtobriggs Business email: [email protected] Additional Footage: Tom Roper Andrew Tobey Allie Knight Thanks for stopping by The world according to Briggs, I make lists. Not just lists of random stuff, I make them about states, cities, towns and other places in the United States. I post 3 times a week and sometimes live stream, so please subscribe and enjoy. DISCLAIMER: This video and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. This helps support the channel and allows us to continue to make videos like this. Thank you for the support! 1K places to see before you die: Do you want to make videos like I do on this channel? This is all you need: DJI Iphone Gimbal: DJI Phantom 3: Blue Yeti Microphone: Sound Cage: Editing Software: Shuttle Controller: Pop filter: Acoustic Foam: The Top Income Cities Per Capita in the United States The Top Income Cities Per Capita in the United States. The United States is one of the wealthiest countries in the world and has more wealth than many other nations combined. It is also a nation of contrasts, with some of the wealthiest cities bordering some of the poorest. The cities with the highest income per capita in the United States are teaming with industry, access to economic development, substantial real estate growth and high quality of life. The highest income per capita cities is clustered in three major areas of the country. The Northeast, the West Coast, and the Midwest. These regions all have metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) that have an average household income of more than $75,000. 1. San Jose, California 3. San Francisco, California 4. Seattle, Washington 5. Boston, Massachusetts 6. Washington, D.C 7. New York City 8. Dallas, Texas List 8 Tourist Attractions in Bellingham, Washington | Travel to United States Here, 8 Top Tourist Attractions in Bellingham, US State.. There's Whatcom Falls Park, Fairhaven Historic District, Boulevard Park, Lake Padden Park, Mount Baker Theatre, Chuckanut Drive, Spark Museum of Electrical Invention, Larrabee State Park and more... GET MORE INFORMATION - Subscribe ➜ SHARE this Video: ➜ CHECK Another Playlist Tourist Attraction in USA ➜ Place to Visit in America ➜ Touris Attraction in Europe -➜ Top Cities in the World ➜ Tourist Attraction in Asia ➜ Thank you for watching this video about Best Tourist Attractions in Bellingham, Washington, USA Seattle Southside, Washington: Family-Friendly Activities Discover family attractions like the Flying Circus to the MaST aquarium, offering plenty of wonder and excitement for parents and kids. Connect on our social channels: ✈ Like Visit The USA: ✈ Follow Visit The USA: Welcome to the official channel of United States tourism. Our goal is to inspire people from around the world to explore all the exciting travel possibilities in the United States. Watch our videos and discover it, all within your reach. Iowa State Capitol Building: The Making of the Golden Dome The Iowa capitol building’s dome is more than just gold. A dome gets its stability from the arches it's composed of. Steel beams fan out from the peak to form a three dimensional arch system. Lean more about the dome in this special segment from Iowa Public Television’s This Old Statehouse project. Belfair Benton City Brinnon Cathlamet Chehalis Chewelah Chimacum Clallam Bay Coulee City Coulee Dam Eatonville Electric City Everson Fall City Fidalgo Island Glenoma Goldendale Grayland Hoquiam Ilwaco Kalama La Conner La Push Marrowstone Island Montesano Mossyrock Naches Neah Bay Nine Mile Falls North Bonneville North Cascades North Central Washington Northeast Washington Orondo Oysterville Peninsulas & Coast Peshastin Port Gamble Ritzville Seabeck Snoqualmie Pass Soap Lake Southeast Washington Stehekin Suquamish Tenino The Gorge The Islands of Washington State The Volcanoes Toppenish Toutle Wapato White Pass White Salmon Wishram Yelm Attractions In Des Moines Antique Store Attractions In Des Moines Art Museum Attractions In Des Moines Bar & Club Attractions In Des Moines Beaches Attractions In Des Moines Beer Tasting Attractions In Des Moines Biking Trail Attractions In Des Moines Breweries Attractions In Des Moines Civic Center Attractions In Des Moines Concert / Show Attractions In Des Moines Convention Center Attractions In Des Moines Entertainment Center Attractions In Des Moines Factory Tour Attractions In Des Moines Flea Market Attractions In Des Moines Food & Drink Attractions In Des Moines Fun & Games Attractions In Des Moines Garden Attractions In Des Moines Golf Course Attractions In Des Moines Government Building Attractions In Des Moines Historic Sites Attractions In Des Moines History Museum Attractions In Des Moines Jazz Bar Attractions In Des Moines Jogging Path Attractions In Des Moines Landmark Attractions In Des Moines Monument Attractions In Des Moines Mountain Attractions In Des Moines Museums Attractions In Des Moines Nature Attractions In Des Moines Neighborhood Attractions In Des Moines Nightlife Attractions In Des Moines Outdoor Activity Attractions In Des Moines Science Museum Attractions In Des Moines Shopping Attractions In Des Moines Specialty Museum Attractions In Des Moines Stadium & Arena Attractions In Des Moines Symphony Attractions In Des Moines The Best Attractions In Des Moines Theater Attractions In Des Moines Theme Park Attractions In Des Moines Tourist Spot Attractions In Des Moines Traveler Resource Attractions In Des Moines Water Body Attractions In Des Moines Water Park Attractions In Des Moines Waterfall Attractions In Des Moines Winery Attractions In Des Moines Zoos & Aquariums Attractions In Des Moines
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7-DAY ADRIATIC AND MEDITERRANEAN FROM VENICE Messina is a harbor city in northeast Sicily, Italy. It is the capital of the Italian Metropolitan City of Messina, and has close ties with Reggio Calabria. The city's main resources are its seaports (commercial and military shipyards), cruise tourism, commerce, and agriculture (wine production and cultivating lemons, oranges, mandarin oranges, and olives). The city has been a Roman Catholic Archdiocese and Archimandrite seat since 1548 and is home to a locally important international fair. The city has the University of Messina, founded in 1548 by Ignatius of Loyola. Messina has a light rail system, Tranvia di Messina, that was opened on 3 April 2003. This line is 7.7 kilometres (4.8 mi) and links the city's central railway station with the city centre and harbour. The city is home to a significant Greek-speaking minority, rooted in its history and officially recognised. Zadar is a city in Croatia on the Adriatic Sea. It is the centre of Zadar county and the wider northern Dalmatian region. Zadar faces the islands of Ugljan and Pašman, from which it is separated by the narrow Zadar Strait. The promontory on which the old city stands used to be separated from the mainland by a deep moat which has since become a landfill. The harbor, to the north-east of the town, is safe and spacious. Zadar is the seat of a Catholic archbishop. Venice is a city in northeastern Italy sited on a group of 118 small islands separated by canals and linked by bridges. The city is renowned for the beauty of its setting, its architecture, and its artwork. The city in its entirety is listed as a World Heritage Site, along with its lagoon. Venice has been known as the La Dominante, Serenissima, Queen of the Adriatic, City of Water, City of Masks, City of Bridges, The Floating City, and City of Canals. It has also been described as being one of Europe's most romantic cities. It is truly an amazing, stunning and interesting city for the adventurous to explore! Kotor is a coastal town in Montenegro with a population of about 13,500. It is well-known for its World heritage medieval structures (including churches and fortifications) and its stunning natural setting at the very edge of the mountain-rimmed Kotor Bay. It is situated in a most secluded tip of Boka Kotorska bay, in the northern part of the Montenegro coast on the Adriatic Sea. Kotor has developed around Stari Grad (local language for "old town"), the city's old town and best known landmark, which is listed with UNESCO World heritage sites. Kotor Bay is the deepest natural fjord-like bay in the Mediterranean Sea, and the scenery around it (including the steep mountains which come almost straight down to the waters edge) is spectacular. Corfu, an island off Greece’s northwest coast in the Ionian Sea, is defined by rugged mountains and a resort-studded shoreline. Nicknamed ''the island of the Phaeacians'', Corfu is home to the Ionian University. Known also as Kerkyra, is the northernmost of the Ionian Islands in Greece. Located off of the far northwest coast of the country, Corfu lies in the Adriatic sea, east of Italy and southwest of Albania. Historically Corfu has been controlled by many foreign powers, notably the Venetians, French, and British. 7-DAY HAWAII INTER-ISLAND FROM HONOLULU Honolulu, Kahului, Kailua-Kona, Nāwiliwili, Hilo 7-DAY SOUTHERN CARIBBEAN FROM SAN JUAN From Bridgetown Bridgetown, St Kitts and Nevis, San Juan, Saint Thomas Island, Martinique, Philipsburg 7-DAY HAWAII INTER-ISLAND From Oahu Oahu, Kahului, Kailua-Kona, Nāwiliwili, Hilo 14-DAY SOUTH AMERICA FROM BUENOS AIRES From Ushuaia Ushuaia, San Antonio Province, Montevideo, Argentina, Punta Arenas, Puerto Montt, Chile, Stanley, Buenos Aires F.D., Puerto Madryn, Puerto Chacabuco 11-DAY ANCHORAGE DENALI EXPRESS - SOUTHBOUND CRUISETOUR From Vancouver Vancouver, Juneau, Ketchikan 7-DAY SAWYER GLACIER FROM SEATTLE Skagway, Juneau, Glacier, Ketchikan, Seattle, Victoria State 7-DAY MEXICAN RIVIERA FROM LOS ANGELES Los Angeles, Mazatlán, Cabo San Lucas, Puerto Vallarta 14-DAY PANAMA CANAL FROM MIAMI Municipio de Corinto, Puerto Quetzal, Miami, Los Angeles, Cartagena, Costa Rica, Panama, Acapulco de Juárez, Cabo San Lucas
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Boeing Completes System Integration of High Energy Laser Technology Demonstrator Laser beam control system, subassemblies installed on tactical truck Low-power tests scheduled for 4Q 2011 US Army technology demonstrator designed to counter projectile threats HUNTSVILLE, Ala., June 27, 2011 -- The Boeing Company [NYSE: BA] recently completed system integration of key components for the U.S. Army’s High Energy Laser Technology Demonstrator (HEL TD). The integration included installation of the Beam Control System and critical hardware onto the Oshkosh Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck, HEL TD’s vehicle platform. This milestone helps prepare HEL TD for low-power system testing at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. The tests, scheduled for the fourth quarter of 2011, will demonstrate the system’s ability to acquire, track and target moving projectiles. “Now that HEL TD is fully assembled, we are ready to take this program from the lab into the field for real-world tests,” said Mike Rinn, vice president, Boeing Directed Energy Systems. “Our team is eager to demonstrate the ultra-precision, speed-of-light benefits of multi-mission directed energy technologies, which will help the Army effectively and efficiently counter a variety of threats including rockets, artillery, mortars and UAVs. Boeing is committed to providing this advanced capability to the warfighter, and we appreciate the confidence that the Army has shown in our efforts on this program.” The HEL TD system integration was accomplished at the Boeing facilities in Huntsville, where Boeing integrates other systems on Army vehicles. “We are applying the best of Boeing to deliver this groundbreaking technology to the warfighter as soon as possible,” said Blaine Beardsley, Boeing HEL TD program manager. In operation, HEL TD will acquire, track and select an aimpoint on a target. Next, the system will receive the laser beam from the HEL TD laser device, reshape and align the beam, and then focus it on the target. The system includes mirrors, high-speed processors and high-speed optical sensors. HEL TD is a cornerstone of the Army’s high-energy laser program and will support the transition of directed energy technologies to Army acquisition programs. The Army HEL TD system is managed by the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces Strategic Command headquarters at Redstone Arsenal, Ala. Boeing is the largest aerospace company in Alabama and one of the state's largest employers. Current company operations in Huntsville include the Ground-based Midcourse Defense program and other missile defense work, including the Standard Missile-3 Block IIB program, the Arrow system and the Patriot Advanced Capability-3 seeker, as well as work associated with Ares I, the International Space Station, Army Integrated Logistics, Brigade Combat Team Modernization, and engineering for the 787 and the P-8A Poseidon. A unit of The Boeing Company, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is one of the world's largest defense, space and security businesses specializing in innovative and capabilities-driven customer solutions, and the world’s largest and most versatile manufacturer of military aircraft. Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is a $32 billion business with 65,000 employees worldwide. Follow us on Twitter: @BoeingDefense. Elizabeth Merida Strategic Missile & Defense Systems [email protected]
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Sewage-to-hydrogen fuel station opens UCI's fuel cell center technology powers new sewage-to-hydrogen fuel station. When waste sits in holding tanks, it produces gases, primarily methane. Most of the methane at Orange County’s plant is filtered and used for power, with surplus sold or burned off into the atmosphere. Now the extra methane will be converted to hydrogen on-site with a unique fuel-cell generator. Fuel cells are like giant batteries. The generator will use chemical catalysts to split hydrogen atoms off each methane molecule. Much of the hydrogen will then be converted to 300 kilowatts of electricity. The rest will be siphoned off for use in automobiles equipped with smaller fuel cells, which convert it to electricity to run the engine, with no dangerous emissions. The station was designed by UCI; FuelCell Energy Inc., which makes pollution-free power plants; and Air Products & Chemicals Inc., the biggest U.S. supplier of industrial gases. Funding was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy, the California Air Resources Board and the South Coast Air Quality Management District. Orange County Sanitation District, 10844 Ellis Ave., Fountain Valley, Calif. (just off the 405 freeway at the Euclid Avenue exit) Five major automakers have announced plans to commercially manufacture hydrogen-fueled cars by 2015. Using locally produced hydrogen will increase its supply, bring costs in line with other renewable energy sources, and provide highly efficient power. “This is a paradigm shift,” said National Fuel Cell Research Center director Scott Samuelsen. “We’ll be truly fuel-independent and no longer held hostage by other countries. This is the epitome of sustainability, where we’re taking an endless stream of human waste and transforming it to transportation fuel and electricity. This is the first time this has ever been done.” As New York cases drop, Nebraska and Minnesota among states emerging as new coronavirus hotspots UCI awarded $45 million for infectious disease research Flipped Reality
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New Order > New Order Add More Dates Around Coachella 2017 Appearance By Holly Williams in Music / Festivals on 10 January 2017 Follow New Order The band have five live dates in April. New Order have added three more US live dates to their touring schedule, having already been announced to play at Coachella Festival in Spring. Tickets are going on sale for the extra shows this weekend, which will take place in California and New York. New Order hit the road in April Last week, the UK synthpop band announced that they were joining the roster for the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California in April, and now they've secured two more dates in the state, and another one in New York City. They will play at the Santa Barbara Bowl and Berkeley's Greek Theater on April 18th and April 21st respectively, with special guests Poliça supporting the shows more than a year after releasing their third album 'United Crushers'. Before that though, they are due to arrive in New York on April 13th for a stint at the Radio City Music Hall. New Order will also be playing both Sundays of the two Coachella weekends (April 16th and 23rd), which is being headlined by Kendrick Lamar, Beyonce and Radiohead. Other Sunday artists include Lorde, Justice, Porter Robinson and Madeon, and Future Islands. More: Coachella announces 2017 headliners The band; who are Bernard Sumner, Gillian Gilbert, Stephen Morris, Tom Chapman and Phil Cunningham; released their last album in 2015. 'Music Complete' was their first project on Mute Records and reached number two in the UK, making it their highest charting album since 1993's 'Republic'. Over the last year, they have been performing around the world including shows at London's Royal Albert Hall and the Sydney Opera House. They also headlined Glastonbury Festival and have just completed their South American tour. Tickets for the shows will be available on January 13th 2017 for the Berkeley and New York gigs, and January 14th for their show at the Santa Barbara Bowl. Passes for Coachella are already sold out. April 13 - New York, NY - Radio City Music Hall April 16 - Indio, CA - Coachella April 18 - Santa Barbara, CA - Santa Barbara Bowl April 21 - Berkeley, CA - Greek Theater New Order's Bernard Sumner slams 'ludicrous' NHS mental health waiting times New Order to live-stream London O2 gig New Order to stage huge homecoming gig in Manchester New Order and Joy Division podcast announced New Order - Be a Rebel Audio Video New Order release first new song in five years World in Motion 'stopped New Order from splitting up' New Order - Temptation [Live] Video Video A Guide to Clockenflap 2015 New Order - Music Complete Album Review Bernard Sumner: Peter Hook is an angry man New Order unveil new song New Order Album To Feature Guest Stars Including Brandon Flowers Bands Index: 0 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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Current insight on the mechanisms of Cobra venom cytotoxins can help anti-venom therapy Health, Technology February 9, 2023February 5, 2023 admin New Delhi, Feb 09, 20223: Scientists have traced the mechanisms of the toxic action of cobra venom, paving a path towards developing strategies for application of antivenom or small molecule inhibitors, which can help mitigate the local toxic effects of cobra venom retained at the bite site. Cobras (genus Naja) are widely distributed over Asia and Africa, and cobra bites are responsible for large mortality and morbidity on these continents, including the Indian sub-continent. Like other elapid venoms, cobra venoms are neurotoxic in nature. However, they also exhibit local cytotoxic effects at the envenomed site, and the extent of cytotoxicity may vary from species to species. Proteomic studies from several other laboratories have demonstrated that cobra venoms are predominated by the non-enzymatic three-finger toxin family, constituting about 60-75% of the total venom. Cytotoxins (CTXs), an essential class of the non-enzymatic three-finger toxin family, are ubiquitously present in cobra venoms. These low-molecular-mass toxins, contributing to about 40 to 60% of the cobra venom proteome, play a significant role in cobra venom-induced toxicity, more prominently in dermonecrosis (local effects). Some CTXs are also responsible for depolarizing neurons and heart muscle membranes, thereby contributing to cardiac failures frequently observed in cobra-envenomed victims. Consequently, they are also known as cardiotoxins (CdTx). Interestingly, the proportion of cobra venom CTXs varies dramatically across different Naja species. Usually, venoms from African spitting cobras have a higher proportion of CTXs than the Asiatic cobra ones, indicating geographical variation in snake venom composition. A recent study published in the journal Toxins led by Prof. Mukherjee, Director of the Institute of Advanced Study in Science and Technology (IASST), Guwahati, an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology and his collaborators Prof. Yuri N. Utkin from the Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, and Dr. Bhargab Kalita from Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Kochi, has comprehensively discussed the mechanisms of action of cobra venom CTXs and highlighted their significance in cobra venom-induced pathophysiology and toxicity. Furthermore, this collaborative review article shed light on the efficacy of commercial antivenoms in mitigating the toxic effects of this significant class of cobra toxins. Prof. Mukherjee emphasized that being low-molecular-mass toxins, venom CTXs induce low immune responses during the traditional production of antivenoms. Therefore, commercial antivenoms lack sufficient antibodies to neutralize these cobra venom toxins. Dr. Mukherjee added that due to this sub-optimal performance of commercial antivenoms against cobra venom CTXs, in-patient hospital management of local effects prevalent in cobra-envenomation is challenging and still a grave concern that requires immediate attention. The authors believe that the recent advances in molecular biology and protein engineering can significantly facilitate the solution to this problem and aid in creating highly immunogenic toxins/toxin fragments for antivenom production. Moreover, they suggested that developing strategies for topical application of antivenom (small antibodies, e.g., VHH or nanobodies) or small molecule inhibitors may be a more effective alternative to mitigate the local toxic effects of cobra venom CTXs retained at the bite site. Publication link: https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins14120839 anti-venom therapy, Cobra venom cytotoxins Hindus urge Ironstone meadery to withdraw goddess Kali alcoholic drink NSD to organize the 22nd edition of the Bharat Rang Mahotsav
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Home > Reference > Flora & Fauna > Indian Flora and Fauna > Eco Parks in India > Assam Eco Parks Assam Eco Parks Assam Eco Parks are playing an important role in preserving natural resources of the state. An Ecological park is defined as a territory which primarily aims to protect the ecosystem in which it is located. These protected areas also serve as recreational centers and allow public entrance. The species sheltered in an eco park receive special care. These parks are known to be typically managed the state. India is also involved in protecting the ecosystem by establishing several eco parks. India is a vast country with great biodiversity and ample natural resources. The country is considered as the seventh largest in the world by geographical area and hence, it is home to a large number of species of flora and fauna. To preserve this great collection of the Indian flora and fauna, several eco parks have been established in different parts of the country. The north eastern states of India are no exception. In fact, the state of Assam is one of those places that serves as a home to two of the most popular and important eco parks of India. These eco parks are Kaziranga National Park and Manas National Park. Kaziranga National Park was established in the year 1905. Globally, this park can be pinpointed at latitudes 26 degrees 30 minutes north and 26 degrees 45 minutes north and longitudes 93 degrees 08 minutes east to 93 degrees 36 minutes east. It is located on the banks of the mighty Brahmaputra River within two districts namely the Kaliabor subdivision of Nagaon district and the Bokakhat subdivision of Golaghat district. It occupies an area of about 430 square kilometres (170 sq mi). It is approximately 40 km (25 mi) in length from east to west and about 13 km (8 mi) in breadth from north to south. Summer, monsoon and winter are the three seasons of this park. Uncontrolled and illegal activity of poaching of the one-horned Rhinos caused the Kaziranga National Park to be declared as a wildlife sanctuary in 1940. One-horned Rhino is considered to be a prehistoric survivor and therefore needed special care and protection. This park was recognized as a Tiger Reserve in 2006 for the conservation of tigers. It was also declared as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International for the protection of avifaunal species. Kaziranga is known to have attained considerable success in wildlife conservation, relative to other protected areas in India. The managing body of Kaziranga National Park is the Government of India and the Government of Assam. The park celebrated its centennial in 2005 after its establishment in 1905 as a reserve forest. Flora of Kaziranga Wildlife Sanctuary Kaziranga Wildlife Sanctuary is a home to large clumps of semi-evergreen forest. It also consists of elephant grass, which is characteristically dense and tall. The vast distribution of elephant grass is intermixed by small swamplands left behind by the receding floodwaters of the river Brahmaputra. These swamplands have an abundant cover of water lilies, water hyacinth and lotus. Fauna of Kaziranga Wildlife Sanctuary The Kaziranga Wildlife Sanctuary protects about two-thirds of the world's great one-horned rhinoceroses. More specifically, this sanctuary is a home to about 1,651 adult rhinos (663 male, 802 are females, 186 unsexed), about 294 sub-adults (90 males, 114 females, 90 unsexed), about 251 juveniles and about 205 cubs. It is also a home to the highest density of tigers among protected areas in the world. Indian elephants, Indian bisons, swamp deers or barasingha, hog deers, sloth bears, tigers, leopard cats, jungle cats, hog badgers, capped langurs, hoolock gibbons, wild boars, jackals and wild buffalos are other major animals sheltered in the Kaziranga Wildlife Sanctuary. Avifauna of Kaziranga National Park Kaziranga National Park is also considered to be a birding paradise. Some of the birds found here are the grey-headed fishing eagle, oriental honey buzzard, black-shouldered kite, black kite, brahminy kite, pallas's fishing eagle, Himalayan griffon, white tailed eagle and red jungle fowl. During winters, a large number of migratory birds descend on the parks lakes and swampy