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Diode Ventures Announces Financial Close of its First Greenfield Utility-Scale Solar Photovoltaic Project
Publish date: Monday June 14th, 2021 | Overland Park, Kansas
Once constructed, Grizzly Ridge solar installation will help serve increasing demand for renewable energy in Texas
To help address growing demand for solar energy generation in the southwestern U.S., Diode Ventures (Diode), a Black & Veatch company that develops global infrastructure projects, announced today that has reached financial close on the Grizzly Ridge Solar Project, a nearly 140-megawatt (MW) utility-scale solar field located in Hamilton County, Texas. The project was co-developed with RKB Energy, LLC (RKB).
In Texas, favorable economics, regulatory support and a streamlined permitting process are driving significant growth in solar energy development; analysts estimate that installed capacity will reach 1.6 gigawatts (GW) of solar across the state by 2022. Once complete, Grizzly Ridge, a utility-scale solar field located outside Fort Worth, Texas, will provide 137.7 MW dc/100 MW ac to the ERCOT North Zone, a growing economy and power market where there is high demand for all forms of electricity.
“Grizzly Ridge is one of the first utility-scale solar projects that Diode developed from the ground up, marking a significant milestone for the company when it comes to pure greenfield development projects,” said Brad Hardin, president of Diode. “In Texas, we are seeing more resilient infrastructure development on the horizon to support large-scale energy generation from both renewable and non-renewable sources.”
Diode partnered with RKB – a greenfield, utility-scale solar development company that currently focuses on the West and Southwestern regions of the U.S. – to assist with co-development activities of the project, from origination to sale.
“Diode Ventures has been an excellent partner in the Grizzly Ridge Solar project,” said Robert Schleider, president of RKB. “We are excited to see this project enter the build phase of its life cycle and believe it is a great project for Hamilton County and the State of Texas.”
The project is construction-ready, with an executed interconnection agreement with Brazos Electric Cooperative, the transmission service provider. The area will also undergo an upgrade from 69 kilovolts (kV) to 138 kV, reflecting this significant growth in demand. Diode is currently in discussions to add an on-site battery energy storage system to the project, reinforcing its reliability and resilience.
“The Grizzly Ridge Solar Project is an exciting development in a region of the country that continues to see significant demand growth,” said Paul Ksiazek, senior project director with Diode. “The environmental, economic and local tax benefits are noteworthy, and the project will benefit the ERCOT energy portfolio.”
In September 2020, Diode announced that it had sold a 240-MW ac/315 MW dc solar PV project under development in Fort Bend County, Texas, to renewable energy leader ACCIONA.
The company recently announced that it was partnering with JLC Infrastructure (JLC), an infrastructure investor and asset management firm, to advance the development of a new dark fiber network in northern Virginia.
About Diode Ventures
Diode Ventures is a developer of energy and data infrastructure, serving the commercial, industrial and technology sectors. With our partners, we offer our clients development services including site selection, capital assembly, project financing, EPC and O&M. Diode Ventures is a wholly owned subsidiary of Black & Veatch with a global presence in more than 100 countries. To learn more, visit www.diodeventures.com.
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www.kinga-jazz.com
1998 sang with ‘The Brian Downey Big Band’ from Ottawa at the Tulip Festival.
Performed with contemporary icons like Renee Rosnes, Guido Basso, and the legendary Don Thompson. Lend vocals to Don Thompson and his own jazz ensemble, as well as Denny Christianson’s Big Band at Humber College.
2006 included a top 100 finish at Canadian Idol for the second year in a row, a 2 song duet with legendary Jeff Healey.
2014 Collaboration with Bill King resulting a full album production titled "Guess Who I Saw Today".
2016 Signed with Arena Music Promotion to release "Guess Who I Saw Today".
2016 Charted as #1 on CFBX 92.5 FM 350
KINGA BIOGRAPHY
Jazz and pop chanteuse Kinga was born in Poland, then moved with her family to Amsterdam before settling in Ottawa, Ontario. While being baptized at four months of age, she screamed out, and the attending priest predicted that Kinga would become a singer. Her parents gifted Kinga with appreciation for music, including and especially jazz, at an early age: Her father played in a jazz cabaret while her mother constantly played vocal pop and jazz records by The Platters, Tony Bennett, Frank Sinatra and the like.
By age thirteen, Kinga had studied classical piano and voice theory, and began immersing herself classical and contemporary music, both jazz and pop. She soon began performing at recitals and competitions, and helped assemble and lead a jazz quartet (called West Berlin) that played in and around Ottawa until all its members graduated from high school. She also discovered and began learning the repertoires of many great jazz vocalists, including Diana Krall, Dianne Reeves, Sarah Vaughan, Natalie Cole, and especially Ella Fitzgerald.
Kinga moved on to Humber College, studying voice and theory under Trish Colter, Lisa Martinelli, and Lisa Sullivan; she also served as instructor for voice, piano, theory, ear training and improvisation to child and adult students. “The most important experiences during my time at Humber College were working alongside very talented and reputable musicians, learning different aspects of the jazz world, and lastly, winning the Duke Ellington Honoree award in my final year there,” Kinga recalls.
Kinga has subsequently spread her vocal talents – as smooth, heady and sophisticated as a well-matured brandy – throughout Canada: She has sung the American and Canadian national anthems for the Toronto Blue Jays, Toronto Maple Leafs (in partial French, for a sold-out contest against the Montreal Canadians), the Toronto Raptors, and internationally-broadcast Hockey Night in Canada. Kinga has performed with pianist Renee Rosnes, flugelhornist Guido Basso, and Don Thompson’s jazz ensemble, and appeared at the National Jazz Awards, the Royal Ontario Museum, Canada’s Walk of Fame, and on CTV and CBC Radio.
Guess Who I Saw Today brings all Kinga’s influences and experiences full circle. Knowing that a great singer’s best friend is a great song, her debut release features new interpretations of Ellington’s classic “Mood Indigo” and such familiar tunes as “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” and “This Bitter Earth.” Its title track was first recorded by Nancy Wilson. Songs by such talented singer-songwriters as Randy Newman (“I Think It’s Going to Rain Today”), Bill Withers (“Ain’t No Sunshine”) and Mose Allison (“What’s With You” and “Swingin’ Machine”) round out the set.
Guess Who I Saw Today was arranged and produced by pianist Bill King. “I could tell during our first practice sessions, the voice fit comfortably around the rich melodies and could deliver a heartfelt interpretation of the lyrics,” producer King recalls.
For Kinga, the most important thing about this debut is her emotional connection to each track. Each song reflects a time or point in her life where she experienced an emotional roller coaster – whether it was love, happiness, heartache, anger or frustration – and these experiences speak to and through each song on Guess Who I Saw Today.
© 2016 by KINGA
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Grant Enfinger Wins NASCAR Hall Of Fame 200 NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Playoff Race At Martinsville Speedway
by Press Release November 1, 2020 0 comments
RIDGEWAY, Va. – The intensity was raised like only a penultimate playoff race at Martinsville Speedway can provide as Grant Enfinger, driver of the No. 98 for ThorSport Racing, grabbed his spot in the Championship 4 of the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series with a hard-fought victory in the NASCAR Hall of Fame 200 at Martinsville Speedway.
Enfinger earned his win surviving two restarts in a frantic final 10 laps of the NASCAR Hall of Fame 200, with his No. 98 Ford crossing under the checkered flag with a .803-second margin of victory. He led 49 of the 200 laps in the playoff race. It was his first win at historic Martinsville and his sixth in Gander Trucks competition. It his Enfinger’s fourth win of the Gander Truck season, and now he will race for a championship.
“We knew we were going to have to take the gloves off and fight for this one,” said Enfinger. “We came in here with our back against the wall.”
Pole-starter Sheldon Creed, driver of the No. 2 for GMS Racing, and teammate Brett Moffitt, driver of the No. 23, had already clinched Championship 4 berths with wins earlier in the Playoffs’ Round of 8. Enfinger and Zane Smith, driver of the No. 21 for GMS Racing, claimed the remaining two berths in Friday night’s NASCAR Hall of Fame 200.
“My first trip to Martinsville was everything I expected and more,” said Smith. “I had to play it safe all night. My team never gave up and that’s why we’re here.”
With eight laps remaining, three of the front-running trucks spun in a big chain-reaction crash that involved Ben Rhodes, Raphael Lessard and sidelined Moffitt. Rhodes was able to continue and rejoined the field in second place right behind his teammate Enfinger.
The field was then set for the final two-lap sprint to the finish. Rhodes had to line up directly in front of Christian Eckes with his championship hopes on the line – one week after the two had an incident at Texas Motor Speedway followed by post-race confrontation in the garage. Rhodes and Eckes had contact, but Rhodes was just not able to catch and pass Enfinger, who led 49 laps overall.
Rhodes held onto second in his Thorsport No. 99 Ford, with Smith in third, Eckes fourth and Matt Crafton completing the top five. Reigning series champion Crafton and Rhodes each failed to advance to the Championship 4.
Hill, the series’ regular-season champion, entered the race with a 27-point cushion above the postseason cutline, but reported a faltering engine on his No. 16 for Hattori Racing Enterprises midway through the second stage. Hill’s truck was sidelined after completing 117 laps, leaving him with a 35th-place finish and out of the the playoffs. Tyler Ankrum was also eliminated from title contention.
Creed, Moffitt, Enfinger and Smith will race for the Gander Trucks championship in the Lucas Oil 150 series finale at Phoenix Raceway on Friday at 8:00 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
2020 NASCAR Playoff Race Weekend
Martinsville will host the penultimate NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series races for the first time on Oct. 31-Nov. 1. The Xfinity 500 will set the field for the NASCAR Cup Series Championship on Sunday, Nov. 1 at 2:00 p.m. ET. The Draft Top 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff race will compete on Saturday, Oct. 31 at 3:30 p.m. ET.
The Cup and Xfinity Series races at Martinsville will be televised nationally on NBC. The races will also air on MRN and its network of nationwide affiliates, in addition to SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
Stay connected to Martinsville Speedway on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and by downloading the Martinsville mobile app for Apple or Android.
About Martinsville Speedway
Founded by H. Clay Earles in 1947, Martinsville Speedway is the only NASCAR track to host NASCAR Cup Series races every year since its inception in 1949. At .526 miles in length, the track annually hosts two NASCAR race weekends featuring the NASCAR Cup Series, along with NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series races in the fall. Martinsville Speedway also annually hosts the ValleyStar Credit Union 300, the nation’s biggest, richest and most prestigious NASCAR Late Model Stock Car race. For more information about Martinsville Speedway, visit martinsvillespeedway.com.
About NASCAR
The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR consists of three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series™), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour), one local grassroots series and three international series. The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, Americrown Service and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).
About the NASCAR Hall of Fame
Located in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, the NASCAR Hall of Fame is an interactive, entertainment attraction honoring the history and heritage of NASCAR. The high-tech venue, designed to educate and entertain race fans and non-fans alike, includes artifacts, hands-on exhibits, a 278-person state-of-the-art theater, Hall of Honor, Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant, NASCAR Hall of Fame Gear Shop and NASCAR Productions-operated broadcast studio. Opened on May 11, 2010, the NASCAR Hall of Fame is owned by the City of Charlotte, licensed by NASCAR and operated by the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority. For more information, visit nascarhall.com.
Source: Martinsville Speedway
Photo Credit: Brian Lawdermilk/Getty Images
Grant Enfinger Martinsville Speedway NASCAR NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series NASCAR Hall of Fame 200 ThorSport Racing Zane Smith
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Enviros Label California’s Cap-And-Trade Plan As ‘Institutional Racism’
Michael Bastasch DCNF Managing Editor
Some environmentalists have labeled California’s new law extending its cap-and-trade system as “institutional racism” that will end up killing thousands of “people of color.”
Activists with Friends of the Earth did not support Gov. Jerry Brown’s signing of legislation to extend the state’s cap-and-trade system until 2030. Major environmental groups supported the bill, but Friends of the Earth (FOE) said it didn’t go far enough.
“The cap-and-trade bill, which the California legislature passed Monday night, blocks the ability of local air quality agencies from establishing rules limiting greenhouse gases,” FOE vice president Michelle Chan wrote Tuesday evening.
“The bill also includes a host of other concessions to polluters, including giving away tens of billions of dollars worth of free carbon emissions allowances,” Chan wrote, “and allowing polluters to buy carbon offsets instead of actually reducing emissions.”
FOE tweeted their frustration Wednesday morning. Brown signed the legislation Tuesday over objections from Republicans and even some Democrats that it would raise electricity prices.
CA cap-and-trade extension is institutional racism that will kill 3K people, predominately people of color. https://t.co/h5Km85ztBD
— Friends of the Earth (@foe_us) July 26, 2017
The cap-and-trade system began operating in 2012. Large industrial facilities are required to buy state permits in order to emit carbon dioxide. For years, Democrats favored this method as a way to fight global warming.
California’s cap-and-trade system survived recent legal challenges and gained a surge of renewed support from Democrats after President Donald Trump announced he would withdraw from the Paris climate accord.
FOE, however, wanted California to allow local air regulators to impose harsher standards on oil refineries, which the cap-and-trade bill didn’t do. The environmental group claims the failure to do this will end up killing thousands of minorities.
“The 3,000 people that analysis showed would die prematurely if the refinery cap was not put in place,” Chan wrote. “This is institutional racism.”
So, will thousands of people die because of the refinery carve out in California’s cap-and-trade program? It’s not likely.
On the other hand, Californians’ electricity and gas bills will likely increase because of cap-and-trade. Businesses spent $1 billion on emissions permits in 2015.
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Tags : california energy friends of the earth jerry brown
Michael Bastasch
Follow Michael on Twitter
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Iran's Guards Detain 10 U.S. Sailors - ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive
Iran’s Guards Detain 10 U.S. Sailors
by Asharq Al-Awsat English | Jan 13, 2016 | Latest News, Middle East |
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) detained 10 American sailors after a “broken navigation system” led them into Iranian waters, according to Iran’s state-run Press TV. Yet, U.S. officials have not confirmed the reason behind two American naval ships entering Iranian waters.
The U.S. sailors, seized in a Farsi island, are being interrogated to determine whether they “entered Iranian waters intentionally on an intelligence mission,” the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps said.
The sailors did not show resistance and will be released “as soon as the IRGC receives proper orders,” IRGC Navy Commander Admiral Ali Fadavi said on Iranian TV.
According to officials, the vessels were sailing in the Persian Gulf en route from Kuwait to Bahrain.
A senior defense official said no distress call was made by the ships.
This incident came days ahead of the expected implementation of a landmark nuclear accord between Iran and world powers to freeze Tehran’s nuclear program.
The lifting of sanctions in return for a halting of Tehran’s nuclear program is expected to benefit the IRGC, which is largely responsible for Iran’s nuclear research.
However, this incident could impede the pending implementation.
U.S. opponents of the nuclear deal considered the capture of the Navy sailors to as another of provocation by Tehran. Other incidents include ballistic missile tests that the United Nations charged violated a Security Council resolution.
“This kind of openly hostile action is not surprising,” Arkansas Republican Sen. Tom Cotton told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer. “It’s exactly what I and so many others predicted when President Obama was negotiating the nuclear deal with Iran — that it would embolden their aggression towards the United States and our allies in the region.”
Asharq Al-Awsat English
Asharq Al-Awsat is the world’s premier pan-Arab daily newspaper, printed simultaneously each day on four continents in 14 cities. Launched in London in 1978, Asharq Al-Awsat has established itself as the decisive publication on pan-Arab and international affairs, offering its readers in-depth analysis and exclusive editorials, as well as the most comprehensive coverage of the entire Arab world.
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Pet Food Contaminated with Toxic PFAS Chemicals from Packaging
FIREPAW November 4, 2022 December 15, 2022 Animal Health and Well-Being, Contaminated Pet Food and Treats
The family pet is likely being exposed to toxic “forever” chemicals every day. A recent analysis conducted by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) examined 11 bags of pet food and found that all of them contained toxic PFAS* chemicals, including several at extremely high levels. The chemicals are likely used in pet food bags to make them repel grease.
Researchers tested the packaging of both cat food and dog food and measured the amount of compounds that indicate PFAS chemicals are present.
For cats, the highest levels were detected in the Meow Mix Tender Centers salmon and chicken flavors dry cat food, at more than 600 parts per million (ppm). Purina Cat Chow Complete chicken showed over 350 ppm, while Blue Buffalo, Iams and Rachael Ray Nutrish all had levels of less than 100 ppm.
For dogs, Kibbles ’n Bits bacon and steak flavor registered just under 600 ppm, followed by Blue Buffalo’s Life Protection Formula chicken and brown rice recipe at 150 ppm. Other dog foods made by Purina, Iams and Pedigree had much lower amounts. While some of the PFAS levels are considered by public health advocates to be high, no legal framework to measure it exists. (source)
Despite pressure from public health advocates, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has refused to ban the use of PFAS in food packaging.
*PFAS chemicals (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are toxic to humans, animals and the environment. They are comprised of approximately 12,000 compounds. PFAS chemicals have been mass produced since the 1950s, and used in products such as firefighting foams, nonstick pans and personal care items. They are now ubiquitous in the U.S., appearing in many consumer and industrial products including household products (like carpeting, curtains, furniture upholstery, waterproof and stain-resistant flooring, etc.), cooking supplies (including cooking utensils and bake ware), clothing, personal care products (like cosmetics, including waterproof mascara) and even food (PFAS appears in processed food packaging for humans and pets) and public drinking water (tap water) that affects an estimated 2 million Americans. PFAS chemicals are usually found in products labeled “stain-proof” and “waterproof”. PFAS chemicals also appear in fire-fighting foam and other industrial products used at airports and military bases across the country, where the chemicals have leached into the groundwater. PFAS chemicals are known as “forever chemicals” because they do not readily break down in the environment or human body. PFAS chemicals have been linked in scientific and medical studies to a variety of serious health conditions including cancer (including testicular cancers), kidney disease, heart disease, thyroid problems, reproductive problems and liver problems. Some newer PFAS have been found to accumulate in organs, and in some cases, science simply cannot detect them in blood. PFAS chemicals have been detected in the blood of more than 98% of Americans. (source)
Animal Welfare, Pet Food Contaminated with PFAS Chemicals
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The Clues Within November Jobs Report - December 08, 2014
Markets ended the first week of December with a bang, rallying for the seventh straight week, though the Nasdaq gave in to selling pressure and closed slightly down. Investors used an upbeat November jobs report as an excuse to rally, giving the Dow another record close for the year. For the week, the S&P 500 added 0.38%, the Dow grew 0.73%, but the Nasdaq fell 0.23%.[1]
The November jobs report showed that the economy gained 321,000 new jobs last month, though the unemployment rate held steady at 5.8%. Job growth was widespread, showing improvement in several sectors of the economy.[2]
Another report supported the view that the labor market is making great strides. Americans quit their jobs in greater numbers in September than in any period since April 2008. Voluntary separations are a sign of increased dynamism in the labor market as workers quit to take advantage of better opportunities. Young employees are among the most aggressive job-switchers; many that were forced to take low-paying jobs early in the recovery are taking better positions. Employers, who have long held the upper hand, are scrambling to keep key workers, and recruitment for many in-demand areas is up.[3]
What does this mean for the economy? Hopefully, higher incomes, increased upward mobility, and higher consumer spending. We may also see increased demand in the housing market as household formation among young Americans - which dropped precipitously during the recession - picks up.[4]
Black Friday numbers came in last week and showed that spending over the Thanksgiving weekend unexpectedly dropped about 12% over last year.[5] While the results are quite puzzling, given the general improvement in consumer fundamentals, research shows that Black Friday trends are not strongly correlated with overall holiday season shopping.[6] Though the early numbers are a bit of a disappointment, there's still room for a solid retail season.
ECONOMIC CALENDAR:
Tuesday: JOLTS
Wednesday: EIA Petroleum Status Report, Treasury Budget
Thursday: Jobless Claims, Retail Sales, Import and Export Prices, Business Inventories
Friday: PPI-FD, Consumer Sentiment
Notes: All index returns exclude reinvested dividends, and the 5-year and 10-year returns are annualized. Sources: Yahoo! Finance and Treasury.gov. International performance is represented by the MSCI EAFE Index. Corporate bond performance is represented by the DJCBP. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Indices are unmanaged and cannot be invested into directly.
HEADLINES:
Gas prices fall below $2.00/gallon. Pump prices for regular unleaded plummeted across the nation, dropping below $2.00/gallon in Oklahoma. With prices this low, the spread between area prices is growing; Hawaiians have the highest average prices at $3.883.[7]
Factory orders fall for third straight month. New orders for factory goods fell in October for the third month in a row, indicating that manufacturing activity may have slowed down in the fourth quarter.[8]
Federal Reserve Beige Book report optimistic about economy. The Fed's assessment of economic conditions across the country in October and November shows important gains in business conditions and employment, though the housing market remains an area of concern.[9]
Black Friday deal making drives auto sales. U.S. sales of light vehicles grew 5% year-over-year in November, driven by attractive deals, lower gas prices, and increasing wages. Though the November volume may chip away at December sales, the fundamentals are in place for a solid quarter for automakers.[10]
These are the views of Platinum Advisor Marketing Strategies, LLC, and not necessarily those of the named representative, Broker dealer or Investment Advisor, and should not be construed as investment advice. Neither the named representative nor the named Broker dealer or Investment Advisor gives tax or legal advice. All information is believed to be from reliable sources; however, we make no representation as to its completeness or accuracy. Please consult your financial advisor for further information.
Investing involves risk including the potential loss of principal. No investment strategy can guarantee a profit or protect against loss in periods of declining values.
Diversification does not guarantee profit nor is it guaranteed to protect assets.
The Standard & Poor's 500 (S&P 500) is an unmanaged group of securities considered to be representative of the stock market in general.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted average of 30 significant stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ. The DJIA was invented by Charles Dow back in 1896.
The Nasdaq Composite is an index of the common stocks and similar securities listed on the NASDAQ stock market and is considered a broad indicator of the performance of stocks of technology companies and growth companies.
The MSCI EAFE Index was created by Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) that serves as a benchmark of the performance in major international equity markets as represented by 21 major MSCI indexes from Europe, Australia and Southeast Asia.
The Dow Jones Corporate Bond Index is a 96-bond index designed to represent the market performance, on a total-return basis, of investment-grade bonds issued by leading U.S. companies. Bonds are equally weighted by maturity cell, industry sector, and the overall index.
The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices are the leading measures of U.S. residential real estate prices, tracking changes in the value of residential real estate. The index is made up of measures of real estate prices in 20 cities and weighted to produce the index.
The 10-year Treasury Note represents debt owed by the United States Treasury to the public. Since the U.S. Government is seen as a risk-free borrower, investors use the 10-year Treasury Note as a benchmark for the long-term bond market.
Google Finance is the source for any reference to the performance of an index between two specific periods.
Opinions expressed are subject to change without notice and are not intended as investment advice or to predict future performance.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
You cannot invest directly in an index.
Consult your financial professional before making any investment decision.
Fixed income investments are subject to various risks including changes in interest rates, credit quality, inflation risk, market valuations, prepayments, corporate events, tax ramifications and other factors.
http://goo.gl/9IOen5
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/
https://nrf.com/media/press-releases/
http://www.businessinsider.com/
http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/156146/
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Jerry Dammers Net Worth 2023 Update: Bio, Age, Height, Weight
1 Jerry Dammers Net Worth
Jerry Dammers Net Worth
How rich is Jerry Dammers? For this question we spent 30 hours on research (Wikipedia, Youtube, we read books in libraries, etc) to review the post.
The main source of income: Musicians
Jerry Dammers information Birth date: May 22, 1955 Birth place: Ootacamund, Tamil Nadu, India Profession:Soundtrack, Composer
:How tall is Jerry Dammers – 1,79m.
How much weight is Jerry Dammers – 74kg
Jeremy David Hounsell Jerry Dammers, (born 22 May 1955) is a British musician who is a founder, keyboard player and primary songwriter of the Coventry, England based ska revival band The Specials, The Special A.K.A. and The Spatial AKA Orchestra.
Biography,Dammers was born in Ootacamund, Tamil Nadu, South India, the son of Horace Dammers who was later Dean of Bristol Cathedral from 1973 to 1987. Jerry Dammers attended King Henry VIII School, Coventry.Dammers was a Mod in the 1960s, then became a hippie, before becoming a skinhead. He had been a member of The Cissy Stone Soul Band, and studied art at Coventrys Lanchester Polytechnic (now Coventry University), where he met Horace Panter.He founded 2 Tone Records, which helped develop the 1970s/1980s ska revival. He became an anti-apartheid campaigner, helping to create Artists Against Apartheid in the U.S., and writing the song Free Nelson Mandela about the jailed African National Congress leader in South Africa. In 1985, in the wake of the Band Aid single, he organised the recording and release of the Starvation single, a version of The Pioneers 1969 song, in aid of famine relief in Africa, featuring members of The Special AKA, UB40, Madness, The Pioneers, and The Beat. In early 1986, he took part in the Red Wedge tour that also featured The Style Council, The Communards, Junior Giscombe, Lorna Gee and other special guests. He also introduced Simple Minds to producer Tony Hollingsworth and they became the first major act to agree to perform at Hollingsworths Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute concert, which was broadcast worldwide from Londons Wembley Stadium, on 11 June 1988. That same year, he briefly played with the re-formed Madness on their single I Pronounce You and its attendant album, The Madness.In October 2000 Dammers received Q Magazines Q Merit Award at Londons Park Lane Hotel.Dammers still regularly DJs in English nightclubs, as well as performing with his band, The Spatial AKA Orchestra, playing his own compositions and tributes to Sun Ra and other experimental jazz artists. The band features established jazz musicians Zoe Rahman, Larry Stabbins and Denys Baptiste. They perform in elaborate Ancient Egyptian and outer space-themed costumes, and share the stage with bizarre props such as model alien heads and mummy Sarcophagi. Renowned trombonist Rico Rodriguez also featured in a number of shows.In November 2006, Dammers was awarded an honorary degree from Coventry University, celebrating by DJing at the launch party of the Coventry branch of the Love Music Hate Racism organisation. In the same month, he attended a private viewing of a Harry Pye curated art exhibition in east London that featured paintings of bands and singers that had once been championed by the late BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel. Dammers read out a four-page poem, in which he thanked Peel for helping his own band, and for supporting black musicians.Carl Barat of The Libertines included a Dammers composition, Too Much Too Young, on his personal compilation album Under The Influence. Pete Doherty, former member of The Libertines, namechecked What I Like Most About You is Your Girlfriend on Down in Albion, the first Babyshambles album. The song Merry Go Round contains the lyrics He says, What I like most about you, Pete/Is your girlfriend and your shoes. Those who have recorded a song written by Dammers include Tricky (Ghost Town), The Prodigy (Ghost Town) and Elvis Costello (What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend).Dammers has produced singles for Robert Wyatt, The Untouchables, UB40 and Junior Delgado. He contributed Riot City to the soundtrack of the Julien Temple film, Absolute Beginners, and Brightlights to the compilation album Jamming: A New Optimism.In April 2014, Dammers received the South African Companions of OR Tambo order in silver award, a national honour, for his role in the anti-apartheid movement. It feels fantastic. It is a real honour to be considered for this, especially when I compare what little I did to the work of those who sacrificed their lives, I am humbled, he said. In November 2015 he received an honorary doctorate from Sheffield Hallam University
Wikipedia Source: Jerry Dammers
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Four of Pentacles
Today is Day 49 of 2023
George, Duke of Clarence, is drowned, according to tradition, by Richard III in a vat of Malmsey wine in the Tower of London.
Vincent Price gave the definitive portrait of this event as the Duke of Clarence in the 1939 movie The Tower of London (1939).
Queen of England and Ireland Mary I born in Greenwich, England.
Stained glass artist Louis Comfort Tiffany born in New York City.
Swedish artist and sculpture Anders Zorn born in Mora, Sweden.
Jefferson Davis was inaugurated president of the Southern Confederacy in Montgomery, Alabama.
Author Nikos Kazantzakis (Zorba the Greek) born in Heraklion, Crete.
Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is published for the first time in the United States.
It had previously been published in Great Britain in December of 1884.
Classical guitarist Andres Segovia born Linares, Spain.
Writer Wallace Stegner (Angle of Repose) born in Lake Mills, Iowa.
Character actor Jack Palance (Shane) born in Lattimer Mines, Pennsylvania.
Poet Jack Gilbert born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Experimental filmmaker, Zine creator, Jazz fiend, Beat progenitor and collage artist Wallace Berman born in Staten Island, New York.
His image appears on the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover. He is two rows up next to Tony Curtis.
Poet A. R. Ammons born in Whiteville, North Carolina.
Author, historian and graphic artist Len Deighton (The IMPCRESS File) born in London.
Cartoonist Gahan Wilson born in Evanston, Illinois.
Novelist Toni Morrison (Song Of Solomon) born Lorain, Ohio.
Cartoonist Johnny Hart (B.C.) born in Endicott, New York.
Film director Milos Forman (Amadeus) born in Cáslav ,Czechoslovakia.
Artist Yoko Ono born Tokyo, Japan.
The first 3D film Bwana Devil opened.
VIII Winter Olympics open in Squaw Valley, California.
Experimental filmmaker, Zine creator, Jazz fiend, Beat progenitor and collage artist Wallace Berman dies in car accident caused by a drunk driver.
He had told his mother as a child he would die on his 50th birthday which was today in 1976.
Square One Ranch
Reef Squid taken at the Monterey Bay Aquarium on 20150216.
Click on the photo for a larger view.
Photo available Here
This Day at the New Yorker
“Gluttony kills more than the sword.” ~ German Proverbs
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Deen, W. M., Introduction to Chemical Engineering Fluid Mechanics.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2016.
Designed for single-semester undergraduate courses in fluid mechanics for chemical engineers, this textbook illustrates the fundamental concepts and analytical strategies in a rigorous and systematic, yet mathematically accessible manner. It guides readers through the use of dimensional analysis and order-of-magnitude estimation for identifying which forces are important in different settings, and explains friction factors for pipes and other conduits, terminal velocities of particles, drops, and bubbles, and flow in porous media, packed beds, and fluidized beds. It also describes the physical and mathematical distinctions among major flow regimes, including unidirectional flow, the lubrication approximation, creeping flow, pseudosteady flow, irrotational flow, laminar boundary layers, turbulent shear flow, and compressible flow.
Including numerous worked examples and end-of-chapter problems to illustrate key concepts, and with a full solutions manual for instructors available at www.cambridge.org/deen, it is the ideal text for students looking to master the fundamentals of the subject.
Deen, W. M., Analysis of Transport Phenomena, 2nd ed.
Oxford University Press, New York, 2012
This textbook, published originally in 1998, was revised extensively in 2012. Intended for use in graduate-level courses for chemical engineers, it provides a unified treatment of momentum, heat and mass transfer, emphasizing concepts and analytical techniques that apply to all of these transport processes. The first few chapters establish the tools for later analyses, while also covering heat and mass transfer in stationary media. The similarities among the "molecular" or "diffusive" transport mechanisms--heat conduction, diffusion of chemical species, and viscous transfer of momentum--are highlighted. Conservation equations for scalar quantities are derived first in general form, and then used to obtain the governing equations for total mass, energy, and chemical species. Scaling and order-of-magnitude concepts that are crucial in modeling are also introduced. Certain key methods for solving the differential equations in transport problems, including similarity, perturbation, and eigenfunction expansion techniques, are described using conduction and diffusion problems as examples.
Following are several chapters devoted to fluid mechanics, beginning with fundamental equations for momentum transfer and then discussing unidirectional flow, nearly unidirectional (lubrication) flow, and laminar boundary layer flow. Forced-convection heat and mass transfer in laminar flow, free convection, and turbulence are then covered. A chapter on multicomponent energy and mass transfer introduces the variety of effects that occur when species and energy fluxes are coupled. A new chapter is devoted to transport in electrolyte solutions, including both macroscopic (electroneutral) systems and microscopic ones in which a net charge concentration gives rise to electrokinetic phenomena. The first appendix summarizes vector and tensor operations and relations involving various coordinate systems. A second appendix, which is new, provides a concise review of solution methods for ordinary differential equations and of the properties of special functions that arise frequently in transport problems.
An Instructor's Resource CD, available to adopters of the text, includes all figures and solutions to all end-of-chapter problems. It may be obtained by contacting Oxford University Press in New York. A list of errata is updated periodically on this site. See: Errata Transport.
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HomeDaily Current AffairsCurrent Affairs- 17th January 2023
Current Affairs 2023 by Crack Adda
Daily Current Affairs: 17th January 2023. Today’s Current Affairs covers the following news headlines:
Kollam becomes first constitution-literate district
Miss Universe 2023
Google Doodle pays tribute to wrestler KD Jadhav
The 21st edition of the bilateral naval exercise
Magh Bihu
National Clean Air Programme
1200-Year-Old Miniature Votive Stupas
Daily Current Affairs 17th January 2023:
If you are a student preparing for entrance exams or like to keep yourself updated, the following current affairs will help you. The current affairs provide you with daily updates about economic, national, international, etc., events. They highlight important events and news which can help in your exam preparation for UPSC, SSC, Railways, Banking, and other Competitive Exams. Here, you can get all the important News Headlines for the 17th of January 2023.
Kollam becomes the first constitution-literate district in India: The first district in the nation with a working knowledge of the constitution is Kollam. Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan announced the accomplishment on Saturday in Kollam at a ceremony presided over by Finance Minister KN Balagopal. The district’s success is attributable to a seven-month-long Constitution literacy campaign that the Kollam district panchayat, District Planning Committee, and Kerala Institute of Local Administration (KLA) jointly launched in an effort to raise awareness about various facets of the nation’s laws and citizen rights.
Miss Universe 2023: R’Bonney Gabriel from the United States becomes the winner: R’Bonney Gabriel, an American contestant, was crowned the 71st Miss Universe. On January 14, 2023, in New Orleans, Louisiana, the 28-year-old American beauty from Houston, Texas, was crowned Miss Universe. R’Bonney, Miss USA 2022, had to compete against 84 other ladies to win the title. Divita Rai, an Indian competitor who advanced to the top 16 levels of the tournament, was also one of them. The pageant’s first runner-up was Miss Venezuela, while the second runner-up was Miss Dominican Republic.
Google Doodle pays tribute to wrestler KD Jadhav on his birth anniversary: On Sunday, Google’s Doodle honoured Khashaba Dadasaheb Jadhav, the first individual medalist from independent India at the Olympics, whose 97th birthday falls on January 15. After losing to Japanese Shohachi Ishii in the sixth round, Jadhav, a wrestler competing in the bantamweight division, was awarded a bronze medal in the 1952 Helsinki Olympics. In 1948, the wrestler participated in the Olympics as well.
The 21st edition of the bilateral naval exercise between India and France, Exercise Varuna, has begun on the Western Seaboard on January 16th, 2023: This edition of the exercise will see the participation of the Indian Navy’s indigenous guided missile stealth destroyer INS Chennai, guided missile frigate INS Teg, maritime patrol aircraft P-8I and Dornier, integral helicopters, and MiG29K fighter aircraft.
Prime Minister greeted the people on the occasion of Magh Bihu: Magh Bihu is a harvest festival of Assam where people express gratitude for a good harvest and marks the end of the harvest season. It believes in sharing the gifts of nature as a community and strengthening a sense of identity and belonging.
National Clean Air Programme: In January 2019, the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) launched the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) to prepare clean air action plans. The goal of NCAP (annual average ambient air quality standards at all locations in the country): 20%–30% reduction of PM2.5 and PM10 concentration by taking 2017 as the base year for the comparison of concentration.
Global Risks Report 2023: The World Economic Forum (WEF) has released the 18th Edition of Global Risks Report 2023 which seeks that the world be prepared for ‘Natural disasters and extreme weather events’ in the next two years.
1200-Year-Old Miniature Votive Stupas Discovered ASI: Archeological Survey of India (ASI) has recently discovered two 1200-year-old miniature votive stupas during landscaping activities near Sarai Tila mound on the premises of ‘Nalanda Mahavihara’, a world heritage site in Nalanda district.
Daily Current affairs 15th & 16th January
Daily Current affairs 14th January
byju's current affairs
current affairs 2023 pdf
current affairs updates
currentaffairsinhindi
daily current affairs adda247
daily current affairs January
Current Affairs- 22nd February 2023
Current Affairs- 21 February 2023
Current Affairs- 19th & 20th February 2023
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Anti-Semitism in the United States: ADL Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents in 2014
(Updated April 2015)
Category » In the United States
Anti-Semitic Incidents (ADL)
Anti-Semitic Incidents in the United States Graph
Congressional Action
Senate Passes Bipartisan Resolution Condemning Anti-Semitism
House Resolution H.Res. 1154 Condemning QAnon
Senate Unanimously Votes to Condemn All Forms Of Anti-Semitism
House Condemns Anti-Semitism and Other Forms of Hate
Legislation Expressing U.S. Interest in Combating Anti-Semitism at Home and Abroad
Global Anti-Semitism Review Act
Federal Initiatives Against Hate Crimes
H.R. 3030 - The Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act
Statistics on Religious Hate Crimes
Federal Action
House Passes Res. 1125 Condemning Rising Anti-Semitism
Identifying Organizations Engaged in Anti-Semitic BDS Activities
Meeting on National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism
State Department Definition of Anti-Semitism
Revised State Department Definition of Anti-Semitism
Biden Administration Endorses IHRA Definition of Anti-Semitism
Trump Issues Executive Order on Combating Anti-Semitism
Hate Crimes (FBI)
Shootings Targeting American Jews
Incidents of Hate Crimes Against Jews in the U.S. Graph
Hate Groups in the U.S.
Reactions & Attacks
Agnew Seeks Saudi Funding to Fight Zionists
Americans Reacts to Damascus Blood Libel
Anti-Semitic Propensities Among Americans
Flier Says Roosevelt Administration Loaded With Jews
The International Jew
The Lynching of Leo Frank
On the University Campus
Washington’s Letter to Jews of Newport
Charles Coughlin
Asser Levy
Anti-Semitism in the United States: Table of Contents|Public Opinion|"The International Jew"
The Anti-Defamation League's annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents recorded 912 anti-Semitic incidents across the United States in 2014, a 21% increase from the 2013 figure of 751.
The 2014 incidents included:
36 Anti-Semitic Assaults (up from 31 in 2013)
513 cases of anti-Semitic harassment, threats and events (down from 405 in 2013)
363 cases of anti-Semitic vandalism (down from 4315 in 2013)
Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director, stated that “While the overall number of anti-Semitic incidents remains lower than we have seen historically, the fact remains that 2014 was a particularly violent year for Jews both overseas and in the United States.” Foxman cited a shooting at a JCC in Kansas and various acts of violence and vandalism against Jews and Jewish institutions during 2014 to substantiate his statements.
The ADL attributed the particularly violent year towards Jews to the controversy surrounding Operation Protective Edge. Israel's ground invasion of Gaza and the heavy casualties sustained by the Palestinians fueled the global flames of anti-Semitism during 2014. The increase in anti-Semitic incidents in the United States corresponded to an increase in anti-Semitic incidents and sentiment throughout the world, according to ADL National Chair Barry Curtiss-Lusher. Lusher went on to explain that “A number of Jewish communities, including those in France, Great Britain and Austria reported a doubling of anti-Semitic incidents over the previous year due to the conflict between Israel and Hamas. While the Jewish community here did not experience anything like the attacks overseas, the Gaza war did have an impact in terms of creating a momentary spike in incidents in the U.S.”
The states with the largest Jewish populations, New York and California, topped the list of states with the most anti-Semitic incidents. New York state experienced 231 incidents of anti-Semitism during 2014, up from 203 in 2013. In California 184 incidents were reported, compared to 143 from 2013.
Anti-Semitic incidents and feelings in 2014 were correlated to the launch of Operation Protective Edge, with 139 anti-Semitic incidents reported during July 2014 soon after the launch of the operation. During that same period the previous year, only 54 incidents were reported.
Sources: Anti-Defamation League
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/6277
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‘Chabahar Day’ observed to promote Chabahar – Link to INSTC
The Ministry of Port, Shipping and Waterways (MoPSW) on July 31st observed ‘Chabahar Day’ in Mumbai to mark the Chabahar – Link to International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) – Connecting Central Asian Markets.
India’s vision: To make Shahid Beheshti Port at Chabahar a transit hub and linking it to INSTC to reach out to Central Asian Countries.
INSTC (International North-South Transport Corridor) is India’s vision and initiative to reduce the time taken for EXIM shipments to reach Russia, Europe, and enter the central Asian markets.
Chabahar Port:
The Chabahar Port is a key pillar of India’s India-Pacific vision to connect Eurasia with the Indian Ocean Region.
The Chabahar Port located in Iran is the commercial transit center for the region and especially Central Asia.
The port will also be part International North-South Transport Corridor network connecting India.
Notably, the first rail transit cargo from Russia to India entered Iran recently through the Sarakhs border crossing, marking the official launch of the eastern section of the North-South railway corridor.
International North-South Transport Corridor:
International North-South Transport Corridor is a corridor to increase trade between India and Russia.
This trade route is 7200 Km long and the transport of freight is through a multi-mode network of roads, ships, and railways.
This route connects India and Russia through Iran and Azerbaijan.
The corridor is aimed at reducing the carriage cost between India and Russia by about 30 per cent and bringing down the transit time from 40 days by more than half.
Russia, India, and Iran are the founding member states of INSTC.
The agreement was signed in 2002.
There are 13 member states of the INSTC project – India, Iran, Russia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Tajikistan, Kyrgystan, Oman, Turkey, Syria and Ukraine.
Bulgaria is the Observer State. The Baltic countries like Latvia and Estonia have also expressed willingness to join the INSTC.
India shows interest in extending INSTC membership to countries like Afghanistan and Uzbekistan.
Establishing a land route via Kabul and Tashkent to form the INSTC’s “Eastern corridor” would maximise the potential of this collaboration.
Also, India wants to include Chabahar port to be included in the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC).
Central Asia:
Central Asia is a landlocked region, which is located in the heart of Asia. It forms a part of India’s extended neighbourhood.
The region is composed of the 5 post-soviet countries:
o Kazakhstan
o Uzbekistan
o Turkmenistan
o Kyrgyzstan
o Tajikistan
The countries are also known as 5 “Stans” due to the same ending in their names.
It is bounded on the north by Russia and on the south by Iran, Afghanistan, and China.
Why Central Asia assumes significance for India?
Geo-strategic location: Its geographical proximity, strategic location, and historical linkages make it an important partner for New Delhi.
Energy hub: Central Asia has an abundance of oil and gas deposits. The region contains vast hydrocarbon fields both on-shore and off-shore in the Caspian Sea which homes around 4 percent of the world’s natural gas reserves and approximately 3 percent of oil reserves.
Gas (Turkmenistan)
Oil, gas and uranium (Kazakhstan)
Uranium and gas (Uzbekistan)
Hydropower (Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan)
Global power hub: Strategically, Central Asia is emerging as the next high-stakes competition ground for global powers, hence, it would behoove India to pay closer attention.
Leading role: Central Asia provides India with the right platform to leverage its political, economic, and cultural connections to play a leading role in Eurasia.
Significant transportation hub: The region is a major transportation hub for gas and oil pipelines and multi-modal corridors connecting China, Russia, Europe, and the IOR.
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Nicholas Ballasy
Senior Correspondent
Nicholas Ballasy has been breaking news for more than a decade in the nation’s capital and questioning political leaders about the most pressing issues facing the nation. Since 2008, Ballasy has interviewed former President Bill Clinton, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, former President Donald Trump, Sen. Mitt Romney, Sen. Bernie Sanders, Sen. John McCain, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Vice President Al Gore, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and more.
He’s also conducted on-camera interviews with many of the most influential figures in the Hollywood, music and business worlds about their political activism such as George Clooney, Kevin Spacey, Tom Hanks, Denzel Washington, Whoopi Goldberg, George Lucas, James Cameron, Michael Moore, Kelsey Grammer, Harrison Ford, Eva Longoria, Gloria Estefan, Quincy Jones, Dave Matthews, Stevie Wonder and more.
Media outlets and television shows including NBC News, ABC News, Fox News, CNN, The Washington Post, Inside Edition, New York Times, Politico, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Access Hollywood and others have featured his reporting.
In addition to covering news on Capitol Hill such as the passage of landmark legislation like Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform, the Affordable Care Act, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 as well as the government shutdown, Ballasy has covered the 2008, 2012 and 2016 presidential elections, the inauguration of Barack Obama in 2009 and 2013, Donald Trump’s inauguration, the White House Correspondents Dinner red carpet and more. Ballasy has appeared on the One America News Network and Fox Business Network to provide political analysis and discuss his reporting.
Follow Nicholas on Twitter
E-mail Nicholas at [email protected]
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FDIC has only about half the cash needed to cover roughly $264B in deposits at failed banks, report
Federal workers owe $1.5B in back taxes after GOP remedies die under Democrat legislative control
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Polish National Republic
Location of Poland
Polish (Official)
German (Regionally Official)
Ukrainian (Regionally Official)
Poland, officially the Polish National Republic, is a country located in Central Europe. Warsaw is the nation's capital and largest metropolis.
1.1 Early History
1.2 Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
1.2.1 The Coalition War against Poland (1832-1834)
1.3 Poland in the 20th century
1.3.1 Insurgency in Poland (1920s-1930s)
1.3.2 Poland in the Great War
1.3.3 Post-war Poland
In the late antiquity period a people group known as the Western Polans dominated the region and are the group that gave Poland its name. The establishment of Polish statehood can be traced to 966, when the pagan ruler of a realm coextensive with the territory of present-day Poland embraced Christianity and converted to Catholicism.
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
The Kingdom of Poland was founded in 1025 and in 1569 cemented its longstanding political association with Lithuania by signing the Union of Lublin. This union formed the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, one of the largest and most populous nations of 16th and 17th century Europe, with a uniquely liberal political system different from it's neighbors at the time
The Coalition War against Poland (1832-1834)
The partition of Poland in 1834
During the early 19th century, ideas of reforming the declining Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth had sprung up among progressive thinkers throughout the multi-ethnic empire. In 1829, the Great Sejm of Poland introduced a new constitution for Poland, designed to limit foreign influence in Poland. This was met with suspicion from Poland's neighbors, specifically Russia and Austria, who were happily content with the deteriorating status of the commonwealth. After the Ottomans' victory and prestige in helping defeat the French in the during the French revolutionary wars, Russia and Austria feared that their influence in Poland might be overshadowed. This prompted the Coalition War against Poland (1832-1834), launched by a coalition of Austria, Russia, Saxony, and Pomerania. The war ended with the partition of Polish territory designed to paralyze Polish power and influence, and left Poland as a rump multi-ethnic state and a buffer between Russia and Austria.
Poland in the 20th century
Insurgency in Poland (1920s-1930s)
By the late 19th to early 20th century, the hallmark tolerance of the Poland gradually waned. Economic stagnation and hardship caused tensions between the ethnic and religious groups in Poland, primarily the Germans in the north coast, the Ruthenians in the south, and the Jewish communities throughout Poland. The Germans of the north wanted to either have their own state, or be integrated to Pomerania; the Ruthenians wanted to secede from Poland; the Jews demanded more rights and a reversal of anti-Jewish policies enacted in Poland during the early 20th century.
Poland in the Great War
Main article: Great War
When the Great War erupted, Poland officially declared neutrality. Austria and the Ottomans tried to coerce the Polish state into siding with the Tripartite Coalition, to allow them access through Polish territory. However, Poland steadfastly refused. As a response, Austria started supplying the German insurrectionists in the north with weapons and auxiliary support. In the south, there have been reports of Ottoman troops crossing Polish borders. The Polish Sejm accused the Tripartite Coalition of agitating for war, but this was denied by both Austria and the Ottoman Empire.
On the 18th and 20th of September 1936, two explosions damaged parts of the Krakau railway, killing two Austrian servicemen. Three people were arrested, identified by Austria as "Polish nationalists." Although Poland denied any involvement in the attacks, the Austrians maintained that these were "acts of subversion carried out by the Polish state." On 26 September 1936, the Austrian Empire declared war on Poland. This was followed with the Ottomans also declaring war on Poland on the same day, and laid siege to Kiev.
The siege of Kiev lasted for four months, and ended in the city's capitulation to the Ottoman army. By June 1937, Poland had been fully occupied by Austrian and Ottoman forces.
Post-war Poland
The monarchy of Poland, although at war with the Tripartite Coalition at first, willfully surrendered and collaborated with the Tripartite Coalition. After the war, Poland was divided by Russia as a punitive measure. The Ruthenian parts of Poland were ceded to Russia, and were incorporated in the Russian National Republic, while some of their eastern territory was ceded to the German states. Initially, the new Polish state was supposed to be landlocked, but Polish National Republicans protested this and were able to negotiate a Baltic coast. Post-war Poland was run by a National Republican government.
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New Batavia
Erawa
Soenda
Thaitania
Bhotan
Sultanate of India
Kamarupa
Middle East and Central Asia
Serindia
Retrieved from "https://wiki.rosestulipsandliberty.com/w/index.php?title=Poland&oldid=4644"
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/7605
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New mixed-use project boosts prospects for investment in Detroit neighborhoods
Michigan Strategic Fund supports mixed-use project on Detroit’s east side; developers anticipate more economic activity for area
LANSING, Mich. – A new mixed-use, mixed-income development is being built in the historic West Village neighborhood of Detroit with support from the Michigan Strategic Fund, the Michigan Economic Development Corporation announced today. The project, “The Coe,” aims to bring additional development to the area while attracting residents to an up-and-coming neighborhood on Detroit’s east side.
MSF approval of a $730,933 Michigan Community Revitalization Program performance-based grant will contribute toward the total capital investment of $3.9 million. When completed, the project is expected to create five full-time equivalent jobs.
“The Coe will fill in a long-vacant lot in the West Village neighborhood of Detroit and serves as a promising sign of the continuing redevelopment of Detroit, especially beyond the core downtown areas,” said Michigan Economic Development Corporation Chief Executive Officer Steve Arwood. “We look forward to the momentum of this project and the additional investment it will encourage in other Detroit neighborhoods.”
Coe Van Dyke LLC plans to construct The Coe, a mixed-use development on a vacant lot located at Van Dyke Street and Coe Avenue in the traditional commercial center of the historic West Village neighborhood. The project will include market-rate and affordable rental housing with commercial space on the first floor.
The Coe is expected to add density to the historic neighborhood, bring additional investment to the area, and demonstrate to other developers that projects outside of downtown and Midtown can be profitable.
In addition to the MSF grant, the development is receiving funds totaling $1.29 million from Invest Detroit’s Strategic Neighborhood Fund Initiative and $1.906 million from Capital Impact Partners’ Detroit Neighborhoods Fund.
Invest Detroit, a nonprofit organization that supports economic development opportunities in underserved communities, primarily in the City of Detroit, has launched a $30 million Strategic Neighborhood Fund in partnership with the City. The Strategic Neighborhood Fund serves as a revolving loan, grant and equity investment tool to promote the revitalization of Detroit neighborhoods. The Coe is the first project to receive funding from the Strategic Fund Initiative.
“MCRP funding from the MEDC was vital to complete the capital stack for developing The Coe, which represents the first mixed-use, mixed-income project supported by the Strategic Neighborhood Fund. We congratulate developer Cliff Brown of Woodborn Partners for their significant contribution to the vibrancy of Detroit’s West Village and greatly appreciate the partnership support of the MEDC and Capital Impact Partners,” said Dave Blaszkiewicz, president and CEO of Invest Detroit. “Collaborative support from the public, private and philanthropic sectors is critical to the overall success of this comprehensive initiative to create density, jobs and sustainable economic growth.”
The city of Detroit is supporting the project with a Commercial Rehabilitation Tax Abatement valued at approximately $236,700 over a 10-year period. Sachse Construction is the construction manager, Christian Hurttienne Architects is the architect of record, and Broder & Sachse Real Estate is the property manager.
“The Detroit Economic Growth Corporation is committed to helping neighborhood redevelopment such as the Van Dyke & Coe project and growing the capacity of Detroit-based developers,” said DEGC Executive Vice President for Real Estate Moddie Turay. “Woodborn Partners is a local firm leading this project, and its participation demonstrates its own growth and the commitment of Detroit-based developers to rebuild our neighborhoods.”
About Woodborn Partners
Woodborn Partners is a Michigan-based, minority-owned full service development company committed to changing people's lives through real estate development. The firm specializes in developing projects that bring safety, appeal, and value to their surrounding communities. For more information on Woodborn Partners, visit http://www.woodbornpartners.com/.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/7957
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FiscalNote Completes $180M Acquisition of CQ ROLL CALL From The Economist Group
WASHINGTON, August 20, 2018 – FiscalNote, a technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government that provides advanced, data-driven Issues Management solutions, today announces that it has completed its acquisition of CQ Roll Call from The Economist Group for $180 million through a combination of cash and equity. The Economist Group obtains an 18 percent equity stake in FiscalNote, making it the largest single shareholder of the company and Chris Stibbs, CEO of The Economist Group, will join the board of directors. As part of the transaction, S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI) takes a strategic equity investment in the D.C.-based FiscalNote and appoints Mark Blake, its global head of corporate development, as a Board Observer. FiscalNote Founder Tim Hwang remains the largest individual shareholder and will lead the company going forward as Chairman and CEO.
This strategic acquisition combines the strengths of complementary businesses and will infuse CQ Roll Call’s award-winning journalism and content with FiscalNote’s proprietary technology. The combined company, now known as FiscalNote, will continue to offer award-winning journalism along with products and services that provide access to large quantities of data, news, and analysis for all levels of government to help corporations, associations, and non-profits of all sizes manage their issues.
“I am humbled by the opportunity to oversee the next phase of FiscalNote growth while protecting the legacy and tradition of the CQ and Roll Call brands,” said Tim Hwang, CEO of FiscalNote. “The combination of FiscalNote’s technology with CQ Roll Call’s non-partisan and unbiased information and analysis creates an exciting opportunity to further our mission of connecting the world to their governments, enabling us to better serve customers and readers.”
“I have every confidence in Tim’s vision for the combined FiscalNote and in his ability to lead the team to deliver best-in-class product offerings,” said Chris Stibbs, CEO of The Economist Group. “I look forward to joining the FiscalNote Board of Directors and to helping drive The Economist Group’s investment in FiscalNote.”
With the close of this transaction, FiscalNote becomes one of the largest technology employers headquartered in Washington, D.C. The company will expand its current office overlooking iconic Pennsylvania Avenue between the U.S. Capitol and the White House, bringing the combined company under one roof at the intersection of American politics.
FiscalNote is currently evaluating the processes, products, staff, and technology capabilities from each company to determine the best ways to combine the two groups. The company does not plan to make any additional leadership announcements at this time; however, it will uphold CQ Roll Call’s editorial independence, while also identifying opportunities to adapt and grow in a transforming digital news landscape.
CQ Roll Call provides news, analysis and grassroots advocacy resources for government and political professionals. It is the premier source of timely, objective news and analysis on government and electoral politics. CQ Roll Call journalists have won more Dirksen Awards for “Distinguished Reporting of Congress” than any other organization.
Transaction advisors for FiscalNote were West Arrow, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, and Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher LLC. Transaction advisors for The Economist Group were Ondra Partners and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP.
About FiscalNote
FiscalNote’s mission is to connect the world to their governments. It is the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government, whose revolutionary Issues Management solutions combine real-time policy data from Congress, all 50 states and nearly 30 countries with machine learning, advanced analytics, and innovative workflow tools to help organizations better understand the risks and opportunities of today’s socio-political environment.
Headquartered in Washington, DC, FiscalNote also maintains offices in New York City, Baton Rouge, Korea, India, and Belgium. The company’s shareholders include prominent investors such as The Economist Group, S&P Global, Mark Cuban, Jerry Yang/AME Cloud Ventures, Rise of the Rest, Renren, First Round Capital’s Dorm Room Fund, Green Visor Capital, MoneyToday, Visionnaire Ventures, Perle Ventures, NEA, and 645 Ventures.
Organizations — from small startups and non-profits to multinational corporations — that rely on FiscalNote’s suite of products and services include Toyota, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, Microsoft, PhRMA, Salesforce, the Consumer Technology Association, Anthem BlueCross BlueShield, Schlumberger, and the National Education Association.
Source - Press Release
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Mercedes Benz S-Class Museum – A Shrine to Design
January 4, 2021 Baker
A Mercedes rules the street with its power. The Mercedes-Benz Museum in Germany emulates the power and amplifies the advancement. When traveling in the Stuttgart area, spend the day at the shrine to design.
Stuttgart is Germany’s transportation capital, hosting the headquarters of Daimler, Porsche, and Maybach. The prototype for the Volkswagen Beetle was worked here. Stuttgart pioneered the light rail, or trams, in Germany.
