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Berkeley EECS to honor Joseph Gier with memorial sculpture
A community is defined by the heroes it chooses to celebrate. We invite you to join the EECS department in recognizing a previously overlooked hero, Berkeley EE Prof. Joseph T. Gier, the University of California's first tenured Black professor. Raised in Oakland by a single mother, Gier came to Berkeley as an undergraduate in 1930, and earned two degrees (B.S. ME '33 and M.Eng. '40) before becoming an EE lecturer in 1944, associate professor with tenure in 1952, and full professor in 1958. He was a world authority on thermal and luminous radiation, and an inventor of devices used in the early days of aerospace exploration and solar power harvesting. He was also said to be an extraordinary teacher and role model during a period of deep national segregation and social unrest. We have commissioned artist Dana King to create a bronze monument representing Gier and his contributions to ensure that his profound legacy is restored to the life of the Berkeley campus, and to permanently establish him as a mainstay in our cultural narrative. We hope to raise $150K to fund the creation, installation and upkeep of the sculpture, which will be placed at the entrance of Blum Hall.
Learn more about the project and join our team effort!
Sophia Shao, Prabal Dutta, and Deepak Pathak win 2022 Okawa Foundation Research Grants
EECS Assistant Prof. Sophia Shao, Associate Prof. Prabal Dutta, and alumnus Deepak Pathak have won 2022 Okawa Foundation Research Grants. The Okawa Foundation for Information and Telecommunications recognizes "studies and analyses in the fields of information and telecommunications." Shao, whose research interests are in computer architecture, was awarded for her work on building domain-specific systems at scale. Dutta, whose research interests include energy-efficient cyber-physical systems and applications of sensor networks and Internet-of-things technology, was awarded for his work on a new kind of radio architecture, called “backsplatter,” and combining it with conventional radios. Pathak, who is now an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, was recognized for his work “Towards Continually Improving Robots in the Wild.” They comprise three of the seven U.S. recipients who were awarded $10,000 grants this year.
The Research Grant Recipients 2022
Prabal Dutta wins 2022 ACM SenSys Test of Time Award
EECS Associate Prof. Prabal Dutta has won the 2022 ACM SenSys Test of Time Award. The paper by Dutta, Dawson-Haggerty (Ph.D. ‘14), Chen, Liang, and Terzis titled, “Design and Evaluation of a Versatile and Efficient Receiver-Initiated Link Layer for Low-Power Wireless,” was recognized “for pioneering the use of synchronous transmissions in low-power protocols by exploiting their benefits at the MAC layer and pushing the limits of radio operation.” Established in 2014, the “ToTA” recognizes papers that are at least 10 years old and have demonstrated long-lasting impact on network embedded sensing system science and engineering. “It's a real testament that so much of the field traces its roots to Berkeley,” said Dutta.
ACM SenSys ToTA Winners
Design and evaluation of a versatile and efficient receiver-initiated link layer for low-power wireless
Berkeley EECS mourns the loss of Dave Hodges
EECS Prof. Emeritus and alumnus David A. Hodges (M.S. 1961; Ph.D. 1966) passed away on November 13th. He was 85. A former engineering dean and EECS department chair, Prof. Hodges began his career at Bell Telephone Laboratories before joining the EECS faculty in 1970 where his pioneering contributions to the design of integrated circuit (IC) chips and use of silicon-based metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) technology challenged the conventional wisdom of the era. His landmark research led to the rapid development of devices, technologies, and standards that not only were instrumental to the growth of the semiconductor industry in Silicon Valley but continue to have a tremendous impact today. After 28 years of active service wherein he supervised 27 completed doctoral dissertations, 91 completed master's degrees, co-authored 3 books, 130 technical publications, and 6 patents, Prof. Hodges remained a stalwart of the department, mentoring and championing new faculty and shaping the department culture for decades to come. Prof. Hodges was a Fellow of the IEEE and a member of the NAE. He won the IEEE Education Medal (1997), the Berkeley Citation (1998), and was inducted into the Silicon Valley Hall of Fame (2013). A tremendous teacher, collaborator, colleague, and mentor, Prof. Hodges will be dearly missed.
David Hodges, former dean of engineering and pioneer in integrated circuit design, dies at 85
Constance Chang-Hasnain wins 2022 Welker Award
EE alumna and EECS Prof. Emerita Constance Chang-Hasnain (Ph.D. '87) has won the 2022 Welker Award at Compound Semiconductor Week (CSW). She was cited “For pioneering contributions to VCSEL photonics, nano-photonics and high contrast metastructures for optical communications and optical sensing.” Vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers, or VCSELs, are used in many consumer electronics, including 3D smartphone sensors and cars. Established in 1976 in honor of Heinrich Welker, the pioneer of III-V compound semiconductors, the Welker Award is given to those who have made outstanding contributions to the field of III-V compound semiconductors. Prof. Chang-Hasnain currently serves as Chairperson and founder of Berxel Photonics Co. Ltd. She is an NAI Fellow, an IEEE Fellow, and an NAE member. In 2021, she was elected president of Optica (formerly known as the Optical Society of America).
CSW-2022 Awards
Paul Debevec to receive Emmy for Lifetime Achievement
EECS alumnus Paul Debevec (Ph.D. ‘96, advisor: Jitendra Malik) will receive the Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award at the Television Academy’s 74th Engineering, Science & Technology Emmy Awards. The award recognizes Debevec for his pioneering work on high dynamic range imaging, image-based lighting, and photogrammetry–techniques that are now standard within the VFX industry for computer-rendered images and graphics. Debevec is also recognized for his work with LED lighting, which “further laid the groundwork” for its use in virtual production, and “has seen a rapid growth as a tool for lighting actors on virtual stages," according to the Television Academy. Debevec is currently the director of research, creative algorithms, and technology at Netflix, and is an adjunct research professor at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies. He received ACM SIGGRAPH's first Significant New Researcher Award in 2001, a Scientific and Engineering Academy Award in 2010, and the SMPTE Progress Medal in 2017. Debevec co-authored the 2005 book, "High Dynamic Range Imaging," chaired the SIGGRAPH 2007 Computer Animation Festival, served as Vice President of ACM SIGGRAPH, as well as co-chair of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Sci-Tech Council.
Computer Graphics Innovator Paul Debevec to Receive Emmy for Lifetime Achievement
Winners of 74th Engineering, Science & Technology Emmys Announced
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Home News North Korea Fires Over 20 Missiles, and South Korea Retaliates
North Korea Fires Over 20 Missiles, and South Korea Retaliates
On Wednesday, North Korea launched more than 20 missiles, one of which landed close to South Korean waters in what President Yoon Sukyeol referred to as a “virtual territorial aggression.” South Korea responded by firing back.
Experts claimed that it was also a component of North Korea’s “aggressive and threatening” response to a massive joint air exercise between the United States and South Korea.
Residents of Ulleungdo were urged to hide in bunkers after a short-range ballistic missile crossed the Northern Limit Line, which serves as the de facto maritime border.
At the end of the Korean War in 1953, the South Korean military claimed that a North Korean missile had landed so to South Korean waters for “the first time since the peninsula was partitioned.”
In a statement, the Blue House stated, “President Yoon today pointed out that North Korea’s provocation is effective territorial aggression with missiles.”
The army described the incident as “extremely rare and unbearable” after one of the missiles landed in waters 35 miles (57 kilometers) east of the mainland.
According to the South Korean military, North Korea launched 23 missiles, including six surface-to-air missiles and seven short-range ballistic missiles.
During an unfortunate diplomatic match, North Korea also fired artillery into a maritime “buffer zone” established in 2018 to ease tensions between the two countries.
The massive launch’s release, according to Asan Policy Research Institute researcher Ko Myung-Hyun, was “a provocation against South Korea.”
He continued, “I wouldn’t be surprised if they lead to nuclear tests.”
In contrast, South Korea announced that it had fired three air-to-surface missiles into the sea in the direction of the north of the maritime demarcation line that separates the two nations.
“Swift and severe action to ensure that North Korea’s provocations pay a clear price” was the directive given by President Yoon when he convened the National Security Council.
“Ensure the safety of passengers on routes to the United States and Japan,” South Korea has instructed local airlines to divert flights to the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan.
Russia urged restraint, but European Council President Charles Michel described North Korea’s “aggressive and irresponsible behavior” as “outrageous.”
In retaliation, South Korea labels North Korea’s missile launch “territorial aggression”.
In response to North Korea’s missile launch, South Korea has announced that it has conducted an air-to-ground missile test.
According to Kang Shin-Chul, “North Korea’s missile launch is extremely unusual and unacceptable because it approached South Korea’s territorial waters south of the Northern Limit Line for the first time. JCS’s Director of Operations told the media.
The JCS stated in a statement that missile launches close to South Korean territorial waters were extremely uncommon and unacceptable.
The JCS claims that Ulleungdo received an air raid warning that was broadcast on national television and instructed residents to “evacuate to the nearest underground shelter.”
According to the Ministry of Transportation of South Korea, several sea-based air routes off the east coast of the Korean peninsula have been shut down.
Initially, the JCS stated that it had detected three short-range ballistic missile launches, but it later stated that North Korea had launched “at least 10 missiles of various types to the east and west” today.
Japan also confirmed North Korea’s launch of missiles, and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters he would convene a “National Security Council” “as soon as possible.”
Storm warning:
The most recent launch by Pyongyang comes as Seoul and Washington hold “Storm Watcher,” the largest joint aviation exercise in history, in which hundreds of warplanes from both sides participated.
A Wednesday report in the state media said that Park Jong Chong, a senior official in North Korea, described the drill as aggressive and provocative.
According to Park, the exercise’s name is a nod to Operation Desert Storm, the US-led military campaign in Iraq that followed Kuwait’s invasion in 1990 and 1991.
koreamissile north koreanorth koreanorth korea ballistic missilenorth korea fires ballistic missilesnorth korea fires missilenorth korea fires missile over japannorth korea fires missilesnorth korea japan missilenorth korea launchnorth korea missilenorth korea missile japannorth korea missile japan alertnorth korea missile launchnorth korea missile testnorth korea missile testsnorth korea missilesnorth korea newssouth korea
Minister of State Visiting Bangladesh Hopes for Early Resolution of Teesta Water Problem
Pakistan Long March Suspended Until Imran Khan Recovers; Protest to Continue
Minister of State Visiting Bangladesh Hopes for Early...
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U.S. DOE Selects Lockheed Martin to Advance Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion Utility Power Plans
The U.S. Department of Energy recently selected Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT) to receive two grants totaling $1 million to advance the technology commercialization of Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC). The grants support the company’s effort to produce an economically viable, utility-scale renewable energy source leveraging the temperature difference of the ocean’s warm surface water and colder water below.
Under the first grant, Lockheed Martin will develop a tool to estimate the amount of energy that can be extracted from the ocean’s thermal layers. The geographic information system-based dataset and software tool will be used to identify regions of the world viable for OTEC and seawater-based air conditioning (SWAC). The resulting resource mapping will provide critical information to policy makers, the energy industry and the public about regional OTEC and SWAC feasibility.
SWAC, which uses cold seawater located near coastlines to supply air-conditioner coolant, has the potential to significantly reduce electric utility loads during high summer demand periods and is a proven technology currently in use in Hawaii, Bora Bora, Stockholm and Ottawa.
Under the second grant, Lockheed Martin will develop estimates of performance and life-cycle costs associated with utility-scale OTEC systems to demonstrate the economic feasibility of such projects. The resulting data will provide justification for pursuing commercialization of OTEC and generate investment interest in this stable, renewable energy source.
"The Department of Energy awards provide Lockheed Martin the opportunity to further demonstrate the capability of OTEC," said Jeffrey Napoliello, vice president of Lockheed Martin’s New Ventures line of business. "As a self-sustaining energy source, with no supplemental power required, OTEC will help our nation and our military achieve their renewable energy goals."
The Department of Energy grants follow an $8.12 million Department of Defense award to Lockheed Martin in September 2009. That contract from the U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Command calls for development of critical OTEC system components and further matures its design for an OTEC pilot plant, an incremental step in developing large-scale utility plants. In 2008, Lockheed Martin received a $1.2 million Department of Energy contract to demonstrate how special cold water piping could be fabricated to carry the large volumes of seawater required to produce commercial power.
Lockheed Martin’s experience with OTEC technology dates back to the 1970s when the company built "Mini-OTEC." This early prototype remains the world’s only floating OTEC system to generate power in excess of what is required for self-sustainment. Since that time, Lockheed Martin has continued to mature and validate the critical technologies necessary for an OTEC system that could generate a utility-scale power supply.
In addition to its work in OTEC, Lockheed Martin is working with its customers to address the nation’s energy and climate challenges in the areas of next-generation alternative energy, energy efficiency, and storage and climate monitoring.
Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a global security company that employs about 140,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. The Corporation reported 2009 sales of $45.2 billion.
www.lockheedmartin.com
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We Energies, Foxconn Partner on Clean Energy Project in Wisconsin
March 15, 2023 | Foxconn
We Energies, a Wisconsin-based utility company of WEC Energy Group, and Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn) announced that this spring the companies will submit for approval with the Village of Mount Pleasant Board of Trustees and Racine County Board of Supervisors a project to install solar panels at Foxconn’s Science and Technology Park in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin.
“In partnership and collaboration with We Energies, Foxconn is excited to launch one of the largest nonresidential solar projects in Racine County,” said Foxconn Technology Group. “Foxconn is committed to integrating green and sustainable practices throughout our operations to mitigate the impacts of climate change, thereby further achieving our responsibility of protecting the environment. As Foxconn’s operations in Wisconsin expand in response to market demand, the presence of renewable energy resources within the park demonstrates our commitment to environmental stewardship across the manufacturing supply chain to our customers and the community.”
Foxconn has invested over $1 billion in Wisconsin and today employs over 1,000 employees who manufacture data servers and motherboards for tier-1 customers. These customers look to suppliers such as Foxconn to use renewable sources of energy throughout the manufacturing process when determining additional business growth.
Under the contract, We Energies will install, own, and maintain approximately 2,000 solar panels on the Foxconn campus in Mount Pleasant. The one-megawatt project is capable of producing enough energy to power 300 homes. The unique project design utilizes a mix of single-axis tracking and fixed-tilt panels to maximize the renewable energy production capability.
“We’re pleased to bring more clean energy to Wisconsin through this partnership with Foxconn,” said Gale Klappa, executive chairman — WEC Energy Group. “As Foxconn expands its operations, this project will deliver affordable, reliable and clean energy for years to come.”
The annual energy production expected from this solar project is estimated to offset more than 1,200 metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, equivalent to taking 260 cars off the roads or planting 20,000 trees. During the 30-year life of the system and the agreement between We Energies and Foxconn, the benefits are expected to grow to well over 33,000 metric tons of CO2 removed, 7,200 cars off the road, or 560,000 trees planted.
What Is an Atomic Clock?
06/20/2019 | NASA
Developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, the Deep Space Atomic Clock is a serious upgrade to the satellite-based atomic clocks that, for example, enable the GPS on your phone.
Enabling Revolutionary Nondestructive Inspection Capability
06/17/2019 | DARPA
X-rays and gamma rays have a wide range of applications including scanning suspicious maritime shipping containers for illicit materials, industrial inspection of materials and processes, and medical diagnostic and therapeutic procedures.
Graphene Device Could Substantially Increase the Energy Efficiency of Fossil Fuel-powered Cars
06/02/2016 | University of Manchester
A graphene-based electrical nano-device has been created which could substantially increase the energy efficiency of fossil fuel-powered cars.
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Step back in time to see what area movie theaters were presenting in April 1957. Film titles are linked to the Internet Movie Database.
Fans of Rock Hudson and Yul Brynner had much to enjoy at the Redford. April started with a held-over run of Giant, starring Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor and James Dean. Next up was Brynner in his Oscar-winning Best Actor performance in the The King and I (also at the Redford in October 1956). Then came Hudson's latest movie, the drama Battle Hymn, with Martha Hyer. Brynner later co-starred with the other lead acting Oscar winner of 1956—Ingrid Bergman in Anastasia.
Also earning long runs at the Redford were the western The Big Land (Alan Ladd and Virginia Mayo) and The Girl Can't Help It, with Jayne Mansfield, Tom Ewell and Julie London (along with music from Fats Domino, Little Richard, Gene Vincent and The Platters). Children enjoyed the Easter Fun Show, which included Tarzan's Hidden Jungle (1955) and five Bugs Bunny cartoons. Kids also flocked to a Saturday matinee of The Bandit of Sherwood Forest (1946) and Fangs of the Arctic (1953, with Chinook the Wonder Dog).
In Ann Arbor, the Butterfield Theatres movie chain of the Michigan, State and recently opened Campus promoted itself with advertising like "A Shower of Hits as Bright and Fresh as Spring Itself" and "Go Modern...Go Movie! See a New 1957 Movie at Its Best in a Motion Picture Theatre!"
The Michigan had films for both ladies (Designing Woman, with Gregory Peck and Lauren Bacall) and gentlemen (Men in War, starring Robert Ryan and Aldo Ray). Children enjoyed a re-release of Walt Disney's Cinderella (1950), which opened a few days after a TV version of the same story with Julie Andrews. The 30th anniversary of Charles Lindbergh's famous Atlantic flight was marked by The Spirit of St. Louis, which starred Jame Stewart and was directed by Billy Wilder.
Art film in the Detroit area included the Detroit premiere at the Surf and Coronet of Gina Lollobrigida in Woman of Rome (1955). The World and Studio showed Akira Kurosawa's The Magnificent Seven (1954, now called The Seven Samurai). At the Krim, Jose Ferrer starred in The Great Man. Also on the bill were the 1956 Academy Award-nominated cartoons Magoo's Puddle Jumper (the winner), Gerald McBoing! Boing! on Planet Moo and The Jaywalker. The Temple Art Cinema hosted the midwest premiere of Golden Demon (1953). The Campus in Ann Arbor showed Diabolique (1955).
The Ten Commandments finished its fifth month at the Madison in Detroit with extra Easter Week showings at 10 a.m. to go with the daily 2:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. screenings.
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Agile WAN
New ISP Network Boosts Philippine Economy
The Philippines offers a variety of economically significant local specialties, such as mangoes from Luzon Island, Barong Tagalog shirts, wood carvings from the Banaue Rice Terraces, and a diversity of bags and carpets made from Manila hemp — to name a few.
Tourist sales locally are limited, but e-commerce boosts revenues for Philippine vendors. Network bandwidth is essential, and reliable, fast, and affordable network services are a must.
In addition to e-commerce, new economic and business models are constantly emerging on digital platforms, such as online gaming, HD video, and social media. In addition, the Philippines has become the “call center capital” of the world.
Thus, network development is vital to the advancement of the national digital economy of the Philippines.
Converge ICT (Converge) is a pure fiber Internet service provider. It is a leading player in the all-optical broadband access industry, with licenses for fixed networks, fiber optics, cable TV, enterprise private lines, fixed broadband, and wireless broadband services. Driven by the demand for high-speed network services, the company is dedicated to deploying a modern and scalable network infrastructure.
Converge has deployed an extensive fiber optic network, covering Central Luzon, the national Capital Region, and South Luzon. It plans to provide affordable, high-quality fiber Internet services to the largest audience possible.
Converge started as a cable TV operator. Its live network was a Hybrid Fiber-Coaxial network and was the base for the growth of its Fiber-To-The-Home (FTTH) service. With continuous innovations, bandwidth-hungry services like 4K and 3D video began to proliferate, which drove the need for more bandwidth.
To fulfill its mission to ensure that the country can cope with these digital demands, the company decided to roll out the Philippines’ first pure end-to-end fiber network. Since the initial roll-out, Converge has provided its clientele with maximum Internet connectivity.
Today, Converge is expanding its Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) service market in Metro Manila by providing customers with reliable, high-quality, and high-speed optical network services. To this end, Converge has specified a reliable and elastic network that will deliver high input-output ratios for contemporary data center requirements. This network must also improve support for the current enterprise private line and home broadband access services and support future services, such as FTTH, enterprise data, data center, cloud, and Smart City services throughout the country.