areas. They are the greylag geese, bar-headed geese, ruddy shelduck, gadwall, falcated duck, red-crested pochard and northern shoveller. Reptiles of Kaziranga National Park Rock pythons and many more varieties of snakes and monitor lizards are the reptiles of Kaziranga National Park. Manas National Park Manas National Park was established in the year 1990. Globally, this park can be pinpointed at coordinates 26 degrees 43 minutes north and 90 degrees 56 minutes east. It is located in the Himalayan foothills in Assam and a portion of it stretches to the neighboring country, Bhutan. It occupies an area of about 950 square kilometers. This area falls in five districts of Kokrajhar, Chirang, Baksa, Udalguri, and Darrang. This park experiences a minimum temperature of about 15 degrees Celsius and a maximum temperature of about 37 degrees Celsius. The annual average rainfall of this park is about 333 cm. Heavy rainfall occurs in the area occupied by the park between May and September. On October 01, 1928, Manas National Park was declared a sanctuary and on December, 1985, it was declared as a World Heritage Site. This park is also a project tiger reserve, an elephant reserve and a biosphere reserve. The managing body of Manas National Park is the Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India. Flora of Manas National Park Manas National Park has two major biomes. They are the grassland biomes and the forest biomes. The east Himalayan mixed moist and dry deciduous forests are the most common type of vegetation of the Manas National Park. Other types of vegetation are the low alluvial savanna woodland, sub-Himalayan light alluvial semi-evergreen forests in the northern parts and the Assam valley semi-evergreen alluvial grasslands, which cover almost 50% of the park. Fauna of Manas National Park Manas National Park Assam is very diverse in terms of its animal population. More specifically, this park is a home to about 55 species of mammals, 380 species of birds, 50 of reptiles and 3 species of amphibians. Out of these wildlife, about 21 mammals are India’s Schedule I mammals and 31 of them are threatened. The Assam roofed turtle, hispid hare, golden langur and pygmy hog are the rare and endangered endemic wildlife protected in this park. Some of the potentially aggressive creatures sheltered by the park are tigers, elephants, rhinos, wild buffaloes, leopards, clouded leopards and the rare Black Panthers. This park is also well known for its population of the wild water buffalo. Avifauna of Manas National Park Manas National Park is also a home to many resident and migratory bird species. More specifically, it serves as a home to more than 450 species of birds. Some of these species are Giant Hornbills, red jungle fowls, bulbuls, brahminy ducks, khaleej pheasants, egrets, pelicans, fishing eagles, serpent eagles, falcons, scarlet minivets, comb duck, bee-eaters, magpie robins, pied hornbills, gray hornbills, mergansers, harriers, ospreys and herons. Indian Flora and Fauna Eco Parks in India Jammu and Kashmir Eco Park West Bengal Eco Parks Tamil Nadu Eco Parks Maharashtra Eco Parks Rajasthan Eco Parks More Articles in Eco Parks in India (36) Bhagyanagar Nandanavanam ... Leisure Valley West Bengal Eco Parks (2) Bihar Eco Park Kerala Eco Parks Karnataka Eco Parks Madhya Pradesh Eco Parks Gujarat Eco Parks Haryana Eco Parks Jammu and Kashmir Eco Par... (7) Maharashtra Eco Parks (1) Eco Parks in Odisha Tamil Nadu Eco Parks (2) Uttar Pradesh Eco Parks Uttaranchal Eco Parks Qudsia Bagh Semmozhi Poonga Rajdhani Vatika Tripura Heritage Park Eco Tourism in Landour Chandrasekhar Azad Park Garden of Five Senses Recently Updated Articles in Flora & Fauna • Babul Tree Also known as gum Arabic tree, Babul is a small tree species native to Africa, the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent. It is a flowering tree known for immense medicinal benefits as well as other utilities. • Wildlife Sanctuaries of Odisha Wildlife sanctuaries of Odisha are designated areas dedicated to the protection of several species of animals, birds, reptiles, etc. Some of these wildlife sanctuaries are Ushakothi Wildlife Sanctuary, Chilka Wildlife Sanctuary and Karalpat Wildlife Sanctuary. • Desert National Park Desert National park is rich in retaining the heritage of life of Indian desert. Desert national Park is one of the famous national parks of the region and also throughout India. • Silent Valley National Park Silent Valley National Park is remarkable for its calm and peaceful ambience, along with its plethora of wild creatures. In South India, Silent Valley National Park has drawn admiration of the tourists due to its preserves of wild creatures and plantations. • Thattekkad Bird Sanctuary, Thattekkad Bird Sanctuary in Kerala, founded by Dr. Salim Ali, is counted amongst world famous sanctuaries. Thattekkad Bird Sanctuary was constituted in the year 1983. Subscribe to E-Magazine on Reference
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/21107
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Concert_Music at the Interchurch Center_Grieg, Brahms, Debussy tags: art song, Brahms, Debussy, edvard grieg, Interchurch Center Enter a caption Raining of the Heart norwegian, german, french art song by Grieg, Brahms, Debussy Lisa Dæhlin, soprano Tor Morten Kjøsnes pianist Wednesday, 2nd December 2015, 12:00pm Music at the Interchurch Center Concert Series 475 Riverside Drive (@120th), New York City FREE ADMISSION to this half-hour lunchtime concert series. LINK TO INFO ON THE EVENT’s SITE to the knitters on the list… yes, that IS knitted video tape in the background. Thinkest thou that it looks like water? Lisa Daehlin, soprano, has performed numerous roles including Amelia (Un Ballo in Maschera), Fiordiligi (Cosi Fan Tutte), Tatiana (Eugene Onegin), Angelica (Suor Angelica), Madame Lidoine (Dialogues of the Carmelites), First Lady (Magic Flute), High Priestess (Aida) and Wellgunde (Das Rhinegold). In New York City, Lisa performs frequently at St. Paul’s Chapel, Cornelia Street Café, and The Players Club. Her concert repertoire focuses extensively on Norwegian, French and American Chanson, Cabaret and Art Song. European concerts in Italy, Germany, and in Scandinavia as an invited singer for the International Edvard Grieg Society in Bergen, Norway. Though known for her rendition of “I’m a Stranger Here Myself,” Lisa is no stranger to the cabaret stage, having performed incarnations of her show From Classical to Cabaret: The songs of Poulenc, Porter, Weill and Satie in venues as varied as the underground club to the concert hall. She has sung Dorothy Parker songs in the Algonquin’s Oak Room. She has performed the music of Stefania de Kenessey at City Center and with the Annabella Gonzalez Dance Theater at Lincoln Center. The recording project for that company is now used in the performance repertoire. She produced and directed OperaKnit Cabaret at Performance Space 122 (PS122, NYC), and her one-woman show Twisted Stitch: Songs of Love and Knitting was featured in the Classical to Jazz festival at Cornelia Street Café (NYC), weaving together songs of Edvard Grieg, Franz Schubert, Maury Yeston and a world premier cycle of songs by Stefania de Kenessey. Awarded the degree of Master of Arts in Music and Music Education from Columbia University Teachers College, Daehlin operates a private voice studio in New York City. Norwegian pianist Tor Morten Kjøsnes is an active contributor to the New York music scene as an accompanist, soloist, and chamber musician. He accompanies up-and-coming as well as established ensembles, singers, and instrumentalists. Recent collaborations include legendary Swedish singer Sven-Bertil Taube, Norwegian violinist Arve Tellefsen, trombonist William Lang, and violinist Christian Svarfvar. Kjøsnes graduated from Manhattan School of Music in 2010, where he studied with Nina Svetlanova. His studies in the U.S. were generously supported by the American Scandinavian Foundation. Earning his undergraduate degree studying with Tori Stødle at the Tromsø Music Conservatory in Norway, he graduated with honors in 2007, one of only a handful pianists to be awarded the top grade in the national censorship. He also held a full-time position as accompanist at the same institution, 2007–08. Additionally, he studied at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater in Hamburg, Germany, with Ralf Nattkemper. Kjøsnes has participated in masterclasses with artists such as Hans Leygraf, Martino Tirimo, Sigurd Slåttebrekk, and Volker Banfield. Passionate about many forms of music, Kjøsnes utilizes his versatility as a composer and arranger with the folk/world music group Ljom, with which he has toured extensively througout Norway, Sweden, and the U.S. The group’s first album was released in June 2014 by the renowned Norwegian label Kirkelig Kulturverksted. Increasingly active as a guitarist, Kjøsnes works closely with experimental folk rock singer Kjersti Kveli. For such collaborations, Kjøsnes also writes string, chamber, and orchestral arrangements. Currently he is working on Kveli’s next album, to be released later in 2015. from → Knitting and Crochet, Performance, Uncategorized ← Concert at the Norwegian Seaman’s Church Christmas Fair (Julemarked) Artisans Craft Sale at Columbia University Teachers College – Hats de Lisa selling her wares →
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California governor signs $15 bln package to tackle climate change Friday, 24 September 2021 05:18 GMT Michael Kozicki from Santa Fe Springs Fire and Dan Rasmussen from Downey Fire discuss fire plans as the Caldor Fire burns in the background, in Kirkwood, California, U.S., September 1, 2021. REUTERS/Fred Greaves The largest climate package in the state's history - to fund efforts focused on drought, extreme heat, water and wildfire preparedness - comes after a devastating fire season Sept 24 (Reuters) - California Governor Gavin Newsom has signed a $15 billion package that will fund programs to tackle drought and climate change in the state after a devastating wildfire season. Newsom signed 24 bills focused on climate and clean energy efforts, droughts, and wildfire preparedness, his office said in a statement on Thursday, describing the funding as the largest climate package in California's history. The package's largest portion, $5.2 billion, will go towards funding for emergency drought relief projects and expanding California's water supplies. The package includes $3.7 billion to address climate change risks, investing in projects that will mitigate extreme heat and tackle the threat of rising sea levels. About $1.5 billion will go toward preventing wildfire risk in forests, according to the statement from Newsom's office. This month, President Joe Biden renewed his push for significant investments to combat climate change as he visited California and took an aerial tour of areas hit by one of the country's worst fire seasons. California typically experiences its peak fire season in late summer and fall. The state is on pace to see more of its landscape go up in flames this year than last, which was the worst year on record for the state. Human-caused climate change has intensified the withering drought gripping the Southwestern United States, the region's most severe on record, with precipitation at the lowest 20-month level documented since 1895, a U.S. government report said on Tuesday. Over the same period, from January 2020 through August 2021, the region also experienced the third-highest daily average temperatures measured since record-keeping began near the end of the 19th century, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The report warned that extreme drought conditions are likely to worsen and repeat themselves "until stringent climate mitigation is pursued and regional warming trends are reversed." (Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru. Editing by Gerry Doyle) Climate Change General $THEME_LOOKUP.get("${o}")
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/22198
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White Sands Test Center > Test Center > Testing and Evaluation > Range Instrumentation Range instrumentation systems include radar, optics, GPS (Global Positioning System), interferometer, and telemetry. These systems provide the range´s data collection capability. Special instrumentation support is also available. Extensive instrumentation systems are available and are capable of measuring the following: acceleration, velocity, displacement, force, strain, pressure, temperature, and time sequence. A mobile instrumentation van is available to support tests performed at alternate locations. Analog & Digital: Field measurements of acoustic signature, events, pressures, sound pressure, strain, temperature, and vibration. Analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog (D/A) data conversion. Digital data acquisition, recording and processing from computerized systems. Electro-optics: Support for atmospheric transmission, radiometry, photometry, thermal measurements, thermal signatures, lasers, laser characterizations, and image processing/analysis. Telemetry: FM/FM, FM/PCM, PCM, RS-232, and MIL-STD-1553 data acquisition, recording, and processing. Microwave transmission of data. Video data acquisition, transmission, distribution, remote control, manprint, special effects, editing, digital still video, display and recording. Please contact us at [email protected] The Optical Instrumentation Suite consists of a variety of optical tracking systems and facilities throughout White Sands Missile Range (WSMR). The equipment and facilities are ultimately responsible for producing Time Space Position Information (TSPI), visual information and Radiometric analysis on a wide variety of aerial and ground targets. The Optics Branch (RO-DO) is part of the Range Operations Directorate, Data Collection Division and consists of both Government and Contractor support elements. The Government contingent operates remotely-controlled Kineto Tracking Mounts (KTM) as well as three Remote Instrument Control Systems (RICS) and the Optics Remote Control and Aquisition (ORCA); both are used to control the KTMs remotely. The Contractor personnel operate a group of KTMs and another Optics Remote Control and Aquisition (ORCA) system. The Contractor is also responsible for the operation of the non-track camera systems used primarily at launcher and impact sites, KTM depot-level maintenance, and the visual information and media transfer facilities. The KTM systems are equipped with long focal length lenses, analog video cameras, high-speed digital cameras, infrared video systems, and digital recording systems. These systems are usually remotely operated at a hazard-safe distance from either an ORCA or RICS control van. Due to the size of WSMR and the number of missions executed, it is necessary to move the KTMs and their associated control systems around the range almost daily. There are three different configurations of KTMs used at WSMR, each with a different number of sensor platforms and capabilities, the MAT, LAT and TPM. The non-track or “fixed” cameras are used even more than the tracking systems. The non-track cameras are typically set up around the launcher and impact sites. The inventory of equipment includes high-speed digital, analog video and streak cameras as well as video streamers and recording devices. The cameras can be used to collect simple “event” type pictures or data that can be used produce TSPI solutions. Recent modernization efforts for optics include the elimination of film and the digital conversion of optical systems to interface with the WSMR network. Use of film has been eliminated and replaced with digital cameras. The effort is on-going to convert the KTMs and control systems to digital, making it possible to link them via a WSMR-wide network. Once completed this will increase the operational capabilities and make the setups more flexible because they will not be restricted to line-of-site connections. Radar Branch operates eleven instrumentation tracking radars throughout the range. Two phased AN/MPS-39 Multiple Object Tracking Radars and ten AN/FPS-16 radars form the basic radar instrumentation network. These are supplanted by a special purpose CW Doppler radar. The AN/MPS-39 Multiple Object Tracking Radars are White Sands Missile Range´s most modern instrumentation radars. WSMR operates two MOTR systems. They are phased array radars, each capable of simultaneously tracking up to 40 objects within a scan volume of 60 degrees by 60 degrees. Each MOTR phased array antenna is mounted on an azimuth over elevation pedestal so that full hemispheric coverage is possible. The precision of the radar is 0.2 mils (approximately 0.2 milliradians) in angles and 1.5 yards in range. The peak power of the radar is one-megawatt, but a mix of six different waveforms provides for a total average transmitted power of 5000 watts, the highest of any of the WSMR radars. The MOTR is capable of tracking a six-inch sphere to a range in excess of 120 km. WSMR also operates up to ten AN/FPS-16 instrumentation tracking radars. The FPS-16 is a pulsed radar that operates at C-Band frequencies between 5.4 and 5.9 GHz. It is capable of tracking a single target as small as a six inch sphere with a precision of better than 3 yards to a distance of almost 100 kilometers. The radar can track in two modes: echo, where the radar locks onto the reflected energy from a target, and transponder mode, where an active on-board device is used for the tracking signal. Normally, the FPS-16 requires a crew of three to four technicians. The Continuous Wave CW Doppler Radar is a special purpose radar designed to record the Doppler Signature of a target. It is used primarily for measuring the exit velocity of ground launched missiles and muzzle velocity of direct fire weapons. WSMR operates two C-band Radar Transponder shops. One is located at WSMR main post and the other is at HAFB. The transponder test facility provides and effectuates all transponder support on White Sands Missile Range, both on and off range, as to ensure positive, reliable, repeatable target tracking necessary to meet Missile Flight Safety and customer requirements. Telemetry Data Center The range is heavily instrumented with many types of sensors and data gathering equipment. The Telemetry System is one such type of sensor that collects information pertaining to a test vehicle´s direction, health and status. The manufacturer normally instruments the test vehicle at the factory with numerous sensors and guidance systems. Data from these systems is then transmitted, where telemetry tracking stations receive the information and relay it to the primary data processing station at WSMR, the Telemetry Data Center (TDC). The TDC provides White Sands Missile Range with one of the premier telemetry data processing and display facilities within the Department of Defense. The data is processed and displayed for use by both external range customers, such as a missile manufacturer, and internal customers, such as missile flight safety. Missile flight safety officers depend on this information to tell them how the subject under test is performing according to predetermined parameters (including trajectory) and determine if the test should be terminated. Such constraints require that the telemetry system perform its duties flawlessly. The TDC staff includes recognized experts in mathematical analysis, real-time data processing, software development, systems engineering and real-time missile flight safety decision strategies. The purpose or mission of this organization is to collect, process, archive and display telemetry data in either preflight, real time or post flight mode. Consequently, TDC engineers are expected to design, specify and build telemetry ground stations, which perform the entire spectrum of operations. These systems are complex and dependent on a multitude of technologies. The TDC is in the process of upgrading its current complement of processing and display systems. These upgrades will enhance mission support and data products for our customers. Such benefits include: improved processing, display, and data storage and access capability. The TDC has begun the implementation of a software based telemetry processing system (versus the traditional hardware based systems) that extracts real time telemetry data and presents it in real time via PC based graphical displays and/or strip chart recorders. Considering that telemetry data can provide information concerning a vehicle´s position, status and health, the TDC uses telemetry data to depict real time visual information of a vehicle´s orientation and/or position using Modeling and Simulation tools. This visualization provides our customers with an intuitive grasp of the missile´s spatial situation. With the new processing systems, TDC is capable of digitizing telemetry data in real-time and has the ability to offer its customers processed digital telemetry data products in a greater variety of large capacity archival media. The data products of the TDC consists of the following: Serial or Multiplexed Metrum Helical Scan Tapes, Sony 8mm tapes, Compact Disks, Digital Versatile/Video Disks and USB Hard Drives. In addition, the TDC provides customers with SVHS and VHS tapes, embedded telemetry seeker video displays, 2D/3D computer generated graphical representations of TM data and strip chart recordings. Range InstrumentationCurrently selected This page was last updated on 9/13/2019 1:09 PM
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/23128
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Orchestral Film Score Recording Returns to New York City with Monitor System from JBL Professional by HARMAN Master Reference Monitor 8" Master Reference Monitor S2S-EX High-performance 15" (380mm)Passive Subwoofer -Press Release PDF- NEW YORK—New York City’s only orchestral recording studio acoustically optimized for classical music, The DiMenna Center for Classical Music recently installed a complete JBL by HARMAN 5.1 monitoring system consisting of JBL’s M2 and 7 Series Master Reference monitors. The system has already been used for a wide variety of audio recordings, including major film scores, like the recent Coen Brothers release, “Hail, Caesar!” Leveraging The DiMenna Center’s superb hall acoustically optimized for orchestral performances, recording and mixing experts Audiosmith Digital Solutions partnered with the center to offer full-service orchestral recording capabilities. When Audiosmith’s founding partner Lawrence Manchester needed a studio monitoring system capable of producing accurate and consistent results across any production, he turned to JBL. Manchester is a GRAMMY Award-winning music producer/mixer/engineer with an impressive list of credits, including more than 85 films, such as Martin Scorsese’s Academy Award-winning “The Departed,” musical TV productions, such as “Adele Live in New York City,” and he is also the music mixer/producer for NBC’s “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.” According to Manchester, who first heard the earlier JBL studio monitors at GRAMMY Award-winning producer Frank Filipetti’s studio in 2006, JBL’s new patent-pending Image Control Waveguide technology is the standout feature on both the M2 and the LSR708i. “When I first heard Frank demo the M2s, I was blown away by the imaging and the bass response, and I could not wait to try them for myself,” Manchester said. “I knew when we started this recording partnership with The DiMenna Center the M2s would be a key component and the LSR708i model proved to be an exciting new loudspeaker that we loved from the start. The Waveguide is a fantastic piece of technology that provides an incredibly engaging and satisfying listening experience.” As the acoustic interface for the M2’s D2430K and 2216ND transducers, JBL Waveguide technology provides exceptional high-frequency detail and natural balance at nearly any listening position. The technology also ensures detailed imaging and a coherent transition between channels, surrounds and immersive format overhead loudspeakers. “Consistency in how your mixes translate to the outside world is what makes a good loudspeaker and exciting people when they hear their own music playing back is what makes it a great one,” Manchester said. “With film score production, one needs to be able to hear exactly what’s being recorded in the room and the M2s and the LSR708i monitors provide a unique level of accuracy and reliability.” The orchestral recording studio’s 5.1 monitoring system features three M2 Master Reference monitors (Left, Center, Right), two LSR708i Master Reference Monitors for surround and a JBL S2S-EX Subwoofer. The system is powered by three Crown I-Tech 5000HD power amplifiers, one Crown DCi 2|300N network amplifier and one Crown DCi 2|1250N network amplifier. The studio also uses the LSR708i in a stereo setup when a near-field listening experience is needed. Implementing system components that easily integrate was a key motivator behind Audiosmith’s decision to use JBL and Crown solutions. “We rely heavily on networked audio throughout our studio design,” Manchester said. “Having a centrally managed system of DSP components that are designed to work together improves the flexibility of our setup and the accuracy of our listening.” For more information on Audiosmith Digital Solutions, LLC: www.audiosmithdigitalsolutions.com For more information on The DiMenna Center for Classical Music: www.dimennacenter.org ABOUT HARMAN HARMAN (harman.com) designs and engineers connected products and solutions for automakers, consumers and enterprises worldwide, including connected car systems, audio and visual products, enterprise automation solutions and connected services. With leading brands including AKG®, Harman Kardon®, Infinity®, JBL®, Lexicon®, Mark Levinson® and Revel®, HARMAN is admired by audiophiles, musicians and the entertainment venues where they perform around the world. More than 25 million automobiles on the road today are equipped with HARMAN audio and connected car systems. The Company's software services power billions of mobile devices and systems that are connected, integrated and secure across all platforms, from work and home to car and mobile. HARMAN has a workforce of approximately 28,000 people across the Americas, Europe, and Asia and reported sales of $6.5 billion during the 12 months ended December 31, 2015. The Company’s shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol NYSE:HAR.