A local genius, Karl Benz, invented the first petro-powered car. Benz co-owned an iron foundry. He began tinkering with motors for extra income. His 1879 patent for a two-stroke engine led to the creation of Benz and Company. Benz toyed with the idea of combining petro-powered engines and vehicles. In 1883, he received the patent for the gas-fueled automobile. Benz and Company launched a car line and never looked back.
Across town, Gottlieb Daimler and his partner, Wilhelm Maybach, were creating a number of firsts including a fast petro-engine; a four-wheel automobile; and a petrol-powered motorcycle. In 1890, Daimler and Maybach formed Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft. After years of success, Daimler grew sick and died at age 62. Maybach left to start his own company. DMG management approached Karl Benz, and the two companies merged as Daimler-Benz, the present Daimler AG. The Mercedes-Benz Museum tells their story.
The eight-story museum seems sculptured by Thor in circular steel, concrete, and glass. The shape of each floor is the Mercedes S Class three-point star symbol, displaying a bit of past, present, and future. For example, the second floor is about historic and current Mercedes trucks. Other levels focus on Mercedes-Benz legends; celebrity cars; sustainability technology; and future visions.
Racing is the company’s soul and the seventh floor is the best time. From the earliest starting point, Daimler understood the importance of Grand Prix’s and other street racing to their development and building the brand. Racing played a key role in hauling Mercedes out of the wreckage of the Second World War. As a vehicle-producer for the German armed force, allied bombers pulverized Daimler and Stuttgart. Auto racing emerged as a significant post-war sport. Mercedes-Benz presence and victories accelerated sales from around the globe.
Stuttgart is an excellent stop on a German itinerary with other museums and some great castles, like the spectacular Schloss Hohenzollern. The centerpiece is the Mercedes-Benz Museum. After a visit, you will give more respect to the Mercedes that just blew your doors off on the expressway. Racing is in its DNA.
Imprint Weber is an international business professor in Rochester, NY, who traveled the world on behalf of the Eastman Kodak Company and Heidelberger Druckmachinen, especially Germany. Weber brings a unique perspective on the customs, attractions, transportation options, language, and food.
Need to Learn How to Choose the Best Gaming chair
Some Basic Facts About Raccoon Animal Removal
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AnydayGuide
Beaty & Style
← Holidays Today
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Holidays Calendar for June 30, 2021
07/01/2021 →
Public Holidays → Guatemala
Army Day in Guatemala
Guatemala annually celebrates Army Day on June 30. This holiday commemorates the events of 1871, when the Conservadora administration was put to an end.
Public Holidays → Sudan
Revolution Day in Sudan
Revolution Day in Sudan is a national holiday, that commemorates the bloodless coup of 1989. The holiday is annually observed on its anniversary, June 30.
Public Holidays → Democratic Republic of the Congo
Independence Day in DR Congo
June 30 is Independence Day in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This is a public holiday that commemorates the day when the country gained independence from Belgium in 1960.
Public Holidays → Central African Republic
General Prayer Day in the Central African Republic
Inhabitants of the Central African Republic observe General Prayer Day every year on June 30. This holiday unites all people of CAR regardless their religion and political views.
Public Holidays → Egypt
June 30 Anniversary in Egypt
June 30 Anniversary is a public holiday in Egypt that commemorates the 2013 Egyptian coup d'état. It was established to commemorate demonstrations that led to the overthrow of President Mohamed Morsi.
Social Media Day
It is hard to imagine our lives without social media these days. Within the relatively short time since their emergence, social media have changed the way we interact with one another. No wonder that they even have their own holiday, Social Media Day, which is celebrated annually on June 30.
Professional Days → Belarus
Economist's Day in Belarus
Belarusian economists annually observe their professional holiday, Economist's Day, on June 30 since 2000. This holiday was established in February, 2000 by Presidential Decree. Economist's Day is a holiday of all experts in the field of economics.
Professional Days → Dominican Republic
Teachers' Day in the Dominican Republic
The Dominican Republic and Haiti share one island and they are bound by one history. But they don't share Teachers' Day, that is celebrated in the Dominican Republic every June 30.
Cultural Observances → Philippines
Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day in the Philippines
The Republic of Philippines annually celebrates Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day on June 30. Establishment of this holiday is connected with the events of 1898-1899, when a group of Spanish soldiers was defending Spanish flag in the town of Baler, Philippines.
Anniversaries and Memorial Days → India
Remna Ni in Mizoram
Remna Ni is an official holiday in the Indian state of Mizoram. It is celebrated on June 30 to commemorate the signing of the Mizoram Peace Accord of 1986 that ended insurgency and violence and resulted in the statehood of Mizoram.
Hul Divas (Santhal Rebellion Anniversary) in Jharkhand
Hul Divas is an annual observance marked in the Indian state of Jharkhand to commemorate the 1855 Santhal rebellion against the British Raj. It is observed annually on June 30 to honor the memory of those killed during the rebellion, especially its leaders.
UN Observances
International Asteroid Day
Asteroid Day, also referred to as International Asteroid Day, is observed annually on June 30. This annual global event was initiated by Brian May, Danica Remy, Grigorij Richters and Rusty Schweickart, and officially endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly.
International Day of Parliamentarism
On June 30, UN member states celebrate the International Day of Parliamentarism. It was established by the UN General Assembly to emphasize the role of national parliaments in the implementation of national and international plans and strategies.
Other Observances → Azerbaijan
Lovers’ Day in Azerbaijan
A lot of countries celebrate love and lovers on February 14 (Valentine’s Day), but there are some exceptions. For example, Lovers’ Day in Azerbaijan is observed annually to commemorate the tragic love story of Ilham and Fariza Allahverdiyev.
Festivals on June 30, 2021
Cairo International Book Fair in Cairo, Egypt
London Book Fair in London, United Kingdom
Battle Creek Field of Flight Air Show and Balloon Festival in Battle Creek, USA
Edinburgh International Science Festival in Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto, Italy
Montreal International Jazz Festival in Montreal, Canada
Jazz à Vienne in Vienne, France
Frederikssund Viking Games in Frederikssund, Denmark
Zlín Film Festival in Zlín, Czech Republic
Glyndebourne Festival Opera in Lewes, United Kingdom
← More Festivals
2009 Died: Pina Bausch, German dancer, choreographer, and director. Her unique style, a blend of movement, sound and prominent stage sets made her a leading influence in the field of modern dance. Her Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch performs internationally.
2002 Died: Chico Xavier, Brazilian medium and author, known for his 450 books, most of which were written using a psychography.
2001 Died: Chet Atkins, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer, believed to be a creator of a smoother country music style, known as the Nashville sound.
1985 Born: Michael Phelps, American swimmer, the most decorated Olympian of all time. He won with a total of 22 medals, 18 of them are gold medals, that is the all-time record for Olympic gold medals.
1985 39 American hostages from the hijacked TWA Flight 847 en route from Cairo to San Diego were freed in Beirut after being held for 17 days.
1975 Born: Ralf Schumacher, German race car driver, the younger brother of seven-time Formula One World Champion Michael Schumacher.
1971 The entire crew of the Soviet Soyuz 11 spacecraft was killed when when the crew capsule depressurized during preparations for reentry into the Earth atmosphere.
1968 Born: Phil Anselmo, American singer-songwriter and producer, best knows as the former lead singer of the heavy metal band Pantera.
1966 Died: Giuseppe Farina, Italian race car driver, the first ever Formula One World Champion. He also stands out in the history of Grand Prix motor racing for his much-copied "straight-arm" driving style.
1966 Born: Mike Tyson, American boxer and actor. He is a former undisputed heavyweight champion of the world and holds the record as the youngest boxer to win the WBC, WBA and IBF heavyweight titles.
1963 Born: Rupert Graves, English actor, best known for role as Inspector Lestrade in the BBC television series Sherlock.
1963 7 police officers new Palermo were killed in a explosion of a car bomb, intended for mafia boss Salvatore Greco.
1961 Died: Lee de Forest, American inventor. He patented over 180 inventions, among them was the audion tube, the fist electrical device, that could amplify a weak electrical signal and make it stronger.
1956 A Trans World Airlines Super Constellation collided with a United Airlines DC-7 above the Grand Canyon in Arizona. The planes crashed, killing all 128 people on board of both airliners.
1950 Born: Leonard Whiting, English actor, a Golden Globe Award of New Star of the Year winner. He's best known for role as Romeo in the 1968 Zeffirelli film version of Romeo and Juliet. This role brought him the award.
1949 Born: Andy Scott, Welsh singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer. He is best known for being the lead guitarist and vocalist of British rock band Sweet.
1942 Born: Robert Ballard, American lieutenant and oceanographer, most noted for his work in underwater archeology. He discovered the wrecks of the RMS Titanic, the battleship Bismarck and the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown.
1937 The very first emergency telephone number in the world was introduced in London, it was 999. Today the same number is used in many countries around the world.
1934 Adolf Hitler's political rivals in Germany were murdered. This event became known as the Night of the Long Knives, sometimes called Operation Hummingbird. After the operation Hitler was established as the supreme judge of the German people.
1926 Born: Paul Berg, American biochemist and academic, Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate for fundamental studies of the biochemistry of nucleic acids, with particular regard to recombinant DNA.
1922 U.S. Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes and Dominican Ambassador Francisco J. Peynado signed the Hughes-Peynado agreement, thus ending the United States occupation of the Dominican Republic.
1919 Died: John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, English physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate for discovery of argon. His another great achievement was discovery of the phenomenon known as Rayleigh scattering, that can be used to explain why the sky is blue.
1917 Died: Antonio de La Gándara, French painter, one of the most talented artists of the Belle Epoque. He was one of the favorite artists of the Paris elite and he portrayed poet Charles Leconte de Lisle, Paul Verlaine, Sarah Bernhardt, Romaine Brooks, Jean Moreas, Winnaretta Singer, and Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau.
1911 Born: Czesław Miłosz, Polish poet and author. He was awarded with Nobel Prize in Literature in 1980, that was one of the major achievements in his career.
1908 The Tunugska event occurred in Siberia, Russia. The event was caused by an asteroid or comet, that exploded at altitude of 5-10 kilometers. Although no traces of space body were found, it's still believed that the explosion was caused by a comet.
1905 Albert Einstein published the article On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies, in which he introduced the special theory of relativity.
1882 Died: Alberto Henschel, German-Brazilian photographer and businessman, known for making pictorial representations of Rio de Janeiro as a landscaper photographer. He was allowed to make pictures of every-day life of the Brazilian monarchy during the reign of Pedro II.
1859 Charles Blondin, French tightrope walker, crossed the Niagara Gorge on a tightrope 1,100 ft long, 3.25 inch in diameter and 160 ft above water near location of modern Rainbow Bridge.
1857 Died: Alcide d'Orbigny, French zoologist and paleontologist, remembered today for this major contributions in many areas, including palaeontology, zoology, geology, archeology and anthropology.
1660 Died: William Oughtred, English minister and mathematician, inventor of the slide rule. He is also credited with introduction of symbol × for multiplication and the abbreviations of sin and cos.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/8435
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AUDIOVISUAL PROJECT
CORPORATE MATERIAL
2022 PICS
EXPERTS/RECIPIENT COMPANIES
CIIF Market will hold pitch sessions for the participating projects, which will be evaluated by production companies, receivers, analysts, sales agents, broadcasters and national and international experts, who will examine them for possible investment, with whom they will subsequently hold an agenda of one-on-one meetings. Likewise, the Canarian literary works selected in CIIF Market Lab will have the opportunity to be presented in pitch format and establish connections with market participants.
*Subject to change
Specializing in European and independent films with the potential to reach a wide audience, A Contracorriente Films is currently the leading Spanish-owned distributor in the theatrical market. It has a catalog of more than 1,500 titles, which it manages in theaters, platforms, television and domestic formats. Its editorial line is aimed at an adult audience, with an interest in culture and good cinema. ACF’s production department, with 20 years of experience in the industry and numerous awards to its credit, has always been very active in the development of projects that fit its editorial profile, prioritizing collaboration with the best talent available, in the search for the quality and commerciality necessary to satisfy its usual target audience.
Name: Manuel Monzón
Position: Producer
Degree in Economics (UB). He began his career at Filmax, designing and managing international co-productions such as “Fragile”, “El perfume” and “The machinist”. In 2006 he became producer of Notro Films (Vértice 360º) producing feature films such as “Oceans” and “Fermat’s Room”. He founded Monzón Films in 2010, participating in feature films such as “Red Lights”. He is currently a producer for A Contracorriente Films. Examples of award-winning productions: “La Librería” or “El Ciudadano Ilustre”.
ADAPTA MARKET
Adapta Market is a web platform aimed at bridging the gap between literature and audiovisuals, in order to promote the sector of literary adaptations to the screen. The main objective is to bring together people who work in the literary world and those who are part of the audiovisual world.
Name: Joana Chilet
Joana Chilet has more than 25 years of experience in the audiovisual and cultural management sector. He manages the Adapta Market project through the association Nautilus Gestió i Comunicació. She is the technical director of Promercat-València Film Market, a co-production market organized by the Conselleria de Cultura through the Insitut Valencià de Cultura. As a cultural manager she collaborates with MAFIZ and coordinates ShortPitch, the short film pitching event of Skyline Film Festival De Benidorm. She has been executive producer in different projects: Maniacos de la Serie B (2016), documentary feature film, Museo del silencio (2014), multi-platform project; Un hombre de pago, fiction feature film, development director, for JCmedia. She was the director and executive producer of the documentary Regino Mas, l’Art del Foc (2019) for FX Produccions; production manager of the feature documentary Chicote, el barman de las estrellas (2018), for Endora Producciones, and of El Xef a Casa for À Punt. During her time at Televisión Valenciana (1994-2011) she was the director of the daily program Punt de Mira and, at different stages, responsible for new projects, programming design, co-productions and broadcasting rights; she worked as executive producer in different TV movies and fiction series: Tocant el mar (2012), Mar de plàstic (2011), El Criminal (2010), Tip & Cía (2009), Violetas (2008) , Las palabras de Vero (2005) and Maniatics (2007).
ÁLAMO PRODUCCIONES
Spanish production company that is committed to Spanish talent and independent production and is capable of generating competitive quality products recognized by box office performance and awards at prestigious festivals.
Name: Eduardo Campoy
Position: Managing Director
At the head of Álamo Producciones Audiovisuales is Eduardo Campoy, who has a long professional career dedicated to film production. Outstanding filmography: Mamá o Papá (2020), by Dani de la Orden. Superagent Makey (2020), by Alfonso Sánchez. Hasta que la boda nos separe (2019), by Dani de la Orden. Litus (2019), by Dani de la Orden or El mejor verano de mi vida (2018), by Dani de la Orden.
ALBA PRODUZIONI
Alba Produzioni was founded in 1990. It is a film production company that has produced documentary films, fiction films and commercials. Alba is a dynamic company with a lean and well-organized structure that draws on a team of highly skilled professionals with international experience. In addition to the two partners, Sandro Frezza and Ferdinando Vicentini Orgnani, who have been operating in the sector for over 25 years.
Name: Rosanna Seregni
Position: Producer / Consultant
In 2005 it received the FICE award for Best Independent Production Company. She is a member of the David di Donatello Film Academy (Italy); member of the jury of the Script Development Fund of the Amiens Film Festival; tutor of the TyPA Foundation (Argentina) in the Latin American project development workshop; tutor of projects in development of the BRLab; selector and jury of the New Cinema Network, Mercato de Coproductions of the Rome International Film Festival and Member of the Board of the Bolzano-Alto Adige Sudtirol (BLS) Production Fund, among others. She has served as executive or associate producer on countless films including, A la revolución en un dos caballos (Maurizio Sciarra, 2001), Vodka Lemon (Hiner Salem, 2003), El reclamo (Stefano Pasetto 2009), Planta madre (Gianfranco Quattrini, 2014) or El Nido (Matia Temponi, 2021). Currently, she participates in first level international markets as an analyst and consultant for scripts and projects in development.
ALESA PRODUCCIONS – YOUPLANET PICTURES
Alesa Produccions is a small production company that was born in 2004 and is based on participating in co-productions. To date, Alesa has made one feature film, 5 short films and is currently in the co-production of an animated feature film and another one in co-production with Uruguay.
Name: Albert Espel
Position: Executive Producer
Albert Espel, started in the audiovisual industry in 1989. He has served as executive producer on feature films such as “La cima” (by Ibon Cormenzana), “Rastros de Sándalo” (by María Ripoll) or “Tilt: Nos hacemos falta” (by Juanjo Giménez, director of the Oscar-nominated short Timecode) and series such as “Martita!”(by Irene Moray) or “Pelotas” (by Corbacho and Cruz), and as production manager in feature films such as “Mediterráneo” (by Marcel Barrena) for which he received the Goya for best production direction, “Un novio para mi mujer” (by Laura Mañá) or “Las Consecuencias” (by Claudia Pinto), in animated feature films such as “Animal Crackers” (by Scott Christian Sava) and in series such as “Volveremos” (by Felip Solé).
BENDITA FILM SALES
Bendita Film Sales is an international sales agency based in Spain. Its carefully curated catalog includes works with a marked authorial profile and international prestige, such as La virgen de agosto, by Jonás Trueba (FIPRESCI Award and Special Jury Mention at Karlovy Vary 2019), or Blanco en Blanco, by Théo Court (Best Director Award and FIPRESCI Award in the Orizzonti Section of the Venice Film Festival 2019).
Name and Position: Luis Renart (CEO), Jorge Blanch (Head of Festivals)
EL VIAJE FILMS
Nominated for the Oscars by the Chilean Academy (Blanco en Blanco), recently awarded at the Venice Film Festival (2019 and 2021) and nominated for the European Cinematography Awards (2016), El Viaje Films was born in 2004, consolidating very recognizable signs of identity, through works where authorial treatment, interest in new narrative formulas and ethical commitment to what is filmed prevail. His works assimilate international references and are committed to the universality of language. In addition to institutional support such as Eurimages, Media Program (Single Project and Slate), Ibermedia Program, Sundance Institute, ICAA (Ministry of Culture, Government of Spain) and Government of the Canary Islands, the filmography of El Viaje Films incorporates the participation of television stations (Televisión Pública de Canarias, Canal Sur, TV3, Castilla La Mancha Media CMM), distributors (Elamedia, Numax, Márgenes, Begin Again Films, Begin Again Films) and international sales (Shellac, Stray Dogs, Bendita Sales), Canal Sur, TV3, Castilla La Mancha Media CMM), distributors (Elamedia, Numax, Márgenes, Begin Again Films) and international sales (Shellac, Stray Dogs, Bendita Film Sales) that have boosted the exploitation of the works in theaters and platforms such as Amazon, MUBI, Filmin and Filmin Latino, among others.
Name: James Weiss
Born in Brooklyn and based in Madrid, Spain, he is a film producer at El Viaje Films. He received a BA in film from Boston University and an MA in documentary and experimental filmmaking from TAI University in Madrid. Since 2015 he has been working as a producer at El Viaje Films (Madrid/Tenerife), bringing an international perspective to this award-winning independent production company, collaborating on projects such as Helena Girón and Samuel M. Delgado’s Eles Transportan a morte (2022) and Theo Court’s Blanco en Blanco (2019), among others. As producer and international co-production coordinator for El Viaje Films, he has participated in markets, festivals and pitching sessions including Marche du Film (2020, 2022), Venice Production Gap (2017), Les Arcs (2017 – Winner Eurimages Lab Award), Berlinale Co-Production Market (2021, 2022), Rotterdam IFF (Dutch Post Production Awards 2019), Ventana Sur (2019, 2021), San Sebastian (Europe- Latin American Co-production Forum 2016, 2019) and Catapulta (FICUNAM 2022), Spanish-Canadian Co Production Forum (TIFF 2022) among others. In addition, he has participated as a project advisor in professional forums at Documenta Madrid (2018, 2019) and Progressio (Cineteca Madrid, 2019).
FACTION FILMS
FactionFilm/Faction Media is an independent documentary film company based in London. Our films focus on social and cultural issues. We co-produce with filmmakers from around the world to help find an international audience for their stories. Faction Films was founded in 1984. We encourage new talents. We co-produce internationally with filmmakers to help them tell their own stories and reach an international market.
Delegate: Sylvia Stevens
Position: Executive Director, Producer
Sylvia Stevens is co-founder of London-based Faction Films. With over thirty years of experience as a producer and director she has worked with British broadcasters BBC, Channel 4, ITV and international broadcasters Netflix, RTE, PBS, HBO, NHK, FR2, ARTE, SBS, AVRO, STV, AJ and YLE, among others. He has made European co-productions, as well as in Latin America – Cuba, Colombia, Mexico, Brazil – and in India, South Africa, Australia and Japan. His documentary films focus on social/political stories and the arts. His films include Picturing Derry (Northern Ireland), War Takes (the war in Colombia), Tales Beyond Solitude (Gabriel García Márquez on writing for film), Love Honour and Disobey (domestic violence -Southhall Black Sisters), Chevolution, Educating Igor (gypsies in Slovakia), Android in La Land -Gary Numan documentary, and The Plan. He has made a VR film. She recently served as executive producer of Off the Rails and Oaxacalifornia: the Return. His films have won international awards. EAVE documentary expert since 2005 and has taught workshops all over the world, including Colombia, South Africa, Egypt, Tunisia, Turkey and Cuba.
FILMARKET HUB
Filmarket Hub is an exclusive online marketplace that connects curated projects with producers, broadcasters, OTT platforms, sales agents and distributors who use the platform to discover great projects! Launched in 2015 with the aim of giving visibility to the best emerging talent and favoring agreements to produce new projects, the platform has more than 33,000 users in Europe and Latin America.
Name: Katalina Tobón
Position: Director of Alliances and Pro Accounts
Creative audiovisual producer with solid experience in the field of postproduction and cultural management in Spain and Colombia. With a Master’s Degree in Contemporary Cinema and Audiovisual Studies from Pompeu Fabra University and in Visual Arts and Education from the University of Barcelona. In 2018 he was part of the Short Film Selection Jury of the Albacete International Film Festival – Abycine. She has a solid experience as a junior colorist for documentaries at Gris Medio Studio based in Barcelona, and as a curatorial assistant at Casa Asia’s Exhibition Department in Barcelona. For almost three years he has been part of the Partnerships department of Filmarket Hub. He has also worked coordinating Abycine’s Lanza audiovisual market. Previously she worked as a producer for the Remote Color Suite at The Mill in Ark (Bogota), coordinating projects for color and VFX completion. For four years she was the producer of PUERTO FICCI, Industry area of the Cartagena de Indias International Film Festival, where she led the selection and curatorial process of projects for the Documentary Film Workshop and the coordination of the academic area in the BAM (Bogota Audiovisual Market). She served as head of industry for the Miradas Medellín 2021 Festival, and also Industry Coordinator for the EIP Encounter (International Producers Meeting in Cartagena de Indias) in the same year and this 2022 as head of content for BAM.
Based in Barcelona, Filmax is one of Spain’s leading audiovisual companies. Organized in four main areas: production, international sales, distribution and exhibition, Filmax is today the only independent film and television studio in the country. Since its founding in 1953, the company has produced more than 100 feature films, including The Machinist, Perfume, the horror saga [REC] and While You Sleep. More recently, Filmax has brought to the big screen the films 100 metros (Marcel Barrena, 2016), Jaume Balagueró’s Musa and the action thriller No matarás, a film directed by David Victori and starring Mario Casas that was released last October. In the television field, Filmax has produced the series Pulseres vermelles, winner in 2015 of the International Emmy Kids Award for best children’s series; Cites, Sé quién eres and the black comedy Benvinguts a la familia, “Días de Navidad” and “Todos Mienten”, in addition to “Feria: la luz más oscura”, for Neflix.
Name: Gemma Pascual
Position: Director of Film Project Development
Gemma Pascual Avila works as Director of Film Project Development at Filmax, where in addition to supervising the writing of all scripts in development and working closely with their creators, she is in charge of searching for new projects and identifying new talent, analyzing scripts and proposals from all over the world, among other tasks. At Filmax he has participated in the development of productions such as “No matarás”, “Donde caben dos” and “Pan de limón con semillas de amapola”, nominated for the Goya Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.
HANSEN & PEDERSEN
Hansen & Pedersen has made it its trademark to create high quality documentaries for the general public in Denmark and internationally. We work with the best directors who share our vision of creating thought-provoking content on vital issues. Hansen & Pedersen was founded in 1997 by producer Malene Flindt Pedersen and director Anders Riis-Hansen.
Name: Anders Riis-Hansen
Position: Director, Producer
He has worked as a director, TV producer, consultant, journalist and editor for more than 30 years for the Danish and international market. He directed The Circus Dynasty, selected in 2014 at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) and The Invisible Cell, winner of a Bodil for best documentary in 2010. He served as commissioning editor and consultant to the Danish Broadcasting Corporation (DR) and the Danish Film Institute (DFI). He is co-owner of Hansen & Pedersen Film.
LATIDO FILMS
We are an international sales agency specialized mainly in Spanish and European films, but open to films from all over the world. We pursue new talent and support established directors to create a catalog with a variety of high quality titles. We work with both auteur films and blockbusters. In order to guarantee our quality standards, our programming does not exceed 15 titles per year.
Name: Marjory Maceres
Position: Procurement and Sales Coordinator
She currently works at Latido Films as Acquisitions and Sales Coordinator. Professional in the area with a Master’s Degree in Digital Television and Audiovisual Content Management from the San Pablo CEU University and a Master’s Degree in Film Distribution from the ECAM. She has extensive experience as an Audiovisual and Communications Manager. As Head of Audiovisual Management at ADECINE-Bolivia, I coordinate the different areas to promote the positioning of the Bolivian audiovisual sector in local and international cinema, managing to carry out different programs and projects to strengthen the film and audiovisual sector in the region.
MACARONESIA
Macaronesia Films was born with the vocation of being a leading company in the support of audiovisual production that takes place in the Canary Islands, mainly in national and international projects related to film and television, providing service to productions that want to shoot in the archipelago and need both the structuring of tax incentives, as well as equipment rental and specialized machinery, in the areas of production, wardrobe, makeup, rest, office and energy.
Name: Jaime Romero
Position: Chief Executive Officer
MAFIZ
MAFIZ is the industry and market event of the Malaga Film Festival, where the Spanish Screenings, Malaga Work in Progress (WIP), Malaga Festival Fund Co-production Event (MAFF), Malaga Docs, Latinoamerican Focus, Malaga Talent, Territorio España, La Village and the most recent digital creation event, Hack Mafiz Malaga, are organized.
Name: Rogelio Chacón
Position: Assistant Coordinator, Producer
Producer, consultant, teacher and entrepreneur. Graduated from the International School of Film and TV, San Antonio de los Baños, Cuba, specializing in Director of Photography and Production. General Director of the Centro Costarricense de Producción Cinematográfica, (official cinematography institution), Producer of Sixaola Producciones for the production, consulting and development of audiovisual, cultural and creative content industry projects in Latin America. Also, analyst of film projects and training, especially in pitching techniques. Currently Assistant Coordinator of MAFIZ, Malaga Film Festival.
MUSIC LIBRARY / CONTROL FREAKS
Our company is a sub-publisher and exclusive representative for Spain of the Audio Network production music catalog. We add value to our offer and, by strategically allying ourselves with professionals and the best talent, through our new division Acorde, we offer 360º music supervision services. Control Freaks is a company specialized in copyright, related rights, licensing and music supervision, which offers various services to artists, composers, production houses and audiovisual media creators in general.
Name: Arturo Olea
Position: CEO
Director of business development and production of music and audiovisual content with 30+ years of experience. Partner and CEO of Music Library &SFX and publisher Alternativas de Contenido (AltContent). Patricia Carrera: Nearly 19 years of experience in copyright and related rights for artists and authors, almost 11 years in film, TV and advertising licensing, and nearly 8 years doing music supervision and consulting for audiovisual media. It carries out educational and training activities at various festivals, markets, conferences and public and private sector companies, in order to professionalize the mechanisms that make the industry work and improve the conditions that will allow for better commercialization of music and the creation of sustainable music careers.
SCENIC RIGHTS
With offices in Madrid, Barcelona, Los Angeles, Mexico City and Prague, Scenic Rights is the leading agency in the Hispanic market in the representation of intellectual properties of the most important authors and creatives in Spain, Latam and US Hispanics, which has led it to be present in more than a hundred projects in different phases (Hernán, El Cid, La Templanza, Memorias de Idhún, Promesas de arena, La Cocinera de Castamar, etc.).
Name: Ignacio Díaz
Position: COO
Ignacio Díaz has been working for 5 years at Scenic Rights agency, where he started as Content Director, and later became COO of the company’s strategy and operations execution. Previously, he worked in the field of production of both advertising and fiction content in companies such as Babieka Films, Alfa Zulú or Interpromo.
SECUOYA STUDIOS
Secuoya Studios is the leading Spanish-language premium content development and production studio for the global market. Our content covers all major formats and genres, with a special focus on fiction series, feature films, documentaries and entertainment programs, for both global and domestic platforms and broadcasters. Secuoya Studios also offers production services in Spain for international shoots, being the perfect ally for American and European productions in our country, and has a comprehensive service structure for the development of financial-fiscal structuring models and the implementation of strategic agreements with commercial, creative and financial partners.
Name: Roberto Serrano
Position: Assistant Director of Fiction
Roberto Serrano is deputy director of development at Secuoya Studios. In his more than fifteen years of experience in the audiovisual world, he has combined executive production and coordination of fiction series with project development work in national and international production companies. He also collaborates with the “Master’s Degree in Film Screenwriting and Television Series” at the URJC, where he teaches and is responsible for the series creation workshop.
RADIO TELEVISIÓN CANARIA
RTVC is an autonomous public television and radio broadcaster, dependent on the Parliament of the Canary Islands. Televisión Canaria broadcasts in the territory of the Canary Islands through its conventional channel (digital terrestrial television) and through the Internet on the tvcanaria.net channel. The activity of RTVC is carried out under Law 13/2014, of December 26, 2014 on Public Radio and Television of the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands, regulating the provision of the public audiovisual communication service owned by the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands.
Name: Diana Armas
Position: Media Production Technician
Degree in Information Sciences, specializing in the branch of Visual and Auditory Image from the Polytechnic University of Valencia. Linked to Televisión Pública de Canarias S.A. since its creation. Between 1999 and 2004, he worked in the channel’s news services. Since 2004, she has been responsible for independent productions at Televisión Canaria. He is a member of FORTA’s pre-purchase rights and co-productions commission. He has been a member of the advisory committee of the audiovisual arts of the Vice-Ministry of Culture and Sports of the Canary Islands Government, representing RTVC from 2005 to 2011.
JAIRO LÓPEZ, EL VIAJE FILMS
Moderator Pitching Projects
Jairo López has more than 20 years of experience in the audiovisual sector. With the production company Digital 104, of which he is co-founder, he directed the documentaries ‘Jardín barroco’ and ‘Modernos’, and produced the feature films ‘La viajante’ and ‘Las postales de Roberto’. He is currently a film producer at El Viaje Films, which this year has commercially released the titles ‘Ellos transportan la muerte’ (Spain-Colombia) and ‘Matadero’ (Argentina-Spain-France).
As a graduate and DEA in Art History from the University of La Laguna, he has researched and published articles on Canarian cinema in specialized magazines, and regularly participates in conferences, symposiums and seminars on the audiovisual industry. He also teaches Pitching at the Instituto del Cine de Canarias. He has also been director of the Film Classroom of the University of La Laguna, president of the Association of Filmmakers of the Canary Islands Microclima, member of the Executive Committee of the Audiovisual Cluster of the Canary Islands and, later, manager of the same organization, developing projects such as the Atlantic Film Accelerator, the Crece Program or the launch of REDCAU (Spanish Network of Audiovisual Clusters).
CIIF MARKET 2023 @ All Rights Reserved | Contact
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Home Perspectives Reading Entrails
Reading Entrails
Firas Al-Atraqchi
In the formative years of paxa Romana it was common practice for wealthy families to seek out soothsayers who would read the entrails of geese, sheep, and fish to prophesy into the future.
In the formative years of paxa Americana one need not rely on such drastic measures to predict times to come. The devil is in the details, as they say, and there are many interesting concurrent ‘details’ to choose from.
Last week saw a flurry of public (and discreet) events that should give one some insight into events in the Middle East.
1.. The U.S. quietly, and with practically minimal media coverage, increases financial and military aid to Israel by a whooping 500 million dollars.
2.. Israel announces that Dov Weisglass, an aide to Israeli Prime Minister Arik Sharon, meets with U.S. National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice to discuss Israel’s demand for 10 billion dollars in loan guarantees. Of note is the fact that the Federal Reserve just slashed rates, U.S. unemployment rates are rising and 401ks are quickly becoming worthless garage sale artefacts.
3.. The heat is one, part un: U.S. Congress considers slashing military aid to Egypt; the aid is a pivotal clause in the 1979 Camp David Accord. The U.S. move comes in protest over an Egyptian TV serial alleged to be anti-Semitic. Meanwhile, prominent U.S. evangelicals continue to slander Islam and Islam’s prophet. The FBI reports that anti-Arab attacks in the U.S. rise by 300 percent since 2000; anti-Islamic attacks rise by 2350 percent since 2000. No measures taken there.
4.. Mideast experts agree that the pressure on Egypt is due to the latter’ s stance over an impending war on Iraq. Egypt has vehemently opposed a new war, with Egyptian President Mubarak claiming that such a war would “open the gates of hell in the Middle East.”
5.. North Korea’s ambiguous announcement over nuclear weapons ominously slides from front-page news coverage. The White House line, ‘focus on Iraq, forget North Korea’ is mimicked by major U.S. news media.
6.. The U.N. Oil-For-Food programme is renewed for only 9 days as the Security Council witnesses debate concerning the dual use list. The U.S. wants to introduce new items to the list. Pencils are still considered dual use for the graphite and lead they contain. The U.S. fears that imported pencils for school children may be fitted to missile warheads.
7.. Arab editorials charge that the U.S. move concerning the oil-for-food programme seeks to reverse the improvements to Iraqi infrastructure gained in the past few years. U.N. experts, along with UNICEF and WHO, agree that the programme has somewhat improved the plight of the Iraqi people. Moderate Arab governments fear the U.S move will be interpreted as a new measure to make life harder for the Iraqi people. (SEE MADELINE ALBRIGHT).
8.. Dr. Hans Blix, U.N. weapons inspections head, continues to be ridiculed by U.S. officials. The Washington Post blasts him for being sympathetic to Iraqi grievances; “Blix has an unparalleled record for failure in dealing with Saddam Hussein”. Former U.N. weapons inspections head Richard Butler implicitly casts doubt on Blix’ record for professionalism. Russia and France protest that U.S. attacks on Blix are undermining the weapons inspections process and aggravating the situation.
9.. Iraqi grievances that production of plastic slippers should not be considered a dual use item are ridiculed by CNN anchor Paula Zahn. “They are effectively lying”, says Zahn. So much for objectivity.
10.. U.S. intellectuals stage a protest outside CNN’s World Headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia. They charge that CNN has become a mouthpiece of the U.S. government.
11.. The heat is on, part deux: Saudi Arabia comes under the most vigorous attack in the U.S. media, spurned partly by pro-Israel U.S. Congressmen. This time the attacks are personal; Newsweek and Time articles allege that a Saudi princess donated money to a pair of 9-11 Al-Qaeda hijackers. The fact that Al-Qaeda’s enemy number one is Saudi Arabia is purposely lost in U.S. media. Unilateral action to apprehend Saudis in Saudi Arabia is threatened. New York Daily calls Saudi Arabia an enemy.
12.. Don’t fool yourselves: The pressure on Saudi Arabia has little to nothing to do with the ‘war on terrorism’; the pressure is piling up as Saudi Arabia continues to deny the U.S. use of military bases in the oil-rich kingdom to stage a war on Iraq.
13.. The Ukraine comes under intrusive inspections as FBI investigators dig for proof that Ukrainian officials sold highly advanced radar systems to Iraq. Leads point to a third party middleman, China. Of note, the Ukraine, Chine and Russia oppose a war on Iraq.
14.. Venezuela’s democratically elected President Hugo Chavez survives yet another coup attempt. Chavez cites that this is the 4th major coup attempt in less than a year; points finger of blame at CIA. Of note is Chavez’ visit to Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia in 2000/2001, irking U.S. officials.
15.. Former U.S. Vice-President Al Gore ridiculed in U.S media for his critique of Bush’s international policies, namely in Israel/Palestine and Iraq. Gore claims Bush squandered international good will towards the U.S. U.S. media has a field day with Gore. Message: no dissent, no criticism, no straying from the official line will be tolerated.
Reading entrails.
Firas Al-Atraqchi is a Muslim Canadian journalist living on the Pacific Coast.
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Tales of the Red Tails
Debra Cleghorn
Debra Cleghorn, Evolution
The countdown has begun for “Red Tails,” the aviation movie we’ve all been waiting for! Here’s a sneak peek about this historic fighter squadron from our sister magazine, Flight Journal.
In September 1939, while Europe was erupting for the second time in two generations, America slowly prepared for war. That month, the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama applied to the Civil Aeronautics Administration to participate in the Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPT). Thereby, black males tentatively became eligible for government flight training—a revolutionary development in American aviation.
In early 1940, CAA representatives arrived to supervise admissions tests. The Institute’s high academic standards were validated when every applicant passed the CPT entry test, reportedly an unmatched record in the South.
That fall, the budding Tuskegee airmen were heartened when President Franklin Roosevelt confirmed that Negroes would be trained as Army pilots.
Tuskegee’s first preflight class convened in July 1941: 12 cadets under Capt. Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., a West Pointer like his father, while white officers performed administrative functions. Of the original dozen cadets, five completed the course and proceeded to flight training.
In March 1941, the Army established the 99th Pursuit Squadron at Chanute Field, Illinois. Commanded by a white officer, Capt. Harold Maddux, it was staffed with black enlisted personnel. Meanwhile, in 1942, Moton Field was completed to provide primary flight training to Tuskegee applicants. Graduates then moved to nearby Tuskegee Army Air Field for basic and advanced phase.
By the time of the Pearl Harbor attack in December 1941, the 99th was based at Maxwell Field, Alabama, and the 100th Squadron also stood up.
Suddenly faced with a huge need for more of everything, the United States expanded its armed forces almost overnight. Far more than pilots were needed, and in April 1942, the Curtiss-Wright company began preparing to train black P-40 mechanics, with another facility established later in Lincoln, Nebraska. All the while, pilot training continued at Tuskegee with five classes graduated by August. That month, now Lt. Col. Davis assumed command of the 99th with 33 pilots on the roster.
With more pilots, losses were inevitable. In September, Lt. F.A. Mcinnis fatally crashed on a local flight, the first of some 150 Tuskegee Airmen who died during the war.
Additional personnel permitted a larger organization, and in October 1942, the 332nd Fighter Group was established at Tuskegee with the 100th, 301st and 302nd Squadrons. At year’s end, nine classes had graduated, providing a continuing source of pilots for the growing unit.
-Read the entire article in the February issue of Flight Journal
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Home Maserati MC20 News
Maserati MC20 GT2 Racer Begins Shakedown Process Ahead Of June Debut
It uses the Nettuno V6 engine.
Mar 07, 2023 at 11:50am ET
Maserati announced last year that it'd return to GT2 racing with the MC20. The automaker released two photos showing off the race car at the time, but today we now have more information about its upcoming reveal and a much better look at it inside and out. The car will make its official debut at the end of June at the 24 Hours of Spa in Belgium.
The car made its track debut today, beginning the shakedown process at the Autodromo Varano de' Melegari. Maserati says the launch is "the precursor to a series of events" leading to the racer's official debut three months from now.
Gallery: Maserati MC20 GT2
The MC20 GT2 inherits the road-going car's Nettuno V6 engine. The twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V6 features twin-combustion technology based on Formula 1 engines. Maserati didn't detail the GT2's output but said it took it to "a higher level." We'll hopefully learn all those details soon. The road version makes 621 horsepower and 538 pound-feet of torque. The car can sprint to 62 miles per hour in 2.9 seconds and reach a top speed of 201 mph.
The regular MC20 pairs the engine with an eight-speed dual-clutch gearbox. However, the GT2 replaces that unit with a six-speed sequential racing gearbox. A racing steering wheel with paddle shifters sits in front of the 10-inch driver's display tucked in the carbon-fiber dashboard.
Maserati replaced the racer's suspension setup with racing components. It gives the GT2 adjustable shock absorbers and adjustable front and rear anti-roll bars. The car also features quick-release removable bodywork and an adjustable rear wing. The Blu Infinito livery completes the coupe's racing appearance.
Check Out More GT2 Racers:
Mercedes-AMG GT2 Race Car Breaks Cover With 707 Horsepower
KTM X-Bow GT-XR Spied Preparing To Transform GT2 Racer Into A Road Car
"We've focused on developing a product that not only stands up to its competitors but is also an ideal car for our gentleman drivers in terms of handling, comfort, and performance," said Andrea Bertolini, Maserati's test driver. "We want them to experience a unique feeling in this car,' he added.
This isn't the automaker's first time competing in GT2. Maserati raced the MC12 in the FIA GT2 Championship from 2004 to 2010.
Source: Maserati
6:35am 2024 Audi A5 Sportback Spied For The First Time
Maserati MC20
Motorsport Official
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START @dm1n 2020-11-17T00:28:34+00:00
Szymon Nehring is one of the most gifted and promising pianists of the younger generation in Poland. He is the only Pole to win First Prize at the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition in Tel Aviv, one of the most important piano competitions in the world.
In 2017-2019 he was a student in the class of Boris Berman at the Yale School of Music (the Artist Diploma program). At the Academy of Music in Bydgoszcz he studied in the class of Stefan Wojtas, with whom he worked since 2013. Before that, he studied piano in the class of Olga Łazarska at the Mieczysław Karłowicz Primary Music School in Kraków and at the Fryderyk Chopin Secondary Music School in Kraków for 11 years.
In 2014 he won First Prize at the Arthur Rubinstein in Memoriam International Competition in Bydgoszcz. In 2015 he received a Krystian Zimerman scholarship and performed in the finals of the 17th Fryderyk Chopin International Piano Competition to win an Honourable Mention, the Audience Prize as well as a number of extra prizes. In 2017 he won First Prize at the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition in Tel Aviv as well as several extra prizes, including the Best Performance of a Chopin Piece Prize.
His debut CD with music by Polish composers received the Fryderyk Award 2016 from the Polish Phonographic Academy (in the category Album of the Year – Solo Recital), the Joker from Crescendo magazine, and the Supersonic Award from Pizzicato magazine.
The year 2016 saw the release of the artist’s two albums: Chopin’s Piano Concertos with the Sinfonietta Cracovia orchestra conducted by Jurek Dybał and Krzysztof Penderecki, as well as Krzysztof Penderecki’s Piano Concerto “Resurrection” under the composer’s baton. The artist’s latest recording includes Chopin’s works performed on a period instrument (Erard 1858).
Szymon Nehring has given concerts in Asia, both Americas and in most European countries.
He has performed with orchestras such as the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in Katowice, the NFM Wrocław Philharmonic, the Israel Symphony Orchestra, the Bamberger Symphoniker, L’Orchestre Philharmonique de Marseille, the Hartford Symphony Orchestra, the Calgary Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, collaborating with conductors including Jerzy Maksymiuk, Jacek Kaspszyk, Grzegorz Nowak, Pablo Heras-Casado, Karina Canellakis, Giancarlo Guerrero, Omer Meir Wellber, John Axelrod, Lawrence Foster, David Zinman and Krzysztof Penderecki.
The artist performed at venues such as Carnegie Hall, Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie, Barcelona’s Palau de la Música Catalana, Konzerthaus Berlin, Copenhagen’s DR Koncerthuset, Vienna’s Musikverein, and Munich’s Herkulessaal and Prinzregententheater.
In 2019 he was invited to join the Programme of the Orpheum Foundation, as part of which he performed with Tonhalle Zurich Orchestra under the baton of David Zinman. In 2020 he made his debut at the Berlin Philharmonic.
Szymon Nehring is represented by the Ludwig van Beethoven Association.
Photo by Bartek Barczyk
Photos by Wojciech Grzędziński
Photos by Bruno Fidrych
Supersonic Award Diploma (F. Chopin Piano Concertos)
Santander Orchestra Award
Nagroda Publiczności – XVII Międzynarodowy Konkurs im. F. Chopina w Warszawie
Fryderyk 2016 w kategorii “Najlepszy recital solowy”
JOKER CRESCENDO
Supersonic Award Diploma
Fryderyk Chopin Chamber Works
The album of the White Series of National Institut of Fryderyk Chopin contains chamber works of Fryderyk Chopin interpreted by Polish musicians: Szymon Nehring(piano), Marcin […]
Fryderyk Chopin Piano Concertos
The recording of two concertos by Fryderyk Chopin was made in September 2016 in the concert hall of The Krzysztof Penderecki European Center for Music. […]
Krzysztof Penderecki Concerto Doppio Per Violino, Viola (violoncello) e Orchestra Concerto Per Pianoforte ed Orchestra Resurrection Concertino Per Tromba e Orchestra
The CD from the cycle of concertos by Krzysztof Penderecki conducted by the composer himself. Album contains concertos for the instruments most rarely used – […]
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Japan Matters for America
America Matters for Japan
Explore US-Asia National and Local Connections
An initiative of the East-West Center and Asia Matters for America partners and stakeholders
The Mekong
EWC Projects
Educational Exchange
Chocolate Hearts [Image Source: Wikimedia Commons/Korona Lacasse]
University of Nebraska-Lincoln students enjoy Japanese candy-making tradition
By Xiaoyi Wang Mar 30, 2017
In February, Madoka Wayoro, director of the Kawasaki Reading Room at University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) hosted a chocolate-making event to teach students about Japanese customs. Students filled silicone molds with melted chocolate to make Valentine’s Day gifts for their friends and family. In Japan, it is women who do the gift giving on Valentine’s Day, and a month later on White Day, men reciprocate with gifts. Valentine’s Day chocolate, however, is not limited to just romantic relationships; friends, family, and office workers are on the list as well.
UNL has a close friendship with Japan and many Japan related programs have formed to meet students’ increasing interest in the country. UNL launched a Japanese language and culture program in 2009 for students to learn more about Japan. UNL also cooperated with Senshu University in Tokyo to establish the Business, Culture and Language (BLC) Program. This 12 week fall semester program provides UNL students an opportunity to explore Japanese culture. Global Friends of Japan, founded in 1990, is an officially recognized student organization in UNL, aiming to promote mutual understanding among Japanese students, others at UNL, and community members. Additionally, UNL has an annual Japan Festival in March. This free event is open to the public, and usually includes a cultural presentation and film screening.
For more than four decades, Japan has been a key trade and investment partner for Nebraska. Japan is the state’s largest foreign direct investor, having invested more than $4.4 billion into the state since 2010. Japan is also the third largest trading partner of Nebraska. In 2016, the Cornhusker State exported $4.7 billion in goods to Japan and imported $2.8 billion in goods from the country. Nebraska has now opened its first international office, the Nebraska Center, located in Tokyo. The new office serves as a hub for Nebraska’s international business operations, including the recruitment and expansion of Japanese-owned companies, agricultural market expansion, and the cultivation of multinational partnerships for economic growth. Nebraska also has a strong cultural relationship with Japan, with the two locations boasting three sister city relationships. 2015 marked the 50th anniversary of the sister city relationship between Shizuoka and Omaha.
The East-West Center promotes better relations and understanding among the people and nations of the United States, Asia, and the Pacific through cooperative study, research, and dialogue. Established by the US Congress in 1960, the Center serves as a resource for information and analysis on critical issues of common concern, bringing people together to exchange views, build expertise, and develop policy options. The Center's Washington D.C. office focuses on preparing the United States for an era of growing Indo-Pacific prominence.
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MERS Middle East respiratory syndrome
Approximately 35% of MERS-CoV patients that have been reported have died. Despite the fact that the majority of human MERS-CoV infections have been attributed to human-to-human transmissions in health-care settings, recent scientific evidence suggests that dromedary camels are a key reservoir host for MERS-CoV and an animal source of MERS infection in people. The specific involvement of dromedaries in viral transmission and the particular route(s) of infection, however, is uncertain.
Studies have shown that humans are infected through direct or indirect contact with infected dromedary camels.
MERS-CoV has been identified in dromedaries in several countries in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. The origins of the virus are not fully understood but, according to the analysis of different virus genomes, it is believed that it may have originated in bats and was transmitted to camels sometime in the distant past.
Some laboratory-confirmed cases of MERS-CoV infection are reported as asymptomatic, meaning that they do not have any clinical symptoms, yet they are positive for MERS-CoV infection following a laboratory test.
Most of these asymptomatic cases have been detected following aggressive contact tracing of a laboratory-confirmed case.
Severe illness can cause respiratory failure that requires mechanical ventilation and support in an intensive care unit. The virus appears to cause more severe disease in older people, people with weakened immune systems, and those with chronic diseases such as renal disease, cancer, chronic lung disease, and diabetes.
Since 2012, 27 countries have reported cases of MERS including Algeria, Austria, Bahrain, China, Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Islamic Republic of Iran, Italy, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Malay sia, the Netherlands, Oman, Philippines, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, and Yemen. Approximately 80% of human cases have been reported by Saudi Arabia. What we know is that people get infected there through unprotected contact with infected dromedary camels or infected people. Cases identified outside the Middle East are usually travelling people who were infected in the middle east and travelled outside later.
Causative agent
What is the Causative agent of MERS Middle East respiratory syndrome?
MERS-CoV is a zoonotic virus
It is a viral respiratory disease caused by a novel coronavirus (Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, or MERS COV) that was first identified in Saudi Arabia in 2012.
Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses that can cause diseases ranging from the common cold to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).
What are the Symptoms of MERS Middle East respiratory syndrome?
The clinical spectrum of MERS-COV infection ranges from no symptoms (asymptomatic) or mild respiratory symptoms to severe acute respiratory disease and death.
fever, cough and shortness of breath.
Pneumonia is common. but not essentially be present.
Gastrointestinal symptoms, including diarrhoea, have also been reported.
Mode of Transmission :
It is a virus that is transmitted between animals and people.
Non-human to human transmission:
The route of transmission from animals to humans is not fully understood, but dromedary camels are the major reservoir host for MERS-CoV and an animal source of infection in humans. Strains of MERS-CoV that are identical to human strains have been isolated from dromedaries in several countries, including Egypt, Oman, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia.
Human-to-human transmission:
The virus does not pass easily from person to person unless there is close contact, such as providing unprotected care to an infected patient. There have been clusters of cases in healthcare facilities, where human-to-human transmission appears to have occurred, especially when infection prevention and control practices are inadequate or inappropriate. Human to human transmission has been limited to date, and has been identified among family members, patients, and health care workers. While the majority of MERS cases have occurred in healthcare settings, thus far, no sustained human to human transmission has been documented anywhere in the world.
There is presently no vaccination or specific therapy for MERS-CoV, however various vaccines and therapies are being developed. Treatment is supportive and personalized to the patient’s specific needs.
Anyone visiting farms, marketplaces, buildings, or other locations where domestic camels and other animals are present should adopt normal hygiene procedures, such as hand washing before and after touching animals and avoiding contact with sick animals as a precaution.
Raw or undercooked animal products, such as milk and meat, provide a significant risk of infection from a number of organisms that can cause disease in humans. Animal products that have been properly cooked or pasteurized are safe to eat, but they should be handled with caution to avoid cross-contamination with raw foods.
Camel meat and camel milk are nutritious goods that can be ingested after being pasteurized, cooked, or exposed to various forms of heat.
Until MERS-CoV is better understood. Diabetes, renal failure, chronic lung disease, and immunocompromised people are all thought to be at a high risk of MERS-CoV infection causing serious illness. These persons should avoid coming into contact with camels, ingesting raw camel milk or urine, or eating the undercooked meat.
F Y D Pharm & S Y D Pharm Notes, Books, Syllabus, PDF, Videos
First Year D Pharm Second Year D Pharm
ER20-11T Pharmaceutics Theory ER20-21T Pharmacology Theory
ER20-11P Pharmaceutics Practical ER20-21P Pharmacology Practical
ER20-12T Pharmaceutical Chemistry Theory ER20-22T Community Pharmacy & Management Theory
ER20-12P Pharmaceutical Chemistry Practical ER20-22P Community Pharmacy & Management Practical
ER20-13T Pharmacognosy Theory ER20-23T Biochemistry & Clinical Pathology Theory
ER20-13P Pharmacognosy Practical ER20-23P Biochemistry & Clinical Pathology Practical
ER20-14T Human Anatomy Physiology Theory ER20-24T Pharmacotherapeutics Theory
ER2014P Human Anatomy Physiology Practical ER20-24P Pharmacotherapeutics Practical
ER20-15T Social Pharmacy Theory ER20-25T Hospital & Clinical Pharmacy Theory
ER20-15P Social Pharmacy Practical ER20-25P Hospital & Clinical Pharmacy Practical
ER20-26T Pharmacy Law & Ethics
SARS Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome sars-cov-2
Tuberculosis Symptoms, Causative agent, transmission, Control, Prevention
Arthropod-borne infections
Filariasis Symptoms, Causative agents, transmission, prevention, control
Covid 19 Epidemiology Symptoms Prevention Control
Acute Respiratory Infection
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/10691
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Montreal – Downtown Streets & Places
Quebec Trans-Canada Highway
Infotourist Centre, 1255 Peel Street, Suite 100
(514) 873-2015 Fax: 1 877 BONJOUR (266-5687) (Toll Free)
Peel METRO
Downtown is both the cosmopolitan heart of Montréal with its postmodern towers, surrounding Victorian architecture, and splendid churches, museums and green spaces dot the area. And all this right close by to great shopping and electric nightlife on Crescent Street.
The Underground City
Peel and McGill METRO (green line) or Bonaventure METRO (orange line)
Montreal is famous for its wide range of international boutiques, and with Canada’s low dollar its especially attractive for Americans to shop here. The original segment of the Underground City lies below Place Ville-Marie sits above. The “city” now links many major buildings and multi-level shopping malls in the downtown and is a shopper’s paradise year round. East of the McGill metro station the “city” extends from Place-des-Arts down past Complexe Desjardins. Another series of passageways extends the existing network to include a quadrant in the new Quartier international.
More than 500,000 people pass through the underground city every day, on their way to work, university or to scope out bargains at the over 1,680 boutiques and businesses. The many passageways also serve a more leisurely purpose; connecting certain métro stations, the underground provides access to about 40 theatres, cinemas and other entertainment venues, as well as restaurants, tourist attractions and museums.
Corner of Saint-Laurent Blvd. and de La Gauchetière Street
Place-d’Armes METRO
In the 1860s Chinese immigrants came to Canada to work in the mines and on the railroads. They settled downtown, mainly along de La Gauchetière Street near Saint-Laurent Boulevard. Over the years, the Chinese residents have settled all around Montreal , but the area has retained its Asian flavour and the Chinese community continues to shop and celebrate traditional festivals and holidays here. Sun Yat-Sen (Clark at de La Gauchetière street) honours the philosopher and political figure seen as the father of modern China, and you can see large arches at the entrance to the district and the pagodas on the Holiday Inn Select..
The 1826 Wing building (corner de La Gauchetière at Côté) houses a fortune-cookie manufacturer. The first Chinese laundry was established in 1877 on the corner of Saint-Antoine and Jeanne-Mance Streets, followed by the first grocery, the Sun Ling Lung market (72A de La Gauchetière Street). The Holy Spirit Chinese Catholic mission building (205 de La Gauchetière Street West) is designated a historical monument and contains a remarkable Oriental painting of the stations of the cross, drawn by a Chinese artist and his son.
Peel / Guy-Concordia METRO
Crescent Street run perpendicular to Sainte-Catherine Street in the heart of downtown. North of de Maisonneuve Boulevard, the Street’s sumptuous Victorian architecture housing luxury boutiques, haute couture showrooms and art galleries. To the south, nightclubs, restaurants, bars, outdoor cafés and pubs add frivolity and excitement, which is the heart of Montréal’s “joie de vivre”.
Atwater METRO
At the western edge of downtown, Greene Avenue has a typically British aura, with its red brick sidewalks adorned with magnificent flowers. Fashionable boutiques, superb art galleries and antique shops line Greene Avenue. At the corner of Wood Street, three Mies van der Rohe-design black towers of steel and tinted glass, soar above the elegant Westmount Square business and shopping centre.
Square-Victoria
at the intersection of Beaver Hall Hill and McGill Streets
The world headquarters of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a specialized agency of the United Nations, is here in Montreal. The complex features a 15-storey office tower, a five-storey conference centre, and a six-storey sky-lit atrium. Outside the Atrium entrance is a sculpture by the Québec artist Marcelle Ferron entitled “Le Miroir aux alouettes”.