“Early on, we felt we needed a network that was reliable, scalable, cost-effective, and allowed us to easily implement new products and services,” said Jesus Romero, Converge’s Chief Operating Officer. “And we are very pleased that we were able to, in fact, get that with Huawei.”
Huawei has built a professional network of consulting, planning, construction, and maintenance teams. Since 2006, Huawei’s global consultants have provided consulting services for over 120 operators in more than 70 countries or regions to help operators resolve problems and improve competitiveness.
With a full understanding of Converge’s current network situation and future plans, Huawei helped them sort out and explore potential high-value customers and develop solutions for current and future network construction and services.
Agile WAN Solutions Meet Large Bandwidth and Network Evolution Requirements
Huawei proposed its Agile WAN Solution to Converge, which will use NE40E universal service routers to build a Fixed-Mobile Convergence (FMC) 2.0 network. The network helps Converge build an intelligent, ultra-broadband, and simplified network that meets service development and network evolution needs.
IP + optical synergy affords one-click service deployment. The IP + optical synergy solution applies cross-layer network resource integration and automatic cross-domain topology discovery, simplifies O&M, and achieves end-to-end service deployment in minutes.
The 2 Tbit/s large-capacity line cards meet large bandwidth service requirements. Built on a 2T platform, the NE40E series energy-efficient routers support smooth capacity expansion to 2 Tbit/s per slot, which allows for large-capacity service support and meets future increased bandwidth requirements.
Hierarchical Quality of Service (HQoS) meets user service experience requirements and is applied in an end-to-end manner. It allows fine-grained service scheduling by differentiating users and services and provides large buffers, low latency, and high reliability to ensure superior service quality user experience.
Broadband remote server access in multiple scenarios and hot-standby technology ensure non-stop services. Users can access the network in Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet (PPPoE), Internet Protocol over Ethernet (IPoE), dial-up, private line, wired, or wireless modes. Five authentication modes are supported, affording unified user access for the entire network. And hot-standby technology allows user information to be backed up between active and standby devices with rapid and covert traffic switching.
Helping Converge Become a Top FTTH Provider
From the Dense Wavelength-Division Multiplexing (DWDM) backbone and Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) core, to the MAN, and to the access network, Converge’s network is largely built by Huawei.
The renewed Converge network is more reliable and stable, achieving lower latency, higher speeds, and easier O&M — all of which help Converge quickly launch new products and services. Most important, the new network will help Converge better meet customer requirements and automatically distribute services suited for market needs. The network is beneficial for e-commerce companies that sell Philippine specialties; Internet enterprises providing online live streaming and HD video services; innovative enterprises that engage in local social media or sharing platforms; and citizens — all helping to vigorously promote a robust digital economy. In partnership with Huawei, Converge has enhanced its reputation for providing FTTH services that create superior customer experiences.
“Huawei has been responsive in terms of support,” Jesus Romero, Chief Operating Officer of Converge, said. “In terms of pricing, they remain competitive, and they help us a lot with strategy planning, what to do next, and where to go — which is one key area where we feel we should continue and expand cooperation.”
“Early on we felt we needed a network that was reliable, scalable, cost-effective, and allowed us to easily implement new products and services. And we are very pleased that we were able to, in fact, get that with Huawei.”
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/8676
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Awards/Grants
Programme lectures
Opening lecture
Robert Samuel Houk was born in New Castle Pennsylvania and attended Shenango Area High School. He received the B. S. in Secondary Education from Slippery Rock State College in 1974 and the Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from Iowa State University in 1980. His dissertation described the first results from coupling an analytical ICP to a mass spectrometer. He was a postdoctoral associate at the Ames Laboratory USDOE and then joined the faculty in the Chemistry Dpeartment at ISU in 1981.
He is presently Professor of Chemistry and an Associate of the Ames Laboratory. His research is in analytical atomic spectrometry, especially ICP-MS, and also in laser ablation electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Houk has served on various editorial boards, e.g., JAAS and Spectrochimica Acta Part B. He has won several awards including the ACS Awards for Chemical Instrumentation (1993) and Spectrochemical Analysis (2012).
Gary Hieftje
Gary M. Hieftje is Distinguished Professor and Mann Chair of Chemistry at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. His research interests include the investigation of basic mechanisms in atomic emission, absorption, fluorescence and mass spectrometric analysis, and the development of instrumentation and techniques for atomic, molecular, and biomolecular methods of analysis.
He has won numerous awards in the fields of analytical chemistry, chemical instrumentation, and spectroscopy, has held major offices in several scientific societies, has delivered many named lectures, and has served on the editorial boards of many major journals. He is the author of over 600 publications, 13 books, 20 chapters, and 21 patents. To date, 70 students have received doctorates under his direction; many others have received M.S. degrees, and scores of undergraduates and visiting scientists have performed research in his laboratories.
Indiana University, Indiana, USA
Norbert Jakubowski
Norbert Jakubowski graduated at the University in Essen/Duisburg and obtained his doctorate (Dr. rer. nat.) in 1991 from the University of Stuttgart/Hohenheim. In 1981 he started his career in the Institute for Analytical Sciences (ISAS) in Dortmund and became the head of the division 1.1 (Inorganic Trace Analysis) of the Federal Institute of Materials Research and Testing in Berlin in 1999. His research is focused on analytical method development for material and life science applications.
(Plenary lecture sponsored by Thermo Fisher)
BAM-Berlin, DE THE QUANTITATIVE ELEMENTAL MICROSCOPE: FOR WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR?
Gunda Köllensperger
Universität Wien, AT Metalomics and metabolomics
Björn Meermann
Dr. Björn Meermann is a research associate in the group of apl. Prof. Thomas Ternes within the Department of Aquatic Chemistry at the Federal Institute of Hydrology (BfG) in Koblenz, Germany since 2012, as well as a “Habilitand” in association with the University of Koblenz-Landau since 2014.
He received his Dr. rer. nat. degree in Analytical Chemistry in 2009 from the University of Münster working on technical aspects of hyphenated techniques for speciation analysis of environmentally relevant chemical elements in the group of Prof. Uwe Karst.
Afterwards, he worked for almost two years as a Post-Doctoral researcher at Ghent University (Belgium) in the group of Prof. Frank Vanhaecke on the topic of speciation analysis of halogen-based drug metabolites by means of HPLC/ICP-MS and on-line isotope dilution.
His current research interests are focused on the topic of nanoparticle analysis by means of AF4/ICP-SFMS in combination with on-line isotope dilution and stable isotope tracers, as well as method development for speciation analysis of chemical elemental species in surface waters by means of HPLC/ICP-MS and CE/ICP-SFMS.
Federal Institute of Hydrology, Department G2 - Aquatic Chemistry, Koblenz, DE ICP-MS - a powerful and versatile tool in “Nanolytics”
Senior Scientist: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (July 1982 – current) 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720 ([email protected])
Founder and President: Applied Spectra, Inc (August 2004 – current) 46665 Fremont Blvd, Fremont, CA 94598 ([email protected]
BS – Chemistry: University of Florida, Gainesville (1976-1978)
PhD – Chemistry, Laser Spectroscopy: Indiana University, Bloomington (1978 to 1981)
In 1982, Russo established the laser spectroscopy group at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; he continues to be the scientific director of this group. The research addresses laser ablation (LA) fundamental physics with concurrent applied research establishing this technology for real-time spectrochemical analysis. In addition to ICP detection, Russo the research studies light emission from the surface plasma induced at the ablation site. Light collection and spectral analysis are the basis of LIBS (Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy). Most recently, his group demonstrated and patented the use of laser plasmas for real-time measurement of isotopes. The new technology named LAMIS (Laser Ablation Molecular Isotopic Spectroscopy) won 2012 R&D100 and 2013 Strock Awards. The LAMIS technology is a real-time atmospheric pressure method to measure isotope abundance ratios. The technology has advanced to show precision of isotope abundance ratios close to that measured with laboratory based mass spectrometers.
Other research by Russo at Berkeley includes co-inventor of a nanowire laser that led to a Science article and patent. He also is co-inventor of a patented process for nano-texturing (ITEX process) thin-films, lead- inventor of the patented ion-assisted pulsed laser deposition (IBAD process) which produced a world record critical current for HTSC (High Temperature Superconductor) materials. Russo has over 320 Scientific Publications, over 270 Invited Lectures, 10 Book Chapters and 27 Patents. Fourteen students have received their PhD degree under Russo’s direction at the University of California, Berkeley. Over 25 international students have performed part of their PhD research in his Berkeley Laboratory. Several scientific visitors and faculty sabbatical members are hosted in his research group every year.
Applied Spectra, Inc
Russo also is founder and president of Applied Spectra, Inc. (ASI). The company is a world leader for analytical spectroscopic instruments addressing commercial applications of laser ablation based on LIBS and ICP analysis. He has grown the company to include core expertise is research, development and manufacture of laser ablation instrumentation and analytical measurement services. With Russo’s leadership, Applied Spectra has transitioned Berkeley research into state-of-the-art analytical instruments that are sold worldwide. ASI instruments are utilized in national and international markets, including academia, national laboratories, industry, energy, environmental and security applications.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, US LIBS, LAMIS & LA
Jacob Shelley
Jacob Shelley is currently the Alan Paul Schulz Career Development Chair at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, NY. His current research is in the development of new tools for mass spectrometry, which enable rapid detection/identification of analytes in complex matrices. He has authored 35 journal articles, 3 US patents/patent applications, a book chapter, and has given more than 30 invited presentations at national and international venues.
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 228 Cogswell Laboratory, Troy, NY, US Ambient desorption / cold plasma sources
Joanna Szpunar
Joanna Szpunar graduated from the Warsaw University of Technology in 1986 and obtained her Ph.D (1992) and D.Sc. (habilitation) (2000) from at the University of Warsaw. Since 1997 she works at the National Research Council of France (CNRS). In 2007 she obtained the title of professor of chemistry (Poland). Her research interests concern bioinorganic speciation analysis and hyphenated techniques for metallomics. She was the chairperson of the Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry in 2013.
Research Council of France (CNRS), Pau, FR Speciation
Frank Vanhaecke
Frank Vanhaecke is Senior Full Professor at the Department of Analytical Chemistry of Ghent University (Belgium), where he leads the ‘Atomic & Mass Spectrometry – A&MS’ research group. His research group focuses on the determination, speciation and isotopic analysis of (trace) elements using ICP-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The A&MS groups studies fundamentally-oriented aspects of the technique and develops methods for solving challenging scientific problems in an interdisciplinary context.
University of Ghent, BE Isotope ratio perspectives
Dr. Lu Yang is a research officer at National Research Council of Canada (NRC, Ottawa, Canada), leading research in applications of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) and MC-ICP-MS. Her research focuses on the development of the most accurate and precise methodologies for the determination, speciation and isotopic analysis of trace elements using ICP-MS and MC-ICP-MS. The isotopic measurements for mercury, germanium and indium from her lab have been adopted by IUPAC as the best available isotopic composition measurements in the 2011 Table, and the 2011 atomic weights of mercury and germanium are based on her results. Dr. Yang has published over 100 research papers.
Dr. Yang is a member of the IUPAC Subcommittee on Stable Isotope Reference Material Assessment under the Inorganic Division, and the Commission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights. She is a NRC’s representative at the Inorganic Analysis Working Group of CCQM (Consultative Committee for Amount of Substance) of the BIPM (International Bureau of Weights and Measures). She is an Editorial Board member of JAAS and Spectroscopy. She is a member of RSC and serves as the director of Ottawa Valley for the Canadian Society for Analytical Sciences and Spectroscopy.
NRC Canada, CA Metrological principles in plasma spectrochemistry
Sylvain Berail
Sylvain Bérail is currently engineer at the French National research center (CNRS). He’s working in the Pluridisciplinary Insitute of Research on Environment and Material (IPREM-LCABIE) at the University of Pau. He started his career working for a private company (Evans Analytical Group) as a GD-MS operator and then as ICP department manager. In 2008 he joined the IPREM institute where he is in charge of the MC-ICP-MS facilities. In addition, he was invited in 2014 as a guest researcher in the NIST (National Institute of Standard and Technology) at the HML (Hollings Marine Laboratory, Charleston SC, USA) to promote Hg isotopic analysis for environmental studies.
His scientific interests include the use of non-traditional stable isotopes (Hg,Pb,Sr,…) as a tool for environmental research and food authenticity. This include the development of hyphenations between MC-ICP-MS and specific introduction systems (Laser, chromatography,...) to open new fields of applications for isotopic analysis.
LAB-Link
University of Pau, FR Hyphenated MC ICP-MS methods for environmental research
Annemie Bogaerts
Annemie Bogaerts obtained her Ph.D. degree in chemistry, on “Modeling of a glow discharge plasma” in 1996, from the University of Antwerp in Belgium. She became a Professor of Physical Chemistry in 2003, at the same university, and is head of the interdisciplinary reseach group PLASMANT. Her current research activities include the numerical modeling of various types of plasmas, as well as modeling plasma-surface interactions, for analytical chemistry, materials science, environmental and medical applications, as well as experiments for environmental and medical applications.
University of Antwerp, BE Plasma fundamentals
Bernd Bodenmiller
Bernd Bodenmiller Institute of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, Switzerland Bernd Bodenmiller (1979) studied biochemistry at the University of Bayreuth and ETH Zürich and obtained his PhD for his work on system-wide signaling network analysis in the laboratory of Ruedi Aebersold at ETH Zürich. For his postdoctoral training, he joined the laboratory of Garry P. Nolan at Stanford University. There he developed methods for the high throughput analysis of signaling network states by mass cytometry, a technology that allows quantifying up to 100 proteins and signaling molecules at the single cell level.
In 2012, he became group leader and in 2013 SNF/ERC assistant professor at the Institute of Molecular Life Sciences at the University of Zürich. Currently his group is developing methods for highly multiplexed imaging by mass cytometry to unravel how trans-cellular signaling network interactions in the tumor microenvironment drive cancer development and ultimately might be exploited for therapeutic targeting.
University of Zurich, CH Imaging Mass Cytometry
George Chan
George Chan is currently a Project Chemist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Prior to joining LBNL in 2012, he was an Assistant Scientist on the research faculty in the Department of Chemistry at Indiana University. He received a Ph.D. degree in Analytical Chemistry under the mentorship of Prof. Gary Hieftje at Indiana University in 2007.
He has over 50 scientific publications and holds one patent. His research interests lie in analytical chemical measurement and instrumentation, with emphasis on the use, characterization and understanding the basic fundamental processes, and further development and improvement of various plasma-based spectroscopies in modern multidisciplinary research.
Press release: Spectroscopy website.
Olivier Donard
Olivier F.X. Donard is a research scientist at the French CNRS.
His expertise is directly related with the development of instrumentation coupled mainly to ICP/MS to study the fate and effect of trace elements in the different compartments of the environment.
He is currently the director of the “Center of Mass Spctrometry for Reactivity and Speciation Sciences” at the IPREM in Pau (France).
University of Pau, FR Environmental challenges unravelled by hyphenated systems using ICP as a ionization sources for quadrupole, high resolution and Multicollector MS.
Carsten Engelhard
Carsten Engelhard is currently an assistant professor for analytical chemistry at the University of Siegen, Germany. He received his Dr. rer. nat. degree from Prof. Karl Cammann and Dr. Wolfgang Buscher and performed postdoctoral research with Prof. Gary Hieftje. Carsten is a member of the Editorial board of JAAS. His research interests revolve around analytical chemistry with a special focus on ultra trace elemental and molecular analysis, direct surface analysis, single nanoparticle detection, plasma sciences, and instrumentation. Examples of his research include a) spectroscopic studies of novel plasma sources for use in e.g. ambient desorption/ionization, b) application of plasma-based ambient desorption/ionization sources for direct bioanalysis, and c) development of novel ICP-MS methods for nanomaterials characterization.
University of Siegen, DE Nanoanalysis
After receiving his PhD in 1995 at University of Essen, Germany in Environmental Analytical Chemistry Jörg went to Canada supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. Since 1997 he worked in Scotland at the University of Aberdeen, where he founded TESLA (Trace Element Speciation Laboratory). His work on the analysis of arsenic speciation was influential for the introduction of a maximum contaminant level in rice by the WHO and the EU in 2015. At present, he has published more than 200 peer-reviewed papers in more than 70 journals which gained more than 10,000 citations. He is on the JAAS Editorial Board and recently he has received the European Award for Plasma Spectrochemistry 2015 and the RSC Interdisciplinary Prize 2016.
University of Aberdeen, UK Environmental applications
Alex Gundlach-Graham
Alexander Gundlach-Graham earned his Ph.D. in 2013 from Indiana University for the development and characterization of distance-of-flight mass spectrometry (DOFMS). Following Indiana University, Alex received a Marie-Curie Fellowship to complete postdoctoral research in the lab of Prof. Detlef Günther at ETH Zurich. Alex’s current research focuses on ICP-time-of-flight mass spectrometry and its application for high-resolution laser-ablation ICPMS imaging and nanoparticle detection and sizing.
ETH Zürich, CH Laser ablation ICP-TOFMS
Heidi Goenaga-Infante
Heidi Goenaga-Infante is Principal Scientist and Team Lead er of the Inorganic Analysis team within the Science and Innovation Division at LGC. Her key expertise lies in trace element speciation analysis, metallomics research, combi ned use of elemental and molecular mass spectrometry, size-based element fractionation and the characterisation of “speciated” reference materials. Heidi is the UK representative at the Inorganic Analysis Working Group of the international Consultative Committee for Metrology in Chemistry (CCQM). She is the leading author of over 70 scientific peer reviewed scientific papers.
LGC Limited, Teddington, UK Speciation strategies for Cr in high carbon matrices using hyphenated QQQ-ICP-MS: Towards the production of new ‚speciated’ reference materials.
Walter Gössler
His research focuses on the development and improvement of analytical methods with emphasis on inorganic analysis. The quantification of trace elements and the identification of trace element species are key competences. The developed methods are then applied to answer questions and solve problems related to human health and the environment. Biotransformation of arsenic compounds plays a central role in my research.
University of Graz, AT Speciation
Bodo Hattendorf
Bodo Hattendorf is Senior Researcher in Detlef Günther’s Group of Trace-Element- and Microanalysis at ETH Zürich, where he also had earned his PhD in 2002. Research interests are fundamental and applied studies concerning for example spectral and non-spectral interferences in (LA-)ICPMS, improving instrumentation in elemental and isotope mass spectrometry techniques with respect to sensitivity, selectivity and reliability and ultimately their application to improve analyses of real world samples.
ETH Zürich, CH Taming Laser-Generated Ions for Their Use in Mass Spectrometry
Johanna Irrgeher
Dr. Johanna Irrgeher is currently postdoctoral researcher in the field of analytical chemistry at the Helmholtz Centre for Materials and Coastal Research Geesthacht in Germany with her research focus set on analytical method development for elemental and isotopic analysis in the field of analytical ecogeochemistry dealing with aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.
Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthach, DE Isotope as tracers in water catchments
Maria Montes-Bayon
Maria Montes-Bayón holds a permanent position as Associate Professor in the Analytical Chemistry Area of the Department of Physical and Analytical Chemistry at the University of Oviedo since April 2008. She did her Master Thesis at the University de Plymouth (UK) and got her PhD in 1999 in Analytical Chemistry within the University of Oviedo supervised by J. I. Garcia Alonso and A. Sanz Medel. In 2000, she joined the research group of Prof. Joseph A. Caruso in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio (USA) as Postdoctoral Fulbright Fellow until July 2002.
In August of the same year she got back to the University of Oviedo as Research Scientist (Ramón y Cajal) in the Analytical Spectrometry Group until 2007. In 2008 she obtained the position of Associate Professor (accreditation as Full Professor, 2014). She is co-author of more than 100 original research publications and reviews, as well as several book chapters. She participates in different research projects (national and regional) through which the research in funded.