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Saks Strengthens Commitment to Men’s Business Online and In-Stores James Harden, Lil Baby The luxury retailer has unveiled a new men’s shopping destination in New York City and launched its first-ever men’s brand ambassador program, The Saks Man Saks has unveiled a new men’s shopping experience on the seventh floor of the iconic Saks Fifth Avenue New York flagship and expanded its menswear assortment online as part of the luxury retailer’s ongoing commitment to its men’s business. The 40,000-square-foot advanced designer and contemporary ready-to-wear department offers more than 70 brands – 23 of which are new to the store – and features shop-in-shops by key men’s brands including CELINE, Dior Men, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, and more. “Our men’s business has experienced significant growth over the past several years, and Saks continues to be the destination that shoppers look to for the latest in men’s luxury fashion,” said Tracy Margolies, Chief Merchandising Officer at Saks. “While we remain focused on expanding our online offering and creating an unparalleled assortment of men’s fashion and accessories on Saks.com, our stores remain a crucial part of the Saks Fifth Avenue ecosystem. The new men’s floor in New Yorkreinforces the power of the in-store experience and exemplifies Saks’ reputation as a fashion authority. We are excited to continue investing in the men’s category both online and in store through our exclusive partnership with the Saks Fifth Avenue stores to further solidify our position as the ultimate destination for men’s luxury fashion.” The luxury retailer has also launched an invite-only men’s brand ambassador program called The Saks Man to further connect with men’s customers through unique digital content and in-person experiences. The Saks Man comprises a diverse group of influential men who serve as brand ambassadors for Saks by promoting the digital luxury platform’s marketing campaigns and product launches, creating custom content for Saks’ digital channels, and attending and hosting both virtual and in-person events. Members of The Saks Man come from a wide range of industries including sports, entertainment, business, activism and more, with the group complementing Saks’ existing women’s brand ambassador program, Saks Social Club. To celebrate the renovation and the launch of its first-ever men’s brand ambassador program, Saks hosted a private tour of the new floor followed by a cocktail party with NBA-All Star and Saks board member James Harden and members of The Saks Man at Le Chalet at L’Avenue at Saks on Thursday, January 26. SEVENTH FLOOR RENOVATION AT SAKS FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK The new seventh floor at the New York flagship offers an expertly curated selection of men’s ready-to-wear by emerging designers and established brands. The destination features 19 new shop-in-shops by the most sought-after names in men’s fashion including: Alexander McQueen, Balenciaga, Balmain, Bottega Veneta, Burberry, CELINE, Dior Men, Dolce&Gabbana, Fendi, Givenchy, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Moncler, Palm Angels, Off-White (opening in February 2023), Saint Laurent Paris (opening in March 2023), Thom Browne, Valentino and Versace. Highlights include: CELINE’s first shop-in-shop in the United States dedicated to CELINE HOMME Alexander McQueen’s first concept shop designed by the brand’s Creative Director Sarah Burton in partnership with Chilean architect Smiljan Radic Burberry’s first concept shop in New York City reflecting the design of the brand’s Sloane Street flagship store in London Palm Angels’ first men’s shop-in-shop in the United States The Saks Fifth Avenue Store Planning and Design team collaborated with Architecture, Engineering and Interior Design firm Highland Associates to update the floor and showcase the expert curation of men’s fashion in an elevated and easily navigable setting. A modern staircase boasting dichroic glass connects the sixth and seventh floors to create a seamless men’s shopping experience, and previously-blocked windows along Fifth Avenue have been opened and restored to flood the space with natural light. Additionally, the floor features extended aisle paths and new lounge seating areas to encourage socialization and exploration. A centrally located Atrium space will showcase emerging designers and new-to-Saks brands on a rotating basis. As part of the renovation, 23 brands were added to the men’s ready-to-wear assortment at Saks Fifth Avenue New York, including BODE, CELINE, Jil Sander, Louis Vuitton, Maison Margiela, Marni, Martine Rose, Sacai, Sky High Farm Workwear, Undercover, Wales Bonner and Willy Chavarria. “As our men’s business continues to grow, we are excited to offer a reimagined shopping experience for our customers to discover the latest in luxury menswear at the Saks Fifth Avenue New York flagship,” added Louis DiGiacomo, Senior Vice President and General Merchandise Manager of Men’s at Saks. “This renovation is a testament to our continued focus on the men’s category, and we look forward to offering our fresh, fashion-forward perspective through the unmatched assortment available on the new floor and on Saks.com.” As consumer appetites for shopping for luxury online continue to grow, Saks, the premier digital platform for luxury fashion, remains focused on meeting customers where and how they want to shop. The retailer added over 125 brands to its men’s array on Saks.com in 2022, including Jacquemus, Jil Sander, Junya Watanabe, Loewe and Sacai. Saks also expanded its wellness and activewear assortment in categories such as golf, ski and swim with the launch of Alo Yoga, BOGNER, Fair Harbor, Rhone and SEASE, among other brands. The digital platform now features a dedicated men’s homepage to better serve its men’s customers online, providing tailored product recommendations and curated content such as trend stories and influencer-curated product arrays. Saks also offers access to exclusive virtual shopping experiences with men’s designers and industry experts on its digital events events platform, Saks Live. ABOUT SAKS FIFTH AVENUE Saks Fifth Avenue is the leading name in luxury shopping. Since 1924, the brand has maintained a reputation for delivering an expertly curated assortment of fashion and highly personalized service. The Saks Fifth Avenue experience offers seamless all-channel shopping through an elevated digital platform and in-person services provided by an extraordinary network of 39 Saks Fifth Avenue stores across North America. Shop on Saks.com and the Saks app, or visit Saks.com to find a Saks Fifth Avenue store location near you. Follow @saks on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook and Twitter, @thesaksman on Instagram and Saks Fifth Avenue on LinkedIn. SOURCE Saks; PRNewswire In: Fashion Previous Post: MTA Unveils Major Accessibility and Circulation Improvements at 34 St-Penn Station Next Post: TADA! Youth Theater Presents: Princess Phooey
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Paddington Arrives on Blu-ray and DVD on April 17th Everyone’s favorite marmalade-loving little bear is ready to make a splash onto home screens when Anchor Bay Entertainment and TWC-Dimension release the critically acclaimed, heart-warming family film Paddington on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand April 28, 2015. Paddington tells the story of the comic misadventures of a young Peruvian bear who travels to London in search of a home. Finding himself lost and alone, he begins to realize that city life is not all he had imagined until he meets the kindly Brown family (Bonneville and Hawkins) who take him home after reading the label around his neck. It looks as though his luck has changed until this rare talking bear catches the eye of Millicent (Nicole Kidman), a museum taxidermist. He’s Come a Long Way And He’s Here to Stay Available on BLU-RAY, DVD and On Demand April 28, 2015 Early Digital Download Window Begins April 17, 2015 BEVERLY HILLS, CA – Paddington Bear was first introduced to children in Michael Bond’s 1958 book, A Bear Called Paddington and the subsequent Paddington Bear series has sold over 35 million copies and been translated into 40 languages. For the first time, author Michael Bond has given his blessing for his beloved characters to be brought to the big screen, charming both critics and audience members alike. From writer-director Paul King and producer David Heyman, the film features a stellar cast with Emmy® nominee Hugh Bonneville (TV’s “Downton Abbey”), Oscar® nominee Sally Hawkins (Blue Jasmine), Oscar nominee Julie Walters (Billy Elliot, Educating Rita), Oscar winner Jim Broadbent (Iris), Peter Capaldi (TV’s “Doctor Who,” “The Musketeers”) with Oscar winner Nicole Kidman (The Hours), and Ben Whishaw (Skyfall) as the voice of Paddington. The Rotten Tomatoes Certified Fresh film is “stuffed with family fun,” according to the Los Angeles Times, and has earned over $228 million worldwide at the box office to date. Paddington is rated PG for mild action and rude humor. Runtime is 95 minutes. The Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD bonus content includes Meet the Characters, When a Bear Comes to Stay, From Page to Screen and “Shine” Lyric Music Video written by Gwen Stefani & Pharrell. The Blu-ray will also include the exclusive special feature called The Making of "Shine" with Gwen Stefani & Pharrell. Posted by Sean Ferguson on Tuesday, March 10, 2015
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/24385
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SEC Charges Safeguard Metals LLC – Fraud Scheme SEC Files Fraud Charges Alleging a Multi-Million Dollar Scheme that Targeted Retirement Accounts Washington, DC (STL.News) The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) today announced charges against Safeguard Metals LLC, and its owner, Jeffrey Santulan, for engaging in a multi-million dollar fraud scheme involving hundreds of investors who were at or near retirement age. According to the SEC’s complaint, from December 2017 through at least July 2021, Safeguard and Santulan acted as investment advisers and persuaded investors to sell their existing securities, transfer the proceeds into self-directed Individual Retirement Accounts, and invest the proceeds into gold and silver coins by making false and misleading statements about the safety and liquidity of the investors’ securities investments, Safeguard’s business, and its compensation. As alleged, Safeguard fraudulently marketed itself as a full-service investment firm with offices in London, New York City, and Beverly Hills that employed prominent individuals in the securities industry and had $11 billion in assets under management. In reality, Santulan allegedly operated the company from a small leased space in a Woodland Hills, California office building using sales agents. The complaint further alleges that Safeguard’s sales agents used prepared scripts, some written by Santulan, that were filled with false and misleading statements about how the market was going to crash and how their retirement accounts would be frozen under a new ‘unpublicized’ law. “The federal securities laws prohibit deceptive conduct and material misrepresentations in the purchase or sale of securities,” said Kathryn A. Pyszka, an Associate Director in the SEC’s Chicago Regional Office. “We will take action when, as alleged, parties fraudulently induce investors to sell their securities through lies and deception.” Safeguard and Santulan also allegedly misled investors about Safeguard’s commissions and markups on the coins, charging average markups of approximately 64% on its sales of silver coins, instead of the 4% to 33% markups that they disclosed to investors. According to the complaint, Safeguard obtained approximately $67 million from the sale of coins to more than 450 mostly elderly, retail investors, and kept approximately $25.5 million in markups. The SEC’s complaint, which was filed in federal district court in Los Angeles, Calif., charges Safeguard and Santulan with violating the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. The SEC is seeking permanent injunctions, disgorgement of allegedly ill-gotten gains, plus interest, and civil penalties. The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Jedediah B. Forkner and Jean M. Javorski of the SEC’s Chicago Regional Office and was supervised by Anne C. McKinley. The litigation will be led by Jonathan S. Polish. The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and state regulators that are members of the North American Securities Administrators Association. Tags: California, Fraud Scheme, London, Los Angeles, New York City, Safeguard Metals, US Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington DC H&R Block – Reports Fiscal 2022 Second Quarter CFTC – Safeguard Metals LLC – Nationwide Fraud Case
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/24652
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Collaborative approaches to Big Data questions in Earth system science · Tuesday, December 17th, 2019 Human actions are driving changes in Earth’s atmosphere, ocean, and land surface at unprecedented rates. Fully-coupled Earth system models (ESMs) simulate physical aspects of the climate system, their interactions with terrestrial and marine ecosystems, and biogeochemical cycles. In this sense, ESMs are extremely valuable to understanding and managing planetary-scale human-environment interactions. Over the past few years, modeling centers around the world have prepared their state-of-the-art ESMs to participate in the 6th phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). The World Climate Research Program (WCRP) coordinates the design and distribution of ESM simulations, aiming to assess the Earth system response to various forcing trajectories—inclusive of internal climate variability and uncertainty estimates—and to understand the origins and consequences of systematic model biases. CMIP represents a cutting-edge, collective capacity to understand and model the Earth system. The CMIP enterprise had modest beginnings in the early 1990s, with a handful of participating models each archiving a limited set of output from their simulations—growing to the present CMIP6, which includes participation of dozens of models and modeling centers, contributing many more variables at higher spatial resolution and temporal frequencies. These factors have driven a massive increase in the volume and diversity of CMIP data, making it increasingly difficult to effectively analyze. Meanwhile, the potential for connectivity among scientists has increased as collaborative platforms have emerged. However, the scientific culture could become more effective at developing community-oriented approaches to addressing the large-scale problems defining the present era, leveraging resources like CMIP to advance scientific understanding and actionable information. The complexity of the Earth system and our models of it demands deep collaboration, integrating knowledge across diverse communities. Earth system science is data intensive; barriers to the effective synthesis and interpretation of large and diverse data form a critical rate-limiting step in establishing actionable science. It was in this context that we organized the CMIP6 Hackathon, a joint OCB/US-CLIVAR activity. The Hackathon took place 16–18 October, 2019 at three locations simultaneously: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO; Palisades, NY), NCAR (Boulder, CO), and informally at the University of Washington (UW; Seattle, WA). In addition to these primary nodes, a handful of people participated remotely, some having expressed reluctance to travel due to personal carbon-conscious no-fly commitments. Participants were primarily graduate students and postdocs at U.S. universities. We structured the CMIP6 Hackathon around group projects; there was very limited direct instruction, but rather project teams worked solidly for three days on group projects with regular check-ins that established a sense of shared purpose. Rapid learning was fostered via the intense collaborations within the project teams; the groups learned from each other as they overcame technical and scientific challenges. We invested substantial effort in advance planning of the group projects and staging of the relevant CMIP6 data. Prior to the event, we provided instructions and made use of collaborative platforms (Slack, Discourse, Google Drive, GitHub). Participants were asked to propose projects via a post on discourse.pangeo.io and ensuing discussion enabled formation of teams. Project themes spanned many sub-disciplines, including ocean physics and biogeochemistry, climate sensitivity, atmospheric circulation, and the efficacy of data compression techniques. We pre-staged CMIP6 data for the projects in two locations; (1) the National Center for Atmospheric Research’s CMIP Analysis Platform (CMIP-AP), which provides a 10 PB central data repository connected to the NCAR supercomputer, Cheyenne; and (2) the Google Cloud, taking advantage of efforts within the Pangeo Project to coordinate hosting of CMIP6 data under a Google’s Public Dataset Program. To facilitate data access within computational workflows, we developed a data cataloging utility Intake-esm, a Python package that supports data discovery and access. The hackathon focused on the application of a suite of software tools that have been a focal point of the Pangeo community: Xarray, which enables working with labeled, multi-dimensional arrays; Dask, which provides a flexible approach to enabling parallel computation; and Jupyter Notebooks, which provide an interactive computing platform supporting sharing and publication of computational narratives. Each project team worked in a GitHub repository and developed a set of Jupyter Notebooks performing and documenting computation related to their research objectives. The CMIP6 Hackathon represented one small step toward an envisioned transformation, building communities of practice around specific problems, using effective approaches to analysis workflows to stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration and accelerated science.
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/24722
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Massive cyber-attack by Iran stole data from governments, companies and universities March 26, 2018 | | News / Threats / Australia ; Canada ; China ; Denmark ; Finland ; Germany ; India ; Italy ; Japan ; Malaysia ; Netherlands ; Poland ; Singapore ; South Korea ; Spain ; Sweden ; Switzerland ; Turkey ; United Kingdom ; United States ; Nine Iranians working on behalf of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps hacked the computers of 7998 professors at 320 universities around the world over the past 5 years, an indictment filed by a federal grand jury alleges. The hackers stole 31.5 terabytes of documents and data, including scientific research, journals, and dissertations, the indictment alleges. Their targets also included the United Nations, 30 U.S. companies, and five U.S. government agencies. The “massive and brazen cyber assault” is “one of the largest state-sponsored hacking campaigns ever prosecuted by the Department of Justice,” U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman of the Southern District of New York, where the indictment was filed, said at a press conference this morning. The hacks came to light through investigations by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and reports from victims. “The hackers targeted innovations and intellectual property from our country’s greatest minds,” Berman said, adding that they went after data and research from many fields. According to the indictment, 3768 of the hacked professors were at 144 U.S. universities, and the attackers stole data that cost these institutions about $3.4 billion to “procure and access.” The accused allegedly set up an institute in Iran called Mabna that coordinated and paid for the hacks. The defendants then sold the stolen data through two websites, Gigapaper and Megapaper. The institute, the indictment says, aimed to “assist Iranian universities, as well as scientific and research organizations, to obtain access to non-Iranian scientific resources.” The indictment does not name academic institutions or companies that were hacked, but does specify that victims included academic publishers, a biotechnology company, and 11 technology companies. The indictment offers more detail about government breaches, noting that hacks in the United States occurred in the states of Hawaii and Indiana, as well as at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and Department of Labor, both in Washington, D.C. The defendants also allegedly hacked the United Nations Children’s Fund. Other countries targeted include Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, and the United Kingdom. The charges against the accused include wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy to commit computer intrusions. The indictment says the university breaches involved “spearfishing,” in which the accused sent emails to targets that tricked them into providing their login credentials. The emails supposedly came from professors who read articles by the targets and asked to see more of their work, providing links. A click on the link took the victim to a fake internet domain that resembled their own university’s website and asked them to log in. For the private sector, the indictment says hackers used “password spraying,” cracking into accounts with commonly used passwords; then they “exfiltrated entire email mailboxes from the victims” and also captured new outgoing and incoming email from compromised individuals. Berman said all nine defendants are now believed to be in Iran. “These defendants are no longer free to travel outside of Iran without the fear of being arrested and extradited to the United States,” Berman said. “The only way they can see the rest of the world is through their computer screen, but now stripped of their greatest asset, anonymity.” Source » sciencemag Abdollah Karima Abuzar Gohari Moqadam Ehsan Mohammadi Gholamreza Rafatnejad Mabna Institute On four buses Over 200 members of Iranian militias head towards borders with Iraq Accused of leaking information Iranian-backed militias arrest 17 Iranian culture centre starts new training courses in Deir Ezzor Leaked Document Reveals Infighting In Khamenei’s Family Business Hussein Yazdanpana – The Kurdish Leader Calling For The Toppling Of The Islamic Republic Of Iran
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/26025
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HUGH PRESTWOOD Hugh’s songwriting career A native of El Paso, TX, Hall of Fame songwriter Hugh Prestwood has been writing hits for three decades. He was discovered in 1978 by Judy Collins, who gave him his first hit (Hard Times For Lovers), and subsequently recorded five more of his songs. Hugh has penned #1 hits for Randy Travis, Trisha Yearwood, Michael Johnson, Shenandoah, Crystal Gayle and Collin Raye. He has also composed hits for Highway 101, Anne Murray, Ty England and Kathy Mattea. Other artists who have recorded his songs include Conway Twitty, Lee Greenwood, Don Williams, Jackie DeShannon, Maura O’Connell, Tanya Tucker, The Judds, Jimmy Buffett, James Taylor, Jerry Douglas and Alison Kraus. In 1991 Prestwood was honored at the annual BMI Awards with the 23rd Robert J. Burton Song of the Year Award for “Hard Rock Bottom of Your Heart”. He was also picked by Billboard Magazine as the #2 Country Songwriter that year. He made his recording debut on RCA Records in 1993 with the album “Signatures 3”, featuring five of Nashville’s top writers. In 1994, he won a Prime Time Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music & Lyrics for his composition, “The Song Remembers When”, featured in the Disney special, “Trisha Yearwood - The Song Remembers When”. This song was also nominated for a CableACE Award for Best Original Song and was voted Song Of The Year by members of the Nashville Songwriters Association (NSAI). Three of Hugh’s songs have been nominated for Grammys in the Best Performance Category: “Sound of Goodbye” by Crystal Gayle; “Hard Rock Bottom of Your Heart” by Randy Travis; and “Ghost In This House” by Shenandoah. In 2006, along with Jimmy Buffett and Jim Weatherly, he was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters’ Hall of Fame. Since the early 1980’s, Hugh has taught “Advanced Songwriting” for the New School in Manhattan, a short drive from his home in Long Island, NY. Also while in Nashville or other cities in the US, Hugh can be found teaching songwriting workshops for NSAI. With his steady stream of hits and willingness to share his craft, Hugh Prestwood is well-respected by his peers and singers alike. It is that friendliness that comes through in his songs. If you are a fan of Hugh Prestwood’s songs, his recent album, “The Fate of Fireflies” has 15 well-done tracks that showcase a man with a strong baritone voice reminiscent of James Taylor.
2023-14/0010/en_head.json.gz/26141
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Apartment Lake Garda 63 by Alfiero Massimini | Apr 20, 2022 Luxury apartment Lake Garda for sale in a historic building. This luxurious apartment Lake Garda is located in a unique context: a landmark Austro-Hungarian building dating to 1856. The last major project carried out in Italy by the Austro-Hungarian army a year before the death of Josef Radetzky, which took place in 1857. This Lake Garda 12 apartments (5 already sold) and 6 mega-penthouses (2 already sold) offer you the luxury of living in history, with the comfort, light and brightness of large spaces: from 270 to 450 square meters. Apartment Lake Garda – The Restoration The ambitious restoration project of this nineteenth-century Austro-Hungarian building that houses this apartment Lake Garda is entrusted to expert architects. The imposing palace is being carefully restored while maintaining and enhancing the architectural and structural features. The original materials, such as stone, exposed brick arches and ancient beams, have been carefully recovered and enhanced. An important testimony of our history, with suggestive architecture and generous spaces, which allow creating extraordinary luxury apartments. Ask for the restoration project’s complete teaser Apartment Lake Garda – Luxurious Apartments & Penthouses All the rooms of this historic building are huge and with large windows. The large spaces allow the architects involved in the restoration to obtain great elegance and comfort apartments. The project enhances the architectural details of the nineteenth-century building, creating functional and bright spaces. From 270 to 450 square meters, the generous sizes have been modulated to obtain apartments characterized by large dimensions and depth of vision. Like this luxury apartment Lake Garda. Apartment Lake Garda – Suggestive location All charming historic apartments enjoy a suggestive view over the Mezzo canal and the sixteenth-century Ponte dei Voltoni in Peschiera del Garda. The main entrance of the imposing Austro-Hungarian building instead opens onto the lush Catullo park. A privileged position, the charm of history and its indisputable beauty. All this makes this historic building the jewel of Lake Garda, which finally awakens and is ready to show its splendour. A privilege for the lucky few. Book your exclusive viewing to this apartment Lake Garda. Peschiera del Garda is one of the most evocative towns of eastern Lake Garda and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In fact, from 9 July 2017, the “Venetian defence works between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: State from Land-State from Western Sea” of the fortress of Peschiera became part of the 58 Italian sites that are part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site. One of a kind, this lake village is surrounded by canals and overlooks the lake in a spot sheltered from the winds. Its alleys, protected by imposing ramparts, are home to a myriad of shops and restaurants and beautiful historic buildings, squares, churches, and impressive military structures rich in history. The Rocca di Peschiera del Garda, commonly known as Rocca, is a small architectural jewel enclosed by a substantial pentagonal wall dating back to the sixteenth century, with beautiful ramparts and majestic access gates. Living in this apartment Lake Garda will allow you to enjoy all this and much more. Lake Garda is the largest and most beautiful lake in Italy. Thanks to its unique charm and Mediterranean climate, Lake Garda is the most popular touristic destination in Northern Italy. In fact, in 2018, Lake Garda was visited by over 24 million unique visitors. Every year millions of international tourists come to Lake Garda and enjoy its stunning landscape and turquoise waters. Lake Garda, for centuries, was the favourite destination of noble families and significant historical figures. They came from Europe and also overseas. A few ones: Emperor Federico I Hohenstaufen, Empress of Austria “Sissi” Elisabeth of Bavaria, and German poet and writer Wolfgang Goethe. Also, Archduchess Maria Theresa of Ausburg, King Carlo Alberto di Savoia, King Vittorio Emanuele I and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill loved Lake Garda. Lake Garda offers a beautiful Mediterranean climate, a charming landscape, and pristine nature. And don’t forget the friendly people and unique culinary delights. Lake Garda is worldwide known for its famous wines and the extra virgin olive oil of excellent quality. In this “Eden”, a small group of wealthy individuals have the rare opportunity to invest in top-quality real estate assets. Like this luxurious apartment Lake Garda for sale. This apartment Lake Garda doesn’t meet your needs? Contact us and we will make a customized search.