Museum Quarter
Guy-Concordia / Peel METRO
The Museum Quarter radiates out from the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and is the heart of the city’s cultural life. The area’s historical and architectural richness spills into surrounding streets, with Crescent, de la Montagne and Sherbrooke Streets are the hub of the district’s vibrant business life. Also adjoining the district are high-end, designer fashion and décor boutiques, international shops, art galleries, jewellers and exquisite fine dining.
Phillips Square
Corner of Sainte-Catherine Street and Union Avenue
McGill METRO
This tiny park close to Sainte-Catherine Street’s major department stores features a monument to Edward VII. The park is named after its donor, Thomas Phillips, in 1840. The first downtown stores were located around this Square, which is still home to the famous 1864 Birks jewellery store, and The Bay department store, originally called the Hudson’s Bay Company which was founded over 330 years ago by British fur trappers.
Place des Arts
175 Sainte-Catherine Street West
Montréal, Québec, H2X 1Z8
Place-des-Arts METRO
Place des Arts, located in the cultural heart of the city, is Canada’s premiere entertainment centre, featuring an impressive year-round program of music, theatre, dance, opera, song, comedy, and musicals. Its five halls total nearly 6,000 seats and its outdoor plaza plays host to the city’s largest festivals. Guided backstage tours are also available.
Place Ville Marie
Corner of McGill College Avenue and Cathcart Street, Montréal, Québec, H3B 2E7
Bonaventure / McGill METRO
This building is “ground zero” for downtown business and shopping, with its innovative 1950s office tower atop the Place Ville Marie shopping centre with over 80 elegant boutiques, restaurants and services including the famous Restaurant Marché Mövenpick. Consisting of several towers, Place Ville Marie features a cruciform design recalling the religious vocation of this city, which was originally dedicated to the Blessed Virgin. Open: Monday to Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Thursday and Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.
Quartier international
Square-Victoria METRO
This new urban space has emerged from the quadrant lost to the 1960s construction of the Autoroute Ville-Marie. This east-west expressway was partially covered with tree-lined parks and public spaces, called the Quartier international to form a transition between the bustling, modern downtown and the quieter historical city. “La Joute” (The Joust), a work by celebrated artist Jean-Paul Riopelle, will be the crowning piece in a new public space named in his honour, following his death in 2001. Place Riopelle will face the newly renovated Palais des congrès (convention centre). Those arriving by metro at Square-Victoria will see that station’s authentic Parisian Metro grille presented prior to the Expo 67 World’s Fair.
McGill College Avenue is often called the little “Champ Élysées Avenue” resembling the grand tree-lined boulevard of Paris. From the terrace at Place Ville Marie the view northward provides a striking view of the main gates of McGill University and a great view of Mount Royal, along with a street ined with modern buildings and wide sidewalks for strolling and shipping..
Sainte-Catherine Street
Green Line METRO (with 8 stops)
Downtown has always been identified with Sainte-Catherine Street, Montréal’s renowned commercial thoroughfare which stretches east-west for 15 kilometres The street is lined with the major department stores, shops and restaurants that have been the pride of Montréal for more than a centur and is served by eight metro stations, with the green line running parallel to it.
Sherbrooke Street West
Guy-Concordia / Atwater METRO
Near Décarie Boulevard, west of downtown this street serves a mainly English-speaking clientele with its Victorian storefronts and British ambiance.
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2009-MT012
Incorporating Financial Sustainability Considerations into the Planning and Design of New Facilities in the National Parks
Management Track
MT012-Richardson
The backlog of maintenance in the National Park System is reaching crisis proportions. The total deferred maintenance (DM) backlog was estimated at $8 to $10 billion in 2008. This problem has worsened in recent years despite a concerted effort to combat it. The National Park Service (NPS) cannot hope to limit and reduce deferred maintenance without significant increases to its budgets for the Repair & Rehabilitation and Line Item Construction programs, which combined provide less than $100 million annually to address DM. Faced with this seemingly intractable problem, park planners should heed the maxim, “First, do no harm.” In other words, parks should guarantee that sufficient operations & maintenance (O&M) funding is available for all planned assets before construction of new assets begins.
Newly constructed capital assets can accumulate DM rapidly if not adequately maintained. The World War II Memorial on the National Mall has accumulated $725,000 in DM since completion in 2004. Perhaps because life cycle costs are so unexpectedly high, park stakeholders, typically cooperating associations and member of congress, often advocate and provide funding for new construction without providing adequate O&M funding.
The NPS can better ensure the financial sustainability of parks and the preservation of mission critical assets by requiring comprehensive life cycle cost estimates for construction and rehabilitation projects during the general management planning process. The General Management Plan (GMP) is the master plan that guides the development of infrastructure and major policy decisions concerning visitation, usage, and commercial activities in a park.
In July 2008, the NPS produced comprehensive cost estimates for an update of the GMP of Golden Gate National Recreation Area. In considering the requirements for effective and rigorous project selection, the planning team identified a need for comprehensive, quality cost estimates. This effort coincided with the interest of Park Facility Management Division of the NPS in promoting financial sustainability principles in planning.
Hundreds of project options were evaluated, some involving the construction of new facilities, some the rehabilitation of existing assets, and others the disposal of underutilized and excess assets. Cost estimates were produced for all facility projects contemplated within the three management alternatives considered as viable options for the basis of the GMP. The estimates were then used to help identify and improve the preferred alternative.
A review of this engagement yielded a number of insights. Foremost among these is the conclusion that comprehensive evaluations of financial sustainability for facility projects can be economically and efficiently incorporated into NPS General Management Plans. Incorporating life cycle cost estimating into the park planning process would result in improved project accountability and help the parks to reduce DM and calibrate the size of their asset portfolios in keeping with available O&M funding.
Fred Richardson
Mr. Richardson is an Associate at Booz Allen Hamilton. He received a B.A. degree in English from Kenyon College and a Master of Public Affairs degree from the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas.
Mr. Richardson brings a range of professional experiences to his current position in capital asset management at Booz Allen Hamilton. He began his career as a legislative aide in the U.S. Senate, and complemented this work with several positions managing political campaigns. During graduate school Mr. Richardson accepted a consulting internship with the National Park Service to develop a business plan for the Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island National Monument. He has produced business plans for three national parks, and managed nine consulting teams in the production of business plans for national forests. This work led Mr. Richardson to the capital asset management group at Booz Allen Hamilton, where he works with the National Park Service. His portfolio of work includes the management of cost estimating work for NPS General Management Plans, the development of a pilot process for the holistic improvement of degraded park areas, and Booz Allen Hamilton’s support of the NPS Sustainable Operations and Climate Change program. He has 17 years of professional experience, including certifications in mediation, negotiation, facilitation.
Matthew Tetreault
Mr. Tetreault, a Senior Consultant at Booz Allen Hamilton, received a BBA degree in Finance from James Madison University and a MBA degree in Management from Johns Hopkins University.
Mr. Tetreault has 9 years of professional experience encompassing cost estimating, financial analysis, capital asset management, and budget control. He currently provides capital asset management support to Federal Government clients. Recent projects include the development of Operations and Maintenance (O&M) cost models, General Management Plan cost estimating, and development of a Total Cost of Facility Ownership cost model. Past experience include development of life cycle cost estimates, estimation of quantitative benefits, and qualitative benefit assessments for Intelligence Community clients.
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Discussion: Why More Blacks Are Headed Back to the South
In Deborah Brown’s family lore, the American South was a place of whites-only water fountains and lynchings under cover of darkness. It was a place black people like her mother had fled.
But for Ms. Brown, 59, a retired civil servant from Queens, the South now promises salvation.
Three generations of her family — 10 people in all — are moving to Atlanta from New York, seeking to start fresh economically and, in some sense, to reconnect with a bittersweet past. They include Ms. Brown, her 82-year-old mother and her 26-year-old son, who has already landed a job and settled there.
The economic downturn has propelled a striking demographic shift: black New Yorkers, including many who are young and college educated, are heading south.
About 17 percent of the African-Americans who moved to the South from other states in the past decade came from New York, far more than from any other state, according to census data. Of the 44,474 who left New York State in 2009, more than half, or 22,508, went to the South, according to a study conducted by the sociology department of Queens College for The New York Times.
The movement is not limited to New York. The percentage of blacks leaving big cities in the East and in the Midwest and heading to the South is now at the highest levels in decades, demographers say.
“I feel a strong spiritual pull to go back to the South,” Ms. Brown said.
Middle-class enclaves, like Jamaica and St. Albans in Queens, are feeding this exodus. Black luminaries — like James Brown, W. E. B. Du Bois and Ella Fitzgerald — once lived in St. Albans, a neighborhood that is now being hit by high unemployment and foreclosures.
The migration of middle-class African-Americans is helping to depress already falling housing prices. It is also depriving the black community of investment and leadership from some of its most educated professionals, black leaders say.
The movement marks an inversion of the so-called Great Migration, which lasted roughly from World War I to the 1970s and saw African-Americans moving to the industrializing North to escape prejudice and find work.
Spencer Crew, a history professor at George Mason University who was the curator of a prominent exhibit on the Great Migration at the Smithsonian Institution, said the current exodus from New York stemmed largely from tough economic times. New York is increasingly unaffordable, and blacks see more opportunities in the South.
Source: New York Times | DAN BILEFSKY
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- Discussion are back blacks Headed more south The To why
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Stopping By, a new production at the Edgemar Center for the Arts in Santa Monica from June 4 – 25.:
Actress Barbara Tarbuck’s loving, touching and often hilarious solo show about an older woman who sets out to take her husband’s ashes to Burning Man, where she encounters the vast open space, violent dust storms, glowing night skies and uninhibited joy of thousands.
Written and performed by Mar Vista resident Barbara Tarbuck. Her daughter attended Santa Monica High School and Barbara taught an activing class through UCLA Extension for 20 years on Westwood. She won the Distinguished Instructor Award in 2006 and shortly after retired from teaching a regular class. Now she teaches occasional audition workshops and scene study master classes at the Ruskin Group Theatre in Santa Monica.
Trained on a Fulbright Grant to the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, Barbara’s New York theater work includes the American premiere of Harold Pinter’s Landscape and Silence; David Mamet’s The Water Engine at the Public Theater; the Broadway production of Neil Simon’s Brighton Beach Memoirs and the national tour of his Broadway Bound; and the Signature Theatre production of María Irene Fornés’ Enter the Night. Regional standouts: numerous productions at South Coast Rep including Sidney Bechet Killed a Man, Blue Window and, more recently, Becky Shaw; Long Days Journey Into Night at Dallas Theater Center; Six Characters in Search of an Author at Williamstown; Death of a Salesman at San Diego Rep; and The Cripple of Inishmaan at the Geffen Playhouse. She has been featured in feature films such as Walking Tall, Curley Sue and Peter Greenaway’s Tulse Luper Suitcases. Hundreds of TV guest stars include recurring roles on Falcon Crest, Cagney and Lacey, American Horror Story and Asylum, but she is best known as Australian Jane Jax on General Hospital. She’s just completed work on a pilot for a new half-hour comedy called Disillusioned.
By mirrormmg May 4, 2016
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FDA Approves ALS Treatment for the First Time in More Than 2 Decades
Congressional Quarterly—CQ-Roll Call,Inc.
By Natalie Grover / Reuters
May 5, 2017 5:33 PM EDT
The Food and Drug Administration on Friday cleared a treatment for fatal neurological disorder amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), marking the first such U.S. regulatory approval in more than two decades.
The drug, known chemically as edaravone, is already sold by Japanese pharmaceutical company Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corp (MTPC) in Japan and South Korea.
In the United States, the only other approved ALS medicine, generic riluzole, modestly slows the progression of the disease in some people.
After six months of treatment with edaravone on top of standard-of-care, data showed the intravenous drug reduced the rate of functional decline in patients by about a third, Dr Jean Hubble, VP of medical affairs, at MTPC’s U.S. unit MT Pharma America (MTPA), said.
ALS, whose cause is largely unknown, garnered international attention when New York Yankees player Lou Gehrig abruptly retired from baseball in 1939, after being diagnosed with the disease.
In 2014, ALS returned to the spotlight with the “Ice Bucket Challenge,” which involved people pouring ice-cold water over their heads, posting a video on social media, and donating funds for research on the condition, whose sufferers include British physicist Stephen Hawking.
The rare progressive condition attacks nerve cells located in the brain and spinal cord responsible for controlling voluntary muscles.
Eventually, the brain’s ability to start and control voluntary movement is lost, and the patient succumbs to the disease – usually three to five years from the onset of symptoms.
The FDA was expected to make its decision on edaravone by June 16. To be sold under the brand name Radicava, the drug should be available in the United States by August, MTPA Chief Commercial Officer Tom Larson said.
He declined to disclose edaravone sales data from Japan and South Korea in an interview with Reuters in anticipation of the FDA announcement.
Another promising drug for ALS is being developed by French drugmaker AB Science SA, which in March reported positive late-stage data on its drug, masitinib. The drug is now under European review.
More than 6,000 people in the United States are diagnosed with ALS each year, according to the ALS Association
The FDA Just Approved At-Home DNA Tests for 10 Diseases
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The Little Tin Box
The 5 Browns
The musical keepsakes in The Little Tin Box represent an encounter with childhood memory, a reclaiming of its sweetness and beauty, and a reveal of greater meaning in the light by having survived the dark.
The album is available worldwide on CD and through all dowload and streaming services.
On November 6, 2020 Steinway & Sons releases the newest album from The 5 Browns, The Little Tin Box: A Collection of Childhood Memories. The 5 Browns will be donating albums and proceeds as part of a philanthropic partnership with National Children’s Alliance, the nation’s largest network of care centers for children victimized by abuse.
Ryan, Melody, Gregory, Deondra and Desirae Brown shatter the stereotype of stuffy classical piano while appealing to all music fans with a lively, whimsical approach that will surely connect the audience with their inner selves.
At its core, The Little Tin Box is a passion project about awareness of the traumas and emotions children face, inspired by children’s keepsake boxes filled with personal treasures. The tracks on the album, many of which the siblings played throughout their childhoods, are meant to illustrate the emotions — some beautiful, some heartbreaking, some a combination — attached to childhood memories and mementos.
With the siblings having experienced their own personal traumas as children related to abuse, the album paints the complexities of childhood — one that can be carefree and fun, yet painful and confusing. The music transports both children and adults into a world of memory, evoking tears and laughter, meant to represent a child’s emotional pain and incredible ability to break through and find joy.
“I was astonished by the precision with which the talented Browns executed their keyboard gymnastics.”
“Undeniably masters of their instruments and their art, they could play lines of code and make it sound pretty.”
—Midwest Record
The Little Tin Box / The 5 Browns • STNS 30166
Recorded at The Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University on June 24–26, 2016.
Producer/Engineer/Mastering Engineer: Adam Abeshouse
Executive Producers: Eric Feidner, Jon Feidner
Production Assistant: Renée Oakford
Art Direction: Jackie Fugere
Design: Cover to Cover Design, Anilda Carrasquillo
Illustrations: Hilary Onyon
Photographs: August Miller, UVU Marketing & Communications
The 5 Browns — Ryan, Melody, Gregory, Deondra and Desirae — all attended The Juilliard School in New York City, where they became the first family of five siblings to be admitted. The quintet enjoyed their first wave of critical attention in 2002, when People magazine dubbed them the “Fab Five” and they were featured on Oprah and 60 Minutes. The 5 Browns’ albums have collectively spent over 30 weeks in the #1 position on Billboard Magazine’s Classical Album Chart. The New York Post has proclaimed: “One family, five pianos and 50 fingers add up to the biggest classical music sensation in years.”
The quintet has garnered extensive coverage from media outlets ranging from The Tonight Show, Good Morning America, Today, and The View, to NPR’s Performance Today, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and Entertainment Weekly.
The 5 Browns tour extensively in the United States and abroad and have performed in venues including Carnegie Hall in New York City, the Grand National Theater in Beijing, Suntory Hall in Tokyo, Symphony Hall in Chicago, and Zaryadye Concert Hall in Moscow. Individually and collaboratively, they have soloed with orchestras including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the National Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the New Jersey Symphony, the Saint Louis Symphony, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, and the Orchestre de chambre de Paris.
Additionally, filmmaker Ben Niles’ feature-length documentary “The 5 Browns: Digging Through the Darkness” has played at film festivals around the world and was labeled a Critic’s Pick by The New York Times.
The 5 Browns are exclusive Steinway Artists.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/13115
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Ron Polk
Al BlanchardAndrea BlackwellAndrew LangCody DoyleCynthia DawickiDan DiasDerek DrinkwaterEmily HydeHolly HuffmanJim McKiernanKarl SabourinLinda McKiernanMackenzie CorriganMary ChaplainMike PetersPam BlanchardRobert St. PierreRon PolkRoy DanielScott SancombShawn LamminenSheri GaySue DanielTom AngeloTom CraneTom Worthen
Gatemen
Legendary Mississippi State baseball coach Ron Polk, the winningest coach in the history of the Southeastern Conference, will return to Wareham for the 2020 season after coaching with the Hyannis Harbor Hawks for many years.
In July 2009, Polk was inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame. He is also a member of the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) Hall of Fame, having been inducted in 1995. In 1988, he was presented with the Lefty Gomez Award, the highest award given by the ABCA.
Polk retired from Mississippi State in 2008 following his 29th season at the school. He currently ranks ninth all-time in NCAA Division I career head coaches victories.
Polk concluded his 35-year career as a head coach with a record of 1,373-700-2 (.662). In his career, which also included stints at Georgia Southern (1972-75) and Georgia (2000-01), Polk led his teams to a total of eight College World Series appearances, five SEC Championships and 23 Regional appearances. He is one of only three coaches in college baseball history to take three different programs to the College World Series.
At Mississippi State, Polk recruited and coached some of the game’s all-time greats including MLB standouts Jeff Brantley, Will Clark, Rafael Palmeiro, Bobby Thigpen and Jonathan Papelbon.
A three-time National Coach of the Year, Polk held the position of Assistant Athletics Director for Special Projects at Mississippi State following his team’s College World Series run in 1997. While in that position, Polk spearheaded a successful campaign to expand Polk-DeMent Stadium in Starkville. He returned to coaching Georgia in 2000 where he spent two years before making the move back to Mississippi State for his final seasons.
Perhaps Polk’s most talented Mississippi State squad ever was the 1985 version. That club finished the year 50-15 and was SEC Champion before going on to appear in the College World Series. The 1985 Bulldog club featured future major league stars Brantley, Clark, Palmeiro and Thigpen.
IN his 35-years as a head baseball coach, Polk produced 35 All-American and more than 75 All-SEC performers.
In addition to Polk’s work in the collegiate ranks, the Boston, Mass., native has complete seven tours as a member of the coaching staff for the USA National Baseball Team, twice serving as head coach. Two of the teams he coached represented the United States in the Olympics.
Polk has also written many books on coaching baseball. He has authored “The Baseball Playbook”, the nation’s leading textbook for baseball, and is featured in the book, “6 Psychological Factors for Success: America’s more Successful Coaches Reveal the Path Competitive Excellence.”
Polk will primarily work with the position players this summer.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/13733
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Tag: Rosicrucians
The Federal Reserve Cartel: Part III: The Roundtable & The Illuminati
Source: TheRedPillGuide
Part 1 -The Federal Reserve Cartel – The Eight Families
Part 2 – The Federal Reserve Cartel – The Freemason BUS & The House Of Rothschild
[Excerpted from Chapter 19: The Eight Families: Big Oil & Their Bankers in the Persian Gulf…]
According to former British intelligence agent John Coleman’s book, The Committee of 300, the Rothschilds exert political control through the secretive Business Roundtable, which they created in 1909 with the help of Lord Alfred Milner and South African industrialist Cecil Rhodes.
The Rhodes Scholarship is granted by Oxford University, while oil industry propagandist Cambridge Energy Research Associates operates out of the Rhodes-supported Cambridge University.
Rhodes founded De Beers and Standard Chartered Bank. According to Gary Allen’s expose, The Rockefeller Files, Milner financed the Russian Bolsheviks on Rothschild’s behalf, with help from Jacob Schiff and Max Warburg.
In 1917 British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour penned a letter to Zionist Second Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild in which he expressed support for a Jewish homeland on Palestinian-controlled lands in the Middle East. [1]
The Balfour Declaration justified the brutal seizure of Palestinian lands for the post-WWII establishment of Israel. Israel would serve, not as some high-minded “Jewish homeland”, but as lynchpin in Rothschild/Eight Families control over the world’s oil supply.
Baron Edmond de Rothschild built the first oil pipeline from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean to bring BP Iranian oil to Israel. He founded Israeli General Bank and Paz Oil. He is considered by many the father of modern Israel. [2]
Roundtable inner Circle of Initiates included Lord Milner, Cecil Rhodes, Arthur Balfour, Albert Grey and Lord Nathan Rothschild. The Roundtable takes its name from the legendary knight of King Arthur, whose tale of the Holy Grail is paramount to the Illuminati notion of Sangreal or holy blood.
John Coleman writes in The Committee of 300, “Round Tablers armed with immense wealth from gold, diamond and drug monopolies fanned out throughout the world to take control of fiscal and monetary policies and political leadership in all countries where they operated.”
While Cecil Rhodes and the Oppenheimers went to South Africa, the Kuhn Loebs were off to re-colonize America. Rudyard Kipling was sent to India. The Schiffs and Warburgs manhandled Russia. The Rothschilds, Lazards and Israel Moses Seifs pushed into the Middle East. In Princeton, New Jersey the Round Table founded the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) as partner to its All Souls College at Oxford. IAS was funded by the Rockefeller’s General Education Board. IAS members Robert Oppenheimer, Neils Bohr and Albert Einstein created the atomic bomb. [3]
In 1919 Rothschild’s Business Roundtable spawned the Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA) in London. The RIIA soon sponsored sister organizations around the globe, including the US Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), the Asian Institute of Pacific Relations, the Canadian Institute of International Affairs, the Brussels-based Institute des Relations Internationales, the Danish Foreign Policy Society, the Indian Council of World Affairs and the Australian Institute of International Affairs. Other affiliates popped up in France, Turkey, Italy, Yugoslavia and Greece. [4]
The RIIA is a registered charity of the Queen and, according to its annual reports, is funded largely by the Four Horsemen. Former British Foreign Secretary and Kissinger Associates co-founder Lord Carrington was President of both the RIIA and the Bilderbergers.
The inner circle at RIIA is dominated by Knights of St. John Jerusalem, Knights of Malta, Knights Templar and 33rd Degree Scottish Rite Freemasons. The Knights of St. John were founded in 1070 and answer directly to the British House of Windsor. Their leading bloodline is the Villiers dynasty, which the Hong Kong Matheson family married into. The Lytton family also married into the Villiers gang. [5]
Colonel Edward Bulwer-Lytton led the English Rosicrucian secret society, which Shakespeare opaquely referred to as Rosencranz, while the Freemasons took the role of Guildenstern. Lytton was spiritual father of both the RIIA and Nazi fascism. In 1871 he penned a novel titled, Vril: The Power of the Coming Race.
Seventy years later the Vril Society received ample mention in Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Lytton’s son became Viceroy to India in 1876 just before opium production spiked in that country. Lytton’s good friend Rudyard Kipling worked under Lord Beaverbrook as Propaganda Minister, alongside Sir Charles Hambro of the Hambros banking dynasty. [6]
James Bruce, ancestor to Scottish Rite Freemason founder Sir Robert the Bruce, was the 8th Earl of Elgin. He supervised the Caribbean slave trade as Jamaican Governor General from 1842-1846. He was Britain’s Ambassador to China during the Second Opium War.
His brother Frederick was Colonial Secretary of Hong Kong during both Opium Wars. Both were prominent Freemasons. British Lord Palmerston, who ran the Opium Wars, was a blood relative of the Bruce monarchy, as was his Foreign Secretary John Russell, grandfather of Bertrand Russell. [7]
Children of the Roundtable elite are members of a Dionysian cult known as Children of the Sun. Initiates include Aldous Huxley, T. S. Eliot, D. H. Lawrence and H. G. Wells. Wells headed British intelligence during WWI. His books speak of a “one-world brain” and “a police of the mind”. William Butler Yeats, another Sun member, was a pal of Aleister Crowley.
The two formed an Isis Cult based on a Madam Blavatsky manuscript, which called on the British aristocracy to organize itself into an Isis Aryan priesthood. Most prominent writers of English literature came from the ranks of the Roundtable. All promoted Empire expansion, however subtly. Blavatsky’s Theosophical Society and Bulwer-Lytton’s Rosicrucians joined forces to form the Thule Society out of which the Nazis emerged. [8]
Aleister Crowley formed the British parallel to the Thule Society, the Isis-Urania Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. He tutored LSD guru Aldus Huxley, who arrived in the US in 1952, the same year the CIA launched its MK-ULTRA mind control program with help from the Warburg-owned Swiss Sandoz Laboratories and Rockefeller cousin Allen Dulles- OSS Station Chief in Berne.
Dulles received information from the Muslim Brotherhood House of Saudi regarding the creation of mind-controlled Assassins. Dulles’ assistant was James Warburg. [9]
The Atlantic Union (AU) was an RIIA affiliate founded by Cecil Rhodes- who dreamed of returning the US to the British Crown. In 1939 AU set up its first offices in America in space donated by Nelson Rockefeller at 10 E 40th St in New York City. Every year from 1949-1976 an AU resolution was floored in Congress calling for a repeal of the Declaration of Independence and a “new world order”.
Another RIIA affiliate was United World Federalists (UWF)- founded by Norman Cousins and Dulles assistant James P. Warburg. UWF’s motto was “One world or none”. Its first president Cord Meyer stepped down to take a key position in Allen Dulles’ CIA. Meyer articulated UWF’s goal, “Once having joined the One-World Federated Government, no nation could secede or revolt…with the atom bomb in its possession the Federal Government would blow that nation off the face of the earth.” [10]
In 1950 James Warburg, whose elders Max and Paul sat on the board of Nazi business combine IG Farben, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “We shall have world government whether or not you like it- by conquest or consent.” The AU and UAF are close to the CFR and the Trilateral Commission (TC)- founded by David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski in 1974. [11]
The TC published The Triangle Papers which extended the “special relationship between the US and Western Europe” to include Japan, which was fast becoming creditor to the rest of the world. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker was TC Chairman. TC/CFR insider Harvard Professor Samuel Huntington, who most recently has argued for a “Clash of Civilizations” between the West and the Muslim world, wrote in the TC publication Crisis in Democracy, “…a government which lacks authority will have little ability short of cataclysmic crisis to impose on its people the sacrifices which may be necessary.” [12]
The Illuminati
The Illuminati serves as ruling council to all secret societies. Its roots go back to the Guardians of Light in Atlantis, the Brotherhood of the Snake in Sumeria, the Afghan Roshaniya, the Egyptian Mystery Schools and the Genoese families who bankrolled the Roman Empire.
British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, who “handled” mafia-founder and 33rd Degree Mason Guiseppe Mazzini, alluded to the Illuminati in a speech before the House of Commons in 1856 warning, “There is in Italy a power which we seldom mention. I mean the secret societies. Europe…is covered with a network of secret societies just as the surfaces of the earth are covered with a network of railroads.”[13]
The Illuminati is to these secret societies what the Bank of International Settlements is to the Eight Families central bankers. And their constituencies are exactly the same.
The forerunners of the Freemasons -the Knights Templar- founded the concept of banking and created a bond market as a means to control European nobles through war debts. By the 13th century the Templars had used their looted Crusades gold to buy 9,000 castles throughout Europe and ran an empire stretching from Copenhagen to Damascus.
They founded modern banking techniques and legitimized usury via interest payments. Templars’ bank branches popped up everywhere, backed by their ill-gotten gold. They charged up to 60% interest on loans, launched the concept of trust accounts and introduced a credit card system for Holy Land pilgrims.
They acted as tax collectors, though themselves exempted by Roman authorities, and built the great cathedrals of Europe, having also found instructions regarding secret building techniques alongside the gold they pilfered beneath Solomon’s Temple. The stained glass used in the cathedrals resulted from a secret Gothic technique known by few. One who had perfected this art was Omar Khayvam, a good friend of Assassin founder Hasan bin Sabah. [14]
The Templars controlled a huge fleet of ships and their own naval fleet based at the French Atlantic Port of La Rochelle. They were especially cozy with the royals of England. They purchased the island of Cyprus from Richard the Lion Heart, but were later overrun by the Turks.
On Friday October 13, 1307 King Philip IV of France joined forces with Pope Clement V and began rounding up Templars on charges ranging from necromancy to the use of black magic. Friday the 13th would from that day forward carry negative connotations. “Sion” is believed to be a transliteration of Zion, itself a transliteration for the ancient Hebrew name Jerusalem.
The Priory of Sion came into public view in July 1956. A 1981 notice in the French press listed 121 dignitaries as Priory members. All were bankers, royalty or members of the international political jet set. Pierre Plantard was listed as Grand Master.
Plantard is a direct descendent, through King Dagobert II, of the Merovingan Kings. Plantard, who owns property in the Rennes-le-Chateau area of southern France where the Priory of Sion is based, has stated that the order has in its possession lost treasure recovered from beneath Solomon’s Temple and that it will be returned to Israel when the time is right.
He also stated that in the near future monarchy would be restored to France and other nations. The Templars claim to possess secret knowledge that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene, fathered children to launch the Merovingan bloodline and was the son of Joseph of Arimathea. [15]
Joseph was the son of King Solomon. Solomon’s Temple is the model for Masonic Temples, which occur without fail in every town of any size in America. It was a place of ill repute where fornicating, drunkenness and human sacrifice were the norm. Accorder to British researcher David Icke, it’s location on Jerusalem’s Mount Moriah may have also been an Anunnaki flight control center.
The Annunaki are the reptilian/aliens revealed by the Sumerian clay tablets- the oldest written accounts of humankind known. The Crusader Knights Templar looted their huge store of gold and numerous sacred artifacts from beneath the Temple. King Solomon was the son of King David- who during his 1015 BC reign massacred thousands of people.
Icke calls King David “a butcher” and asserts that the king wrote a good chunk of the Bible. His son Solomon killed his own brother to become King. He advised Egyptian Pharaoh Shiskak I, marrying his daughter. Solomon studied at Akhenaton’s Egyptian Mystery Schools, where mind control was rampant.
The Grand Lodge of Cairo spawned a network of secret societies including Assassins, Cabalists, Freemasons and the Afghan Roshaniya. Those who pass through to the highest levels become Illuminati.
Icke claims the Canaanite Brotherhood was headed by the god/king Melchizedek, who may have been an Annunaki. The King focused on a Hebrew understanding of the Ancient Mysteries. The Order of Melchizedek became the secret society associated with the Cabala. King Solomon developed his vast wisdom studying the Sumerian Tables of Destiny which Abraham had possessed. Abraham may have also been of Anunnaki origin.
Both he and Melchizedek had been tutored by the Sumerian Brotherhood of the Snake, whose name may have something to do with the Biblical creation story, where Adam and Eve are tempted from a bountiful garden of Eden (a hunting and gathering existence?) into a world of “sin and servitude” by a snake.
When the Bible says that the first couple ate the forbidden fruit, could it mean that Eve was impregnated by the snake – an Annunaki serpent (the Nephilim of the Book of Genesis) – thus damning all Adamus to a life of toil under serpent king bloodline control?
The basis of the Sumerian Tables of Destiny which Abraham possessed became known as Ha Qabala, Hebrew for “light and knowledge”.
Those who understood these cryptic secrets, said to be encoded throughout the Old Testament, are referred to deferentially as Ram. The phrase is used in Celtic, Buddhist and Hindu spiritual circles as well. The Knights Templar brought Cabbalistic knowledge to Europe when they returned from their Middle East Crusade adventures. [16]
The Knights created the Prieure de Sion on Mt. Zion near Jerusalem in the 11th century to guard such holy relics as the Shroud of Turin, the Ark of the Covenant and the Hapsburg family’s Spear of Destiny- which was used to kill Jesus Christ. The Priory’s more important purpose was to guard Templar gold and to preserve the alleged bloodline of Jesus – the royalSangreal – which they believe is carried forth by the French Bourbon Merovingan family and the related Hapsburg monarchs of Spain and Austria. [17]
The French Lorraine dynasty, which descended from the Merovingans, married into the House of Hapsburg to acquire the throne of Austria.
The Hapsburgs ran the Holy Roman Empire until its dissolution in 1806, through King Charles V and others. The family traces its roots back to a Swiss estate known as Habichtburg, which was built in 1020. The Hapsburgs are an integral part of the Priory of Sion. Many researchers believe that Spain’s Hapsburg King Philip will be crowned Sangreal World King in Jerusalem. The Hapsburgs are related to the Rothschilds through Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa’s second son Archibald II.
The Rothschilds- leaders in Cabala, Freemasonry and the Knights Templar- sit at the apex of the both the Illuminati and the Eight Families banking cartel. The family accumulated its vast wealth issuing war bonds to Black Nobility for centuries, including the British Windsors, the French Bourbons, the German von Thurn und Taxis, the Italian Savoys and the Austrian and Spanish Hapsburgs. The Eight Families have also intermarried with these royals.
Author David Icke believes the Rothschilds represent the head of the Anunnaki Serpent Kings, stating, “They (Rothschilds) had the crown heads of Europe in debt to them and this included the Black Nobility dynasty, the Hapsburgs, who ruled the Holy Roman Empire for 600 years. The Rothschilds also control the Bank of England. If there was a war, the Rothschilds were behind the scenes, creating conflict and funding both sides.”[18]
The Rothschilds and the Warburgs are main stockholders of the German Bundesbank. Rothschilds control Japan’s biggest banking house Nomura Securities via a tie-up between Edmund Rothschild and Tsunao Okumura. The Rothschilds are the richest and most powerful family in the world. They are also inbred. According to several family biographers, over half of the last generation of Rothschild progeny married within the family, presumably to preserve their Sangreal. [19]
The 1782 Great Seal of the United States is loaded with Illuminati symbolism. So is the reverse side of the US $1 Federal Reserve Note, which was designed by Freemasons. The pyramid on the left side represents those in Egypt- possibly space beacon/energy source to the Anunnaki- whose Pharaohs oversaw the building of the pyramids using slave labor.
The pyramid is an important symbol for the Illuminati bankers. They employ Triads, Trilaterals and Trinities to create a society ruled by an elite Sangreal few presiding over the masses- as represented by a pyramid. The Brotherhood of the Snake worshiped a Trinity of Isis, Osirus and Horus- who may have been Anunnaki offspring. The Brotherhood spread the concept of Trinity to Christian (Father, Son and Holy Spirit), Hindu (Brahma, Shiva and Krishna) and Buddhist (Buddha, Dharma and Sangha) faiths. [20]
The reptilian eye atop the pyramid depicted on the $1 bill is the all-seeing eye of the Afghan Roshaniya, known alternately as The Order and Order of the Quest- names adopted by Skull & Bones, Germanorden and the JASON Society. [21] Take a magnifying glass and look at the eye’s pupil. There is an image of an alien inside the pupil. I’m not kidding.
Novus Ordo Seclorum appears beneath the pyramid, while Annuit Coeptis appears above the all-seeing eye. Annuit Coeptis means “may he smile upon our endeavors (Great Work of Ages)”. Above the eagle on the right side of the note are the words E Pluribus Unum, Latin for “out of many one”. The eagle clutches 13 arrows and 13 olive branches, while 13 stars appear above the eagle’s head. America was founded with 13 colonies. Templar pirate Jaques deMolay was executed on Friday the 13th.
The numbers 3, 9, 13 and 33 are significant to the secret societies. 33rd-degree Freemasons are said to become Illuminati. According to the late researcher William Cooper, the Bilderberger Group has a powerful Policy Committee of 13 members. It is one of 3 committees of 13 which answered (until his recent death) to Prince Bernhard- member of the Hapsburg family and leader of the Black Nobility. The Bilderberg Policy Committee answers to a Rothschild Round Table of 9. [22]
Next Time: The Creature from Jekyl Island
[1] “The Secret Financial Network Behind ‘Wizard’ George Soros”. William Engdahl. Executive Intelligence Review. 11-1-96
[2] Rule by Secrecy: The Hidden History that Connects the Trilateral Commission, the Freemasons and the Great Pyramids. Jim Marrs. HarperCollins Publishers. New York. 2000. p.83
[3] Ibid. p.89
[4] Fourth Reich of the Rich. Des Griffin. Emissary Publications. Pasadena, CA. 1978. p.77
[5] The Robot’s Rebellion: The Story of the Spiritual Renaissance. David Icke. Gateway Books. Bath, UK. 1994. p.195
[7] Dope Inc.: The Book that Drove Kissinger Crazy. The Editors of Executive Intelligence Review. Washington, DC. 1992. p.264
[8] Ibid. p.538
[9] Dope Inc.
[12] Marrs
[13] Icke. p.148
[14] Bloodline of the Holy Grail. Laurence Gardner. Element Books, Inc. Rockport, MA. 1996
[15] Holy Blood, Holy Grail. Michael Bagent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln. Dell Publishing Company New York. 1983
[16] Icke.
[17] Behold a Pale Horse. William Cooper. Light Technology Press. Sedona, AZ. 1991. p.79
[18] Children of the Matrix. David Icke. Bridge of Love Publishing. Scottsdale, AZ. 2000.
[19] Marrs. p.71
[20] Icke. 1994. p.42
[21] Ibid. p.71
[22] Cooper
Posted on February 8, 2016 Categories Big Banks, Big Chema, Big Oil, Mind Control, Social Engineering, MK Ultra & Entrainment Technology, Nazis, News, Secret Societies & Ruling FamiliesTags Aldous Huxley, Aldus Huxley, Aleister Crowley, Annuit Coeptis, Annunaki, Arthur Balfour, Asian Institute of Pacific Relations, Australian Institute of International Affairs, Bank of International Settlements, Banking, Banksters, Big Banks, Bilderberg Group, Bilderbergs, BIS, British House of Windsor, Canadian Institute of International Affairs, Cecil Rhodes, CFR, Committee Of 300, Council On Foreign Relations, Danish Foreign Policy Society, David Icke, E Pluribus Unum, Eight Families, Europe, IG Farben, Illuminati, Indian Council of World Affairs, Institute des Relations Internationales, Iran, Israel, James Warburg, Jekyl Island, King Arthur, King David, King Solomon, Kissinger, Knights of Malta, Knights Of St. John Jerusalem, Knights Templar, Lazards, London, Lord Alfred Milner, Lord Nathan Rothschild, Madam Blavatsky, Max Warburg, Merovingan bloodline, Middle East, MK Ultra, Nazis, Neils Bohr, Nelson Rockefeller, Novus Ordo Seclorum, Opium Wars, Order of Melchizedek, Priory of Sion, RIIA, Robert Oppenheimer, Rosicrucians, Rothschilds, Royal Institute of International Affairs, Russia, Schiffs, Social Engineering, Sumer, Sumerian Clay Tablets, Tables of Destiny, The Creature from Jekyl Island, Trilateral Commission, Warburgs, Windsors, WWIILeave a comment on The Federal Reserve Cartel: Part III: The Roundtable & The Illuminati
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Powerful Unions: 9 Couples Who Mean Business in B.C.
BCBusiness Helesic
1. Carole Taylor, Chancellor of SFU and Art Phillips, former mayor of Vancouver and co-founder of Phillips, Hager & North
Home Turf: Vancouver
SHE is widely respected as a longtime business and community leader. After 20 years in broadcast journalism, Taylor was elected as an Independent Alderman for Vancouver, later named Chair of Vancouver Port and subsequently Chair of Canada Ports Corporation. Then became Chair of CBC/Radio-Canada and was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2001. Elected as a Liberal MLA for Vancouver-Langara and promptly named Minister of Finance (2005-2008). Became Chancellor at SFU in 2011 and continues to serve on several corporate boards.
HE served as the 32nd mayor of Vancouver from 1973 to 1977, after co-founding the successful Vancouver investment firm Phillips, Hager & North. Phillips was instrumental in forming the municipal political party TEAM in 1968, and is considered Vancouver’s first modern mayor, a proponent of the livable cities concept. In 2010 Phillips was awarded the city’s highest honour, the Freedom of the City award. That year Phillips and his wife also received the President’s Distinguished Community Leadership Award, which recognizes outstanding community service.
2. Derek Corrigan, Mayor of Burnaby and Kathy Corrigan, NDP MLA of Burnaby-Deer Lake
Image courtesy of Kathy Corrigan
Home Turf: Burnaby
HE has been mayor of Burnaby since 2002, now serving his fourth consecutive term. Left-leaning and outspoken, Corrigan is unafraid to speak out on issues that affect Burnaby taxpayers, like Kinder Morgan’s planned expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline (he slammed it).
SHE was elected MLA in 2009 and serves as Deputy Caucus Chair and opposition critic for Public Safety and Solicitor General. A lawyer and public-policy researcher by profession, she’s a strong advocate for public education, serving three terms on the Burnaby Board of Education until 2008.
3. Vikram Vij and Meeru Dhalwala, restaurateurs, co-owners of Vij’s and Rangoli
Image courtesy of Vikram Vij and Meeru Dhalwala
THEY famously brought contemporary Indian food to Vancouver in 1994 with the opening of Vij’s, a non-traditional Indian restaurant. Then Vij’s at Home, a line of packaged curries, launched with second restaurant Rangoli in 2004. Three years later their first cookbook Vij’s: Elegant and Inspired Indian Cuisine was published and won the Cuisine Canada’s Gold Award for Cookbook of the Year and the Cordon D’Or Gold Ribbon for International Cookbook. Momentum continues – last year, Vij’s Railway Express food cart hit Vancouver’s streets and Dhalwala (with Oguz Istif) opened 72-seat Shanik in Seattle. Dhalwala is also one of the organizers behind The Joy of Feeding, an annual multi-cultural potluck, supporting UBC Farm.
4. Shayne Ramsay, CEO of BC Housing and Janice Abbott, CEO, Atira Women’s Resource Society
Image courtesy of Atira Women's Resource Society
HE was named the CEO of BC Housing in 2000, the provincial agency responsible for creating housing options for those most in need in B.C. He provides leadership for the delivery of social housing strategies in partnership with the housing sector. Has also served as CEO of the Homeowner Protection Office and Director of Housing Policy and Program Development with the former Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing.
SHE is a leading social entrepreneur who has transformed Atira Women’s Resource Society into a multi-service agency with more than 20 programs and 11 sites in the Lower Mainland, dedicated to the provision of housing, advocacy and support services to women and children experiencing violence and poverty.
5. Annabel Hawksworth, Principal, Hawksworth Communications and David Hawksworth, Executive Chef, Hawksworth Restaurant
Image courtesy of Hawksworth Communications
SHE is a PR maven, focusing on the development and implementation of strategic media plans for luxury clients. Previously the communications director for Toptable Restaurant Group, Hawksworth opened her boutique PR agency in 2006, and provides services for resorts, retailers and restaurants including Bellstar Hotels & Resorts, Tiffany & Co., Caffè Artigiano and Tinhorn Creek Vineyards.
HE is Vancouver’s most renowned chef, the former EC at West Restaurant, and the youngest chef to be inducted into the B.C. Restaurant Hall of Fame. Devoted to ingredient-led, perfectly executed contemporary cuisine, he opened Hawksworth Restaurant and neighbouring Bel Café in Rosewood Hotel Georgia to rave reviews in 2011. Hawksworth was named “Restaurant of the Year” by Maclean’s magazine in 2012.
6. Nanon de Gaspé Beaubien-Mattrick, founder and president, Beehive Holdings and Donald Mattrick, president Interactive Entertainment Business, Microsoft
Image courtesy of Microsoft
Home Turf: Vancouver/ Redmond, Washington
SHE founded Beehive Holdings in 2009, a business incubator that invests in and helps accelerate the growth of local early-stage businesses. Beaubien-Mattrick specifically empowers female visionaries by offering coaching, capital and a connected network. Currently serves as director on UBC/VGH Hospital Foundation, H20 Foundation Board and The Forum for Women Entrepreneurs School.
HE joined Microsoft in 2007 as president, Interactive Entertainment Business, and is responsible for Microsoft’s entertainment experiences across gaming, music and video platforms. His team drives development and marketing of Xbox 360, Kinect for Xbox 360 and Xbox LIVE. In August 2011 Fortune named him one of the “Smartest People in Tech 2011.” He co-founded Distinctive Software Inc. in 1982, acquired by Electronic Arts in 1991 to become EA Canada, a company where Mattrick enjoyed many leadership roles before joining Microsoft.
7. Jay DeMerit, White Caps captain and Ashleigh McIvor, freestyle skiier
Image courtesy of Onside Sports Agency
Home Turf: Vancouver/Pemberton
HE started playing for the White Caps in 2010. From Green Bay, Wisconsin, DeMerit came to Vancouver after six seasons with England’s Watford FC. He was the first player signed by the Whitecaps in preparation for their entry into Major League Soccer in 2011, and was named captain as the season began. DeMerit also plays for the U.S. national team.
SHE is a 2010 Olympic Ski Cross gold medalist, World Champion, X Games Medallist and has won 11 World Cup medals. McIvor recently announced her retirement from racing at age 29, and a return to free skiing. She also works for CBC as an announcer and for Whistler Blackcomb as part of their new “Ski with an Olympic Champion” package.
8. Danny Robinson, founder and CEO of Perch Communications Inc.and Maura Rodgers, founder of Strutta Media Inc.
Image courtesy of Perch Communications
HE launched Perch in 2012, a hands-free video communication app where an iPod, iPad or iPhone is mounted in your home allowing always-ready communication via video. Robinson co-founded both Internet company Strutta in 2007 (with Maura) and Opskwan, and is the managing director of Bootup Labs, which helps founders build tech startups in the area of consumer Internet, mobile, casual gaming and web-based productivity software.
SHE launched Strutta in 2008, a platform to facilitate the managing of social promotions such as contests, sweepstakes and Facebook apps. The Strutta platform has been translated into nine languages and launched in every continent except Antarctica. Rodgers is also behind guide site urbandig.com and Launch Party Vancouver (with husband Robinson), a networking event for the city’s entrepreneurs, tech junkies and bloggers.
9. Anne Giardini, President of Weyerhaeuser Company Ltd. and Tony Giardini, Executive VP and CFO at Kinross Gold Corp.
Image courtesy of Anne Giardini
Home Turf: Vancouver/Toronto
SHE joined forestry giant Weyerhaeuser in 1994 as legal counsel and worked her way to president by 2008. The daughter of the late Carol Shields, Giardini is also an acclaimed author of two novels. Appointed Queen’s Counsel in 2010 and a board member of the Vancouver Board of Trade, deputy chair of the Board of Governors of SFU and chair of the Vancouver International Writers Festival.
HE is a seasoned corporate finance leader in the mining industry. Started his career with KPMG, spent 10 years at Placer Dome Inc. in a number of financial roles, became CFO of Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. from 2006 to 2012, and was named VP and CFO at Vancouver’s Capstone Mining in August 2012. Four months later, Giardini has already moved to a new role as Executive VP and CFO of Toronto-based Kinross Gold Corp.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/14308
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2008-LL05
Five Questions a Project Manager Should Ask About Every Estimate
Lessons Learned Track
Every day, project managers make decisions on estimates. Since each decision can determine whether a project succeeds or fails, credible estimates are critical. Projects launched without a rigorous initial estimate have five times more probability of experiencing delays and cancellations. Even projects with sound initial estimates are doomed to overrun if they are not guided by management rules of thumb and formal estimates-to-complete. Therefore, project managers must be armed with simple metrics along with rigorous estimating models to be successful. Simple or complex, there are five questions project managers should ask about every estimate and they should then compare the answers to their own rules of thumb.
This presentation will enforce and value of credible cost, schedule and risk estimating and discuss the project management discipline of compiling metrics to develop estimating rules-of-thumb.
Anthony A. DeMarco
Mr. DeMarco is the President and Managing Member of PRICE Systems L.L.C., a privately held company in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey. PRICE is the world leader in Parametric Planning, Estimating, and Budgeting software, training and services with clients in the North America, South America, Europe, and Asia. PRICE introduced the first commercially available Hardware and Software Cost Estimating Models in 1975 and attained its industry leading position through dedication to speed, quality and customer satisfaction. PRICE Systems is a PMI Registered Education Provider (REP) and NASA maintains an enterprise-wide license for PRICE Systems software.
Mr. DeMarco received a Bachelors degree in Mathematics from St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a Masters degree in Computer Science from the New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark, NJ.
Since joining PRICE Systems in 1981, Mr. DeMarco’s accomplishments have included the development of the PRICE electronics cost model (PRICE M), major enhancements to the PRICE hardware model (PRICE H), and the personal computer program XPERT/H. As PRICE Product Development Manager for several years, Mr. DeMarco led a team of operations researchers, logisticians and computer scientists in the development of parametric models and tools to serve the cost estimating and analysis community.
Mr. DeMarco is a recognized expert and frequent speaker on predictive cost modeling and Program Affordability Management. He has contributed over 25 papers on cost estimating, analysis and management and is cited on two U.S. patents for cost estimating techniques. In 1997, Mr. DeMarco received the highest honor bestowed by the International Society of Parametric Analysts (ISPA), the Freiman Award. In 2001, Mr. DeMarco served on the NASA International Space Station Management and Cost Evaluation Task Force (IMCE) to help address cost growth on the program. Mr. DeMarco works with many cost engineering societies and currently serves as a Director on the Board the National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA) Delaware Valley Chapter.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/14488
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Marietta Petkova, pianoOP DEZE PAGINA KOMT ALLE INFORMATIE OVER MARIETTA PETKOVA TE STAAN
Vesko Eschkenazy, violinOP DEZE PAGINA KOMT ALLE INFORMATIE OVER Vesko Eschkenazy TE STAAN.
Dominic Seldis, double bassREPRESENTATION:The Netherlands (exclusive)Worldwide (non-exclusive) Well-known for his unique solo performances and stage presence, Dominic Seldis shows us how incredibly virtuosic and musically sensitive the double bass can be. Dominic Seldis is the 1st Solo Double Bass with the famous Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra since October 2008. With his long term musical partner James Pearson at the piano Dominic has given numerous recitals in notable music festivals and concert halls. He has also performed as a concerto soloist with the London Symphony Orchestra, The Philharmonia Orchestra, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, the Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra amongst others. In great demand as a chamber musician, he has played all over the world with some of the world’s finest musicians. Dominic is one of the regular faces seen on classical music television. Most notably as a judge on BBC’s “Maestro”, but also appearing in different guises on BBC Proms, BBC Young Musician of the year and various national, commercial and local radio programmes. In 2012 and 2013, he is to be seen on Dutch national television as a judge for AVRO’s “Maestro”. Please read the full biography for more information. BIOGRAPHYNEWSVIDEOCONCERTSPHOTOSWEBSITE
Arno Bornkamp , saxophone
Anuschka Pedano, viola
Maria Pedano, soprano, oboe
Ruysdael Quartet
Quartetto di Cremona
RCO Chamber Soloists REPRESENTATION:The Netherlands (exclusive)Worldwide (non-exclusive) The soloists of the world famous Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra perform chamber music in various combinations and styles. The ensemble is an initiative of Vesko Eschkenazy and Henk Rubingh (respectively 1st concert master and leader of the second violin group). In 2016 cd recordings were made with pianists Emanuel Ax (Brahms piano quartet) and Lucas and Arthur Jussen (Saint-Saëns Carnaval des Animaux for Deutsche Gramophon). Internationally the ensemble performed with pianist Ludmil Angelov. The programmes of the RCO Chamber Soloists consists of compositions by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms, Dvorák and Korngold for piano trio, string trio, piano quartet, flute quartet, string quintet and/or clarinet quintet, preceded by sonates for violin and piano or cello and piano. Vesko Eschkenazy – violinHenk Rubingh – violin/violaGregor Horsch – celloEmily Beynon – fluteOlivier Patey – clarinet
George Pehlivanian, conductor REPRESENTATION:The Netherlands and Belgium (exclusive) Regular guest of the most prestigious orchestras in the world, George Pehlivanian gained international attention by becoming the first North American conductor in winning the prestigious international contest of Besançon. George Pehlivanian has conducted the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Gewandhaus of Leipzig, Philharmonia of London, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Česká Filharmonie, Filarmonica della Scala, Norddeutscher Rundfunk NDR of Hamburg, Accademia di Santa Cecilia, Rotterdams Philharmonisch Orkest, Orchestre Philharmonique of Radio France, Orchestre Philharmonique of Monte-Carlo, BBC Philharmonic, Mariinsky Theatre Symphony Orchestra, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra and the Symphonic orchestras of Montreal, Toronto, Cincinnati, Houston, among many others. George Pehlivanian has been Chief Conductor of the Slovenksa Filharmonika (2005-2008), the Residentie Orkest of The Hague (1996-1999) and the Wiener Kammerorchester (1996-2000) and Principal Guest Conductor of the Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz (2002-2012) and the Opera in Cagliari. He has collaborated with renowned artists such as Leonidas Kavakos, Vadim Repim, Sarah Chang, Joshua Bell, Janine Jansen, Misha Maisky, Gidon Kremer, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Arcadi Volodos, Emmanuel Ax, , Lynn Harrell, Maurice Andre, Evelyn Glennie, Mirella Freni, Ruggero Raimondi, Dimitri Hrostovsky, Leona Mitchel, Bernarda Fink, Marjana Lipovsek etc.. Regular Opera Conductor, he has performed titles such as La Traviata, Tosca, La…
O Verde Do Brasil
It was in the early 1990’s that I started my first activities as an artist promoter, inspired by a profound admiration for the Bulgarian pianist Marietta Petkova, who had just come to live in The Netherlands. At that time, being a musician myself, I did not know much about ‘management’ yet. My only concern was to introduce this unique artist to the audiences, knowing that she affects them deeply.
Having become more experienced over the years, I decided to keep my eyes and ears open for other artists as well, provided that I would commit myself only to those who would really have stolen my heart. Good management is all about passion…
In this sense, the choice for Vesko Eschkenazy was an easy one: who wouldn’t love his warm, humanized playing and personality?
Dominic Seldis joined us in June 2013. I cannot imagine a better ambassador for the double bass and classical music!
The same counts for Arno Bornkamp when it comes to the saxophone; Arno is always full of interesting new ideas (such as ‘Little Big Horn’, subsidized by numerous funds).
Since I played in a string quartet as a youngster, I have always kept a great love for this ultimate form of chamber music. In 2019 I started to work for the Ruysdael Quartet and the Quartetto di Cremona.
My cooperation with Anuschka and Maria Pedano started off in the Summer of 2022, after I had been deeply affected by their live performances on the radio and in concert.
My first special project was in 2015/2016: ‘Chopin Meets The Blues Goes Big’ by Peter Beets and the Northern European Jazz Orchestra (20 concerts in The Netherlands). It was successfully followed by the Bernstein Celebration Tour in 2018/2019 with the Millennium Jazz Orchestra, Laura Bohn and Claron McFadden, and by the Gershwin Celebration Tour in 2019/2020 (MJO with Fay Claassen). A new MJO project, ‘O Verde Do Brasil’ (featuring Lilían Vieira), will have its world premiere on October 6, 2022.
My own conducting experience has helped me to understand the dynamics between conductors and orchestras. This may lead to new projects in the future, if time permits… An interesting cooperation is the one with Maestro George Pehlivanian (for special projects only).
HAIKO BOONSTRA studied piano, violin and orchestral conducting at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam, graduating as a solo pianist in 1989 and as a conductor in 1998. His main teachers were Jan Wijn and Roland Kieft.
In 1989/1990 he spent a year as Resident Artist at The Banff Centre for the Arts in Canada, completing the Advanced Studies In Music program. He followed piano masterclasses with Gary Graffman, Nelly Ben-Or, Anton Kuerti and many times with György Sebök in Amsterdam, Canada and Switzerland.
His debut as a soloist with orchestra had been with the Frysk Orkest in Brahms’ First Piano Concerto. Haiko has given piano recitals and radio performances until 1994, when he shifted his focus towards teaching, conducting and artist management.
As a conductor he took masterclasses from Peter Eötvös, David Porcelijn and Joop van Zon in Amsterdam and from Michael Kukushkin and Alexander Polishuk at the Peter the Great Music Academy in St. Petersburg, where he conducted the Orchestra of the State Hermitage and the St. Petersburg Camerata.
Since then he has conducted several youth and semi-professional orchestras in The Netherlands, such as the JeugdOrkest Nederland, the Nederlands Jeugd Strijkorkest, the Amstel Strijkers Ensemble and the Orchester der Landesregierung Düsseldorf. He was principal conductor of Musica Instrumentalis Hilversum (1999-2010) and of the Ad Hoc Orkest Utrecht (1998-present). He collaborated with soloists such as Liza Ferschtman, Marietta Petkova, Thomas Oliemans, Gwyneth Wentink, Marieke Schneemann, Rosanne Philippens and Timothy Gill (solo cellist of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra).