University of Oviedo, Spain ICP-MS based strategies to monitor the fate of nanostructured drugs in cell models
Jorge Pisonero
Dr. Jorge Pisonero is an Associate Professor of Physics (since 2012) at University of Oviedo (Spain), from which he obtained his PhD degree (November 2004) working on glow discharge spectroscopy at Prof. Sanz-Medel's research group. After his PhD, he was awarded a 2-year Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship for a postdoctoral stay at ETH (Switzerland) to work on laser ablation-based techniques at Prof. Günther's research group. Afterwards, Jorge obtained the outstanding “Ramon and Cajal” research contract and went back to University of Oviedo, where in collaboration with Dr. Nerea Bordel established the Laser and Plasma Spectroscopy Research Group
His current research interests are focused on fundamentals and applications of atmospheric and low pressure GD spectroscopy, LIBS and LA-ICP-MS. Moreover, Jorge is co-author of more than 60 scientific articles and several book chapters.
Link to webpage
University of Oviedo, ES solid analysis by GD-MS
Steven Ray
Steven Ray, Ph.D. is currently the Winkler Assistant Professor of Chemistry in the Department of Chemistry, State University of New York at Buffalo. Steve received his Ph.D. from Indiana University under the direction of Prof. Gary Hieftje, then worked as the Senior Mass Spectrometrist for IU before taking a research faculty position in the Laboratory for Spectrochemistry at IU, and finally moving to UB in 2015. Dr. Ray has published more than 80 manuscripts and book chapters, and holds 8 patents.
He serves on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, and the advisory boards of Applied Spectroscopy, Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, Spectrochimica Acta, Part B, and Spectroscopy magazine. Dr. Ray was the recipient of the 2016 Young Plasma Spectrochemist Award and 2014 SAS Lester Strock Medal, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. His research interests involve novel aspects of analytical instrumentation, including distance-of-flight mass spectrometry, atomic spectroscopy, ambient mass spectrometry, plasma spectrochemistry, and metallomics methodologies.
Winkler Assistant Professor of Chemistry Department of Chemistry
State University of New York at Buffalo
410 Natural Sciences Complex
Buffalo, NY, 14260 Distance of flight mass spectrometry
Mark Rehkämper
Mark Rehkämper Professor of Isotope Geochemistry, Department of Earth Science & Engineering, Imperial College London
Mark is an isotope geochemist with particular interest in the development and application of novel techniques for trace metal isotope analyses. He is originally a chemist by training, with undergraduate studies at the Universities of Marburg and Heidelberg. His career in geochemistry commenced with a PhD project at the Max-Planck-Institute for Chemistry in Mainz.
This was followed by stints at the Universities of Michigan and Münster, and the ETH Zurich. He joined Imperial College London in 2005 and established the department’s MAGIC Research Centre (MAss spectrometry and isotope Geochemistry at IC London), which now encompasses a highly diverse team of 30 researchers.
Imperial College London, UK Isotope geochemistry
Frank Von der Kammer
Dr. Frank von der Kammer completed his PhD in 2005 with highest honour at Hamburg University of Technology, in the Department of Environmental Science and Technology. He is currently senior scientist and lecturer, the Head of Nanogeosciences Division and vice Head of the Department for Environmental Geosciences at the University of Vienna. In the past, Frank has acted as a visiting Professor at the University of Pau and at the University of Aix-Marseille, France. He is member of the editorial board of the RSC journal Environmental Science: Nano, supports the OECD Working Party of Manufactured Nanomaterials and CEN/ISO in standardizing analytical methods for nanoparticles. He has published more than 70 papers on Environmental Colloid Chemistry, Nanoparticle Behaviour, Characterization and Application and the general Environmental Chemistry.
Frank’s research interests include environmental colloids, their dynamic behaviour and interaction with trace elements, natural nano-scale processes, nanoparticle characterization in the environment, food and cosmetics, engineered nanoparticles in the environment and the application of field flow fractionation and (sp) ICP-MS to characterize nanoparticles in complex samples.
University Vienna, AT Nanogeosciences
Johannes Van Elteren
Johannes van Elteren has been working in several research institutions and has made contributions to various analytical disciplines such as chemical speciation, radiochemistry and microanalysis. Currently he is employed as a senior scientist at the National Institute of Chemistry, Ljubljana (Slovenia) where he has specialized in laser ablation-based imaging techniques (www.AICO.si).
Link to my institutes LAB-Link
Link to my own field www.AICO.si
Slovenian National Institute of Chemistry, SI imaging LA-ICP-MS
Thomas Walczyk
Thomas Walczyk is an Associate Professor at the Department of Chemistry at the National University of Singapore (NUS), a globally leading university centered in Asia. He studied General Chemistry at the University of Regensburg, German, where he received his PhD in Analytical Chemistry and Isotope Sciences in 1994 as a PhD scholar of Klaus Heumann. After 13 years of Life Science research at ETH Zurich at the Laboratory of Human Nutrition he joined NUS in 2007 where he is heading NutriTrace@NUS, a research group dedicated to the exploration of mineral and trace element metabolism in animals and humans using stable isotope techniques.
Isotope ratio analysis by inorganic mass spectrometry and isotope dilution mass spectrometry have been at the center of his research for more than 25 years including aspects of chemical metrology. Due to his track record and competence in isotopic analysis he has been serving the Commission of Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights (CIAAW) of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) in various positions since 1998 and acts as an expert, consultant and advisor to several national and international institutions including the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
National University of Singapore, SG Uncertainty Budgeting for Dummies – who is afraid of Monte Carlo Techniques?
Wolfhard Wegscheider
Wolfhard Wegscheider is Professor of General and Analytical Chemistry at the Montanuniversitaet Leoben, Austria. He received his education from the Graz University of Technology majoring in Technical Chemistry with a specialisation in Biochemistry and Food Chemistry. His diploma thesis and doctoral thesis were in Analytical Chemistry with an emphasis on trace analysis and environmental analysis.
As Fulbright Scholar he worked in Denver, CO, mainly on energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry.
Much of his research centers on the development of chemometric procedures for analytical chemical problems. He is co-author of the textbook on Analytical Chemistry featuring the DAC FECS-Curriculum and a member of the editorial board and contributor to the Encyclopedia of Analytical Sciences (Academic Press).
W.W. is member of several learned societies such as GDCh, GOECh, Co-operation on International Traceability in Analytical Chemistry (CITAC) and EURACHEM where he is also founding member of the Working Group on Education and Training, of the Working Group on Measurement Uncertainty and Traceability. In both, EURACHEM and CITAC he also served as Chairman. After a term as President he currently is Member of the Board of Directors of the Austrian Society of Analytical Chemistry – ASAC. In 2010 he has been appointed Fellow of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).
He is a consultant to the Austrian Federal Ministry for Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water Management, a lead auditor in the Austrian Accreditation of Laboratories System and an Editorial Advisor of Journals such as MIKROCHIMICA ACTA, SPECTROCHIMICA ACTA ELECTRONICA, CHEMOMETRICS AND INTELLIGENT LABORATORY SYSTEMS and ACCREDITATION AND ANALYTICAL QUALITY ASSURANCE.
From 1995 to 2001 he served as Dean of Graduate Studies of Montanuniversitaet Leoben, and from 2003 to 2011 as Rektor (President) of this Institution. Presently he is chair of the Board of Trustees of OeAD GmbH, the Austrian Agency for International Cooperation in Education and Research. W.W. is member of Statistics Committee of AOAC International for the period 2016-2019.
He is married to Susanne, a pharmacist and has one son, Stefan, two daughters, Beate and Eva, and three grandchildren.
University Leoben, AT GUM and QUAM
Michael E. Wieser
Michael Wieser is an Associate Professor of Physics in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Calgary. Michael and his graduate students are working with the isotopic compositions of molybdenum and copper to explore topics including the long-lived double beta decay of 96Zr to gain insights into the mass of the electron neutrino; the molybdenum isotopic composition of ground and surface waters to investigate the impact of industry on the environment; and copper in living systems to study how changes in metabolic processes may affect the isotopic composition of copper.
The laboratory employs both thermal ionization and multiple collector inductively coupled mass spectrometry and is actively pursuing new ways to implement isotopic tools in new areas. Michael Wieser has been actively involved with the IUPAC Commission on Isotopic Abundance and Atomic Weight since 2001 www.ciaaw.org.
University of Calgary, CA Double-Spiking your way to successful isotope abundance measurements
Student award grant lectures
Student grant winners
Young scienctists career event
University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences
Division of Analytical Chemistry
Konrad Lorenz Straße 24
3430 Tulln a.d. Donau
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|
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Jamie C. Huffman - Financial Consultant
6200 Old Dobbin Lane Suite 100 Columbia, MD 21045
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What Is the Tax History of the United States?
United States tax law is a constantly changing landscape. The latest major piece of tax legislation is the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which was signed into law on December 22, 2017, by President Donald Trump.
The 2017 law kept the 10% personal income tax rate and lowered the others to 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%. It almost doubled the standard deduction, eliminated personal exemptions, and kept the long-term capital gains tax rates of 15% and 20%. In addition, the law limited the combined itemized deduction for state and local property taxes and local income taxes (or sales taxes in lieu of income) to $10,000 ($5,000 if married filing separately). Qualifying mortgage interest can be deducted on up to $750,000 of mortgage debt ($375,000 if married filing separately); for debt incurred on or before December 15, 2017, the prior $1 million limit will apply. The law also nearly doubled the estate tax exemption but kept the federal estate tax rate at 40%. These tax law changes affecting individuals are scheduled to expire after 2025.
The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 was signed into law on January 2, 2013, by President Barack Obama. It extended many of the provisions in the Taxpayer Relief Act of 2010 and the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act (EGTRRA) of 2001.
The 2012 tax law extended indefinitely the federal income tax rates that had been in effect since 2003 (10% to 35%) and added a 39.6% rate that was in effect prior to enactment of the 2001 tax law. The law also extended the 0% and 15% tax rates on long-term capital gains and qualified dividends and added a 20% rate. The law also extended the federal estate tax provisions of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 2010, with the exception that the top federal estate tax rate increased from 35% to 40%.
EGTRRA was signed into law by President George W. Bush on June 7, 2001. This bill provided the largest tax cut in two decades. Previous administrations have enacted other major tax packages. In the 1980s, the Reagan administration passed the Tax Reform Act of 1986. It not only reduced maximum tax rates and the number of federal income tax brackets but also eliminated many loopholes that existed in the tax code.
The Clinton administration also passed major tax legislation. The Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993 eliminated some of the changes in the 1986 tax act and added two new federal income tax brackets to the existing three, with the top rate hitting 39.6%. The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 incorporated many reforms, including the reduction of long-term capital gains taxes and creation of the child and education tax credits, the Roth IRA, and the Education IRA, among other provisions.
Whenever major changes affect the tax law, there are potential ways that taxpayers can benefit their personal financial situations.
The Retirement Planning Specialist title is awarded by Equitable Advisors, based upon the Financial Professional's (FP) receipt of a Certificate in Retirement Planning from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. In a collaboration between the Wharton School and Equitable Advisors' affiliated life insurance carrier, coursework for the certificate was developed exclusively for Equitable Advisors FPs, and the title may be used only by FPs who have completed the required coursework and maintain the title through ongoing continuing education requirements. To verify that an FP has earned and holds the title in good standing, contact us at [email protected]. Complaints about an Equitable Advisors FP should be directed to [email protected].
Phoenix Private Wealth is not a registered investment advisor and is not owned or operated by Equitable Advisors or Equitable Network.
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Public Charge Injunction Upheld in Federal Court
Last Wednesday, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York denied the Trump Administration’s request to lift a nationwide injunction on the Department of Homeland Security’s final public charge rule. With this ruling, the public charge rule remains blocked by a federal court from going into effect.
The public charge rule – which would penalize immigrants for accessing Medicaid, SNAP, or housing subsidies – has had a profound chilling effect on participation in other federal programs, including WIC. In the final public charge rule, WIC was explicitly excluded from consideration in public charge determinations. Issued in August 2019, the final public charge rule would have gone into effect in mid-October 2019, if not for this court action.
NWA joined an amicus brief (a court filing) that opposed efforts to reverse the nationwide injunction, which would allow the Administration to begin enforcing the final public charge rule. NWA will continue to advocate against harmful changes to longstanding immigration policies that recognize the basic needs of immigrant and mixed-status families living in the United States.
Congress to Consider Labor Protections for Pregnant Workers
This Tuesday, the House Education and Labor Committee will mark up the bipartisan Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA), led in the House by Reps. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) and John Katko (R-NY). This legislation would ensure that pregnant employees could obtain reasonable accommodations (i.e., relief from heavy lifting, a stool to sit on, the ability to carry a water bottle, etc.) to ensure that they can continue to work throughout pregnancy. Under existing pregnancy discrimination law, pregnant workers have few legal remedies to a denied accommodations request.
NWA has been actively engaged in advancing this crucial legislation. In October, the committee held a hearing to highlight the need for additional labor protections for pregnant workers. In the hearing, five congresswomen shared their own varied experiences of working while pregnant, ranging from miscarriages to fighting for additional bathroom breaks.
New Legislation Introduced to Support Breastfeeding Workers
Last Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators reintroduced the Providing Urgent Maternal Protections (PUMP) for Nursing Mothers Act. This legislation would expand labor protections for nursing mothers, requiring employers to provide reasonable break time and a private place to pump breastmilk for employees in salaried positions. These protections would cover approximately 13.5 million women in salaried positions. Earlier legislation – led by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) and passed in 2010 – ensures these labor protections for hourly employees.
NWA has endorsed this legislation and is supportive of its passage. The bill is led by Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), and Cory Booker (D-NJ).
Updated Nutrition Labeling Rules in Effect
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) implemented new rules governing nutrition facts labels on retail packaging. After an extensive process, the new FDA rules aim to enhance consumer knowledge, requiring companies to more effectively communicate key nutrition metrics, including serving size, calorie content, and the amount of added sugars. FDA has compiled key resources that explain the changes for a general audience.
NWA has been supportive of FDA’s process to update the nutrition facts labels in a manner that assists shoppers in making healthy choices. The labeling rules are effective for large companies as of January 1, 2020. Smaller companies have an additional year to comply with the new requirements.
Kansas Poised to Expand Medicaid
Last Thursday, Kansas Governor Laura Kelly (D) announced that she had reached a deal with the Kansas State Senate to expand Medicaid, which will lead to an additional 130,000 people being able to access healthcare coverage. Medicaid expansion is correlated with increased utilization of healthcare services, resulting in better health outcomes for a state’s low-income population. Kansas would be the 37th state to enact Medicaid expansion, originally offered to states through the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010.
Tennessee Set to Extend Paid Family and Medical Leave to State Employees
Last Tuesday, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee (R) announced that twelve weeks of paid family and medical leave would soon be offered to state employees. Tennessee is only the tenth state to offer these benefits to state employees, and only 19% of all employees in the United States have access to paid leave. NWA was supportive of recent provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) – passed in December 2019 – that extended paid parental leave to federal employees, effective October 1, 2020. NWA continues to support legislative efforts for a national, comprehensive paid family and medical leave framework for all employees.
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ALLIED PILOTS ASSOCIATION ON “KNOWN CREWMEMBER” PROGRAM: “GREAT STEP FORWARD” IN AVIATION SECURITY
posted on August 04, 2011 19:24
Captain Sam Mayer
Fort Worth, Texas (August 4, 2011)—The Allied Pilots Association (APA), certified collective bargaining agent for the 11,000 pilots of American Airlines (NYSE: AMR), applauded the forthcoming introduction of the Transportation Security Administration’s “Known Crewmember” program, which will streamline the security screening process for U.S. commercial pilots.
“The Allied Pilots Association has invested considerable resources in Known Crewmember’s development and we are gratified to see it come to fruition,” said APA President Captain Dave Bates. “The introduction of full-body scanners last year was the catalyst for our pilots to say ‘enough is enough.’ We knew there had to be a better way to address the issue of security screening for our pilots, who were adamantly opposed to the additional radiation exposure they would receive via the scanners.”
APA and the Coalition of Airline Pilots Associations (CAPA) responded by pressing for a more common-sense approach. APA persuaded American Airlines senior management to get involved, which resulted in American Airlines Corporate Security writing the programming code for Known Crewmember. American Airlines then provided the Air Transport Association (ATA) with the code for implementation and support. ATA is hosting the servers that will query airline databases when TSA Transportation Security Officers process pilots for entrance to the Security Identification Display Area. The TSA will continue conducting random searches to help ensure the new system’s integrity.
“Known Crewmember’s rapid implementation is a testament to what can be accomplished when government, industry and labor work cooperatively,” Bates said. “On behalf of the APA leadership, I want to thank TSA Administrator Pistole for his commitment to pursuing common-sense solutions to crewmember security concerns.
“Known Crewmember demonstrates our government’s confidence in pilots as trusted agents. Most importantly, it’s a great step forward in aviation security that further enhances the TSA’s ability to secure our nation’s airports.”
Founded in 1963, the Allied Pilots Association—the largest independent pilot union in the U.S.—is headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. APA represents the 11,000 pilots of American Airlines, including more than 1,000 pilots not yet offered recall from furlough. The furloughs began shortly after the September 11, 2001 attacks. Also, several hundred American Airlines pilots are on full-time military leave of absence serving in the armed forces. The union’s Web site address is www.alliedpilots.org. American Airlines is the nation’s largest international passenger carrier and fifth-largest cargo carrier.
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Orrick Pro Bono Effort Helps Secure Ruling Finding Louisiana’s Debtors’ Prison Unconstitutional
August.27.2019
With an Orrick pro bono team playing an instrumental role, a federal appeals court has declared Louisiana's debtors' prison scheme unconstitutional in a case challenging a system that resulted in indigent people being jailed for being unable to pay court debts. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on Aug. 23 upheld a judge's 2017 decision, which found the debt-collection practices of the judges of the Orleans Parish Criminal District Court (OPCDC) violated the Fourteenth Amendment.
Rejecting an appeal from the OPCDC judges, the appeals court agreed with our arguments that New Orleans' predatory funding scheme makes it impossible for the OPCDC to function as the neutral tribunal the Constitution demands. The Fifth Circuit held that when the OPCDC judges make judicial decisions that generate money they rely on and control, the "temptation" to make those decisions with an eye toward their court's finances "is too great."
Orrick has partnered with the Civil Rights Corps and the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under the Law to challenge the New Orleans criminal court's debtor-prison practices, which are common across Louisiana and other states. Associate Rachel Shalev, a member of Orrick's Supreme Court and Appellate Practice, successfully argued the case in the Fifth Circuit. Senior Counsel Jonathan Guy led the team that won in the trial court.
"This ruling will help bring basic fairness to New Orleans' criminal court and send a message to states, cities, and counties across the country that seek to fund their criminal legal systems on the backs of their poorest citizens," said Marco Lopez, an attorney with Civil Rights Corps.
Partner Kelsi Brown Corkran led the appellate team in the Fifth Circuit, in addition to Rachel. The appellate and trial effort also has included Kathryn Mantoan, Ethan Fallon, David Fuad, Christine Hanley and Alexandra Heifetz.
Rachel G. Shalev Senior Associate, Oberster Gerichtshof & Berufungsgericht
Oberster Gerichtshof & Berufungsgericht
Rachel G. Shalev Senior Associate
Rachel is a member of Orrick's Litigation Group and Supreme Court and Appellate practice.
Rachel represents clients in high-stakes, complex litigation. She has argued successfully in federal and state appellate courts and has been the lead drafter of briefs and dispositive motions in both state and federal court and the U.S. Supreme Court. Rachel’s experience litigating and advising clients covers a wide range of substantive areas. She focuses in particular on tough questions of constitutional law, administrative law, and statutory interpretation. Rachel also maintains an active pro bono practice.
Prior to joining Orrick, Rachel served as a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer, Judge Cornelia T.L. Pillard of the D.C. Circuit, and Judge William A. Fletcher of the Ninth Circuit. Rachel received her J.D. from Yale Law School, where she served as a student director of the Supreme Court Advocacy Clinic and as Essays Editor of the Yale Law Journal. She graduated from Williams College and received master’s degrees from University College London and University of St. Andrews.