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/1137
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emily hindrichs​ S O P R A N O LEBENSLAUF (DEUTSCH) Praise for Hindrichs as Marie in Bernd Alois Zimmermann's "Among the difficult singing roles, the american soprano Emily Hindrichs had the most formidable part to master. She did this with astonishing aplomb, and struck exactly the right tone between well-behaved young girl and love- and life-hungry woman." (DAS OPERNGLAS) Soprano Emily Hindrichs, born in New Orleans, made her European concert debut in 2008 as the Angel in Händel's Jephtha with the Internationale Bachakademie Stuttgart under Helmuth Rilling. One year later, she debuted as Queen of the Night at the English National Opera. Engagements followed with the Seattle Opera, the Seattle Symphony, the American Composers Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, where she performed again with Helmuth Rilling. "Emily Hindrichs' Queen of the Night blazed her way like a comet through the role’s high tessitura, putting all those tricky triplets in the second part of ‚Der Hölle Rache‘ perfectly in place." (Opera News) 2012 brought Hindrichs' French operatic debut at Opéra Théâtre Saint-Étienne as Anne Trulove in The Rake's Progress, her first engagement with Oper Frankfurt as Königin der Nacht, and a role debut as Konstanze with the Connecticut Early Music Festival. The following season she appeared in Chicago Opera Theater's production of The Magic Flute, and gave a recital with pianist Joseph Middleton during Britten Weekend in Aldeburgh (England), featuring world premieres of song cycles by Christian Mason and Edmund Nesbit. That weekend also saw performances of Hindrichs' reconstructed edition of Les Mamelles de Tirésias (Poulenc), as arranged by Benjamin Britten. From 2013-2015, Hindrichs was a soloist at the Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe, making role debuts as Oscar (Un Ballo in Maschera), Sophie (Der Rosenkavalier), and Musetta (La Bohème), as well as reprising her Königin der Nacht. In her breakout performance in the 2014 International Händel Festspiele production of Riccardo Primo, she was hailed as "the discovery of the evening" (Opernnetz). The same season, she was celebrated in the title role of Stravinsky's Le Rossignol, returned to Oper Frankfurt for performances of Die Zauberflöte, and made her London concert debut at the Barbican Centre, singing Reinhold Glière's Concerto for Coloratura Soprano. In 2015 Hindrichs became a soloist in the ensemble of Oper Köln, where she has made notable role debuts as Susanna (Le Nozze di Figaro), Teresa (Benvenuto Cellini), Cunegonde (Candide), and Rose Maurrant (Street Scene). In her first collaboration with Ensemble Musikfabrik, she gave the world premiere performance of Adela in Liza Lim's Tree of Codes, heard at both Oper Köln and the HELLERAU Tonlagen Festival, followed by an appearance with the ensemble at the ACHT BRÜCKEN Festival in Unsuk Chin's Cantatrix Sopranica. Later that year, Hindrichs made her house debut at Komische Oper Berlin in Barrie Kosky's acclaimed production of L'Enfant et les Sortilèges, and at the Aalto-Theater Essen in Die Zauberflöte. 2018 marked an important role debut for the soprano. As Marie in Bernd Alois Zimmermann's Die Soldaten, Hindrichs "left no musical wish unfulfilled, rose to every challenge, never weakened" (Die Deutsche Bühne). She was immediately engaged by the WDR Sinfonieorchester for their performance of the Zimmermann Soldaten Vokalsinfonie, under the direction of Emilio Pomàrico, and later nominated for "Sänger/Sängerin des Jahres" in the Opernwelt Critic's Survey. "The north American coloratura Emily Hindrichs shows a stunning incarnation of Marie, heroine sacrificed to ordinary barbarism. Her vocal timbre is pointed and her agility demands admiration." (Anaclase) In the 2018-19 season Hindrichs returned to the Aalto-Theater Essen (Die Zauberflöte) and made her debut as Ishmaela in Olga Neuwirth's The Outcast at the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg. At Oper Köln, she made debuts as Wanda in Offenbach's La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein, as Ottilie in Im weißen Rössl, and as Rose Maurrant in Kurt Weill's Street Scene. In the 2019-20 season Hindrichs made her house debut with the Deutsches Nationaltheater und Staatskapelle Weimar in Peter Konwitschny's new production of Lanzelot (Paul Dessau) and sang with the Concertgebouworkest under the musical direction of François-Xavier Roth. In 2021 followed role debuts as Marguerite in Faust at Oper Köln and Royal Danish Opera Copenhagen, and as Clémence in Kaija Saariajo's L'amour de loin at Oper Köln. In the season 2021/22 she makes a role debut as Olympia in Barrie Kosky's Les Contes d'Hoffmann at Komische Oper Berlin, and reprises her Marie in Die Soldaten with Gürzenich Orchester (musical direction: François-Xavier Roth, scenic direction: Calixto Bieto) at the Philharmonie de Paris and the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg. Hindrichs was a recipient of a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship, a Sullivan Foundation Award, the winner of the Les Azuriales Opera Competition in France, and a New England regional finalist in the Metropolitan Opera National Council auditions. She holds degrees from the University of Southern Mississippi, the University of Exeter, and a doctorate from the New England Conservatory. She completed her musical formation as a Max Kade Scholar at the Middlebury College German for Singers program, as a member of the Seattle Opera Young Artists Program, and as Tanglewood Music Center Vocal Fellow. (Lebenslauf - Deutsch) Photo: Andrew Finden
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Primary Resources and Archives Links to guide pages that list primary resource collections (both online and in print) What Is a Primary Source? UCLA Special Collections and Archives Library Special Collections Documents, Statistics, Newspapers, Images, Video Primary Source Databases Primary Source Databases (A-Z List) List of UCLA subscription databases featuring primary source content. Primary sources are "first-hand" information, sources as close as possible to the origin of the information or idea under study. Primary sources are contrasted with secondary sources, works that provide analysis, commentary, or criticism on the primary source. In art, literature, and cultural studies, primary sources include original creative works, such as paintings, architectural plans, music, poems, novels, movies, television shows, and even advertisements. In historical studies, primary sources include written works, recordings, or other sources of information from people who were participants or direct witnesses to the events in question. Examples of commonly used historical primary sources include government documents, memoirs, personal correspondence, oral histories, and contemporary newspaper accounts. In the sciences, primary sources are usually articles or data resulting directly from experiments, fieldwork, or clinical trials. Note that the "primacy" of a source can be relative. In cases where original records were lost or a live performance was never recorded, a review or commentary from a third party may be the most primary source available. Below are links to primary locations for print special collections at UCLA. Select online finding aids are also available via the Online Archive of California. UCLA Library Special Collections collects materials in the following areas: Los Angeles History and Culture; History of Medicine and the Sciences; Global Histories and Cultures; Performing Arts (Music, Film and Television, Theater, Dance). UCLA Library Special Collections Collections include a wide variety of literary rare books, as well as manuscripts and archival collections relating to specific authors and poets. William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Located in the historic West Adams neighborhood of Los Angeles, UCLA’s Clark Library is a rare book and manuscript library specializing in the study of England and the Continent from the Tudor period through the long eighteenth century. Other subject strengths include Oscar Wilde, book arts and fine press printing, and Montana and the West. The Clark Library is open to anyone who wishes to conduct research with its holdings. UCLA Film & Television Archive The UCLA Film & Television Archive holds over 350,000 motion pictures and 170,000 television programs, spanning the entire course of film and broadcasting history. The collection includes independent and studio-produced shorts and feature films, documentaries, local and network TV programming, commercials, news and public affairs broadcasts, LGBTQIA media, and 27 million feet of newsreels produced between 1919 and 1971. UCLA Ethnomusicology Archive The Archive’s collection of more than 150,000 audio, video, print, and photographic items documents musical expressions throughout the world and includes unique field recordings as well as rare commercial recordings. The majority of the material in Library Special Collections would be considered primary resources. The following types of sources are generally considered to be primary sources. Statistical Data Sources Though usually written by journalists who were not direct witnesses to events, newspapers and news broadcasts may include quotes or interviews from people who were. In the absence of first-person accounts, contemporary news reports may be the closest thing to a primary source available. Image Resources Includes information on how to cite image resources, rights and reproduction, and a list of online resources to find images. UCLA Film and Video Collections On-site and streaming media collections at UCLA. URL: https://guides.library.ucla.edu/primary-sources Tags: primary sources, spec-text
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7th Army Training Command 7th ATC Search 7th ATC: Search Combined Arms Training Center Grafenwoehr Training Area International Special Training Centre Joint Multinational Readiness Center Joint Multinational Simulation Center Noncommissioned Officer Academy Training Support Activity Europe Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine Georgian Defense Readiness Program-Training Europe Best Sniper Team Strong Europe Tank Challenge USAREUR-AF Best Squad 7ATC Best Squad Competition Allied Spirit Combined Resolve Dynamic Front Rapid Trident Saber Junction Uebungsbetrieb Home : About Us : Our History GTA 100 1900-1909 Timeline of Grafenwoehr Training Area's history from 1900-1909 in celebration of its centennial birthday in 2010. This collection was created by 7th Army Joint Multinational Training Command Public Affairs Office for publication in the quarterly 7th Army Joint Multinational Training Command Training Journal, in the Summer 2010 edition. Timeline of Grafenwoehr Training Area's history from 1940-1949 in celebration of its centennial birthday in 2010. This collection was created by 7th Army Joint Multinational Training Command Public Affairs Office for publication in the quarterly 7th Army Joint Multinational Training Command Training Journal, in the Summer 2010 edition. View the whole collection at https://www.flickr.com/photos/7armyjmtc/albums/72157635200176642. Looking for high-res versions of these photos? Visit https://www.flickr.com/photos/7armyjmtc/albums/72157635200176642. The History of 7th Army In 2022, 7th Army Training Command relinquished training readiness authority of U.S. Army Europe and Africa's brigades and resumed it's historical mission as the training command for the U.S. Army in Europe. 7th Army Training Command's mission expanded in 2018 to include training readiness authority over four of U.S. Army Europe's combat brigades: the 173rd Airborne Brigade, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, 12th Combat Aviation Brigade and the re-activating 41st Field Artillery Brigade. In 2016, the 7th Army Joint Multinational Training Command was returned to its original designation as the 7th Army Training Command. 7ATC's Joint Multinational Simulation Center opens a 50,000-square-foot facility for digital models, simulations and virtual training. The Seventh Army Training Command changes its name to the Joint Multinational Training Command and is the command element for Grafenwoehr Training Area, Combat Maneuver Training Center in Hohenfels, the Combined Arms Training Center in Vilseck, and the Training Support Activity, Europe. The JMTC assisted the militaries of the former Warsaw Pact countries and Russia in transforming their forces and our NATO allies in preparation for current conflicts. At the same time, CMTC transformed into the Joint Multinational Readiness Center. Grafenwoehr becomes the headquarters for the Seventh U.S. Army Training Center, which becomes the Seventh Army Training Command the following year. The Seventh Army Training Center is responsible for all U.S. Army training activities in Europe. About 12,000 Soldiers come from the U.S. to join the 220,000-man, U.S. Seventh Army in West Germany. U.S. Army Europe and Seventh Army Headquarters merge at Heidelberg. Grafenwoehr becomes headquarters of the Seventh Army Training Center, incorporating the Grafenwoehr and Hohenfels Training Areas to become the largest training complex in Germany. Rose Barracks becomes the home of the Seventh Army Combined Arms School. Between 1950 and 1953, the camp was renovated to the form and structure seen today. The construction projects completed in this time frame included, among others, the field camps Tunesia, Cheb, Kasserine, Aachen, Algiers and Normandy. These facilities could house 42,000 troops. The U.S. Seventh Army is reactivated and the headquarters is created from the Constabulary headquarters at Stuttgart. A year later, V and VII Corps arrive in Europe and are assigned to Seventh Army. The U.S. Army officially re-opens Grafenwoehr Training Area was as a designated tank training center. The U.S. Seventh Army is deactivated. During the Battle of the Bulge, the Seventh Army extended its flanks to take over much of the Third Army area which allowed the Third to relieve surrounded U.S. forces at Bastogne. Along with the French First Army, the Seventh went on the offensive in February of 1945 and eliminated the enemy pocket in the Colmar area. The Seventh then went into the Saar, crossed the Rhine, captured Nürnberg and Munich, crossed the Brenner Pass, and made contact with the Fifth Army – once again on Italian soil. In less than nine months of continuous fighting, the Seventh had advanced over 1,000 miles and for varying times had commanded 24 American and Allied Divisions. In May 1945, after the surrender of Germany, the U.S. Army occupied the Grafenwoehr Training Area. In March, Lieutenant General Alexander Patch was assigned to command the Seventh Army which moved to Naples, Italy. In August, Seventh Army units assaulted the beaches of southern France in the St. Tropez and St. Raphael area. Within one month, the Army employing three American Divisions, five French Divisions, and the first Airborne Task Force had advanced 400 miles and had joined with the Normandy forces. In the process, the Seventh Army had liberated Marseilles, Lyon, Toulon, and all of Southern France. The Army them assaulted the German forces in the Vosges Mountains, broke into the Alsatian Plain, and reached the Rhine River after capturing the city of Strasbourg. The Seventh Army was the first U.S. Field Army to see combat in WWII and was activated at sea when the I Armored Corps under the command of Lieutenant General George Patton was re-designated July 10, 1943. The Seventh Army landed on several beaches in southern Sicily and captured the city of Palermo July 22 and along with the British Eighth Army captured Messina Aug. 16. During the fighting, elements of the Seventh Army killed or captured more than 113,000 enemy soldiers. The shoulder patch for the Seventh Army was approved June 23. The letter “A” for “Army” is formed by seven steps indicating the numerical designation of the unit. The colors suggest the three basic combat branches which make up a field army – blue for Infantry, red for Artillery, and yellow for Armor (Cavalry). Veterans of the Seventh Army wore a tab reading “Seven Steps to Hell” under the patch, but this tab was never officially authorized. CATC History The 7th Army Training Command's Combined Arms Training Center (CATC) was originally established at Vilseck, Germany, in 1948 as the U.S. Constabulary Tank Training Center. In 1949, it came under the command of Seventh Army. In 1958, the Tank Training Center was re-designated as the Seventh Army Training Center. In 1959, the organization was re-designated as the Seventh Army Combined Arms School and training was expanded to include personnel from the infantry, armor and field artillery. In 1970, sustainment courses were added and as a result, the organization was re-designated on July 1, 1971, as the U.S. Army Europe (USAREUR) Combined Arms Training Center. Over the coming years, USAREUR moved the combat support courses formerly held at the Combat Support Training Center at Oberammergau to CATC at Vilseck. Later, CATC assumed responsibility for courses of instruction for Military Intelligence, Military Police, NBC Defense, logistics, Systems Design, command, management and others. In January 1974, it was re-designated as the Seventh Army Combined Arms Training Center and since then, has operated under that name. ISTC History The ISTC, formerly known as International Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol School, dates back to 1974 when, at a EURO-NATO Army Sub-Group Conference, it was suggested to centralize the training of LRRP units and Special Forces in a joint training facility. In 1980, Belgium, Germany and the United Kingdom signed the first MOU, Greece joined the MOU in 1981, USA in 1986, Norway in 1989, Italy in 1991, Netherlands in 1992, Denmark in 1994, Turkey in 1999, and Romania in 2017. In 2000, the US took over as Lead Nation. In 2001, ILRRPS became ISTC. GTA History Grafenwoehr celebrates 110 years of training. Members of a nature-preservation project received the U.N. "Decade of Biodiversity" award at the Grafenwoehr Training Area. Grafenwoehr celebrates its centennial birthday, 100 years, a century of training. GTA is approved for a series of Department of the Army range projects. Planning begins for the construction of a Multi-Purpose Range Complex at the Grafenwoehr Training Area. Major upgrades are completed at Grafenwoehr facilities, and the ranges are renumbered. From 1981 to 1993, the U.S. Army extends and enlarges Rose Barracks, the southern tip of the Grafenwoehr Training Area. GTA offers jungle and counter guerilla training for personnel deploying to Vietnam. Pvt. Elvis Presley visits Grafenwoehr for six weeks of winter training with his unit. He returns in 1960 to train and participate in the NATO exercise “Winter Shield.” The U.S. establishes a co-use agreement for Camps Algier and Normandy for joint training and maneuvers. The first German Bundeswehr soldiers arrive and are billeted at Camp Normandy at GTA. By 1957, Bundeswehr tanks and soldiers take to the Grafenwoehr Ranges. From 1950 to 1953 large construction projects change the face of the Training Area. The Barracks “Tunisia,” “Cheb,” "Kasserine,” and Camps Aachen, Algiers and Normandy are added. These facilities combined are capable of housing more than 42,000 troops. The U.S. Constabulary establishes a training area for the newly activated 370th and 371st Infantry Battalions. The area between Grafenwoehr and Vilseck will be used. Americans start training at Grafenwoehr. Tankers attend courses at the 7th Army Tank Training Center near Vilseck, Germany, while artillery and infantry units train at both the GTA and at Wildflecken training areas. A Prisoner of War collection point is established. April - Two allied bombing raids take place on the town and post. U.S. 3rd Army Soldiers fighting their way through Bavaria arrive to accept the surrender of the GTA 10 days later. Mussolini visits the GTA to inspect and observe Italy’s San Marco Division training. Hitler visits Grafenwoehr and observes an obstacle breaching exercise. GTA has rifle and machine-gun ranges, combat infantry and armor ranges, and possesses an authentic bunker/pillbox system for training overcoming defensive obstacles. The second great expansion of Grafenwoehr takes place by order of the War Ministry in Berlin. The GTA doubles by 35,000 acres to the west of the existing camp to accommodate the stupendous growth of the resurgent Wehrmacht, more than 3,500 civilians are relocated outside the training area. The Artillery Observation tower at Schwartzenberg Hill, known today as the Bleidorn Tower is complete. Germany explores the use of tanks in an offensive role at the Grafenwoehr Training Area. After November 11, the Grafenwoehr Training Area is converted into a demobilization point. April - The POW camp at the training area is closed. Grafenwoehr becomes a major Prisoner of War (POW) camp. By the end of 1915, The POW population at Grafenwoehr is more than 15,000 men. By 1913, the Grafenwoehr airfield, named 'Airfield Hammergmuend' is a fully operational facility for the new science of military aeronautics. By January 1911, more than 10,000 Bavarian soldiers are training at the GTA. Grafenwoehr’s first Commander, General Oskar Menzel, arrives at the new training area. The iconic Grafenwoehr water tower is completed. On June 30th Soldiers from the 2nd Royal Bavarian Foot Artillery Regiment fired the first round on the Grafenwoehr Training Area, a 150 mm Field Howitzer. It fell 800 meters short of its target. JMRC History The Hohenfels Training Area is located in the Free State of Bavaria in the Oberfalz (Upper Palatinate) and is named after the market town of Hohenfels. Throughout Bavaria's history, there were many armies that roamed this region. The city of Regensburg was founded by the Romans in 179 A.D. and maintained an outpost here at this location. In 788 A.D., Charlemagne pulled Bavaria into his empire. In the 1600s, the Swedes occupied Regensburg and Napolean was based in Regensburg in 1809 during his battle with the Austrians. The Hohenfels Training Area was originally founded by the German Army for military training April 1, 1938. From late 1939 to early spring 1940, more than 3,000 Polish non-commissioned officers and soldiers were interned at Unteroedenhart. This was one of the Wehrmacht's prime training areas where they rehearsed breaching the Maginot Line and invading France. During the fall of 1942, approximately 7,000 prisoners of war from the British Empire and the U.S. were permanently billeted in Camp Unteroedenhart. On April 22, 1945, the 2nd Cavalry Regiment of Patton'sThird Army entered the training area with only nine tanks and limited resistance from German and Hungarian troops, liberating the POWs. The training area was opened for the resettlement of refugees and expelles from Soviet-occupied German territories in 1948. These settlers were integrated into the community of "Hohenfels-Nainhof," which became one of the largest rural communities in Bavaria. However, three years later, U.S. forces claimed the area for military training purposes and requested its expansion to the west. In a meeting hosted August 17, 1951 in Petersberg -- among the German government, the State Government of Bavaria, the Land Commissioner of Bavaria, and U.S. Army representatives -- an agreement was reached to extend the training area to its current size of about 40,017 acres. By 1984, the training area had 52 ranges within its firing and maneuver area and a MILES warehouse that held enough equipment for 15 companies. REFORGER exercises and HAWK missile sites became primary missions to the HTA. Due to increasing training requirements, U.S. Army Europe in 1987 formed the Combat Maneuver Training Center (CMTC) at Hohenfels Training Area, creating the Army's third combat training center. In 1990, an Opposing Force (OPFOR) was added, the 1st Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment (1-4 IN). With the opening of the CMTC, Hohenfels Training Area became the primary maneuver training area for USAREUR Soldiers. In 2005, the CMTC transformed and became the Joint Multinational Readiness Center, or JMRC. JMSC History In 2008, the Joint Multinational Simulation Center opens a state-of-the-art 50,000-square-foot facility for digital models, simulations and virtual training. JMTG-U History Starting in July 2020, Illinois Army National Guard's 33rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team continues a multi-year tradition of National Guard support to JMTG-U. From November 2019-July 2020, Wisconsin Army National Guard's 32rd IBCT was on ground. In 2019, Soldiers from 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) from Fort Campbell, Kentucky, supported the mission, May-November. Tennessee Army National Guard's 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment deployed to JMTG-U for nine months, August 2018-May 2019. Prior to that, New York National Guard's IBCT ran the program from November 2017-August 2018. In 2017, Oklahoma National Guard's 45th IBCT manned the day-to-day JMTG-U mission from January to November. In 2016, California Army National Guard's 79th IBCT took over the on-ground mission as a longtime partner with Ukraine in the National Guard's State Partnership Program, alongside 3rd Infantry Division Soldiers. The oversight of the now Joint Multinational Training Group-Ukraine mission shifted to 7th ATC later that same year. In 2015, U.S. Army Europe began supporting Ukrainian security forces and deployed 173rd Airborne Brigade to support the mission, which was then called Fearless Guardian, at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center. NCOA History The Seventh Army Noncommissioned Officer Academy was originally established as the United States Constabulary Noncommissioned Officer Academy and is the oldest NCO Academy in the Army. Due to the shortage of NCOs in the Constabulary, Major General I. D. White, Commanding General of the U.S. Constabulary, directed then Brigadier General Bruce C. Clarke, Commanding General of the 2d Constabulary Brigade, to open a school for the purpose of training NCOs. The first class was enrolled on 17 October 1949, with BG Bruce C. Clarke as the Commandant. The Academy was designated the Seventh Army Noncommissioned Officer Academy on 1 November 1951, when the Seventh United States Army absorbed the functions and facilities of the Constabulary. At its inception, the Academy occupied two adjoining Kasernes: Stetten Kaserne and Jensen barracks, located in Munich, Germany. On 31 October 1958, after nine years in the Bavarian capital, the Academy moved to its second location at Flint Kaserne, Bad Toelz, Germany. In January of 1972, the office of the Commandant, which up until that time was held by a general grade or field grade officer, was officially designated as a Command Sergeant Major position. The first enlisted Commandant was CSM Lawrence T. Hickey. In July of 1983, a significant change took place in the program of instruction. The curriculum changed from the Primary Leadership Course (PLC) to the Primary Leadership Development Course (PLDC). Effective 4 September 1990, the Seventh Army NCO Academy relocated to and became a tenant unit of the Grafenwoehr Training Area (GTA). In January of 1999, the Academy added a third PLDC training company, which made it the largest PLDC in the United States Army. In October of 2005, the Academy transformed the Program of Instruction from PLDC to the Warrior Leader Course and in October of 2015 it changed to the Basic Leader Course; utilizing Grafenwoehr training sites to train an adaptive and creative NCO. In 2003, the NCO Academy started receiving International Military Students (IMS) and has since trained over 1,000 of our European and African allies. The 7th Army NCO Academy earned the recognition as an “Institute of Excellence” during three consecutive Accreditations from the United States Army Sergeants Major Academy and TRADOC with the most recent being in September of 2015. US Army Europe and Africa US European Command Department of the Army DoD Information Quality DoD Plain Writing DoD Open Government DoD Privacy Program USA.gov DISA Privacy Impact Privacy, Security & Links Disclaimer DVIDS