In 1996 Haiko Boonstra became Personal Manager of pianist Marietta Petkova, which eventually led to the foundation of HB Personal Artist Management in 2001.
HB PERSONAL ARTIST MANAGEMENT
Kiekendieflaan 9
NL-1343 BG Almere Hout
T +31 (0)6 43 942464 (temporarily out of order) / +31 (0)6 40003301
[email protected]
HB Personal Artist Management | Ontwikkelt door Birds Media Tech.
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Category: Wind and solar technologies
Even at $10/barrel, oil can’t match solar on cost
World News Forum
Standard Oil Refinery No. 1 in Cleveland, Ohio, 1889
One of the biggest banks in the Middle East and the oil-rich Gulf countries says that fossil fuels can no longer compete with solar technologies on price, and says the vast bulk of the $US48 trillion needed to meet global power demand over the next two decades will come from renewables.
The report from the National Bank of Abu Dhabi says that while oil and gas has underpinned almost all energy investments until now, future investment will be almost entirely in renewable energy sources.
The report is important because the Gulf region, the Middle East and North Africa will need to add another 170GW of electricity in the next decade, and the major financiers recognise that the cheapest and most effective way to go is through solar and wind. It also highlights how even the biggest financial institutions in the Gulf…
Author jewel1944Posted on March 15, 2015 April 8, 2015 Categories Abu Dhabi, Business, Climate change, Ecology, Economics, Energy policy, Environment, Human ecology, Politics, Pollution, Science, Wind and solar technologiesTags National Bank of Abu DhabiLeave a comment on Even at $10/barrel, oil can’t match solar on cost
Quixotic ’80 Campaign Gave Birth to Kochs’ Powerful Network
The Libertarian Party’s 1980 presidential candidate, Ed Clark, center, with his running mate, David H. Koch. Credit Randy Rasmussen/Associated Press
He backed the full legalization of abortion and the repeal of laws that criminalized drug use, prostitution and homosexuality. He attacked campaign donation limits and assailed the Republican star Ronald Reagan as a hypocrite who represented “no change whatsoever from Jimmy Carter and the Democrats.”
It was 1980, and the candidate was David H. Koch, a 40-year-old bachelor living in a rent-stabilized apartment in New York City. Mr. Koch, the vice-presidential nominee for the Libertarian Party, and his older brother Charles, one of the party’s leading funders, were mounting a long-shot assault on the fracturing American political establishment.
The Kochs had invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in the burgeoning libertarian movement. In the waning days of the 1970s, in the wake of Watergate, Vietnam and a counterculture challenging traditional social mores, they set out to test just how many Americans would embrace what was then a radical brand of politics.
It was the first and only bid for high office by a Koch family member. But much of what occurred in that quixotic campaign shaped what the Kochs have become today — a formidable political and ideological force determined to remake American politics, driven by opposition to government power and hostility to restrictions on money in campaigns.
Read more at The New York Times
Author konigludwigPosted on June 9, 2014 June 10, 2014 Categories Climate change, Climate science, Conservation, Economic policy, Economics, Energy policy, Environment, Environmental policy, History, Natural resources, Opinion/Editorial, Political commentary, Politics, U.S. history, Wind and solar technologies, Workers' rightsTags American Legislative Exchange Council, Americans for Prosperity, Charles and David Koch, Chief Justice John Roberts, Citizens United decision, Justice Clarence Thomas, Koch Industries, Libertarian Party, Tea Party3 Comments on Quixotic ’80 Campaign Gave Birth to Kochs’ Powerful Network
Conservative heavyweights have solar industry in their sights
The Koch brothers and large utilities have allied to reverse state policies that favor renewable energy. Environmentalists are pushing back, but the fight is spreading and intensifying.
Americans for Prosperity, run by David Koch, shown here, and his brother, Charles, has led the effort to overturn a law in Kansas that requires 20% of the state’s electricity to come from renewable sources. (Phelan M. Ebanhack / Associated Press / August 30, 2013)
WASHINGTON — The political attack ad that ran recently in Arizona had some familiar hallmarks of the genre, including a greedy villain who hogged sweets for himself and made children cry.
But the bad guy, in this case, wasn’t a fat-cat lobbyist or someone’s political opponent.
He was a solar-energy consumer.
Solar, once almost universally regarded as a virtuous, if perhaps over-hyped, energy alternative, has now grown big enough to have enemies.
The Koch brothers, anti-tax activist Grover Norquist and some of the nation’s largest power companies have backed efforts in recent months to roll back state policies that favor green energy. The conservative luminaries have pushed campaigns in Kansas, North Carolina and Arizona, with the battle rapidly spreading to other states.
Alarmed environmentalists and their allies in the solar industry have fought back, battling the other side to a draw so far. Both sides say the fight is growing more intense as new states, including Ohio, South Carolina and Washington, enter the fray.
At the nub of the dispute are two policies found in dozens of states. One requires utilities to get a certain share of power from renewable sources. The other, known as net metering, guarantees homeowners or businesses with solar panels on their roofs the right to sell any excess electricity back into the power grid at attractive rates.
Net metering forms the linchpin of the solar-energy business model. Without it, firms say, solar power would be prohibitively expensive.
Read more at the Los Angeles Times.
Support quality journalism. Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.
Author konigludwigPosted on April 21, 2014 February 15, 2015 Categories Conservation, Ecology, Energy policy, Environment, Environmental policy, Human ecology, Natural resources, Political economy, Politics, Pollution, Propaganda, Top stories, US News, Wind and solar technologiesTags Alliance for Solar Choice, American Legislative Exchange Council, Arizona, Barry Goldwater Jr., Koch brothers, net meteringLeave a comment on Conservative heavyweights have solar industry in their sights
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North Korea fires ballistic missile into sea: South Korean military
North Korea fired a short-range ballistic missile from its east coast, marking its first missile launch in just over a week, according to South Korea’s military on Thursday.
A South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff statement said it detected a Pyongyang launch from the Wonsan area of Gangwon Province at 10:48 a.m., but did not provide further details.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff also said: Around Yonhap: “While enhancing surveillance and vigilance, our forces are working closely with the United States to maintain full readiness.”
It was the first launch in eight days. The last time North Korea fired a short-range ballistic missile into the East Sea was on November 9th.
The latest launch comes just hours after North Korea threatened to launch “more intense” military action against the United States if Washington chooses to continue its security commitments to protect regional allies. It was conducted.
North Korea’s Foreign Minister Choi Song Hue warned on Thursday ahead of the missile launch that the recent US-Japan-South Korea summit agreement on North Korea would make tensions on the Korean Peninsula “more unpredictable”.
The statement marked North Korea’s first formal response to a trilateral meeting between President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, and South Korean leader Yoon Suk-yeol in Cambodia on November 13.
South Korean President Yoon Seok-yeol (left) trio with US President Joe Biden (C) and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (right) on the sidelines of the 40th and 41st East Asia Summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Remarks at the Meeting (ASEAN) Summit to be held in Phnom Penh on 13 November 2022.
At another meeting with Kishida on the same day, Biden said, “I reaffirmed the United States’ commitment to extended deterrence. [South Korea] U.S. commitment to use all U.S. defense capabilities, including nuclear, conventional, and missile defense capabilities, and to identify additional measures to further strengthen deterrence, including nuclear, conventional, and missile defense capabilities. emphasized. [North Korea’s] A nuclear threat, according to a White House statement.
South Korean leader Yoon Seok-yeol said on Nov. 13 that North Korea had launched about 50 missiles since taking office in May, with “intensive” missile launches since the end of October.
One of these missiles is said to have crossed the maritime border and landed in South Korean territorial waters for the first time since the Northern Limit Line, a maritime demarcation line drawn by the United Nations Command at the end of the 1950-1953 Korean War. Yun pointed out. war. He called it a “very serious provocation” by North Korea.
The missiles were launched during a joint exercise between the US, South Korean and Japanese forces. These exercises, for the first time since 2017, involved a US aircraft carrier and her US B-1B supersonic bomber.
Two U.S. Air Force B-1B bombers, top center, four ROK Air Force F-35 fighters, and four U.S. Air Force F-16 fighters during a joint aviation exercise called “Vigilant Storm” in South Korea. Flying over the peninsula South Korea on November 5, 2022. (Korea Ministry of Defense via AP)
Over the past few years, annual military exercises between Seoul and Washington have been scaled back or canceled, in part to support a now-dormant diplomacy with North Korea and prevent the COVID-19 pandemic.
Mimi Nguyen Ly covers world news with a focus on US news. Please contact her at [email protected]
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Boomer Natural Wellness Anticipates a Busy New Year Following President Trump’s Approval of the Farm Bill
The Farm Bill recently signed by President Trump and Congress included a provision for the legalization and regulation of hemp under the Department of Agriculture. With the passing of this bill, thousands of U.S. hemp industry players including Boomer Natural Wellness are expecting to boom in 2019.
Hemp farmers, manufacturers, and business operators across the country are eager to see changes to federal regulation of hemp. President Trump approved a farming legislation on Dec. 20 that may pave the way for the legalization of hemp and regulation of the same under the Department of Agriculture.
Boomer Natural Wellness, a Las Vegas based brand that manufactures high-quality, hemp oil- infused supplements and cosmetic products adhering to the highest standards of quality, safety and efficiency is confident in the success of the bill.
Their exquisite range of hemp oil-based products include breath mints, breath sticks, chewing gums, deep rub salve, disposable vape pens, hemp patch, hemp tincture, hemp infused pet products, and much more.
A great source of high-quality nutrients, hemp oil has a long history of use in Eastern culture as a multi-purpose natural remedy. The oil contains virtually no THC, the psychoactive element present in cannabis, using the naturally occurring nutrients solely for medicinal purposes. Hemp is known to stimulate biological processes and can help prevent a number of degenerative diseases.
Some of the most well-known hemp oil benefits include but are not limited to
A remedy for assisting with pain, stress, sleep, anxiety, and more.
Decrease skin dryness to alleviate itching and irritation. Its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties can protect against the aging process.
Contains essential fatty acids, including docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), that are required for brain development.
With a 3:1 ratio of Omega-6 to Omega-3 fatty acids, it has been shown to support heart health and promote proper cardiovascular function.
A rich source of gamma-linolic acid (GLA), clinically proven in helping the body balance hormones.
Contains essential fatty acids that have been shown to promote healthy flora in the intestines and support immune system response and function.
Following Congress’ approval of the Farm Bill, Boomer Natural Wellness has announced the grand opening of their Las Vegas store Friday, Jan. 18 – Sunday, Jan. 20, 2019.
“The passing of the bill is paving way for a paradigm shift in hemp farming in the United States,” says Jenny Pike, founder of Boomer Natural Wellness. “Just like the entire hemp industry, we are expecting great things to happen in 2019. On the heels of this news, we look forward to the grand opening celebration of our North Las Vegas Store.
Find out more about Boomer Natural Wellness and to explore their wide range of products.
About Boomer Natural Wellness
Boomer Natural Wellness provides the highest quality, all-natural, non-GMO, hemp-infused products supporting health and wellness. All Boomer products contain zero THC and undergo rigorous third-party testing and certification. This ensures consumers receive safe, high-quality, effective supplements, cosmetics, sports and pet-specific products that yield positive results. Boomer Natural Wellness offers consumers a no-questions-asked full 30-day money back guarantee.
Headquartered in Las Vegas, all Boomer Natural Wellness products are made in the USA in accordance with USDA and State Department of Agriculture Regulations. In addition to its retail store in North Las Vegas, Boomer Natural Wellness products and additional information about the brand are available at www.boomernaturalwellness.com.
Connect with Boomer Natural Wellness on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
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Four telehealth networks will leverage OSCnet to aid Ohio communities
COLUMBUS, Ohio (Nov 26, 2007) —
Four regional telehealth networks that will leverage the speed and connections of OSCnet are among 69 projects nationwide receiving $417 million in federal funding to “significantly increase access to acute, primary and preventive health care in rural America.”
These four projects will receive more than $35.4 million over three years, representing the largest state share of funding among the 42 states and three U.S. territories garnering awards through the Federal Communications Commission’s Rural Health Care Pilot Program. According to proposals, these projects will provide high-speed connections to facilities in nearly half of Ohio’s 88 counties.
“Regional telehealth networks will help make Ohio healthier by propelling the adoption of new technology and ways to exchange health information,” said Ohio Governor Ted Strickland.
“My Broadband Ohio plan aims to create sufficient broadband capacity throughout Ohio to ensure that all communities and all Ohioans can benefit from initiatives such as this. I am proud of the work that the Ohio Supercomputer Center is doing to make this all a reality.”
These four regional telehealth networks will connect to Broadband Ohio’s backbone to transport data traffic between regions in Ohio, as well as to use OSCnet to access Internet2, the primary national research and education network in the country. This fulfills a key requirement of the grant – that the healthcare traffic be able to flow across the country from Ohio.
“As a direct result of the prior investments in OSCnet to establish a statewide backbone, nearly all the monies from these grants can be used to provide last-mile connectivity for hospitals, clinics, centers, etc.,” said Stanley Ahalt, executive director of the Ohio Supercomputer Center.
“If we can work closely with the grantees in the deployment of last-mile connections, the state should be able to leverage the Ohio connections for productive purposes beyond healthcare. The FCC grant specifically allows for these additional uses so that the regional telehealth networks become self-sufficient and sustainable. This could significantly expedite Governor Strickland’s Broadband Ohio plan to deploy high-speed connections to every county.”
The four projects involving OSCnet consist of:
The Southern Ohio Healthcare Network, which will receive $13.9 million to provide connectivity to about 60 facilities by building or purchasing fiber-optic rings, as well as to provide connectivity to facilities outside the reach of the rings.
This regional network will impact 15 Ohio counties: Adams, Athens, Fayette, Gallia, Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs, Morgan, Perry, Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton and Washington.
The Northeast Ohio Regional Health Information Organization, which will receive $11.3 million to expand and upgrade an existing network to connect approximately 19 medical facilities.
This regional network will impact 22 Ohio counties: Ashland, Ashtabula, Carrolton, Columbiana, Coshocton, Cuyahoga, Erie, Geauga, Holmes, Huron, Lake, Lorain, Mahoning, Medina, Portage, Sandusky, Seneca, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Tuscarawas and Wayne.
A consortium of eight healthcare facilities in southeastern Ohio, Holzer Consolidated Health Systems, which will receive $1.8 million to upgrade its existing network to a broadband fiber-optic network. This regional network will initially impact Ohio’s Gallia and Jackson Counties.
Eventually, through a collaborative relationship with the Appalachian Regional Informatics Consortium – Electronic Data Interchange project, the Holzer network plans to expand to facilities in West Virginia’s Wood County and eight additional Ohio counties: Athens, Fairfield, Guernsey, Hocking, Muskingum, Ross, Scioto and Washington.
The statewide West Virginia Telehealth Alliance, which will receive $8.4 million to connect approximately 450 West Virginia healthcare facilities, reaching Internet2 through OSCnet connections to Marshall University in Huntington, W.Va.
“I don’t think that there is any way to overstate how important this is for our rural communities,” said Mark Ansboury, acting chief technology officer for the Northeast Ohio Regional Health Information Organization. “These projects will literally transform the level of patient care and breadth of diagnostic services available, providing patient’s access to the same quality of health services readily available in our major cities.”
“We are delighted to have the opportunity to work with the Ohio Supercomputer Center to build a health care network that will open the world of high-tech medical innovation to all of southern Ohio,” said Tom Reid, project director for the Southern Ohio Health Care Network. “The collaborative spirit and technical excellence available to us through our association with OSCnet will provide fundamental support to our efforts, as well as connectivity to the globe.”
Governor Strickland issued an executive order in July that paired OSCnet – the nation’s leading high-speed, statewide network dedicated to education, research and economic competitiveness – with the NextGen Network, a new state and local government system being developed by acquiring available bandwidth from OSCnet.
The order also created the Ohio Broadband Council to serve as the coordinating body for Broadband Ohio and to provide oversight of the initiative from a policy, procedure, process and development standpoint. Ohio’s Office of Information Technology manages the NextGen Network, while the Ohio Supercomputer Center continues to manage OSCnet.
The Federal Communication Commission’s pilot program will support the connection of more than 6,000 public and non-profit health care providers nationwide to broadband telehealth networks. The participating health care facilities include: hospitals, clinics, universities and research centers, behavioral health sites, correctional facility clinics, and community health centers.
Ohio Supercomputer Center: Celebrating 20 years of service, the Ohio Supercomputer provides reliable high performance computing and high performance networking infrastructure for a diverse state and regional community including education, academic research, industry, and government. OSC promotes and stimulates computational research and education to enable the state to achieve its aspirations in information systems and advanced technology and industries. For additional information, visit www.osc.edu.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/16355
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The centennial stimulated public arts and spawned paintings, murals, sculptures and plays about El Paso's rich multicultural heritage. Private and public monies, especially depression work programs supported artists and writers, some of whom would become nationally recognized such as Tom Lea. The art projects promoted the area's historical heritage and tourism.
The artists, whose works celebrated the centennial included Tom Lea Jr. and José Aceves. Carillo Gonzáles and Keith Martin. The paintings and drawings of Tom Lea, Leola Freeman, José Aceves, and Carillo Gonzales were prominently exhibited at the Texas Centennial Exposition. Lea’s large mural depicting the Texas cattle culture graced the wall of the Hall of State building at the Dallas exposition. His illustrations of centennial themes were featured in the Herald’s Texas Centennial Edition. In October 1936, the Mckee Construction Company completed construction of the Centennial Museum on the College of Mines. Above the building’s entrance, Tom Lea created a large sandstone lintel depicting Cabeza de Vaca and his three companions at the Pass of the North in 1537.
In August 1936, Damasio Colmenero, Tigua tribal cacique, posed for a large portrait oil painting by artist Keith Martin in the Paso del Norte Hotel. The portrait was publicized as a centennial activity. The painting was temporarily exhibited in the Paso de Norte Hotel where the artist had his studio.
Tigua History Celebrated
Newspaper writers made the public aware of the Tigua legacy. They included Cleofás Calleros, Marshall Hail, Joseph Ignatius Driscoll, Jeanie M. Frank and Betty Luther. The El Paso Diocese published Driscoll’s centennial booklet, El Paso the Land of Romance on its 400th birthday.
The Beginnings of Spanish Settlement in the El Paso District by Anne E. Hughes was reprinted by the El Paso Public School system in 1934 as a Texas Centennial Activity. The historical treatise, written in 1914, focused on the early history of the settlement in the El Paso region. Subsequently, it has been annotated and re-published by Ysleta del Sur Pueblo.
Several centennial articles concerned the Tigua Indians. On August 24, 1935, Marshall Hail wrote a newspaper article entitled "Change of Priest at Ysleta Stirred Indians to Revolt." It concerned an event, which occurred in 1890 when Father M. Penella, S.J., assigned a secular curate to Ysleta Mission. Bishop Pierre Bourgade decided to remove the Jesuits from the El Paso area. The replacement infuriated the Tigua Tribe because they had not been consulted. As result of Indian opposition, Bishop Dunne was forced to reverse his decision.
J.N. Phillips wrote an article entitled "Early Day Ysleta Indian Band Save Spanish Deserters From Punishment." It included an oral history tradition that he had recorded from Manuel Ortega. It helped make the public aware of the tribe's contributions to the development of the region.
Centennial Markers Recognize Tigua History
The placement of commemorative markers was a major activity of the Texas Centennial. The El Paso County Advisory Board of the Texas Centennial Commission produced Stone and bronze plaques, funded by the state for $200 each. A few markers were privately financed by local civic organizations. During the centennial observance, at least twelve historical markers were installed within El Paso County.
Four markers within the region recognized Tigua contributions. All of these markers have survived. The State of Texas erected two markers at the Ysleta Mission commemorating Tigua Indian history. The Knights of Columbus donated a third marker at the mission. The fourth marker recognized the battle of Sierra Vieja near Valentine, Texas.
The Texas Centennial funded the marker at the Ysleta Mission, to recognize the founding of Ysleta Mission and pueblo as result of the 1680 Pueblo Indian Revolt in New Mexico. The State Historical Survey Commission, Texas Highway Department, Texas Society of Colonial Dames, and the Knights of Columbus authored the text. The plaque was unveiled in front of the Ysleta Mission on July 16, the Feast Day of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, instead of on June 13th the feast day of San Antonio, the Tribal patron saint. It was dedicated on this date because the tribal delegation and Cleofás Calleros were attending the Texas Centennial Exposition from June 11 through the 13th.
The Texas State Council of the Knights of Columbus erected the second Ysleta Mission marker. Outlined on the stone vertical face is a design that features a patronizing image of a Tigua Indian kneeling before a Franciscan missionary. Above the image and text is a bas-relief of the mission landscape. The marker credited the Franciscans for founding the mission. The text honored the Church for "civilizing and Christianizing" the Tigua. The plaque referred to Ysleta as the first Indian and Spanish settlement in Texas, when in fact it was specifically an Indian pueblo and not a Spanish settlement.
Texas Centennial Ysleta Mission Marker
"Site of the first mission in Texas, Corpus Christi De La Ysleta Del Sur, founded in 1682 by Don Antonio de Otermin and Padre Fray Francisco Ayeta, O.F.M. for the civilizing and Christianizing of the Tigua Indians, Pueblo revolt refugees, formerly located at La Ysleta, New Mexico. Building damaged by floods of the Rio Grande and later by fire, but rebuilt on the exact site and in part on the walls of the original structure. Nearby was established the Pueblo of Ysleta, first Indian and Spanish settlement in Texas. Erected by the Texas State Council, Knights of Columbus in 1936."
Paso Viejo Battle Plaque
The historical marker that recognized Tigua valor at the battle of Paso Viejo was installed at that location on the Espy Miller Ranch near Van Horn. Simón Olguín, Tigua Pueblo Scout and six Buffalo Soldiers were killed on June 11, 1880, as result of an Apache Ambush at the pass (Houser, 2003:5:178-179; U.S. National Archives, 1880; Annual Report of the Secretary of War). The text plaque reads as follows. (The date is incorrect it should be June 11):
"In this Vicinity June 12, 1880, the Apaches made their last stand in Presidio County when four Pueblo Indian Scouts of General Benj. H. Grierson, U.S.A. fought and defeated 20 Apache Warriors. Erected by the state of Texas 1936".
Jack Shipman, local historian wrote the marker's text with the support of the Marfa Chamber of Commerce and the State of Texas. It was unveiled with a dedicatory ceremony, without Tigua Indian participation on March 6, 1938.
Mr. Shipman, program coordinator, remarked at the dedication that the Tigua Indians deserved recognition by the state. He stated in a letter to a member of the centennial organization: "I am indeed happy [that] the State of Texas has honored these valiant men with a marker. Wonder if you can find out if there are any of these Pueblo scout's descendents living in Ysleta now?"
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/16688
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The AMB is the public administration of the metropolitan area of Barcelona, a large urban conurbation comprising 36 municipalities. The constitution as public administration was on 21 July 2011 in accordance with Law 31/2010 passed by the Parliament of Catalonia. It is established as a local government composed by representatives of the 36 municipalities. The main competences are related to urban planning, transport and mobility, housing, economic development, social cohesion and ecology. The ecology area is linked to three services: waste prevention and management, water and wastewater management, and environmental services. The Directorate of Waste Prevention and Management Services is that which will be involved in the INFUSION project. It is in charge of municipal waste treatment and owns 12 waste treatment facilities with an overall capacity of 1,040,000 tons of municipal solid waste and 466,000 tons of sorted solid organic waste. The AMB owns Ecoparc 2, the facility in which one of the INFUSION prototypes will be implemented. Moreover, as the entity responsible for waste management from the metropolitan area o Barcelona, AMB could replicate the innovative system developed at INFUSION into the territory’s other urban waste treatment facilities.
Role in the project: Permits management, characterization and monitoring of Ecoparc 2 effluents through AMB Laboratory accredited by the National Accreditation Body (ENAC), responsible of the dissemination and communication activities.
Founded in 1986, joint-stock company since 2002, AMIU Genova is owned by the Municipality of Genoa.
AMIU is the main provider in the Liguria region (Italy) for environmental services, waste management and circular economy. The company manages two dismissed landfills, an operative landfill, civic amenity sites, and a recycling plant for plastic and metals. Moreover, AMIU promotes a circular economy by providing services for the reuse and repair of furniture and Electric and Electronic Equipment (EEE). AMIU has four subsidiary companies: AMIU Bonifiche (asbestos services), Ecolegno (wood collection and recycling), Ge.Am. (integrated waste management in the port area) and Sater (waste management in Cogoleto Municipality). Overall, the company has extensive experience and is fully operational in the following areas:
-Waste management and design (street sweeping, waste collection, transport and disposal; collection, transport and disposal of bulky, hazardous and special waste including WEEE, construction and demolition waste; civic amenities management)
-Landfills management, design and maintenance
-Requalification of contaminated soils, degraded areas and brownfields management
-Sorting plant management
-Environmental consulting
-Quality and environmental certification consulting
-Laboratory environmental analysis (waste, asbestos, soil, water, air)
-Waste vehicles fleet management and maintenance
-Cleaning of public spaces including beaches, storm water drains and weeding management
-Equipment rental and services for municipal authorities
-Garbage collection fees management
-Environmental training and education initiatives
-Circular economy approach to waste management, reduction, and valorisation (permanent forum Liguriacircular)
Role in the project: Communication and dissemination activities, valorisation of INFUSION solution
AQUALIA is the third-largest private water management company in Europe and the seventh worldwide (Global Water Intelligence). AQUALIA is part of the environmental services group FCC, which provides public services infrastructures, present on 5 continents, and employing around 70,000 people in 52 countries. AQUALIA covers the entire water cycle and manages water and wastewater services for more than 1100 towns and cities and it serves more than 23 million people in more than 22 countries. AQUALIA’s activity comprises 3 major areas among which, it creates synergies in knowledge, methodology, research and development, working with local partners and administrations:
– Integral management of public water services
– Design and construction of all types of water infrastructures.
– Global solutions for the use of water in industry.
AQUALIA has solid experience in water and wastewater treatment and management, always aimed at presenting sustainable solutions to problems arising in the field of water treatment, allowing the technical department to design water treatment facilities with the latest and most modern technologies. AQUALIA has provided necessary knowledge through pilot programs testing plants to solve wastewater treatment problems with innovative technologies. AQUALIA has considered the participation of its affiliated entity HIDROTEC, a subsidiary of the water utility AQUALIA, that administers specialised support services in engineering, information technology as well as health and safety.
Role in the project: Technology provider, engineering, support the optimization and operation of technologies.
Mechanical-biological treatment plant, with a capacity of 300,000 Tn/year between containers, REST and FORM. It has automatic pre-treatment processes, anaerobic digestion, composting tunnels, cogeneration engines, air treatment and biological leachate treatment plant.
Role in the project: Construction and operation of prototype and monitoring of water contaminants.
EURECAT, Centre Tecnològic de Catalunya is a non-profit private foundation whose aim is to efficiently contribute to improving the competitiveness and the technological and sustainable development of companies by providing specialized services and carrying out R&D and innovation projects. EURECAT has participated in numerous projects and individual contracts aimed at innovation, development, testing and optimization of water treatment and reuse technologies, in urban, agricultural, industrial and environmental sectors. Among its fields of expertise, EURECAT has ample experience and knowledge on the mechanisms involved in separation technologies and biological treatments for water and wastewater treatment. EURECAT researchers have participated in numerous research, development and innovation projects related to separation technologies including membrane technologies (e.g., reverse osmosis and reverse electrodialysis), advanced oxidative processes (e.g., ozone and H2O2/UV) and biological processes such as activated sludge, MBR, anaerobic digestion, IFAS, etc. Apart from conventional equipment for the microbiological and physicochemical analysis of environmental samples, EURECAT also has facilities to evaluate the performance of membrane and biological processes such as bench and pilot scale membrane equipment. Furthermore, EURECAT has ample experience in Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) and Life-cycle Cost (LCC) studies in sectors such as: wastewater treatment and regeneration, water treatment, and energy production. EURECAT led the FP7 DEMOWARE, intended for demonstration of water reuse schemes in different sectors, among other projects about water treatment and reuse (i.e., LIFE RELEACH, LIFE REWATCH, LIFE SOLIEVA).
Role in the project: Coordinating beneficiary, optimization of the INFUSION solution at bench-scale, LCA & LCC.
COGERSA SAU is a public waste management company based in Asturias (north coast of Spain) established since 1985. It is owned by a public consortium comprised of the Government of Asturias (20%) and its 78 municipal councils (80%). It is accredited with ISO 9001, ISO 14001 (first landfill in Spain) and OHSAS 18001. Operator of a unique waste management complex including 3 landfills (non-hazardous, hazardous, and inert waste), 4 sorting plants (light packaging, paper and cardboard, C&D waste, WEEE), 2 composting plants for green waste (ecolabel compost) and sewage sludge, anaerobic digestion of biowaste, waste-to-energy of clinical waste, 4 treatment plants for hazardous waste (physico-chemical, solidification-stabilisation, oil recovery, and Marpol residues). Electricity production with landfill biogas since 1989 (first in Spain), Biomembrat® for leachate depuration (1st in Spain), laboratory, R&D activities, regional environmental campaigns (1 M€/y), 1,000 m2 visitor centre, pilot plant for microalgae cultivation recovering CO2 of incineration exhaust gases (1st in the world). A 58 M€ MBT plant for 375,000 t/y of MMW, bulky and commercial/industrial waste will be in operation by the end of 2023. Additionally, COGERSA SAU serves most of Asturias’ green points, 9 transfer stations, MMW collection in 40 municipalities, separate collection across the 78 municipalities of Asturias, etc.
Role in the project: Operation of prototype at COGERSA, analytical monitoring of the prototype, effluents characterization, permits management and dissemination at the local level.
DETRICON is a technology and know-how provider in the field of nutrient recovery from liquid waste streams. The nutrient nitrogen is recovered under the form of ammonia and in a second step bound with an acid to form a marketable ammonium salt. DETRICON’s technology is based on a stripping and scrubbing process and produces a technical pure liquid ammonium salt in an energy efficient way. A pilot installation, treating 3 tons per hour of manure and digestate is operated in Belgium and is used as a testing facility for new innovations and other ammonia rich input streams. A patent is pending for DETRICON’s advanced stripping and scrubbing technology. In the ECO innovation project DIGESMART, the market implementation, technology readiness level and LCA analysis were worked out in collaboration with universities in Belgium, Spain and Italy.
Role in the project: Provider of technologies for the recovery of nutrients from wastewater, support the optimization of technologies.
IRTA (www.irta.cat) is a research institute owned by the Government of Catalonia (Spain) and affiliated with the Catalan Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Food. It is regulated by Law 04/2009, approved by the Catalan Parliament on 15 April 2009, and is governed by private regulations. It is composed of a network of 10 research centres and experimental stations and 3 associated centres located throughout Catalonia. In 2017, IRTA had 628 employees and a turnover of €16.897.391,70. Its mission is to contribute to modernising, improving, boosting competitiveness and fostering sustainable development in the sectors of agriculture, food, agro-forestry, aquaculture and fishing, as well as in areas related to the supply of healthy, high quality foodstuffs to consumers. IRTA has a research area focused on Environment and Global Change, which includes several programmes investigating Integral Management of Organic Waste, Marine and Continental Waters, Efficient Use of Water in Agriculture and Sustainable Field Crops. IRTA gives technical assistance and specialized advice to groups, companies and representatives from the sectors in which it carries out its activity. It also organizes courses and seminars, as well as visits for technical personnel or university graduates to its centres or laboratories. Examples of transfer activities are the Magnet project (visits of schools and students to IRTA) or the Science Week when research projects are explained to the general public. IRTA has a vast experience in research projects, being involved in 2,300 R&D activities in the last 6 years, including both publicly funded projects and private contracts. IRTA has coordinated 35 projects representing an amount of 6M€. Out of them, 13 are international projects (LIFE, H2020, FP7, and EFSA Procurements) and the remaining 22 are national and regional projects. This experience guarantees smooth coordination between the Consortium and the EU, and among partners.
Role in the project: Characterization and valorisation of recovered nutrients.
LIFE INFUSION
The LIFE INFUSION project is co-funded by the LIFE Programme of the European Union under contract number LIFE19 ENV/ES/000283.
The information published in this web page reflects only the LIFE INFUSION project beneficiaries’ views and work. The European Commission is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/17159
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Home > Culture > Film & TV > 10 Best Jackie Chan Movies Of All Time: ‘Police Story’, ‘Drunken Master’ And More
10 Best Jackie Chan Movies Of All Time: ‘Police Story’, ‘Drunken Master’ And More
By: Sanika Achrekar, Mar 7 2023 10:50 am
When you think of martial arts movies, what is the first name that pops into your mind? For most people, it’s going to be the iconic Jackie Chan. Over the course of his legendary career, Jackie Chan has worn many hats – he’s been a martial artist, actor, director, producer and even singer. Known for his acrobatic fighting style and comic timing, Chan is also famous for performing all of his own stunts. In a career spanning more than five decades, the multi-talented actor has featured in over 150 films. So, why don’t we take a closer look at the best Jackie Chan movies?
Stanley Tong’s “RUMBLE IN THE BRONX” released on this day 27 years ago.
Starring Jackie Chan. pic.twitter.com/GrVM1E9Rrv
— AddToTheList (@AddToTheList_) February 26, 2023
As mentioned above, Chan has starred in 150 films, so selecting just 10 is like finding needles in a haystack. But, we’ve somehow managed to do the impossible. From epic action sequences in Wheels on Meals and Drunken Master to iconic Hollywood films like Rush Hour and its sequel, here are our favourite picks.
Looking at Jackie Chan’s top 10 movies
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(Hero image credits: Courtesy IMDb/Rush Hour)
(Feature image credits: Courtesy IMDb/Snake In The Eagle’s Shadow)
Jump To / Table of Contents
Drunken Master II
Armour of God II: Operation Condor
Dragons Forever
Wheels On Meals
Snake In The Eagle's Shadow
Police Story is a Hong Kong action film that was also directed by Chan. Released in 1985, it became one of Chan’s most successful and influential films. The plot follows the story of Chan Ka-Kui, a police officer who is tasked with protecting a witness in a drug trafficking case. However, things go wrong when the witness is killed and Chan is framed for the murder. The film focuses on Chan’s efforts to clear his name and bring the real culprits to justice. Police Story was so successful after its release that it led to a franchise with several sequels including Police Story 2 and Police Story 3: Super Cop.
(Image credits: Courtesy Police Story/IMDb)
Released in 1978 in Hong Kong, Drunken Master is a martial arts comedy film directed by Yuen Woo-ping. In the film, Jackie Chan plays Wong Fei-hung, a young man who is sent to train with his uncle, Beggar So (played by Yuen Siu-tien), after getting into trouble with the law. Beggar So teaches Wong the art of drunken boxing, a style of kung fu that involves using unorthodox movements and techniques to confuse and overpower opponents. Commercially successful in Hong Kong and considered to be one of Jackie Chan’s best action movies, the film helped establish Chan as a leading actor in martial arts films.
(Image credits: Courtesy Drunken Master/IMDb)
Directed by Lau Kar-Leung, Drunken Master II is a martial arts film that came out in Hong Kong in 1994. Just like its prequel, this film too follows the story of Wong Fei-hung, a martial arts master who must use his drunken boxing style to defend his country from a gang that is smuggling valuable artefacts out of China. Set in the late Qing Dynasty, the film is widely applauded for being one of Chan’s best films and has become a classic in the genre of martial arts films.
Fun fact: This film was released in the United States in 2000 as The Legend of Drunken Master.
(Image credits: Courtesy The Legend Of Drunken Master/IMDb)
Directed by and starring Chan, Armour of God II: Operation Condor is a Hong Kong action-adventure film released in 1991. Also known as Operation Condor and Superfly, this movie features Chan playing a character named Jackie, a treasure hunter who is tasked with finding a cache of Nazi gold hidden in the Sahara Desert. Along the way, he is pursued by a group who are also after the treasure. The film was a box office hit in Hong Kong and other parts of Asia, which helped establish the actor’s reputation as a leading action star. It also gained a cult following in the West.
(Image credits: Courtesy Operation Condon/Amazon Prime Video)
Dragons Forever is a 1988 Hong Kong action-comedy film directed by Sammo Hung, who also stars in the film along with Jackie Chan and Yuen Biao. The plot follows three friends, Jackie, a lawyer; Luke, who is a fish market worker, and Timothy, a private investigator, who team up to help Miss Yip, whose factory is polluting the environment. Later on, they discover that the factory is also producing illegal drugs, and in the process, get involved in a dangerous battle against a powerful drug lord. The film is known for its impressive action sequences, including a climactic action scene that is considered to be one of the best fight scenes in movie history.
(Image credits: Courtesy Dragons Forever/Amazon Prime Video)
Rush Hour is a 1998 buddy cop action-comedy film directed by Brett Ratner and starring Chan and Chris Tucker. The film follows LAPD Detective James Carter and Hong Kong Police Inspector Lee teaming up to rescue the daughter of the Chinese Consul who has been kidnapped by a criminal organization. Rush Hour is an iconic film and is famous for its viral comedic moments, especially the interactions between the two leads. One of Jackie Chan’s most popular comedy movies, it was a commercial success, grossing over USD 244 million worldwide. Two sequels were also released, Rush Hour 2 and Rush Hour 3, with the franchise establishing Chan as a popular star in Hollywood.
(Image credits: Courtesy Rush Hour/IMDb)
The Foreigner is a 2017 British-Chinese action thriller directed by Martin Campbell, based on the 1992 novel The Chinaman by Stephen Leather. In the film, Chan plays Quan Ngoc Minh, a Vietnamese immigrant living in London. When his daughter is killed in a terrorist attack, Quan seeks revenge by trying to track down the bombers. He crosses paths with Liam Hennessy (played by Pierce Brosnan), a former IRA member and current government official in Northern Ireland. The film showcases Chan’s acting prowess and calibre as a performer who isn’t just limited to stunts and action sequences. It is considered to be one of Chan’s most memorable performances in a non-comedic role, helping him showcase his range as an actor.
(Image credits: Courtesy The Foreigner/IMDb)
An action-comedy directed by Sammo Hung, Wheels on Meals sees the story of two best friends who run a fast food truck in Barcelona, Spain. As they get involved in the kidnapping plot of a beautiful heiress by a gang of criminals, the two friends team up with a private detective named Moby to help rescue the heiress. Apart from Chan, the film also stars Yuen Biao, Sammo Hung and Lola Forner.
Rotten Tomatoes score: 81% (audience score)
(Image credits: Courtesy Wheels on Meals/IMDb)
Directed by Yuen Woo-ping, Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow is an action-comedy film that first hit Hong Kong cinemas in 1978. The story focuses on Chien Fu, a young servant who is constantly bullied by his boss and c0-workers. One day, he meets an old beggar who teaches him the art of snake fist kung fu. The servant uses his newfound skills to take on the villainous Eagle Claw clan, led by Master Sheng. Since its release, the movie has now become a cult classic and is regarded as one of the most influential kung-fu films of all time.
Rotten Tomatoes score 80%
(Image credits: Courtesy Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow/IMDb)
Rumble in the Bronx is a 1995 Hong Kong martial arts action-comedy film directed by Stanley Tong. The plot follows Keung, a Hong Kong cop who comes to New York City to attend his uncle’s wedding. He gets caught up in a conflict with a gang of thugs who are trying to take over his uncle’s supermarket. Eventually, Keung uses his martial arts skills to take on the gang and protect his family and friends.
(Image credits: Courtesy Rumble in the Bronx/IMDb)
Question: Which is Jackie Chan’s best movie?
Answer: Jackie Chan has starred in over 150 films. His highest-rated movie on Rotten Tomatoes is Police Story.
Question: Was Jackie Chan a stunt double for Bruce Lee?
Answer: Jackie Chan's first notable jobs in cinema was as a stunt double for Bruce Lee's 1972 film Fist of Fury.
Question: How many movies has Jackie Chan starred in?
Answer: Jackie Chan has starred in 150 films over a career spanning five decades.
Action Movies Films Jackie Chan Kung-Fu Movies Martial Arts Movies
Sanika Achrekar
Digital Writer, Augustman
Sanika lives for fashion and skincare. She enjoys writing about style, beauty, and lifestyle. She worked as a fashion writer for Man's World India magazine. When not writing about designers and trends, she likes to shop, travel, try new Sushi restaurants, practise pilates and rewatch her comfort shows.
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Weekly WIC Policy Update
FY 2020 WIC Funding Considered in Congress
Tomorrow, the House Appropriations Committee is expected to mark up the FY 2020 Agriculture Appropriations bill. This is one of the final steps before a floor vote in the House.
Two weeks ago, the Subcommittee on Agriculture Appropriations advanced a bill that included $6 billion in overall WIC funding, a slight decrease of $75 million from FY 2019 levels. The subcommittee's bill also included a $10 million increase in funding (to a total of $70 million) for the Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Program, which would be the first increase in nearly a decade.
The House has been moving swiftly to pass appropriations bills, with House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) hoping to pass all twelve bills by the end of June. The Senate has yet to craft any appropriations bills, as Senate leadership is awaiting the results of bipartisan budget talks that will set the overall spending levels for FY 2020. NWA will continue to update members as the budget and appropriations process unfold.
Remembering Senator Thad Cochran
The Hon. Thad Cochran, US Senator, Mississippi, December 7, 1937 – May 30, 2019, passed late last week. The late Senator Cochran (R-MS) was a steadfast supporter of WIC. He thoroughly understood WIC’s impact on Mississippi families and its importance to the health and nutritional well-being of families across the nation. The Senator and his staff often carried the water for NWA in pressing for Senate Appropriations bills that responded to both caseload needs and to protect program resources. His commitment to WIC was so important to him that he was a frequent speaker at NWA Washington Leadership Conferences.
Before coming to the Senate in 1978, he served in the US House of Representatives for five years. He served as Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, most recently from 2015-2018. He resigned from the Senate in the Spring of 2018 as a result of failing health.
Senator Cochran was the quintessential gentleman, bowing out of a Senate leadership race rather than embrace the hostility of political attacks fostered by colleagues. He understood the importance of bipartisanship and was deeply troubled by the divisive nature of the current political environment. Mississippi and the nation have lost a great statesman.
Long-Delayed Disaster Package Expected to Pass This Week
After months of contentious negotiations, Congress is poised to pass a $19.2 billion disaster aid bill. The bill includes funding for Puerto Rico, the Pacific territories, and states impacted by hurricanes, wildfires, and funds. The bill notably includes $600 million in nutrition assistance for Puerto Rico, sorely needed after Puerto Rico's block-granted Nutrition Assistance Program (NAP) had to slash benefits earlier this spring.
The House had first put forth a disaster bill in January 2019, but Senate negotiations faltered over opposition from the White House to additional Puerto Rico relief funding. The Senate passed the bipartisan compromise bill before Memorial Day, but the House was unable to advance the legislation throughout the recess week due to opposition from Reps. Chip Roy (R-TX), Thomas Massie (R-KY), and John Rose (R-TN). Now that the House is back in session, the final package is expected to receive broad support for passage.
New Legislation Addresses Maternal Mortality
Two weeks ago, Senator Kamala Harris (D-CA) and Rep. Alma Adams (D-NC) reintroduced the Maternal CARE Act, which aims to address racial disparities in maternal mortality rates by funding implicit bias trainings for healthcare providers. The United States has one of the worst maternal mortality rates in the developed world, and black women face substantially higher risk than their white counterparts.
Last Congress, NWA worked to advance the Preventing Maternal Deaths Act, to provide funding for state-run maternal mortality review committees. NWA has likewise endorsed the Maternal CARE Act and is working to ensure its passage in this Congress.
New Legislation Addresses Needs of Pregnant Workers
Two weeks ago, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act was reintroduced in the House with bipartisan support. The legislation, modeled after the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), requires employers to make reasonable accommodations for pregnant workers to continue working.
NWA has endorsed this legislation to ensure that WIC participants do not face adverse employment consequences for the simple fact that they are pregnant. The bill - sponsored by Reps. Lucy McBath (D-GA), Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), John Katko (R-NY), Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA), and Bobby Scott (D-VA) - could advance in this Congress.
New Bill Pilots Diapers in WIC
The End Diaper Need Act has been introduced in this Congress by Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) and Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL). This legislation would create a $100 million demonstration program, looking to distribute free diapers and diapering products in states, communities, and nonprofits around the nation. The distribution projects are specifically instructed to integrate at points-of-contact, including WIC clinics. NWA has not endorsed the legislation in its current form. NWA will continue to update members if this bill moves forward.
Congress Again Scrutinizes ERS Relocation Plan
This Wednesday, there is a hearing scheduled to examine the impact of relocating USDA research agencies on agriculture research. This is the second hearing on this topic in the past three months, emphasizing the need for answers as USDA continues with it's relocation plans.
In August 2018, Secretary Perdue announced his intent to relocate ERS outside of the National Capital Region. Of the 136 parties in 35 states that submitted interest, there are three finalists in Indiana, Missouri, and North Carolina.
Multiple news reports indicate declining morale at the research agencies, which conduct studies into nutrition, food security, and program evaluation for WIC, SNAP, and child nutrition programs. Indeed morale has suffered so much that key ERS staff have resigned over the planned relocation and remaining ERS staffers unionized last month in the most forceful step to counter the relocation.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/19629
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Cy(Bear)security Research Group
"The Shaw University Cy(Bear)security Research Group is a team of undergraduate students led by Professor James Brown committed to developing sophisticated intrusion detection systems capable of identifying malicious intrusions in IoT environments in real-time."
Why is Cybersecurity Important?
The field of cybersecurity has become omnipresent in modern society. Many of the services rely upon a multitude of various devices, technologies, and systems commingling in complex and sophisticated environments. However, as the importance of these services grows, the potential threat they face increases as well. Malicious actors see these systems as significant targets for financial gain, political ideologies, religious beliefs, cyberterrorism, or state-sponsored cyberespionage. Hence why having effective security protocols in place are of utmost importance.
Currently, damage related to cybercrime is projected to hit $6 trillion annually in 2021. Cyber threats have become more prevalent with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Hospitals and other healthcare-related facilities have seen a dramatic increase in the number and diversity of attacks. A successful data breach can have significant financial reputations for these facilities. Based on current metrics, the average cost of a cyber-attack in healthcare is $3.62 million.
The Internet of Things (IoT), introduced by the MIT Auto-ID Center in 1998, is a rapidly evolving field of information and communication technology which encompasses a diverse set of devices, networking protocols, and transmission methods. The term represents a vision where different technologies converge to create networks of distributed and interconnected devices that monitor, record, and analyze various aspects of society including Smart Homes, Smart Cities, Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), and many more. As a result, by 2025, there is expected to be over 75 billion Internet-enabled devices transmitting data across networks. These devices include embedded sensors which collect precise readings from environments that are processed through multi-tiered sophisticated software systems.
Shaw University's Cy(Bear)security Research Group
The group aims to expose students to the practice of research and to explore cutting-edge topics in cybersecurity.
The Cy(Bear)security Research Group engages in research focused on two key areas:
Malware Analysis: Performing dynamic and static analysis of malware to build a behavioral profile.
Internet of Things Intrusion Detection: Analyzing and detecting malicious intrusions in Internet of Things environments.
The Cy(Bear)security Research Group seeks to develop sophisticated intrusion detection systems capable of identifying malicious intrusions in IoT environments in real-time. IoT is particularly challenging to secure due to a lack of standardization, training, laws, distribution (geographically) of devices, resource constraints of devices, and diversity of devices, including the manufacturers. An intrusion detection system must account for these challenges to be a viable solution for IoT intrusion detection. Traditional systems were not designed, nor developed, to account for those challenges, therefore, they are unsuitable for this type of environment. The Cy(Bear)security Research Group will use machine learning algorithms and artificial intelligence to generate intrusion detection models and test their efficacy on community accepted and recognized data sets.
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/19709
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Reading: Africa, Latin America Refuse to Support Condemning Russia for Ukraine Invasion at U.N.
Patriot Wire > Politics > Africa, Latin America Refuse to Support Condemning Russia for Ukraine Invasion at U.N.
Africa, Latin America Refuse to Support Condemning Russia for Ukraine Invasion at U.N.
Breitbart February 24, 2023
Updated 2023/02/24 at 9:32 PM
Latin American and African nations made up the bulk of the small resistance on Thursday against condemning Russia on the anniversary of its “special operation” against Ukraine during a vote at the United Nations General Assembly.
The General Assembly voted Thursday on a resolution that calls for Russia to withdraw its forces and end its invasion of Ukraine. The Assembly overwhelmingly approved the resolution with 141 votes. Prominently Russian allies such as Syria and North Korea voted against the resolution, but, prominently, many African and Latin American states abstained from the vote, refusing to support the condemnation.
The vote was evidence of growing and unchecked Russian influence in Africa and Latin America countries, fueled by trade deals, geopolitical support, and military assistance.
The results of the vote showed that Eritrea, Mali, and Nicaragua were the African and Latin American countries that joined Belarus, North Korea and Syria in voting against the U.N. resolution. Algeria, Cuba, Namibia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe abstained alongside Armenia, China, Iran, and Pakistan.
LIST OF SHAME: Countries who just voted No on a resolution condemning Russia’s war on Ukraine:
???? Belarus
???? Eritrea
???????? Mali
???? Nicaragua
???? North Korea
???????? Syria
Abstained:
???? Algeria
???? Armenia
???? China
???? Cuba
???? Iran
???? Namibia
???? Pakistan
???? South Africa
???????? Zimbabwe
… pic.twitter.com/ht5tt98wKY
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) February 24, 2023
Over the past decade, Russia has made great efforts to expand its influence on African nations at a political and economic level through the use of propaganda, arms sales, mining activities, and mercenaries to help governments maintain control of their countries.
Even as it wages a costly war in Ukraine, Russia has been making dramatic inroads on a ‘second front’ — Africa. Find out more about Moscow’s growing influence in the continent: https://t.co/cQeHyXwJNg pic.twitter.com/ULtHiSOtxV
— Financial Times (@FinancialTimes) February 7, 2023
While in some cases Russia has aided African nations through the restoration of cathedrals and donations to build school classrooms, in others, such as Mali — which voted against the U.N. resolution — Russia has provided continued support to the ruling junta that overthrew the elected government in 2020. Mercenaries from the Russian Wagner Group private military contractor reportedly provide aid to the ruling junta regime, which has resulted in accusations of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by both Mali’s government forces and mercenaries from the Wagner Group.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov recently visited Mali to extend Moscow’s influence on the African nation.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (right) and his Malian counterpart Abdoulaye Diop met in Moscow on May 20, 2022. (AFP)
Eritrea, ruled by the notoriously anti-American dictatorship of Isaias Afwerki, has maintained a strong pro-Russia stance throughout time. The African nation was also among those that voted against the U.N. General Assembly’s March 2022 resolution that demanded Russia end its invasion of Ukraine.
Eritrea has continuously voted against U.N. resolutions related to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, such as voting alongside Russia against the launching of a United Nations Human Rights Council panel to oversee the Ukrainian conflict.
Algeria, which chose to abstain on Thursday, expressed in August its intention to begin talks to join the BRICS economic group, of which Russia and China are part of alongside Brazil, India, and South Africa. The gas exports of the African nation saw record highs during 2022, marked by the European Union’s search for alternatives to Russian energy sources.
In January, both Russia and South Africa, which abstained on Thursday, expressed their intention to strengthen their bilateral ties during Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s visit to Pretoria. Both countries began naval exercise drills earlier this week.
In the case of Latin American countries, support for Russia in the recent U.N. General Assembly vote came from the authoritarian — and directly ideologically aligned — regimes of the region: Cuba and Nicaragua.
The socialist regime of Venezuela, whose ever-growing Russian support ranges from the economic to offering military bases and weaponry, was a notable exception in the recent U.N. vote — not because of any disagreement with Russia, but because the Maduro regime is unable to cast votes of any kind at the U.N. General Assembly. The country lost voting rights at the Assembly in January over unpaid dues. The Maduro regime owes upwards of $76 million to the United Nations as of January 2023.
Shortly before the beginning of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Vladimir Putin announced Russia’s intention of strengthening its cooperation with the three rogue Latin American nations “in all areas,” including military.
The communist Castro regime, a close ally of the Soviet Union, has continued to receive military support from Russia, including a direct $50-million loan in 2018 to buy Russian weaponry, increasing its influence on the island-nation in recent years.
In 2022, both Cuba and Russia expressed their intention to deepen military cooperation as a follow-up to the visit of Castro regime figurehead president Miguel Díaz-Canel to Russia in 2019.
During the second half of 2022, the authoritarian Sandinista regime of Daniel Ortega allowed the presence of Russian military forces in its territory. The indeterminate number of Russian troops, ships, and warplanes were allegedly sent to Nicaragua to conduct “humanitarian aid, rescue and search missions in emergencies” and “law enforcement against illicit activities.”
Russian authorities have denied that their presence in Nicaragua was an effort by the Ortega regime to open the doors for the Russian military in the region.
In August, Vladimir Putin announced Russia’s intention to expand arms trade with its socialist allies in Latin America, as well as allied nations in Asia and Africa.
Christian K. Caruzo is a Venezuelan writer and documents life under socialism. You can follow him on Twitter here.
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In support of its new strategic plan, the university has announced a strategic partnership between the newly renamed SDSU Global Campus and SDSU International Affairs.
SDSU World Campus and Global Affairs Announce New Partnership, New Changes
The previously named SDSU World Campus and Global Affairs are working more closely in partnership and are being rebranded.
By SDSU News Team
Story Keywords: Faculty, Graduate Students, Staff, Students, International, News, Global Campus
In an effort to expand access to academic programming to learners around the world and position San Diego State University as a leader in global education, SDSU World Campus and SDSU Global Affairs have formed a strategic partnership and will be rebranded as SDSU Global Campus and SDSU International Affairs.
The innovative collaboration between the two units emphasizes the university’s efforts to expand its academic infrastructure and create a truly global learning community as outlined in the university’s new strategic plan.
"The collaboration between SDSU Global Campus and SDSU International Affairs is one more example of SDSU's ongoing commitment to expanding international education and increasing access to students in our transborder region and around the world,” said Cristina Alfaro, Interim Associate Vice President of International Affairs. “By remaining committed to values of equity and inclusion as well as harnessing innovative educational technologies and methodologies, expanding our academic infrastructure, and establishing global partnerships, we look forward to amplifying the university's global impact while developing and inspiring global-conscious citizens."
To assist SDSU with fulfilling its strategic priorities, SDSU Global Campus will roll out more than a dozen new programs over the next academic year, which include online master’s programs and degree completion programs.
At the start of 2020, SDSU announced plans to launch bachelor's degree completion programs with microsites located at San Diego Mesa College and Southwestern College. With the launch of business administration and criminal justice, beginning with the academic year 2020-21, these microsites are being introduced to specifically address student and regional educational needs in the contemporary age of lifelong learning, providing valuable SDSU bachelor’s degree attainment options for non-traditional learners.
To meet the needs of learners around the world, SDSU Global Campus is also creating a new Student Center that will guide students from initial contact through the enrollment process and beyond graduation. Along with these new student services, SDSU Global Campus will launch a new, streamlined website in the fall to encourage student engagement and successful completion.
“Our universal challenges such as economic security, access to healthcare and higher education, are borderless,” said SDSU Global Campus Dean Radhika Seshan. “Collaborating with SDSU International Affairs and our expert faculty, SDSU Global Campus will expand access to our academic programs, increasing opportunities, and creating positive impact beyond boundaries.”
Concurrent with the changes at SDSU Global Campus, SDSU International Affairs, which remains housed in the Division of Academic Affairs, will support the university’s strategic goals through study abroad programs, student exchange programs, internships, faculty-led programs, and other initiatives focused on engaging with international learners.
Ranked in the top five nationally among universities for the number of students studying abroad, SDSU has long emphasized an international academic experience as a key component to a well-rounded and impactful education that fosters higher levels of academic achievement and retention in school and prepares students for a global workforce.
SDSU is also a popular destination for international students seeking to study in the U.S. More than 2,700 international students from more than 70 countries on five continents attended SDSU in 2018-19. The university’s location on the U.S.-Mexico border and its recognized status as an international gateway are advantages in promoting study abroad and other global education and research.
SDSU International Affairs will also focus its efforts on revamping their student support capabilities. These internationally-focused student services include a dedicated passport office, admissions and advising services, and travel support services.
It will also lead the university on its internationally-focused research and assessments to support the needs of communities across the globe, as well as bi-national initiatives focused on the university’s close proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border, including the second annual RE:Border Bi-national Conference.
RE:Border 2020, scheduled this year for Nov. 12-13 in San Diego and Tijuana, will focus on challenges and solutions related to mobility and migration in the transborder region of California and Baja California. Academic experts, practitioners, students, public policy experts, and community stakeholders will explore how San Diego State University and its regional partners can contribute to innovative solutions in the transborder region.