Pro Bono Berufungsverfahren
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The Scientist Magazine
Working in a Virtual Laboratory
NEXT STEP: The virtual center "is the natural evolution of our shared research interests," says Ashley T. Haase, chair of the microbiology department at the University of Minnesota. When AIDS researchers physically located in four different states hold a meeting, it almost feels like they're sitting at a table across from each other--but they're really just facing their individual computer screens. They view slides of the human immunodeficiency virus in lymphoid tissue in real time and discuss
Persistence Prevails for John Scott Recipients
PHOTO CREDIT: Lori Desantis, Children's Hospital of Boston ANGIOGENESIS HONORS: Children's Hospital of Boston researcher Judah Folkman (far right) received the 1998 John Scott Award from the Philadelphia Board of Directors of City Trusts for his work in studying angiogenesis and angiogenesis inhibitors. Folkman, who refuses to be photographed alone, is joined by Harvard Medical School colleagues (from right) Donald Ingber, Michael O'Reilly, and Robert D'Amato. After being built up by a New York
Cow-Human Cell News Raises Ethical Issues
Per the request of President Bill Clinton, the members of the presidentially appointed National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) met on Nov. 17 to discuss the bioethical, medical, and legal ramifications of the apparent first-ever creation of bovine-human hybrid cells, embryonic cells consisting of a human cell's nucleus inside a cow egg. In a Nov. 14 letter to the NBAC, the president said that he was "deeply troubled by this news of experiments involving the mingling of human and nonhuman
Building a Bridge to the Future
PHOTO: Edward Derrick, AAAS PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE: J. Scott Hauger (left), director of the Research Competitiveness Program at the American Association for the Advancement of Science, speaks with Tom Collins, vice president for research at Oklahoma State University, during a break at the recent Next Generation Internet conference in San Diego. A distributed information-retrieval system enables desktop access to biological collections that can be used for biodiversity research, conservation, m
New Weapon Attacks Latent HIV Reservoirs
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Circadian Studies Show Plant, Animal Similarities
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Honorable Mention in Science:The Nobel Surprise
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NAS: A Unique Institution
The National Academy of Sciences is a focal point of the highest credibility for the greatest scientific community the world has ever known. Not only does the Academy recognize, reward, and reinforce excellence and creativity in science, setting the highest standards of quality and discovery, it also powerfully fosters the uses of science and technology in judicious, humane, and democratic ways. The scientific community is the best approximation we now have to a truly international community,
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Doctors and their patients often hold different ideas about disease and how to treat it. When it comes to alternative medicine, the line seems clear. The public prefers alternative treatments--acupuncture, herbal remedies, imagery, therapeutic touch--to the drugs, psychotherapies, and surgery offered by the medical establishment. According to a 1993 report in the New England Journal of Medicine (D.M. Eisenberg et al., 328:246-52) Americans make more visits to alternative healers and spend more
Do Energy Transport Systems Shape Organisms?
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Cold Spring Harbor NEW PROGRAM AT COLD SPRING HARBOR Next fall, five students will begin a new Ph.D. program at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island that promises to be both faster and more flexible than the typical graduate school experience. The private, nonprofit research and educational institution has been home to such bioluminaries as Barbara McClintock and James Watson. Although it has welcomed grad students from the nearby University at Stony Brook for many years, until now it
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SAE International to Honor Honda Aircraft Company President Michimasa Fujino with Clarence L. (Kelly) Johnson Aerospace Vehicle Design and Development Award
Press Releases, Seattle
WARRENDALE, Pa. (Aug. 19, 2014) — Dr. Michimasa Fujino, President and CEO of Honda Aircraft Company, will be honored with the SAE International Clarence L. (Kelly) Johnson Aerospace Vehicle Design and Development Award. Fujino will receive the award during the SAE 2015 AeroTech Congress & Exposition, which will be held Sept. 22-24, 2015, in Seattle, Washington, USA.
Established in 1992, the award recognizes individuals who have distinguished themselves by making significant contributions during their career in the innovative design and development of advanced aircraft and/or spacecraft. It’s made possible through a fund established by the Lockheed Advanced Development Company.
Fujino is responsible for the research and development, production, sales and marketing of the innovative HondaJet. Fujino rose through the engineering ranks to become a vice president with Honda R&D Americas Inc., and named the project leader for the HondaJet. He led all design tasks of the HondaJet through advanced analysis, experimental verification and flight testing.
Fujino’s clean sheet design for an advanced light jet that could achieve both higher speed and higher fuel efficiency led to the development of key HondaJet technologies. He discovered the optimum Over-The-Wing Engine Mount configuration, which reduces wave drag at a high Mach number, and applied it to the HondaJet design. This aeronautical breakthrough was proven to greatly enhance aircraft performance, fuel efficiency and passenger comfort. He also developed a new natural laminar flow (NLF) wing and fuselage nose for the light jet with application of a new concept composite construction to the fuselage structure. These innovations allow the HondaJet to achieve highest speed, superior fuel efficiency and the most cabin and luggage space over other light jets in its class.
Fujino has been the recipient of numerous international awards and distinctions, including the International Council of Aeronautical Sciences Innovation Award (2014), American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Aircraft Design Award (2012), Aviation Week and Technology’s Vision Award (2008) and the Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences (JSASS) Technology Award (2004). His research and theories on aircraft design, advanced aerodynamics and aeroelasticity have been published in numerous technical and academic journals, and he holds several patents.
SAE International is a global association committed to being the ultimate knowledge source for the engineering profession. By uniting more than 145,000 engineers and technical experts, we drive knowledge and expertise across a broad spectrum of industries. We act on two priorities: encouraging a lifetime of learning for mobility engineering professionals and setting the standards for industry engineering. We strive for a better world through the work of our philanthropic SAE Foundation, including programs like A World in Motion® and the Collegiate Design Series™.
SOURCE: HondaJet
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/12595
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Australian singer/songwriter Missy Higgins has enjoyed phenomenal success with her irresistible melodies and ‘arrow through the heart’ lyrics, delivered by a striking voice that clearly means it.
After touring the globe with her undeniable songs and unforgettable live performances, Missy’s highly acclaimed ‘The Sound Of White’ (ARIA Album Of The Year featuring the hits ‘Scar’, ’Ten Days’ and ’The Special Two’), ‘On A Clear Night’ (featuring North American top 20 airplay hit ‘Where I Stood’ plus Australian #1 single ‘Steer’) and ‘The Ol’ Razzle Dazzle’ (featuring ‘Everyone’s Waiting’ and ‘Hello Hello’) have sold over two millions copies globally.
Missy appeared twice on the cover of Australia’s Rolling Stone magazine. She is a five-time chart topper and nine-time ARIA Award winner (Australia’s Grammys).
After seven years of touring and recording, Missy quietly took a break from music for several years from 2009 to pursue other interests including a course in Indigenous Studies, as well as making her acting debut in Australian film ‘Bran Nue Dae’.
In September 2014, Missy released a unique book/covers album called ‘OZ’ to rave reviews. In recent years she has also struck a chord with standalone singles ‘Oh Canada’ (2016), inspired by the tragic images of infant Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi and ‘Torchlight’ (2017), a powerful, emotive ballad written for Australian film ‘Don’t Tell’. ‘Torchlight’ won Best Original Song Composed for the Screen at the 2017 APRA Screen Music Awards.
In 2018, Missy announced her long awaited fifth studio album, ‘Solastalgia’, with its lead single ‘Futon Couch’ becoming her biggest radio success in a decade. Missy was also confirmed as the main support on Ed Sheeran’s ÷ Tour – the largest series of concerts in Australian history with nearly 1 million tickets sold.
Missy capped off the year with the release of ‘The Special Ones’ – a Best Of Collection that is a primer to one of Australian music’s strongest modern catalogues;. The album features four previously unreleased tracks including new single ‘Arrows’ and the previously unheard demo of ‘All For Believing’ that set her career in motion when she won Triple J Unearthed all those years ago. Alongside the album release, Missy was also the focus of an ABC TV special ‘Missy & Friends Live’ – a celebration of her career with special guests including Peter Garrett and Kasey Chambers as part of Ausmusic Month.
In 2019 Missy embarked on the Coming Home Tour, a national co-headlining tour of Australia with John Butler Trio+ at venues including Sidney Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne, as well as two sold-out shows at the Sydney Opera House forecourt. She also wrote a number of original songs for the acclaimed ABC TV show ‘Total Control’. The show became the highest rated new Australian TV drama of the year, and the track ‘Edge of Something’ was nominated for Best Original Song Composed for the Screen at the 2020 APRA Screen Music Awards.
Missy began 2020 by releasing new single ‘Carry You’ written by Tim Minchin for his TV show ‘Upright’, which peaked at #5 on iTunes and was featured on the ARIA Album Chart #1 compilation ‘Music From The Home Front’. The song was also nominated for Song of the Year at the 2021 APRA Music Awards. Missy capped off the year with the release of standalone single ‘When The Machine Starts’.
Late 2021, Missy featured on a hip hop track by Birdz and she also released lead single “Edge Of Something” from her new mini-album Total Control. The Total Control mini-album was inspired initially by musical fragments Missy pieced together to fit certain scenes in the soundtrack to the TV Series of the same name. The songs pick up themes of exploitation and female empowerment that run through Total Control and which also dominated real world headlines last year as a string of abuse allegations emerged from Parliament House.
Touring nationally 2022 – www.missyhiggins.com
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5 Years Ago: Guns N’ Roses’ Reunion Begins With a Club Show
Bryan Rolli
Bryan Rolli Updated: April 1, 2021
Hundreds of people snaked around the shuttered Tower Records building in West Hollywood on the afternoon of April 1, 2016. The date couldn’t have been more ironic. The people were all waiting in line in hopes of snagging a ticket to one of the biggest rock events of the century, one that had been teased countless times over the years but, even now, seemed like a pipe dream or elaborate joke: the Guns N’ Roses reunion show at the Troubadour nightclub.
Well, three-fifths reunion, to be precise. After years of mudslinging in the press, baseless rumors, solo projects, supergroups and Chinese Democracy, three core members of Guns N’ Roses — Axl Rose, Slash and Duff McKagan — would take the stage together for the first time since 1993. The Troubadour gig would serve as a warm-up for their massive, wryly titled Not in This Lifetime tour, which ended up zigzagging the globe several times.
Fleshing out the semi-original GNR lineup were keyboardist Dizzy Reed, guitarist Richard Fortus, drummer Frank Ferrer and second keyboardist and programmer Melissa Reese. Original drummer Steven Adler made sporadic appearances with the group throughout 2016, but cofounding rhythm guitarist Izzy Stradlin has kept his distance from the reunion.
Hundreds of fans and numerous celebrities — including Lenny Kravitz, Nicolas Cage, Kate Hudson and Jim Carrey — packed into the Troubadour on the night of April 1 to witness the band’s historic, 17-song set. They kicked things off with the one-two punch of Appetite for Destruction classics “It’s So Easy” and “Mr. Brownstone” before barreling through the title track off 2008’s Chinese Democracy for the first time with Slash. The rest of the set largely comprised Appetite songs along with popular covers (“Live and Let Die,” “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”) and the occasional deep cut (Use Your Illusion’s “Double Talkin’ Jive”).
Cellphones, cameras and other recording devices were banned from the gig, but that didn’t stop fans from smuggling them inside and capturing a few glimpses of the group in action. The amateur videos that emerged found the band shaking off some rust and speeding up some tempos but bringing the heat nonetheless. Rose, in particular, looked and sounded rejuvenated, bringing his serpentine dance moves and sandpapery, high-pitched scream to classics like “Welcome to the Jungle.”
Watch Guns N' Roses Perform 'Welcome to the Jungle' in 2016
The Guns N’ Roses reunion no sooner got off to an explosive start than an onstage accident threatened to derail it, when Rose slipped and fell a few songs into the set. High on adrenaline, he laughed it off and finished the show, but it was later revealed that he broke his left foot.
The volatile frontman had been known to cancel gigs for far smaller inconveniences during the band’s heyday, so skeptical fans naturally feared the worst. But Rose soldiered on, borrowing Dave Grohl’s guitar throne from the Foo Fighters’ 2015 tour and performing the next several gigs while seated and with his leg in a cast. That included two shows at Las Vegas’ new AT&T Arena and Saturday-night headlining slots at both weekends of Coachella.
Rose was back on his feet by the time the Not in This Lifetime tour resumed in late June. (He spent the intervening two months fronting AC/DC on their Rock or Bust world tour.) The massive trek has since stormed six continents, sold more than 5 million tickets and become the third-highest-grossing tour of all time, pulling in $584 million across 158 shows and counting.
Guns N' Roses Lineup Changes: A Complete Guide (We Think)
Next: Ranking Every Single Guns N' Roses Song
Source: 5 Years Ago: Guns N’ Roses’ Reunion Begins With a Club Show
Filed Under: Guns N Roses
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About Joe C. Davis
About the Foundation and Its History
Grant Making Policies and Practices
How and When to Apply for a Grant
The Foundation makes contributions to charitable organizations exemplifying the core values of Joe C. Davis: the importance of personal initiative, perseverance, hard work, education, and entrepreneurship.
The Foundation’s primary areas of focus are education, healthcare, and community and social services. Geographically, the Foundation’s focus is the Nashville, Tennessee area.
The Foundation seeks to invest in organizations with strong leadership; organizations with long-term, sustainable financial models; and organizations that are the leading experts in the relevant area of service.
The Foundation supports a wide range of education-related organizations.
In recent years, the Foundation’s support of public K-12 educational programs has focused primarily on recruitment and development of top talent in the education sector, and on increasing the supply of high-performing charter schools. The Foundation’s support of private, tuition-based K-12 educational institutions is now limited to Montgomery Bell Academy and Harpeth Hall School, where the Foundation primarily funds need-based scholarships for academically promising students.
The Foundation supports a variety of early childhood programs, after-school programs, adult education programs, and workforce development programs. The Foundation has also supported a limited number of post-secondary institutions, most notably Vanderbilt University, but also a few others from time to time, particularly in specialized areas of training.
The Foundation supports a broad array of healthcare organizations and endeavors. These have included medical training, health and wellness initiatives, medical clinics serving the underinsured, addiction services, mental health services, and crisis services. Within these areas, the Foundation has, from time to time, funded facilities, research, technology, and routine services. At Vanderbilt University Medical Center, the Foundation has primarily supported research and medical training.
Community and Social Services
The Foundation supports a wide variety of social service organizations, with a particular focus on helping children reach their highest potential and helping adults become self-sufficient. Programming areas include such things as youth mentoring, parent education, workforce development, affordable housing, and community resource centers.
Excluded Categories
Except as may be incidental to other programs, the Foundation does not provide funding for (a) the arts, (b) environmental causes, or (c) religious activities. The Foundation also does not make grants to individuals or for the support of fundraising events or dinners.
Types of Grants
The Foundation generally prefers to make one-time grants designed to enhance existing programs, and sometimes to create new ones if they have a long-term financial sustainability model. The Foundation will also consider capital requests, including facility funding. The Foundation will consider relatively small grant requests in support of regular ongoing operating costs; however, multiple requests from the same organization over consecutive years are reviewed to be sure the Foundation is not creating excessive ongoing dependency upon its grants.
The Foundation’s larger grants are typically made only after fairly extensive interaction between the Foundation and the grant seeker over an extended period.
© Joe C. Davis Foundation • 104 Woodmont Blvd., Suite 310 • Nashville, Tennessee 37205 • 615.352.9036
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Increases in Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Budget through Clean Energy Initiatives
The Biden-Harris administration has released the President’s Budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2024. The budget reflects the Administration’s commitment to ongoing efforts vital to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s (BOEM) mission, which include advancing renewable energy, creating good-paying jobs with a free and fair chance to join a union, bolstering energy security, supporting economic prosperity, and ensuring the reliability and affordability of domestic clean energy.
The FY 2024 President’s Budget for BOEM provides $268.2 million in total budget authority to fund the Bureau’s mission to manage the nation’s offshore energy and mineral resources in an environmentally and economically responsible manner. The budget makes critical investments for the American people that will help lay a stronger foundation for shared growth and prosperity for generations to come.
“The President’s 2024 budget request provides BOEM the needed resources to execute our mission and help achieve the Administration’s ambitious goals to fight climate change and create good paying jobs,” said BOEM Director Elizabeth Klein. "The budget request will ensure we are equipped to oversee offshore energy and marine minerals development in a responsible manner for the benefit of the American people.”
The President’s budget proposal for BOEM will:
Bolster Environmental Programs. The FY 2024 budget includes $92.8 million for BOEM’s Environmental Programs. Responsible environmental stewardship is a central focus in every activity BOEM undertakes. BOEM’s Environmental Programs ensure that programmatic decision-making is guided by the best available science and Indigenous knowledge, by contributing transparent environmental research and data to inform the public, stakeholders, diverse ocean users, and external decision-makers about the potential impacts of Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) energy and mineral activities. This work enables BOEM to identify risks and mitigation strategies to assist with conservation and protection of the human, marine, and coastal environments. Fostering effective government-to-government relationships and improving Tribal Nations’ consultation capacities with BOEM on the impacts of potential projects and decisions are critical components of the Environmental Programs’ responsibilities. During FY 2024, BOEM will continue to prioritize working with Tribal, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian communities and institutions to ensure scientific and Indigenous knowledge inform BOEM’s decision-making. BOEM will also work to promote equity in access to and participation in BOEM’s decision-making process through ongoing engagement with underserved and environmental justice communities to incorporate their feedback in both addressing impacts and delivering benefits.
Advance Renewable Energy. The FY 2024 budget request includes $64.5 million for BOEM’s Renewable Energy Program. Building upon its work in FY 2023, BOEM continues to make considerable strides toward accomplishing the Biden-Harris administration’s goal of deploying 30 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind energy capacity by 2030 and the Department of the Interior’s goal to deploy 15 GW of floating offshore wind capacity by 2035. In FY 2024, BOEM will maintain an all-of-government approach by collaborating with multiple government agencies and states, and consulting with Tribal Nations to expand responsible offshore wind development. BOEM aims to run efficient, transparent, and inclusive processes to identify future lease sale areas; avoid, reduce, and mitigate conflicts; and advance projects. BOEM will also work with the Governors of U.S. Territories to explore the potential of offshore wind lease sales in federal waters off their coasts, as authorized by the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
Continue to Support Conventional Energy. The FY 2024 budget requests $72.3 million for BOEM’s Conventional Energy Program. BOEM continues to support U.S. energy security and meet its statutory obligations under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act by administering existing leases, permitting geological and geophysical surveys, evaluating resources, and developing the next National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program. In meeting these obligations, BOEM conducts its Conventional Energy program in a manner that delivers a fair return for the American taxpayer, mitigates and addresses adverse impacts, and ensures leaseholders maintain adequate financial assurance. In the coming fiscal year, the Department will finalize and implement the next National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program. President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law gave the Department new authority to authorize leases, easements, and rights-of-way on the OCS that support carbon sequestration activities. The FY 2024 budget will ensure the effective launch of that program and allow for reviewing new proposals for carbon storage projects, as well as related environmental analyses.
Ensure Responsible Management of Marine Minerals. The FY 2024 budget proposes $16.4 million for BOEM’s Marine Minerals Program. BOEM’s marine minerals activities help ensure the responsible management of the nation’s OCS mineral resources by considering environmental impacts and using the best available science to improve coastal resilience, enhance natural disaster preparedness, assess the availability of critical minerals, and protect shorelines essential for national security, the economy, and the environment. BOEM continues to have robust engagement with stakeholders and state and local governments to facilitate the procurement of sand and sediment resources for coastal restoration and beach nourishment upon request and when necessary to preserve infrastructure, defense facilities, and the nation’s coasts. BOEM’s FY 2024 budget request underscores the importance of increasing current understanding of marine minerals and subsea environments to inform the management of OCS mineral resources, address environmental harms due to climate change, and avoid potential multiple-use conflicts and impacts by advancing the development of the National Offshore Sand Inventory, Marine Minerals Information System, and National Offshore Critical Mineral Inventory.
Provide Executive Direction. The FY 2024 budget request includes $22.3 million for BOEM’s executive functions, providing Bureau-wide strategic leadership, management, budget, and administrative support. In FY 2024, BOEM will continue to support Biden-Harris administration and Department-wide initiatives to promote Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility by implementing the Justice, Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) Charter and building-out its Office of Diversity, Inclusion and Civil Rights to advance all aspects of equal opportunity, diversity, and inclusion to foster a stronger and more inclusive culture throughout the Bureau.