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/2649
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The Everly Brothers Living Legends - 24 Original Golden Greats catalog number: WW5027 Learn more about The Everly Brothers (1972/WARWICK) 24 tracks - rare TV advertised Album more The Everly Brothers: Living Legends - 24 Original Golden Greats (1972/WARWICK) 24 tracks - rare TV advertised Album Article properties: The Everly Brothers: Living Legends - 24 Original Golden Greats Interpret: The Everly Brothers Album titlle: Living Legends - 24 Original Golden Greats Label WARWICK Everly Brothers, The - Living Legends - 24 Original Golden Greats LP 1 01 Wake Up Little Susie The Everly Brothers 02 Oh What A Feeling The Everly Brothers 03 Brand New Heartache The Everly Brothers 04 When Will I Be Loved The Everly Brothers 05 Rip It Up The Everly Brothers 06 Since You Broke My Heart The Everly Brothers 07 Bird Dog The Everly Brothers 08 Lightning Express The Everly Brothers 09 Problems The Everly Brothers 10 Like Strangers The Everly Brothers 11 This Little Girl Of Mine The Everly Brothers 12 (Till) I Kissed You The Everly Brothers The Everly Brothers Don (February 1, 1937 – † August 21, 2021) Phil (January... more "The Everly Brothers" Don (February 1, 1937 – † August 21, 2021) Phil (January 19, 1939 – † January 3, 2014 ) DON EVERLY OBITUARY The ethereally beautiful harmonic blend of The Everly Brothers was deeply rooted in the rural country sibling duos that were so prevalent during the ‘30s and ‘40s. In turn, the Everlys were tremendously influential to the more melodic British Invasion aggregations—The Beatles, who seldom failed to cite them as musical heroes, as well as The Hollies, Peter and Gordon, and Chad and Jeremy. Phil Everly’s majestic tenor was permanently stilled in 2014; now his older brother Don is gone too. He died August 21. 2021 in Nashville at age 84. Don was the older of the two, born February 1, 1937 in Brownie, Kentucky. His father, Ike Everly, holds his own exalted place in musical history; his thumb-picked guitar technique was a primary influence on Merle Travis, though Ike couldn’t parlay his fret mastery into stardom the way Travis did. Phil came along in 1939, after Ike had departed the coal mines of Kentucky to play his guitar on the radio in Chicago (that’s where Phil was born). Another move to Shenandoah, Iowa in 1944, where Ike broadcast over KMA-AM, gave the brothers plenty of local radio exposure after they joined their dad’s program full-time in 1949. They developed into competent rhythm guitarists along the way. Another relocation to Knoxville with their family in 1953 got the Everlys closer to Nashville. Another of Ike’s admirers was fellow guitar wizard Chet Atkins; he steered one of Don’s early compositions to Kitty Wells in 1954, and it hit. As soon as Don graduated from high school in ’55, he and Phil set out for Nashville. They cut a single for Columbia, Keep A’Lovin’ Me, that stiffed, and the label promptly dropped the young pair. Things got pretty lean until Wesley Rose, head of Acuff-Rose Publishing, took an interest in the Everlys’ songs. He recommended them to Archie Bleyer, the owner of New York-based Cadence Records, who had already turned the Everlys down previously. This time Bleyer brought them aboard. Rose sent Bleyer a song by married writing duo Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, Bye Bye Love, that had been bouncing around Nashville. Bleyer decided to cut it on the Everlys in March of ’57 with Atkins joining the boys on guitar. Enriched with the Everlys’ high, keening harmonies and a choppy acoustic guitar introduction that Don cadged from his own Give Me A Future, Bye Bye Love topped the C&W hit parade and barely missed doing the same thing on the pop side of the tracks. Atkins’ faith in the duo had been fulfilled, albeit for another label rather than RCA Victor, where he was an A&R director. The Bryants became the Everlys’ primary source for smashes at Cadence. They came up next with the playful Wake Up Little Susie, which did top both hit lists that autumn despite a bit of blowback regarding the teenaged couple in the song staying out all night. Although it charted, the Everlys’ third Cadence offering, a remake of Ray Charles’ This Little Girl Of Mine, was a relative disappointment commercially. Not so the breathtaking ballad All I Have To Do Is Dream, a blockbuster from Boudleaux that again paced the pop and country charts during the summer of 1958 with Roy Orbison’s Claudette proving a very strong flip. Boudleaux came right back with both sides of the Everlys’ next pairing, the novelty rocker Bird Dog and a gorgeous Devoted To You, and they were both smashes. The Bryants collaborated on Problems, the Everlys’ next hit that fall, but Don was a talented songscribe in his own right, bringing in the rumbling (‘Til) I Kissed You, their biggest seller of 1959. Rose was appalled that the Everlys tackled something outside the Acuff-Rose catalog, but their instincts proved correct when the strings-enriched ballad Let It Be Me was a 1960 smash. The pair left a few winners in the Cadence vaults when they defected to Warner Bros. in ‘60, notably the Phil-penned When Will I Be Loved, which hit in direct competition with their WB sides. The duo came up with a juggernaut their first time out for their new label with the self-generated Cathy’s Clown, a #1 pop smash on both sides of the Atlantic. The hits continued in abundance at WB initially with a Don-scribed So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad) and its flip, a remake of Little Richard’s Lucille, as well as another two-sider in ’61 pairing Sonny Curtis’ pounding Walk Right Back and John D. Loudermilk’s tragedy opus Ebony Eyes. Then Don got the idea to update the Tin Pan Alley artifact Temptation. That was more than Rose could bear. When it came out as a single, Rose retaliated by shutting off the duo’s access to the Bryants and the other writer in his stable. Compounding their problems, the Everlys had to fulfill their military obligations during this turbulent period. But they persevered, looking to New York for fresh material and scoring big with Carole King and Howard Greenfield’s lovely Crying In The Rain and then That’s Old Fashioned (That’s The Way Love Should Be) by a trio of Brill Building stalwarts. Then the British Invasion hit. Instead of boosting the Everlys’ fortunes, it largely wiped them from the charts aside from the throbbing self-penned rocker Gone, Gone, Gone in 1964. Making a slew of contrasting albums and promising 45s for WB that never quite ignited commercially, the Everlys soldiered along until imploding at a 1973 concert at Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park, California. Each tried to mount a solo career, Don posting three country chart records on Hickory in 1976-77 with Yesterday Just Passed This Way Again, Since You Broke My Heart and Brother Juke-Box. But two separate Everlys just didn’t have the appeal of the brothers as a unit, and they reunited in 1983. On The Wings Of A Nightingale, the pair’s first single together in over a decade, came out the next year and was an all-star affair, written by Paul McCartney and produced by Dave Edmunds. Surprisingly, it was only a mild hit. Although they toured widely with another celebrated duo, Simon and Garfunkel, in 2003-2004, the brothers were reportedly estranged again in later years. Don took Phil’s death hard, going so far as to say good morning to his ashes every day some two years after his passing. Now they’re together again. Born into music, Don and Phil began performing as children in the mid-40s. Their father Ike Everly, an accomplished guitarist, hosted a variety of rural radio programs which eventually incorporated his whole family. Wife Margaret and sons Don (born February 1, 1937) and Phil (born January 9, 1939) all took their turns at the mic in varying combinations as they honed their harmony skills. However, by 1953 the family's format had reached its end. As recorded music overtook the need for live performers, Don and Phil became infatuated with introducing rock and rhythm and blues flavors to their standard folk and country repertoire. The mid-'50s found the family struggling to survive. Ike and Margaret worked odd jobs to support their sons' burgeoning musical career, while Don and Phil focused on songwriting and knocking on doors near Nashville. Their first recording deal with Columbia was a fleeting failure and it was not until the duo met up with Wesley Rose that they were truly on the path to success. Being one of the most powerful music magnates in Nashville (and the owner of the colossal Acuff Rose publishing company), Wesley Rose found the brothers a home with East Coast indie label Cadence Records. Rose further coupled Don and Phil with the husband and wife writing team of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, and the rest is, as they say, history. The Everly Brothers' first Cadence release, 1957's Bye Bye Love, began a solid string of thirteen Top 40 hits for the label. But by 1964, the Everlys and many of their label mates had departed from Cadence (and the charts). Resultantly, founder Archie Bleyer sold his musical assets to former signee, singer Andy Williams. Although Williams held back the Everly masters for six years, 1970 saw the first in a flood of nostalgic reissues of the duo's Cadence recordings (a trend which continues to this day). Nevertheless, these collections are simply a shuffling of the same forty songs the brothers cut for the label. March 1985 saw the first compilation that deviated from this format, Rhino Records' 'All They Had To Do Was Dream'. Compiled entirely from outtakes and demos, this set lifted the lid on what still remained within the Cadence archive. Bear Family's 'Classic Everly Brothers' (BCD 15618) box set further collected these outtakes with a few added obscurities, giving enthusiasts and historians a more complete picture of what occurred during those times. Now, some twenty years later, Everly fans are once again allowed back into the archive to hear a newly unearthed set of working versions and musical sketches from that magical era. A compelling study of the creative process behind the legendary Cadence masters, this set gives one a fresh perspective on these, the Everlys' most popular sides. You won't hear perfection at every turn. Yet, nearly every track exhibits a talented team on the verge of a musical breakthrough. So, pull up a chair and join us at RCA Victor Studios in Nashville, as we join the Everly Brothers in session. The Everly Brothers The Outtakes Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/everly-brothers-the-the-outtakes.html Customer evaluation for "Living Legends - 24 Original Golden Greats" Weitere Artikel von The Everly Brothers The Everly Brothers: Studio Outtakes (CD) Art-Nr.: BCD17587 The Everly Brothers: Classic (3-CD Deluxe Box Set) Art-Nr.: BCD15618 The Everly Brothers: The Price Of Fame (7-CD Deluxe Box Set) Art-Nr.: BCD16511 $178.75 * $169.70 * The Everly Brothers: Chained To A Memory (8-CD - 1-DVD Deluxe Box Set) Art-Nr.: BCD16791 $226.28 * The Everly Brothers: The Everly Brothers Rock (CD) Art-Nr.: BCD17321 Show all "The Everly Brothers" articles
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/2694
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WiM to host 5th Annual Holiday Toast honouring legendary women in the industry For the fifth year, Women In Media’s Annual Holiday Toast will honour a slate of renowned women in the entertainment industry. The toast will pay tribute to legendary songwriter/composer Diane Warren, executive producer/writer/director Deborah Pratt (Quantum Leap, Grey’s Anatomy), Costume Designer Deborah L. Scott, (Avatar, E.T., Oscar-winner for Titanic), supervising sound editor Becky Sullivan (The Woman King, Always Be My Maybe), and cinematographer/camera operator Michelle Crenshaw (The Ranch, The Watermelon Woman). The event will be held at Television City, the iconic studio owned and operated by an affiliate of Hackman Capital Partners. Guest toast masters will join the honourees for a personalised panel where guests will share firsthand experiences and discuss the changing landscape for women and gender non-conforming individuals in the motion picture and entertainment community. The toast masters include Kimberly Jimenez the senior vice president, post production services at Sony Entertainment, award-winning cinematographer Johnny Simmons, ASC, who is currently Emmy-nominated for Family Reunion, producer/director/writer Romell Foster-Owens, p.g.a. (president, Jowharah Films), and award-winning composer Sharon Farber (Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power, The Young And The Restless). The discussion will conclude with a lively audience. “I am honoured to be recognised by Women In Media”, says Diane Warren, who became the first songwriter ever voted to receive an Honorary Academy Award by the Academy’s Board of Governors. Her portfolio includes dozens of popular and rock hits, 13 past Academy Award nominations as well as the song, Applause in Tell it Like A Woman, which is eligible this year. Warren adds, “I am a strong advocate for women and this organisation has been instrumental in recognising women’s important contributions in the industry. And I’d like to give some applause to my fellow honourees.” Women In Media promotes gender balance in the film and entertainment industries through networking, professional development, and advocacy for filmmakers who work above and below the line. This activity is made possible through generous sponsor participation. An essential partner, Zach Sokoloff, senior vice president at Hackman Capital Partners says, “Organisations like WiM provide invaluable opportunities for women and gender non-conforming individuals to obtain the skills necessary to become part of the next generation of production talent that will help create a more inclusive entertainment industry and reaffirm Los Angeles’ position as the creative capital of the world. This is not only a win for our region’s economy – creating new jobs and keeping production and people in LA – but also a win for diversifying our City’s most identifiable industry and allowing new storytellers with new perspectives to leave their mark on Hollywood.” The WiM Holiday Toast includes a generous brunch buffet, silent auction, panel with candid conversation, and a champagne toast. All genders are encouraged to be part of the Holiday Toast celebration. Festivities run from 10 am to 2 pm on Saturday, December 10 at Television City, 7800 Beverly Blvd., Studio 46. Individual tickets, tables and sponsorships are available from: https://womennmedia.com/event/2022-la-holiday-toast/
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/2750
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Home » Keywords: » aluminum processing Items Tagged with 'aluminum processing' Equipment News Firearms Manufacturer Orders Continuous Conveyor Furnace Wisconsin Oven Corp. shipped a continuous conveyor furnace to a firearms manufacturer. The oven will be used for heat treating aluminum parts prior to quenching. The furnace has a maximum temperature rating of 1110°F (600°C) and interior chamber dimensions of 4 feet, 2 inches wide x 30 feet long x 1 foot high. It includes 8-inch-thick plate construction and two zones of control. The parts are manually loaded onto the flat wire belt conveyor and transported through both zones of the oven. The recirculation system utilizes two 56,000-CFM blowers for a total of 112,000 CFM. The part heat-up and soak times were verified with temperature uniformity survey to guarantee the parts were within +/-10°F for 15 minutes. Report Shows Carbon Footprint of North American Aluminum Production Dropped More Than Half Since 1991 A third-party critical-reviewed life-cycle assessment (LCA) report shows that the energy and carbon impact of aluminum production in North America has dropped to its lowest point in history. Since 1991, the carbon footprint of primary aluminum production declined by 49%, while the footprint of recycled aluminum production dropped by 60%. During the same time period, the energy needed to produce primary and recycled (or secondary) aluminum has dropped by 27% and 49%, respectively. Aluminum Association Launches Campaign The Aluminum Association launched the Choose Aluminum campaign, which includes a digital media ad buy, videos with workers and aluminum leaders, a new sustainability website and additional material highlighting the sustainable properties of the 100% recyclable metal. The campaign describes how aluminum is providing sustainable solutions in the areas of recycling, automotive production, building and construction more. It also tracks how the North American aluminum industry has reduced its carbon footprint by more than half over the last 30 years. The U.S. aluminum industry supports nearly 660,000 jobs and has invested over $3 billion in U.S. manufacturing over the past decade. Alcoa Announces Technology Roadmap Alcoa Corp. unveiled a technology roadmap to support the company’s vision to reinvent the aluminum industry for a sustainable future. The technologies in Alcoa’s roadmap, including a proprietary post-consumer scrap-recycling process, have the potential to decarbonize a significant portion of the upstream aluminum supply chain. The roadmap includes three key programs: the Refinery of the Future, the ASTRAEA metal purification process and ELYSIS joint-venture technology. Alcoa to Restart Aluminum Smelting Capacity in Brazil Alcoa Corp. plans to restart 268,000 metric tons per year (mtpy) of aluminum capacity at its Alumar smelter in São Luís, Brazil. The facility has been fully curtailed since 2015. The process to restart will begin immediately. The first molten metal is expected in the second quarter of 2022, and the full 268,000 mtpy of capacity is expected to be operational in the fourth quarter of 2022. The Alumar smelter restart will involve the hiring of more than 750 employees. Aluminum Distributor Opens Pennsylvania Plant, Creates Jobs AA Metals Inc., a Florida-headquartered aluminum distributor, purchased a dormant aluminum plant in Williamsport, Pa., with plans to reopen and hire 100 employees. The facility will be the company’s first U.S.-based manufacturing operation and will operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The former JW Aluminum plant closed in January 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The new business, which will be named Chance Aluminum, will focus on production of aluminum foil and coil and will serve as the domestic supplier of AA Metals. Aluminum Rolling Business to be Acquired for $1.67 Billion KPS Capital Partners (KPS) signed a definitive agreement to acquire the global aluminum rolling business (Rolling) from Norsk Hydro ASA for approximately $1.67 billion. The transaction is expected to be complete by the middle of the year. Rolling is one of the largest global manufacturers of aluminum rolled products and serves customers across markets including automotive, beverage can, foil packaging and construction. Its assets include seven manufacturing facilities and one research-and-development center across Germany and Norway. The acquired facilities include Alunorf, the world’s largest aluminum rolling mill according to Norsk Hydro, and Grevenbroich, the world’s largest rolled aluminum finishing mill according to Norsk Hydro. Kaiser Aluminum to Purchase Alcoa Warrick Kaiser Aluminum Corp. entered into a definitive agreement to purchase Alcoa Warrick LLC, containing all the assets of the Warrick Rolling Mill, from Alcoa Corp. for a purchase price of $670 million. Alcoa will retain ownership of the related smelting assets, power plant and land. As part of the transaction, Kaiser Aluminum will enter into a market-based molten aluminum supply agreement. The Warrick facility includes casting, significant hot- and cold-rolling capacity, and a range of finishing and coating lines. Warrick, which is located near Evansville, Ind., has shipped over 675 million pounds of aluminum in the last 12 months. Braidy Industries Now Unity Aluminum The global aluminum company formerly known as Braidy Industries announced a new name. Introduced as Unity Aluminum, the Ashland, Ky.-based company will continue to play a leading role in the aluminum industry by addressing a substantial global aluminum shortage impacting American jobs and economic growth. The new name signifies the company’s steadfast commitment to its customers, innovative technologies and local community in Ashland. Unity Aluminum has accelerated its plans to build the world’s most technologically advanced aluminum rolling mill. It is currently working to finalize fundraising and begin construction. Joint Venture to Serve Aluminum, Zinc Markets Ritchey Metals, a Canonsburg, Pa.-based manufacturer of zinc alloys, entered into a joint venture with Imperial Group to serve the nonferrous alloyed metals industry in the southern half of the United States. Chicago-based Imperial Group, which consists of 17 industrial entities, is a diversified metals group moving nearly 75 million pounds of metal per month. The joint venture will utilize Imperial Group’s plant in Scottsboro, Ala., which will add capabilities to service the market stretching all from the East Coast to the Southwest. Ritchey Metals operates two facilities in southwestern Pennsylvania, each with multiple industrial furnaces. More Articles Tagged with 'aluminum processing'
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Personal Assistant Robot Developer Temi Raises $21 Million Temi backer Ogawa, a Malaysia-based health and wellness retailer, will market and distribute Temi robots Tofi Stoler 15:4320.12.18 New York-headquartered robot company Temi Global Ltd., formerly known as Roboteam Home USA Inc., has raised $21 million in a round led by existing investor John Wu, former chief technology officer for Alibaba, the company announced Tuesday. For daily updates, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here. In 2016, Temi was spun off from Robo-Team Ltd., a Gaithersburg, Maryland-based company founded by Israeli entrepreneurs, which develops autonomous robots for military use. Temi develops a voice-activated personal assistant robot on wheels capable of recognizing and following people around the house, making video calls, replying to user questions, playing music, or carrying small objects from room to room. Yossi Wolf, founder and CEO of Temi, with the company's robot. Photo: Danny Isserles Other participants in the round include Shah Alam, Malaysia-based health and wellness retailer Ogawa, incorporated as Healthy World Lifestyle Sdn. Bhd., and existing investor Generali Investments Europe S.p.A., the investment arm of Italian insurance company Assicurazioni Generali S.p.A. In addition to the investment, Ogawa also partnered with Temi to market and distribute its product at 180,000 points of sale worldwide. In April, Yossi Wolf, founder and CEO of Temi told Calcalist in an interview that the company has signed a three-year distribution deal for 100,000 units with Chinese electronics distributor Shenzhen Aisidi Co. Ltd. Don’t Forget to Tip the Delivery Bot This Robotics Startup Plans to Fund Engineering Courses for the People it Plans to Put Out of a Job Drowning in Laundry? This Robot Will Fold Your Clothes The latest round brings Temi’s total funding raised to $82 million. The company intends to use the funding for marketing and sales. The company employs around 120 people according to Pitchbook, and has an R&D center in Tel Aviv. Temi’s robot is currently sold at 15 locations in the U.S. as well as on the company’s website, and will officially launch in January. To all comments
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Who are the alumni of Columbia University? Top 25 Columbia University Notable Alumni Barack Obama. Art Garfunkel. Jake Gyllenhaal. Amanda Peet. Julia Stiles. Alicia Keys. B.R. Ambedkar. Amelia Earhart. Who famous went to Columbia? Ira Gershwin* (1918), Pulitzer Prize-winning American lyricist. Amelia Earhart* (1920), American aviator and early female pilot. Simon Kuznets (1923), Nobel Prize-winning economist. David O. Federico García Lorca* (1929), Spanish poet and dramatist. Isaac Asimov (1939), Science fiction author and biochemist. Is Columbia University famous? Columbia University is the home of the Pulitzer Prize, an award for achievements in newspaper, magazine and online journalism, literature, and musical composition. Is Columbia University impressive? Columbia is an amazing university, and it still holds down the title because of the quality graduates it produces every year. The university has a history of high achievers including 4 presidents, 46 Olympians, 84 Nobel prize winners, over 90 Pulitzer prize winners, and many celebrities. What do Columbia students call themselves? Undergraduate admissions and financial aid Columbia is a racially diverse school, with approximately 52% of all students identifying themselves as persons of color. Additionally, 50% of all undergraduates received grants from Columbia. What did Jake Gyllenhaal study at Columbia? Talented actor Jake Gyllenhaal spent two years studying eastern religion and philosophy at Columbia University before deciding to concentrate on his film career instead. This may explain why he does the “brooding” thing so well… What is Columbia best known for? In a nutshell, Colombia is famous for its arepas and specialty coffee, as well as the kindness of its people. It’s known for its diverse landscapes and culturally rich heritage where art, music, and theater mix. It also has its share of famous people like Shakira and Sofia Vergara. What is so special about Columbia University? Columbia’s reputation for out-standing achievement in the sciences. Columbia has a long tradition of distinguished teaching, research and discovery in the natural sciences and mathematics. What’s so special about Columbia University? What is so good about Columbia University? Columbia University is known not only for its groundbreaking research (it has more Nobel laureates than any other university in America), but also for the strength of its undergraduate program, defined by the well-known Core Curriculum that exposes students to a wide range of studies meant to widen the student’s … What is the tuition at Columbia University? The tuition of Columbia University is 50,665 US$ in 2019 Is Columbia University accredited? Columbia University is accredited by The Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools (MSA). What is Columbia University? Columbia University is an independent, privately supported, nonsectarian institution of higher education. Its official corporate name is “The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York.”.