Chamber of Commerce Award Recognizes SDSU’s Leadership in Fostering Binational Collaboration
Presidential Visit to Palau Highlights SDSU’s Global Impact
‘Incredibly Competitive’ Fulbright Grants Awarded to Six Students
SDSU Ranks in Top Three for Students Studying Abroad
SDSU a ‘Top Producer’ of Gilman Scholars
A ‘Rethinking’ for International Studies Minor
16 Students Earn Gilman Scholarships
Student Fulbright Program Accepts Two SDSU Applicants
Trending for Summer 2021: Passports
First Student Earns SDSU University Seal of Biliteracy and Cultural Competence
International Exchange Students Help Restaurants During COVID-19 Crisis
SDSU Participates in Prestigious Internationalization Laboratory
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Oil & Gas Energy
Industrial engineering is a branch of engineering which deals with the optimization of complex processes, systems, or organizations. Industrial engineers work to eliminate waste of time, money, materials, person-hours, machine time, energy and other resources that do not generate value. According to the Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers, they create engineering processes and systems that improve quality and productivity.
Industrial engineering is concerned with the development, improvement, and implementation of integrated systems of people, money, knowledge, information, equipment, energy, materials, analysis and synthesis, as well as the mathematical, physical and social sciences together with the principles and methods of engineering design to specify, predict, and evaluate the results to be obtained from such systems or processes. While industrial engineering is a longstanding engineering discipline subject to (and eligible for) professional engineering licensure in most jurisdictions, its underlying concepts overlap considerably with certain business-oriented disciplines such as operations management.
Depending on the sub-specialties involved, industrial engineering may also be known as, or overlap with, operations research, systems engineering, manufacturing engineering, production engineering, management science, management engineering, ergonomics or human factors engineering, safety engineering, or others, depending on the viewpoint or motives of the user.
Stats & Charts
Modern industrial engineers typically use predetermined motion time system, computer simulation, along with extensive mathematical tools for modeling, such as mathematical optimization and queueing theory, and computational methods for system analysis, evaluation, and optimization.
Industrial engineers also use the tools of data science and machine learning in their work owing to the strong relatedness of these disciplines with the field and the similar technical background required of industrial engineers.
[easy_chart chart_id='12726']
Industriel is a pioneer in design-build specializing in architecture and construction services.
Industriel has a brilliant record in responding to complex customer requirements.
We work to reduce air emissions associated with our operations and the products we deliver.
Electronic materials are the type of materials which are typically used as core elements in a variety of device applications. These elements can be, for example, memories, displays, LEDs and could be easily seen in daily electronic gadgets such as mobile phones, computers, laptops, tablets, GPS devices, LED bulbs, TVs and monitors.
Electrical power has been the technological foundation of industrial societies for many years. Although the systems designed to provide and apply electrical energy have reached a high degree of maturity, unforeseen problems are constantly encountered, necessitating the design of more efficient and reliable systems based on novel technologies.
The automotive aftermarket is the secondary market of the automotive industry, concerned with ... Replacement parts are automotive parts built or remanufactured to replace OE parts as they become worn or damaged.
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One Thirty West 12, 130 W 12TH ST, 7A
West Village, New York, New York 10011
Step into a pre-war residence that feels like home in this quadruple-exposure, dual-wing four-bedroom in the esteemed Greenwich Lane complex in Greenwich Village. Enter through the foyer to an oversized and multiple windowed eat-in kitchen with custom millwork by WHQ Woodworks and a built-in banquette. The upgraded kitchen, with its Viking range and electric oven, can be enclosed to accommodate small events or different dining configurations.
A stunning combined dining and living space, accessible from the kitchen, offers a cornered double exposure, pre-war-beamed ceilings, and oversized casement windows. Luxurious touches abound throughout the unit, with Nanz hardware, Waterworks fixtures, custom-built closets, and a blend of chevron and plank-styled hardwood flooring. A walk-in hall pantry provides abundant extra storage, and a side-by-side vented washer-dryer in the bedroom wing offers the ultimate in suburban convenience in the middle of the city.
The residence is perched above the treetops, clearing the townhomes with views of some of the city's most notable buildings-from the Empire State Building to One World Trade Center. Art lovers will appreciate the ample space for hanging large-format art in the home's great room, hallways, and even in the well-appointed bedrooms, two of which are en-suite. The extra-large fourth bedroom can also be used as a study or home office.
An additional storage unit is included with this residence. The home also has access to the stunning communal landscaped rooftop terrace, where homeowners can lounge on chaises facing lower Manhattan's iconic skyline.
The Greenwich Lane complex is a full-service, white-glove building comprised of five unique addresses and five townhouses. The residence was built in 1941 and redeveloped into a condominium by Rudin Management in 2012. The award-winning firm CookFox Architects, known for their reliance upon sustainable design, helmed the exterior and residential renovation.
In addition to 130 West 12th Street's windowed gym, 24-hour attended lobby, state-of-the-art HVAC and water filtration systems, and live-in superintendent, residents have access to Greenwich Lane's La Palestra-managed fitness center with yoga, treatment, steam, and locker rooms, and a three-lane, 25-meter swimming pool, and hot tub.
Occupying an entire city block along Seventh Avenue, this LEED-certified complex provides a combination of restored classic architecture and breathtaking new construction: classic New York meets modern comfort, with convenience right at your fingertips. In the heart of one of the city's most robust neighborhoods, the West Village, this home is within close proximity of dining stalwarts like Morandi, Rosemary's, and Minetta Tavern. With the 1, 2, and 3 subways on the block, the rest of the city is just minutes away. Welcome home.
Southern Exposure
Eastern Exposure
Featured neighborhood
Long synonymous with artists, writers, and the counterculture movement, this neighborhood of curving streets and 19th-century townhouses is one of the city's most charming.
Read more about West Village
118 W 12TH ST, TOWNHOUSE
Listing Courtesy of OFFI - Official (EMAIL)
125 W 12 CORP, 125 W 12TH ST, 3E
Listing Courtesy of SLOA - Sloane Square LLC
The John Adams, 101 W 12TH ST, 10R
The John Adams, 101 W 12TH ST, 21F
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Kenneth Cooper
The versatile American harpsichordist, pianist, conductor, musicologist, and pedagogue, Kenneth Cooper, was trained at the at New York’s High School of Music and Art. Afterwards he studied harpsichord with Sylvia Marlowe at the Mannes College of Music from 1960 to 1963) and pursued his education with Lang, Moore, and Luening at Columbia University (BA., 1962; MA Graduate Faculties, 1964; Ph.D. Graduate Faculties, 1971).
In 1965 Kenneth Cooper made his debut as a harpsichordist at London’s Wigmore Hall. His USA debut followed in 1973 at New York’s Alice Tully Hall. In subsequent years, he toured widely in the USA and abroad. He is one of the world’s leading specialists in the music of the 18th century and one of America’s most exciting and versatile performers. Renowned for his improvisations and his expertise in ornamentation – long-lost 18th century arts – he has revived countless musical works, lending them extraordinary authenticity as well as great vitality. His comprehensive repertory embraces works from the early keyboard era to the avant-garde. He gave premiere performances works by George Flynn. Daniel Paget, Seymour Barab, Noel Lee. Ferruccio Busoni, Paul Ben-Haim, Ernst Krenek, etc., as well as dozens of modern day revivals.
As music director of the Berkshire Bach Ensemble, Kenneth Cooper has made a tradition of the New Year’s performances of the Bach Brandenburg Concerti and has instituted a series of Concertofests in the style of Bach’s Collegium concerts at Zimmermann’s Kaffeehaus. He has been co-director (with the late Henry Schuman) of the legendary Our Bach concerts and was featured on Live From Lincoln Center as soloist in Bach’s Brandenburg No. 5 with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and the The Adams Chronicles Channel 13.
Kenneth Cooper has had numerous guest appearances and festivals. He is heard regularly at the Temple of Dendur (Metropolitan Museum of Art) with Paula Robison, the Grand Canyon Music Festival, the Washington Square Park Concerts, the Sherman Chamber Ensemble, the Yale-Norfolk Summer Chamber Music Festival, and the Little Orchestra Society’s Vivaldi festivals at Alice Tully Hall. Most recently he has appeared with the Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival and with Music at Menlo. He has been heard as soloist and guest conductor with the American Symphony, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Ohio Chamber Orchestra, Northwest Chamber Orchestra, and Mostly Mozart Festival.
Kenneth Cooper taught at Barnard College from 1965 (Baker) or 1967 (Who’s) to 1971, and was Adjucant Assistan Professor at the Brooklyn College of the City University of New York from 1971 to 1973. Then he served as professor of harpsichord and director of Collegium at the Mannes College of Music from 1975 to 1985; visiting specialist in performance practice at Montclair State College in New Jersey from 1977 to 1992; artist-in-residence at Columbia University from 1983; and director of Graduate Seminars in Baroque practice and conductor of the Baroque Orchestra (Baroque Aria Ensemble) at the Manhattan School of Music from 1984. He has also given Graduate Workshops in Performance Practice at the Peabody Conservatory of Music from 1987, and has had many residencies and guest appearances and lectures.
Over the past four decades, Kenneth Cooper has made dozens of recordings and soundtracks, among them: Bach Harpsichord Music Vol 1 (Musical Heritage Society); Händel: Theatre and Outdoor Musick; Handel/Scarlatti: Cantatas with Judith Blegen; Bach: Gamba-Harpsichord Sonatas with Yo-Yo Ma (CBS); Bach/Händel: Flute-Harpsichord Sonatas with Paula Robison; Scarlatti: Sonatas for harpsichord Volumes 1 and 2 (Vanguard): Bach Brandenburg Concerti and Goldberg Variations (BWV 988) (Berkshire Bach Society, South Egremont, Massachusetts). His spectacular versions of ragtime and other American delights may be heard on Silks and Rags (EMI) and Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot (Musical Heritage Society). He is also heard on Mother Goose and More (UNIFEM/Classic Raps), on the video game Louis Cat Orze, on the documentary Van Gogh Revisited, and on the soundtracks of Before Sunrise and Valmont. Most recently, he has recorded on fortepiano the complete Bach Flute and Keyboard Sonatas with Susan Rotholz (Bridge), and the Six Bach Sonatas for Violin and Fortepiano with violinist Ani Kavafian (Helicon).
Publications: Monteverdi: Tirsi e Clori; Three Centuries of Music in Score. Contributor To: Current Musicology; Musical Quarterly; Stagebill; Opus; High Fidelity; MGG; Vanguard. Among Kenneth Cooper’s extensive musical writings is his 1984 Playbill article “Bach’s Call to Action,” in which he wrote: “How Bach regarded [his mentor] Buxtehude is how we might well recognize Bach: as a master, not a god; filled with delight, respect and admiration, not worship; and stimulated to a human response, not a mindless, mechanical or methodological one… The great master would have desired us to be fired into action, not awed into obedience.”
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/23215
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Gisola: Real-Time Moment Tensor computation optimized for multicore and manycore architectures
Gisola is an open-source Python-based software for automatic MT calculation of seismic events provided by the FDSN Web Services in real-time, oriented for High-Performance Computing.
Automatic Moment Tensor (MT) determination for regional areas is essential for real-time
seismological applications such as stress inversion, shakemap generation, and tsunami warning.
Gisola applies enhanced algorithms for waveform data filtering via quality metrics such as signal-to-noise ratio, waveform clipping, data and meta-data inconsistency, long-period (“mouse”) disturbances, and current station evaluation based on comparison between its daily Power Spectral Density (PSD), Green’s Functions computation and more featuring a CPU multiprocessing implementation for faster calculations. The inversion procedure code (important phase of program) has been intensively improved by exploiting the performance efficiency of GPU-based multiprocessing implementation (with an automatic fallback to CPU-based multiprocessing in case of GPU hardware absence) and by unifying sub-programs to minimize I/O operations. In addition, a fine-grained 4D (space-time) adjustable source grid search is available for more accurate MT solutions. Moreover, Gisola expands its seismic data input resources by interconnecting to the FDSN Web Services and well-known seismological community standards (QuakeML, SeisComP, etc.). The operator has full control of all calculation aspects, with an extensive and adapted to regional data, configuration. The program can be installed on any computer that operates a Linux OS and has access to the FDSN Web Services via Internet, while the source code will be open and free to the scientific community.
Read more here: https://github.com/nikosT/Gisola/wiki/
See also: Presentation
Nikolaos Triantafyllis
Nikolaos Triantafyllis, PhD candidate holds the position of HPC high-level support engineer in GRNET. He has developed a HPC-oriented application for automatic moment tensor retrieval in real-time, operationally in use by the Institute of Geodynamics (GI) of NOA, which recently received an award from the EGU General Assembly 2021. Until lately, he held the position of the Technical Commission at the European Integrated Data Archive (EIDA) in GI-NOA, while in the past, he participated in software development projects on security-bound applications at the Cyber Defense Department of the Hellenic National Defense General Staff. He graduated from the Computer Engineering and Informatics Department (CEID) of the School of Engineering at the University of Patras in 2012, and in 2014 he received his MSc in Computer Science and Engineering from the same department. At the moment, he is working on his PhD on HPC Job Scheduling optimizations at the Computing Systems Laboratory (CSLAB) of the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) of the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA).
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2023-14/0014/en_head.json.gz/23319
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Disney+ Announces New Short 'The Good, The Bart, And The Loki' Premiering July 7
Disney+ announced THE GOOD, THE BART, AND THE LOKI, a new Marvel-themed short from “The Simpsons" premiering Wednesday, July 7. In the new short coming exclusively to Disney+, Loki is banished from Asgard once again and must face his toughest opponents yet: the Simpsons and Springfield’s mightiest heroes. The God of Mischief teams up with Bart Simpson in the ultimate crossover event paying tribute to the Marvel Cinematic Universe of Super Heroes and villains.
Tom Hiddleston returns as the voice of Loki in the new animated short. The God of Mischief will be seen alongside many fan-favorite characters from “The Simpsons.”
THE GOOD, THE BART, AND THE LOKI is the second in a series of Disney+ shorts from “The Simpsons” that highlight the service’s marquee brands and titles. The previously released Star Wars-themed short “Maggie Simpson in ‘The Force Awakens from Its Nap’” is now streaming on Disney+.
New episodes of Marvel Studios’ original series “Loki” stream Wednesdays on Disney+.
About Disney+
Disney+ is the dedicated streaming home for movies and shows from Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and National Geographic, along with The Simpsons and much more. In select international markets, it also includes the new general entertainment content brand, Star. The flagship direct-to-consumer streaming service from The Walt Disney Company, Disney+ is part of the Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution segment. The service offers commercial-free streaming alongside an ever-growing collection of exclusive originals, including feature-length films, documentaries, live-action and animated series, and short-form content. With unprecedented access to Disney’s long history of incredible film and television entertainment, Disney+ is also the exclusive streaming home for the newest releases from The Walt Disney Studios. Disney+ is available as a standalone streaming service or as part of The Disney Bundle that gives subscribers access to Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+. For more, visit disneyplus.com, or find the Disney+ app on most mobile and connected TV devices.
About The Simpsons
From Creator Matt Groening and Developed by James L. Brooks and Sam Simon the longest-running primetime scripted show in television history, THE SIMPSONS exploded into a cultural phenomenon in 1990 and has remained one of the most groundbreaking and innovative entertainment franchises, recognizable throughout the world. Currently airing its record-annihilating 32nd season, THE SIMPSONS has won 34 Emmy Awards, 34 Annie Awards, 9 Environmental Media Awards, 7 People’s Choice Awards and 13 Writers Guild of America Awards. THE SIMPSONS was the first animated series to win a Peabody Award, and in 2019 received the Institutional Peabody Award. It was nominated for an Academy Award in 2012 for the theatrical short "The Longest Daycare." This was followed by the theatrical short “Playdate with Destiny”(2020) and the Disney+ exclusive “The Force Awakens From Its Nap”(2021). The Simpsons Movie was a hit feature film, their mega-attraction The Simpsons Ride at Universal Studios has received historic expansion updates with the addition of 'Springfield’—winning a Thea Award in both 2009 and 2017. The show was honored with a Star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2000. The Simpsons ongoing Tapped Out mobile game which launched in 2012 was a recipient of a Webby Award in 2018. It has been named the “Best Show of the 20th Century” by Time Magazine, called the "Greatest American Sitcom" by Entertainment Weekly in 2013, and declared "The Best TV Show Ever" in 2016 by vulture.com.
THE SIMPSONS is a Gracie Films Production in Association with 20th Television Animation. Created by Matt Groening, Developed by James L. Brooks, Matt Groening and Sam Simon. The Simpsons Executive Producers are James L. Brooks, Matt Groening, Al Jean and Matt Selman. The Gracie Films Worldwide Brand Division develops and produces the licensed content for the series.
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Back to Home / Bios / Alan Hetherington
Alan Hetherington
Print Alan Hetherington's Bio
Faculty, Oscar Peterson School of Music
Specialty(s)
Alan Hetherington’s performing experience spans many of the musical genres in the west where percussion can be found today. He has performed widely in North and South America and the Caribbean: Cumbia in Colombia, the Joropo tradition (maracas) in Venezuela, Afro-Peruvian music in Lima, Peru, Cuban folkloric music in Havana, and today specializes in the many musical styles of Brazil.
His extensive background has allowed him to perform in a variety of musical settings including with The Toronto Symphony, The Vancouver Symphony, John Wyre and World Drums, Nexus, Hermeto Pascoal, Guinga, Andrea Bocelli, David Foster, Michael Bublé, Trichy Sankaran,, Evergreen Club Gamelan, The Canadian Opera Company, Peter Erskine, Glen Velez, Filó Machado, Celso Machado, and Henrique Cazes, among others. He was a member of Ravi Naimpally’s critically acclaimed Indo-Jazz ensemble, Tasa, which has toured North America, Europe and Japan, and recorded 5 cd’s. He has also performed and recorded with many accomplished Canadian vocal artists such as Lenka Lichtenberg, Maryem Tollar, Sophie Milman, Carol Welsman, Emily-Claire Barlow, Melissa Stylianou and Kiran Ahluwalia. He has made numerous recordings for television and film and has toured with ensembles or as a solo artist throughout Europe, North and South America and Asia.
A Canadian born drummer/percussionist, he holds a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of British Columbia where he studied with John Rudolph, and a Masters Degree in Percussion Performance from the University of Toronto under Russell Hartenberger.
Since 1989 Alan has spent Canadian winters in São Paulo and Rio de janeiro Brazil, performing with Sombra e Agua Fresca, Bell Brasil, Carlos do Cavaco, Chocolatte da Vila Maria, Henrique Cazes, and Filó Machado.
Alan has been a devotee of the samba school tradition of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo since 1990, performing with some of the largest and most exciting percussion ensembles (baterias) in the world. He has studied and performed with great masters including Mestre Serjão from the Escola de Samba Arco Iris and Leões da Hortolândia de Jundiaí, Mestre Sombra from Mocidade Alegre, Mestre Odilon from Acadêmicos do Grande Rio, Mestre Celinho from Unidos da Tijuca, Mestre Beto from Imperatriz Leopoldinense, and Mestre Paulão from Beija-Flor.
Alan is the founder and Director of Toronto’s own Escola de Samba de Toronto, teaches a course in Brazilian bateria at The Royal Conservatory of Music, and has traveled throughout Canada, the United States and Japan teaching the tradition.
Alan’s Escola de Samba de Toronto toured Brazil in 2008, 2011 and 2016 to high acclaim, and today the ensemble is considered one of Canada’s principal cultural links to Brazil.
Alan’s Brazilian musical life is the subject of filmmaker Avi Lev’s feature documentary, We Are Samba.
In 2001 Alan founded the collective, Samba Toronto, together with the creative spirits of his Brazilian colleagues and in 2006 formed the band Sambacana. Their first CD, Nós, was released in 2009.
His most recent recording, A Fantástica Bateria de Alan Hetherington and Chocollatte, recorded in São Paulo and Toronto, is a percussion tour de force that mixes traditional and contemporary idioms.
Also of note is Alan’s role as producer, co-musical director and performer with 2012 Canadian Folk Music Award winning artist Lenka Lichtenberg; releasing 3 CD’s together, including the latest, Embrace.
In 2016 and 2017 Alan brought artists Filó Machado and Henrique Cazes from Brazil to perform in Canadian festivals with Canadian sidemen. He is presently devoting his time towards producing new Canadian-Brazilian musical projects and bi-cultural exchanges.
Alan is a Sonor Drums and Contemporânea Instrumentos Musicais endorser.
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Niagara Falls 1-800-899-9136
Yuk Yuk's Niagara Falls
6455 Fallsview Blvd, ON L2G 3V9
About Yuk Yuk's
Mark Breslin
Jeff Silverman
Jeff Silverman - President
Jeff is a graduate of the School of Visual Arts in New York City. He worked for four years as a Commercial Artist at TRP Studios in London and became Account Representative for Benson & Hedges, Milk and Rothman Cigarettes.......In 1974 Jeff joined his brother operating Quasar Publisher Representative Company in New York, a company which produced restaurant reviews for Cavalier, After Dark and Penthouse Magazine. The company also published “WHOS WHO IN NORTH AMERICAN RESTAURANTS."
Moving to Canada in 1976, Jeff moved into the Entertainment business by operating three of Toronto's hottest Entertainment venues, The 99 CENT ROXY Repertory movie theatre, the NEW YORK THEATRE on Yonge at Bloor and the HORSESHOE TAVERN. For several years Jeff and his partner Gary Topp introduced some of the hottest music to Toronto. These acts included The Ramones, The Police, Tom Waits, Joan Jett, Patti Smith and many many more.
In 1980 Jeff created and produced Canada's first all night television show “THE ALL NIGHT SHOW” which brought back old hit TV sitcoms like “Have Gun will Travel,” “The Twilight Show,” “Outer Limits,” etc. as well as showcasing new musical talent and producing over a 1,000 hours of live television.
From 1983 to 1985 Jeff produced the award winning series “CONCERTS IN THE PARK” for CBC TV highlighting Canadian Talent such as the Good Brothers, Rough Trade, Ronnie Hawkins, Manteca, The Boss Brass, etc. Jeff also produced and sold to the CBC a series of rock concerts called “ROCK DELUXE” which highlighted international music performs such as a Flock of Segulls, Brian Ferry, Little Feat, etc.
In 1985 Jeff was hired as the Molson representative for the Tour 1986 and 87 concert series, working with touring acts like Billy Idol, Tina Turner, David Bowie, and Michael Jackson. In 1989 Jeff was hired as the Account Director for the O'Keefe Centre (now called the Hummingbird Centre) in Toronto, where he used his expertise to help market and promote some of the biggest shows in entertainment. Some of these shows included “42 nd St, Westside Story, Sesame Street Live, The Boyfriend, Camelot and many more.
In 1986 Jeff began working with Mark Breslin as Vice President of Marketing and promotions. In 1990, Jeff became Marks partner and President where he remains to this day as the business force behind Yuk Yuk's the world's largest chain of comedy clubs and Canada's national stand up Comedy Company.
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HNP Today Food Ministries Expand, Thank Volunteers
Food Ministries Expand, Thank Volunteers
HNP Communications November 21, 2012 In the Headlines
With Thanksgiving being commemorated this week, people’s thoughts often turn to feeding the poor.
Several Province ministries dedicate themselves to meeting the growing concerns of those in need in this tough economy, especially at the holidays.
One program in particular is taking its show on the road, as the saying goes. The 82-year-old St. Francis Breadline at St. Francis of Assisi Church in Manhattan is expanding to include a delivery service for senior citizens.
Franciscans Deliver — a breadline on wheels — will cut the ribbon for its launch during an open house weekend December 15 and 16. The food ministry, which distributes hundreds of brown-bag meals and hot coffee each morning, has created a food pantry in the old school building adjacent to the church on West 31st Street.
The program’s goal is to deliver each week one meal consisting of chicken or red meat, potatoes or rice, and dessert. In addition, the food delivery will include hot or cold cereal, coffee or tea, milk, a dozen eggs, bread and cheese.
The meals will be delivered by pairs of volunteers to neighborhoods in the vicinity of the Midtown church, including a high-rise housing complex called Penn South between 8th and 9th avenues at 23rd to 29th streets.
Recipients will be screened by social workers at Penn South, according to U.S. income guidelines. This partnership may allow Franciscans Deliver to qualify to provide government food in the future.
Volunteers for the expanded program were recruited from the parish’s ministry groups.
Thanking Volunteers
St. Anthony Shrine in Boston also has a popular food program. On Oct. 21, director James Patrick Kelly, OFM, andRaymond Selker, OFM, chaplain of the Franciscan Food Center, hosted a special “Thank You” Mass and luncheon for more than 45 food volunteers. James Czerwinski, OFM, also participated.
The volunteers followed Jim’s invitation to come up to the altar during the Consecration and elicited a comment that the group resembled the Sermon on the Mount.
The Mass was followed by a pasta lunch prepared by the shrine’s executive chef Jackie Mello. Volunteer director Julie Ogden decorated the auditorium.
“The Franciscan Food Center helps people who need help with their food by providing groceries in a client-choice environment of compassion and dignity,” said Joyce Lonergan, food center director, who provided a photo (“behind” photo above.) Each week, the center serves approximately 450 persons based on financial and in-kind food support from a group of generous Shrine and food industry donors.”
These are just two of the Province’s many food ministries. Others include St. Francis Inn in Philadelphia, along with programs at St. Camillus Parish, Silver Spring, Md.; at several New Jersey parishes — St. Bonaventure in Paterson, St. Mary in Pompton Lakes, St. Francis on Long Beach Island, N.J.; Holy Name and St. Stephen of Hungary parishes in Manhattan; St Francis of Assisi Parish in Raleigh, N.C.; and St. Anthony-St. Patrick Parish, Hartford, Conn.
— Wendy Healy, a Connecticut-based freelance writer, is a frequent contributor to HNP Today.
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8 Most In-demand Artificial Intelligence Skills in 2022
With AI becoming the future, businesses are upskilling themselves to run AI-driven business operations. Here’s the list of skills to become AI proficient.
Batoi Research Group Sep 12, 2022 Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest
Batoi Research Group
AI has the potential to disrupt every industry, and its widespread acceptance and expected stable growth make it the hottest job, tapping the market. AI demand will likely bring about 97 million jobs between 2022 and 2025.
Businesses realise the efficiency gain that can be achieved via leveraging the power of cutting-edge tech capabilities and the demand for competent people in the tech industry. However, enterprises are still battling to find individuals with the abilities required to design, train, and work with intelligent machines.
This blog enlists the most in-demand valuable skills you must learn today to step into the AI-first world.
1. Solid Mathematical Foundation
The following are some of the mathematical disciplines that help you understand programs (algorithms) and logic:
Mathematical skills include linear algebra, statistics, probability, graphs, optimisation methods, etc. These competencies help you to build algorithms as per requirements/ or data specifications.
Statistics: Statistics is a subfield of mathematics that deals with data collection, analysis, and interpretation. Statistical understanding enables you to understand the patterns inside the data while spotting outliers.
Probability theory: Probability is an essential part of AI and is extensively used for discriminative and generative models, support vector machines, and more.
2. A Hands-on Experience in Programming Languages
AI specialists must be fluent in programming; however, each language has its own advantages and is used for specific purposes.
Python: It is syntactically easier than languages such as C++ or Java. It's a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted language. Python aims to make code readable and compact. It offers advanced libraries for sophisticated computation.
Java: This emerged from data analysis tools including Spark, Flink, Hive, Spark, and Hadoop. This eases implementing intelligence programming, search algorithms, genetic programming, ML approaches, and neural networks in AI.
R: It is a scripting language with dynamic typing and is widely used for statistical computation. R includes many statistical and graphical tools when used for analytical tasks.
C++: This programming language is used by AI to expedite procedural programming and hardware resource manipulation. It helps produce browsers, video games, and operating systems due to its versatility and object-oriented qualities.
3. Data Science and Data Analytics
Data science remained a part of computer science school curricula, and in the digital-first world, it emphasises addressing business problems with data. Data is vital to machines' ability to think and learn. It's used to train AI robots/models to perform tasks. Data analytics experts understand collecting, manipulating, and interacting with data to obtain actionable insights. These are demanded abilities in the field of AI.
Data analytics is an essential component of data science. It entails leveraging a large dataset to obtain actionable insights. Data analysts are competent in finding trends, spotting anomalies, and determining correlations between variables, which can help AI systems increase their accuracy.
4. Subfields of AI: Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Natural Language Processing, and Computer Vision
Machine Learning and Deep Learning are two fields of Computer Science; both involve training computers to learn from data without explicit programming. While machine learning is used to increase the accuracy of software predictions, deep knowledge increases the performance of ML systems by supplying more data to systems to learn from.
In recent times, machine learning and deep learning are becoming increasingly crucial through which computers can learn from experience and adapt to new conditions. Deep learning employs neural networks to learn. Neural networks are interconnected networks of processing nodes that recognise patterns in input data.
Natural Language Processing studies how computers interpret and process human language. NLP can be used for various tasks, including machine learning, text summarisation, and automatic translation. It performs activities such as comprehending word meanings, breaking phrases into their constituent pieces and comprehending word relationships.
Computer Vision is the study of how computers perceive and comprehend digital images. It encompasses operations such as facial recognition, detecting items and objects in photographs, and estimating the 3D geometry of objects in images.
5. Big Data and Distributed Computing
Predictive modelling and data analysis in AI entail massive datasets demanding immense computational resources. Implementing a single system to perform large-scale computation may be insufficient to meet the required outcomes. Therefore, technologies such as Big Data and distributed computing are beneficial.
Big Data is a technology that extracts, manages, and analyses a pool of data efficiently. This data requires a lot of computation power and provides superior statistical capabilities. Big data is utilised in user behaviour analysis, predictive analytics, and other huge data set analytical purposes.
Distributed computing is a discipline of computer science that involves distributed systems whose components are located on many networked computers while coordinating and communicating their operations by sharing messages. Its applications are multiplayer online video games and peer-to-peer software.
6. Signal Processing Techniques
Signal processing is a subfield of electrical engineering that incorporates the study, modification, and synthesis of any type of signal (e.g. audio, radio, image, or any scientific measurements). This technique advances storage efficiency, transmission, and quality while spotting critical components in a signal. This may include time-frequency analysis, convolution, and Fourier Analysis for computer vision algorithms.
Signal processing (specifically the techniques wavelets and contourlets) is widely employed for feature extraction, such as
Speech recognition and image comprehension
Audio signal processing, such as music or speech representation
Image processing in computers and digital cameras
Video processing in moving pictures, and wireless communication
Source coding techniques include image, video, and audio compression.
7. Shell Scripting
Shell scripting or bash scripting is one of the critical aspects of AI or pattern recognition tasks. A shell script is a program designed to execute by the Unix shell. Shell scripts can perform common processes such as file manipulation, printing text, and program execution.
There are numerous types of shells, including KornShell (ksh), Almquist shell (ash), Powershell (msh), Z shell (zsh), Tenex C Shell (tcsh), and Perl-like shell (psh). As Linux-based machines are used in businesses, understanding shell scripting and familiarity with commands such as awk, grep, ssh, and more are essential.
8. Soft Skills
It's substantial to employ computers to make informed decisions while gaining a more profound knowledge of complex subjects than based on human-scale analytics. Many enterprises have demonstrated that they can bring about large-scale, positive change using AI and machine-driven decision-making. Communication skills, creativity, and decision-making are essential soft skills for achieving potential benefits.
Data communicators and interpreters are among the most in-demand skill sets in business regarding AI/ML. Furthermore, strong visualisation skills are another necessity to transform data insights into captivating storytelling that communicates precisely what needs to be done and how to achieve development and results.
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'The Sandman: Season 1' Soundtrack From the Netflix Series Now Available
WaterTower Music has announced the release of The Sandman: Season 1 (Soundtrack From the Original Netflix Series) which features music by composer David Buckley (The Good Wife, The Gifted). This 27-track score is available now on all major digital platforms for digital purchase and streaming. “The Sandman is an incredibly eclectic story spanning everything from other-worldly magic to deep trauma and horror, but is always told with real human feelings,” says Buckley. The Sandman’s range of genres gave Buckley the opportunity to embrace a large palette for the score including full orchestra, choir, early music instruments, such as viola da gamba and baroque flutes, and some esoteric sounds. He combined historic classical music and instruments with modern electronic textures to bridge time within the music. One of the most notable experimentations is that of Dream’s theme, using bells to portray his character’s ruling of the sleeping world, reminding the viewer of a midnight chime. The bells are sometimes warped or dissonant, mimicking the inconsistency and eclecticism of dreams. As an Endless, Dream’s theme is ubiquitous, being used throughout episodes regardless of his on-screen presence. The highly emotional score switches from dark to dainty themes episode to episode while still remaining cohesive and homogenous. Buckley created sounds unique to every moment of the series, making the music feel alive and distinctive.
The Sandman: Season 1 (Soundtrack From the Original Netflix Series) track list is as follows:
The Kingdom Of Dreams
Meet Ethel Cripps
The Threshold Of Desire
Jessamy’s Flight
The Houses Of Secrets & Mysteries
Dream’s Escape
Johanna & Rachel
The Oldest Game
A Kind Word And A Friendly Face
God Tells Me To Do It
Every Hundred Years
A True Annulet
Dreams Shape The World
The Throne Room Of The King of Dreams
Jed Walker, Guardian Of Sleepers
Sleep Well, John
New Dreams To Spur The Minds Of Men
Even A Nightmare Can Dream
A Remedy For Poison
The Truth Of Mankind
Into The Vortex
Return To The White Horse
This Is Fiddler’s Green
Children Of The Endless
New Dreams… A New Age
Fortune Go With You
ABOUT ‘THE SANDMAN’
There is another world that waits for all of us when we close our eyes and sleep — a place called the Dreaming, where The Sandman, Master of Dreams (Tom Sturridge), gives shape to all of our deepest fears and fantasies. But when Dream is unexpectedly captured and held prisoner for a century, his absence sets off a series of events that will change both the dreaming and waking worlds forever. To restore order, Dream must journey across different worlds and timelines to mend the mistakes he’s made during his vast existence, revisiting old friends and foes, and meeting new entities — both cosmic and human — along the way.
Based on the beloved award-winning DC comic series written by Neil Gaiman, The Sandman is a rich, character-driven blend of myth and dark fantasy woven together over the course of ten epic chapters following Dream’s many adventures. Developed and executive produced by Gaiman, showrunner Allan Heinberg, and David S. Goyer, The Sandman also stars Boyd Holbrook, Patton Oswalt, Vivienne Acheampong, Gwendoline Christie, Charles Dance, Jenna Coleman, David Thewlis, Stephen Fry, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Mason Alexander Park, Donna Preston, Vanesu Samunyai (formerly known as "Kyo Ra"), John Cameron Mitchell, Asim Chaudhry, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Joely Richardson, Niamh Walsh, Sandra James-Young and Razane Jammal.
ABOUT DAVID BUCKLEY
Emmy nominated composer David Buckley is currently scoring Kandahar starring Gerard Butler. Recent film scores include Universal’s Nobody starring Bob Odenkirk, Greenland also starring Butler, the remake of Papillon starring Charlie Hunnam & Rami Malek, Jason Bourne directed by Paul Greengrass and The Nice Guys for Shane Black and Joel Silver. Previous scores include the Joel Schumacher-directed thriller Blood Creek, Ben Affleck’s crime drama The Town, Taylor Hackford’s action feature Parker and Rob Minkoff’s fantasy adventure The Forbidden Kingdom.
For television, David composed the music for the hit Scott Free/CBS drama series The Good Wife and continues to score the spin-off, now in its sixth season, The Good Fight (for which he received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Title Music). He also composed the scores for Mercy Street (PBS), BrainDead (CBS), The Gifted (Marvel/FOX), The Stranger (Netflix), Stay Close (Netflix) and The Lincoln Lawyer (Netflix). He is currently scoring the third season of Evil (CBS).
Born in England, David’s first involvement with film music was as a cathedral choirboy performing on Peter Gabriel’s score for Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ. He continued his musical education at Cambridge University. In 2006, David moved to Los Angeles where he began collaborating with Harry Gregson-Williams on film scores, including Shrek The Third and Gone Baby Gone. He has written music for films including Wonder Woman, all the Fifty Shades movies, Big Eyes and American Hustle, and his music was featured in David O’Russell’s Joy. David was honored as a ‘Brit to Watch’ by BAFTA.
As well as film and TV, David has written the music for a number of games, including Batman Arkham Knight (Warner Bros/Rocksteady).
ABOUT WATERTOWER MUSIC WaterTower Music, the in-house label for the Warner Bros. Discovery companies, releases recorded music as rich and diverse as the companies themselves. It has been the soundtrack home to many of the world’s most iconic films, television shows and games since 2001.
david buckley
watertower music
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Cliff Almond (Working Through The Grid)
Cliff Almond (Working Through The Grid) quantity
Artist: Cliff Almond
Description: In this drum masterclass video, renowned drummer Cliff Almond takes you through some exercises to help with your inner clock, independence, soloing and more. Cliff discusses and demonstrates "the grid" which can be used in various ways to enhance your playing and separate your ear from your muscle memory. If you are looking to free up new possibilities in your drumming, this drum lesson is for you.
Topics Covered: Drums, Exercises, The Grid, Note Values, Subdivisions, Stickings, Limbs, Orchestrating, Creative Warmups, Inner clock, Independence, Etc.
Cliff Almond
Cliff Almond was born in Tallahassee Florida. Coming from a family of musicians, his father a choral conductor and his mother a piano teacher, Cliff was exposed to various styles and influences at a very young age. His parents started him on violin at the age of 5, but Cliff was constantly gravitating toward the drums and other percussion instruments. Cliffʼs parents purchased him a drum set when he was eight years old and from that point on he was playing along with records and began studying the instrument with various teachers around San Diego.
By the time Cliff was 13 years old he began performing in local bands and orchestras throughout California. He was often accompanying various choral ensembles conducted by his father at San Diego State University, as well as playing in pit orchestras, rock bands, jazz ensembles, and for various theater productions around San Diego.
When Cliff was 17 years old he attended the Percussion Institute of Technology in Hollywood, California for a year of study and began to immerse himself in the drums. On weekends he would commute to San Diego to perform in various groups, and was also beginning to work on various recording projects including jingles and film dates.
When Cliff was 20 years old he began corresponding with then Chick Corea Drummer Dave Weckl. Weckl then heard Cliff play at a drum clinic sound check and was kind enough to recommend Cliff to pianist Michel Camilo a few weeks later. Cliff landed the Camilo gig in New York and moved to the city when he was 21 years old.
Since that time, Cliff has remained busy in New York City in a number of styles and continues to tour and perform in the city with various artists. The roster of musicians he has performed/recorded with over the years includes such artists as Anthony Jackson, Will Lee, Jeff Berlin, Jimmy Johnson, Janek Gwizdala, Bunnie Brunell, John Pattitucci, Mike Stern, John Tropea, Chuck Loeb, Tom Scott, Michael Brecker, Chris Potter, Ronnie Cuber, Paquito D’Rivera, Lou Marini, Dave Binney, George Young, Dave Valentine, Lew Soloff, John Faddis, Clark Terry, Terrance Blanchard, Akiko Yano, Hikaru Utada, Quruli, Billy Childs, Michel Camilo, Leon Pendarvis, The Manhattan Transfer, Celia Cruz, Trey Anestasio, Tito Puente, Alex Acuna, Giovanni Hildago, Eddie Palmieri, Wayne Krantz, Pete Mcann, Bashiri Johnson, Alex Acuna, Jeff Golub, and many more.
Cliff has been featured in many international Music magazines such as Modern Drummer Magazine, Slagwerkkrant (Holland), Drums (Japan), BASS (Japan), Keyboard (Japan), and Sound and Recording (Japan), as well as on television shows such as CBS This Morning, Austin City Limits, and CBS Night Watch.
Cliff also remains active as a clinician and endorses Yamaha Drums, Zildjian Cymbals, Vic Firth Sticks, Evans Heads, Dʼaddario Products, and Extreme Isolation Headphones. Currently, Cliff teaches online at Cliffalmondlessons.com.
Website: http://info.cliffalmond.com/
Ari Hoenig (Rhythm Training) – All 3 Videos
Alex Machacek (Demystifying The Fretboard)
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DISNEY+ WILL BE AVAILABLE IN THE PHILIPPINES FROM NOVEMBER 17
The Walt Disney Company (Southeast Asia) Ltd. announced today that it is expanding access to its highly anticipated streaming service, Disney+, to the Philippines from November 17, 2022. Disney+ is the dedicated streaming home for movies and TV shows from Disney’s iconic brands including Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and National Geographic and Star.
With Disney+ available soon in the Philippines, consumers will be able to enjoy an ever-growing library of global, regional and Asian language content such as blockbuster films from the Marvel Cinematic Universe to award-winning Pixar animation, to Korean content featuring BTS and other top Asian stars, under the Star brand.
Star also features thousands of hours of general entertainment content produced by Disney Television Studios (ABC Signature and 20th Television), FX Productions, 20th Century Studios, Searchlight Pictures and more. Star offers renowned movies and shows such as Emmy-award winning Grey’s Anatomy, Only Murders in The Building, Dopesick, The Bear, The Simpsons and The Kardashians. In addition, Star will offer exclusive originals produced in collaboration with producers and directors in the Asia Pacific region.
“Through Disney+, we are opening new doors of entertainment to everyone with our heritage of unparalleled storytelling, creative excellence and cutting-edge content delivery.” said David Shin, Senior Vice President and Managing Director, Southeast Asia, Taiwan and Hong Kong, The Walt Disney Company. “We are excited that consumers in the Philippines can soon connect with their beloved characters and brands and enjoy access to some of the world’s most original and iconic stories, told by the world’s most talented creators.”
More choices than ever before
From next month, consumers in the Philippines can join the Disney+ streaming service with the introduction of a new range of subscription plans that will deliver more choices than ever before. The expanded line-up of plans will offer viewers flexibility with different subscription options to suit their needs including:
A Mobile Plan for ₱159 monthly or ₱1,150 annually
A Premium Plan for ₱369 monthly or ₱2,950 annually
Disney+ Entertainment Experience
Disney+ will be accessible on a wide selection of mobile and televisions subject to users’ chosen subscription plans, including smartphones and tablets (Android or iOS), smart TVs such as Samsung and LG and connected TV devices including Google TV and other Android TV OS, Apple TV 4K and Apple TV HD, and Chromecast.
Based on their chosen subscription plans, consumers will be able to access high-quality viewing, with up to four concurrent streams available only with the premium plan, personalized recommendations, and the ability to create up to seven different user profiles per account.
Entertainment for Everyone
Starting from November 17, subscribers will be able to unlock an exciting and ever-growing library of content on Disney+ including:
Disney+ Originals and exclusives like Marvel Studios’ WandaVision, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, Moon Knight and Loki; Lucasfilm’s The Mandalorian, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Andor; Hocus Pocus 2 and the upcoming Willow and Disenchanted
Korean content such as Big Mouth, Snowdrop, BTS: PERMISSION TO DANCE ON STAGE - LA, IN THE SOOP : Friendcation, Soundtrack #1 and Doctor Lawyer
Blockbuster films from Marvel Studios including Avengers: Endgame, Avengers: Infinity War, Captain Marvel, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Black Panther, Thor: Love and Thunder, and the upcoming Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special
All 12 Star Wars movies including Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Star Wars: The Last Jedi and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
Access to iconic Walt Disney Animation Studios’ movies including the Oscar-winning Encanto, the live action reimagining of Pinocchio, as well as animated classics including Aladdin, Beauty and the Beast, Frozen, Mulan, Raya and the Last Dragon, The Lion King, Zootopia and more
Heartwarming and powerful storytelling from Disney and Pixar, including Lightyear, Turning Red, Soul, Luca, Coco, and more
Documentaries and specials from National Geographic including Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted, Limitless with Chris Hemsworth, Running Wild with Bear Grylls, and more
A specially curated Star content selection including Emmy Award® winning series Grey’s Anatomy, Dopesick, NCIS and reality TV hits The Kardashians and more
Other movies from franchises including the X-Men, Predator, Night at the Museum, Home Alone, and well-loved animated series like The Simpsons and Family Guy
Premium live events and video-on-demand from World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE)
The newest season of Emmy award-winning singing competition series, The Voice
For more information, visit www.DisneyPlus.com
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23 Musicians and Music Industry Leaders Who Debuted in Goshen
Goshen is a hotbed for musicians. Many local artists have launched careers and found success both here and well beyond the confines of our city. Following is a list of just some of our top-tier talent.
For even more stories of musical greatness rooted in our hometown, click through to read the 18 Bands That Got Their Start in Goshen post!
Chuck Ainlay
Producer/Engineer
Chuck Ainlay is an independent record producer and sound engineer who has recorded and mixed more than three hundred albums. His resume also includes multiple Grammy wins and Academy of Country Music awards.
Over the course of his career, Ainlay has worked with country music luminaries including George Strait, Taylor Swift, Miranda Lambert, Lee Ann Womack, Steve Earle, Dixie Chicks, Emmylou Harris, and Lyle Lovett.
His engineering and production skills have also been showcased on rock, pop, and cross-over projects with artists such as Peter Frampton, Lionel Richie, Sheryl Crow, and two Dire Straits albums with long-time collaborator and band frontman Mark Knopfler.
Web Developer/CEO of Beats Music/Senior Director at Apple Music
Ian Rogers graduated from Goshen High School in 1990. While a student at Indiana University Bloomington, the Beastie Boys hired him to tour with the band and develop their website.
Rogers went on to become general manager for Yahoo Music. Over five years with music marketing company TopSpin, he worked with artists including Trent Reznor, Paul McCartney, and Eminem. And as an executive at various music companies — CEO of Beats and senior director at Apple — Rogers was instrumental in establishing the consumer market for digital music distribution.
More recently, Rogers spent five years as chief digital officer of LVMH, the Paris-based luxury goods conglomerate whose brand portfolio includes Louis Vuitton and Dior. He currently serves as chief experience officer of Ledger, a company dedicated to creating public understanding for another digital product: cryptocurrency.
The Curtis Family
Singer-Songwriters/Composers
Goshen-based siblings Rick and Tom (vocals/guitar), Michael (vocals/bass), Patty (vocals/tambourine), and friend Travis Rose (drums) formed the psychedelic-folk band These Vizitors in 1965.
The Curtis legacy, however, is songwriting.
Rick and Michael contributed music and vocals to Crazy Horse’s album 1972 album, At Crooked Lake. They went on to record demos with Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham and wrote the song “Blue Letter,” which appeared on Fleetwood Mac’s self-titled 1975 album. They also wrote “Seven League Boots,” which was revamped by Stephen Stills as the 1982 hit “Southern Cross” for Crosby, Stills & Nash. The Curtis Brothers also recorded an album released by Polydor in 1976.
Carrie Newcomer
Singer-Songwriter/Guitarist
Carrie Newcomer, who attended Goshen College, has been called many things: “a soaring songstress” by Billboard and “rapturously tuneful” by Rolling Stone. She has released 19 solo albums, and her first musical, Betty’s Diner: The Musical, was produced by Purdue University in 2015.
Newcomer made The Chicago Tribune’s list of the top 50 folk artists of the last 50 years and Boston’s WUMB radio station’s Top Most Influential Artist of the past 25 years. Folk Wax Magazine awarded her both Artist of the Year and Album of the Year in 2003 and 2007, respectively.
Her voice is equally respected on issues related to human rights. Newcomer has served as a cultural ambassador to India, traveled to Kenya on behalf of the Interfaith Hunger Initiative, and visited organizations focused on non-violent conflict resolution in the Middle East. In 2016, Goshen College awarded Newcomer an honorary degree, Bachelor of Arts in music for social change, the college’s first.
She continues to make her home in the state, performing frequently in the Goshen area.
Find Newcomer on Spotify and Apple Music.
J Sider
Digital Media Master/Musician
J Sider, who attended Goshen College, is the founder of BandPage, an online platform designed to help musicians build a presence, post content, and connect with their fans. According to the company’s website, BandPage boasts more than 500,000 musicians using the service. Sider’s success hasn’t gone unnoticed. He has been named to “30 Under 30” lists at Inc. Magazine, Billboard, and Forbes.
YouTube acquired BandPage in 2016; Sider continues to serve as CEO.
Jay Lapp
Mandolinist/Vocalist
Lapp was a founding member of Double Barrel Darrel and Goldmine Pickers, and is currently a mandolin player and vocalist with Americana roots band The Steel Wheels.
The Steel Wheels’ 2010 album Red Wing was on the Americana Music Association’s Top 40 chart for 13 weeks, and the track “Nothing You Can’t Lose” earned Best Country Song honors at the Independent Music Awards. The band’s 2012 album Lay Down, Lay Low was named the Independent Music Awards Album of the Year.
Find The Steel Wheels on Spotify and Apple Music.
Dan Gardner
In 2002, Today Show viewers voted former Goshenite Dan Gardner “Today’s Superstar” in the program’s Music Icon talent search, boosting his television, radio, and concert career. He released two albums and his single “More Than Life” was a hit on the adult contemporary chart.
Find Gardner on Spotify and Apple Music.
Reuben Gingrich
Reuben Gingrich is a drummer, composer, and producer who performs with funk/rock/soul ensemble The Main Squeeze. The band has played at festivals including Bonnaroo and Gathering of the Vibes.
Find The Main Squeeze on Spotify and Apple Music.
Anna Montgomery
A graduate of Goshen High School and Goshen College, Anna Montgomery is a songwriter, recording artist, and session vocalist.
Her solo discography includes Lyin’ in the Face of Love, The Lean, and Triple Seven. Montgomery was an opening act and backing vocalist for Grammy Award-winning Shelby Lynne, and appeared on The Ellen Degeneres Show, Late Night with David Letterman, and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
Ethan Setiawan
Mandolinist
In 2014, Goshen native and Goshen College student Ethan Setiawan was named the national mandolin champion at the Walnut Valley Bluegrass Festival. In May 2015, he was one of the featured performers in Garrison Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion” live recording at Goshen College. While at Goshen College, Setiawan participated in folk trio Theory Expats with classmates Sadie Gustafson-Zook and Andrew Pauls.
Since Goshen, Setiawan found his way to Boston, where he completed his Bachelor of Music degree in 2019 at Berklee College of Music. Apart from working on his solo music, he has also been involved in several projects in Boston, including Corner House, the Harmolodic String Band, and the Band of Friends. Setiawan is currently based out of Maine.
Find Setiawan on Spotify and Apple Music.
Austin Wulliman
Goshen native Austin Wulliman was a violinist with the Chicago-based string ensemble Spektral Quartet before moving on to become a part of JACK Quartet in New York City.
As a young musician, Wulliman trained with the Goshen College Strings Preparatory Program, a precursor to the Community School of the Arts.
Listen to JACK Quartet on Spotify and Apple Music.
Audio Engineer/Bassist
Jiménez is an audio engineer and bassist. In addition to running sound at Ignition Music Garage and Goshen College, he has worked alongside big-name artists including Marc Scibilia, Gretchen Wilson, Big and Rich, Phil Keaggy, and Jewel.
Jimenez is currently stage manager and guitar tech for country singer/songwriter Thomas Rhett.
Jeff Massanari
Jazz Guitarist
Jeff Massanari is a recording and performing guitarist and instructor now based in California. The jazz player is also adept at blues, rock, fusion, and country stylings. Massanari’s albums include Groovework (2006) and Hip Flip! (1996).
Listen to Massanari on Spotify and Apple Music.
Gina Holsopple
Holsopple – who graduated from Goshen College with an interdisciplinary degree in music, women’s studies, and anthropology – resides in central New York state and has performed all over the United States. A three-time winner of the New Song Contest at the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, Kansas, she has also performed at the SXSW Music Festival. Her discography includes Drop of Water (2005), Unless (2008), and From The Earth (2010).
Holsopple recently released a new single entitled “Doors Wide Open.”
Check out Holsopple on Spotify and Apple Music.
Brad Yoder
Pittsburgh Magazine lauded Yoder – who graduated with a bachelor’s in music from Goshen College – as “ruling the Pittsburgh coffeehouse scene.” Yoder’s music has been featured on CBS’ “NUMB3RS” and NPR’s “Car Talk,” among other programs. His albums include Someday or Never (2007) and Excellent Trouble (2010).
Check out Yoder on Spotify and Apple Music.
Sadie Gustafson-Zook
Vocalist/Guitarist/Songwriter
Sadie Gustafson-Zook is a versatile singer, guitarist, and contagious songwriter. Goshen-grown, Boston-nurtured, and Nashville-based, she performs at folk venues and festivals around the country, has been featured on podcasts including Basic Folk, and is a Kerrville New Folk finalist.
Gustafson-Zook studied music at Goshen College, where she formed the folk trio Theory Expats with classmates Ethan Setiawan and Andrew Pauls. She went on to complete a master’s degree in jazz and contemporary music at Boston’s Longy School of Music.
On her debut album, Melange, Gustafson-Zook is backed by her parents, folk musicians, and Goshen locals Les and Gwen Gustafson-Zook. Her song “Unless I Loved” took top honors in 2011 in the New Song Showcase at the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, Kansas. The then-junior at Bethany Christian High School was the youngest person to win the first-place award at the showcase.
Gustafson-Zook’s releases include I’m Not Here (2017) and the EP Vol. I (2021). She is set to release her new album, Sin of Certainty, on April 22, 2022.
Find Gustafson-Zook on Spotify and Apple Music.
Heather Kropf
Singer-Songwriter/Pianist
Pittsburgh-based songwriter/performer and Goshen College alum Heather Kropf incorporates jazz and Americana influences into her pop songs. Her most recent albums include Chrysalis (2014) and Lights (2017).
Find Kropf on Spotify and Apple Music.
Zac Grant
Guitarist / Vocalist
Formed in Colorado in 2009, the band Zolopht blends a horn section, three-part harmonies, and blues, funk, reggae, and rock influences. It also includes band member Zac Grant on guitar and vocals, formerly of Goshen.
Listen to Zolopht on Spotify and Apple Music.
Emily Rodgers
Emily Rodgers is a Concord High School and Goshen College graduate. “Rodgers has one of those haunting, unforgettable voices that radiates with a surreal beauty,” raves NPR’s All Songs Considered. Pittsburgh City Paper dubs her sound, “a brand of post-rural, ethereal alt-country drenched in primo melancholy and reverb.”
Her releases include Bright Day (2009), Two Years (2016), and I Will Be Gone (2021).
Listen to Rodgers on Spotify, Apple Music, and Bandcamp.
Aaron Puckett
Rapper/Singer/Songwriter
Known under his stage name, “lil aaron,” Aaron Puckett grew up in Goshen. Now in Los Angeles, Puckett found his way to a songwriting career.
Puckett’s writing has been included in work by major pop artists such as Selena Gomez, Blackbear, Lizzo, Hailee Steinfeld, Dev, Icona Pop, Kiiara, and Travis Mills. Puckett has released two rap solo albums, Gloing Pain$ (2016) and Rock$tar Famou$ (2018).
Listen to lil aaron on Spotify and Apple Music.
Chris Rhoades and Jeff Sanders
Bassist & Drummer
Rhoades and Sanders are veterans of the rockabilly/rock unit The Bar Brawl III. Rhoades (bass) also performs with John Doe, solo artist and member of legendary Los Angeles punk rock act, X. Sanders (drums) plays with Doug Strahan’s band Strahan & the Good Neighbors, a Texas southern rock, country soul group.
Anna p.s.
Musician/Songwriter
Indie folk musician Anna p.s. grew up in Pennsylvania but found her way to Goshen when she started at Goshen College in 2006. Anna started her career as an audio engineer. She also was a member of the indie rock band Shiny Shiny Black until 2014. Her solo career began in 2014, and she has released two solo LPs, Umbrella (2016) and In The Void (2019).
Goshen has been intertwined into various parts of Anna’s creative career, including some work at the Goshen Theater. She continues to live and create in the Goshen area.
Find Anna on Spotify and Apple Music.
Ted Yoder
Hammered Dulcimerist
You may know Ted Yoder from when his 2016 rendition of Tears for Fears’ “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” played on the hammered dulcimer, went viral, putting Goshen on the map. You may not have known that Yoder has been honing his musical talent since 2010. He primarily covers songs but also has some originals.
While his viral video has pulled Yoder to far-off places, he still calls Goshen home. He has recorded several LPs of his enchanting hammered dulcimer music, including Comfort and Joy (2010), Ted Yoder (2015), Songs from the Orchard (2017, featuring “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”), and, most recently, Lean In and Shadowlight (both 2020).
Find Yoder on Spotify and Apple Music.
Good of Goshen Editors • Scott Weisser, Emma Koop Liechty, Wendy Wilson
Originally published May 2016; last updated March 2022.