The Budget makes these smart investments while also reducing deficits and improving our country’s long-term fiscal outlook.
For more information on the President’s FY 2024 Budget, please visit https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/.
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‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’
In collaboration with Paper Mill Playhouse
Performance Information
REMA WEBB vocalist
BRYAN HERNANDEZ-LUCH violin
HÉCTOR FALCÓN violin
DAVID BLINN viola
SARAH SEIVER cello
HA YOUNG JUNG bass
NJSO musicians and Broadway veteran Rema Webb give a virtual performance of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “You’ll Never Walk Alone” from Carousel in the first of a four-part collaborative series with the Paper Mill Playhouse.
Written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II
Williamson Music Company
By arrangement with Concord
Arranged for String Quintet by Stephen Wisner
Rema Webb, vocalist
Rema Webb is a 20-year Broadway veteran who made her Paper Mill debut last season in the world premiere of Unmasked: The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber. In summer 2019, she was featured in the Public Theater/Disney Theatrical production of Hercules at the Delacorte Theater. Rema’s Broadway credits include Escape to Margaritaville, The Color Purple, Violet, The Lion King, The Book of Mormon and Ragtime, and her off-Broadway and regional credits include Little Shop of Horrors, The Cradle Will Rock, The Colored Museum and A New Brain, among others. She has appeared on television and film in NBC’s The Sound of Music Live!, First Born, Beloved, Sudden Death and “Murphy Brown.” Webb debuted her critically acclaimed solo concert, Children Will Listen, at 54 Below and gave an encore performance at 42 West. With a mission to pass on her knowledge and inspire the next generation of young artists, Webb is the founder and executive director of On Broadway Performing Arts Training Program.
Bryan Hernandez-Luch, violin
Violinist Bryan Hernandez-Luch, of Peruvian descent, has been described by The Deseret News as “strikingly imaginative … he is an artist to be reckoned with.” Hernandez-Luch began his violin studies at age 6, and at 15 he made his solo debut with the Utah Symphony Orchestra. As a soloist, Hernandez-Luch has performed with the symphony orchestras of Detroit, Cleveland, Atlanta, New Jersey, Nashville, Utah, Chautauqua, New World, Colorado, Princeton, Grand Rapids and Battle Creek; Prince George Philharmonic and Canada’s National Arts Center Orchestra. He has worked with such conductors as Franz Welser-Möst, Robert Spano, Keith Lockhart, Rossen Milanov, Arthur Fagan and Thomas Wilkins.
As an avid chamber musician, Hernandez-Luch has toured extensively across Columbia, the United States, Russia, Japan, Korea and South Africa. He was a founding member of the Catalyst Quartet, whose performances have been featured in Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium, Weill Hall and major concert halls worldwide. The New York Times called a Catalyst Quartet performance “invariably energetic and finely burnished.” The quartet held residencies at the University of South Africa, Grand Canyon Music Festival, Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, Juilliard Quartet Seminar, Sphinx Performance Academy at Northwestern University, Oberlin Conservatory, Roosevelt University and The Walnut Hill School. Hernandez-Luch had the distinct privilege of performing with the Guarneri Quartet in Mendelssohn’s String Octet and a performance of Tchaikovsky’s Souvenir de Florence at Carnegie Hall.
A frequent collaborator with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Hernandez-Luch is currently performing in the Tony Award-winning Broadway revival of My Fair Lady. He has played recently in Miss Saigon and Fiddler on the Roof and was the music director/conductor and on-stage musician for The Cherry Orchard starring Diane Lane. Hernandez-Luch has been a member of the Radio City Music Hall Orchestra and performed regularly in the Broadway productions of The Phantom of the Opera, Les Misérables, The King and I, Something Rotten!, Cinderella and On the Town.
Hernandez-Luch earned a master’s degree from The Juilliard School and a B.M. from the University of Utah. His major teachers have included Joseph Lin, Igor Gruppman and Nell Gotkovsky.
Hernandez-Luch loves living in New York City with his wife, concert pianist Desirae Brown, and their two children, Poppy and Rowan.
Héctor Falcón, violin
Described by music critics as an artist who “displays a solid technique, beautiful sound and great maturity” and possesses “an excellent sense of style and musicality,” violinist Héctor Falcón has won numerous awards and competitions both in the United States and Puerto Rico, including first prize in the Sam Levenson Violin Competition and the R. J. Reynolds Career Grant award. He began his violin studies with Jose Figueroa, a member of Puerto Rico’s most prestigious family of musicians, and with Jaime Medina, a member of the Orquesta Sinfónica of Puerto Rico.
Falcón has been a member of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra since 2000, and he regularly plays with the New York City Ballet, Opera Orchestra of New York, American Symphony Orchestra and Houston Symphony Orchestra. For the past 12 years, he has toured Japan with the New York Symphonic Ensemble. A busy soloist and chamber musician, Falcón has performed in prestigious music festivals, including the Pacific Music Festival of Japan and OK Mozart Festival. He made his solo debut with the NJSO in January 2012, performing François Dompierre’s Les Diableries; The Star-Ledger praised his “charismatic performance throughout, with fluid, silky tone and impressive precision.”
At The Juilliard School, where he obtained his bachelor’s and master’s degrees, he studied with Dorothy DeLay, Hyo Kang and Masao Kawasaki. He has attended master classes with Itzhak Perlman, Igor Bezrodny and Ruben Gonzalez.
Falcón is an avid violin recordings collector and violin historian.
David Blinn, viola
David Blinn has been a violist with the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra since 1993. He received a bachelor’s degree from The Juilliard School, where he was principal of the Juilliard Orchestra for three years; he completed a graduate degree in Orchestral Studies at the Manhattan School of Music. A passionate chamber musician, Blinn frequently performs with a variety of ensembles in New York and New Jersey. He was a founding member of the Allendale String Quartet, which has performed in Carnegie’s Weill Recital Hall.
Blinn enjoys a variety of music; he is currently the violist in Broadway’s hit revival of Evita. Other credits include the Tony Award-winning South Pacific at Lincoln Center, as well as Stephen Sondheim’s revivals of Follies and A Little Night Music. He is also a member of the City Center Encores! Orchestra. Blinn can be heard on many recordings and soundtracks.
Sarah Seiver, cello
Sarah Seiver has been a member of the NJSO cello section for more than 25 years. Seiver and NJSO bassoonist Mark Timmerman created the Orchestra’s “Ask a Musician” intermission feature, for which the NJSO presented them with the Orchestra’s Award for Audience Development in 2006. In 2008, Seiver started the NJSO’s board member/musician partnership program, pairing NJSO trustees one on one with members of the Orchestra in an initiative designed to promote awareness and interaction within the organization.
In addition to the NJSO, Seiver is a member of the American Ballet Theatre Orchestra and has been a cellist for many musicals on Broadway.
Seiver graduated from the Curtis Institute of Music and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University and a Master of Music degree from The Juilliard School.
Ha Young Jung, bass
Dynamic and engaging NJSO Principal Bass Ha Young Jung captivates audiences with her performances. A graduate of the Royal College of Music, Juilliard School, Yale University and Boston University, Jung regularly appears in high-caliber ensembles including Grammy-nominated string orchestra A Far Cry (Boston), Carnegie Hall’s Ensemble Connect, Chineke! Orchestra (United Kingdom), Jupiter Symphony Chamber Players (New York) and New York Philharmonic and as acting principal double bass at Riverside Symphony (New York).
Jung garnered first prize at the International Society of Bassists’ Competition (USA, 2007) and the Grand-Prix of International String Competition (Moscow, 2006) and Musician of the Year at the Solti Foundation (Belgium, 2006).
Watch on YouTube.
The video will post to our YouTube channel at 7 pm on Jan 5.
Watch on our website.
Refresh your browser window right before the premiere time to watch on this page. Watch all of our on-demand content.
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Support NJSO!
Love the NJSO’s virtual concerts? These performances are made possible through the generous support of patrons like you. Please make a donation today to ensure we can continue to provide all residents of New Jersey with virtual orchestral music performances and community programs. Consider supporting the NJSO with a recurring donation and join our Monthly Giving Club.
The Paper Mill Playhouse series is sponsored by JCP&L/FirstEnergy Foundation and PNC Bank.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/16445
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Global Government Payload Exploration
6th November 2017,
The Hosted Payload Alliance (HPA) will again offer a workshop intended to explore current examples of successful commercially hosted government payload programs and where those successes may help accelerate adoption of similar programs for global government customers.
The experts from the HPA member companies will offer an unbiased view with a diverse base of satellite owner-operators, launch providers, payload and satellite manufacturers and others.
These experts will bring forward lessons learned from their respective hosted payload programs as well as foster an open dialogue about technical considerations, procurement and funding challenges as well as opportunities for industry and global governments to collaborate to further leverage these time and cost reducing means of accessing space. The Workshop is intended to serve as a targeted discussion on hosted payloads and a forum for open dialogue between government and industry participants.
Learn about and discuss:
Case studies and lessons learned from proven commercially hosted government payload programmes
Direct dialogue between experts in industry and government on key opportunities, benefits and obstacles surrounding hosted payloads
Leveraging commercial to achieve "national space program" objectives- revealing benefits of owernship models where hosted payloads can fulfil national satellite requirements at a fraction of the cost and time to orbit
Enabling a more resilient space architecture by distributing assets over multiple platforms and locations
Rich Pang
Vice President, Government Product Management, SES
Mr. Rich Pang joined SES in August 2015 and serves as the Vice President of Product Management for the Government Market Solutions Center where he is responsible for assessing the global governmental and institutional markets, identifying customers’ requirements, and leading the identification and/or development of SES’ products and solutions to meet customers’ needs. Prior to joining SES Mr. Pang worked for SES Government Solutions (SES-GS) where he served as Senior Director for Hosted Payloads. He was responsible for seeking, pursuing, and securing opportunities to support U.S. Government missions around the world through the use of hosted payloads. While there he managed the Commercially Hosted InfraRed Payload (CHIRP) program for the United States Air Force and captured two other hosted payload contracts: (1) the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) funded by the Federal Aviation Administration; and (2) the Global Observation of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). In May 2010, Mr. Pang retired from the United States Air Force as a Lieutenant Colonel after twenty-one years of service. In his last assignment, he served as the Director of Operations at the Program Executive office for Environmental Satellites in Silver Spring, Maryland, U.S.
The Hosted Payload Alliance is a satellite industry alliance formed to increase awareness of the benefits of hosted government payloads on commercial satellites. Composed of satellite operators, satellite manufacturers, launch providers and system integrators, HPA is a broad based organization which acts as a source of subject-matter expertise and serves as a bridge between government and private industry to foster open communication between potential users and providers of hosted payload capabilities.
8:30 Registration and Coffee
9:00 Opening Remarks and Introductions
Rich Pang, Vice President, Government Product Management, SES
Rebecca M. Cowen-Hirsch, Sr. Vice President, Government Strategy and Policy, U.S. Government Business Unit, Inmarsat, Inc
Lucio Caporicci, VP Business Development, Europe, Space Systems Loral
9:15 Leveraging commercial & hosted payload approaches to achieve resilience and assured access to space
10:00 Achieving national space requirements through shared satellite programs and/or public/private partnerships
11:15 Case Studies
11:45 Closing remarks and questions
12:00 End of Workshop
Riverbank Park Plaza
London SE1 7TJ
London's most stunning 4-star deluxe, new build, hotel to open for many years! The impressive Riverbank Park Plaza is situated on the south side of the River Thames, opposite the Tate Britain art gallery, and occupies stunning views of the Houses of Parliament, Big Ben and the London Eye. The hotel boasts 394 deluxe guestrooms including superior and executive rooms and suites, as well as a brasserie restaurant and bar, on-site business centre and executive lounge. Riverbank Park Plaza offers some of the most spectacular conference and events facilities in the city! Each room is fully air-conditioned and features state-of-the-art technical and audiovisual facilities including wireless high speed Internet access. As well as being able to accommodate 660 guests for a reception, Riverbank Park Plaza also offers the Thames Room, which having floor-to-ceiling windows, boasts breathtaking views of the river Thames and creates the ideal venue for special events.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/17776
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Green Day's 'Revolution Radio' Video World Premieres On Twitch During E3 Live Show
by Caryn Robbins Jun. 12, 2017
Social video platform Twitch and Grammy® Award-winning Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees Green Day, today announced it will live stream the exclusive world premiere of the music video for Green Day's "Revolution Radio," the title track from their No. 1 album released in October 2016 by Reprise Records. The video will debut on tonight at 8:00pm PT during Twitch's E3 live show on Twitch.tv/twitch.
The music video, directed by Green Day and shot by band photographer Greg Schneider and Revolution Radio album engineer Chris Dugan, is part of Twitch's most robust E3 live stream schedule to date. This year, Twitch is hosting its Pre Pre Show, broadcasting all of the major press conferences, and a live stage show throughout the week. In addition, the Twitch Esports Arena will bring esports to the show on June 13-15.
"The Twitch community is passionate about a lot of emerging content beyond gaming, with music being one of the areas they've rallied around," said Mary Kish, Senior Producer at Twitch Studios. "Because our community thrives off the shared viewing experience, being able to live stream world premiere videos, including Green Day's "Revolution Radio," is going to add an engaging twist to the event."
Green Day are currently touring Europe in support of Revolution Radio and will return to the U.S. for the second North American leg of the tour on August 1, which will include stops at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Wrigley Field in Chicago, and the Oakland Alameda County Coliseum.
All of Twitch's E3 live streams can be viewed at https://www.twitch.tv/event/e3
About Twitch Twitch is the world's leading social video platform and community for gamers. Each day, millions of community members gather to watch, talk, and chat about shared interests. Twitch's video platform is the backbone of both live and on-demand distribution for all types of content, including the entire video game ecosystem, the creative arts, vlogging (IRL), and more. Twitch also runs TwitchCon, the annual convention for celebrating the Twitch community. For more information about Twitch, visit our Press Center, Twitter feed (#Twitch), andBlog.
About Green Day Green Day is an American punk rock band composed of vocalist/guitarist Billie Joe Armstrong, bassist Mike Dirnt and drummer Tré Cool. Formed in 1986, Green Day was originally part of the punk scene at the DIY 924 Gilman Street club in Berkeley, California. The band's early releases were with the independent record label Lookout! Records. In 1994, its major label debut Dookie (released through Reprise Records) became a breakout success and eventually sold over 10 million copies in the United States. Green Day was widely credited with popularizing and reviving mainstream interest in punk rock in the United States. Green Day's follow up albums Insomniac (1995) and Nimrod (1997) each sold over two million albums and were certified Double Platinum, and Warning (2000) was certified Platinum. 2004 brought the band's rock opera American Idiot which reignited the band's popularity with a younger generation and sold over six million copies in the United States. Green Day is one of the world's best-selling bands of all time, having sold more than 75 million records worldwide. The group has won five Grammy Awards: Best Alternative Album for Dookie, Best Rock Album for American Idiot, Record of the Year for Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Best Rock Album for the second time for 21st Century Breakdown and Best Musical Show Album for American Idiot: The Original Broadway Cast Recording. In 2010, a stage adaptation of American Idiot debuted on Broadway. On April 18, 2015, the band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a part of the 2015 class in what was their first year of eligibility for induction. On October 16, 2015, Green Day released the documentary Heart Like A Hand Grenade, an unprecedented behind the scenes look at the writing and recording of their legendary album American Idiot. Green Day's 12th studio album Revolution Radio was released on October 7, 2016 and debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200 Chart. The band is currently on their Revolution Radio World Tour.
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Buy The Temptations Tickets
Ranked amongst the ‘100 Greatest Artists of All Time’ by Rolling Stone Magazine, The Temptations have enthralled millions with their groovy music and riveting live performances. The band has garnered immense success over the years and has been described, ‘as influential to soul and R&B as The Beatles are to pop and rock’. The Temptations have sold tens of millions of units around the world and continue to allure thousands of fans to their concerts every year. This season, the band is all set to take down the house by staging energetic and vibrant live performances. The Temptations will be playing live throughout the country including the Margaritaville Resort Casino’s Bossier City stage.
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Artist: The Temptations
Hit Songs: Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone, Just My Imagination, My Girl, Masterpiece
Major Honors: 3 Grammy Awards, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction
Hailing from Detroit, the band was initially formed in 1960 as The Elgins. The original lineup of the band consisted of members from two rival groups, the Primes and the Distants. Members of both the groups were well acquainted with each other as they used to play at the same public venues and participate in the same talent shows.
However, after the two groups disbanded, Otis Williams was in search of band members in order to audition for Berry Gordy’s label, Motown. Paul Williams and Eddie Kendricks, who had move to Alabama after the disbandment of the Primes, returned to Detroit and joined the new group. The original lineup featuring Paul Williams, Eddie Kendricks, Melvin Franklin, Elbridge Bryant and Otis Williams, auditioned for Motown and were signed by Berry for the Motown imprint, Miracle.
Major Albums
The group released its first two singles, ‘Check Yourself’ and ‘Oh Mother of Mine’ in 1961. Their debut studio album, ‘Meet the Temptations’ was released in 1964 and made it to the Billboard 200 chart. Since then, The Temptations have released 43 studio albums, fifteen compilation albums and four live albums. Over thirty of the band’s albums have reached the Top 10 position on either the Pop Albums chart or the R&B ALBUMS chart in the US and UK. These albums include 'Truly For You', 'Wings of Love', 'Anthology', 'Solid Rock', 'On Broadway', 'Puzzle People and 'Cloud Nine'. The band has produced fourteen number one hits on the R&B charts as well as nine number one singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
The Temptations - Live
In their 43rd year, The Temptations continue their exciting journey. Currently comprising of exceptionally talented musicians such as Bruce Williams, Terry Weeks, Joe Herndon, Ron Tyson and original founding member Otis Williams, The Temptations’ live performances continue to enchant countless people every year. The group’s live acts feature high energy crowd, thumping music, flashy dance performances and a thrilling aura, making it a unique and exciting experience for the audience. The Temptations tickets are always a catch amongst the avid fans of the band. So make sure to listen to the legendary group live on stage this season to indulge in an unforgettable musical experience.
The Temptations was the first Motown recording act to win a Grammy Award.
The Temptations are known to always feature a lineup consisting of at least five male vocalists and dancers.
The band was a major inspiration for several 1960s and 1970s bands such as Daryl Hall & John Oates, the Dramatics, Parliaments, the Chi-Lites and the Delfonics.
The 1991 film, The Five Heartbreakers is based on the lives of The Temptations band members.
The band was awarded a ‘Lifetime Achievement Award’ at the 2013 Grammys.
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Blu-ray, DVD Release: 3 Films By Roberto Rossellini Starring Ingrid Bergman
– June 24, 2013Find Others: Blu-ray, DVD, Movie, New Release, NewsGet More: Criterion, Drama, Foreign, Ingrid Bergman
Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Sept. 24, 2013
Price: DVD $99.95, Blu-ray $99.95
Studio: Criterion
George Sanders and Ingrid Bergman's marriage falls apart in Roberto Rossellini's Journey to Italy.
In the late 1940s, the incandescent Hollywood star Ingrid Bergman (Casablanca ) found herself so moved by the revolutionary Neorealist films of Roberto Rossellini (Open City) that she sent the director a letter, introducing herself and offering her talents. The resulting collaboration produced a series of films that are works of both sociopolitical concern and metaphysical melodrama, each starring Bergman as a woman experiencing physical dislocation and psychic torment in postwar Italy. It also famously led to a scandalous affair and eventual marriage between filmmaker and star, and the focus on their personal lives in the press unfortunately overshadowed the extraordinary films they made together.
Stromboli, Europe ’51, and Journey to Italy are intensely personal portraits that reveal the director at his most emotional and the glamorous actor at her most anguished, and that capture them and the world around them in transition.
Here’s a rundown on the three film dramas:
STROMBOLI (1951)
The first collaboration between Roberto Rossellini and Ingrid Bergman is a devastating portrait of a woman’s existential crisis, set against the beautiful and forbidding backdrop of a volcanic island. After World War II, a Lithuanian refugee (Bergman) marries a simple Italian fisherman (Mario Vitale) she meets in a prisoner of war camp and accompanies him back to his isolated village on an island off the coast of Sicily. Cut off from the world, she finds herself crumbling emotionally, but she is destined for a dramatic epiphany. Stromboli balances the director’s trademark with deeply felt melodrama.