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129 28 311 417 513 2015 219 2214 2311 2410 2510 2614 Holidays Calendar for August 29, 2017 Public Holidays → Slovakia Slovak National Uprising Anniversary Slovak National Uprising Anniversary is one of the public holidays in Slovakia. This holiday commemorates the day, when the Slovaks rose up against Nazi Germany in 1944. Professional Days → Poland Municipal Police Day in Poland Municipal Police Day, also known as City Guard Day (Dzień Straży Gminnej), is a Polish professional holiday celebrated on August 29. It was officially declared by statute in 1997. This holiday is normally a working day unless falling on a weekend. Ecological Observances → Argentina Arbor Day in Argentina Annually thousands of Argentinians take their shovels and buckets full of water to participate in tree planting event, that is organized at the national level on August 29. Arbor Day is celebrated in Argentina since 1900. Cultural Observances → India Telugu Language Day in India Telugu is one of the six classical languages in India. It's spoken in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and in the union territory of Yanam. The holiday of Telugu Language Day is annually celebrated in India on August 29. National Sports Day in India On August 29, Indians celebrate National Sports Day. The holiday was established to commemorate the birthday of Dhyan Chand, an Indian field hockey player considered to be one of the greatest field hockey players of all time. Anniversaries and Memorial Days → Ukraine Day of Remembrance of the Defenders of Ukraine The Day of Remembrance of the Defenders of Ukraine is a memorial day that was added to the Ukrainian official holiday calendar in 2019. It is observed on August 29 to honor the memory of Ukrainian soldiers and officers who died protecting the country’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity. Anniversaries and Memorial Days → Kazakhstan Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Closure Anniversary in Kazakhstan The Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Closure Anniversary is observed in Kazakhstan on August 29 every year. It was established by the government of Kazakhstan in 2019 to commemorate the closing of the first and one of the largest nuclear test sites in the Soviet Union. National Lemon Juice Day August 29 is the National Lemon Juice Day. This is the perfect occasion to learn more about the benefits of lemon juice. National Chop Suey Day August 29 is the perfect day to order some delicious takeout from your nearby American Chinese restaurant since it is National Chop Suey Day. This food holiday celebrates a stir-fry what was inspired by Chinese cuisine but developed in the United States. More Herbs, Less Salt Day More Herbs, Less Salt Day is observed annually on August 29. It was created to encourage people to eat a healthier diet by showing them that healthy food doesn’t have to be bland. August 29 is one of the UN international observances, International Day Against Nuclear Tests. This observance was established on December 2, 2009 by the UN General Assembly. PAX Dev in Seattle, USA Odense International Film Festival in Odense, Denmark Red Sea Jazz Festival in Eilat, Israel Burning Man in Black Rock City, USA Zimbabwe International Film Festival in Harare, Zimbabwe Edinburgh Mela in Edinburgh, United Kingdom Onam Festival in Kerala in Thiruvananthapuram, India Melbourne Writers Festival in Melbourne, Australia Montreal World Film Festival in Montreal, Canada Minnesota Renaissance Festival in Shakopee, USA Michigan Renaissance Festival in Holly, USA Pittsburgh Renaissance Festival in West Newton, USA Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto, Canada Zürcher Theater Spektakel in Zurich, Switzerland Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire in Manheim, USA 2016 Died: Gene Wilder, American stage and screen comic actor, screenwriter, film director, and author. He is best known for his portrayal of Willy Wonka in Mel Stuart's film Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971). 2005 Much of the U.S. Gulf Coast from Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle was devastated by hurricane Katrina. 1,836 people were killed and over $108 billion in damage was caused by the hurricane. 2004 German racer Michael Schumacher beat a 47-year-old world record held by Argentinian Juan Manuel Fangio, winning the 5th consecutive Formula One Drivers' championship. 1996 Vnukovo Airlines Flight 2801 en route from Moscow, Russia to Longyearbyen, Norway crashed into a mountain on the Arctic island of Spitsbergen. All 141 people on board were killed. 1989 Died: Peter Scott, British ornithologist, conservationist and painter. He is best remembered for his contribution to conservation of wild animals. He was one of the founders of the World Wide Fund for Nature and designed its logo with a panda. 1986 Born: Lea Michele, American actress, singer and author, winner of two Golden Globe Awards for Best Actress in a Television Series. Michele is best known to audience for performance as Rachel Berry on television series Glee. 1982 The synthetic chemical element Meitnerium, atomic number 109, was first synthesized at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt, Germany. It's calculated, that this element has similar properties to cobalt, rhodium and iridium. 1977 Died: Jean Hagen, American actress, best known for the role as Lina Lamont in Singin' in the Rain. This role brought her nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. 1975 Died: Éamon de Valera, Irish educator and politician. He was one of the dominant political figures in the 20th century Ireland, serving as the 3rd President (from 1959 till 1973). De Valera was also a leader of struggle for independence from the United Kingdom and led to the introduction of the Constitution of Ireland. 1966 The Beatles performed their last concert before the fans at Candlestick Park, San Francisco, California. At that time the audience didn't known, that it was the last concert of the group, that is why it drew not much attention from the mass media. 1958 Born: Michael Jackson, American singer, songwriter, dancer and actor, often called the King of Pop. His contributions to music and dance and his much publicized personal life made him a global figure in popular culture. 1949 The Soviet Union conducted its first nuclear weapons test, known as First Lightning (Joe 1), at Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan. 1946 Died: John Steuart Curry, American painter, noted for paintings depicting life in Kansas. His is considered to be one of the three great painters of American Regionalism of the first half of the 20th century. 1939 Born: Joel Schumacher, American director, producer and screenwriter. He directed such notable films as The Lost Boys, St. Elmo's Fire, Batman Forever, A Time to Kill, Batman & Robin, The Phantom of the Opera. 1938 Born: Elliott Gould, American actor, best known for roles in M*A*S*H, The Long Goodbye and California Split. 1923 Born: Richard Attenborough, English actor, director and producer. His best known work was Gandhi, an epic biographical film dramatizing the life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. This film brought him four Golden Globe Awards and four BAFTA Awards. As an actor he is known for roles in The Great Escape, Miracle on 34th Street and Jurassic Park. 1920 Born: Charlie Parker, American jazz saxophonist and composer, known as a highly influential jazz soloist and leading figure in the development of bebop. 1915 Born: Ingrid Bergman, Swedish actress, winner of three Academy Awards, two Emmy Awards, a Tony Award and four Golder Globe Awards. She starred in many American films, including Casablanca, Notorius, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Joan of Arc. 1910 The Japan-Korea Treaty came into force, thus officially starting the period of Japanese rule in Korea. 1904 Born: Werner Forssmann, German physician and academic, Nobel Prize laureate for developing a procedure that allowed for cardiac catheterization. 1898 American inventor Frank Seiberling founded the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company. Today this company is one the most recognizable advertising icons in America. 1891 Died: Pierre Lallement, French inventor of the bicycle. His invention was inspired by a dandy horse, a human-powered vehicle, that became a forerunner of the first bicycle with a rotary crank mechanism and pedals. 1885 German engineer Gottlieb Daimler patented the Reitwagen (riding wagon in English), that became the first motorcycle in the world. 1865 Died: Robert Remak, Polish-born German embryologist, physiologist and neurologist. He is best known for introduction of modern terms for germ layers (ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm) and discovery that the origin of cells is the division of pre-existing cells. 1862 Born: Maurice Maeterlinck, Belgian playwright, poet and essayist. In 1911 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. His best known masterpiece is a philosophical fairy play The Blue Bird. 1831 Michael Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction, the production of an electromotive force across a conductor when it's exposed to a varying magnetic field. 1799 Died: Pope Pius VI, born Count Giovanni Angelo Braschi. His papacy lasted for over two decades, making his reign the fourth-longest in papal history. Pope Pius VI is remembered for condemnation of the French Revolution and the suppression of the Gallican Church. 1780 Died: Jacques-Germain Soufflot, French architect, known as a person, who introduced neoclassicism. His most famous wok is a church dedicated to Saint Genevieve in Paris, France, that is now known as the Panthéon. 1657 Died: John Lilburne, English activist, known for coining the term "freeborn rights". He defined the term as rights with which every human being is born, as opposed to rights bestowed by government of human law. 1632 Born: John Locke, English philosopher and physician, who is regarded as one of the most influential thinkers of Enlightenment and known as the Father of Classical Liberalism. His writings influenced the works of Rousseau, Voltaire and many Scottish Enlightenment thinkers, as well as American revolutionaries. 1533 Died: Atahualpa, the last sovereign emperor of the Inca Empire before the Spanish contest. He was captured by the Spanish, who used him to control the empire. After his death the Inca Empire began to disintegrate.
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/6735
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Taiwan Stands Up 1st Apache AH-64E Attack Helicopter Brigade The new Apache helicopter gunships will “play a pivotal role in boosting Taiwan’s combat capabilities and its defensive needs,” according to the country’s president. By Franz-Stefan Gady for The Diplomat Credit: Youtube Still Shot The Republic of China Army (ROCA) commissioned its first air brigade equipped with Boeing AH-64E Apache “Guardian” heavy attack helicopters on July 17, according to Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense. The 29 Apache AH-64E helicopter gunships, divided up into two squadrons, are to be operated by the ROCA’s 601st Air Cavalry Brigade, which is part of the service’s Aviation and Special Forces Command. The new helicopters will all be stationed at the Longtan Air Base in Taoyuan, in northern Taiwan. “By stationing the two squadrons in Longtan, the military aims to allow the brigade to intercept an enemy’s landing corps that could make inroads into Taiwan from the north coast,” a Taiwanese military was quoted as saying by the South China Morning Post. Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen said during the commissioning ceremony that the induction into service of the new helicopters was an “important milestone” in the country’s “multiple deterrence and resolute defense” strategy. She also noted that the commissioning of the helicopters will boost the ROCA’s “combat readiness.” “The government will make sure to fully support the military to follow up and further enhance the helicopters’ capability,” Tsai added. U.S. defense contractor Boeing delivered 30 attack helicopters to Taiwan between November 2013 and October 2014. Total acquisition costs were $2.53 billion, which, next to the helicopters, included 1,000 AGM-114L Hellfire missiles and other equipment. One AH-64E was lost when it crashed into a three-story building during a training flight in bad weather conditions in April 2014 leaving 29 to form the air brigade. The first Apache AH-64-E squadron was commissioned last June, the second earlier this year. Over the past four years, Taiwan’s military has struggled to keep the helicopters operational given the country’s wet and high humidity climate. At one point in 2015, only eight A-64Es were airworthy. The rest of the fleet was grounded due to missing spare parts or rust corrosion. As I explained elsewhere: The AH-64E helicopter, operated by a two-man crew, is the latest and most advanced variant of the helicopter gunship. The gunship is armed with a M230 30 millimeter chain gun capable of firing up to 625 high-explosive dual-purpose rounds per minute, and can also accommodate up to 16 AGM-114L Hellfire air-to-ground missiles, AIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missiles, and Hydra 70 2.75-inch rockets. Additionally, the helicopter is fitted with the powerful AN/APG-78 Longbow fire-control target acquisition radar. The radar can track 128 targets and provides the helicopter with day/night, all-weather, 360 degree search capabilities for both air and ground targets up to a range of 8 kilometers. 601st Air Cavalry Brigade AH-64E AH-64E Apache helicopter AH-64E Apache sale to Taiwan Apache Helicopters Republic of China Armed Forces Republic of China Army Grounded: Taiwan’s US-Made Attack Helicopter Fleet is Rusting Away By Franz-Stefan Gady Taiwan’s tropical climate may be too much for the AH-64E Apache gunship to handle. The Politics Behind Taiwan’s Military Draft Extension By Brian Hioe While extending the conscription period is a politically risky move, few other parties are ready to openly criticize the decision. US Approves Two Possible Attack Helicopter Sales for Philippines The Philippines armed forces will consider the AH-64E or the AH-1Z. US, India Sign Contract for 6 More AH-64E Attack Helicopters Deliveries of the new helicopters are expected to begin in 2023.
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/7512
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Pioneer Center Joins Newman’s Own Foundation $500K Holiday Challenge Help Pioneer Center win $150,000 by donating to its CrowdRise campaign Pioneer Center for Human Services has joined the Newman’s Own Foundation $500k Holiday Challenge, a fundraising competition on CrowdRise, the largest crowdfunding platform for good. Newman’s Own Foundation $500k Holiday Challenge is a friendly fundraising campaign for eligible US-based 501(c)3 charities. Participating organizations will compete for half of one million dollars in prize money. Pioneer Center has joined the challenge on CrowdRise in hopes of raising money to support its developmental disability, behavioral health and homeless service programs. Pioneer Center serves over 4,500 in McHenry County annually and relies on private contributions from individuals, corporations and foundations to support our three service areas. Challenge funds will be used to support the organization’s 15 group homes for individuals with developmental disabilities, mental illnesses, and autism, as well as the organization’s two PADS shelters for the homeless. “This is a wonderful opportunity to raise awareness of the important work Pioneer Center does within McHenry County,” said Amy Hernon, Director of Development for Pioneer Center. “As a non-profit organization, annual contributions are vital to our stability. This challenge has the potential to double those contributions—doubling the impact!” The Newman’s Own Foundation $500k Holiday Challenge launched on CrowdRise on November 21, 2017 at 12pm ET and runs through January 3, 2018 at 1:59:59pm ET. There are 10 grand prizes up for grabs with the team that raises the most online winning $150,000 and 10th place winning $2,500. On #GivingTuesday an additional $85,000 will be awarded to the top 3 charities. Plus, weekly Bonus Challenges enable charities to win up to another $115,000. CrowdRise Challenges are innovative fundraising competitions for charitable organizations designed to build capacity, create massive engagement and leverage, and use the power of the crowd to provide new meaningful funding streams for organizations in every sector. To help Pioneer Center win the Newman’s Own Foundation $500k Holiday Challenge head to https://www.crowdrise.com/pioneer-center-for-human-services2 ABOUT NEWMAN’S OWN FOUNDATION Newman’s Own Foundation is celebrating 35 years of giving and $500 million to thousands of charities, helping millions of people. As Paul Newman would say, “giving back is just the right thing to do.” Newman’s Own foundation was founded by the late actor Paul Newman to continue his philanthropic legacy and help make the world a better place. The Foundation turns all net profits and royalties from the sale of Newman’s Own food and beverage products into charitable donations. For more information, visit www.newmansownfoundation.org. ABOUT CROWDRISE CrowdRise is the world’s largest crowdfunding platform dedicated exclusively to charitable fundraising. Used by millions of individuals, tens of thousands of charities, hundreds of companies and many of the most famous artists and athletes in the world, CrowdRise enables people to creatively leverage their resources and networks to unlock the power of the crowd to support positive social missions and create massive impact. Founded by actor Edward Norton, film producer Shauna Robertson and Robert and Jeffrey Wolfe, CrowdRise has conceived, implemented and powered campaigns that have raised hundreds of millions of dollars to date. For more information visit www.CrowdRise.com. In January 2017, CrowdRise merged with GoFundMe to offer both people and organizations the best fundraising tools for any cause they care passionately about. Categories: Hot Topics, Press ReleasesBy Pioneer Center November 22, 2017 PreviousPrevious post:Pancakes, Pizza and Pasta for Pioneer CenterNextNext post:Meet Bryan Bode
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Ensemble > Our Vision & Roots Theatre for Adults > Private Acting Coaching The Red Nosed Clown Theatre for Kids Theatrix Kjersti Webb Founding Member, Co-Artistic Director Kjersti (Shesh-tee) was born and raised in Sweden. She moved To the U.S. in 1996 to study at the Dell `Arte School of Physical Theatre in Blue Lake, California. She also has extensive training in the Lecoq and Phillipe Gaulier physical theatre lineages having trained in the United States, England and Italy. She holds a Bachelors degree in Theatre from Naropa University and is currently pursuing Master Level pedagogic training in the Lecoq lineage under the supervision of world-renowned teacher Amy Russell. Kjersti has acted, written, directed or produced more than thirty projects over the past fifteen years. An expert in events planning and implementation, Kjersti co-founded several theatre companies namely Theatre 13, LTO and Bohemian Dinner Theatre. Among other original projects with Theatre13, she created and performed in three critically acclaimed World Premier works, “The Dogrobber Revolt”, “Once Upon a Time The End” and “Olive”. She also has extensive experience in technical theatre mostly as a lighting designer. She received “Best Lighting Design” from the Boulder Daily Camera in 2008 for “The Death and Resurrection of Carl Verplank” and “Best Lighting Design” from the Denver Critics Circle for “The Handler” in 2009. She holds licensure from Stage Vision of Sweden in Safety and Regulations for Stage and Events. Kjersti returned to Sweden in 2011 and founded Everything Theatre Company with her husband Judson Webb. ETC produces and teaches theatre, film, corporate conferences and workshops. Passionate about her work in Physical Theatre Kjersti utilizes her extensive background to help people and companies grow. A resident of Falun, Sweden she is the mother of two beautiful daughters and one fabulous stepson. Judson Webb Born and raised in West Texas, Judson now lives in Falun, Sweden. He holds a Masters Degree in Contemporary Performance (MFACP) from Naropa University and has participated in over fifty theatre and film projects during the past 20 years. Passionate about the intersections between art and human development he has also studied Substance Abuse Counseling and Family Dynamics, Transpersonal Psychology, Tibetan Buddhist Meditation, Tai Chi, Yoga, Pilates, Traditional Lakota Ceremony, Butoh, Method Acting, Modern Dance, Body Mind Centering, The Roy Hart Voice Technique, The Grotowski Technique, The Feldenkrais Method, The Alexander Technique, Public Speaking and Life Coaching. In the U.S. Judson co-founded multiple theatre companies, namely Theatre13, LTO and Bohemian Dinner Theatre. As a founding member of much acclaimed Theatre13, he produced directed and/or acted in more than twenty productions during the company's four rambunctious seasons in Boulder, Colorado. Judson has also been deeply involved in micro-budget filmmaking having acted, written and produced for indie screens for over a decade. His most recent work as a producer of film, “Somewhere West”, has won multiple film festival awards in both the U.S. and Europe. As an actor, his work has been critically acclaimed in the Denver Post, Rocky Mountain News, Westword, Boulder Weekly, and the Boulder Daily Camera among others. Judson is Co-Artistic Director of Everything Theatre Company. Located in Falun, Sweden ETC is an entertainment and education company producing and teaching theatre, film, corporate conferences, seminars and retreats. He is the proud father of three awesome kids. Claire Patton Claire Pattonis a director, teacher, collaborator, and performer of Lecoq-based physical theatre. She graduated from Kiklos International School of Theatre Creation in Padua Italy, where she studied under Giovanni Fusetti. She then completed his course in the pedagogy of movement theatre in 2009. Patton is the founder and Artistic Director of Quake Theater, a physical theatre company based in Boulder, Colorado. She has co-written and directed several original productions, including the mask comedy Woe to the Conquered, which premiered at the Boulder Fringe in 2010 and won the festival's Encore! award. Patton has served as a guest artist at the University of Colorado Department of Theatre and Dance, specializing in Commedia dell'Arte, and has collaborated as a movement coach on three of their productions: Pillowman,You Can't Take it With You, and A Play on Two Chairs. Last year Patton performed a solo multi-character piece, Smite Smote Smitten, under the direction of Elizabeth Baron. She is co-founder of Sweden's Everything Theatre Company, having taught and performed red nose clown in the summer of 2012 in Caux, Switzerland. Barrett Ogden Barrett has worked as an actor, director, writer, and teacher in film, theatre, television, and voice-over for the past two decades. He received an MFA in Contemporary Performance (MFACP) from Naropa University in 2009. He currently serves as a Professor of Acting in the Department of Theatrical Arts for Stage & Screen at Utah Valley University. Barrett co-founded Handcart Ensemble in 1999, Hollow Earth Conspiracy in 2004 and Jules Verne Expeditionary Research in 2011. He has trained internationally in NYC, Denmark, England, and elsewhere in a variety of theatre performance-related disciplines, including the Michael Chekhov Technique, Body Mind Centering, Contemplative Dance Practice, Developmental Movement, Stage Combat, the voice work of Cicely Berry, Catherine Fitzmaurice, and Kristen Linklater, The Roy Hart Voice Technique, The Alexander Technique, Viewpoints composition with Wendell Beavers and SITI Company, Yoga, various approaches to mask performance, the work of Jerzy Grotowski, Eugenio Barba's Odin Teatret, North American Cultural Laboratory, and Tectonic Theatre's Moment Work, along with several other techniques of acting, movement, voice, and directing work, and is a Teacher of the Feldenkrais Method. His work has been favorably reviewed by The Village Voice, Off-Off Broadway Review, www.nytheatre.com, Westword, Boulder Weekly and Boulder Daily Camera among others. He’s pleased to be engaged in the lifelong path of service through art.
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SBAS-Africa: A Cost Effective Southern African Solution Serving Multiple Market Sectors J. Ostolaza, D. Pérez, J.J. Lera, D. Hill, V. Boissinot, W. Roberts, S. Basker, E. Avenant, G. Lamprecht, S. Sheppard, P. Milway, M. Reche Abstract: Satellite Based Augmentation System (SBAS) capabilities were pioneered by the United States of America (with WAAS) and the European Union (with EGNOS) with the aim of delivering safety-of-life navigation services to the civil aviation sector and have now been deployed by other nations including GAGAN in India and MSAS in Japan. All these nations benefit both economically and socially from improved navigation services not only in the aviation sector but also across the wide range of markets that have adopted GNSS. Nevertheless due to the differences in needs and financial situation, the countries of Africa have not had the same opportunity to take advantage of all the benefit that an SBAS can deliver. SBAS-Africa is a 12 month initiative that has successfully deployed an end-to-end SBAS testbed with a live signal in space that demonstrates the potential benefits of implementing SBAS capabilities in Southern Africa. SBAS-Africa, led by Avanti Communications PLC (Avanti) was co-funded by the United Kingdom Space Agency (UKSA) through its International Partnerships Space Programme (IPSP) programme. With the collaboration of GMV, NSL, Pildo Labs, Thales UK, the South African National Space Agency (SANSA), Ghana Council for Scientific and Industrial Research and the Agency for Aerial Navigation Safety in Africa and Madagascar (ASECNA), SBAS-Africa delivered a real-time SBAS signal for the southern part of the African continent. GNSS monitoring stations developed by NSL were deployed on the ground while communication (often in very remote locations) was assured by the Avanti high throughput satellite HYLAS 2. The SBAS messages are then generated by GMV’s magicSBAS tool and broadcast via ARTEMIS satellite - originally an ESA EGNOS test satellite which is now owned and operated by Avanti PLC. The testbed immediately improves GPS accuracy assuring integrity confidence levels and showcases many benefits across a large variety of applications within different sectors. The objectives of SBAS-Africa (http://sbas-africa.avantiplc.com/), are to capture the service provision requirements for an African SBAS, to deploy an SBAS demonstrator and run demonstrations, to under-stand the likely benefits and build operational SBAS business cases for key stakeholders and finally to identify the way forward so that South African authorities are able to make a safe bet without investing so much as it was done initially in America and Europe. One of the expected outcomes of SBAS-Africa is the acceleration in the adoption of an operational SBAS for Africa. The African SBAS needs are different, there are fewer commercial aviation movements and the major benefits are likely to be agriculture, geomatics, logistics, maritime and general aviation. But SBAS does not only bring economic benefits, it also can bring various societal benefits. Indeed it will stimulate innovation, attract in-ward investment, create high-value jobs, reduce imports and open up new export markets, save lives, increase productivity, improve the environment, reduce inequality, encourage social cohesion in rural communities and enhance the standard of living for many South Africans. This paper gives an overview of SBAS-Africa describing the system architecture and developments that have taken place that, through a combination of commercial off the shelf GNSS and satcom components and the ingenuity of the consortium members, has led to a live cost-effective operational system within one year. The paper then assesses the performances and immediate benefits across different market sectors. Trials were run throughout South Africa across these sectors, including flight tests in Johannesburg and Pretoria, precise agriculture trials in Stellenbosch, UAVs in the Western Cape and Potchefstroom and maritime in Cape Town. Performances of the trials are assessed in terms of the achieved accuracy, continuity, integrity and availability. Cite this article: Ostolaza, J., Pérez, D., Lera, J.J., Hill, D., Boissinot, V., Roberts, W., Basker, S., Avenant, E., Lamprecht, G., Sheppard, S., Milway, P., Reche, M., "SBAS-Africa: A Cost Effective Southern African Solution Serving Multiple Market Sectors," Proceedings of the 29th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation (ION GNSS+ 2016), Portland, Oregon, September 2016, pp. 2754-2765.