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Tag Archives: Foreign language film
Academy Awards, Venice International Film Festival
85 countries vie for foreign language film Oscar
October 13, 2016 HollywoodGlee Leave a comment
LOS ANGELES, Oct 13 — Yemen is competing for an Academy Award for best foreign language film for the first time, one of 85 countries submitting entries including Paul Verhoeven’s Elle and Pedro Almodovar’s Julieta, organisers announced Tuesday.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which presents the Oscars, will consider Yemeni director Khadija al-Salami’s I Am Nojoom, Age 10 and Divorced — which explores the culture of child brides — it said in a statement.
The entries for Best Foreign Language Film also include Dutch director Verhoeven’s Elle, a transgressive thriller starring French actress Isabelle Huppert, and Afterimage, by the legendary Polish director Andrzej Wajda, who died Sunday.
Wajda portrayed the last years of avant-garde painter Wladyslaw Strzeminski, who battled Stalinist orthodoxy, in a film some see as a metaphor for present-day Poland under the conservative Law and Justice Party.
Mexico’s Jonas Cuaron, son of star director Alfonso Cuaron, directed his country’s entry, the thriller Desierto, while Spain entered Almodovar’s Julieta, a vibrant portrait of a woman confronting crisis.
Switzerland submitted the animated My Life as a Zucchini, by Claude Barras, and Italy sent Gianfranco Rosi’s Fire at Sea, a documentary about migrants’ lives, focusing on the Italian island of Lampedusa.
The academy will make a preliminary cut later this year before announcing five finalists in January.
The 89th Oscars ceremony is set for February 26, 2017.
Hungary’s Son of Saul, by director Laszlo Nemes, won the prestigious award this year. — AFP
(Source: http://www.themalaymailonline.com)
Academy AwardsAfterimageAndrzej WajdaBest Foreign Language Film AwardClaude BarraDesiertoElleFilmFilmmakingFire At SeaForeign language filmGianfranco RosiI Am NojoomJonas CuaronJulietaKhadija al-SalamiLaszlo NemesMy Life As A ZucchiniOscarPaul VerhoevenPedro AlmodovarSon of Saul
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Home / World War II / War Against Japan
THE STORY OF THE 25th INDIAN DIVSION The Arakan Campaign
Formed in Southern India in August 1942 for defence of that area in case of Japanese invasion, the ‘Ace of Spades’ Division had its baptism of fire in Arakan in February 1944. It served throughout the remainder of that campaign, the climax being the battle of Tamandu. Its victorious fight for the Kangaw roadblock was considered by many to have been the fiercest battle of the entire Burma war, while its liberation of Akyab was the first convincing proof to the rest of the world that the tide had turned against the Japanese.
THE STORY OF THE 25th INDIAN DIVSION The Arakan Campaign quantity
Between 1945 and 1947 the Director of Public Relations, War Department, Government of India, published a series of short publications covering the individual histories of the WWII Indian Divisions. They followed a consistent format, having between 44 and 48 pages within illustrated soft card covers. They have an average of 50 monochrome photographic illustrations, and each has a full colour centre-spread depicting a scene from the Division’s wartime operations (drawn by official war artists). With the exception of ONE MORE RIVER and TEHERAN TO TRIESTE (which are slightly smaller) They were printed at various presses in Bombay and New Delhi, and each contains at least one map.
The British Indian Army during World War II began the war, in 1939, numbering just under 200,000 men. By the end of the war, it had become the largest volunteer army in history, rising to over 2.5 million men in August 1945. Serving in divisions of infantry, armour and a fledgling airborne force, they fought on three continents in Africa, Europe and Asia.
This Army fought in Ethiopia against the Italian Army, in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and Algeria against both the Italian and German Army, and, after the Italian surrender, against the German Army in Italy. However, the bulk of British Indian Army was committed to fighting the Japanese Army, first during the British defeats in Malaya and the retreat from Burma to the Indian border; later, after resting and refitting for the victorious advance back into Burma, as part of the largest British Empire army ever formed. These campaigns cost the lives of over 87,000 Indian servicemen, while another 34,354 were wounded, and 67,340 became prisoners of war. Their valour was recognised with the award of some 4,000 decorations, and 18 members of British Indian Army were awarded the Victoria Cross or the George Cross. Field Marshal Auchinleck, Commander-in-Chief of British Indian Army from 1942, asserted that the British “couldn’t have come through both wars (World War I and II) if they hadn’t had British Indian Army. “British Prime Minister Winston Churchill also paid tribute to “The unsurpassed bravery of Indian soldiers and officers.”
War Department Government of India
SB 38pp Illustrated throughout in colour 2020 N&MP Reprint of 1947 Original Edition
Published Price £9.99
JAPANESE EQUIPMENT: PHOTOGRAPHS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF BASIC WEAPONS ENCOUNTERED IN THE SWPA (ALLIED LAND FORCES SWPA, 1943)
GET THAT FIGHTER!
ARMY MEDICAL SERVICES: CAMPAIGNS VOL II Hong Kong, Malaya, Iceland & the Faroes, Libya, 1942-1943, North-West Africa. Official History of the Second World War
BALL OF FIRE The Fifth Indian Division in the Second World War.
HISTORY OF THE CORPS OF ROYAL MILITARY POLICE
GOLDEN ARROW The Story Of the 7th Indian Division In The Second World War 1939-45
FOURTH INDIAN DIVISION
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Location: Home > Research > Highlights
During the past 60 years, Shanghai Branch of Chinese Academy of Sciences made significant progress in such fields as information, material, physics, chemistry, life science, astronomy, etc. aiming at the national strategic demands and the world science frontiers. In the early period, the scientists of Shanghai Branch made great breakthrough for China's first missile, nuclear bomb and satellite research. Meanwhile, researchers in life sciences achieved the world’s first synthetic Crystalline Bovine Insulin and total synthesis of Yeast AlaninetRNA.
After the CAS Pilot Project of National Knowledge Innovation Program started from 1998, Shanghai Branch has made more achievements concerning China's economic construction, national security and sustainable social development.
SSRF
Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility (SSRF) is a third-generation synchrotron radiation light source of median electron energy with excellent performances that are comparable to top synchrotron radiation facilities, and will become an invaluable tool for Chinese scientific research and industrial community. It will be able to accommodate hundreds of scientists and engineers from universities, institutes and industries doing research, experiments and R&D simultaneously. SSRF consists mainly of a 150 MeV linac and a 3.5 GeV booster of 180m in circumference, a 3.5 GeV storage ring of 432m in circumference and a number of beamlines and experimental stations. Proposed and supported jointly by Chinese Academy of Sciences and Shanghai Municipality, SSRF is China's largest ever scientific project. Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics undertook the responsibility of construction and operation.
"CX-1" Micro-satellite
"CX-1" Micro-satellite, developed by Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology (SIMIT), was successfully launched on Oct. 21st, 2003. It was the first data communication satellite of less than 100kg in China. Micro-satellites constellation plays a key role in such fields as traffic transportation, environment, oil-transportation, disaster relief, prevention of forest fire, and earthquake monitoring.
Multi-payload onboard the Fengyun series satellites.
The first of the Fengyun-III series meteorological satellites and the sixth of the Fengyun-II series were successfully launched in 2008. The core payloads, including MCSR, VIRR, MERSI, IRAS, ERM, were developed by the Shanghai Institute of Technical Physics (SITP). The images and data obtained by the Fengyun series satellites played an important role in nationwide and worldwide weather forecasts.
Broadband wireless communication system for emergency response.
A broadband wireless multimedia communications system was leaded by Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology to converge the broadcasting and unicasting. After Wenchuan earthquake in 2008, when the system of public communication network in the affected areas paralyzed, the system provided communication support to earthquake relief in the very site. The system was also deployed as a long-range wireless video surveillance network in Tangjiashan quake lake, with real-time transmission to earthquake relief headquarters and the central government, providing a solid basis for decision-making.
Silicon-On-Insulator (SOI) Technology
SOI technology known as "silicon-based IC technology in the 21st century" finds important applications in the fields of high-speed, low power IC, high-voltage power devices and radiation resistant microelectronics. With over 20 years' technology development, Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology developed high quality SOI wafers, and finally commercialized the technology. This work won the First Class State Award for S&T Progress in 2006.
Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
In the China first Lunar Exploration Program, Chang'E-1 Program and the VLBI system of Shanghai Astronomical Observatory (SHAO) contributes to real-time monitoring the satellite orbit, especially during the lunar capture stage.
Life Science Achievements.
Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences (SIBS) has achieved important progresses in the following areas: neuroscience, cellular signal transduction, epigenetic, tumor-related mechanism, immunology, stem cell research, metabolic diseases, plant, insect and microbe research.institutes
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Synergy Percussion
http://www.synergypercussion.com/synergy/profile.aspx
Synergy percussion has the dual distinction of being Australia’s oldest and foremost contemporary music ensemble. A world of sound with percussion at its heart, the group celebrated 40 years of concerts, collaborations, recordings and commissions in 2014. Over four decades of huge cultural change, Synergy Percussion has remained vital and fiercely committed to defying expectations of what percussion music might aptly express. Core members Timothy Constable, Bree van Reyk and Joshua Hill are all award-winning and internationally acclaimed exponents of new music in their own right, equally at home on world-music stages, contemporary/experimental art venues, pop concerts and recital halls.
The ensembles’ expansive vision of percussion, together with the exceptionally wide musical experience of the members past and present, has allowed the group to work together with a diverse and exemplary family of artists from around the world. Collaborators include Fritz Hauser, Hossam Ramzy, Omar Faruk Tekbilek, Aly N’Diaye Rose, Trilok Gurtu, Jose Vicente, Kazue Sawai, Dave Samuels, Evelyn Glennie, Riley Lee, Taikoz, Michael Kieran Harvey, Sydney Dance Company, Meryl Tankard and Regis Lansac, Akira Isogawa, Grainger String Quartet, William Barton, and the Leigh Warren Dancers, the Sydney and Melbourne Symphony Orchestras among many others.
Well over fifty commissions of Australian and international composers has helped create an Australian percussion sonic identity, and contributed to the canon more generally. Notable commissions include Steve Reich Mallet Quartet (2009, the most significant percussion work of the composer post drumming of 1971), Anthony Pateras beauty will be amnesiac or will not be at all (2013, the most ambitious Australian concert work for percussion), Nigel Westlake Omphalo Centric Lecture (1984, statistically the most performed classical percussion ensemble piece in the world), Ross Edwardes prelude and dragonfly dance, Peter Sculthorpe Sun Song, Djilile, Gerard Brophy Book of Clouds. The group also commissions internally, and works by ensemble members have been performed internationally to high acclaim.
Synergy Percussion has a proven track record of successfully creating and executing education and outreach programs aimed at encouraging young people from all walks of life to engage with music. The group has contributed to the education programs at all major tertiary music institutions across the country, including supervising the post-graduate percussion program at the Australian National University. The ensemble has enjoyed a long-standing collaboration with Musica Viva to deliver such programs to students across Australia, the most recent being the highly successful Under Construction with composer Damian Barbeler. Members of the group also mentor young musicians through the Sydney Youth Orchestra’s Percussion program and through the young artist in residence program.
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NewsCovering Kentucky
Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, owner of Shadwell Farm in Lexington, dies
Kamran Jebreili/AP
FILE - In this Sept. 7, 2011, file photo, Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, deputy ruler of Dubai and United Arab Emirates minister of finance attends the opening of Arab Finance Ministers Exceptional meeting in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. He has died, his brother said on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. He was 75. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili, File)
By: Web Staff
LEXINGTON, Ky. (LEX 18/AP) — Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the deputy ruler of Dubai and an internationally renowned horseman, has died at the age of 75. Hamdan was also the owner of the more than 3,200-acre Shadwell Farm in Lexington.
"Sheikh Hamdan was a beloved figure around the world, cherished for his grace, humanity, loyalty, knowledge and sportsmanship," said Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin in a statement. "While he achieved great success as a Thoroughbred breeder and owner through his global Shadwell Farm operation, he made innumerable contributions to the sport – many of which were behind the scenes."
Emirati officials announced his death without specifying the cause. Sheikh Hamdan had been in poor health for several months. Last fall, he flew abroad for an unspecified surgery and in recent weeks his brother Sheikh Mohammed tweeted prayers for his recovery.
Sheikh Hamdan owned eight stud farms in Britain, Kentucky and Ireland with hundreds of regally bred horses and top stallions.
"It is a time to reflect on his achievements and his enormous contribution to the global Thoroughbred and Arabian industries," Shadwell Racing said in a statement. "His legacy will live on through his horses."
A tremendous sadness fell over Shadwell Farm early this morning when we awoke to learn the passing of H.H. Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum! What a huge loss for so many! He has touched the lives of so many people in a positive way. pic.twitter.com/TcPkaGvZ5Z
— Shadwell Farm (@ShadwellFarm) March 24, 2021
"Keeneland is grateful for his strong support of our sales and racing programs, including Shadwell’s involvement in our philanthropic activities," said Arvin. "Sheikh Hamdan's yearling purchases here include such standouts as Group 1 winner Dayjur and Belmont (G1) winner Jazil, and he also participated significantly in our November Breeding Stock Sale. On the race track at Keeneland, Shadwell won nine stakes led by the 2008 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (G1) with Alwajeeha. Because of Shadwell's encouragement, Keeneland began the Best Turned Out Awards program to recognize hard-working grooms when Shadwell started to sponsor Keeneland's one-mile turf race during the 1999 Fall Meet. Keeneland is extremely proud of that race, the Shadwell Turf Mile (G1), which became our first million-dollar event in 2014, anchors our Fall Stars Weekend and is a key stop on the road to the Breeders' Cup."
His funeral service will be restricted to family because of COVID-19, according to Dubai's government-run media office, which ordered government offices closed for three days of mourning.
Copyright 2021 Scripps Media, Inc. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Afternoon Clouds over the Amazon Rainforest
While you may think of a rainforest as being perpetually wet and rainy, the world’s largest rainforest, the Amazon, actually has a dry season when the clouds clear and sunlight drenches the trees. It is during this period, the time without rain, that the forest grows the most. For much of the Amazon Rainforest, the dry season occurs in June, July, and August. During this period, the thick blanket of clouds brought in by large-scale patterns in the atmosphere disappear, and smaller-scale processes that influence the weather become apparent. This image, captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite on August 19, 2009, reveals how the forest and the atmosphere interacted to create a uniform layer of “popcorn” clouds one afternoon.
The clouds likely formed from water vapor released from trees and other plants throughout the day. Plants convert light, carbon dioxide, and water into sugar and oxygen through photosynthesis. As the plants inhale carbon dioxide, water vapor escapes, a process called transpiration. During the dry season, the rainforest gets more sunlight. The plants thrive, putting out extra leaves and increasing photosynthesis. The photosynthesizing plants release water vapour into the atmosphere. In the heat of the day, the air rises and eventually condenses into clouds like the popcorn clouds shown in this image.
The clouds are distributed evenly across the forest, but no clouds formed over the rivers. In general, land warms more quickly than water and gives off more heat during the day. The hot air from the land rises, carrying water vapor from both evaporation and transpiration with it. The air cools as it rises, and the water vapor condenses into the tiny clouds seen here. But what goes up must come down. In this case, the air mass descends over the rivers, when temperatures are cooler. As the air drops, it warms, and the warming air keeps the water vapor from condensing into clouds. As a result, there are no clouds over the rivers.
When water vapor condenses, it releases heat into the atmosphere. The heating causes the air to rise even more. The higher it rises, the more the air expands and cools, which allows more water vapor to condense. Eventually, thunderstorms can form. The more concentrated clusters of clouds in the image are likely thunderstorms.
In the Amazon, transpiration may play a significant role in transitioning between the rainy and the dry seasons. Westward-blowing trade winds carry moisture from the Atlantic Ocean over South America year round. Once over the continent, regional winds channel the moist air north or south. When winds blow north, Atlantic moisture goes with it, and the part of the rainforest south of the equator experiences a dry season. When winds shift to the south, the seasons reverse. Tropical climatologist Rong Fu, of Georgia Institute of Technology, believes that the shift in wind direction toward the southern Amazon may be triggered by late dry-season thunderstorms originating from transpiring plants. The widespread thunderstorms carry heat high into the atmosphere. The heated air rises, and air from the north replaces it. This movement of air creates the winds that channel monsoon moisture back to the southern part of the Amazon Rainforest.
To read more about the connection between the rainforest and the atmosphere, see The Amazon’s Seasonal Secret on the Earth Observatory.
NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response at NASA GSFC. Caption by Holli Riebeek.
A uniform layer of tiny “popcorn” clouds covers the Amazon Rainforest in this image from August 19, 2009. The clouds are a byproduct of photosynthesis.
Image of the Day for August 26, 2009
Aqua — MODIS
Image of the Day Atmosphere Heat Land Life
Farabee, M.J. (2007, June 6). Phot osynthesis. On-line Biology Book, Estrella Mountain Community College. Accessed August 21, 2009.
Graham, S., Parkinson, C., Chahine, M. The Water Cycle. NASA’s Earth Observatory. Accessed August 21, 2009.
Lindsey, R. (2007, May 22). The Amazon’s Seasonal Secret. NASA’s Earth Observatory. Accessed August 21, 2009.
U.S. Geological Survey. (2009, May 13). The Water Cycle: Transpiration. Accessed August 21, 2009.
Human Activities Are Drying Out the Amazon
The atmosphere above the rainforest has become drier, increasing the demand for water and leaving ecosystems vulnerable to fires and drought.
Image of the Day Atmosphere Land Fires Remote Sensing
The Amazon Makes its Own Wet Season
Satellite measurements of heavy isotopes in water vapor help solve a mystery of the rainforest.
Image of the Day Atmosphere Water Remote Sensing
Initiation of Rainy Season in Southern Amazon
Image of the Day Atmosphere Heat Life
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OIAC applauds Amb. Haley’s initiative to include human rights in the Security Council agenda
WASHINGTON, April 3, 2017-The United States has underscored the need for a refreshing approach to help change the ambivalent culture permeating the United Nations regarding the violations of human rights around the world. Organization of Iranian American Communities (OIAC) welcomes this development and applauds Ambassador Nikki Haley’s efforts to place human rights at the center of the U.S. mission at the U.N.
As Ambassador Haley pointed out recently, “peace and security cannot be achieved in isolation from human rights.” The long-suffering people of Iran, Syria, and Iraq bear witness that “human rights abuses are not the byproduct of conflict; they are the cause of conflict, or they are the fuel that feeds the conflict.”
Nearly four decades of struggle against the religious dictatorship in Iran has imparted on our community the insight and the drive to promote human rights, equality, and women leadership- as key human assets against perversion of religion, tyranny, and inequality. In Iran, the ruling regime has murdered Neda Agha-Soltan and over 120,000 of the country’s best and brightest. Today, Iranian rulers execute more per-capita than any other nation. Yet the people of Iran continue to reject humiliation, misogyny, terrorism, and abuse. Iranian people’s vibrant democratic resistance against tyranny is hence a viable and vital example of the very values the United States is actively promoting at the U.N. Security Council.
OIAC also applauds congressional leaders who have called attention to mullahs’ atrocities. We highlight the initiative by Chairman Michael McCaul (R-TX), Chairman Ed Royce (R-CA) and Ranking Member Eliot Engel (D-NY) regarding the 1988 massacre of some 30,000 political prisoners in Iran. Unfortunately, Iranian officials who committed that manifest case of crime against humanity still serve at the highest levels of the government. A key figure who was admittedly involved in the 1988 massacre, Mostafa Pour Mohammadi, is now Hassan Rouhani’s Justice Minister. The 1988 Massacre is also addressed in UNSG March 2017 report.
We thank Ambassador Haley in her efforts to ensure that the U.N. Security Council explicitly links human rights with security. OIAC applauds her leadership so that the issue of human rights abuses in Iran and particularly the 1988 massacre of political prisoners would be included in the U.N. Security Council agenda.
SOURCE: Yahoo News
https://www.yahoo.com/news/oiac-applauds-amb-haleys-initiative-human-rights-security-144900856.html
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By David B. Rivkin, Jr.
February 27, 2023, in the Wall Street Journal
Your editorial “Putin Buries Nuclear Arms Control” (Feb. 22) correctly discounts the significance of Vladimir Putin’s withdrawal from the New Start Treaty, explaining that nuclear deterrence is buttressed by U.S. nuclear force deployments and not by arms-control treaties, particularly given Moscow’s frequent noncompliance. Given America’s demanding extended deterrence commitments to defend numerous allies from conventional and nuclear attacks, however, Washington should take several additional deterrence-enhancing steps.
First, deterrence is bolstered by a nuclear-use policy, targeting enemy assets based on the enemy’s own values and weaknesses. This is why the U.S. moved from a “assured mutual destruction” policy, targeting Soviet cities in the 1960s, toward hitting the Soviets where it mattered to them the most. The final iteration of this strategy, adopted during Jimmy Carter’s presidency, targeted Communist Party headquarters and railways linking European Russia with Siberia. Given Mr. Putin’s highly personalized regime, the U.S. contingency plan should be to target Russian leaders and their close associates, as well as the key transportation facilities connecting Russia proper with restive Muslim and Asian regions.
Second, robust U.S. declaratory policy, describing how we view nuclear weapons, enhances deterrence. Unfortunately, visions of a nuke-free world have been overly embraced by numerous administrations of both parties. Given Russia’s embrace of its ability to prevail in a nuclear war, the U.S. must give up on nuclear abolitionism and refocus on a credible nuclear war-fighting strategy.
Today’s challenges require the U.S. to re-emphasize the first-use policy (already embraced by Russian military doctrine) and stress that a properly prosecuted nuclear war can be won. We need to respond robustly to Mr. Putin’s nuclear taunts, stating that any use of Russian nuclear weapons against Ukraine would so malignantly change the post-World War II global security environment that it would be met by a vigorous U.S. response.
Facilitating Russian defeat in Ukraine would also discourage Beijing’s attack on Taiwan. China is rapidly building its nuclear forces but won’t approach nuclear parity with the U.S. until 2030 at the earliest (it’s during these years that U.S. conventional force vulnerabilities in any conflict with China loom largest.) Discounting Mr. Putin’s nuclear threats, abandoning self-deterrence and returning the U.S. to a muscular nuclear policy would bolster deterrence of Beijing, too.
Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-us-nuclear-weapons-deterrence-russia-china-643649ab
The Iran Deal Violates U.S. Law
Obama let Tehran get into the medical-isotope business, contrary to the intent of Congress.
By David B. Rivkin Jr. and James L. Connaughton
Oct. 12, 2017, in the Wall Street Journal
As President Trump decides whether to certify his predecessor’s nuclear deal with Iran, here’s another wrinkle he should keep in mind: The deal’s implementation violates federal law, namely the American Medical Isotopes Production Act of 2012.
That statute seeks to end the nuclear-proliferation risk associated with foreign production of radioactive substances for medical use using weapons-grade highly enriched uranium. U.S. doctors use a molybdenum isotope, moly-99, in 20 million procedures annually to detect early cancer, heart disease and other lethal illnesses. But the U.S. has no domestic production capability, relying instead on foreign suppliers who obtain the necessary highly enriched uranium from the U.S. government.
In enacting the 2012 law, Congress sought to end exports of highly enriched uranium while ramping up sufficient domestic production of moly-99 to satisfy U.S. needs. Since America uses roughly half of the world’s moly-99, robust U.S. production would cramp the ability of foreign isotope suppliers to control the market and sell their wares globally.
Under the 2012 law, the National Nuclear Security Administration is supposed to implement programs to encourage U.S. entrepreneurs to develop ways of making moly-99 without using highly enriched uranium, with the goal of making enough of it to justify permanently ending U.S. exports of highly enriched uranium. The Obama administration conspicuously failed to fulfill the law’s requirements. Moly-99 is not being produced in the U.S. and the U.S. government continues to export weapons-grade uranium overseas.
The Iran deal makes matters worse. It specifically permits Tehran an unlimited right to generate highly enriched uranium for use in medical isotope production. Iran is free to join with other producers to control supply and price. Earlier this year Ali Akbar Salehi, Iran’s former lead nuclear negotiator and now head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, declared Iran’s intention to become a major supplier of medical isotopes. Most significantly, the Iran deal’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action commits the U.S. and other parties to assist Iranian medical isotope development with technology transfer, project finance, export credits and other forms of investment. The European Union has established a joint nuclear cooperation working group with Iran.
The U.S. cannot in good faith implement these obligations without evading its obligation under the American Medical Isotopes Production Act to curtail such foreign medical isotope production. Under U.S. law, there is no question which obligation prevails. The Obama administration, knowing the Senate would never ratify the JCPOA as a treaty, made it an “executive agreement” instead. Such agreements can have the force of law, but under our Constitution the president cannot unilaterally repeal a statute. It’s another reason the administration should declare the Iran deal null and void.
Mr. Rivkin, a Washington-based constitutional lawyer, served at the Justice Department and White House Counsel’s Office in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations. Mr. Connaughton served as chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, 2001-09.
Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-iran-deal-violates-u-s-law-1507847288
How Congress Can Use Its Leverage on Iran
By DAVID B. RIVKIN JR. And LEE A. CASEY, Jan. 20, 2015
Nuclear talks between Iran and the U.S. recommenced Jan. 14, ahead of full international talks with senior officials from the U.S., U.K., France, Russia, China and Germany two days later. A final agreement is to be reached no later than June 30. Nothing less than Middle Eastern and global security hangs in the balance.
That security depends on verifiable elimination of Iran’s nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs. Unfortunately, the Obama administration is likely to accept a deal leaving in place a substantial Iranian nuclear-weapons infrastructure, including uranium-enrichment capability, long-range ballistic missiles and the ability to deploy a rudimentary nuclear force on short notice. A course correction that only Congress can effect is urgently needed.
It is difficult for Congress to stop a president determined to sign an agreement with foreign leaders. And as this newspaper pointed out in a recent editorial, President Obama has threatened to veto any legislation to impose further sanctions on Iran if the June 30 deadline is not met. Still, Tehran’s insistence that existing U.S. sanctions be lifted as part of a nuclear-weapons agreement gives U.S. lawmakers substantial leverage. The collapse of oil prices, which dealt a heavy blow to the already weakened Iranian economy, has further increased this leverage. Here is what Congress should do:
First, Congress should insist that any Iranian agreement take the form of a treaty. The Constitution requires that treaties be made only with the advice and consent of the Senate. At the time it was adopted, and throughout most of U.S. history, agreements fundamentally ordering the relationship between the U.S. and foreign nations took the form of treaties, not executive orders. A mere executive agreement, which Mr. Obama may use to evade congressional constraints here, would be constitutionally insufficient. Read more »
David Rivkin Online
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/7085
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Academy Awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Academy Museum and LAist Studios to Launch The Academy Museum Podcast
March 17, 2022 HollywoodGlee Leave a comment
Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and Southern California Public Radio’s
LAist Studios to Launch The Academy Museum Podcast,
a New Podcast Series Exploring the Impact, History, Art, and Artists of Cinema
Hosted by the Academy Museum’s Chief Artistic and Programming Officer,
Jacqueline Stewart, the First Season, “And The Oscar® Goes To…,”
Examines 10 Pivotal Academy Awards® Ceremonies
Los Angeles, CA, March 17, 2022 —The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures is partnering with Southern California Public Radio’s LAist Studios to release The Academy Museum Podcast―a new multi-season audio series that examines the myriad stories of our cinematic history inspired by the museum’s galleries. Jacqueline Stewart, Chief Artistic and Programming Officer of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and a MacArthur Fellow, will host the series.
The inaugural season of this podcast, “And the Oscar® Goes To…,” premieres on Friday, March 25. This 10-episode season goes behind-the-scenes of touchstone Academy Awards® ceremonies, probing key social and cultural moments that impacted film artists as well as film fans over the years. Subsequent episodes will launch weekly.
Episodes include revelatory interviews and in-depth conversations with Oscar® winners, film artists, industry leaders, activists, journalists, and scholars, as well as archival audio and other exclusive content that will only be accessible through the podcast. Guests include Halle Berry, Scott Feinberg, Dave Karger, Gregory Nava, Kimberly Peirce, and Bruce Vilanch, among others. Listeners can find the series on the Academy Museum and KPCC websites, as well as on iTunes/Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and other podcast platforms.
“The Academy Museum Podcast will significantly expand the reach of the incredible exhibitions and programs that the museum is presenting both on our campus in Los Angeles and via our virtual programming. Our podcast will allow us to take deeper dives into the multitude of stories about how films are made, how the film industry has evolved, and the impact of cinema on our lives,” said Stewart.
“LAist Studios is thrilled to partner with the Academy Museum—the most spectacular new movie museum in the United States—to bring the stories of our hometown industry to our listeners,” said Herb Scannell, CEO and President of Southern California Public Radio. “The Academy Museum Podcast offers unprecedented access to iconic and important movie moments.”
The first episode for this season, “2002: This Door Has Been Opened,” revisits the historic night when Halle Berry became the first Black woman to win the Academy Award® for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her performance in Monster’s Ball (2001). Her emotional speech closed out a night that was marked by a celebration of Black excellence: Sidney Poitier received a lifetime achievement award and Denzel Washington won the award for Best Actor in a Leading Role for his performance in Training Day (2001). But while the night seemed to signal a historic shift, Berry now calls her historic win “one of my biggest heartbreaks.” Berry reveals to Stewart how the night felt from her perspective and the ways in which the win impacted her career.
Future episodes include:
“1940: Cinema’s Best Year?” ―This episode will explore the bevy of iconic films released in 1939—Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, The Wizard of Oz, Stagecoach, The Women, and more—and look at the double-edged experience of Hattie McDaniel on the night she became the first Black Oscar® winner for Gone with the Wind.
“1951: It’s Going to be a Bumpy Night” ―This ceremony celebrated two films that captured the complexities of show business and its impact on women: All About Eve and Sunset Boulevard.
“1953: Broadcasting the Oscars” ―The episode will look at the history of broadcasting the Oscars®, from radio to television, the rituals fans have created around the broadcast, and a discussion of the future of presenting the Academy Awards in the age of social media.
“1954: The Brave One(s)” ―This episode will examine the long history of blacklisting in Hollywood, looking at the treatment of writers including Walter Bernstein and the Academy‘s posthumous recognition of Dalton Trumbo in 1993.
“1973: Marlon Brando Cannot Accept This Very Generous Award” ―This episode will revisit the speech actor Sacheen Littlefeather delivered on Marlon Brando’s behalf to explore Native American representation in cinema and controversies about using the Oscars stage as a platform for activism.
“1999: For Your Consideration” ―This episode will look at how campaigning changed the Oscars game at the turn of the century and the long history of campaigning dating back to Louis B. Mayer.
“2000: Boys Don’t Cry” ―This episode will discuss LGBTQ+ representation in media, the complex issue of straight actors playing trans and gay characters, actors who come out, and actors who change gender identities.
“2015: Oscars So White” ―This episode will explore the evolution of this issue, the ways the Academy continues to respond, and what this meant for the show’s producers.
“2019: Muchas Gracias, Mexico” ―This episode will look at the success of Mexican film artists at the Oscars―Alfonso Cuarón, Alejandro González Iñárritu, Guillermo del Toro, and Emmanuel Lubezki and why US Latinx filmmakers and films are far less prevalent in the industry overall.
About the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
The Academy Museum is the largest museum in the United States devoted to the arts, sciences, and artists of moviemaking. The museum advances the understanding, celebration, and preservation of cinema through inclusive and accessible exhibitions, screenings, programs, initiatives, and collections. Designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Renzo Piano, the museum’s campus contains the restored and revitalized historic Saban Building—formerly known as the May Company building (1939)—and a soaring spherical addition. Together, these buildings contain 50,000 square feet of exhibition spaces, two state-of-the-art theaters, the Shirley Temple Education Studio, and beautiful public spaces that are free and open to the public. These include: The Walt Disney Company Piazza and the Sidney Poitier Grand Lobby, which houses the Spielberg Family Gallery, Academy Museum Store, and Fanny’s restaurant and café. The Academy Museum exhibition galleries are open seven days a week, with hours Sunday through Thursday from 10am to 6pm and Friday and Saturday from 10am to 8pm.
About Southern California Public Radio (SCPR) and LAist Studios
Southern California Public Radio (scpr.org) is a member-supported multi-platform public media organization that has garnered more than 500 journalistic honors since 1999. Recognized as a national leader in public service journalism and civic engagement, SCPR’s flagship radio station, 89.3 KPCC-FM, reaches more than 900,000 listeners every week as the most listened-to public radio news service across Southern California. The network’s five stations (89.3 KPCC-FM, 89.1 KUOR-FM, 90.3 KVLA-FM, 89.9 FM, and 89.5 KJAI-FM) deliver award-winning local news coverage to the diverse communities of the region, including a robust slate of signature programs from NPR, APM, the BBC and PRI. LAist (laist.com) is a digital news site committed to in-depth reporting about life in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Its award-winning work reaches over seven million people per month, and in 2019, the brand grew to include LAist Studios (laiststudios.com), a dedicated podcast development and production studio. Furthering SCPR’s commitment to premium on-demand audio storytelling, podcasts from LAist Studios aim to reflect the ethos of Los Angeles—a forward-looking, minority-majority community built upon unmatched diversity, inclusion, and drive—going beyond geographical borders to connect with listeners around the globe who share the LA state of mind.
(Press release courtesy of Academy Press Office)
“And the Oscar® Goes To…” Episode One
In "television"
Dawn Hudson Announces This Term Will Be Her Last As Academy CEO
@TheAcademy Museum Announces 2022-2023 Exhibitions
In "Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences"
Bruce VilanchChief Artistic and Programming Officer of the Academy Museum of Motion PicturesDave KargerGoogle PodcastsGregory NavaHalle BerryiTunes/Apple PodcastsJacqueline StewartKimberly PeirceScott FeinbergSpotify
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Rare jewel-colored frog rediscovered in Colombia
by Mongabay.com on 13 March 2008
A brilliantly-colored frog has been rediscovered 14 years after its last sighting in a remote mountainous region in Colombia.
The critically endangered Carrikeri Harlequin frog (Atelopus carrikeri), a member of a family of amphibians that has been decimated by the outbreak of a deadly fungal disease, measures about 2 inches (5 cm) in length and lives at an altitude of 13,000 feet (4,000 m).
“By discovering that the endangered frog still exists, we hope it will show how important conservation is,” said Luis Alberto Rueda, scientist for the Project Atelopus team who led the expedition. “And we plan to continue with our research so that we can better assist in helping to ensure that this frog will not become extinct.”
The Carrikeri Harlequin Frog (Atelopus carrikeri) found in the páramo habitat, a Neotropical grassland ecosystem located in high elevations between the upper forest line (about 3,100 m in altitude) and the permanent snow line (about 5,000 m). Nearly 57 percent of this ecosystem worldwide is found in Colombia. This population is unique since it possesses orange markings, which are unusual for this species. Image courtesy of the Conservation Leadership Program.
Harlequin frogs appear to be particularly at risk from the chytrid fungus that is killing amphibians around the globe: between the 1980s and 1990s, almost two-thirds of the 110 known harlequin frog species went extinct. Scientists say climate change and other habitat perturbations may be making frogs more vulnerable to infection.
The discovery was made by scientists with the Project Atelopus team, a group backed by the Conservation Leadership Program (CLP), a partnership between BP, BirdLife International, Fauna & Flora International, Conservation International and the Wildlife Conservation Society.
In addition to Rueda, team members included Oswaldo Cortes, Giovanni Chaves, Erika Salazar, Jose Gil, Sergio Pulido, Astrid Nossa, Fabian Tavera, Jenny Gallo, Ximena Villagrán and Nidia Rodriguez.
New poison frog species discovered in Colombia August 28, 2007
Scientists have discovered a previously unknown species of poison frog in a remote mountainous region in Colombia. The tiny frog has been dubbed the “golden frog of Supatá” and lives only in a 20 hectare area in Colombiaâs Cundinamarca region
Amphibian Crisis, Amphibians, Animals, Archive, Biodiversity, Endangered Species, Environment, Frogs, Green, Happy-upbeat Environmental, Herps, In-situ Conservation, Photos, Species Discovery, Wildlife
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The Weird Gig Podcast
Stories of gigging musicians
Stories of gigging musiciansStories of gigging musiciansStories of gigging musicians
Have you ever wondered what it might be like to be a freelance musician?
Come for the stories, stay for the weird.
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If you enjoy our show...
Your support and contributions will enable us to meet our goals and improve conditions. Your generous donation will fund our fun musician story mission...and help us upgrade our podcasting equipment.
Episode#1
Anne Smith (Anne Sheridan Smith in a playbill), has been performing in the Chicago theatre community since 1996. She grew up here and caught the bug when she appeared in her first musical at Fenwick High School in Oak Park. “Once a Blackfriar, always a Blackfriar.” She’s been in numerous plays, musicals, lent her voice to bands and special projects, and sang in a trio, FOILED AGAIN, for 20 years, with friends: Rob Lindley and Allison Bazarko-Kirk, with whom she worked with in an a cappella octect at Navy Pier. They have an album called BLANKET OF WINTER available in a number of ways including Apple, Spotify, and CD Baby. A couple of appearances before the pandemic include an immersive play called SOUTHERN GOTHIC and a new musical about the Cubs winning the World Series, called MIRACLE. Anne is a nonprofit development consultant providing services and training that help build fundraising capacity, and she’s an adjunct professor every fall at Northwestern University, School of Professional Studies, teaching Major Gift Fundraising. She’s excited to be in the first episode of Kara and Pat’s podcast, WEIRD GIGS. ......
Tap Tap Tap
Episode #2
Scott Anderson is native of North Carolina, Scott moved to Chicago in 1999 after attending The University of Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music and Indiana University School of Music, and has been very active on the music scene working with countless groups in and around the Chicago area. He has been teaching in the Chicago area for 16years.In 2001, Scott founded Nia Quintet to showcase his songwriting and arranging, collaborating with some of the best musicians that Chicago has to offer. His first album, End of Time, on BluJazz Productions features 10 original compositions from a library of over 200 songs. His second album, released in 2013, features 7 more compositions. His newest release will feature 8 more originals that focus on production and melody driven material, this album will be released in 2016 on Origin Records.
Zoey Witz is a professional guitarist on the Chicago scene. He's a freelance musician and plays in many society bands in the city. Zoey current is a teacher at School of Rock.
#Everythingisjobbing
Frank Canino has been playing professionally since 1979 when he appeared with saxophonist Warne Marsh at The Village Vanguard. After touring internationally as a jazz bassist with Warne and his own groups, in 1987 he joined Cornell Dupree’s band “Who It Is” and recorded their Grammy nominated record “Coast To Coast.”As a freelancer he has been heard with Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Dr. John, Willy DeVille, Ronan Tynan, Ben E. King, Richie Havens, Oz Noy, Kid Creole & The Coconuts, Rick Springfield, Gladys Knight, Bo Diddley, Vanessa Williams, David Fathead Newman, Jane Olivor, Melissa Manchester, Felix Cavaliere, The Original Blues Brothers Band with Steve Cropper and Eddie Floyd, John Oates, Southside Johnny, Gary U.S. Bonds, The Drifters, The Chiffons, Phoebe Snow, Beth Neilsen-Chapman, Melba Moore, Gloria Gaynor, Marilyn Michaels, etc.He’s played in dozens of Broadway shows including Rent, Beautiful, Hairspray, Hair, Memphis, Color Purple and many others . He can be heard on the Grammy winning soundtrack for “Smokey Joe’s Cafe.”
For more info and music links please go to Yogaontours.com
Robin Lukas is a pianist/vocalist in the midwest. Earning a living playing “customer service” music at local Chicago venues ( Drake, Pump Room, 95th Signature Room) she's “kept my creative toe in the water” composing originals.
My fifth release, Good New Days (2020) Danceable poetic Jazzy Sophisti-pop originals.
Chicago pianist Jeremy Kahn's story takes improvising to a new level. He also talks disasters in a theater pit, Donny Osmond, and pandemic creativity.
More about Jeremy...
Jeremy Kahn is one of Chicago’s busiest pianists, dividing his time between jazz venues, pit orchestras, and recording and teaching studios. He graduated from New England Conservatory of Music, where he studied with Jaki Byard. Jeremy then spent twelve years in New York, where he was a member of Vince Giordano’s Nighthawks, and worked with Max Roach on his Obie Award-winning score for three Sam Shepard plays that were performed at La Mama and Syracuse Stage. After moving to Chicago, he was the pianist in the Chicago Jazz Ensemble (led by Jon Faddis and Dana Hall). Jeremy has performed on stage with Dizzy Gillespie, Joni Mitchell, Aretha Franklin, Branford Marsalis, the Chicago and Milwaukee Symphony Orchestras, and on screen with Madonna and Mary Wilson. He is also the founder of Double Monk, showcasing the the music of Thelonious Monk with two pianists and a dancer. Jeremy has played at many of Chicago’s theaters, including the Nederlander (formerly the Oriental), Cadillac Palace, Shubert, Auditorium, Chicago, Broadway Playhouse, Aurora Paramount, Drury Lane Oakbrook, Lincolnshire Marriott, Porchlight and Royal George for shows like Wicked, Spamalot, The Lion King, Les Miserables, Aida and Aladdin. Jeremy was also the pianist/conductor for productions of Hot Mikado, Louis & Keely Live At The Sahara and Pal Joey, and is currently a faculty member of Northwestern University, DePaul University, Elmhurst College and the Music Institute of Chicago. He has been a featured performer at the Chicago, Hyde Park and Poznan (Poland) Jazz Festivals, and a featured guest on the radio shows of Studs Terkel and Marian McPartland. Jeremy is a 2014 honoree of the Chicago Musicians Union Dal Sagno Club.
“New York’s loss has been Chicago’s gain in the case of Jeremy Kahn, the splendid jazz pianist who (has) moved back to his hometown . . .” Howard Reich; Chicago Tribune
Information about Jeremy’s recordings and schedule can be found at www.kahnman.com.
Spoons on Bells
Mitch's weird gig story is called The Bluesmasters.
We also chat about favorite podcasts, "almost awesome" gigs, University of Iowa, and the best homemade wedding gift.
More about Mitch...
Mitch Towne is a keyboardist and touring musician, and is widely considered as the “go-to” Hammond organist in the Midwest. His ability to move seamlessly between diverse styles has made him a sought-after side-man with artists as varied as jazz/R&B artist and Grammy-winning producer Terrace Martin, jazz heavyweights Ryan Kisor, Jerry Bergonzi, Matt Wilson and Dave Stryker, blues artists Eric Gales and Ben Poole, and multi-platinum artist Aloe Blacc. In 2015, Towne played organ on the track “Push” for the album “Velvet Portraits” by Terrace Martin, which was nominated for a 2016 Grammy for “Best R&B” album. Towne is an endorsing artist for Crumar Instruments, Motion Sound Amplifiers and Lounsberry Pedals.
Episode #6 podcast music is by Mitch Towne
Songs include: OGD Road Song (with Dan Wilson Trio) & Eighty One recorded live at The Jewell in Omaha, NE
Subscribe to Mitch's Youtube Page
https://www.youtube.com/user/groovecake
The Bluesmasters
Episode # 7
Vance's weirdest gig stories tell of drummers and "monster dance grooves". Vance and Patrick reminis
More about Vance...
Vance Okraszewski is a freelance Chicago based drummer and percussionist. Since 1998 he has made a living playing music in a wide variety of settings, ranging from commercial studio work, cover bands, musical theatre and pit orchestra work, jazz projects and original rock groups, to orchestral percussion performance and accompaniment for modern dance. As a drum set artist, he has toured nationally with Linda Carter, Gary Sinise and the Lt Dan Band, Lucy Lawless, Don Rickles, Angela Ingersoll, and Michael Orland, the assistant musical director for American Idol. He also teaches drums and percussion at the Merit School of Music, as well as privately either in person or via Zoom.
Click below for Episode #7
Monster dance grooves
Chris Greene's weird gig story is call, "Just give the band free drinks".Underscoring music on today’s show has been an except of Ant’s Marching by the Dave Matthews Band, and Chris Greene’s original song The Crossover Appeal (uno mas).
Weird gig Podcast theme performed by Patrick Williams, Vance Okraszewski and yours truly.
We’re leaving you with a tune from Chris called Blues for Dr. Fear performed by the Chris Greene Quartet.
You can find out more about Chris on his website. chrisgreenejazz.com
More about Chris...
Saxophonist and composer Chris Greene was born in Evanston, IL. He spent his formative years in the award-winning Evanston High School Wind and Jazz Ensembles. As a teenager he began to play professionally with many local pop/rock and jazz bands. Greene eventually went to Bloomington, IN to attend the prestigious Indiana University Jazz Studies program and studied with renowned professor and cellist David Baker. Greene returned to Chicago in 1994 and has since collaborated with some of the nation’s most creative and versatile musicians. As a performer, Greene can be seen with many different groups - in many different genres. He also leads his own critically-acclaimed group, the Chris Greene Quartet. He has also performed or recorded with the following artists: Common, The Temptations, Eric Roberson, Ed Motta, Steve Coleman & Five Elements, Maysa Leak, Ten City, Sheena Easton, Steve Cole, Michael Manson, Andrew Bird, The J. Davis Trio, Chris Rob, Vic Lavender, Jesse De La Pena, Liquid Soul and The Mighty Blue Kings.
Just give the band free drinks
Istvan is a long time member of the dynamic alternative music scene and a fantastic singer/songwriter as well as a clever children’s music artist.
He has a new podcast for kids and families called Istvan’s imaginary podcast.
We’ll talk more about it as well as the release of his upcoming original kids album called Evie the Queen of the Insects but first, Istvan tells the tale of his weirdest experience on a gig. The title of this story is: The Hot Dog Party.
More about Istvan...
Find out more about Istvan's music:
https://www.istvansongs.com
https://www.instagram.com/iamistvan/
https://www.audible.com/pd/Istvans-Imaginary-Podcast-Podcast/B08K57LWK1
https://www.facebook.com/Woo-Woo-Stick-110958572260354/
https://istvan-and-his-imaginary-band.square.site
Find this episode by clicking below...
Hot Dog Party
Episode # 10
Ashley Hamer is a pop, funk, and jazz saxophone player. She also is a science podcaster for the Discovery podcast Curiosity Daily. Ashley and I talk about Bill Nye the science guy, and all things podcaster,
If she could have lunch with anyone living or dead, who would it be? ,
and whoa, it’s weird being a lady on the music scene!
But first, Ashley tells the tale of her space themed, weirdest gig. I’ll title this story…Alien’s landed on New Year’s Eve.
More about Ashley...
Ashley Hamer is a science communicator with a wide range of specialties and a deep love of the unknown. She is the managing editor and cohost of the award-winning Curiosity Daily podcast and a former scriptwriter for the science YouTube channel SciShow. Ashley’s writing has appeared in Cosmopolitan, TIME, Buzzfeed, Mashable, and USA Today.
A Northern California native, she began her editorial career in Chicago in 2010 after earning a master’s degree in jazz saxophone at the University of North Texas. A love of science blossomed while she was in music school, and by the time she had graduated, that love had grown into an urgent need to learn as much as she could about the universe and share that knowledge with the world. Shortly after starting a freelance music career in Chicago, she worked as a staff writer for Groupon while spending her off-time blogging about the intersections between music and science for Mad Art Lab and cohosting and editing its podcast, Mad Art Cast. She also served as a board member of Women Thinking Inc., a nonprofit devoted to promoting science to women and families, and earned a certificate in medical writing from the University of Chicago.
Ashley began a full-time science writing career at Curiosity in 2016, and the rest is history. Since then, she has interviewed the likes of Sean Carroll, Carl Zimmer, and Alan Alda, hosted a number of widely viewed science videos, appeared on several leading science podcasts, and spoken on stages everywhere from C2E2 and New York Comic Con to the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas and meetings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Washington, D.C. and Seattle, Washington.
In 2019, Curiosity was acquired by Discovery, Inc., the media company behind informative, educational TV channels and digital products that include the Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, The Science Channel, Seeker, and more.
When she’s not exploring the universe’s big questions, Ashley can be found performing a wide variety of music in and around Chicago. Ashley is also a Boston-qualified marathon runner, a triathlete, and a cat mom to a genetically interesting calico named Aglet. https://www.ashleyhamer.online
www.fuzzzchicago.com
Aliens landed on New Years Eve
Episode #11
On today’s show, I sit down with Bill Overton. Bill is a woodwind player as well as guitarist and vocalist. In addition to playing jazz and big band gigs in both New York and Chicago over the years, Bill was also a music educator. His latest recording is called “Only Love Can Do That, released in 2018.
Bill and I talk about Gilbert Godfrey, solo saxophone gigs, and a love for Jimmy Webb’s music.
But first, sit back and enjoy Bill’s weirdest gig story. I’m calling it The Rifleman.
Underscoring music on episode #11
The Theme song from The Rifleman TV show
Johnny Crawford- Your nose is gonna Grow
Glen Campbell sings Jimmy Webb- Sun Shower
Bill Overton- Rainy Night in Georgia (written by Tony Joe White)
Bill Overton's Youtube channel
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaWCend78xg
More about Bill...
Bill Overton, woodwinds, guitar and vocals, was born in Memphis in 1954 and grew up there immersed in its blues, jazz and soul music. After receiving his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Music Education from the University of Illinois at Urbana, he moved to New York City in 1981 where he performed with such artists as Mel Lewis, Doc Cheatham, Mickey Roker, Major Holley, Vic Dickinson, Rosemary Clooney, Vince Giordano’s Nighthawks, Howard Alden, Bo Diddley, the Temptations, the Spinners, the Orchestra of St. Luke’s and many others while teaching at the Brooklyn Conservatory, William Patterson College, and the Aebersold Jazz Clinics, as well as in the public schools. He has recorded extensively and conducted clinics, master classes and seminars throughout the U.S. and abroad. Bill and his family moved to Libertyville, Illinois, in 1998, where he taught band, guitar and music technology at Oak Grove School in Green Oaks, IL, while performing with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra with guest artists such as Roy Hargrove, Ahmad Jamal, McCoy Tyner, Ann Hampton-Callaway, Kurt Elling, Slide Hampton, Jon Faddis, etc., the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, the Chicago Philharmonic, his own quartet at Andy’s, The Green Mill and 210, at Ravinia with Seth MacFarlane, Bernadette Peters, Michael Feinstein, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, and many others. He has taught at Midwest Young Artists, the Merit School and many others. His debut recording as a leader, “The Sun Will Shine”, was released in 2015, “Always In My Heart” came next in 2017, and his latest, “Only Love Can Do That”, was released in June, 2018.
We’re celebrating our 12 episode of the season with my special guest, music director and pianist Taylor Peckham.
On today's episode, we talk about becoming friends on the Broadway show, Jersey Boys.
Taylor and I discuss a weird gig about chairs. Yes, you heard right. Songs about chairs.
His weird gig trip to Budapest, Hungary,
And the “pinch me moment” of working on music in NY with Alex Lacamoire.
But first, Taylor’s tells his weirdest gig story titled...
“Are some gigs beyond saving?”
Taylor’s original song "Get Funk’d" is the underscoring music for this episode. Performed by Taylor, along with Jacob Chidester on guitar, John De Simini on sax.
More about Taylor...
Taylor is a music director, arranger, producer & keyboardist originally from San Diego. Whether playing keys for a backyard wedding or conducting orchestras on Broadway, Taylor has been lucky enough to build a career spanning pretty much every kind of music project imaginable. Now settled back in San Diego, Taylor is splitting his professional time between a new career in tech and various music projects.
Just make it, stupid!
Taylor and his friend Renee have a funny podcast about setting your ego aside, checking those internal voices at the door, and inspiring you to create what you've always wanted to do. Positive and entertaining!!
If you've ever made something, are currently making something, or are wondering whether or not TO make something... we're here to encourage you not to overthink it. Just Make it Stupid!
https://www.facebook.com/justmakeitstupid/
The Weird Gig Podcast launches February 12th!!
3 episodes dropping
then....
Weekly episodes on Mondays
Are you a musician or artist with a tale you're dying to tell?
Pitch your story to us and join in the fun!!!
[email protected]
Copyright © 2021 The Weird Gig Podcast - All Rights Reserved.
We're live on the following platforms
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Azerbaijan: US should urge further prisoner releases
DemDigest March 30, 2016 January 23, 2019
United States officials should urge Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, during his visit to Washington to free unjustly imprisoned government critics and political activists, Human Rights Watch said today:
They should also urge Aliyev to lift restrictions on activists recently freed from prison and reform laws that severely curtail fundamental freedoms. Aliyev will participate in the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, D.C., from March 31 to April 1, 2016. It is his first visit to the United States since 2012.
On March 17, Aliyev signed a pardon, freeing 148 prisoners, including 13 journalists, human rights defenders, and activists who had been prosecuted on politically motivated charges. Courts freed two more people by converting their original jail time to suspended sentences. …
Other journalists and activists remain behind bars, also following convictions on unfounded and politically motivated charges, ranging from hooliganism to tax evasion. Among them is Khadija Ismayilova (above), the country’s top investigative reporter, who worked for U.S.-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. …Ilgar Mammadov, a prominent political analyst and one of Azerbaijan’s few alternative political voices, has been unjustly imprisoned since 2013, despite repeated calls by the Council of Europe, Europe’s top intergovernmental human rights body of which Azerbaijan is a member, for the government to free him.
“Because Azerbaijan is such an important partner for the US, it’s all the more reason the US government should lend its voice to help secure freedom for government critics,” said Andrea Prasow, deputy Washington director at Human Rights Watch. “The Obama administration and members of Congress shouldn’t miss this crucial opportunity to encourage Aliyev to end the country’s human rights crackdown.”
Authoritarianism, Azerbaijan, Civil Society, Democratic institutions, Eurasia Azerbaijan, Ilgar Mammadov, Khadija Ismayilova
Dilemmas of Reform in Arab Transitions
Dissent erupts within Cuba’s Communist Party
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/7953
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Everything That Made News In Entertainment From The South (20th – 26th December)
From trailers and teasers to new film announcements, here’s a quick recap of the week that went by.
Team FC
26 Dec, 2021, 12:25 pm
Here's a recap of the significant stories in entertainment across Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada films, and sometimes the odd television series as well.
Chiranjeevi released the trailer for Satya Dev's next, Godse. (Telugu)
Written and directed by Gopi Ganesh Pattabhi, Godse is an upcoming Telugu action-thriller film, starring Satya Dev and Aishwarya Lekshmi in the lead roles. He will play a vigilante who uses 'Godse' as his name and fights against powers that be. The cinematographer is Suresh S and the film is also editor Sagar Undagandla's debut. Sunil Kashyap is roped in as the music composer.
Makers of Yaanai, directed by Hari, have released a teaser. (Tamil)
An action packed teaser of the upcoming Tamil film, Yaanai, shows Arun Vijay in a fierce role. He fights and challenges his opponents while protecting an idol of Lord Ganesh. Priya Bhavani Shankar will also be seen along with Samuthirakani, Yogi Babu, Ammu Abirami, KGF Ramachandra Raju, Radhika Sarathkumar, Aadukalam Jayapalan, Imman Annachi, Rajesh, Aishwarya, Bose Venkat, Sanjeev and Pugazh. The film is directed by Hari with music composed by G.V.Prakash Kumar.
Prabhas-starrer Radhe Shyam's trailer is out. (Telugu)
The trailer for Radhe Shyam, directed by Radha Krishna Kumar was released at an event in Hyderabad with huge fanfare. Starring Prabhas and Pooja Hegde, the film is a love story that is set in Europe. Visuals of a sinking ship and a catastrophic earthquake show that the film could be tragic. Produced under the banner of UV Creations, Radhe Shyam will release in seven languages – Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada, Hindi, Chinese and Japanese – indicating pan-world intentions, on January 14, 2022.
A.R. Rahman makes a Malayalam-comeback after 30 years with Malayankunju, trailer released. (Malayalam)
The trailer of Malayankunju, set to A.R. Rahman's tune introduces Fahadh Faasil as Anikuttan, whose emotional range goes from angry to irate – whether it's a baby's cry to nosy neighbours. The film marks Sajimon Prabhakar's debut as a director, also starring Rajisha Vijayan, Indrans, Jaffer Idukki and Deepak Parambol. Screenplay and cinematography is handled by Mahesh Narayanan and is produced by Fazil.
Dulquer Salmaan's cop drama, Salute, to release on January 14, 2022. (Malayalam)
The actor released a trailer for the upcoming cop drama, Salute, while announcing that the film will hit the theatres on January 14, 2022. His character, Aravind Karunakaran, is seen chasing a case from many years back. The film is directed by Rosshan Andrrews and also stars Diana Penty, Manoj K. Jayan, Saniya Iyappan, Lakshmi Gopalaswamy, Saikumar and Ganapathi S Poduval. The film is produced by Dulquer Salmaan himself under the banner of Wayfarer Films.