EUROPE ’51 (1952)
Ingrid Bergman plays a wealthy, self-absorbed socialite in Rome racked by guilt over the shocking death of her young son. As a way of dealing with her grief and finding meaning in her life, she decides to devote her time and money to the city’s poor and sick. Her newfound, single-minded activism leads to conflicts with her husband and questions about her sanity. The intense, often unfairly overlooked Europe ’51 was, according to Rossellini, a retelling of his own The Flowers of St. Francis from a female perspective. This unabashedly political but sensitively conducted investigation of modern sainthood was the director’s favorite of his films.
JOURNEY TO ITALY (1954)
Among the most influential dramatic works of the postwar era, Journey to Italy charts the declining marriage of a couple (Ingrid Bergman and George Sanders) from England while on a trip in the countryside near Naples. More than just an anatomy of a relationship, Rossellini’s masterpiece is considered a predecessor to the existentialist films of Michelangelo Antonioni. Hailed as a groundbreaking modernist work by the legendary film journal Cahiers du cinéma and named by director Martin Scorsese as one of his favorite films, Journey to Italy is a breathtaking cinematic benchmark.
The DVD and Blu-ray editions of the collection contain the following features:
• New digital film restorations of the English- and Italian-language versions of Stromboli and Europe ’51 and the English-language version of Journey to Italy, with uncompressed monaural soundtracks on the Blu-ray editions
• Archival television introductions by director Roberto Rossellini to all three films
• Audio commentary for Journey to Italy featuring scholar Laura Mulvey
• Rossellini Through His Own Eyes, a 1992 documentary on the filmmaker’s approach to cinema, featuring archival interviews with Rossellini and actor Ingrid Bergman
• New visual essays about Rossellini by scholars Tag Gallagher and James Quandt
• Rossellini Under the Volcano, a 1998 documentary that returns to the island of Stromboli fifty years after the making of Stromboli
• New interview with critic Adriano Aprà about each of the films
• New interview with Fiorella Mariani, Rossellini’s niece, featuring home movies shot by Bergman
• New interview with film historian Elena Degrada about the different versions of Europe ’51
• New interviews with Isabella Rossellini and Ingrid Rossellini, daughters of Rossellini and Bergman
• Ingrid Bergman Remembered, a 1996 documentary on the actor’s life, narrated by her daughter Pia Lindstrom
• My Dad Is 100 Years Old, a 2005 short film, directed by Guy Maddin and starring Isabella Rossellini
• The Chicken, a 1952 short film by Roberto Rossellini, starring Bergman
• A Short Visit with the Rossellini Family, a six-minute film shot on Capri while the family was there during the production of Journey to Italy
• New English subtitle translation for Stromboli and Europe ’51
• A booklet featuring essays by critics Richard Brody, Fred Camper, Dina Iordanova, and Paul Thomas; letters exchanged by Rossellini and Bergman; “Why I Directed Stromboli,” a 1950 article by Rossellini; a 1954 interview with Rossellini conducted by Eric Rohmer and François Truffaut for Cahiers du cinéma; and excerpts from a 1965 interview with Rossellini conducted by Aprà and Maurizio Ponzi for Filmcritica
Buy or Rent 3 Films By Roberto Rossellini Starring Ingrid Bergman
DVD | Blu-ray DVD | Blu-ray DVD | Blu-ray
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Bin Yu wins 2023 COPSS Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship
The Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies (COPSS) has selected Bin Yu, Professor of EECS and Statistics, for the 2023 Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship (DAAL). Formerly known as the R. A. Fisher Award and Lectureship, the DAAL recognizes meritorious achievement and scholarship in statistical science and recognizes the highly significant impact of statistical methods on scientific investigations. She will deliver the DAAL Lecture at JSM in 2023 on veridical data science. Yu’s research focuses on practice, algorithm, and theory of statistical machine learning, interpretable machine learning, and causal inference. Her group is engaged in interdisciplinary research with scientists from genomics, neuroscience, and precision medicine. She and her group have developed the predictability, computability, and stability (PCS) framework for veridical data science toward responsible, reliable, and transparent data analysis and decision-making.
Yu Wins 2023 COPSS Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship
Jessy Lin and Abhishek Shetty win 2023 Apple Scholars in AI/ML PhD fellowships
Two EECS graduate students, Jessy Lin (advisors: Anca Dragan and Dan Klein) and Abhishek Shetty (advisor: Nika Haghtalab) have been named 2023 recipients of the Apple Scholars in AI/ML PhD fellowship. This fellowship recognizes graduate and postgraduate students in the field of artificial intelligence and machine learning. Apple Scholars are selected based on “innovative research, record as thought leaders and collaborators, and commitment to advancing their respective fields.” Jessy Lin’s research is focused on using language as a medium to build agents that can collaborate and interact with humans. Abhishek Shetty’s research is broadly interested in theoretical computer science and machine learning, understanding how learning theory, complexity theory, and probability interact with each other. Apple Scholars receive funding to support their research, and mentorship with an Apple researcher in their field.
Announcing the 2023 Apple Scholars in AI/ML
Allen J. Lichtenberg has died
EECS Prof. Emeritus Allen Joseph Lichtenberg passed away on February 21, 2023, at age 92. Lichtenberg’s research is associated with high-temperature plasma, nonlinear dynamics, and energy utilization. He had been a part of this research since the inception of these fields, publishing over 150 articles in the area. His monograph, “Phase Space Dynamics of Particles,” was published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. in 1969 and was later translated into Russian. His second book, “Regular and Stochastic Motion,” co-authored by Michael Lieberman, was published by Springer-Verlag in 1983 and was also translated into Russian. A second edition was published in 2005, with translations into Chinese and Japanese. Lichtenberg received his A.B. degree from Harvard University in 1952, and his M.S. degree from MIT in 1954. In September 1957 he joined the Department of Electrical Engineering (pre-EECS) as an Acting Assistant Professor. He left in 1959 to obtain his Ph.D. degree in Applied Physics from Oxford University. He returned to the Berkeley campus in 1961. From 1965-1966 he was a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellow and studied radiation from high-temperature plasmas and phase-space concepts in particle dynamics. He held a Miller Research Professorship during 1968-1969, and he chaired the newly formed campus Energy and Resources Graduate Group from 1974-1978.
Rikky Muller and Jaijeet Roychowdhury win 2023 Bakar Prize
EE Profs. Rikky Muller and Jaijeed Roychowdhury have been named winners of the 2023 Bakar Prize. Given annually, the Bakar Prize is designed to give a boost to former fellows as they translate their research into real-world applications, providing additional resources to help transition their work to applications in industry. Muller’s group developed EarEEG, which uses lightweight in-ear earbuds to detect the brain’s electrical activity in a non-invasive way. Roychowdhury’s group invented an Oscillator Ising Machine (OIM), which addresses the scale and expense of “Quantum Annealing” in Quantum computing.
From EarEEG to quantum computing, Bakar Prize winners go for broke
Angjoo Kanazawa wins 2023 Sloan Research Fellowship
CS Assistant Prof. Angjoo Kanazawa has been selected as a 2023 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow in Computer Science. Awarded annually since 1955, the Sloan fellowships honor "the most promising scientific researchers working today...extraordinary U.S. and Canadian researchers whose creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments make them stand out as the next generation of scientific leaders." Kanazawa's research lies at the intersection of computer vision, computer graphics, and machine learning. She is focused on building systems that can capture, perceive, and understand the complex ways that people and animals interact dynamically with the 3-D world–and can use that information to correctly identify the content of 2-D photos and video portraying scenes from everyday life. Sloan Fellows receive $75,000, which may be spent over a two-year term on any expense supportive of their research.
2023 Sloan Research Fellows
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/20308
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US, European Authorities Dismantle Darknet Cryptocurrency Mixer
U.S. and European authorities reported Thursday that they have taken down ChipMixer, a cryptocurrency mixer well-known in the cybercriminal underground and suspected of having laundered more than US$3 billion worth of cryptocurrency.
Biden Proposes Almost $500 Million to Combat Financial Crime in U.S.
As part of President Joe Biden’s2024 fiscal budget proposal, roughly half a billion dollars is set to be dedicated towards deterring criminal actors from laundering their ill-gotten gains through the U.S. financial system.
U.S. Targets Smuggling and Money Laundering Networks Supporting Russia’s Regime
The U.S. Department of Justicefiled two separate cases against a Russian oligarch, in its latest efforts to disrupt money laundering and smuggling networks which support the Russian regime’s war in Ukraine.
Art and Antiquities an Attractive Market for Money Laundering, FATF Argues
Having achieved over US$65 billion in global sales in 2021, the arts and antiquities industry is an attractive market for money laundering activity, according to a Financial Action Task Force (FATF) report.
Bosnian Authorities Bust Group Selling Fake Diplomas
Law enforcement in Bosnia and Herzegovinadetained 11 people suspected of “organized crime, illegal trade, and money laundering” in connection with the sale of fraudulent university diplomas that were not based on genuine study.
Poland and Belarus Dismantle Transnational Tobacco Smuggling Network
Polish and Belarusian authorities detained over a dozen suspects believed to be part of a large-scale tobacco smuggling network operating between the two countries and potentially throughout the European continent.
U.S. Charges Sanctioned Oligarch Associate over Helping Violate Sanctions
U.S. prosecutors have charged a friend of Russian billionaire Viktor Vekselberg with sanctions violation and money laundering because he allegedly helped maintain Vekselberg’s properties in the U.S. and even tried to sell two of them.
Suisse Secrets Whistleblower Faces Prosecution for Economic Espionage
In the wake of theSuisse Secrets investigation released last year, which uncovered how the bank Credit Suisse had stored the ill-gotten gains of criminals and the corrupt across the world, prosecutors have now launched an investigation, but not into the bank.
UK to go after Offshore Firms That Failed to Declare Beneficial Owners
Almost 40 percent of all offshore companies that own property in the United Kingdom have failed to declare their real owners and could now face hefty fines, a suspension of their ownership rights and prison.
TI Executive Director Examines Suboptimal US Corruption Index Score
Although it slightly improved in 2022, partisanship in the political arena, its blatant uses of gerrymandering, and its inadequate countermeasures against money laundering keep the United States’ global corruption perception ranking close to its historic low, a top official of the global anti-corruption organization Transparency International told OCCRP.
Italian Authorities Arrest Dozens in Anti-Mafia Operation in Calabria
Italian police detained 56 suspected mafiosi and seized more than 200 million euros (US$217.89 million) in assets during an operation that, according to authorities, broke the spine of the country’s most prominent organized crime structure, the Calabria-based ‘Ndrangheta.
Swedbank Ex-CEO Cleared of Money-Laundering Cover-Up
A Swedish court cleared on Wednesday Swedbank’s former CEO Birgitte Bonnesen of playing down the bank’s inadequate prevention of massive money-laundering through its operations in the Baltic states.
Spain Busts Illegal Tobacco Gang Exploiting Ukrainian Refugees
Spanish authorities closed down three illegal tobacco factories and arrested 27 suspected members of a criminal group that employed Ukrainians who escaped the Russian invasion of their country to produce the cigarettes.
UK Police Warn on Money Mulling Increase among Youngsters
Thousands of youngsters are being manipulated by criminals into shifting cash between accounts in exchange for some pocket money, effectively acting as “money mules,” U.K. officials warned.
UK: FCA Fines Banks for Anti-Money Laundering Shortcomings
The U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) penalized two banks in as many days for shortcomings in their anti-money laundering and due diligence protocols that failed to ensure that their clients’ money was not connected to financial crime.
U.S. Offers $10 Million for Information on Hezbollah Financiers in Guinea
The U.S. isoffering up to US$10 million for information on Hezbollah’s financial networks in the West African country of Guinea associated with the activities of two local tycoons of Lebanese origin who were sanctioned by the Treasury in March last year.
US: Coinbase to Pay $100 Million to Settle Money-Laundering Investigation
The crypto exchange platform Coinbase agreed Wednesday to pay US$100 million to settle charges levied by the New York State Department of Financial Services (DFS) after it was found to have violated anti-money-laundering laws and not be up to code in managing its security protocols.
Maldives Ex-President Jailed Over Island Lease Bribery and Embezzlement
The Maldives Criminal Court sentenced the archipelago state’s former president to 11 years foraccepting bribes andmoney laundering related to the leasing of an island for resort development, and ordered him to pay a US$5 million fine.
Russian Money Flowing Into San Francisco Real Estate, Silicon Valley Startups
Sanctioned Russian oligarch Suleyman Kerimov funneled at least US$28 million of his fortune into San Francisco real estate and Silicon Valley startups with the help of a covert network of U.S.-based professionals, according to a new investigation published today.
Danske Bank Agrees to Pay $2B in Money-Laundering Fines
Danske Banksaid Tuesday it has reached a settlement with U.S. and Danish authorities in one of the world’s largest money-laundering scandals, pleading guilty to bank fraud conspiracy and a civil securities fraud and agreeing to pay a total of US$2 billion in fines.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/21337
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Musicians From Tennessee
Tennessee has produced a number of Musicians who have made it big. These include Lisa Marie Presley, Dolly Parton, Tina Turner, Aretha Franklin, Justin Randall Timberlake and others.
Vote for Your Favourite Musicians
(Singer-Songwriter and Actress, Primarily Known for Her Work in Country Music)
Multifaceted personality, Dolly Parton is a singer, songwriter, record producer, actress, author and businesswoman and is known mainly for her work in country music. She has received various accolades and awards in her very successful singing career spanning several decades and has composed over 3,000 songs. She has also worked in several movies and is a prolific songwriter.
(Singer-songwriter)
Birthdate: August 20, 1942
(Guitarist, Singer, Musician, Songwriter)
Died: October 29, 1971
Alabama Musicians
Arkansas Musicians
California Musicians
(One of the Best-Selling Music Artists in the World & 'Queen of Soul')
Widely regarded as the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin was a singer-songwriter, actress, and civil rights activist. Recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Aretha was ranked number one on Rolling Stone magazine's 100 Greatest Singers of All Time list in 2010. Having sold over 75 million records, she is also one of the best-selling musicians ever.
Florida Musicians
Georgia Musicians
Illinois Musicians
Justin Randall Timberlake
(Billboard Best Performing Male Soloist in the History of the Mainstream Top 40)
Justin Randall Timberlake is an American actor, singer-songwriter, and record producer. Regarded as a pop icon, Timberlake has sold more than 56 million singles worldwide, which makes him one of the best-selling music artists. In 2007 and 2013, he was named in Time magazine's 100 most influential people in the world list. Timberlake is also known for his philanthropic activities.
(Guitarist, Jazz musician, Record producer, Jazz guitarist, Classical guitarist, Songwriter)
Died: June 30, 2001
Indiana Musicians
Iowa Musicians
Kansas Musicians
(Singer-songwriter & the Only Child of Elvis Presley)
The only child of the legendary singer and musician, Elvis Presley, Lisa Marie Presley fought her addiction with drugs during her teens and later launched herself as singer-songwriter with her debut album To Whom It May Concern. It was followed by two more commercially and critically successful albums. Lisa Marie Presley has also earned appreciation for her numerous philanthropic work.
Birthdate: April 9, 1932
Kentucky Musicians
Louisiana Musicians
Maryland Musicians
(Country Musician Who has Received Twelve 'Country Music Association Awards' & Eleven 'Academy of Country Music Awards')
Country singer Kenneth Chesney has over 40 Top 10 Billboard tracks to his credit. He has won six Academy of Country Music awards and nine Country Music Association awards. He also co-directed the ESPN film The Boys of Fall. His Flip-Flop Summer Tour was the highest-grossing country tour of 2007.
(Member of the Rock Band 'The Allman Brothers Band')
Birthdate: December 8, 1947
Gregg Allman was an American musician and singer-songwriter. He is credited with co-founding the rock band The Allman Brothers Band along with his brother Duane Allman. Dubbed the Southern rock pioneer, Allman was recognized for his distinctive, soulful voice; Rolling Stone magazine named him in its 100 Greatest Singers of All Time list.
Massachusetts Musicians
Michigan Musicians
Mississippi Musicians
(Country Pop Singer Known for Her Single 'Love Me Like You Mean It')
Kelsea Ballerini is an American singer and songwriter. Ballerini became the first female artist since Carrie Underwood in 2006 to have her debut single top the Country Airplay chart. Kelsea Ballerini is the recipient of several prestigious awards, such as CMT Music Awards, Academy of Country Music Awards, and Teen Choice Awards.
Missouri Musicians
NA Musicians
New Jersey Musicians
(Country Singer-Songwriter Known for Her Breakout Single 'Seven Year Ache')
Rosanne Cash is an American singer-songwriter. The daughter of musician Johnny Cash, Rosanne Cash followed in the footsteps of her father. Also a humanitarian, Cash supports many charitable organizations like Children, Incorporated, which supports young adults and children. She has also been a board member of an organization called Center To Prevent Youth Violence, which works towards preventing gun violence.
(One of the Greatest Female Blues Singers of the 1930s)
Bessie Smith was an American singer who gained popularity during the Jazz Age. Dubbed the Empress of the Blues, Smith was one of the most famous blues singers of the 1920s and 1930s. Counted among the greatest singers of her generation, Bessie Smith was a major influence on several other singers. Her life and work inspired the TV film Bessie.
New York Musicians
North Carolina Musicians
Ohio Musicians
Died: February 4, 2016
(Rapper, Songwriter)
Rapper Juicy J, younger brother of rapper Project Pat, established the hip-hop Three 6 Mafia, which delivered the Academy Award-winning track It's Hard out Here for a Pimp. Juicy J was also nominated for a Grammy for his and Katy Perry’s chartbusting track Dark Horse. He went solo later.
Oklahoma Musicians
Pennsylvania Musicians
South Carolina Musicians
Shooter Jennings
(Southern Rock Musician Known for His Album 'Put the 'O' Back in Country' and Son of Coutry Singer 'Waylon Jennings')
Shooter Jennings is an American guitarist, singer, songwriter, and record producer. In addition to releasing his songs and albums, Jennings also produces tracks and albums for several other bands like Jason Boland & the Stragglers, Fifth on the Floor, and Hellbound Glory. Shooter Jennings is also credited with forming a multi-format recording company and a label named Black Country Rock.
Texas Musicians
Virginia Musicians
Washington Musicians
(Musician, Singer)
John Carter Cash
(Singer-songwriter, Record producer)
Wisconsin Musicians
Utah Musicians
New Yorkers Musicians
(The "Queen of Rock 'n' Roll")
Known as the Queen of Rock 'n' Roll, Tina Turner is one of the best-selling recording artists of all time and has had a very long and successful career. Let's Stay Together, What's Love Got to Do with It, Private Dancer and Golden Eye are some of her chartbuster songs. She is also a songwriter and has acted in films too.
(Singer-songwriter who Rose to Fame as Breakout Star of 'Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta')
Nevada Musicians
Minnesota Musicians
Oregon Musicians
(American Country Music Singer and Songwriter)
Chris Young is an American singer and songwriter who achieved popularity after winning the fourth season of the popular reality TV singing competition show Nashville Star. In 2017, he became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Chris Young is also known for his philanthropic efforts; he has supported several non-profit organizations like Little Kids Rock and Stars For Stripes.
(singer-songwriter, songwriter, singer)
Hillary Scott is a singer and songwriter. She is credited with co-founding the popular American country music group Lady A for which she currently serves as the co-lead singer. Over the years, Scott has played a major role in the success of the group, which has won many awards like the Academy of Country Music Awards and American Country Awards.
North Dakota Musicians
Connecticut Musicians
Colorado Musicians
(Comedian)
Bill Black
Arizona Musicians
Nebraska Musicians
Maine Musicians
(Singer, Television presenter, Actor, Songwriter)
Rhode Island Musicians
New Hampshire Musicians
Idaho Musicians
Birthdate: January 4, 1966
Rosie Nix Adams
(Songwriter)
Hawaii Musicians
New Mexico Musicians
Vermont Musicians
Brent Smith is a singer best known as the founder and frontman of the rock band Shinedown. He was just a small child when he started showing a keen interest in music. As a teenager, he launched his own band and enjoyed moderate success. He later founded Shinedown. The band has sold more than 10 million records.