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/9533
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Q Radio Breakfast with Declan Kygo Ft. Whitney Houston GRAMMY® AWARD-WINNING ICON SHANIA TWAIN ANNOUNCES BRAND NEW ALBUM QUEEN OF ME AND UK + IRELAND TOUR 3ARENA DUBLIN 19 SEPTEMBER 2023 General on sale Friday November 4th at 10am Tickets from Ticketmaster Superstar status and genre-crossing appeal…an era-defining artist - NME One of pop music’s great pioneers - The i Shania Twain has had a meteoric impact on the music industry…[a] trailblazing star - Stylist Gearing up for another monumental chapter, five-time GRAMMY® Award-winning legend and the best-selling female artist in country music history Shania Twain will release her new album, Queen of Me, on February 3rd 2023 via EMI - pre-order HERE. It notably stands out as her sixth original full-length offering and first record since 2017. Rumours of a new tour began circulating on the internet in recent months and fans will be delighted to hear that, to celebrate this next era in style, Shania will embark on the Queen of Me Tour across the UK and Ireland. The tour marks the first time fans will get to see the queen in all of her glory in nearly five years. The Queen of Me Tour kicks off on Saturday September 16th at London’s O2 Arena, and stops in Dublin, Glasgow and Manchester before wrapping up in Birmingham on Tuesday September 26th. Fans that pre-order the new album, Queen of Me, from the official store before 4pm on Tuesday 1st November will receive a pre-sale code for 2023 tour tickets. Pre-order now HERE Additionally, Shania and Live Nation have announced that £/€1.50 per ticket sold (less deductions for tax and royalties) will be donated to Shania Kids Can (“SKC”). Established in 2010 by Shania Twain, SKC provides services that promote positive change in children’s lives in times of crises and economic hardship. SKC provides children with one-on-one consultations, academic support and group activities, as well as nutritious snacks and meal programmes where needed, all while in the safe, confidence-building environment that is the Shania Kids Can Clubhouse. These children are learning the skills to cope with and overcome family hardships which, in turn improves their ability to succeed in school. For more information about Shania Kids Can, please visit: www.shaniakidscan.com A post shared by Shania Twain (@shaniatwain) She excitedly heralds the highly anticipated album with new song “Last Day of Summer”, offering fans a taste of what to expect from the upcoming new album - listen HERE. The track unfolds as a nostalgic and cinematic anthem set in the final moments of everyone’s favourite season. Delicate guitar melts into a steady beat and screen-worthy strings as she nostalgically recalls, “The last time we were together the first thing I remember every time September comes.” Shania will make it feel like summer forever, like only she can… This follows the single “Waking Up Dreaming” which headed straight onto the BBC Radio 2 playlist upon release as Shania dropped by Zoe Ball’s Radio 2 show and The One Show to celebrate the new music. She’ll also join the panel of ITV’s Starstruck for its second season, set to air in 2023, alongside Adam Lambert, Beverly Knight and Jason Manford. Shania Twain continues to be one of the world’s most popular artists, with over 100 million global album sales and 330 million streams in the UK alone. Her third studio album, Come On Over, is the UK’s 15th biggest selling album of all time. Her recently released blockbuster, career-spanning Netflix documentary, Not Just A Girl, was praised by NME, The i, Stylist and more for reminding audiences of her status as a cultural icon and music industry pioneer. Notable celebrity fans include Taylor Swift, Post Malone, Lewis Capaldi, Kacey Musgraves, Haim, Avril Lavigne and Harry Styles, who invited Shania to perform with him when he headlined Coachella earlier this year. “Let’s go girls..”, the Queen has returned. General sale - Friday November 4th at 10am from Ticketmaster Tickets from €76.50 including booking fee/facility fee/charity donation. SHANIA TWAIN ‘QUEEN OF ME’ 2023 UK + IRELAND TOUR DATES 9/16 London, UK O2 Arena 9/19 Dublin, IRE 3Arena 9/22 Glasgow, UK OVO Hydro Arena 9/25 Manchester, UK AO Arena 9/26 Birmingham, UK Utilita Arena
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UK Space Agency – International Partnership Programme The UK Space Agency’s International Partnership Programme (IPP) is a five-year, £30M/year ‘space for development’ programme established in 2016, and currently the largest undertaking of its kind in the world. It focuses on utilising the UK space sector’s research and innovation capabilities to deliver sustainable economic and societal benefits to emerging and developing economies around the world. IPP has so far grant-funded 33 projects in 44 countries across Africa, Asia-Pacific and South America, which are run by a large variety of UK and international organisations across industry, academia and non-profit entities. These projects address a variety of critical issues, including reducing deforestation, climate/disaster resilience, remote learning, land-use monitoring, reducing maritime problems, health and renewable energy. The projects generally take between two and five years to be delivered, and range from £500k to £15M in grant value plus match funding. IPP’s portfolio of partners now include 122 space sector organisations and 132 international organisations. The IPP website (www.spacefordevelopment.org) outlines the goals and benefits of each project, its activities and results, and provides links to open-source study documents. This data is available to any organisation (e.g. development agencies) seeking advice, case studies and information for their databases to improve future projects. Some recent examples of how IPP projects are demonstrating impact include: The Earth and Sea Observation System (EASOS), developed in partnership with the Malaysian government, which has helped maritime authorities map the trajectory of oil spills, consequently improving the response to, and policing of, marine pollution. Clean-up costs saved by early intervention are estimated to be over £1.5M each in the two spills identified so far. Two projects supporting sea rescues in South Africa, Madagascar and sustainable fishing in Indonesia have saved 45 lives, been used in 5 rescue missions and 976 small fishing boats have been equipped with vehicle tracking devices. Based on this, IPP is directly benefiting around 6,635 fishermen and indirectly almost 25,000 people in fishing households. A collaboration between the UN, UK and Vietnamese partners is developing D-MOSS, a tool to predict outbreaks of Dengue Fever up to eight months in advance, allowing for life-saving preparations and preventative measures. The same methods could also be used to forecast outbreaks of Zika, which has recently begun to be reported in Vietnam. IPP projects have supported 12 disaster situations since the Programme’s creation, provided satellite data to 25,000 farmers worldwide, provided training to over 300 rural health professionals and satellite internet learning tools to over 34,000 students and 500 teachers, provided satellite solutions to over 1000 fishing vessels and protected more than 380,000 hectares of forests through satellite-based observation. IPP projects have been shown to be more cost-effective in achieving their UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) than alternative non-space solutions. ← Better Satellite World Awards Featured Restaurant Featured Supplier Directory Search Vertical
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Hejduk, John 1Design IV 1Wisniewski, Chester 9Elwell, David 1Agrest, Diana 9Canon, Roger 6Sorkin, Michael 1Webb, Michael 1Cube 8Harlem Housing 1Nine Square Grid Hejduk, John / 356 projects John Hejduk (1929–2000) was an architect and educator living and working in New York City, and a 1950 graduate of The Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture. His teaching career at The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of The Cooper Union began in 1964. The following year he became the Head of the Department of Architecture. In 1975, when the School of Architecture became one of the three autonomous degree-granting divisions of The Cooper Union, he was named Dean and Professor of the School of Architecture. In 2000, he became Dean and Professor Emeritus of Architecture. He was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects and of the Royal Society of Arts. His work has been exhibited around the world, including New York, Chicago, London, Amsterdam, Paris, Athens, Milan, Oslo, Berlin, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, Helsinki, Zurich, Prague, Rotterdam, Briey-en-Foret and Montreal. In 1975, he received the Augustus Saint Gaudens award from The Cooper Union Alumni Association; in 1980 he received a Brunner Grant from the New York Chapter/American Institute of Architects; in 1983 he received a Design Arts Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts; in 1986 he received the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters; in 1988 he received the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture/American Institute of Architects Topaz Medallion for Excellence in Architecture Education and the New York Chapter/American Institute of Architects Medal of Honor for Distinction in the Profession; in 1989 he was awarded the Creative Arts Award Medal in Architecture from Brandeis University and a Fellowship from The Chicago Institute for Architecture and Urbanism; in 1990 he received an Honor Award from the American Institute of Architects; in 1993 he received an inaugural Chrysler Innovation in Design Award from Chrysler-Plymouth Division of Chrysler Corporation; in 1995 he received the Honorable Title and Commemorative Medal of the Art Council of the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague; in 1998 he received the UAR-Honorary Medal from the Romanian Institute of Architects; also in 1998 he received the inaugural Artists of the City Award from The Cooper Union; in 2000 he posthumously received the American Original award from the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. Rizzoli International Publications published Mask of Medusa in 1985, Bovisa in 1987, Vladivostok in 1989, Aesop's Fables (illustrations by John Hejduk) in 1991, Soundings in 1993 and Architectures in Love in 1995. Victims and Collapse of Time were published by the Architectural Association in 1986 and 1987 respectively. In 1991, The Limited Editions Club published a folio of his lithographs to accompany the first illustrated edition of Thomas Mann's The Black Swan. The Lancaster/Hanover Masque was published jointly by the Architectural Association and the Canadian Center for Architecture in 1992. The Monacelli Press published Adjusting Foundations (1995) and Pewter Wings, Golden Horns, Stone Veils (1997) and Lines No Fire Could Burn (1999). Such Places as Memory was published by MIT Press in 1998. Structures from his projects have been built at the Gropius Bau (Berlin), the Architectural Association (London), the University of the Arts (Philadelphia), The Oslo School of Architecture (Norway), Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta),Prague Castle (Czechoslovakia), the City of Prague, the City of Groningen (Netherlands), near Madison Square Park at the intersection of 5th Avenue/Broadway and 23rd Street (New York City), Slussen Stockholm (Sweden), in the "La Boca" area of Buenos Aires (Argentina), the Universitat Politécnia de Catalunya (Spain) and, in 2017, at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. Buildings from his award-winning projects were constructed in Berlin under the auspices of the Internationale Bauausstellung; in Santiago de Compostela, Spain; and in Groningen, Netherlands. He was also the architect for the award-winning renovation of The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art's National Historic Landmark Foundation Building. Photograph by Jose Pelaez. Faculty Course Documents / 9 documents 1981–82, Spring | Thesis 1982–83, Fall | Thesis 9 Square Grid Abandonment and Intervention Abyss Studies A Cultivated Garden 1997-2047 A Dinner/Cinema in NYC A Gentle Vehicle: Electric Car A Hospice A House for Four Generations of a Family Analysis: Borromini, San Carlo Alla Quattro Fontane Analysis: Hadrian's Villa Analysis: Johannes Duiker, De Handelsblad Cineac Analysis: Le Corbusier, Carpenter Center Analysis: Le Corbusier, Villa Meyer Analysis: Mies van der Rohe, Farnsworth House Analysis of Little Red Riding Hood Analysis: Palazzo del Te An Archive for Geographic Measurements A New York Public Branch Library An Urban Farm A Place for Sacred Objects, A Place for Ahab A Protestant Church A Terrain Instrument Atlas of the World A Topos for Pontians A Twenty Seven Foot Cube A Window into History Bannerman's Island - Dentist Office
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Bangladesh Addressing Climate Crisis: Struggling and Surviving through Environmental Adversity by LightCastle Analytics Wing Bangladesh Addressing Climate Crisis: Struggling a... Starting from a school strike, a seventeen-year-old Swedish girl, Greta Thunberg became an iconic figure for climate activists all over the world. By raising her voice loud about the seriousness of the climate crisis, she led a global movement calling for change and demanding immediate actions from world-leaders. Climate change primarily refers to significant changes in global temperature, precipitation, wind patterns and other measures of climate that occur over several decades or longer. Carbon emissions from fossil fuels and industrial processes are influencing climate change the most. The developed countries, more specifically the industry leaders such as China, the US, Russia are the largest contributors to climate change. China and the US, these two countries alone are responsible for more than 40% of the world’s CO2 emissions.[1] Unfortunately, this leaves the developing and LDCs to face the dire consequences. LDCs such as Puerto Rico, Haiti, Bangladesh, Vietnam that make the least contribution to climate issues, are the most affected ones.[2] As natural disasters result in a $520 billion loss in annual consumption globally, climate change has a significant impact on the global economy.[3] The developed countries namely the UK, Norway, China have shown their concern to tackle climate change by taking mitigation steps. Whereas, disaster-prone countries and LDCs have to concentrate mainly on building resilience to climate change rather than taking mitigation steps as they are more vulnerable to climate issues and they contribute relatively less to the global climate crisis. Bangladesh falls under this categorization as it was ranked 9th among the countries most affected by extreme weather events in 1998-2017 according to the Global Climate Risk Index, 2017.[2] The Impact of Disasters on the Economy By experiencing 219 natural disasters between 1980 and 2008, Bangladesh comes with a long history of natural disasters. Over the past 40 years, the economic losses caused by disasters were at an estimated $12 billion, depressing GDP annually by 0.5 to 1%.[4] Floods and tropical cyclones caused the majority of the damage, for example, cyclone Sidr caused an estimated $1.7 billion in damages or about 2.6% of GDP in 2007. In May 2009, cyclone Aila caused an estimated $270 million in asset damage.[4] The figure below shows the economic loss caused by tropical cyclones in the last few decades. FIGURE: Economic loss caused by tropical cyclones in Bangladesh, Source: Asian Development Bank Despite facing a heavy toll from the frequently occurring disasters, Bangladesh’s adaptation and strong disaster-coping mechanisms are minimizing the loss in comparison to past natural disasters. For example, 1970 Cyclone Bhola killed half a million people while a similarly strong 2019 Cyclone Fani caused less than 10.[7] The Government currently allocates 6 to 7% of its annual budget – around $1 billion on climate change adaptation, with 25 percent of this coming from international donors.[5] Bangladesh Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan (BCCSAP) of 2009 works in six thematic areas to tackle climate change. The figure below shows the breakdown of the climate budget against the six areas for 2018. The largest chunk of the budget is used for basic services, food, health and infrastructure. However, the disaster management area requires more investment because of the high frequency of disasters in Bangladesh. FIGURE: Breakdown of Climate Budget / Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh The Trajectory of Greenhouse Gas Emission in Bangladesh Since Bangladesh emits a relatively low amount of greenhouse gases than the developed countries, it does not have any pressing international obligation for climate change mitigation. Agriculture is the leading contributor, with 39% of total greenhouse gas emissions. The energy sector is the second-highest emitter with 33%, followed by land-use change and forestry, waste and industrial processes representing the third, fourth and fifth highest emitters, accounting for 17%, 10% and 2%, respectively.[11] The energy sector contributes highly to carbon emission with 33% of total emissions which can be reduced by using renewable energy. According to Renewable Energy Policy 2008, the government is aiming to achieve 10% power generation from renewable sources by 2020. But Bangladesh is currently generating only 2.95% of total power generation from renewables which puts the country in a challenging situation to reach the target. CO2 emission in Bangladesh is gradually increasing as the figure below shows. Per capita emission was 0.21 metric tons in 2000 which reached 0.47 metric tons per capita emission in 2014.[10] FIGURE: CO2 emissions in Bangladesh / Source: World Bank [ref id=10] The increasing trend in carbon emissions is a matter of concern and Bangladesh Government has formalized an unconditional commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 5% from ‘Business as Usual’ levels by 2030 in the power, transport and industry sectors while submitting ‘Intended Nationally Determined Contributions’ (INDC) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) in 2015.[12] It also included a commitment to increase its contribution to a 15% reduction, dependent on international support. In-state Initiatives The economic sectors that are particularly at risk due to disasters include agriculture, water and sanitation, infrastructure, and health.[6] The International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted that rising sea levels and coastal erosion can cause Bangladesh to lose 17% of its land and 30% of its food production.[5] In that case, agriculture would be severely affected and internal migration would increase causing a greater regional disparity. With more people moving to Dhaka, the living cost would be getting higher which might lead to inflation. Moreover, Dhaka is facing serious air pollution as the average AQI (Air Quality Index) value remains between 201-300 which is extremely unhealthy for city dwellers. If this continues, Bangladesh will face serious healthcare challenges in the near future. The Government of Bangladesh’s on-going 7th five-year plan (2016-2020) addresses climate change concerns by taking initiatives such as enacting Clean Air Act to improve air quality in Dhaka, increasing productive forest coverage to 20% with 70% tree density, promoting zero discharge of industrial effluents, etc.[8] Sustainable Development Goal 13 that explicitly talks about tackling climate change, is integrated into these objectives. The figure below shows the climate-relevant allocation by twenty ministries which reflects the government’s commitment to higher public investment in climate-related activities. FIGURE: Climate relevant allocation / Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh Climate funds are primarily used for building adaptation along with a limited investment in mitigation. The major international sources of climate finance are Global Environment Facility (GEF), Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF), Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Program (ASAP), Global Climate Change Alliance (GCCA), Climate Investment Funds, UN-REDD Readiness Program, and recently established Green Climate Fund (GCF).[5] Bangladesh was among the first eight countries to be funded by the GCF which is a fund set up under the UNFCCC to channel $100 billion a year from developed countries to developing countries to help tackle climate change.[5] According to World Bank, Bangladesh will need $5.7 billion as adaptation finance by 2050 to tackle climate change. But currently, the country spends $1 billion a year, nearly a fifth of the estimated need which indicates a significant funding gap.[5] The bright side is, Bangladesh is internationally recognized for its cutting-edge efforts to tackle climate change. Sheikh Hasina, the Prime Minister of Bangladesh was announced as one of the winners of the United Nations Champions of the Earth award in recognition of her country’s initiatives to address climate change. The award cited the progressive Bangladesh Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan (BCCSAP) for its effectiveness. Bangladesh is also the first country to set up its own Climate Change Trust Fund (CCTF), supported by nearly $300 million of domestic resources from 2009-2012.[14] ‘Women’s Action Towards Climate Resilience in South Asia’, a project led by an Indian NGO Mahila Housing Sewa Trust (MHT), was announced one of the winners of the 2019 UN Global Climate Action Award. This project’s mission is to organize and empower low-income households’ women to increase their resilience to the impacts of climate change. So far, MHT’s initiatives have helped 25,000 low-income families across seven cities in India, Bangladesh and Nepal.[15] A Pioneering Industry: Readymade Garments Even though Industry Policy 2016 covers some areas regarding environmental compliances for industries, most of the industries in Bangladesh have been playing an inactive role in addressing climate concerns except the garments industry.[9] Being a standout, the garments industry has expressed its commitment to tackling climate issues through the implementation of green infrastructure. The RMG industry of Bangladesh, the leading export industry with 83% contribution to the economy, has recently joined the Fashion Industry Charter, a UN initiative for Climate Action that includes a target of 30% GHG emission reductions by 2030. Surprisingly enough, Bangladesh is also leading the green garment industry with the highest number of green garment factories in the world. There are 91 LEED-certified factories in Bangladesh, including the 24 platinum-rated buildings. The LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification, awarded by USGBC, is considered to be the global standard of compliance and safety.[13] The RMG industry realized the urgency of going green to regain international trust after the Rana Plaza incident. Other industries are relatively less motivated for adopting green technology due to lack of such incentive, the high implementation cost and the absence of responsible consumption behavior in Bangladeshi buyers. Despite making significant progress by the Government of Bangladesh, without changes in current global behavior, Bangladesh would see annual economic costs equivalent to 2% of its GDP by 2050, increasing to 9.4% by 2100 as climate change will intensify the threat of natural disasters.[16] To improve the condition of coastal areas and disaster response systems, reduce pollution in Dhaka and avoid the possible inflation and healthcare challenges, Bangladesh is in need of larger funds to allocate resources. To fill the international funding gap, institutional capability needs to be increased as most of these funds implement high-standard fiduciary structures and social protections. It is important to come up with good monitoring mechanisms, transparency and track records to ensure that the funds are being used for the purpose it is meant for. The lack of concern about climate change in the mass population is a huge threat to the future of Bangladesh. In order to make the people aware of climate change consequences, the grassroots solution lies in educating the next generation about the broader issues of climate change and disaster preparedness. This can be done through awareness created by the Government. The environmental laws should be strictly implemented and to do so, Bangladesh can take a lesson from Peru’s establishment of a specialized environmental court. It helped the country strengthen its environmental laws against environmental degradation issues. The Government of Bangladesh should incentivize the industries on going green by introducing green industry policies and establishing monitoring cells to regulate and evaluate the implementation of the policies by the industries. The government has announced its plans to establish a total of 100 Special Economic Zones by the year 2025 which will help the country reduce existing regional disparity. Many of these zones are located near rivers and thus are threatened by the ongoing climate crisis. With adequate funding, an environmental panel should be formed to help build environmental infrastructure in the right economic zones. It will establish the basis of industries as environment-friendly in the economic zones from the very beginning. Legislations and regulations should be enacted in order to set environmental bounds for industries but most importantly focus should be on the proper implementation as Bangladesh has faced trouble with such efforts. Ishrat Jahan Holy, Trainee Consultant at LightCastle Partners, has prepared the write-up. For further clarifications, contact here: [email protected] Tags: Climate Crisis Climate Adaptation Disaster Management Climate Initiative Resilience Climate budget Climate finance Climate funding Environment Climate change 1. Chart of the day: These countries create most of the world’s CO2 emissions | World Economic Forum – World Economic Forum 2. Global Climate Risk Index 2019 | Germanwatch e.V. – Germanwatch 3. Climate Change Overview – World Bank 4. Bangladesh: Building Resilience to Climate Change – World Bank 5. Climate Financing 2018-19.pdf – UNDP 6. Final Design climate Change.indd – SituationAnalysisofCCinitiatives.pdf – Asia Foundation 7. Bangladesh: Climate-Smart Growth Key to Achieving Upper-Middle Income Status – World Bank 8. Development Planning 7FYP & SDG.pdf – GoB 9. Green industrial Policy: Regional Best Practices and Strategy Development for Bangladesh – Green Industrial Policy-31 July 2016_Final.pdf -CPD 10. CO2 emissions (metric tons per capita) – Bangladesh | Data – World Bank 11. GHG Emissions Factsheet Bangladesh_4-28-16_edited_rev08-18-2016_Clean.pdf – USAID 12. Climate Change Profile Bangladesh 2018 – Bangladesh_7.pdf – Reliefweb 13. USGBC | U.S. Green Building Council -USGBC 14. Bangladeshi Prime Minister wins UN environment prize for leadership on climate change | UN News – UN News 15. Winners of the 2019 UN Climate Action Awards Announced | UNFCCC 16. Bangladesh Could See Climate Change Losses Reach Over 9% Of GDP – Report | Asian Development Bank – ADB 17. Disaster Risk Financing in Bangladesh – sawp-046.pdf – ADB 18. Bangladesh: Disaster Risk Reduction as Development | UNDP – UNDP Author: LightCastle Analytics Wing LightCastle Analytics Wing is the research division of LightCastle Partners. It is tasked with producing periodic reports on the different sectors of the economy, analyzing trends in markets and making methodical, thorough and intelligent analysis to improve strategy and drive business growth. Assessing the Current Ecosystem of Financial Products for Women in Bangladesh Blended Finance: How It Can Transform the MSME Landscape in Bangladesh Sustaining Rapid Growth: A Deeper Look at Bangladesh’s Financial Sector Bangladesh’s Apparel Sector: Strengthening Foothold in the Global Market
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/10269