Trailer introduces Prabhu Deva as a genie in My Dear Bootham. (Tamil)
My Dear Bootham, directed by N Ragavan, is a film about a young boy and a genie who only he can see. The trailer introduces Prabhu Deva as the genie who helps with everything from homework to flying into the clouds. Music for the film is composed by D. Imman, cinematography is handled by U.K. Senthil Kumar and San Lokesh is the editor.
Veeramae Vaagai Soodum's trailer announces its release date. (Tamil)
Makers of Veeramae Vaagai Soodum released an action packed trailer this week introducing Vishal as a common man who takes justice into his hands. A theme music, composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja titled 'Rise Of A Common Man' also released this week. The film also stars Dimple Hayathi and Yogi Babu, directed by Thu.Pa.Saravanan. Kavin Raj is the cinematographer and the editor is N.B. Srikanth. It is produced by the actor Vishal himself under the banner of Vishal Film Factory. It is set to release on January 26, 2022.
Trailer for Naaradhan, directed by Aashiq Abu, out. (Malayalam)
Naaradhan, starring Tovino Thomas, Anna Ben, Indrans, Renji Panicker, Sharaf U Dheen, Rajesh Madhavan and Navas Vallikkunnu, is a newsroom drama. Tovino Thomas is a leading anchor who is struggling to find his mojo as others prey on his position. The film is directed by Aashiq Abu, shot by Jaffer Zadique, edited by Saiju Sreedharan and produced by Santhosh Kuruvila, Rima Kallingal and Aashiq Abu. It will be released on January 27, 2022.
Teaser for an Aha-original Senapathi released. (Telugu)
Senapathi, directed by Pavan Sadineni marks the OTT debut of the veteran actor, Rajendra Prasad. In a burra-katha like narration, the teaser introduces the world that the crime thriller is set in. The film also stars Naresh Agastya, Gnaneswari Kandregula, Harshavardhan, Josh Ravi, Jeevan Kumar and Rakendu Mouli. It is produced by Sushmita Konidela and Vishnu Prasad under the banner of Gold Box Entertainment. Senapathi will begin streaming on Aha on December 31, 2021.
Mammootty-starrer Bheeshma Parvam gets a release date. (Malayalam)
Amal Neerad directorial, Bheeshma Parvam, is set to release in theatres on February 24, 2022. The film is a gangster drama starring Mammootty, Sreenath Bhasi, Shine Tom Chacko, Soubin Shahir, Farhaan Fazil, Dileesh Pothan, Jinu Joseph and KPAC Lalitha. It is produced by the director himself under the banner of Amal Neerad Productions and distributed by Dulquer Salmaan's Wayfarer Films.
First look of Dulquer Salmaan as Yaazhan in Hey Sinamika out. (Tamil)
Choreographer Brinda is making her directorial debut with a romantic comedy film, Hey Sinamika, starring Dulquer Salmaan. A first look poster showed many vibrant and cool avatars of the actor's character, Yaazhan. The film also stars Kajal Aggarwal and Aditi Rai Hydari. Music for the film is composed by Govind Vasantha. It is produced under the banner of Jio Studios, Global One Studios and Viacom18 Studios and will be released in theatres on February 25.
Bheemla Nayak and F3 postpone their release dates. (Telugu)
After fighting it out for the festival release dates during Sankranti, makers of Bheemla Nayak have postponed their release date to February 25, 2022. The starring Pawan Kalyan and Rana Daggubati was initially slated for a release on January 12, 2022, only five days after the release of S.S.Rajamouli's RRR (January 7) and in the same week as Prabhas's Radhe Shyam (January 14). Anil Ravipudi's F3, starring Venkatesh Daggubati, has now been postponed to April 29, 2022 to avoid any clash.
Dhanush's next bi-lingual film is titled Sir. (Tamil/Telugu)
Writer-director Venky Atluri's next is a bi-lingual film starring Dhanush in the lead role. The film is titled Sir in Telugu and Vaathi in Tamil. It is expected to be a social drama film. This will mark Dhanush's first direct Telugu release as well. Produced by Naga Vamsi and Sai Soujanya under the banner of Sithara Entertainments along with Fortune Four Cinemas, music is composed by G.V. Prakash Kumar.
M. Sasikumar's first look and title released for his 21st film. (Tamil)
Directed by Sathyasiva, starring M Sasikumar, the film is titled Common Man. Makers released a gritty video showing the actor in a studio where he is recording foley sound for a butchering scene. "The most important thing in life is family," says the video as it introduces the actor as a common man. Music is composed by Ghibran, cinematographer is Raja Bhattacharjee and edited by Srikanth N B. The film is produced by T. D. Rajha and D. R. Sanjay Kumar under the banner of Chendur Film International.
YNOT Studios announces their next, Thalaikoothal. (Tamil)
Thalaikoothal is written and directed by Jayaprakash Radhakrishnan, starring Samuthirakani, Kathir and Vasundhara in the lead roles. The film commenced shooting this week. It is produced by S. Sashikanth under the banner of YNOT Studios.
Makers of RRR released a song titled 'Komuram Bheemudo.' (Telugu)
S.S. Rajamouli's RRR is a fictional tale about two revolutionaries – Alluri Sitaramaraju and Komaram Bheem. The makers have released a song about the latter, titled 'Komuram Bheemudo.' M.M. Keeravani has composed the music which his son, Kaala Bhairava has sung. The lyrics are penned by Suddala Ashok Teja. The film stars NTR, Ram Charan, Ajay Devgn, Alia Bhatt, Olivia Morris, Samuthirakani, Alison Doody and Ray Stevenson.
Dulquer Salmaan
Fahadh Faasil
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AIR Products & Chemicals Value Stock - Dividend - Research Selection
Air products and chemicals
ISIN: US0091581068 , WKN: 854912
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. (“we,” “our,” “us,” the “Company,” “Air Products,” or “registrant”), a Delaware corporation originally founded in 1940, serves energy, electronics, chemicals, metals, and manufacturing customers globally with a unique portfolio of products, services, and solutions that include atmospheric gases, process and specialty gases, electronics and performance materials, equipment, and services. The Company is the world’s largest supplier of hydrogen and has built leading positions in growth markets such as helium, refinery hydrogen, semiconductor materials, natural gas liquefaction, and advanced coatings and adhesives. As used in this report, unless the context indicates otherwise, the terms “we,” “our,” “us,” the “Company,” or “registrant” include controlled subsidiaries, affiliates, and predecessors of Air Products and its controlled subsidiaries and affiliates. During its fiscal year ended 30 September 2016 (“fiscal year 2016”), the Company manufactured and distributed products in two principal lines of business: Industrial Gases and Materials Technologies. Industrial Gases’ primary products were atmospheric gases, process gases, and equipment for air separation. Materials Technologies’ primary products were performance materials and chemicals, such as epoxy amine curing agents, polyurethane catalysts, additives, and specialty surfactants, and electronic materials such as specialty gases, chemical mechanical planarization slurries, and specialty chemicals. The Company also designs and manufactures equipment for natural gas liquefaction and helium distribution. At the beginning of the fiscal year, the Company reported its business in seven reporting segments under which it managed its operations, assessed performance, and reported earnings: Industrial Gases – Americas; Industrial Gases – EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa); Industrial Gases – Asia; Industrial Gases – Global; Materials Technologies; Energy-from-Waste; and Corporate and other. On 29 March 2016, the Board of Directors approved the Company’s exit of its Energy-from-Waste business based on continued difficulties encountered in making its two Energy-from-Waste projects operational and the Company’s conclusion, based on testing and analysis completed during the second quarter of fiscal year 2016, that significant additional time and resources would be required to make the projects operational. The Energy-from-Waste segment is now presented as a discontinued operation. Refer to Note 26, Business Segment and Geographic Information, to the consolidated financial statements for additional details on our reportable business segments. On 16 September 2015, the Company announced that its Board of Directors approved a preliminary plan to spin off its Materials Technologies business, which contained the Electronic Materials and Performance Materials businesses. On 6 May 2016, the Company entered into an agreement to sell certain subsidiaries and assets comprising the Performance Materials business to Evonik Industries AG for $3.8 billion in cash and the assumption of certain liabilities. The Company also announced its intention to proceed with the spin-off of the Electronic Materials business. In preparation for the spin-off, Air Products transferred operations, employees, assets, and liabilities of the Electronic Materials business to its wholly owned subsidiary, Versum Materials, Inc. (Versum). On 1 October 2016, Air Products distributed all of the shares of Versum Materials, Inc. to its shareholders, creating a new publicly traded corporation. As of 30 September 2016, the results of operations, financial condition, and cash flows for the Electronic Materials and Performance Materials businesses are presented within the Company’s consolidated financial statements as continuing operations. Beginning with the first quarter of fiscal year 2017, the historical results of Electronic Materials will be presented as a discontinued operation. The historical results of Performance Materials will be reflected as a discontinued operation when it becomes probable for the sale to occur and actions required to meet the plan of sale indicate that it is unlikely that significant changes will occur. Narrative Description of Business by Segments Industrial Gases Business The Company’s Industrial Gases business produces atmospheric gases (oxygen, nitrogen, argon, and rare gases), process gases (hydrogen, helium, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, syngas and specialty gases) and equipment for the production or processing of gases such as air separation units and non-cryogenic generators. Atmospheric gases are produced through various air separation processes of which cryogenic is the most prevalent. Process gases are produced by methods other than air separation. For example, hydrogen is produced by steam methane reforming of natural gas or by purifying byproduct sources obtained from the chemical and petrochemical industries; and helium is produced as a byproduct of gases extracted from underground reservoirs, primarily natural gas, but also carbon dioxide purified before resale. The Company’s Industrial Gases business is organized and operated regionally. The regional Industrial Gases segments (Americas, EMEA, and Asia) supply gases and related equipment in the relevant region to diversified customers in many industries, including those in metals, glass, chemical processing, electronics, energy production and refining, food processing, metallurgical industries, medical, and general manufacturing. Hydrogen is used by refiners to facilitate the conversion of heavy crude feedstock and lower the sulfur content of gasoline and diesel fuels. The chemicals industry uses hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon monoxide and syngas as feedstocks in the production of many basic chemicals. The energy production industry uses nitrogen injection for enhanced recovery of oil and natural gas and oxygen for gasification. Oxygen is used in combustion and industrial heating applications, including in the steel, certain nonferrous metals, glass and cement industries. Nitrogen applications are used in food processing for freezing and preserving flavor and nitrogen for inerting is used in various fields, including the metallurgical, chemical, and semiconductor industries. Helium is used in laboratories and healthcare for cooling and in other industries for pressurizing, purging and lifting. Argon is used in the metals and other industries for its unique inerting, thermal conductivity and other properties. Industrial gases are also used in welding and providing healthcare and are utilized in various manufacturing processes to make them more efficient and to optimize performance. We distribute gases to our customers through a variety of supply modes: Liquid Bulk—Product is delivered in bulk (in liquid or gaseous form) by tanker or tube trailer and stored, usually in its liquid state, in equipment designed and installed typically by the Company at the customer’s site for vaporizing into a gaseous state as needed. Liquid bulk sales are usually governed by three- to five-year contracts. Packaged Gases—Small quantities of product are delivered in either cylinders or dewars. The Company operates packaged gas businesses in Europe, Asia, and Latin America. In the United States, the Company’s packaged gas business sells products only for the electronics and magnetic resonance imaging (principally helium) industries. On-Site Gases—Large quantities of hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, carbon monoxide, and syngas (a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide) are provided to customers, principally the energy production and refining, chemical, and metallurgical industries worldwide who require large volumes of gases that have relatively constant demand. Gases are produced at large facilities located adjacent to customers’ facilities or by pipeline systems from centrally located production facilities and are generally governed by 15- to 20- year contracts. The Company also delivers small quantities of product through small on-site plants (cryogenic or non-cryogenic generators), typically either via a 10- to 15- year sale of gas contract or through the sale of the equipment to the customer. Electricity is the largest cost component in the production of atmospheric gases, and natural gas is the principal raw material for hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and syngas production. We mitigate energy and natural gas price fluctuations contractually through pricing formulas, surcharges, and cost pass-through arrangements. During fiscal year 2016, no significant difficulties were encountered in obtaining adequate supplies of power and natural gas. The regional Industrial Gases segments also include our share of the results of several joint ventures accounted for by the equity method. The largest of these joint ventures operate in Mexico, Italy, South Africa, India, Saudi Arabia, and Thailand. Each of the regional Industrial Gases segments competes against three global industrial gas companies: Air Liquide S.A., Linde AG, and Praxair, Inc.; as well as regional competitors. Competition in Industrial Gases is based primarily on price, reliability of supply, and the development of industrial gas applications. In locations where we have pipeline networks, which enable us to provide reliable and economic supply of products to larger customers, we derive a competitive advantage. Overall regional industrial gases sales constituted approximately 76% of consolidated sales in fiscal year 2016, 76% in fiscal year 2015, and 77% in fiscal year 2014. Sales of tonnage hydrogen and related products constituted approximately 17% of consolidated sales in fiscal year 2016, 19% in fiscal year 2015, and 22% in fiscal year 2014. Sales of atmospheric gases constituted approximately 36% of consolidated sales in fiscal year 2016, 35% in fiscal year 2015 and 33% in fiscal year 2014. Industrial Gases Equipment The Company designs and manufactures equipment for air separation, hydrocarbon recovery and purification, natural gas liquefaction (LNG), and liquid helium and liquid hydrogen transport and storage. The Industrial Gases – Global segment includes cryogenic and non-cryogenic equipment for air separation. The equipment is sold worldwide to customers in a variety of industries, including chemical and petrochemical manufacturing, oil and gas recovery, and processing and steel and primary metals processing. Other activities, which are managed globally instead of regionally, are also part of this segment, such as technology development for air separation. The Corporate and other segment includes two global equipment businesses, our LNG sale of equipment business and our liquid helium and liquid hydrogen transport and storage containers business. Steel, aluminum, and capital equipment subcomponents (compressors, etc.) are the principal raw materials in the manufacturing of equipment in this business segment. Adequate raw materials for individual projects are acquired under firm purchase agreements. Equipment is produced at the Company’s manufacturing sites with certain components being procured from subcontractors and vendors. Competition in the equipment business is based primarily on technological performance, service, technical know-how, price and performance guarantees. The backlog of equipment orders was approximately $1.1 billion on 30 September 2016 (as compared with a total backlog of approximately $1.5 billion on 30 September 2015) and primarily contains Air Products’ share of the multi-year contract with a joint venture in Jazan, Saudi Arabia for the construction of an industrial gas facility that will supply gases to Saudi Arabian Oil Company (Saudi Aramco). Revenue from this contract is recognized under the percent complete method based on costs incurred to date compared with total expected costs to be incurred. The Company estimates that between 60-70% of the total sales backlog as of 30 September 2016 will be recognized as revenue during fiscal year 2017, dependent on execution schedules of the relevant projects.
Air Products to Highlight Industrial Gases for Improved Plant-Based Food Processing at Natural Products Expo West
Air Products (NYSE:APD) will be exhibiting at the Natural Products Expo West in Anaheim, California from March 9-11 where the company will highlight the productivity and quality benefits of using industrial gases in a variety of natural food products, including plant-based food processing applications.
Air Products Issues Inaugural Green Bonds Across $600 Million and €700 Million Debt Offerings
Air Products (NYSE:APD) has successfully issued its registered green bond offerings of $600 million aggregate principal amount of U.S. dollar-denominated fixed-rate notes and €700 million aggregate principal amount of euro-denominated fixed-rate notes. The green bond issuances consisted of the following tranches:
Air Products issues inaugural green bonds with $600M and ���700M debt offerings
Is There An Opportunity With Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.'s (NYSE:APD) 49% Undervaluation?
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Compounders And Dividends: February 2023 Portfolio Update
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Air Products and Chemicals (NYSE:APD) Has A Pretty Healthy Balance Sheet
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Important Design Session 2 11 December 2007
Vladimir Kagan
Vladimir Kagan was an illustrious American furniture designer whose historic career spanned nearly 65 years. Born in Germany in 1927, he immigrated with his family to the United States in 1938 fleeing from the rise of the Nazi regime. He studied architecture at Columbia and later apprenticed with his father, a master cabinetmaker, in his woodworking shop. In 1949, Kagan opened his own shop in New York, shortly thereafter releasing his first furniture collection, receiving the Museum of Modern Art, New York Good Design Award for his wrought-iron chair. His work is well-known for its avant-garde craftsmanship combined with comfort and functionality. The sensuous, organic forms take on human-like characteristics through exaggerated, curved lines. Kagan’s designs are produced with varying materials including brass, acrylic, aluminum and, most notably, wood.
Over the course of his career, his work was highly sought after by celebrity clientele from Marilyn Monroe to Tom Ford, and he lent his design to projects such as Disneyland’s Monsanto House of the Future in 1964 and the Downtown Los Angeles Standard Hotel lobby redesign in 2002. Kagan lectured extensively on the history of modern furniture design at institutions including Parsons School of Design, Yale and Philadelphia University. A highly honored designer, he was elected president of the American Society of Interior Designers New York Chapter in 1990, and received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum, and the American Society of Furniture Designers. In 2009, Kagan was inducted into the Interior Designer Hall of Fame.
Vladimir Kagan died in 2016, leaving behind an artistic legacy and lifetime of creative achievement.
Upcoming Lots Vladimir Kagan
383 Vladimir Kagan
Wide Angle sofa, model W 506
Cabinet, model 3501
Mosaic coffee table, model 428
Bar stools model 177H, set of three
Nightstands, pair
Auction Results Vladimir Kagan
Unicorn sofa, model U 522
Unicorn sofa, model U522
Contour chairs, pair
Serpentine sofa
Floating Seat and Back sofa
Contour lounge chairs, pair
dining chairs model 175A, set of ten
high back lounge chair
Rare and Early sofa
set of six Sling dining chairs, models VK101 and VK102
custom library cabinet
Floating Curve sofa
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/8417
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National Grid Applauds EPA's Clean Power Plan National Grid Applauds EPA'S Clean Power Plan
Comprehensive regulation will enable meaningful greenhouse gas emissions reductions with flexible options for states
August 3, 2015, WALTHAM, Mass. – National Grid US supports the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Clean Power Plan aimed at meaningfully reducing greenhouse gas emissions from existing power plants.
“This landmark, comprehensive regulation will enable real progress in significantly reducing greenhouse gases,” said National Grid US president Dean Seavers. “The Obama Administration and EPA, under the leadership of Gina McCarthy, have worked tirelessly to craft a regulation that promotes the protection of human health and the environment through a host of clean energy options. This new rule supports market-based solutions while giving the states options to flex them to address their specific characteristics.”
Seavers went on to say that National Grid has long advocated for federal legislation as a comprehensive means to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. “However, we support EPA’s Clean Power Plan in the absence of federal legislation.”
“National Grid will be actively collaborating with the states and other stakeholders as they develop their implementation plans to ensure the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from the energy sector and advance America’s efficient and clean energy future.”
National Grid has a history of supporting efforts to reduced greenhouse gas emissions by helping customers save money and use energy more efficiently to reducing its own emissions. We established reduction goals of 45% by 2020 and 80% by 2050, from year 1990 baseline levels. Due in large part to investments in its electricity generation operations, natural gas and electricity distribution networks, National Grid’s total emissions in the US have decreased by 65% from 1990 to 2013.
About National Grid
National Grid (LSE: NG; NYSE: NGG) is an electricity and natural gas delivery company that connects nearly 7 million customers to vital energy sources through its networks in New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. It is the largest distributor of natural gas in the Northeast. National Grid also operates the systems that deliver gas and electricity across Great Britain.
Through its U.S. Connect21 strategy, National Grid is transforming its electricity and natural gas networks to support the 21st century digital economy with smarter, cleaner, and more resilient energy solutions. Connect21 is vital to our communities' long-term economic and environmental health and aligns with regulatory initiatives in New York (REV: Reforming the Energy Vision) and Massachusetts (Grid Modernization).
For more information please visit our website, or our Connecting website, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, friend us on Facebook, find our photos on Instagram
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/8442
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Marc DeCourcey
USCCF
Welcome and Opening Remarks
Strengthening Economic Mobility
Citizens Awards Celebration | Brought To You By: UPS
Citizens Awards Presentation: Best Corporate Steward Large Business
Citizens Awards Presentation: Best Corporate Steward Small and Middle Market Business
Hidden in Plain Sight: Managing Invisible Disabilities
Field Trip: Innovative Collaborations to Drive Better Health Outcomes for All
Marc DeCourcey is senior vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation and leads its Corporate Citizenship Center (CCC), which serves as a leading resource for businesses dedicated to making a difference. The Center works with businesses to tackle the toughest issues affecting society in the areas of community improvement, disaster resilience, economic empowerment, education, environment, and health.
DeCourcey has 30 years of experience in public policy leadership, spanning the executive and congressional branches of the U.S. government as well as the nonprofit sector. Previously, DeCourcey held several senior positions at the American Red Cross (ARC)—including chief of staff in the president and CEO’s office. There he implemented strategic initiatives, directed day-to-day operations, and represented the organization to major stakeholders across government, corporate, and nonprofit sectors.
He also served as vice president for strategic partnerships and was ARC’s senior director of federal government relations and partnerships, serving as the liaison to the White House, Cabinet departments, and other federal agencies. Earlier, DeCourcey was chief of staff in the Office of Legislation and Congressional Affairs at the U.S. Department of Education.
A native of Massachusetts, DeCourcey ran for state representative immediately after graduating from Providence College. After narrowly losing the race, he was hired to work in Gov. Bill Weld’s (R-MA) administration. He then managed successful congressional campaigns and worked on Capitol Hill for former Reps. Peter Blute (R-MA) and John Kasich (R-OH). In addition, he served as executive director of the Massachusetts Republican Party.
DeCourcey has a long history of community service and has been active on numerous civic and philanthropic boards. He was appointed to be a U.S. National Commissioner for UNESCO and named to the U.S. Department of State’s Advisory Committee on the Strategic Dialogue with Civil Society. He serves as a guest lecturer at the Institute for Corporate Social Responsibility at Johns Hopkins University. He’s also been named No. 50 in Ethisphere’s 100 Most Ethical People in Business. He and his wife have three children.
@marcdecourcey
https://www.linkedin.com/in/marc-decourcey/
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Materion Partners With Rubin Observatory To Give Astronomers A Deeper and Wider View Of The Universe
MAYFIELD HEIGHTS, Ohio--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Materion Corporation (NYSE:MTRN) continues to build on its 50-year legacy of supporting space exploration and observation by partnering with The Vera C. Rubin Observatory on a first-of-its-kind custom optical filter set to be used on the Legacy Survey of Space and Time Telescope (LSST) currently under construction in Chile.
The LSST Camera’s six curved filters, which range from Ultraviolet to near-Infrared in the electromagnetic spectrum, are the largest precision optical filters of their kind in the world, measuring about 30 inches (76 cm) and weighing approximately 90 pounds (41kg). Achieving leading edge optical performance with the correct materials and in the necessary form factor is considered key enabling technology for the broadband spectral mapping planned by the Rubin Observatory team.
Materion’s deep advanced materials knowledge and powerful technical insights enabled the design and fabrication of custom hardware and software infrastructure to support optical metrology, data capture and analysis, and the vacuum coating technology.
“We are excited and very proud to support the Rubin Observatory project, which is unique from other ground-based telescopes in that it provides an exceptionally wide field of view and has the ability to survey the entire visible sky in just 72 hours,” said Dr. Ian Tribick, President of Materion Precision Optics. “Our large area optic solutions can be found on many ground-based astronomical instruments, including The Gemini Observatory, The Southern African Large Telescope (SALT), Keck Observatory, The National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, and The University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy’s Pan-Starrs telescope.”
Materion has supported U.S. and international space observation, exploration and aerospace missions since the early 1960s. The Company’s recent acquisition of Optics Balzers compliments and further extends that proud history through the LSST project as well as NASA’s recent Perseverance mission to Mars, and provides the combined organizations with even more future mission support opportunities.
About Materion
Materion Corporation is headquartered in Mayfield Heights, Ohio. The Company, through its wholly owned subsidiaries, supplies highly engineered advanced enabling materials to global markets. Our unique product portfolio includes high performance alloys, beryllium products, clad metal strip, composite metals, ceramics, inorganic chemicals, microelectronics packaging materials, precision optics, thin film coatings, and thin film deposition materials.
Learn more at (http://materion.com/About).
Or connect with us via:
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/MaterionCorp/
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/materion-corporation
Twitter - https://twitter.com/MaterionCorp
YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/MaterionVideos
John McCloskey
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AlumniEconomicsStatisticsEpidemiology
Pope III, Clive Arden
by Christopher Cumo
(September 30, 1955 - )
Pope III is an economist and epidemiologist.
Clive A. Pope III was born in Logan, Utah, a college town in Cache County roughly 85 miles north of Salt Lake City. The son of Lewiston, Utah native Clive Arden Pope, Jr. and Pikeville, North Carolina born Vivian Evelyn Pope, C. Arden Pope III spent his youth on a ranch in Wyoming and a farm in Idaho, absorbing the rural values that have shaped his subsequent development. This upbringing instilled in him an appreciation of the outdoors. He enjoyed sports and outdoor activities more than school and did not study intensively. An interest in farming led Pope to considering agriculture-related majors at Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, Utah. Pope took an introductory course in agricultural economics, becoming fascinated with the discipline because of its relevance and empiricism. An econometrics course followed, so enthralling Pope that he decided to major in agricultural economics, earning a BS in 1978. His interest in economics and growing passion for academics led him to graduate school at Iowa State University (ISU). The curriculum challenged Pope, who found himself studying diligently for the first time in his schooling. He fondly recalls these years, which prepared him to be an economist, scholar, and scientist.
A research associate and staff economist at ISU’s Center for Agriculture and Rural Development between 1980 and 1982, Pope earned an MS in economics and a PhD in economics and statistics, ISU conferring both degrees in 1981. The next year he became assistant professor in the agricultural economics department at Texas A & M University in College Station, where his research increasingly focused on natural resource and environmental economics. In 1984 Pope returned to BYU as assistant professor in the department of agricultural economics, in 1986 becoming associate professor. Two years later, with a merger of departments, he joined BYU’s economics department.
Between April 1985 and March 1989, Pope took advantage of a unique natural experiment related to Geneva Steel, a large integrated steel mill that was the largest single source of air pollution in Utah Valley. A dispute between labor and management closed it for thirteen months in the late 1980s. Anecdotes from mothers whose children were ill while the factory operated and well when it was idle prompted Pope to examine retrospectively pediatric hospital admission data. He observed that during the mill’s closure, local hospitals admitted fewer respiratory patients, but when production resumed, hospital admissions rose. Pope linked these hospitalizations to airborne pollutants discharged by Geneva Steel, a finding that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) hailed as “seminal.” As visiting scientist and interdisciplinary program in health fellow at Harvard University’s School of Public Health in 1992 and 1993, Pope and his colleagues enlarged this finding by documenting air pollution’s adverse contributions to cardiovascular and lung disease and mortality.
Pope admits that his work generated controversy. Opposition came from politicians who favor energy producers and factories, though subsequent studies have confirmed his findings. Geneva Steel executives rejected Pope’s work, hiring a Georgetown University epidemiologist to discredit it. Yet Pope neither internalized this negativity nor engaged in acrimony even when critics sought to offend him. Instead he continued to publish, letting his research answer them. Lauded for his openness to criticism, Pope uses objections to define topics for further research.
Publishing in economics, environmental science, and medical journals, Pope became a world expert on air pollution. Before his work, attention had focused on harm from gases like ozone, but Pope’s research shifted the focus to the tiny particles in air pollution that lodge in the lungs, inflaming them. Pope and other scientists have documented that such inflammation injures the body in many ways, causing cancers, heart disease, and premature deaths. Harvard University environmental epidemiologist Douglas Dockery praised the simple elegance of Pope’s research, citing it as an example of “genius.” In 1997, the findings of Pope and other scientists led the EPA to toughen air quality standards. Corporations sued the EPA, but the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the new regulations in 2001.
The merits of his science earned Pope promotion to full professor in BYU’s economics department in 1994 and to Mary Lou Fulton Professor of Economics, an endowed chair, in 2005. Between 2009 and 2012, he was associate dean of BYU’s College of Family, Home, and Social Science. Pope received various awards and honors between 1986 and 2017, including BYU’s Karl G. Maeser Excellence in Research and Creative Arts Award in 1995, the Utah Governor’s Medal for Science and Technology in 2004, BYU’s Karl G. Maeser Distinguished Faculty Lecturer award in 2006, the Best Environmental Epidemiology Paper Award in 2010, the Gardner Prize from the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters in 2014, and BYU’s Martin B. Hickman Outstanding Scholar award in 2017.
Despite his attainments, Pope is modest, admitting that most people are uninterested in the intricacies of research. As busy as he is, Pope puts his family first, taking back packing trips with his wife and sons, whose sports teams he coached. Three sons have also earned PhDs in economics.
C. Arden Pope: Professor, Mary Lou Fulton Professor of Economics. Brigham Young University Department of Economics. http://economics.byu.edu/pages/faculty%20pages/c.-arden-pope-iii.aspx
Curriculum Vitae, 2018. https://economics.byu.edu/https:/brightspotcdn.byu.edu/49/35/5222065345788d953fbbc903e2fd/pope-a.docx
Smart, Michael D. “Clearing the Air.” BYU Magazine, Spring 2007. http://magazine.byu.edu/article/clearing-the-air.
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"Meet Kevin Johnson" is the eighth episode of the fourth season of Lost and first aired March 20, 2008, on ABC in the United States. It was written by Elizabeth Sarnoff and Brian K. Vaughan, and directed by Stephen Williams. Most of the narrative is a flashback centering on Michael Dawson, played by Harold Perrineau (pictured), in the month preceding the show's present day. The writers completed the episode on the first day of the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike. ABC pledged to air the episode regardless of the strike's resolution even though the writers felt that its cliffhanger was unsuitable as a potential season finale. Thirteen million Americans watched the episode. Its climax was criticized for its placement in the story and its focus on secondary characters. Critics responded well to Michael's emotional journey but complained that his physical journey conflicted with Lost's timeline. The episode was given the fourth season's only Primetime Emmy Award for its sound mixing. (Full article...)
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The International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Russian president Vladimir Putin (pictured) and Russian official Maria Lvova-Belova for the abduction of children from Ukraine.
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The earliest recordings of Little Walter, an American blues artist, were as a sideman, when he contributed harmonica to songs by Chicago blues musicians such as Jimmy Rogers and Muddy Waters. As the featured artist, Little Walter recorded the instrumental "Juke" in 1952. The single reached number one on Billboard's Rhythm and Blues chart and launched his career as a solo artist. A string of popular singles followed, including "Mean Old World", "Blues with a Feeling", and "Key to the Highway". His "My Babe" was one of the biggest R&B sellers of 1955. In addition to his solo career, Little Walter continued to record harmonica for songs by other artists. He recorded at a time when blues musicians were primarily singles artists. His records were released on Checker Records, run by the Chess brothers, Leonard and Phil. The one album released during his lifetime is a compilation issued by Chess Records, titled The Best of Little Walter (1958). Rolling Stone ranked it at number 198 in its list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". (Full list...)
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The blue-throated macaw (Ara glaucogularis) is a species of macaw that is endemic to a small area of north-central Bolivia, known as the Llanos de Moxos. Recent population and range estimates suggest that about 350 to 400 individuals remain in the wild. Its demise was brought on by nesting competition, avian predation, and a small native range, exacerbated by indigenous hunting and capture for the pet trade. Although plentiful in captivity, it is critically endangered in the wild and protected by trading prohibitions. In 2014, the species was designated a natural patrimony of Bolivia. This blue-throated macaw in flight was photographed at Loro Parque, on the Spanish island of Tenerife in the Canary Islands.
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Holidays Calendar for May 18, 2016
Public Holidays → Turkmenistan
Constitution and Flag Day in Turkmenistan
Constitution and Flag Day is a public holiday in Turkmenistan celebrated on May 18. It was officially established in 2017 by the Assembly (Mejilis) of Turkmenistan.
Public Holidays → Uruguay
Battle of Las Piedras Day in Uruguay
May 18 is Battle of Las Piedras Day in Uruguay. This is an official working holiday, that is mostly observed by schools and public officers.
Public Holidays → Haiti
Flag and Universities Day in Haiti
Flag and Universities Day is observed in Haiti on May 18 every year. This holiday celebrates educational system as well as the creation of the flag of Haiti in 1803.
International Museum Day
International Museum Day is annually celebrated on May 18 or around it. This is a great event with a specific theme, that involves thousands of museums around the world.
World AIDS Vaccine Day
World AIDS Vaccine Day is observed annually on May 18. This observance is also known as HIV Vaccine Awareness Day.
Professional Days → Russia
Baltic Fleet Day in Russia
The Baltic Fleet is the oldest Russian Navy formation. It was established by Peter the Great on May 18, 1703. This day became the date of Baltic Fleet Day.
Professional Days → Ukraine
Reservist Day in Ukraine
Reservist Day is an official holiday in the Ukrainian military. Celebrated on May 18, it was established in April 2019 by President Petro Poroshenko. The observance was created to honor the country’s military reserve force.
Professional Days → USA
National Speech Pathologist Day in the United States
May 18 is National Speech Pathologist Day. This professional holiday was created to recognize healthcare professionals who specialize in the treatment of communication, cognitive-communication, voice, and swallowing disorders.
Anniversaries and Memorial Days → Somalia
Somaliland Independence Day
The Republic of Somaliland is a self-declared state internationally recognized as an autonomous region of Somalia. Despite its lack of international recognition, Somaliland is a de facto state that celebrates its Independence Day on May 18.
Anniversaries and Memorial Days → Sri Lanka
Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day in Sri Lanka
On May 18 every year, Sri Lankan Tamils observe Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day, also known as simply Mullivaikkal Day. It honors the memory of those who died during the final months of the Sri Lankan Civil War that was fought from 1983 to 2009.
Anniversaries and Memorial Days → Ukraine
Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Deportation of the Peoples of Crimea
The Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Deportation of the Peoples of Crimea is observed in Ukraine on May 18 to honor the Russian Germans, Crimean Italians, Crimean Tatars, Armenians, Crimean Bulgarians and Soviet Greeks who were deported from Crimea in 1941–1944. This remembrance day was established by the Supreme Council of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea in 1994.
Unofficial Holidays → USA
National Cheese Soufflé Day
May 18 is National Cheese Soufflé Day. Although savory soufflé may seem too light to be a main course, you can serve it with a side of steamed asparagus, bitter greens, or roasted cauliflower
Unofficial Holidays → Australia
National Marshmallow Day in Australia
National Marshmallow Day is unofficially observed in Australia (mainly in Melbourne) on May 18. To celebrate the occasion, treat yourself to roasted marshmallows, s’mores, a fluffernutter, or some hot cocoa with marshmallows – even if you don’t live in Australia!
Festivals on May 18, 2016
Jewish Motifs International Film Festival in Warsaw, Poland
Orlando Fringe in Orlando, USA
Southside Fringe Festival in Glasgow, United Kingdom
Canadian Tulip Festival in Ottawa, Canada
Norfolk & Norwich Festival in Norwich, United Kingdom
EUROPAfest in Bucharest, Romania
Bergkirchweih in Erlangen, Germany
Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France
Brighton Festival in Brighton, United Kingdom
Prague Spring International Music Festival in Prague, Czech Republic
Brighton Fringe in Brighton, United Kingdom
Utah Renaissance Festival and Fantasy Faire in Marriott-Slaterville, USA
Festival Accès Asie in Montreal, Canada
Palo de Mayo in Bluefields, Nicaragua
Oklahoma Renaissance Festival in Muskogee, USA
← More Festivals
2011 Sol Líneas Aéreas Flight 5428 crashed in Prahuaniyeu, Argentina, killing all 22 people on board. The crash was caused by severe icing of the airframe.
1995 Died: Alexander Godunov, Russian-American dancer and actor whose defection caused a diplomatic incident between the US and the USSR.
1991 Northern Somalia proclaimed independence as the Republic of Somaliland. The independence of Somaliland is not recognized by the international community.
1990 In France, a SNCF TGV Atlantique train achieved a new rail world speed record of 320.2 mph (515.3 km/h). The record was broken in 2007 by another TGV train.
1987 Born: Luisana Lopilato, Argentine actress, model, and singer best known for her role as Mía Colucci on the television series Rebelde Way.
1980 Mount St. Helens erupts in Washington, United States, killing 57 people. The eruption ash in 11 US states and 5 Canadian provinces.
1980 Died: Ian Curtis, English singer-songwriter and musician who is best known as the lead singer of the rock band Joy Division. Curtis committed suicide.
1975 Died: Leroy Anderson, American composer who is considered to be one of the greatest American masters of light orchestral music.
1974 India successfully carried out its first nuclear weapon explosion under project Smiling Buddha, becoming the sixth nation to perform a nuclear test.
1970 Born: Tina Fey, American actress, comedian, producer, and writer. She is best known for her work on the NBC sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live.
1965 Died: Eli Cohen, Israeli spy who is best known for his espionage work in Syria, where he even became the Chief Adviser to the Minister of Defense.
1920 Born: Pope John Paul II (born Karol Józef Wojtyła), pope of the Catholic Church from 1978 until his death in 2005. He was the first non-Italian pope since 1523.
1912 The first Indian film, Shree Pundalik was released in Mumbai. It was produced and directed by Dadasaheb Torne, who is considered the "Father of Indian cinema".
1912 Born: Richard Brooks, American director, screenwriter, novelist, and producer. Among his best-known works are Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Elmer Gantry.
1911 Died: Gustav Mahler, Austrian composer and conductor of Jewish decent. He is considered to be one of the leading conductors of his generation.
1911 Born: Big Joe Turner (born Joseph Vernon Turner Jr.), American blues shouter who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.
1910 Died: Pauline Viardot, French mezzo-soprano, composer and pedagogue. She created her compositions mainly as private pieces for her students.
1909 Died: George Meredith, English novelist, essayist, and poet of the Victorian era. One of his best known works is the 1879 novel The Egoist.
1901 Born: Vincent du Vigneaud, American biochemist who was awarded the 1955 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the first synthesis of oxytocin.
1891 Born: Rudolf Carnap, German and American philosopher who was an advocate of logical positivism and a major member of the Vienna Circle.
1872 Born: Bertrand Russell, British philosopher, logician, historian mathematician, writer, political activist and social critic. He was awarded the 1950 Nobel Prize in Literature.
1868 Born: Nicholas II of Russia, the last Emperor of Russia. He was abdicated at the end of the 1917 February Revolution and executed in 1918.
1843 In Edinburgh, the Free Church of Scotland separated from the established Church of Scotland. This schism is known as the Disruption of 1843.
1804 The French Senate proclaimed Napoleon Bonaparte Emperor of the French. His coronation took place on December 2 at Notre Dame de Paris.
1800 Died: Alexander Suvorov, Russian general and national hero of Russia. He is one of the few generals in world history who never lost a battle.
1799 Died: Pierre Beaumarchais, French playwright, publisher, diplomat, and revolutionary. He is primarily remembered for his Figaro plays.
1781 Died: Túpac Amaru II (born José Gabriel Túpac Amaru), Peruvian-Indian leader of the 1780 indigenous uprising against the Spanish rule.
1652 The Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations became the first colony in English-speaking North America to abolish slavery.
1565 The Great Siege of Malta began, in which the Ottoman Empire invaded the island of Malta but failed to conquer it. It lasted until September 11, 1565.
1048 Born: Omar Khayyám, Persian poet, philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician. He is primarily remembered for his short poems called rubāʿī.
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/10362
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Aerospace Coating Market Size & Share, Industry Report, 2018-2025
Aerospace Coating Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis Report By Resin (Epoxy, PU), By Product, By Application (Exterior, Interior), By End User, By Industry Category, And Segment Forecasts, 2018 - 2025
Industry: Bulk Chemicals
The global aerospace coating market size was estimated at USD 1.56 billion in 2017. Growing investments in the aviation sector, coupled with an increasing number of aircraft fleets in the Asia Pacific, are anticipated to drive the market during the forecast period. They are applied on both the exterior and interior surfaces of an aircraft.
These coatings are further employed by various end-users including commercial, military, and general aviation fleet manufacturers. Major players in the market are investing in R&D activities to widen application scope and market reach of the product and, in turn, sustain their competitive positions.
Increasing the spending power of people in countries such as the U.S. and Europe is stirring up the demand for air travel considerably. This, in turn, is resulting in an increased demand for the product, majorly driven by commercial fleet manufacturers. The use of solvent-based coatings is limited in regions such as Europe and North America due to stringent regulations on harmful emission-causing chemicals, which include volatile organic components. Water-based counterparts are projected to witness a healthy rise in demand over the coming years.
The regulatory framework for the market is governed by various regulatory bodies including the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the National Toxicology Program (NTP). The framework specifies the chemical dangers of raw materials used in the manufacturing process. The coating, curing, and general safety of coatings and its raw materials such as epoxy resins, aluminum, and chromium, which are used in the production of the product, are permitted when safety regulations are stringently followed.
The Asia Pacific is poised to emerge as the most promising regional market during the forecast period. An increasing number of air passengers and growing investments in the defense sector are some of the key factors contributing to the growth of the region. There is a strong demand for the product from the maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) industry in the region owing to the presence of long haul routes.
Resin Insights
Polyurethane resins are the most widely used resins in the market and are available both in single and two-component systems. The resin segment accounted for approximately 60.0% of the market volume in 2017. These coatings are critically used in exteriors of aircraft owing to high erosion resistance and elastomeric properties that ease their application. Several stringent regulations pertaining to VOC and chromate coatings in regions such as North America and Europe are fueling the demand for polyurethane coatings.
Coatings based on polyurethane resin offer external protection to structural parts. The market is likely to witness significant growth during the forecast period on account of increasing application in commercial aviation. Spiraling demand for glossy finishes is expected to augment the market during the forecast period.
Liquid coatings include solvent-based and water-based coatings, wherein solvent-based coatings edged over the other in terms of demand and are the leading revenue contributor to the liquid coatings segment. Solvent-based type, being less vulnerable towards harsh climates, is used predominantly in the aerospace industry. Several limits and standards on VOC emissions by governments of various countries are estimated to inhibit the growth of this product sub-segment over the forecast period.
Constraints on solvent-based aerospace coatings coupled with new technology developments in coating formulations are anticipated to trigger the growth of the water-based sub-segment during the forecast period. Powder coatings have been gaining rapid demand in recent years due to ease of application and their environment-friendly characteristics. The segment is projected to register the highest CAGR of 6.4% in terms of revenue from 2018 to 2025.
End-User Insights
The commercial end-user segment commanded about half of the overall revenue of the aerospace coating market in 2017. Rising demand for passenger air travel owing to increasing tourism and decreasing travel costs is leading to an upswing in the number of commercial aircraft across the world. Growing trade volumes by countries such as China and India are stimulating the demand for air cargo.
The military end-user segment is poised to experience noteworthy growth during the forecast period owing to surging demand for high-quality coatings with enhanced durability. Military aircraft, which are typically built with aluminum alloys require coatings with increased corrosion resistance.
Industry Category Insights
The market, on the basis of industry category, has been bifurcated into OEM and MRO. There is a high demand for these coatings among aerospace OEM manufacturers. In terms of revenue, the OEM segment is likely to expand at a CAGR of 6.0% over the forecast period. Various countries in Europe are aiming to strengthen their manufacturing base for commercial aircraft to reduce their import dependency on the U.S. This, in turn, is expected to boost the demand for aerospace coatings from OEMs in Europe.
External coatings are generally lightweight as a reduction in weight leads to improved energy and fuel efficiency. Polyurethane resin coatings are predominantly used in exteriors as they impart UV resistance. Exterior coatings held the leading share of over 70.0% in 2017. Interior coatings are applied in various interior aircraft surfaces including cabins, walls, ceiling, and panels.
Emerging economies such as India, Brazil, and ASEAN countries are estimated to foster the demand for aerospace coatings for exterior applications owing to a substantial rise in air travel. An increase in per capita income of the middle-class population has led to a sharp rise in the number of air travelers in these countries over the past few years.
North America accounted for 36.1% of the overall market revenue in 2017. The region is anticipated to dominate the market through 2025, thanks to the booming aerospace industry in the U.S. along with the emergence of major aerospace companies in Mexico. Products with lower VOC and hydroxyapatite (HAp) such as polyurethane aerospace coatings are primarily used in this region due to stringent regulations by government bodies.
Post-BREXIT, airline companies in the U.K. have been expanding the capacity and frequency of air travel across the country in order to meet rapidly growing demand. This, in turn, is projected to propel the market in the country during the forecast period. Furthermore, the presence of various long haul airline routes in the Asia Pacific is promoting MRO activities, which is translating into greater demand for aerospace coatings in the region.
Aerospace Coating Market Share Insights
The market is characterized by the presence of various major players including AkzoNobel N.V; PPG Industries, Inc.; Sherwin-Williams; Hentzen Coatings, Inc.; and Mankiewicz Gebr. & Co includes Axalta Coating Systems Ltd; Saint-Gobain S.A; Henkel Corporation; IHI Ionbond AG; Zircotec Ltd; LORD Corporation; AHC Oberflächentechnik; BryCoat Inc.; and NV Specialty Coatings.
Companies majorly compete based on product varieties offered, since players have similar product portfolios. Low product differentiation has led to intense competition among players. Companies aim to offer products at a competitive price in order to strengthen their market position.
Actual estimates/Historical data
Market representation
Volume in Tons, Revenue in USD Million & CAGR from 2018 to 2025
North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Central & South America, Middle East & Africa
Revenue forecast, company share, competitive landscape, growth factors and trends
U.S., Germany, U.K., France, Italy, China, Japan, Brazil.
15% free customization scope (equivalent to 5 analyst working days)
If you need specific information, which is not currently within the scope of the report, we will provide it to you as a part of customization
This report forecasts revenue growth at global, regional, and country levels and provides an analysis of the industry trends in each of the sub-segments from 2014 to 2025. For the purpose of this study, Grand View Research has segmented the global aerospace coating market report based on resin, product, end-user, industry category, application, and region:
Resin Outlook (Volume, Tons; Revenue, USD Million, 2014 - 2025)
Product Outlook (Volume, Tons; Revenue, USD Million, 2014 - 2025)
Solvent-based
End-User Outlook (Volume, Tons; Revenue, USD Million, 2014 - 2025)
Industry Category Outlook (Volume, Tons; Revenue, USD Million, 2014 - 2025)
Application Outlook (Volume, Tons; Revenue, USD Million, 2014 - 2025)
Regional Outlook (Volume, Tons; Revenue, USD Million, 2014 - 2025)
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/11423
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Cambrian College
Location Sudbury
Famous For Largest College in Northern Ontario
Cambrian College is an art and applied technology college based in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1967 and is one of the largest colleges in Northern Ontario, Canada.
Programs at Cambrian College for international students include health science and nursing, engineering, business, law and justice community service, graduate certificates, creative arts and design and more.
Cambrian houses more than 4,100 full-time students, and over 1,600 international students from over 160 countries worldwide. It also has a network of over 60,000 graduates working around the world. At Cambrian College, students will:
Study in modern learning spaces, labs, and workshops
Benefit from small class sizes and learn from an expert, friendly faculty
Be mentored by practicing professionals with extensive industry experience
Participate in hands-on learning opportunities such as co-ops, placements, and community projects
At Cambrian College, international students are given arrival services, support through the career centre, campus security, employment opportunities and participation in social activities.
Details on orientation events are available on the Cambrian International website. Students can access their virtual orientation program and a lot of other information through their myCambrian account.
Under the arrival services, international students can expect to receive pre-arrivals services, settlement assistance, immigration advice and more.
Cambrian College is ranked 18th overall in Canada, the highest rank to date. It also made it to the list of top 50 Research Colleges of Canada conducted by Research Infosource for the 10th consecutive year. As per Webometrics, Cambrian College ranks 8644 in the world and 2034 in the continental rankings.
Cambrian College offers on-campus and off-campus residences for international students. Their on-campus residences are known as Townhouses (available for virtual tours) and first-semester pricing starts from $450/month. Co-ed rooms are also available for couples. For off-campus residences, students can easily find the necessary resources and the College can assist with any concerns or questions.
Ample areas of interest like restaurants, retail shops, groceries, entertainment, and health and wellness sports are within walking distance surround the Barrydowne campus in Sudbury of Cambrian College. To spend weekends, students can visit Adanac Ski Hill, Bell Park, Dynamic Earth, Silver Hills Shopping Centre, SilverCity Sudbury Complex and more.
The Cambrian Sudbury campus is a four-hour drive and a one-hour flight from Toronto. For commuting around the college campus, students can take the help of city buses, taxis, rental cars, bikes, Charter buses, or walk on foot.
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/11708
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Interlinkages between the chemicals and waste multilateral environmental agreements and biodiversity: key Insights
The Secretariats of the Basel, Rotterdam, and Stockholm (BRS) Conventions and the Minamata Convention on Mercury published a study inspired by the ongoing discussions on a post-2020 global biodiversity
Secretariats of the Basel
Undernutrition combined with dietary mineral oil hastens depuration of stored dioxin and polychlorinated biphenyls in ewes. 2. Tissue distribution, mass balance and body burdenm low- and middle-income countries
<p>Food safety crises involving persistent organic pollutants (POPs) lead to systematic slaughter of livestock to prevent contaminants from entering the food chain. Therefore, there is a need to develop
Bioaccumulation and biomagnification of short and medium chain polychlorinated paraffins in different species of fish from Liaodong Bay, North China
<p>Chlorinated paraffins (CPs) are highly complex technical mixtures, and the short chain chlorinated paraffins (SCCPs) are classed as persistent and have been included in the Stockholm Convention. However,
Marine Fisheries
Regulation of Persistent Organic Pollutants Rules, 2017
The Central Government proposes to make the draft rules under clause (d) of sub-section (2) of section 6 read with sub- section (I) of section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 (29 of 1986).
Bioaccumulation of persistent organic pollutants in the deepest ocean fauna
<p>The legacy and reach of anthropogenic influence is most clearly evidenced by its impact on the most remote and inaccessible habitats on Earth. Here we identify extraordinary levels of persistent organic
Nature Ecology & Evolution
North Pacific Ocean
South Pacific Ocean
Diabetes prevalence in relation to serum concentrations of Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB) Congener Groups and three chlorinated pesticides in a Native American population
<p>Exposure to persistent organic pollutants (POPs) is known to increase risk of diabetes. The objective of the study was to determine which POPs are most associated with prevalence of diabetes in 601
Environmental Health Perspectives
Pesticide Use
Negligible impact of ingested microplastics on tissue concentrations of persistent organic pollutants in northern Fulmars off coastal Norway
<p>The northern fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis) is defined as an indicator species of plastic pollution by the Oslo-Paris Convention for the North-East Atlantic, but few data exist for fulmars from Norway.
Environmental Science and Technology
Persistent organic pollutants and early menopause in U.S. women
Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) adversely affect human health. The objective of the study was to determine the association of EDC exposure with earlier age of menopause.
Island innovations: leveraging the environment for the sustainable development of Small Island Developing States
The ‘Island Innovations’ publication is an effort carried out jointly by the UNDP and the GEF during the International Year for Small Island Developing States (SIDS). It showcases some of the most successful
Preconception maternal and paternal exposure to persistent organic pollutants and birth size: The LIFE Study
Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are developmental toxicants but the impact of both maternal and paternal exposures on offspring birth size is largely unexplored. The objective of the study was to
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/11844
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Feature film HUDA’S SALON by Hany Abu-Assad screens on Sunday, October 9th at 7:00 PM (GMT-4), Canada time, as part of the 10th Calgary Arab Film Nights Festival, Canada (Oct. 7th-9th)
To book the tickets, head to the following link:
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/hudas-salon-calgary-arab-film-nights-2022-tickets-426018572017
HUDA’S SALON will open the Middle East Now Festival, in Florence, on Tuesday, Oct. 4, at 7:00PM. It received a Special Jury Prize at Tetouan Mediterranean Film Festival and Beirut International Women Film Festival. The film's leading actress, Maisa Abd Elhadi, won the Best Actress award at the Arab Cinema Center's Critics Awards for Arab Films.
HUDA’S SALON had several commercial international screenings in US cinemas and joined ANA Contemporary Arab Cinema Festival in the USA. It world premiered at Toronto International Film Festival and was screened at Nashville Film Festival in the USA and Valladolid International Film Festival in Spain. The film landed its Arab world premiere at the Red Sea International Film Festival in Saudi Arabia and opened the Reel Palestine Film Festival.
HUDA’S SALON garnered international critical acclaim from the world’s leading media.
“This is a return to form and to more familiar territory for Abu-Assad,” wrote Wendy Ide in Screendaily.
“HUDA’S SALON” doesn’t waste a second... zooming from easy chatter to absolutely horrifying drama,” noted Erbland in IndeWire.
“Nearly every scene takes the form of a single unbroken shot, a technique that sometimes pulls you in and sometimes merely calls attention to its own virtuosity,” explained The Los Angeles Times.
According to Variety, Manal Awad embodied Huda's escalating situation during the investigation scene with wisdom and calmness."
Based on real events, HUDA’S SALON is a heart-racing, entertaining feminist thriller, where two women fight for their freedom. Reem, a young mother married to a jealous man, goes to Huda’s salon in Bethlehem for a haircut and an attentive ear. However, this ordinary visit turns sour after Huda puts Reem in a shameful situation, blackmails her into working for the occupiers’ secret agency, and betraying her people.
Written and directed by Hany Abu-Assad, HUDA’S SALON stars Ali Suliman, Manal Awad, and Maisa Abd Elhadi. The film is produced by H&A Production (Hany Abu-Assad and Amira Diab), Film Clinic (Mohamed Hefzy), and co-produced by MAD Solutions (Maher Diab and Alaa Karkouti), and Lagoonie Film Production (Shahinaz El Akkad), with Daniel Ziskind of Film Clinic serving as co-producer. The film is also co-produced by Key Films, Cocoon, and Philistine Films. MEMENTO INTERNATIONAL manages worldwide distribution, while MAD Solutions and Lagoonie Film Production manage distribution in the Arab world.
Palestinian screenwriter and director Hany Abu-Assad is one of the most eminent Arab directors. His filmography includes several exceptional Arab films that received widespread international acclaim, including PARADISE NOW (2005), which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and won a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film, and OMAR (2013), which was also nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
In 2017, Abu-Assad directed his first Hollywood feature THE MOUNTAINS BETWEEN US, starring Kate Winslet and Idris Elba, which opened the 39th edition of the Cairo International Film Festival (CIFF). His most recent feature film is HUDA'S SALON.
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platner gold plated easy chair
by Warren Platner, from Knoll - sale
Design Warren Platner, 1962
Steel wire rod, 18k gold plated, upholstery
Made by Knoll
In the 1960's, Warren Platner transformed steel wire into a sculptural furniture collection, creating what is now considered a design icon of the modern era. The Platner collection's unique harmonious forms are produced by welding steel wire rods to circular frames, producing a moire effect and capturing the decorative, gentle, graceful quality that Platner sought to achieve. The hand crafted Easy Chair, a popular sculptural icon paring geometry and color, is the epitome of curvy comfort; it is available with or without the Ottoman, which can also be used independently.
Warren Platner's collection of seating and tables using nickel-plated bent wire as a structural and decorative element has captivated furniture enthusiasts worldwide. While many Platner Collection pieces have been in continuous production, the Easy Chair and Ottoman were only produced between 1966-1988 and now re-released for 2014. The Easy Chair offers a generous seat and a high back, enveloping the sitter in comfort. The Platner collection also includes a side chair, low stool plus dining, side and coffee tables.
The Platner seating collection features vertical steel wire rods welded to circular horizontal and edge-framing rods. The frame base has a clear plastic extrusion ring for a smooth bottom surface. The seat is a molded fiberglass shell with highly resiliant molded urethane foam cushions. Seat cushion utilizes the same highly resilient molded urethane foam cushion. This collection is offered in your choice of either bright nickel with clear lacquer frame, painted bronze metallic frame or 18K gold plated with clear lacquer frame. Please call the hive showroom with any questions: 1-866-663-4483.
easy chair: 39.9" w | 37" d | 38.75" h | seat: 18.75" h
$14,314.85 + free shipping
(please allow 10-14 weeks for this special product to be created and shipped to your location)
Warren Platner (1919 - 2006) of Baltimore produced a furniture collection that has proved to be a continuing icon of 1960s Modernism. He is also famed with designing several prominent interiors in New York City, including headquarter offices for the Ford Foundation building and the original Windows on the World restaurant, atop the World Trade Center. Platner graduated from Cornell University with a degree in architecture in 1941. His career began with work in some of the most prominent and remarkable architecture practices in the country. Between 1945 and 1950, he worked for Raymond Loewy and I.M. Pei. He received the Rome Prize in architecture in 1955. Platner was a part of Eero Saarinen’s office from 1960 to 1965, participating in the designs for the Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C., the Repertory Theatre at Lincoln Centre and several dormitories at Yale University. During this time, he also unveiled his seminal collection of chairs, ottomans and tables.