Morgane Stapleton
Alaska Musicians
Delaware Musicians
Montana Musicians
Red West
(actor, singer, television actor, songwriter)
Birthdate: 1936 AD
Died: September 4, 1991
West Virginia Musicians
(Disc Jockey)
Al Jackson, Jr.
Died: October 1, 1975
(Guitarist, Singer, Musician, Songwriter, Record producer)
Died: March 17, 2010
Donald Dunn
(Guitarist)
BlocBoy JB
(Rapper)
(Known as the 'King of Country Music' and a Member of the 'Grand Ole Opry')
Died: November 23, 1992
Popularly known as The King of Country Music, Roy Acuff was also a talented fiddler. Initially a budding baseball player, he ditched his sports career due to repeated injuries and focused on music instead. He was part of the radio broadcast Grand Ole Opry and later won a Grammy Lifetime Award.
(Singer-songwriter, Singer)
Edwin Starr
Died: April 2, 2003
(American Country Music Singer Who Performed for Six Decades)
Died: May 8, 2008
A country music legend, Eddy Arnold had 28 number one singles in his kitty. His father’s death forced him to quit school and work on his family farm at age 11. A Grand Ole Opry member, he soared to fame with tracks such as Make the World Go Away.
Lord Infamous
Bobby Bland
Yusef Abdul Lateef
Birthdate: October 9, 1920
TV :138721
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/21486
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Winning works of the 1st Lin Yao Ji International Competition for Composition premiered
31/05/2013 (Fri)
"Jerusalem Stones" for string quartet, by Gilad Cohen, was premiered in Beijing on 20 May 2013 during the Beijing Modern Music Festival, by the Beijing Central Conservatory's Chamber Music Department's string quartet.
Praised by the 2010 Israeli Prime Minister Award Committee for “creating a personal language fusion that has a unique dimension” in music that is “fascinating, vibrant and drawing the ear as well as the heart”, Israeli composer Gilad Cohen (b. 1980) is an active composer, performer and conductor in different musical genres including concert music, rock and music for theatre. A graduate of the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance and the Mannes College of Music, Gilad is currently a PhD candidate in Composition at Princeton University. Gilad’s music was performed at venues around the US, Europe and Israel including Merkin Hall, Morgan Library & Museum, Bargemusic (New York), the University of Music and Performing Arts in Vienna, Kolarac Hall (Belgrade) and the Jerusalem Theatre (Israel). Recent awards include the Israeli Prime Minister Award for Composers, the Whiting Fellowship for Humanities, the Encore Grant from the American Composers Forum, the first prize in the American Liszt Society International Composition Competition and the top prize in the 2012 Franz Josef Reinl Composition Contest in Vienna. A current student at the Tony-honored BMI Musical Theatre Workshop in New York, Gilad is active as a composer for theatre, choral conductor and performer, playing piano, bass and guitar. Recent performances included Merkin Hall, Rose Hall at Lincoln Center and Symphony Space (New York).
Gilad was the Winner of Category C of the 1st Lin Yao Ji International Competition for Composition (LYJICC).Category C was open to works written for a chamber ensemble of between 3 to 5 instruments including the violin. Instruments in addition to one violin featured in the composition may be any Chinese or Western instrument, including but not limited to violin, voice, digital keyboard and fixed media.
"Spindrift" for solo violin, by Tonia Ko, was premiered by young celebrity violinist and winner of the 2002 Tchaikovsky Violin Competition Chen Xi, on 20 May 2013 during the Beijing Modern Music Festival. The piece was also played on tour in Tianjin and Xi'an as part of the Caput Ensemble's tour of China from 18 to 24 May 2013.
The music of Tonia Ko has been described by critics as “expansive, meditative,” and containing an “uncertain piquancy.” Born in Hong Kong in 1988 and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, her work reflects and embraces her multi-cultural upbringing. Ensembles that have performed her work include the ensemble mise-en, Indiana University New Music Ensemble, Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Eastman Wind Ensemble, Luna Nova New Music Ensemble, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. A three-time winner of the Louis Lane Prize, she has also received recognition from the Musica Domani Competition, International Alliance for Women in Music, Austin Peay State University, Chicago Chinese Fine Arts Society, and the Belvedere Chamber Music Festival. Tonia is currently a first-year doctoral student at Cornell University. She received her Master’s degree at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where she also served as Associate Instructor of Music Theory. At IU, she was awarded the Georgina Joshi Commission Prize. Tonia earned a Bachelor’s degree with highest distinction from the Eastman School of Music. Her mentors include Steven Stucky, David Dzubay, Claude Baker, Robert Morris, and Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon.
“Spindrift" was written by Tonia Ko in France in the summer of 2009, and won the Ma Si-cong Centennial Prize of the 1st LYJICC. Tonia's other entry, “Still Life Crumbles” for violin and double manual harpsichord, also won Category B of the LYJICC. Category B was open to pieces written principally for the violin with accompaniment, or a work in which both the violin and the additional instrument (which can also be a violin) share equal weight in the music.
Both pieces were premiered during Caput Ensemble's tour of China from 18 to 24 May 2013. The Caput Ensemble performed at the Beijing Central Conservatory of Music, the home of the Beijing Modern Music Festival 2013, on May 20th, as well as at the Tian Jin May Festival on May 21st, and at the Xi’an Conservatory of Music on May 23rd.
The tour is supported by the Nordic Culture Point (Kulturkontakt Nord), and the concerts are held in cooperation with the Lin Yao Ji Music Foundation of China and the Icelandic-Chinese Cultural Society (KÍM) which celebrates its 60th anniversary this year.
Videos More
Passacaglia for Violin and Viola (Handel-Halvorsen)
String Quartet in D Major Op.1 No.3 Joseph Haydn 1st Mov. Adagio
Selections from the Butterfly Lovers Concerto For Violin, Pipa and Piano (He Zhanhao/Chen Gang)
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/21653
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Holidays Calendar for April 4, 2020
Public Holidays → Senegal
Independence Day in Senegal
April 4 is Independence Day in Senegal. This holiday celebrates the day, when Senegal and French Sudan merged to form the Mali Federation in 1959.
Public Holidays → Angola
Peace Day in Angola
Every year the Angolans celebrated Peace Day on April 4. This holiday celebrates the end of the Angolan Civil War, that continued for almost 30 years.
Public Holidays → Taiwan, Hong Kong
Children's Day in Taiwan
Celebration of Children's Day annually falls in Taiwan (the Republic of China) on April 4. This holiday was established in 1931. Hong Kong also celebrates this holiday on the same day.
Religious Holidays → India
Mahavir Jayanti
Mahavir Jayanti, also known as Mahavir Janma Kalyanak, is one of the most important festivals in the ancient Indian religion of Jainism. It celebrates the birthday of Jina Mahavira, a revered spiritual leader and the 24th tirthankara (a person who’ve achieved enlightenment). According to the Gregorian calendar, the festival occurs in March or April.
International Carrot Day
International Carrot Day is observed annually on April 4. This unofficial holiday celebrates one of the most widespread and healthy root vegetables used to prepare a wide variety of dishes, from salads to desserts.
Unofficial Holidays → USA
Almost everyday you see a 404 error or Not found message while surfing the Internet. This error occurs when your computer is not able to communicate with a server or server can't find what was requested. Since the decimal form of April 4 coincides with 404, this day has become 404 Day.
National Cordon Bleu Day
April 4 is National Cordon Bleu Day. Although many people think that this dish was developed by Le Cordon Bleu, the world’s largest school network of culinary and hospitality schools that teach gourmet French cuisine, it actually originated in Switzerland and was popularized in the United States.
UN Observances
International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action
The UN General Assembly declared that April 4 is an annual observance of International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action. This international day was created in 2005, and its first observance took place in 2006.
Other Observances
World Rat Day
World Rat Day is an annual international holiday observed on April 4. It's an unofficial celebration dedicated to fancy rats who are among the most popular pets. The holiday was created in 2002.
Other Observances → Israel
Aliyah Day in Israel
Aliyah Day (Yom HaAliyah) is an official holiday in Israel celebrated on 10 Nisan and observed in schools on 7 Cheshvan. It celebrates the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel.
Festivals on April 4, 2020
The Daffodil Festival and Parade in Tacoma, USA
The Daffodil Festival and Parade in Sumner, USA
The Daffodil Festival and Parade in Puyallup, USA
The Daffodil Festival and Parade in Orting, USA
Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival in Vancouver, Canada
Artifact Small Format Film Festival in Calgary, Canada
Museums and the Web in Los Angeles, USA
International Cherry Blossom Festival in Macon, USA
UK Asian Film Festival in London, United Kingdom
National Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, USA
Trans-Siberian Art Festival in Novosibirsk, Russia
CPH:DOX Film Festival in Copenhagen, Denmark
World Amigurumi Exhibition in New York, USA
← More Festivals
2013 A building collapsed in a suburb of Thane, Maharashtra, India. 74 people died, including 18 children, 33 men and 23 women.
2002 The peace treaty was signed by the Angolan government and the UNITA (National Union for the Total Independence of Angola) rebels marking the end of the Angolan Civil War.
1993 Died: Alfred Mosher Butts, American game architect, best known as the inventor of Scrabble game.
1984 Ronald Reagan, President of the USA, called for an international ban of chemical weapons. They were banned only in 1993 under the Chemical Weapons Convention.
1983 Space shuttle Challenger made its first voyage into space.
1979 Born: Heath Ledger, Australian actor and director, best remembered for roles in 10 Things I Hate About You, The Patriot, A Knight's Tale, Lords of Dogtown, The Dark Knight.
1975 Microsoft Corporation was founded as a partnership between Bill Gates and Paul Allen in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
1975 Vietnam War: A United States Air Force Lockheed C-5A Galaxy, one of the largest military aircrafts in the world, transported orphans during the mass evacuation of children from South Vietnam to the USA. The aircraft crashed near Saigon shortly after takeoff, 172 died.
1968 Died: Martin Luther King, Jr., American activist, leader in the African-American Civil Rights Movement, Nobel Peace Prize laureate for combating racial inequality through nonviolence.
1965 Born: Robert Downey, Jr., American actor, singer, producer, and screenwriter, best known for the roles as Tony Stark / Iron man in Iron Man franchise and The Avengers and as Sherlock Holmes in Guy Richie's Sherlock Holmes.
1964 The Beatles occupied the top five positions on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart.
1960 Born: Hugo Weaving, Nigerian-Australian actor, best known for his roles as Agent Smith in The Matrix trilogy and Elrond in The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit film trilogies.
1948 Born: Dan Simmons, American author in the science fiction, horror and fantasy genres, best known for novels Hyperion Cantos, the Fall of Hyperion, Summer of Night.
1931 Died: André Michelin, French businessman, founder of the Michelin Tyre Company.
1929 Died: Karl Benz, German engineer and businessman, founder of Mercedes-Benz, a German automobile manufacturer of luxury automobiles.
1919 Died: William Crookes, English chemist and physicist, the pioneer of vacuum tubes and inventor of the Crookes tube and the Crooks radiometer.
1916 Born: Nikola Ljubičić, Serbian general and politician, the 10th President of Serbia (1982-1984). Ljubičić was proclaimed a national hero in 1953 for his actions in World War II.
1905 An earthquake hit the Kangra Valley, India. 20,000 were killed, most buildings in Kangra, McLeod Ganj and Dharamshala were destroyed.
1883 Died: Peter Cooper, American businessman and philanthropist, founder of Cooper Union, a private college in the East Village, New York.
1870 Died: Heinrich Gustav Magnus, notable German chemist and physicist, the first to identify the three sulfonic acids and their salts. His research continued over his lifetime and touched different areas in chemistry.
1869 Mary Colter American architect and designer, known for design of the Desert View Watchtower in Grand Canyon National Park South Rim.
1841 Died: William Henry Harrison, American general and politician, the 9th President of the United States. Harrison is remembered as the president with the shortest tenure (32 days).
1826 Born: Zénobe Gramme, Belgian engineer, inventor of the Gramme machine, the first electrical generator to produce power on a commercial scale in industry.
1818 Born: Thomas Mayne Reid, Irish-American author, whose novels were especially popular with children and youth. He is best known for the novel Headless Horseman.
1780 Born: Edward Hicks, American folk painter, a Quaker icon, and the minister of the Society of Friends.
1774 Died: Oliver Goldsmith,Irish-English author, poet, and playwright, best known for his novel The Vicar of Wakefield, poem The Deserted Village and plays The Good-Natur'd Man and She Stoops to Conquer.
1768 Phillip Astley staged the first modern circus in London.
1760 Born: Juan Manuel Olivares, Venezuelan composer of the Colonial era. Most of his works are incomplete, only Dúo de violines is the only work of chamber music composed in colonial Venezuela, that is preserved in its entirely.
1660 Charles II of England released the Declaration of Breda, in which he promised a general pardon for crimes committed during the English Civil War for those, who recognize him as the lawful king.
1617 Died: John Napier, Scottish mathematician, physicist, and astronomer, best remembered for discovery of logarithms, invention of Napier's bones and making common the use of the decimal point in mathematics.
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Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome
A rare disorder characterized by very short stature, cor-pulmonale (failure of the right side of the heart) and excess amino acids in the urine due to kidney dysfunction.
* Postnatal growth retardation * Slow motor development * Waddling gait * Frequent respiratory infections * Normal mental development * Reduced muscle tissue * Reduced adipose tissue * Enlarged right ventricle * Enlarged heart * High level of amino acids in the urine * Cor pulmonale * Dwarfism
Approximately 85% of patients with cor pulmonale have COPD, and 25% of patients with COPD eventually develop cor pulmonale. Other respiratory disorders that produce cor pulmonale include: obstructive lung diseases — for example, bronchiectasis and cystic fibrosis restrictive lung diseases — for example, pneumoconiosis, interstitial pneumonitis, scleroderma, and sarcoidosis
The 'prognosis' of Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome usually refers to the likely outcome of Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome. The prognosis of Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome may include the duration of Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome, chances of complications of Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome, probable outcomes, prospects for recovery, recovery period for Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome, survival rates, death rates, and other outcome possibilities in the overall prognosis of Rowley-Rosenberg syndrome. Naturally, such forecast issues are by their nature unpredictable.
Treatment of cor pulmonale is designed to reduce hypoxemia, increase the patient’s exercise tolerance and, when possible, correct the underlying condition. In addition to bed rest, treatment may include administration of: a cardiac glycoside (digoxin) antibiotics when respiratory infection is present; culture and sensitivity of a sputum specimen helps select an antibiotic potent pulmonary artery vasodilators (such as diazoxide, nitroprusside, hydralazine, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, calcium channel blockers, or prostaglandins) in primary pulmonary hypertension oxygen by mask or cannula in concentrations ranging from 24% to 40%, depending on PaO2, as necessary; in acute cases, therapy may also include mechanical ventilation; patients with underlying COPD generally shouldn’t receive high concentrations of oxygen because of possible subsequent respiratory depression a low-salt diet, restricted fluid intake, and diuretics, such as furosemide, to reduce edema phlebotomy to reduce the RBC count anticoagulants to reduce the risk of thromboembolism. Depending on the underlying cause, some variations in treatment may be indicated. For example, a tracheotomy may be necessary if the patient has an upper airway obstruction. Steroids may be used in the patient with a vasculitis autoimmune phenomenon or acute exacerbations of COPD.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/21893
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Home Sport UAE Jiu-Jitsu team arrives in Bangkok ahead of 7th Asian championship
UAE Jiu-Jitsu team arrives in Bangkok ahead of 7th Asian championship
Members of UAE Jiu-Jitsu team pose for a picture after reaching Bangkok.
The UAE Jiu-Jitsu Team, sponsored by Mubadala Investment Company, landed in Bangkok, few days before the start of the Jiu-Jitsu Asian Championship.
The squad traveled to Thailand from Sydney after participating in a training camp to get them ready for the competition, which will take place from February 24-28 with the participation of players from 37 nations.
The UAE’s delegation is led by Mohamed Salem Al Dhaheri, Deputy Chairman of the UAE Jiu-Jitsu Federation, and includes Mubarak Al Menhali, Director of the Technical Department of the UAEJJF, and Ramon Lemos, coach of the national team, in addition to the players.
The team is finishing up its preparations for the competitions scheduled for February 25 and 26.
Dhaheri said: “We have confidence in our national team to win the championship title for the third straight year and solidify the UAE’s leadership in the continent. The Asian championship is considered the most prominent continental championship, where our jiu-jitsu champions have always shone and secured medals.”
Elsewhere, Mubarak Al Menhali, Director of the UAEJJF’s Technical Department, said: “The Sydney camp was an important step in preparing the national team to compete at the highest level. This was one of the longest external camps for the team, and we were successful in producing fruitful outcomes. It has strengthened bonds between players and technical staff along with enhancing technical skills.”
The players have developed the mental and physical fitness required to participate in the competition, according to Ramon Lemos, coach of the national team. “The national team will continue its training, learn more about potential opponents, and prepare the right strategy over the course of the following two days. This is one of training’s most critical parts of training.”
The Emirati champion Omar Al Suwaidi, who competes in the weight of 56 kg division, added: “We arrived in Bangkok with our goal to defend the title and raise the UAE flag on the podium. I have every faith that the golden team will recreate the happy moments we had in Manama, Birmingham, and Abu Dhabi last year.”
The men’s national team delegation includes Theyab Al-Nuaimi and Omar Al-Suwaidi (56 kg), Omar Al-Fadhli and Khaled Al-Shehhi (62 kg), Muhammad Al-Suwaidi and Sultan Jabr (69 kg), Faraj Al-Awlaki and Mahdi Al-Awlaki (77 kg), Saeed Al-Kubaisi and Faisal Al-Ketbi weighed (85 kg), and Abdullah Al-Kubaisi and Hazza Farhan weighed (94 kg).
The women’s team includes Hamda Al-Shekheili and Aisha Al-Shamsi (45 kg), Balqis Abdul Karim and Hessa Al-Shamsi (48 kg), Asma Al-Hosani and Shamsa Al-Ameri (52 kg), Bashayer Al-Matroushi (57 kg), and Haya Al-Jahuri and Shamma Al-Kalbani weighed (63 kg), and Marwa Al-Hosani weighed (70 kg).
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/21947
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Step back in time to see what area movie theaters were presenting in January 1974, the month that the Detroit Film Theatre opened. Film titles are linked to the Internet Movie Database.
DFT Opens
"The Detroit Film Theater at the Art Institute launches its promising premier season Friday with 'Mon Oncle Antoine,' a quietly perceptive French-Canadian film by Claude Jutra," wrote Detroit Free Press Film Critic Susan Stark on Friday, January 4, 1974, the opening night of the DFT. Later in her review, Stark added, "It is precisely the kind of movie—low-key but high quality—that justifies the existence of a Detroit Film Theater."
Mon Oncle Antoine (1971) was described by David Shipman in the 1982 book The Story of Cinema as "the first Canadian film widely seen abroad." On Saturday night, January 5, the DFT presented the poignant 1952 French drama about childhood and death, Forbidden Games. The opening weekend concluded on Sunday, January 6, with Laurence Olivier in The Beggar's Opera (1953).
In reference to Mon Oncle Antoine and Forbidden Games, Detroit News Entertainment Writer Barbara Hoover wrote (on January 4), "The Detroit Film Theatre has chosen two gems to launch its six-month film series at the Detroit Institute of Arts." Patrons were charged $2 for individual tickets, and could buy 16 tickets for $15. This first month coincided with the start of another significant era in Detroit—Coleman Young was inaugurated as Detroit's first black mayor on January 2, 1974.
The DFT's first month included types of films that have always attracted enthusiastic audiences to the DFT: French films (The Fire Within, King of Hearts, and A Very Curious Girl); old American movies (Zoo in Budapest and To Have and Have Not); documentaries (A Sense of Loss); and little-known recent movies (Pulp).