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EECS Faculty to explore implications of ChatGPT in new AI lecture series EECS Faculty will headline a new AI lecture series to explore the “paradigm shift” that ChatGPT and other large language models (LLMs) have catalyzed. CS Professors Jitendra Malik, Stuart Russell and Michael Jordan are among the seven speakers scheduled this spring to address the sensation that is ChatGPT and other related LLMs. CS Professor Ken Goldberg, who organized the lecture series on behalf of Berkeley Artificial Intelligence Research (BAIR), said, “Something changed very dramatically with the performance of ChatGPT, compared with previous large language models, and everyone, including experts, is asking, ‘What does it mean? Where do we go from here?’” The series will also feature John Schulman (Ph.D. ‘16; advisor: Pieter Abbeel), a co-founder of OpenAI and the primary architect of ChatGPT. “Everyone wants to hear from the experts,” Goldberg said. “There are so many misconceptions out there. In the series, we’ll hear from those who have been working in the field for many years who can provide valuable perspectives on the importance of ChatGPT.” AI lectures at Berkeley to explore possibilities, implications of ChatGPT The Berkeley lectures on the status and future of AI Bin Yu wins 2023 COPSS Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship The Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies (COPSS) has selected Bin Yu, Professor of EECS and Statistics, for the 2023 Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship (DAAL). Formerly known as the R. A. Fisher Award and Lectureship, the DAAL recognizes meritorious achievement and scholarship in statistical science and recognizes the highly significant impact of statistical methods on scientific investigations. She will deliver the DAAL Lecture at JSM in 2023 on veridical data science. Yu’s research focuses on practice, algorithm, and theory of statistical machine learning, interpretable machine learning, and causal inference. Her group is engaged in interdisciplinary research with scientists from genomics, neuroscience, and precision medicine. She and her group have developed the predictability, computability, and stability (PCS) framework for veridical data science toward responsible, reliable, and transparent data analysis and decision-making. Yu Wins 2023 COPSS Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship Jessy Lin and Abhishek Shetty win 2023 Apple Scholars in AI/ML PhD fellowships Two EECS graduate students, Jessy Lin (advisors: Anca Dragan and Dan Klein) and Abhishek Shetty (advisor: Nika Haghtalab) have been named 2023 recipients of the Apple Scholars in AI/ML PhD fellowship. This fellowship recognizes graduate and postgraduate students in the field of artificial intelligence and machine learning. Apple Scholars are selected based on “innovative research, record as thought leaders and collaborators, and commitment to advancing their respective fields.” Jessy Lin’s research is focused on using language as a medium to build agents that can collaborate and interact with humans. Abhishek Shetty’s research is broadly interested in theoretical computer science and machine learning, understanding how learning theory, complexity theory, and probability interact with each other. Apple Scholars receive funding to support their research, and mentorship with an Apple researcher in their field. Announcing the 2023 Apple Scholars in AI/ML Rikky Muller and Jaijeet Roychowdhury win 2023 Bakar Prize EE Profs. Rikky Muller and Jaijeed Roychowdhury have been named winners of the 2023 Bakar Prize. Given annually, the Bakar Prize is designed to give a boost to former fellows as they translate their research into real-world applications, providing additional resources to help transition their work to applications in industry. Muller’s group developed EarEEG, which uses lightweight in-ear earbuds to detect the brain’s electrical activity in a non-invasive way. Roychowdhury’s group invented an Oscillator Ising Machine (OIM), which addresses the scale and expense of “Quantum Annealing” in Quantum computing. From EarEEG to quantum computing, Bakar Prize winners go for broke Angjoo Kanazawa wins 2023 Sloan Research Fellowship CS Assistant Prof. Angjoo Kanazawa has been selected as a 2023 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow in Computer Science. Awarded annually since 1955, the Sloan fellowships honor "the most promising scientific researchers working today...extraordinary U.S. and Canadian researchers whose creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments make them stand out as the next generation of scientific leaders." Kanazawa's research lies at the intersection of computer vision, computer graphics, and machine learning. She is focused on building systems that can capture, perceive, and understand the complex ways that people and animals interact dynamically with the 3-D world–and can use that information to correctly identify the content of 2-D photos and video portraying scenes from everyday life. Sloan Fellows receive $75,000, which may be spent over a two-year term on any expense supportive of their research. 2023 Sloan Research Fellows Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli wins BBVA Frontiers of Knowledge Award EE Prof. Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli has won the 15th BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Information and Communication Technologies. He was cited “for ‘radically transforming' the design of the chips that power today’s electronic devices, giving rise to ‘the modern semiconductor industry.’” Prof. Sangiovanni-Vincentelli transformed chip design in three fundamental ways: first, he created simulation tools that sped up electronic circuit design and fabrication; second, he invented a program to automate circuit design with hardware programming languages, eliminating the need for what was once a complicated and arduous process; and finally, he developed algorithms to geometrically optimize circuit placement for performance and energy efficiency. From this body of work, he founded two companies, Cadence and Synopsys, both of which are instrumental to the semiconductor industry today, and continue to provide technology to companies like Apple, GM, Intel, Tesla and Boeing. He received 28 nominations for this award, both individual and institutional, from all over the world. The Frontiers of Knowledge Award was established in 2008 with the goal of promoting “the value of knowledge as a public good without frontiers, the best instrument to take on the great global challenges of our time and expand the worldviews of individuals for the benefit of all humanity.” Each recipient is awarded €400,000. The Frontiers of Knowledge Award goes to Alberto Sangiovanni Vincentelli for transforming chip design from a handcrafted process Hannah Joo receives Brooke Owens Fellowship Hannah Joo, an undergraduate student studying computer science and cognitive science at Berkeley, has won a Brooke Owens Fellowship. Along with 47 undergraduate women and gender minorities from all over the world, Hannah will receive “space and aviation internships, senior mentorships, and a lifelong professional network.” In her freshman year, Hannah joined Space Enterprise at Berkeley, a student-run rocket team. With limited engineering and coding experience, she found her passion at the intersection of avionics and computer science, culminating in a summer internship with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory last year. Now in her 3rd-year, Hannah will intern with SpaceX. The Brooke Owens Fellowship was founded in 2016 to honor the memory of D. Brooke Owens, a beloved industry pioneer, and accomplished pilot, who passed away at age 35 after battling cancer. Brooke Owens Fellowship Class of 2023 Space Enterprise at Berkeley Scott Shenker wins 2023 IEEE Computer Society Women of ENIAC Computer Pioneer Award CS Prof. Emeritus Scott Shenker has won the 2023 IEEE Computer Society Women of ENIAC Computer Pioneer Award. Established in 1981, the Computer Pioneer Award was created "to recognize and honor the vision of those people whose efforts resulted in the creation or expansion and continued vitality of the computer industry. The award is presented to outstanding individuals whose main contribution to the concepts and development of the computer field was made at least fifteen years earlier." Shenker was cited “for pioneering contributions to scheduling and management of packet-switched networks, impacting the theory and practice of communication networks.” Shenker won the IEEE Internet Award in 2006. He is an IEEE Fellow, an ACM Fellow, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences. IEEE Computer Society Women of ENIAC Computer Pioneer Award Yicheng Zhu wins NVIDIA Graduate Fellowship EECS Ph.D. student Yicheng Zhu (advisor: Robert Pilawa-Podgurski) has won an NVIDIA Graduate Fellowship. Zhu, whose research interests include enabling technologies for high-performance electric power conversion, is one of five recipients of the fellowship, which awards up to $50,000 to each recipient in support of research in areas such as accelerated computing, with fellows tackling projects in deep learning, robotics, computer vision, computer graphics, circuits, autonomous vehicles, and programming systems. Awardees are selected from a highly competitive, global applicant pool and will participate in a summer internship with NVIDIA. Spanning 22 years, NVIDIA has awarded $6 million to nearly 200 students to support graduate research. “Our fellowship recipients are among the most talented graduate students in the world,” said NVIDIA Chief Scientist Bill Dally. “They’re working on some of the most important problems in computer science, and we’re delighted to support their research.” Zhu’s research will explore extreme-performance hybrid switched-capacitor voltage regulation modules for ultra-high-power GPUs, which enables highly efficient and ultra-compact vertical power delivery with fast transient response. NVIDIA Awards $50,000 Research Fellowships to PhD Students Sophia Shao, Prabal Dutta, and Deepak Pathak win 2022 Okawa Foundation Research Grants EECS Assistant Prof. Sophia Shao, Associate Prof. Prabal Dutta, and alumnus Deepak Pathak have won 2022 Okawa Foundation Research Grants. The Okawa Foundation for Information and Telecommunications recognizes "studies and analyses in the fields of information and telecommunications." Shao, whose research interests are in computer architecture, was awarded for her work on building domain-specific systems at scale. Dutta, whose research interests include energy-efficient cyber-physical systems and applications of sensor networks and Internet-of-things technology, was awarded for his work on a new kind of radio architecture, called “backsplatter,” and combining it with conventional radios. Pathak, who is now an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, was recognized for his work “Towards Continually Improving Robots in the Wild.” They comprise three of the seven U.S. recipients who were awarded $10,000 grants this year. The Research Grant Recipients 2022
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/10311
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Eye in the Sky: Can F-35 Stealth Fighters Take Out ICBMs at Sea? June 13, 2022 Topic: Missile Defense Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: U.S. NavyMissile DefenseF-35Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air SystemICBMs The F-35 is already being developed to take intercontinental ballistic missiles head-on. by Kris Osborn F-35 Joint Strike Fighters may be able to bring new capabilities to missile defense by filling a needed niche or, at the very least, greatly supplementing existing land-based systems. Unlike many offensive nuclear deterrents, U.S. anti-ballistic missile defense systems are primarily land-based. For instance, a Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI) stationed at Ft. Greely, Alaska, would fire up into space during the middle phase of an intercontinental ballistic missile’s (ICBM) flight to intercept the threat. This presents a number of challenges, as GBIs need sensors or embedded technology to distinguish decoys from actual ICBMs. This is the reason behind the Pentagon’s emerging Next Generation Interceptor, a system designed to both detect and destroy multiple incoming missiles or decoys traveling through space. Multiple kill vehicles, as they sound, integrate a number of interceptors into one missile. This technology primarily aims to ensure that ICBM decoys cannot undermine American missile defense systems in the event of a nuclear strike. Regardless, identifying and knocking out large numbers of ICBMs is, by any estimation, a challenge. A single launch—even from a rogue state with a limited ICBM arsenal—presents a much more manageable threat for Ground-Based Interceptors. An incoming salvo of ICBMs, by contrast, is a totally different equation. This means that two crucial strategies may be needed to counter future ICBM threats. First, the U.S. nuclear triad will serve as a powerful deterrent capable of stopping a first strike from ever happening by ensuring a catastrophic retaliation. The second strategy features a range of advanced defensive measures, including satellites, lasers, multiple kill vehicles, or even F-35 fighters. While destroying ICBMs is quite different from tracking or intercepting short- or medium-range ballistic missiles, the F-35 is already being developed to take these threats head-on. The Navy has successfully tested the F-35 as an integrated aerial node for the Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air (NIFC-CA) architecture. The NIFC-CA architecture uses ship-based Aegis radars, an aerial sensor node, and a guided SM-6 missile to knock out attacking missiles from beyond the horizon. Since its inception, the NIFC-CA system has used an E-2 Hawkeye surveillance plane as the aerial node. Now, the system can turn to far more capable F-35 fighters as the aerial sensor. Kris Osborn is the Defense Editor for the National Interest. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army—Acquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Master's Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University. Image: Flickr/U.S. Air Force
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Irish Underwater Atlas Launched at Geoscience Event Following the publication of ‘The Real Map of Ireland’, showing a three-dimensional overview of Ireland’s seabed territory, earlier this year comes ‘The Real Atlas’ – a detailed compilation of stunning three-dimensional imagery featuring the submarine canyons, underwater mountains and abyssal plains that make up Ireland’s seabed territory, an area ten times that of our land mass. L to R: Dr, Paedar McArdle, Director GSI, Mr. Conor Lenihan, T.D. Minister of State at the Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources and Dr. Peter Heffernan, Chief Executive of the Marine Institute at the launch of the new atlas.Photo:Maxwell Photography This publication, Atlas of the Deep Water Seabed, Ireland was unveiled today (Wednesday 3rdth November) by Minister of State at the Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Mr. Conor Lenihan, T.D. at the Geoscience 2010 conference in Dublin Castle. It has been compiled by University College, Cork from data gathered as part of the Irish National Seabed Survey (INSS) and INFOMAR inshore seabed survey undertaken by the Geological Survey of Ireland (GSI) the Marine Institute and partners, Speaking at the opening of the event Minister Lenihan said, “This is the first such Atlas of its kind world-wide, reflecting our leading role in this field. It will be a valuable resource as we seek to utilise our vast ocean resources in the years ahead. As we develop ocean energy, offshore wind and further oil and gas prospecting, an accurate map of the deep seabed will be vital.” Minister Lenihan (second from left) with the authors of the atlas: Left to Right: Xavier Monteys (GSI), Andy Wheeler and Boris Dorschel (University College, Cork).Photo:Marine Institute The first day of the conference focused on what has been described by European Commissioner for Research, Innovation and Science, Maire Geoghegan-Quinn as one of the “grand challenges for the 21st Century” – the seas and oceans. It featured detailed papers on seabed mapping, deepwater coral reefs, deepwater remotely operated vehicles and a virtual computer simulation of Galway Bay. 3D image of the 300 km-long Gollum Channel system off the Porcupine Seabight, extending from the edge of the Seabight right down to the Porcupine Abyssal Plain.Image by B. Dorschel with kind permission from Springer Science+Business Media B.V. First day speakers from the Marine Institute included Fabio Sacchetti, who described the mapping of the Rockall Trough, and Tommy Furey who discussed the value of seabed mapping projects to a wide variety of marine industries. The first day’s proceedings also included a paper by Dr Colm Lordan of the Marine Institute’s Fisheries Science Services team on the value of the INFOMAR seabed survey to the Irish fishing industry, and an important paper by the Marine Institute’s Director of Strategic Planning and Development Services, Yvonne Shields entitled “Irish Marine research in the Bigger Picture.” Corals and crinoid starfish cling to the wall of the Whittard Canyon in 800 metres of water. (Photo: National Oceanography Centre, Southampton U.K.) The second day of the conference, will focus on more terrestrial themes includes papers on new findings in relation to Irish offshore basins from researchers at UCD. Full details of the event, including the programme of speakers, are available from: http://www.gsi.ie/Geoscience+Initiatives/Geoscience+2010+Conference.htm Atlas of the Deep Water Seabed, Ireland can be ordered directly from amazon.co.uk at: http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-
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Reconnaissance . Oren Ambarchi & Martin Ng "Reconnaissance" is the first duo release by Australian composers Oren Ambarchi and Martin Ng from Sydney - a trilogy of pieces based upon the fluid architectural modulation of harmonics and resonances. Recalling the landmark experiments of the Sonic Arts Union (Robert Ashley, David Behrman, Alvin Lucier and Gordon Mumma), Ambarchi and Ng create an enigmatic tapestry of pulsing, shimmering and shifting sound which represents a subtle and compelling realignment of Eastern and Western minimalist traditions. The unique full-colour art work accompanying this release was created by Viennese graphic designer Tina Frank (Mego). “There is an aura of nostalgia surrounding Oren Ambarchi and Martin Ng's ‘Reconnaissance’. The analog electronics, stripped-down aesthetics, and the lines and geometrical shapes in Tina Frank's artwork are taken right out of the early days of minimalism and sound art (especially Alvin Lucier). Ng's analog tones and Ambarchi's guitar are literally fused together. Only after the most attentive listen (and the willingness to take chances) will one be able to ascertain who produced what sounds. Harmonies and resonances are the heart of this cd. Tones delicately echo off one another, creating cold but pleasant soundscapes. (…) Ever heard a guitar that sounds like finger cymbals? This one is very peaceful, totally Zen. (…) Many artists with or without electronic backgrounds have tried similar things, but rarely have they created a piece that is an object of such plastic beauty, such raw postmodern aestheticism. Every musical gesture counts in this endeavor structured around the repetition of a very limited number of moves. ‘Reconnaissance’ (…) shows impeccable taste and an uncanny courage to do less. Recommended.” (François Couture, All Music Guide) Oren Ambarchi is a composer and multi-instrumentalist with longstanding interests in transcending conventional instrumental approaches. His work focuses mainly on the exploration of the guitar, "re-routing the instrument into a zone of alien abstraction where it’s no longer easily identifiable as itself. Instead, it’s a laboratory for extended sonic investigation". (The Wire, UK). Ambarchi's work on harmonics and resonance has led him to define serene spaces of fluid, shifting sound that is both fragile and extremely physical. He has performed and recorded with Martin Ng (Australia), Sunn 0)) (USA), Christian Fennesz (Austria), Otomo Yoshihide (Japan), Pimmon (Australia), Keiji Haino (Japan), John Zorn (USA), Rizili (Greece), Voice Crack (Switzerland), Sachiko M (Japan), Keith Rowe (UK), Phill Niblock (USA), Gunter Muller (Switzerland), Evan Parker (UK), Robbie Avenaim (Australia), Toshimaru Nakamura (Japan), Dave Grohl (USA), Damo Suzuki (Japan), Chris Townend (Australia) and many more. www.orenambarchi.com Martin Ng Martin Ng whose main instrument is the turntable is another outstanding character in Sydney's rich experimental music circuit. He released an album for the Mego label with Farmer's Manual's Hiaz Gmachl, recorded for Grob with Jim Denley and was part of 2002's "Turntable Hell" tour with among others Otomo Yoshihide and Martin Tetrault.
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Reliance signs shareholder agreement for Ruwais Chemicals Project Abu Dhabi Chemicals Derivatives Company RSC Ltd (TA’ZIZ) and Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), have signed the formal Shareholder Agreement for the TA’ZIZ EDC & PVC project. Reliance is India’s largest diversified conglomerate and a strategic partner with Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) and ADQ, an Abu Dhabi-based investment and holding company, in TA’ZIZ EDC & PVC, a world-scale chemicals development at the TA’ZIZ Industrial Chemicals Zone in Ruwais. The TA’ZIZ EDC & PVC joint venture will construct and operate a Chlor-Alkali, Ethylene Dichloride (EDC) and Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) production facility, with a total investment of over $2 billion (AED 7.34 billion). These chemicals will be produced in the UAE for the first time, unlocking new revenue streams and opportunities for local manufacturers to Make it in the Emirates. The formal shareholder agreement was signed by senior executives during a visit of Mukesh Ambani, Chairman and Managing Director of Reliance, to ADNOC headquarters. During the visit, Ambani met with Dr. Sultan bin Ahmed Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and Managing Director and Group CEO of ADNOC, and discussed opportunities for partnership and growth in Upstream, new energies and decarbonization across the hydrocarbon value chain. Dr. Al Jaber and Ambani exchanged a signed framework agreement between ADNOC and Reliance to explore collaboration in the exploration, development and production of conventional and unconventional resources in Abu Dhabi as well as in decarbonization of operations, including in carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration. Ambani was also briefed on the 28th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP28) which is set to be held in the UAE in 2023. TA’ZIZ EDC & PVC is moving forward in the detailed design phase in advance of the Final Investment Decision (FID) later this year. TA’ZIZ EDC & PVC project will strengthen the UAE’s domestic supply chains and support the UAE’s national strategy to bolster the industrial sector and propel a dynamic and robust economy over the next 50 years. TA’ZIZ complex is expected to benefit from the free trade agreement between India and the UAE, signed in February. TA’ZIZ will further open up trade and development opportunities between both nations. Mohammed Jameel Al Ramahi, CEO of Masdar, met with Ambani to discuss collaborations in renewable energy and green hydrogen, both of which are key initiatives for UAE and India. As described in the Hydrogen Leadership Roadmap, Ambani was briefed on the UAE’s ambitious plans to strengthen its clean hydrogen production capability and expand its renewable energy portfolio. It was announced in December 2021 that the UAE would establish a global clean energy powerhouse under the Masdar brand, joining the efforts of ADNOC, TAQA, Mubadala on green hydrogen and renewable energy. The chemicals set to be produced by the TA’ZIZ EDC & PVC joint venture with Reliance have a wide range of industrial applications, enabling local supply chains and meeting growing demand in key export markets. Chlor-Alkali enables the production of caustic soda, crucial to the alumina refining process. EDC is used in the production of PVC, which is used to manufacture a wide range of industrial and consumer products including pipes, windows fittings, cables, films and flooring. The production of Chlor-Alkali, EDC, and PVC will create opportunities for export to target markets in Southeast Asia and Africa, as well as providing local industry with a source of critical raw materials manufactured in the UAE for the first time, strengthening In-Country Value. Final Investment Decision for the chemical project is expected later this year and is subject to relevant regulatory approvals. SAIP Celebrates World Intellectual Property Day Tesla stock plummets 11 percent after Musk Twitter deal reports Nikki Haley vows to cut every dollar sent to enemies like Pakistan… Jane Fonda is working to preserve marine life Sadat family outraged by passport sale in Texas Global digital platforms dialogue at UNESCO attracts 4,300… US nominates former Mastercard CEO, Ajay Banga, to lead World Bank For sustainable development, the UN calls for $500 billion annually The Big Circle Line in Moscow Metro becomes the longest in the… South Korea will release its overarching defense strategy North Korea test fires cruise missiles
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Attorney General Joins States Supporting Ban on Large-Capacity Magazines July 23, 2019, 12:28 PM HST Hawaiʻi Attorney General Clare E. Connors today joined a group of 18 state Attorneys General to defend California’s ban on large-capacity magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition. In a friend-of-the-court brief filed in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Connors and her counterparts argue that “states have the right to enact reasonable firearm restrictions that protect public safety and reduce the prevalence and lethality of gun violence.” Connors said, “We are pursuing this action to protect Hawaiʻi’s citizens from large- scale gun violence and to support our existing laws banning large capacity magazines.” Hawaiʻi and partner states filed this friend-of-the-court brief in Duncan v. Becerra, a lawsuit challenging California’s prohibition on large-capacity magazines. The lawsuit was filed by a group of gun owners and the California Rifle & Pistol Association, a state affiliate of the National Rifle Association, after the passage of California’s Proposition 63. Since 2000, the State of California has prohibited the manufacture, importation, and sale of large-capacity magazines. In 2016, both the California legislature and the California electorate through Proposition 63 banned the possession of large-capacity magazines that hold more than ten rounds of ammunition, in order to improve enforcement efforts and to further stem the proliferation of large-capacity magazines in the State. Nine other states (including Hawaiʻi), and the District of Columbia have also enacted laws banning large-capacity magazines. The constitutionality of those laws have been unanimously upheld by federal courts of appeals. In April 2019, a lower court struck down California’s prohibition on large-capacity magazines in total. California has appealed the ruling to the Ninth Circuit and the ruling is currently stayed. In this amicus brief, the states collectively argue that a ban on large-capacity magazines is a reasonable restriction that California has the right to adopt because: The Second Amendment does not prevent states from enacting common- sense gun safety measures:The brief explains that states are entitled to adopt reasonable restrictions on firearms to address the unique conditions within their borders and protect public safety. Restricting access to large-capacity magazines is a reasonable restriction because it would reduce firearm injuries and deaths while leaving many other options open for individuals who wish to exercise the core Second Amendment right to self-defense. States have a responsibility to prevent gun violence and protect public safety: The brief notes that states have primary responsibility for ensuring public safety. This includes a duty to reduce the likelihood that their citizens will fall victim to preventable firearm violence, and to minimize fatalities and injuries when that violence does occur. The brief notes that deciding how best to protect the safety of state residents is a question better suited to legislatures than courts. Regulating large-capacity magazines protects the public: The brief cites evidence that large-capacity magazines are especially attractive to mass shooters and criminals, posing increased risks to innocent civilians and law enforcement. At the same time, there is no proof that large-capacity magazines are necessary—or even commonly used—for self-defense. District of Columbia Attorney General Karl A. Racine is leading today’s friend-of-the- court brief and is joined by Attorneys General from Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaiʻi, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Michigan, Minnesota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington. Cook III Hawaiʻi Attorney General Files Brief Supporting… September 24, 2020 Hawai‘i Attorney General Urges FDA to Ban Menthol Cigarettes January 25, 2021 Hawai‘i Attorney General Joins the Fight Against… September 2, 2020 Hawaiʻi Attorney General Joins Coalition Defending… January 21, 2021 Hawaiʻi Attorney General Joins Coalition Urging… May 10, 2021 Attorney General Joins Coalition Urging Support for… June 3, 2021 1Maui Hotels And Restaurants Dominate Usa Todays 10 Best Lists 2Maui Police Seek Man Wanted For Alleged Burglary And Theft 3Park Maui To Hold Lahaina Open House March 25 4Chopped Champion Chef Mckenna Shea Of Maui Wins With Abalone On Food Network 5Notice Of Water Shutdown Affecting Pukalani On March 16 2023 6Bicyclist Suffers Critical Life Threatening Injuries In Honoapiʻilani Crash On Maui
2023-14/0011/en_head.json.gz/12288
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