Hans Knoll founded the Knoll company in New York City in 1938 one year after immigrating from Germany. He hired Florence Schust who had worked for Gropius and Breuer and the two were married in 1946. Knoll would triumph thanks to impressive international contacts, gaining exclusive rights to the works of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe including the Barcelona Chair. Knoll commissioned Eero Saarinen to design the Tulip chair. Artists such as Harry Bertoia, Jens Risom, and Isamu Noguchi also collaborated with Knoll.
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TV Shows » American Idol »
American Idol: “Idol Gives Back” Returns on April 9
“Idol Gives Back,” the Emmy-Award winning charitable campaign that spanned two episodes of American Idol during its sixth season, is back for another fundraising concert in attempt to raise awareness and help charities worldwide. This year, the star-studded event is slated to commence on Wednesday, April 9 at 8pm ET/PT on FOX.
Fans can expect this year’s affair to include a huge pool of international talent, including Bono, Brad Pitt, Reese Witherspoon, Hannah Montana‘s Miley Cyrus, Mariah Carey, Eli Manning, Peyton Manning, Fergie, Annie Lennox, John Legend and Snoop Dogg, who currently stars on the reality series Snoop Dogg’s Father Hood.
And like last year’s event, former Idol participants are expected to grace this year’s fundraising affair. These include Chris Daughtry, 4th place finalist on American Idol‘s fifth season, fourth season champ Carrie Underwood and first season winner Kelly Clarkson. This special is hosted by American Idol host Ryan Seacrest and Ellen DeGeneres.
Aside from the music celebration, this year’s “Idol Gives Back” will also echo the success of last year’s initiative, which raised over $76 million for different U.S. charities that bring support to underprivileged children in some of the most deprived areas of the country, providing them with medical care, food and grocery products, health and literacy programs, just to name a few. Last year’s campaign was also dedicated to organizations that battles poverty in Africa through various health and education programs, including delivering medical supplies and providing clean water.
“Idol Gives Back” is the brainchild of American Idol creator Simon Fuller and British writer Richard Curtis. The campaign has earned praise from many of the world’s notable figures including President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, among others.
Stay tuned for more featured guests on “Idol Gives Back,” which will be announced by FOX in the coming weeks.
-Kris De Leon, BuddyTV Staff Columnist
Source: FOX
By Kris De Leon | Staff Writer, BuddyTV
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In the days before mechanisation, horses were an essential part of farming in Ireland. For example, in 1939, it was estimated that over 350,000 horses worked on Irish farms.
Today, horses are kept for breeding or for pleasure, or usually a combination of both. There are three main sectors to the horse industry on Ireland’s farms – racing, breeding and equestrian sports.
Despite its small size, Ireland holds a pre-eminent position in thoroughbred racing and breeding and in the equestrian world.
The Irish bloodstock breeding and racing industry is of major national importance in terms of employment (especially in rural areas) as well as in exports and tourism. The industry is worth hundreds of millions of euro of economic activity, sustaining jobs and a national network of racecourses, trainers, breeders and farms with an enviable skills base.
Irish horses are in demand worldwide, with exports to 40 countries. A long tradition of skilled horsemanship is a key reason, as is the fact that our limestone soils provide ideal grazing for healthy equine bone growth. Tax incentives for stallion farms introduced in 1969 helped encourage major investment in stud operations.
Some key attributes of the sector include:
Ireland recorded a population of 28,289 thoroughbreds in 2010.
Ireland is the third largest breeder of thoroughbreds in the world. In excess of 40% of the EU output of thoroughbreds and 11% of the total worldwide are produced in Ireland.
7,500 thoroughbred foals were registered in 2010.
Approximately 17,300 people are employed in the thoroughbred industry in Ireland.
The value of Irish thoroughbred exports was an estimated €149m in 2010.
Irish owned and headquarted Coolmore (www.coolmore.com) has stud operations in Fethard, Co Tipperary, Kentucky USA and Australia. Their racing operation, Ballydoyle, in the hands of Aidan O’ Brien, is also a global leader in flat racing. Irish trainers such as Dermot Weld, John Oxx and Dermot Weld have also trained horses in Ireland to win at the highest level overseas.
Irish National Stud
The State owned Irish National Stud (www.irishnationalstud.ie) based at Tully in Co Kildare is a major tourist attraction, with some of the most magnificent horses and sumptuous gardens to be found anywhere in the world. It is a working stud, with elite stallions available to breeders at commercial rates. The farm, purchased by Colonel William Hall Walker at the turn of the 20th century, helps Ireland retain its global leadership position in thoroughbred horse breeding. Each year, over 115,000 visit the farm and its exhibits. In May 2011, Queen Elizabeth II, a noted horse breeder, visited the farm during her historic State visit.
Copyright Irish Farmers Journal
Horse Racing Ireland
Horse Racing Ireland (www.goracing.ie) are responsible for the Thoroughbred sector. Their mission statement is “to develop and promote Ireland as a centre of excellence for horse racing and breeding”.
Breeding horses and ponies for a range of equestrian sports is also an important part of farming in Ireland. Horse Sport Ireland (HSI) (www.horsesportireland.ie) is the governing body for equestrian sports in Ireland.
HSI operates the Irish Horse Register, which encompasses the Irish Sport Horse Studbook and the Irish Draught Horse Studbook. There are also other studbooks operating in the non-thoroughbred sector, including the famous Connemara Pony Society (www.cpbs.ie/), the Kerry Bog Pony Co-op Society (www.kerrybogpony.ie), the Irish Cob Society (www.irishcobsociety.com), the Irish Piebald & Skewbald Association, Miniature Horse and Pony Society of Ireland and the Warmblood Studbook of Ireland.
The Dublin Horse Show (www.dublinhorseshow.com) is held in the Royal Dublin Society each August and provides a major shop window of the best of Ireland’s equestrian talent.
Previous - Horticulture
Next - Organic Farming
Land Use in Ireland
Beef Farming
Tillage Farming
Pig & Poultry Production
Artisan Food Production
Mechanisation and Technology
Sustainability, Climate Change and Eco-Friendly Farming
Farming in the Burren
Farming in Ireland – Conclusion
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Preserving bone integrity with the appropriate choice of hypoglycemic agents
Fragility fractures are increasingly recognized as a relevant complication of both type 1 and 2 diabetes mellitus (T1DM/T2DM).1 Compared to the general population, T1DM and T2DM patients have a significantly higher fracture risk in both males and females at all ages with the difference increasing further with age.1-3 However, while evidence from both preclinical studies and human clinical trials showed a strong correlation between glucose levels and bone metabolism, hypoglycemic agents could further disturb bone architecture and exaggerate fracture risk.1-7
Professor Paolo Pozzilli, Professor of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Campus Bio-Medico University of Rome, Italy, explained that chronic hyperglycemia can cause oxidative stress, inflammation, production of reactive oxygen species and advanced glycation end products (AGEs) that cause organ damage and reduce bone strength. In particular, the accumulation of AGEs in diabetic bone collagen can reduce bone material properties and increase the susceptibility to fracture.1 Also, both AGEs and hyperglycemia can directly inhibit bone formation via the suppression of osteoblast function.1
In practice, Prof. Pozzilli highlighted that “We have a number of [antidiabetic] drugs that are used which can indeed affect either bone formation or bone resorption.” In particular, the pathogenesis of diabetes can disrupt bone architecture and the choice of hypoglycemic agents is clinically important to avoid further disturbing bone homeostasis (Table 1). Among the many available options, metformin is the most common antidiabetic drug worldwide. Previously, cell culture of the murine pre-osteoblast cell line MC3T3E1 suggested that metformin could enhance osteoblast proliferation through the upregulation of adenosine 5-monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and Runt-related transcription factor 2, a regulator of osteoblastic bone formation. At the same time, metformin also reduced bone resorption by modulating the receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B (RANK)/receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B ligand (RANKL)/osteoprotegerin pathway in MC3T3E1 cells. Despite the wide adoption of metformin, Prof. Pozzilli commented that further clinical studies would be needed to determine the efficacy of metformin in preventing bone fractures among diabetic patients.
Other than metformin, antidiabetic agents include sulfonylureas, incretin agents and insulin are also available for treating diabetes. In an earlier study, glimepiride, a third-generation sulfonylurea, was shown to upregulate the phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K)/Atk pathway in rat osteoblasts which increased the proliferation and differentiation of blast cells. However, further data to support the effect of sulfonylureas on bone metabolism is limited and more studies would be required to confirm the underlying mechanism. On the other hand, incretin agents such as glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) analogue could increase bone formation and reduce bone resorption while dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4) inhibitors may affect the bone metabolism and impair the bone quality (i.e., trabecular architecture) as shown in DPP4-knockdown diabetic mice.8
While insulin has an anabolic effect on bone and may improve bone formation, both preclinical and clinical evidence suggested that the insulin sensitizer thiazolidinedione is associated with an increased risk of fracture. In fact, treatment of Wistar rats with the thiazolidinedione rosiglitazone revealed significant increase of fat marrow volume and extended bone erosion by week 12, attributed to the increased proliferation of osteoclasts leading to the active breakdown of osteocytes.8
Sodium glucose co-transporters 2 inhibitor (SGLT2i) is a new class of hypoglycemic drug with limited studies suggesting neutral or beneficial effect on bone architecture. In murine models, exposure to the SGLT2i dapagliflozin resulted in increased tissue mineralization and trabecular bone accretion without a reduction in bone mineral density.8 Notably, Prof. Pozzolli highlighted that the long-term use of dapagliflozin for two years in T2DM patients did not result in any significant change in bone turnover biomarkers.8 Similarly, bone resorption markers including parathyroid hormones remained unchanged following the treatment of animals using another SGLT2i canagliflozin.8 When considering antidiabetic treatment, Prof. Pozzilli concluded that hypoglycemic agent SGLT2i does not appear to affect the bone resorption or formation, supporting its benefit on bone architecture.
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Insightful experience: SGLT2i to treat heart failure with reduced ejection fraction
Heart failure (HF) is global pandemic affecting at least 26 million people worldwide in 2017 and has been increasing in prevalence.1 In 2020, HF plus other heart diseases caused an age-standardized death rate of 34.0 per 100,000 standard population in Hong Kong.2 Previously, patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) were treated with a foundational triple therapy including β-blockers, renin-angiotensin system inhibitors [including angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs)] or angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitors (ARNIs), as well as mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs).3 With reference to the recent data supporting the benefits of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) in patients with chronic HFrEF regardless of the diabetes status, it is noted that comprehensive diseasemodifying quadruple therapy has now become the new standard of care for HFrEF patients.4,5 In a recent interview with Omnihealth Practice, Professor Siu, Chung-Wah David shared his insights on the application of SGLT2i in HFrEF treatment.
CARDIOLOGY NEPHROLOGY
Semaglutide aids weight loss in adults with type 2 diabetes and reduces major adverse cardiovascular events
Weight control remains an indispensable component for the clinical management of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in preventing cardiometabolic morbidity.1-3 People with T2DM who received weekly subcutaneous injection of semaglutide 2.4mg achieved superior and clinically meaningful reduction of body
Young people with diabetes are at a higher risk of complications and death
The prevalence of diabetes has been rising both locally and globally, with 400 million people affected worldwide and over half being Asians.1 For type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), industrialization and urbanization are known to be the risk factors associated with obesity and overweight in all age gro
What not to ignore when diabetes interacts with acute and chronic kidney diseases: A local case sharing
While they may not necessarily have a causal relationship, both chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetes mellitus (DM) have become increasingly more prevalent worldwide.1 As these conditions could be risk factors for developing acute kidney injury (AKI),2 CKD and DM must be carefully managed to pre
DIABETES & ENDOCRINOLOGY NEPHROLOGY
1 out of 10 diabetic COVID-19 patients die within 7 days of hospitalization, 1 out of 5 intubated
Previous pandemics caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), H1N1 influenza, and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) are known to cause more severe symptoms in diabetic patients.1 Similarly, in the recent epidemiological studies, diabetes has been consistently
Combination antiplatelet and anticoagulation therapy to bring positive outcomes in diabetes and cardiovascular disease
More recently, a strategy of dual pathway antithrombotic therapy with antiplatelet and a reduced dose of anticoagulant has been tested and shown to be effective. The COMPASS trial demonstrated that aspirin plus rivaroxaban 2.5mg twice daily was superior to placebo for the reduction of ischemic event
DECLARE-TIMI 58: Cutting heart failure risk with dapagliflozin
Ever since the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued the mandate for conducting cardiovascular outcomes trials (CVOTs) with type 2 diabetes drugs, eight CVOTs have already been completed,
CARDIOLOGY DIABETES & ENDOCRINOLOGY
Combined effects of “twincretin” showed promising results in type 2 diabetes management
The idea of combining glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) receptor agonist for reducing glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and body weight has already been circulated for quite some time.1
Real-world analysis found no amputation risk with canagliflozin for treating type 2 diabetes
Canagliflozin is the first sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.1 Although canagliflozin offers benefits such as reductions in body weight, blood pressure, and risk for hypoglycemia,2 the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has included a
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Nerve Stimulation Reduces Pain and Opioid Use after Orthopedic Surgery
Benefits 'Much Greater Than Anticipated' in Initial Randomized Trial
13-Apr-2021 5:45 PM EDT, by American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)
Newswise — CHICAGO – A technique called percutaneous peripheral nerve stimulation yields "impressive" reductions in pain scores and opioid use during the first week after common orthopedic surgery procedures, concludes a randomized clinical trial published Online First in Anesthesiology, the official peer-reviewed journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), today.
The benefits of postoperative nerve stimulation were “much greater than what we had anticipated, concurrently reducing pain scores by more than 50 percent and opioid consumption by 80 percent,” according to the randomized trial report by Brian M. Ilfeld, M.D., MS, and colleagues. With further study, they believe that peripheral nerve stimulation could be a safe, effective, opioid reducing, non-drug adjunct for pain management after surgery.
In percutaneous peripheral nerve stimulation, a tiny electrical lead (insulated wire) is placed alongside a nerve and connected to a battery-powered pulse generator. The generator delivers mild electrical stimulation to the nerve, interrupting pain transmission. Although this "neuromodulation" technique has been widely used for patients with chronic pain, the new study is the first randomized, controlled trial to evaluate its use for acute pain after surgery.
The study enrolled 65 patients undergoing common outpatient joint surgery, such as bunion surgery in the foot or rotator cuff repair in the shoulder. All patients underwent lead placement near the nerve(s) serving the surgical joint. Half of the patients were randomly assigned to active electrical stimulation, adjusted to achieve the desired sensory change – sometimes described as feeling like a “pleasant massage.” The remaining patients received an inactive “sham” treatment, with a pulse generator that appeared to function normally, but did not deliver any electrical current. After one week, pain scores and opioid use were compared between groups. Evaluations were performed in “double-masked” fashion: neither the researchers nor the patients knew which treatment the patient was receiving.
The results showed significantly lower pain ratings in the active nerve stimulation group. Mean pain score (on a 0 to 10 scale) was 1.1 in patients receiving active treatment, compared to 3.1 in the sham group.
Active nerve stimulation was also associated with a much lower use of opioids to control postoperative pain. Median opioid dose (oral morphine equivalents) for the entire first week after surgery was 5 milligrams in the active treatment group, compared to 48 milligrams in the sham group. That's an important benefit due to the possible adverse effects of postoperative opioids, such as nausea, constipation, sedation, and respiratory depression.
Although the trial was designed as a pilot study, the results “stand on their own and indicate that percutaneous peripheral nerve stimulation is highly effective for acute pain,” Dr. Ilfeld and coauthors wrote. They outlined plans for a subsequent study that is currently enrolling a far larger number of patients and will include a more complete assessment of the treatment effect across patient subgroups.
THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANESTHESIOLOGISTSFounded in 1905, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) is an educational, research and scientific society with more than 54,000 members organized to raise and maintain the standards of the medical practice of anesthesiology. ASA is committed to ensuring physician anesthesiologists evaluate and supervise the medical care of patients before, during and after surgery to provide the highest quality and safest care every patient deserves.
For more information on the field of anesthesiology, visit the American Society of Anesthesiologists online at asahq.org. To learn more about the role physician anesthesiologists play in ensuring patient safety, visit asahq.org/madeforthismoment. Like ASA on Facebook; follow ASALifeline on Twitter. ASA hosts the ANESTHESIOLOGY® annual meeting, the largest, most comprehensive conference in the specialty with world-class education, the latest research and innovations, and the chance to recharge with colleagues, Oct. 8-12, 2021 in San Diego, Calif. Unable to attend in person, sign up for the Virtual Track which will offer a curated selection of presentations.
Follow Anesthesiology on Twitter at @_Anesthesiology or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/ASAanesthesiology
Journal Link: Anesthesiology
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当前位置: 九州体育官网登录入口: -> English
Qiqihar University has a history of more than 50 years. It is the only provincial, comprehensive regular institution of higher learning in the western part of Heilongjiang Province. It is located beside Labor Lake in the city of Qiqihar, the famous homeland of red-crowned cranes. It covers an area of 1.26 million square meters with building area of 750 thousand square meters. It is nicknamed “The Round Lake University,” and has been awarded titles of a “Garden University” and a “Provincial Model Unit” by the Heilongjiang Provincial Committee of the CPC and the People’s Government of Heilongjiang Province.
In recent years, Qiqihar University has successfully realized rapid development. Now, it consists of 22 colleges, including the college of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Literature and History and Culture, Computer and Control Engineering, Life Sciences and Agriculture and Forestry, Foreign Languages, Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science and Engineering, Physical Education, Applied Technology, International Education, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Economics and Management, Light Industry and Textiles, Food and Biology Engineering, Music and Dance, Art and Design, Philosophy and Law, Communication and Electronic Engineering, Sciences, Education and Communication, Marxism and Continuing Education.
The university also has several teaching and auxiliary teaching departments: Modern Education Technology Center, Public Foreign Language Teaching and Research Department and Libraries.
Qiqihar University offers 83 undergraduate specialties that are subordinate to 11 disciplines. 4 of the specialties are national characteristic specialties; 2 of the specialties, including Bioscience and Chemical Engineering and Technology, are national comprehensive reform pilot specialties; 2 of the specialties, including High Polymer Material and Engineering and Applied Chemistry, are provincial comprehensive reform pilot specialties; 17 of the specialties, including Law, High Polymer Material and Engineering, Business Administration, Process Equipment and Control Engineering, Chinese Language and Literature, Chemical Engineering and Technology, Education, Fine Arts, Light Chemistry Engineering, Biology Engineering, Bioscience, Physical Education, Clothing Art Design, Music Performance, Applied Chemistry, English and Pharmaceutical Engineering are provincial key specialties; 21 courses won the award of “Provincial Top-quality Course”; 4 categories of master’s degree authorization are provided (7 master’s degrees of engineering, 15 master’s degrees of education, 3 master’s degrees of physical education and a master’s degree of accounting), and the University has been given sanction to work on a newly-added Doctor’s Degree Conferring Unit.
The R&D Center of Flax-processing Technology is authorized as an engineering research center by the Ministry of Education. Two laboratories, including the Laboratory of Surfactant and the Laboratory of Industrial Auxiliary, are provincial key laboratories. There are two key laboratories of provincial universities: a Laboratory of the Industry of Fine Chemicals, and a Laboratory of the Processing of Agricultural Products. Nenjiang History and Culture Research Base is entitled provincial philosophy and sciences research base. Four R&D Centers, including Deep Processing of Agricultural Products (corn), Fine Processing of Soybean, Linen Processing Technology, and Popular Polymer Composite Modification are provincial R&D centers of engineering technology of a provincial university and play the role of the chairman unit of corn deep processing industry technology innovation strategic alliance in Heilongjiang Province. The Training Center of the Industry of Fine Chemicals and the Training Center of the Processing Technology of Cereal, Oil and Foodstuffs are provincial talent training centers for rejuvenating the old industrial bases of Northeastern China. The university also has a provincial innovative experimental center of talent training mode, three provincial demonstrative centers of experimental teaching, and four provincial demonstrative base for innovation and the creative cultivation of postgraduates, which has an R&D base in Beijing.
Qiqihar University has a highly competitive faculty and a well-reasoned faculty structure. 77% of the faculty hold doctoral and master’s degrees. It is staffed with 1,510 full-time teachers in total, including 683 professors and associate professors, 183 doctoral and postgraduate supervisors, as well as 15 foreign teachers teaching and lecturing in the university. A batch of experts and scholars famous at home and abroad gather in Qiqihar University. Among them, there is a academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2 distinguished professors of “Longjing Scholars Program”, 20 experts enjoy special national government allowances, and 3 experts enjoy special provincial government allowances. Besides, more than 30 teachers are national and provincial honor winners of “National Outstanding teacher” or “National Model Teacher”, there are 5 provincial distinguished teachers and 3 provincial teaching teams.
Qiqihar University is strengthened by scientific research through advancing the high-level and distinctive scientific researches. In recent years, Qiqihar University undertook 658 scientific research projects, including 44 national level and 132 provincial level research projects. More than 10 science and technology awards were obtained at or above provincial level. The number of academic papers, which are published in EI, SCI, CSSCI and key journals, has been increasing annually .
Qiqihar university enrolls students from 30 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities which are under the control of the Central Government of our country. It has formed a perfect educational provisional system of 26,004 students, including 24,547 full-time undergraduates, 1,246 postgraduates, 211 degree-eligible foreign students and 6,423 correspondence students.
Qiqihar University has advanced and enriched teaching conditions and facilities. These include 2,710,000 volumes in our library, 530,000 electronic volumes, 17 Chinese and foreign databases, 3 electronic reading rooms, 5 reading rooms specializing in social sciences or foreign language materials, 134 classrooms functioning as modernized language labs, multi-media classrooms, all online teaching record-anchor multimedia classrooms are in centralized control and management. The university and students also enjoy the first class gymnasium, natatorium, music hall and students’ recreation and sports activities center. Three academic periodicals by our university are published both at home and abroad: the Journal of Qiqihar University (Philosophy and Social Science Edition), the Journal of Qiqihar University (Natural Science Edition), and the Journal of Science of the Teachers College and University.
Qiqihar University’s guiding concept is to uphold Deng Xiao-ping’s Theory, and the important thought of the Three Representatives as guidelines, to advance the scientific concept on development as a command, to fully implement the Party's policy on education, to adhere to the unity of “large-scale, scientific organization, and fine quality with high efficiency,” and to follow the road towards developing these essential qualities. The university stands in Heilongjiang to serve local economic construction and social development, and to keep teaching as the central task, and to improve the quality of teaching as the lifeline of the university. The university unswervingly takes the cultivation of high-level professionals and senior specialists as the basic task to building the university into a provincial key comprehensive university.
Through years of exploration and practice, the university has formed its special features: “Carrying forward the fine tradition of working hard, with a pioneering spirit and a dedication to the frontier, of cultivating surefooted, industrious and competent high-level professionals.”
For years, the university, upholding the thought that “development is the first task,” has been unceasingly deepening programs of reform, development, and the construction of various undertakings, and has made great achievements.
The university lays emphasis on developing campus culture by holding colorful cultural activities. In 2006, the Qiqihar University Symphony Orchestra held a tour event entitled “Fine Art Spreads over Campus” under the nomination of the Ministry of Education, in 2012, the co-produced musical “The Daur People” won the gold award of Chinese Ethnic Arts Festival and became one of the 50 “Homage to Chinese Traditional Culture” projects. ?
The University highly values academic exchanges, and has achieved many positive results by establishing inter-collegiate contacts. It has had academic exchanges and established ties with cooperatively-run schools with some domestic colleges, and also 24 colleges from eight foreign countries like the U.S.A., Great Britain, Japan, South Korea, Russia, Canada, Austria, and Ireland.
Qiqihar University has preserved and promoted its principles in running the university over the last 50 years. By working industriously, it has trained over 126,000 various talented persons. They are all over the country, but most of them take root in Longjiang. They have been well received at their posts because they are willing to work their way up, they are happy in bearing hardships, they dedicate themselves to their work, and they are good at learning and doing. In the past decade, they have completed more than 1,600 research projects, quite a number of which have been materialized in time to make great contributions to local economic construction and social development.
With the inspiring motto “Cultivation of Righteousness and Virtue, Construction of Refinement and Spontaneity”, Qiqihar University is geared to the needs of the future, seizes all opportunities, and promotes a truth-seeking and pioneering spirit necessary for building the university into a provincial key university.
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/16841
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Interpret "Stein-Erik Olsen"
Stein-Erik Olsen
Label: Simax Classics
The Fifties and NOW
Biographie Stein-Erik Olsen
was educated at the Bergen Conservatory of Music and the Norwegian State Academy of Music. His post-graduate teachers included Alexandre Lagoya, at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris, and the Czech pianist, Jiri Hlinka. His international career began in 1974, when he represented Norway at the Expo Norr Festival in Sweden.
Since then he has played at many international festivals and toured extensively, playing solo recitals and concertos (including Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez), and appearing on radio and television throughout Europe, Great Britain, India and Korea. In 1986 his debut recital in the Wigmore Hall, London, merited high praise from the critics and his various recordings have been critically acclaimed world-wide.
Stein-Erik Olsen has had a variety of works dedicated to him by eminent composers including Ketil Hvoslef, Olav Berg, John Duarte, Nikita Koshkin, Noel Zahler, Stepan Rak, etc., now featured on his recordings for Simax.
Stein-Erik Olsen has performed at prestigious venues throughout Europe (Germany, France, Spain, Czech Republic, Hungary, Austria, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, etc.) and the Far East (including India, Nouvelle Calédonie and Korea).
In Norway he has made many appearances at leading music festivals such as Bergen International Festival (where he premiered Olav Berg’s Guitar Concerto), Arve Tellefsens Chamber Music Festival, Oslo, and Stavanger International Chamber Music Festival.
His engagements abroad include concerts at the Cesky Krumlov Festival, Czech Republic, Brussels International Guitar Festival, Belgium, Fanø Guitar Festival, Denmark, Estergom Guitar Festival, Hungary, etc. Stein-Erik Olsen has given recitals in leading halls in cities such as London, Prague, Lucerne, Bordeaux, Rome, Vienna, Paris, Stockholm, and Copenhagen.
Stein-Erik Olsen has performed as soloist in a range of guitar concertos with the Philharmonic Orchestras of Bergen, Stavanger, Trondheim, and Frankfurt, and recorded with the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields. Eminent conductors he has appeared with include Jukka Pekka Saraste, Susanna Mälkki, Christian Eggen, Terje Mikkelsen, Asher Fisch, Michael Schønwandt, Lionel Friend, and Alexander Dmitriev
Stein-Erik has a particular interest in performing chamber music and plays frequent concerts with Gro Schibsted Sandvik, professor at the Grieg Academy and principal flute in the Bergen and Oslo Philharmonic Orchestras. Stein-Erik has also given many recitals with the pan flute virtuoso Roar Engelberg, playing programmes which blend popular music, classical and folk music, Latino music and contemporary works. Over recent years he has gained an international reputation for his recitals and recordings in his guitar duo with Olivier Chassain, professor of guitar at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris. Stein-Erik has also played duo recitals with the distinguished Swedish guitarist Göran Söllscher.
Stein-Erik Olsen is professor of classical guitar at the Grieg Academy, University of Bergen.
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/17484
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Todd Steven Burroughs
NEW BOOK ABOUT MUMIA ABU-JAMAL LAUNCHES MONDAY, JUNE 27th, @ 8 A.M. ON BLACK POWER MEDIA’S iMiXWHATiLIKE! PODCAST
Contributors to The Trials Of Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Biography In 25 Voices, A New Release From Diasporic Africa Press, Discuss The “40 Cities For Mumia” Campaign On July 4th And The Current State of the MAJ Movement
For Further Info, Contact:
Todd Steven Burroughs, Ph.D.
[email protected]
Jared A Ball, Ph.D.
[email protected]
iMiXWHATiLIKE! with Dr. Jared Ball, a flagship podcast of the Black Power Media platform, will be hosting the contributors to a new book about imprisoned author and historian Mumia Abu-Jamal on Monday, June 27, at 8 a.m. EST.
The program comes as the Black Power Media collective, which has consistently given a public forum to political prisoners such as Abu-Jamal in its less than two years of existence, has continued to thrive as a powerful and radical Black alternative to mainstream media, established Black media, and white Left alternative media. It also marks the 40th anniversary of Abu-Jamal’s first-degree murder conviction of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner.
Scheduled guests for the hour include three longtime activists in the movement to free Abu-Jamal and all political prisoners:
YahNe Ndgo, artist/writer/activist, a leader in the #LoveNotPhear Movement;
Dr. Michael Schiffmann, Abu-Jamal biographer/author, Race Against Death, a political biography of the imprisoned writer (an outgrowth of his doctoral dissertation); he is the one that discovered the now-famous Polalkoff photos that show serious discrepancies at the December 1981 crime scene where Abu-Jamal was shot and Faulkner died;
Julia Wright, author, journalist and activist
Suggested Topics:
“40 Cities for Mumia” campaign — events for Abu-Jamal in 40 cities across the country during the July 4th weekend to call attention to Abu-Jamal’s 40 and one-half years of imprisonment since his early-morning arrest on Dec. 9, 1981;
The current state of the movement to free Abu-Jamal and all political prisoners;
The Trials Of Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Biography In 25 Voices, a new, collective biography (all three guests are contributors)
The YouTube link to the program is here: https://youtu.be/RXWsI-rnHAY .
The Trials Of Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Biography In 25 Voices chronicles Abu-Jamal’s life and struggle to survive COVID. It features those who combined their voices on YouTube and Zoom, led by Movement legend Dr. Angela Davis and professor Dr. Johanna Fernandez, both award-winning historians who have been leading spokespeople in the fight to get Abu-Jamal, currently serving a life sentence, either a new trial or compassionate release. The book is published by Diasporic Africa Press.
Abu-Jamal, 68, is a former member of the Philadelphia branch of the Black Panther Party who became an award-winning National Public Radio journalist in the 1970s. In prison, he has written more than 10 books of history and commentary while under constant surveillance and violation of his human rights.
The anthology — edited by Todd Steven Burroughs, also a scheduled guest on the program — chronicles Abu-Jamal’s life up to that point and outlines in detail why the criminal justice system must re-examine his very controversial case. The contributors, many of whom have either known him or advocated for him for decades, talk about his writing career’s beginnings at the Black Panther newspaper, through his radio days, the trial, his lawyers and those who assisted him in becoming the first Black radical blogger and/or cyberspace’s first political prisoner. As the book progresses, Abu-Jamal is discussed as a major writer and scholar. A smattering of pages from Abu-Jamal’s FBI file and graphics and photos directly from Movement veterans round out this strong, scrapbook-like profile.
Proceeds of the book will go to the Jericho Movement, a coalition of activists who fight for the freedom of Black Panthers and other radicals from prison, and movement organizations that support Abu-Jamal.
ABOUT JARED A. BALL, THE HOST OF iMiXWHATiLIKE!:
Jared A. Ball, Ph.D. is first a husband and father. After that, he is a Professor of Communication and Africana Studies at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Md. and author of The Myth and Propaganda of Black Buying Power (Palgrave, 2020; new, updated edition coming in 2023). He is also host of the podcast iMiXWHATiLiKE! and the co-founder of Black Power Media, which can be found at BlackPowerMedia.org. His decades of journalism, media, writing, and political work can be found at imixwhatilike.org.
ABOUT THE BOOK’S EDITOR:
Todd Steven Burroughs, Ph.D. is a journalist, historian and popular culture geek. He is the author of Warrior Princess: A People’s Biography of Ida B. Wells and Marvel’s Black Panther, A Comic Book Biography, From Stan Lee to Ta-Nehisi Coates, both published by Diasporic Africa Press. In 2020 he finished a full draft of Talking Drums and Raised Fists: Mumia Abu-Jamal, A Biography Of A Voice and now has to update that book.
ABOUT THE PUBLISHER:
Diasporic Africa Press is an independent, nonprofit, global publisher of serious nonfiction books about the African world. Founded in 2010, DAP is a champion of serious books about the African world, specializing in histories, cultures, literature and language. Targeting adults and young readers, our books are grounded in scholarship, written for accessibility, and designed to support discussion, teaching, and research. DAP’s director and editor-in-chief, Dr. Kwasi Konadu, is the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Endowed Chair and Professor at Colgate University, where he teaches courses in African history and on worldwide African histories and cultures.
Mumia
Mumia Abu Jamal
Black Power Media Youtube
Imixwhatilike
Dr Jared Ball
More from Todd Steven Burroughs
Public Historian, scholar, journalist, author, comicbook geek.
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public engagement science
2002 Award for Public Engagement with Science Recipient
AAAS Award for Public Understanding of Science & Technology
Bassam Shakhashiri
This year’s recipient of the AAAS Award for Public Understanding of Science and Technology is Dr. Bassam Shakhashiri. He is honored for his tireless commitment to educating the public, especially children, about the nature and wonder of science.
“Scientist by training, teacher and public servant by trade, advocate by conviction, optimist by nature”—how Dr. Bassam Shakhashiri describes himself.
In 1995, the Encyclopedia Britannica’s Yearbook of Science and the Future called Shakhashiri the “reigning dean of lecture demonstrations.” Trained as a chemist, Shakhashiri received his undergraduate degree in chemistry from Boston University in 1960 following a few years at the American University in Beirut. By 1968, he had received both his master’s and doctoral degrees in chemistry from the University of Maryland. Shakhashiri’s scholarship is well-documented in his classic four-volume series, Chemical Demonstrations.This collection of dozens of lecture demonstrations, provided in complete scientific detail and with appropriate safety and usage information, is widely regarded as the definitive source for such information.
As a teacher and public servant, Shakhashiri has held positions at Bowdoin College, the University of Maryland, the University of Illinois-Urbana, and the University of Wisconsin. He also served as the assistant director of the National Science Foundation’s Directorate for Science and Engineering Education from 1984 to 1990 where he directed the design and administration of a wide variety of programs to improve all levels of education in mathematics, engineering, and the sciences. Since his return to the University of Wisconsin in 1990, Shakhashiri has taught introductory chemistry courses to more than 600 students annually.
As an advocate of science education, Shakhashiri founded the Institute for Chemical Education in order to bring effective, modern instructional materials and methods to the broader teaching community. He created the Science is Fun! program to bring science to K-12 students and teachers and has initiated the Conversations in Science Series, which connects research scientists at the University of Wisconsin to secondary education classrooms. Few secondary professional development opportunities have been as successful.
What Shakhashiri may be most famous for is his annual program, “Once Upon a Christmas Cheery, in the Lab of Shakhashiri,” seen across the country on television and in venues like the Smithsonian, the National Academy of Sciences, and the halls of Congress.These demonstration lectures, modern versions of the celebrated presentations made by British scientist Michael Faraday, have formed the basis for an interactive chemistry exhibit seen by many thousands of visitors at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry. Professor Shakhashiri has given about 1,000 invited lectures and presentations throughout the world; he has been featured in magazines and newspapers, national and local; and he has appeared on television and radio, always avowing that science is indeed fun!
AAAS Awards
Scientific community/Education/Educational facilities/Educational institutions/Universities
Scientific community/Education/Science education/Science teaching
Scientific community/Science communication/Science advocacy
Applied sciences and engineering/Technology
Scientific community/Science careers/Science administration
Scientific community/Scientific organizations/Scientific foundations
Social sciences/Anthropology/Cultural anthropology/Cultural practices/Entertainment/Television
Applied sciences and engineering/Industrial science
Scientific community/Education/Education administration/Teacher training
Scientific community/Education/Students/College students/Undergraduate students
Scientific community/Education/Science education/Science degrees/Doctoral degrees
Scientific community/Education/Science education/Science curricula/Engineering education
Scientific community/Education/Educational levels/Early education
Physical sciences/Chemistry/Inorganic chemistry/Solid state chemistry
Applied sciences and engineering/Engineering/Materials engineering
Scientific community/Education/Educational methods/Teaching
Scientific community/Research programs/Education research
Social sciences/Economics/Business/Human resources/Professional development
Tweets by aaas
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IBA and Ukrainian National Bar Association partner to deliver a series of training seminars for lawyers
Amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, the International Bar Association (IBA) and the Ukrainian National Bar Association (UNBA) have partnered to host a series of online seminars. The first two will focus on defence (21 July) and international criminal law (28 July).
The first seminar will be held online and is aimed at providing defence lawyers with the essential knowledge and exposure to international law related to alleged atrocity crimes. Supported by the UNBA’s Higher School of Advocacy, the training will underscore the importance of providing equality of arms for parties, in line with the rule of law. It will take place on Thursday 21 July 2022 at 16:00 Kyiv | 14:00 London | 09:00 New York and will be conducted in English with simultaneous Ukrainian translation.
Watch the seminar on YouTube: https://youtu.be/nKNNPYpyBPQ
Watch the seminar on Facebook: www.facebook.com/hsa.org.ua
IBA President, Sternford Moyo, commented: ‘The IBA is proud to partner with the UNBA to deliver this training seminar to equip defence lawyers with the knowledge and tools they need to fulfil their role. They have a hugely important part to play in ensuring the administration of justice in criminal trials. International cases by their nature are never simple, and as such it is vital that lawyers conducting such work have a strong understanding of the complexities involved.’
UNBA Vice President Valentyn Gvozdiy said: ‘We recognise that the IBA has significant expertise and unique insight into what is required in trials to defend persons accused of national war crimes, and we are delighted that the IBA will provide training for Ukrainian defence lawyers in this respect. Furthermore, the additional IBA support relating to the important issue raised by the IBA of ensuring that the public understands the vital role the legal profession plays in ensuring that anyone accused of an atrocity crime is provided representation is also welcome. We look forward to materialising further IBA-UNBA collaborations being discussed.’
The IBA-UNBA seminar will provide an overview of the basic tenets of international criminal defence work in Ukrainian courts, notably relating to the representation of individuals accused of war crimes and other international criminal law violations. The seminar will further cover: the key differences between the prosecution of domestic and international crimes; the role of the defence lawyer; advocating for a client’s innocence in the face of national opposition; ensuring a fair trial; and grounds for excluding criminal responsibility. The session will conclude with a questions and answers session with a Ukrainian lawyer.
IBA Executive Director Dr Mark Ellis commented: ‘Ensuring fair trials for all is central to the reason for creating this training seminar with the UNBA. As the war in Ukraine continues, undoubtedly there will be more trials. It is essential that lawyers are fully equipped with the necessary knowledge to conduct defences regarding alleged atrocity crimes. It is our objective for legal professionals in Ukraine working on these complex trials to gain an understanding of the interlinking issues and the differences between domestic and international law in respect of these less familiar crimes so that they build successful cases to ensure fair trial outcomes. This is essential to the credibility of Ukraine’s efforts to ensure justice for individuals accused of egregious criminal acts.’
Dr Mark Ellis, Executive Director, International Bar Association, London
Savva Kuzmenko, Director, High School of the Ukrainian National Bar Association, Kyiv
Speakers (in alphabetical order)
Dr Caroline Buisman, Senior Legal Officer, United Nations, The Hague
David Hooper QC, Barrister, 25 Bedford Row, London
Peter Robinson, Criminal Defence Lawyer, International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals, The Hague
Kirsty Sutherland, Barrister, 9 Bedford Row, London; Visiting Fellow of Practice, Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict
David Tolbert, Registrar, Special Tribunal for Lebanon, The Hague; former President of the International Center for Transitional Justice
Natalie von Wistinghausen, Criminal Defence Counsel, International Criminal Court and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, Berlin
The second seminar to be hosted jointly by the IBA and UNBA will cover international criminal law and will be held on Thursday 28 July 2022 at 15:00 BST. It will cover issues including: the history of international criminal law from Nuremberg to the International Criminal Court (ICC); the concept of individual responsibility; the key role of the ICC; jurisdictional issues; the Principles of Complementarity and Universal Jurisdiction; responsibility doctrines and joint-enterprise / command responsibility; and the core crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression.
Notes to the Editor
The International Bar Association (IBA), the global voice of the legal profession, is the foremost organisation for international legal practitioners, bar associations and law societies. Established in 1947, shortly after the creation of the United Nations, it was born out of the conviction that an organisation made up of the world's bar associations could contribute to global stability and peace through the administration of justice.
The IBA acts as a connector, enabler, and influencer, for the administration of justice, fair practice, and accountability worldwide. The IBA has collaborated on a broad range of ground-breaking, international projects with the United Nations, the European Parliament, the Council of Europe, The Commonwealth, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the World Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, among others.
The Ukrainian National Bar Association (UNBA) is a non-governmental and self-governed professional organisation comprising of all Ukrainian attorneys. Established in 2012, the organisation was formed to promote the development and strengthening of the legal profession in Ukraine, with the goal of ensuring the proper practice of law.
Find the IBA (@IBAnews) on social media here:
twitter.com/IBAnews
twitter.com/IBAevents
www.facebook.com/internationalbarassociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-bar-association
Please direct enquiries to:
Savva Kuzmenko
Higher School of Advocacy, Ukrainian National Bar Association
Email: [email protected]
Romana St. Matthew-Daniel
5 Chancery Lane
London WC2A 1LG
Mobile: +44 (0)7940 731 915
Direct Line: +44 (0)20 7842 0094
Main Office: +44 (0)20 7842 0090
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.ibanet.org
Website page link for this news release:
Short link: tinyurl.com/2p8p49b6
Full link: www.ibanet.org/IBA-and-Ukrainian-National-Bar-Association-partner-to-deliver-a-series-of-training-seminars-for-lawyers
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/18171
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Dublin's high-speed broadband network yields CORN
DUBLIN, Ohio (Aug 31, 2005) —
The City of Dublin has joined forces with Ohio's Third Frontier Network (TFN) in establishing the Central Ohio Research Network--or CORN--linking education and commerce for research and economic development.
"We are proud of Ohio's agricultural heritage and are now taking that history and tradition to the next level," said Congresswoman Deborah Pryce. "The Central Ohio Research Network will boost Central Ohio's image as a technology focused and equipped region ready to facilitate research, development and collaborative efforts among universities, government and business. The possibilities are unlimited."
DubLINK, Dublin's underground optical fiber route encompassing nearly 100 miles, will connect directly to the Ohio Supercomputer Center's TFN, the most advanced statewide research network in the country. The TFN links Ohio's colleges and universities, research labs, and hospitals via 1,600 miles of high-speed broadband network.
"Dublin has long recognized the importance of providing underground fiber capacity to businesses," said Dublin's Deputy City Manager/Director of Economic Development Dana McDaniel. "We now have expanded DubLINK by purchasing optical fiber from Columbus Fiber Net to support a plan to offer broadband throughout Central Ohio and aid in connecting the state's colleges and universities as part of OSC's Third Frontier Network."
DubLINK provides the necessary infrastructure for CORN's high-speed broadband network. The connection, approved by Dublin City Council, establishes for the first time in Central Ohio a dedicated research network to enable businesses, government and schools to connect directly to the Ohio Supercomputer Center, and institutes of higher learning and research.
The network also enables interconnectivity between facilities located on the fiber route. For example, Battelle's Dublin location will be able to establish connectivity with its headquarters on King Avenue near The Ohio State University.
Through TFN, Ohio can explore new experimental networking technologies and can customize networks to meet specific and unique research requirements. Schoolchildren can take virtual field trips and interact with university researchers in their classrooms. Doctors will be able to consult with patients across the state without leaving their offices. And, students and researchers will have access to OSC's computers in the blink of an eye.
"The close working relationships established by CORN and TFN will provide immediate benefits to Central Ohio's research and education community," said Pankaj Shah, Director of OARnet, OSC's networking division. "We envision the successful launch of CORN and the DubLINK partnership as a crucial step in TFN's success at the state level, while further highlighting Ohio's leadership role in advanced networking at a national level."
Dublin was approved for a $500,000 grant from the State of Ohio Capital Fund. Dublin received support for its application from Congressional Representatives Deborah Pryce and Patrick Tiberi; State Representatives Jim Hughes and Larry Wolpert; State Senator Steve Stivers; and Franklin County Commissioners Paula Brooks, Mary Jo Kilroy and Dewey Stokes.
By promoting critical scientific and industrial research, the TFN will help increase technology-sector jobs by fostering research collaboration between Ohio's university and business communities, contributing to the growth of the state's economy.
About DubLINK
DubLINK is an innovative partnership between the City of Dublin and The Fishel Company providing a multi-conduit, underground, fiber-optic system connecting Dublin's business district with competitive communication networks providing voice, video and data services. For more information, please visit www.dublin.oh.us.
About TFN
TFN is the most advanced high speed, fiber-optic network dedicated to higher education in the nation. An Ohio Board of Regents' initiative, TFN works with government, academic and industry partners to position the state of Ohio as a world leader in networking technology and the knowledge economy. For more information on TFN, please visit www.tfn.oar.net.
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/18304
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You will visit the following 12 places:
Oranjestad, known as ("Orange Town"), is the capital and largest city of Aruba. In the local language, Papiamento, Oranjestad is also often referred to simply as "Playa". The city consists of hundreds of local stores where tourists usually buy their keepsakes. The city is also home to some of the island's local residents and also many governmental buildings. Along the main "drag" (Sasakiweg street) you will find most tourist walking around and shopping and can also see the cruise ships that bring more and more external tourism into the island everyday. Close to the cruise ships is the island's largest marina where you can find great docking space for your vessel.
Charlotte Amalie, located on St. Thomas, is the capital and largest city of the U.S. Virgin Islands. Founded in 1666 as Taphus (meaning "beer houses" or "beer halls"), the town has been inhabited for centuries. Hundreds of ferries and yachts pass through town each week, and at times the population more than doubles. The city is known for its Danish colonial architecture, building structure and history, and a dozen streets and places throughout the city have Danish names. Charlotte Amalie has buildings of historical importance including St. Thomas Synagogue, the second-oldest synagogue in the Western Hemisphere, and Frederick Lutheran Church, the oldest Lutheran church in the Western Hemisphere. The town has a long history of pirates, especially stories of Bluebeard and Blackbeard (Edward Teach). In the 17th century, the Danes built both Blackbeard's Castle and Bluebeard's Castle attributed to the pirates. Blackbeard's Castle is a U.S.National Historic Landmark. Another tourist attraction is Fort Christian, the oldest standing structure in the Virgin Islands Archipelago. A copy of the Liberty Bell is in Emancipation Park, which is a tourist attraction.
Cartagena is Colombia's most famous tourist destination on the Caribbean coast. The city is renowned for its colonial and colourful architecture. With a tropical climate, the city is also a popular beach destination. The city was founded on June 1, 1533, and named after Cartagena, Spain, itself after the original Carthage in Tunisia. However, settlement in this region around Cartagena Bay by various indigenous people dates back to 4000 BC. During the colonial period Cartagena served a key role in administration and expansion of the Spanish empire. It was a center of political and economic activity due to the presence of royalty and wealthy viceroys. In 1984 Cartagena's colonial walled city and fortress were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Willemstad is the capital city of Curaçao, an island in the southern Caribbean Sea that forms a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Formerly the capital of the Netherlands Antilles prior to its dissolution in 2010, it has an estimated population of 150,000. Willemstad is home to the Curaçao synagogue, the oldest surviving synagogue in the Americas.
Panama officially the Republic of Panama, is known as the "Crossroads of the Americas" due to its privileged position between North and South America. It has the second largest economy in Central America and is also the fastest growing economy and largest per capita consumer in Central America. The ease of travel and wide array of experiences make Panama one of the most attractive emerging tourism destinations in the world. In just one week, visitors can enjoy two different oceans, experience the mountains and rainforest, learn about native cultures and take advantage of vibrant urban life. It's significant capital, Panama City, is a modern, sophisticated metropolis that resembles Miami and has established commerce, arts, fashion and dining.
Puerto Limón
Puerto Limón, commonly known as Limón (Spanish for "lemon"), is the capital city and main hub of Limón province, as well as of the cantón (county) of Limón in Costa Rica. It is the sixth-largest city in Costa Rica, with a population of over 55,000 (including surrounding towns), and is home of a multicultural community. Part of the community traces its roots to Italian, Jamaican and Chinese laborers who worked on a late nineteenth-century railroad project that connected San José to Puerto Limón. Until 1948, the Costa Rican government did not recognize Afro-Caribbean people as citizens and restricted their movement outside Limón province. As a result of this "travel ban", this Afro-Caribbean population became firmly established in the region, which influenced the decision to not move even after it was legally permitted. Nowadays, there is an important outflow of Limón natives who move to the country's Central Valley in search for better employment and education. The Afro-Caribbean community speaks Spanish and Limonese Creole, a creole of English.
Gatun
From Gibraltar
Gibraltar, Bordeaux, Lisbon, Santander, Dubrovnik, Itea, La Rochelle, Brest, Venice, Antwerp, Lipari, Zakynthos, Athens, United Kingdom, Spetsai, Crotone, Durres, The Convent Amsterdam, Barcelona
From San Diego
San Diego, Mazatlán, Cabo San Lucas, Puerto Vallarta
From Vancouver
Vancouver, Juneau
From Yokohama
Yokohama, Kagoshima, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Miyazaki Prefecture, Beijing, Seoul, Quelpart Island, Osakacho, Naha, Nagasaki Prefecture
Montreal, Acadia National Park, Fort Lauderdale, Halifax, Quebec City, Boston, Sydney, Saint John, Charlottetown, Saguenay, Port Canaveral Trailer Park
Athens, 80133, Monte Carlo, Barcelona
From St. John's
St. John's, Saint-Pierre, Málaga, Gibraltar, Lisbon, Acadia National Park, Halifax, Ponta Delgada, Livorno, Monte Carlo, Boston, Sydney, Civitavecchia, Barcelona
From Falmouth
Falmouth, Little San Salvador, Riviera Maya, Fort Lauderdale, San Miguel de Cozumel, Grand Cayman
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/19561
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Dulles CBP Officers Seize more than $1 Million in Counterfeit Consumer Goods
STERLING, Va. – Shipments with a voluminous amount of counterfeit consumer goods are usually transported in maritime cargo, so it was a bit surprising when Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers encountered two women who arrived at Washington Dulles International Airport recently from Qatar with 806 counterfeit items packed into 21 checked suitcases.
This knock-off jewelry was part of
the 806 pieces of counterfeit
consumer goods that CBP seized.
The 806 items, which included fake designer brand jewelry, watches, clothes, shoes, sunglasses and handbags, under the brand names Christian Dior, Dolce & Gabbana, Fendi, Gucci, Hermes, Prada, and Versace, among others, would have had a combined manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP) of $1,065,779, if authentic.
Even the 21 suitcases that the fake goods were packed into were counterfeit.
The two women, U.S. lawful permanent residents living in Virginia, arrived from Doha, Qatar on August 8. A CBP officer referred the women to a secondary examination area to complete a formal entry for the commercial goods in their baggage.
CBP officers then suspected that the goods were counterfeit and detained the goods for a more thorough inspection. Officers inventoried 806 items and submitted documentation of the inventory to CBP’s Consumer Products and Mass Merchandising (CPMM), and the Apparel, Footwear, and Textile (AFT) Centers of Excellence and Expertise.
CBP’s Centers of Excellence and Expertise, which are the agency’s trade experts, worked with trademark holders and by September 27 determined that all 806 pieces were counterfeit. CBP officers completed the seizure on September 29.
“This might be one of the most uniquely large counterfeit goods seizures that Customs and Border Protection officers have seen in regular passenger baggage,” said John Jurgutis, Acting Area Port Director for the Area Port of Washington, D.C. “We know that the illicit trade in counterfeit consumer goods steals revenue from American businesses, threatens consumers with potentially unsafe products, and funds transnational criminal organizations, and CBP officers will continue to strike back at this illicit enterprise while protecting American consumers.”
The two women traveled with these 21
suitcases, which CBP officers also seized as
counterfeit.
CBP protects businesses and consumers every day through an aggressive Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) enforcement program. During fiscal year 2020, CBP reported 26,503 counterfeit goods seizures worth an estimated manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP) of over $1.3 billion, in the goods were authentic. That comes out to about $3.6 million in counterfeit goods seizures every day. Read CBP’s Intellectual Property Seizure Report for more Fiscal Year 2020 IPR stats and analysis.
CBP's border security mission is led at ports of entry by CBP officers from the Office of Field Operations.
CBP officers screen international travelers and cargo and search for illicit narcotics, unreported currency, weapons, counterfeit consumer goods, prohibited agriculture, and other illicit products that could potentially harm the American public, U.S. businesses, and our nation’s safety and economic vitality. Learn more what CBP accomplished during "A Typical Day" in 2020.
Please visit CBP Ports of Entry to learn more about how CBP’s Office of Field Operations secures our nation’s borders. Learn more about CBP at www.CBP.gov.
Follow the Director of CBP’s Baltimore Field Office on Twitter at @DFOBaltimore and on Instagram at @dfobaltimore for breaking news, current events, human interest stories and photos.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is the unified border agency within the Department of Homeland Security charged with the management, control and protection of our nation's borders at and between official ports of entry. CBP is charged with securing the borders of the United States while enforcing hundreds of laws and facilitating lawful trade and travel.
Trade Enforcement
Name: Steve Sapp
[email protected]
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/19636
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MAYAN MOSAIC
About Santo Tomas, El Salvador
Georgetown is a historic neighborhood, commercial, and entertainment district located in northwest Washington, D.C., situated along the Potomac River. Founded in 1751 in the Province of Maryland, the port of Georgetown predated the establishment of the federal district and the City of Washington by 40 years. Georgetown remained a separate municipality until 1871, when the United States Congress created a new consolidated government for the whole District of Columbia. A separate act passed in 1895 specifically repealed Georgetown's remaining local ordinances and renamed Georgetown's streets to conform with those in the City of Washington. The primary commercial corridors of Georgetown are the intersection of Wisconsin Avenue and M Street, which contain high-end shops, bars, restaurants, and the Georgetown Park enclosed shopping mall, as well as the Washington Harbour waterfront restaurants at K Street, between 30th and 31st Streets. Georgetown is home to the main campus of Georgetown University and numerous other landmarks, such as the Volta Bureau and the Old Stone House, the oldest unchanged building in Washington. The embassies of Cameroon, France, Kosovo, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Mongolia, Sweden, Thailand, Ukraine and Venezuela are located in Georgetown.w
Belize City is the largest city in Belize and was once the capital of the former British Honduras. It is located at the mouth of the Haulover Creek, which is a tributary of the Belize River. The city is the country's principal port and its financial and industrial hub. Several cruise ships drop anchor outside the port and are tended by local citizens. It was also the capital of British Honduras (as Belize was then named) until the government was moved to the new capital of Belmopan in 1970.
Coxen Hole
Roatán is one of the Honduras Bay Islands in the Caribbean Sea. The island was formerly known as Ruatan and Rattan. Rests on an exposed ancient coral reef, with two cruise ship ports, Roatan has become a cruise destination, and roads and beaches can be busy when ships are in port. The western side of the island is the most populated and where most tourists stay, and the eastern side is more remote and isolated. Roatan has a warm climate with daytime temperatures between 80-90 year round.
GILDED GLORY
From Stockholm
Stockholm, Riga, Helsinki, Tallinn, Warnemünde, Moscow, Copenhagen
HEMINGWAY'S HIDEAWAYS
From Havana
Havana, Santiago de Cuba, Miami, Key West, Cienfuegos
TASTE OF EUROPE
From Porto
Porto, Barcelona, A Coruña, Biarritz, Admiral Street Police Station (Merseyside Police), Bilbao, Bordeaux, Lisbon, Belfast, Seville, Dublin South, Palma, Southampton, Rosyth, Waterford, Plymouth, St-Malo, Newcastle upon Tyne
GATEWAY TO SUNSHINE
From Los Angeles
Los Angeles, Miami, Acapulco de Juárez
CARIBBEAN PEARLS
From Philipsburg
Philipsburg, Roseau, Bridgetown, Miami, San Juan, St John's, Kingstown, Sandals Regency St Lucia, Guadeloupe, Fort-de-France, Great Stirrup Cay
BALTIC TO THE BISCAY
Porto, Netherlands, Malmö Airport, Bilbao, Stockholm, Bordeaux, Riga, Helsinki, Lisbon, St Petersburg, Oslo, Copenhagen
SACRED HOLY LANDS
From Barcelona
PORTRAITS OF PARADISE
From Raiatea
Raiatea, Honolulu, Tahiti, Bora Bora, Kahului, Rangiroa, San Francisco, Fakarava, Nuku Hiva, Nāwiliwili, Hilo, Moorea
TIMELESS CUBA
Havana, Santiago de Cuba, Miami, Cienfuegos
More about Oceania Cruises
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2023-14/0015/en_head.json.gz/19833
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