A comment about Pulp by Detroit Free Press Entertainment Editor Lawrence DeVine on January 17 helped describe the mission of the DFT: "Now it [Pulp] has been pulled from the obscurity which it so richly did not deserve by the new Detroit Film Theater series..."
When the DFT opened, art film lovers were served mainly by the Studio chain of theaters. On January 4, the Studio-North at Woodward and Nine Mile was showing Fran�ois Truffaut's Day for Night. Claude Lelouch's Happy New Year was screening at the Studio-8 (Greenfield and Eight Mile). The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe was drawing patrons to the Studio 4 in Birmingham, while Harold and Maude appeared for the 70th week at the Studio New Center (3rd and West Grand Boulevard).
To see an old movie on a big screen, your options included libraries, cinema societies in Ann Arbor, and the auditorium at the Henry Ford Museum.
Also Showing
The Redford Theatre and the Michigan Theater marked their 46th birthdays in January 1974. It was one of their last years as mainstream movie theaters, before they were faced with significant challenges that they successfully overcame in the late 1970s with ownership and programming changes that have helped them survive into the 21st century.
The Redford showed a variety of action movies. Martial arts twin bills included Screaming Tigers / Deep Thrust and Blood of the Dragon / Embalmer. Walking Tall, a popular movie of 1973, was paired with Straw Dogs. Other Redford double features included Black Belt Jones / Come Back, Charleston Blue, and The Serpent / Pretty Maids All in a Row. For children, a Kiddie Matinee on January 26 and 27 featured Pippi Longstocking.
The Michigan continued its long association with the W. S. Butterfield Theatres chain, which in Ann Arbor also included the State, Campus, and Wayside (3020 Washtenaw Ave.). Competing with these theaters in Ann Arbor were the Fifth Forum, Movies at Briarwood, and the Fox Village theaters. The first Michigan movie of 1974 was Jonathan Livingston Seagull, followed by A Film about Jim Hendrix, The Laughing Policeman, and Sleeper.
Popular first run movies in the Detroit/Ann Arbor area included The Sting, The Exorcist, Papillon, The Way We Were, The Paper Chase, Magnum Force, and the animated Robin Hood.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/21965
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Solar Water Solutions receives funding from Nefco to scale up solar-powered water purification
Solar Water Solutions receives funding from Nefco to scale up solar-powered water purification in water-scarce countries
The Finnish family enterprise aims to fill the need for sustainable and affordable drinking water in rural areas. Unique battery-less solar-powered water treatment units help reduce e-waste and save groundwater with zero greenhouse gas emissions.
Nefco has granted financing for Solar Water Solutions to speed up the internationalisation of its battery-free desalination systems. With its solar-powered water purification units that turn seawater or any contaminated water into drinking water, the company is tapping into the rapidly growing off-grid zero-emission desalination market, estimated to reach USD 35 billion globally by 2028, and enabling safe and sustainable water for drought-stricken rural communities.
The financing is provided through Nefco's Green Recovery Loan Programme, which helps accelerate the growth and scale-up of Nordic green solutions on global markets.
Improving water security with zero-emission desalination
Solar Water Solutions provides small-scale, decentralised reverse osmosis desalination units powered by solar energy that can be easily integrated to use supplemental wind power or the grid during non-solar hours.
The green recovery financing from Nefco will enable Solar Water Solutions to cover working capital costs for manufacturing, delivering, and installing 10 water treatment units in Guelmim Oued Noun, a region in the southern part of Morocco. The project will be carried out in partnership with Atlas Inclusive Partners, a local green solutions company. For the last two years, the region has been experiencing its most extensive drought in history, which has led the regional government to seek decentralised water treatment systems with fewer operational and maintenance requirements.
The novel configuration of Solar Water Solutions' water treatment units significantly reduces both the cost and carbon footprint of the water purification process, making it one of the most cost-efficient solar-powered water treatment systems on the market. With an affordable, safe, and sustainable water supply for drinking and agricultural use, communities in water-scarce regions can improve their livelihoods and be less impacted by severe droughts. The company's unique brackish water systems have up to 90 % recovery rate enabling ecological water purification saving the scarce groundwater sources.
Clean water without fossil fuels and e-waste
A family enterprise founded in 2015, Solar Water Solutions' innovation for energy-efficient desalination is based on the extensive research of Heikki Pohjola , a Finnish engineer, whose focus has been on renewable energy for the past 25 years. The first pilot was developed in close co-operation with Aalto University Department of Energy Technology. The company partners with local professional water treatment specialists for the installation, services, and maintenance of the technology.
"The need for safe drinking water is global and increasing. Through responsible partnerships, we can revolutionise access to safe affordable water in rural areas together. Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals will not happen without the four key elements: a sustainable technology that brings down the cost of clean water, access to finance, local partners and a market-based business model," says Antti Pohjola , CEO, Solar Water Solutions.
The financing from Nefco will also support the company's expansion to other emerging markets, such as Madagascar and the Caribbean.
Expected direct environmental impact of the Solar Water Solutions' systems throughout the product life cycle in Morocco according to the company's calculations:
Decreasing CO2 emissions by 57 000 tonnes. Decentralised desalination units reduce CO2 emissions from water transportation as the water is purified and consumed locally. The 10 water treatment units to be delivered by the company will reduce CO2 emissions by 57 000 tonnes.
Reducing waste by 1600 tonnes. Battery-free desalination units run purely on solar power. The project will prevent approximately 1600 tonnes of hazardous waste from used batteries from entering the ground.
Improved water security in dry areas. Considering the increasing probability of droughts due to climate change, decentralised solar-powered water treatment systems provide a solution for adapting to climate change and improving water security.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/22579
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Mark Marabella
MARK MARABELLA is an Emmy® nominated executive producer and founder of Marabella Productions. He has over 20 years of experience developing, writing, producing, or directing more than 200 hours of comedy, concerts, talk shows, documentary specials and non-fiction series for VH1, Discovery, I.D., Science, History, National Geographic, MSNBC, Travel Channel, and PBS. In 2009, Mark also helped launch heritageradionetwork, an on-line podcast network composed of more than two-dozen shows. While there, he co-hosted the Q-Report. Mark is also a member of the Writers Guild East and a long-time member of the Producers Guild of America having served as National Board Member, Delegate for the Producers Council, Vice Chairman of PGA East and Chairman of its Documentary and Non-Fiction Committee.
In 2015, after writing, producing, and directing the series DO NOT DISTURB for Investigation Discovery with award-winning executive producer Joel Schumacher, Mark completed 5 episode scripts for MAKING OF THE MOB: Chicago for Stephen David Entertainment that premiered on AMC, then returned for 10 new episodes of Investigation Discovery's new hit series, SHADOW OF DOUBT as show runner and head writer He begins a pilot for another new scripted series in 2017.
Prior to founding Marabella Productions, Mark was the show runner and writer of 60 hours of Discovery's top-rated prime-time true crime procedural series THE FBI FILES for three and half seasons. Through his storytelling, the award-winning series became number one on Discovery two years running, remaining among Discovery's top-rated shows of all time, more recently anchoring the launch of Discovery's, I.D. Thirty episodes of the series can now be seen on Netflix and Amazon.
Originally from Buffalo, New York, Mark began his television career at VH1 working on comedies, talk shows, and music documentaries many of which were nominated for Cable Ace Awards. He went on to become Director of Production and Development for the award winning, independent television and documentary company Globalvision, where he supervised many investigative human rights programs for PBS, the last titled GLOBALIZATION AND HUMAN RIGHTS hosted by award winning journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault. The one-hour documentary won top honors at the World Film Fest in Houston. His work has been broadcast internationally in over 120 countries. Mark has also written for numerous independent newspapers and magazines, and worked closely with top literary and talent agents in New York City.
1 win & 1 nomination
The Interrogator
2019–2020 • 6 eps
Hell in the Heartland: What Happened to Ashley and Lauria
The Jane Doe Murders
Producer(2021)
The Making of the Mob
Producer42
Production Manager4
Somebody's Hiding Something
Seduced By Evil
Shock Docs
Alien Encounters: Declassified
Rifkin on Rifkin: Private Confessions of a Serial Killer
executive producer (2021)
Someone You Thought You Knew
Homicide: Hours to Kill
Shadow of Doubt
Do Not Disturb: Hotel Horrors
Amish Haunting
original story
headwriter
Writer (2014)
Most Likely to...
Travel Like A...
Nova ScienceNow
Writer (segment Origins of the Solar System)
Naked Science
The F.B.I. Files
America's Lost H-Bomb
Base Camp Moon
Director (directed by)
Elder Skelter
Director (segment Origins of the Solar System)
Robocars
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/22901
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Hiring the Congress Hall
ORCHESTRA MUSICIANS
Founded by its artistic director and chief conductor Gintaras Rinkevičius, the Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra debuted in 1989. The orchestra‘s activities began during the years of the national revival of the late 1980s and have evolved in parallel with the history of the re-established independence of Lithuania. It is thus no coincidence that its first name was the Youth Symphony Orchestra: a young state, young musicians, a young conductor, and great hopes for the future. Although three years later the orchestra was conferred the prestigious title of the Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra, the musicians and their artistic director have been faithful to their youthful traditions.
30 January 1989 – the very first concert of the orchestra at the Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theatre – is still alive in the memories of several generations of music lovers. The theatre with a seating capacity of a thousand seats could not accommodate all those who wished to be there, and ingenious students sneaked into the theatre through the restroom window. An orchestra of young and student musicians, and their conductor, Gintaras Rinkevičius, who was also just twenty-eight years old... The opening sounds of the symphonic poem Miške (In the Forest) by Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis and Ludwig van Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, the expressive gestures and astounding energy of the young conductor mesmerized the audience and made the music sound somewhat different and vibrant. The breath-taking sparkling forte, the subtle and sentimental lyricism, and outbursts of emotion – it was so unusual, bold, and strong… Everyone in the audience realised they were witnesses to a historic evening. It was a time of courage and resolve.
Gintaras Rinkevičius and his orchestra became one of the symbols of the young state and of the renewal of its agitated society. The programmes of the orchestra were like repertoire explosions in the musical life of the capital. The ambitious conductor introduced the Lithuanian public to then unheard-of monumental works: Wagner’s Parsifal, Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius, Honegger’s Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher (Joan of Arc at the Stake), Walton‘s Belshazzar's Feast, and Mahler’s complete symphonies.
For its first ten years in existence the orchestra led a student-like life: with no roof over its head it would perform at different venues, yet the loyal audience would follow it everywhere. At last, in 1999, Rinkevičius’s determined efforts yielded results and the orchestra acquired its home, the Congress Hall in Vilnius. Although the original purpose of the building had nothing to do with music, concert goers came to love the new musical space. Youth, novelty, freshness, and the conductor’s charisma attracted the interest of a wider audience, and today one can see a great number of young couples, students, businesspeople, and teenagers here. The Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra has become trendy. This is also thanks to the orchestra’s repertoire, which, alongside classical music, features the music of such rock bands as the Electric Light Orchestra, Queen, and Pink Floyd.
An important field in the orchestra’s activities is production of operas (Pagliaccio, La Boheme, The Magic Flute, Werther, Sweeney Todd, Eugene Onegin, Katya Kabanova, Cossi fan Tutti, Jonas ir Greta (Hansel and Gretel), Il Trovatore, Pelléas et Mélisande, and Tosca) by the theatre director Dalia Ibelhauptaitė. She rallied young singers into an informal movement of the ‘Bohemians’ which eventually was granted the formal status of Vilnius City Opera. Concert performances of operas – Wagner’s Parsifal, Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra, Shostakovich’s Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, and Julius Juzeliūnas’s Žaidimas (A Game) – have become exceptional events in the country’s musical life.
Every year the orchestra has concert tours in European countries. It has played under the baton of such outstanding conductors as Nikolai Alekseyev, Young-Min Park, Brian Schembri, Martynas Staškus, Modestas Pitrėnas, Julius Geniušas, Martinš Ozolinš, Fabrice Grégorutti, Charles Olivieri-Munroe, and Marc Tardue. The orchestra has performed with a multitude of famous musicians: pianists Petras and Lukas Geniušas, Nikolai Petrov, Alexander Paley, Ekaterina Mechetina, Gintaras Januševičius, Andrius Žlabys, and Katia Skanavi; violinists Gidon Kremer, Liana Isakadze, Dalia Kuznecovaitė, Sergei Malov, and Vadim Repin; cellists David Geringas, Alexander Knyazev, Sergei Antonov, Vytautas Sondeckis, and Denis Shapovalov; the trumpeter Sergei Nakaryakov, singers Violeta Urmana, Mikhail Kazakov, Irena Milkevičiūtė, Vladimiras Prudnikovas, Sergei Larin, and Edgaras Montvidas, and other prominent Lithuanian singers of different generations. The orchestra has performed with the Moscow Trio, the Kaunas State Choir, the state choir ‘Latvia’ and many other Lithuanian and foreign performers of classical, popular, and rock music.
The Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra pays considerable attention to its educational mission of acquainting the listener with professional music art of the highest calibre, and of contributing to the spread of musical ideas. Every year it builds up a wide-ranging repertoire, introduces exceptional programmes, and invites young talent to perform along with outstanding and recognized soloists. The youngest concert goers are thrilled by the orchestra’s special educational programmes for children with the participation of theatre actors and circus artistes.
Jūratė Katinaitė
CONCERT OF ORCHESTRA MEMBERS
LSSO IN MARIJAMPOLĖ | THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PEARLS OF OPERA
LSSO IN UTENA | THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PEARLS OF OPERA
LSSO IN ALYTUS | THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PEARLS OF OPERA
Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra
Vilniaus St. 6-1, LT-01102 Vilnius, Lithuania
E-mail: [email protected]
Tel. (+370 5) 262 81 27
Fax. (+370 5) 212 09 66
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MCCI urged to ensure adequate power, and gas supply
Total Views: 3
Industry: Energy & Power, Power
The Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MCCI) has requested the government maintain adequate electricity and gas supplies to ensure economic activity runs smoothly. This proposal is included in its analysis of Bangladesh’s economic position from October to December 2022.
According to the MCCI, the government could have waited a little longer before raising power costs by 5% for the third time this year, despite the fact that global energy prices are on the decline. Businesses suffered a lot in the summer of last year due to a power disruption that impacted business activities.
The Russia-Ukraine war conflict caused supply chain interruptions, global oil and food price spikes, a slowdown in external demand, and sluggish remittance inflows, as a result, the manufacturing sector’s cost of production has gradually increased dramatically.
Source for more details:
The demand for electricity rising by 100MW per day
The State Ministry of Electricity, Energy, and Natural Resources said that electricity demand is increasing by roughly 100MW each day. They are doing everything they can to control the problem.
According to power sector sources, the country may face more than 3,000MW load-shedding this Ramadan due to increased demand for electricity. Despite having a capacity of more than 25,000MW, the country can only generate roughly 12,000MW due to primary fuel shortage.
Due to the recent currency issue, the government was forced to suspend diesel-based power generation. In terms of renewable energy, the government plans to add 1,000MW of solar electricity to the national grid within a year.
The Business Post
Solar energy might save Bangladesh $1 billion yearly
The US-based National Bureau of Asian Research (NRB) discovered that Bangladesh could reduce its annual LNG and diesel imports cost by more than one billion dollars by rapidly expanding its 2,000 MW solar power capacity and replacing all diesel-run irrigation systems with solar electricity.
According to the report, replacing diesel-fired irrigation systems with solar-powered systems and adding 2,000 MW of solar power capacity for daytime applications might help reduce 5.58 million tonnes of CO2 emissions each year.
Electricity generation from rooftop systems presently costs Tk. 5.25 per kWh. Hence, as compared to the cost of grid electricity, industries can save 40% on per-unit electricity costs during the day. Similarly, utility-scale solar could generate electricity at Tk. 7.6/kWh, or 14% cheaper than the Bangladesh Power Distribution Board’s (BPDB) average electricity generation cost in FY 2021-22.
Russia eager to export LNG to Bangladesh
Russia offered to supply liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Bangladesh during the two countries’ intergovernmental commission online conference. The offer comes at a time when Bangladesh has been trying to purchase LNG from the foreign market to meet the expanding domestic natural gas demand.
Authorities claimed that after hiking natural gas taxes by up to 178.88% in February, Bangladesh has increased LNG imports, particularly from the spot market. It intends to purchase a total of eight LNG cargoes in April, a 14.28% increase over March.
Six of these LNG cargos will be delivered by long-term suppliers Qatargas and Oman Trading International (OTI), with the remaining two coming from the international spot market. The country will need an estimated US$450 million to import more LNG to meet rising fuel demand in industry and power plants.
The Indo-Bangla Friendship Pipeline is ready to open
The 130-km Friendship Pipeline between Bangladesh and India, which will transport gasoline or diesel, is ready for opening. The pipeline, known as the Indo-Bangla Friendship Pipeline has 126.57 km in Bangladesh and 5 km built in India.
According to official sources, On March 18, the 131.57-km cross-border pipeline will be formally inaugurated via video conference between Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
Under a 15-year government agreement with India, the BPC, the state agency in charge of marketing petroleum fuel under the Energy and Mineral Resources Division, has been carrying out the project, which entails importing between 250,000 and 400,000 tonnes of diesel from the neighboring country every year via a cross-border pipeline.
Adani Power begins testing transmissions to Bangladesh
Power transmission from Adani’s 1,600MW coal-fired power plant in the Indian state of Jharkhand to Bangladesh began on March 9, although power tariff issues remain unresolved.
The power transmission was synchronized with Bangladesh’s national grid on a test basis, according to a Power Grid Company of Bangladesh (PGCB) Facebook status. More than 50MW of power from the Adani plant reached Bangladesh’s national grid via newly constructed transmission lines and substations.
The company stated that it developed a 134km 400kV transmission line from the adjoining Mankasha area to Bogura via Rohanpur. A 400/230kV substation was also erected in Bogura to enable power evacuation.
Experts urges to accelerate domestic gas and coal exploration
Experts recommended that efforts to explore domestic natural gas and coal resources be increased in order to ensure the country’s future energy security, condemning the government’s ‘lethargic’ posture in this respect thus far.
They made the observation at a session on “Energy Security” at the Bangladesh Business Summit, which was hosted by the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI) at the city’s Bangabandhu International Convention Centre (BICC).
Bangladesh has around 3.30 billion tonnes of coal reserves, which are sufficient to supply the country’s total energy requirement for the next 300 years. According to the former senior SDG (sustainable development goal) organizer, if 25% of underground coal can be extracted, it will fulfill domestic demand for at least 75 years.
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CaribbeanTales presents Heart Beat, an exciting new Canadian-Caribbean musician profile series, coming to Bravo!
Toronto – October 4, 2007
Music fans will gain a deeper appreciation for the sounds of the Caribbean this November, with the launch of Heart Beat – a unique 13-episode documentary series which showcases Canadian-Caribbean musicians and explores the hearts, minds and worlds of some of Canada’s most dynamic musical creators. Heart Beat will premiere on Bravo! on Tuesday, November 27 at 7 p.m.
The series is created and produced by award winning filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon and directed with panache and passion by Lana Lovell, Safiya Randera, Paul Nguyen, Justin Lovell, Alberto Suarez and Mars Horodyski.
Each half-hour episode tells the story of a different Caribbean performer, and explores the depth of their artistry. Featured artists include Master Drummer Muhtadi, Kaiso band Kobo Town, Jazz trumpeter Nick “Brownman” Ali, and many many more.
The official Heart Beat series launch event will take place on Tuesday, October 30 at the Trane Studio, when guests will be treated to live musical performances, as well as an advance screening of a couple of episodes from Heart Beat.
EP 1 : Muhtadi:
‘Muhtadi’ profiles one of Canada’s premier percussionists. A celebrity in his own right, Master Drummer Muhtadi plays djembe, bongos, congas, timbales, steel pan, has been performing professionally for over 30 years, and is the force behind the Muhtadi International Drumming festival, now in its 7th year. He has worked with a host of renowned performers, including Mary Wilson from The Supremes. Each year Muhtadi returns to Trinidad and Tobago for Carnival to perform with the world famous Desperadoes Steel Orchestra.
EP 2: Kobo Town:
Singer/songwriter Drew Gonsalves and the members of Kobo Town are one of Toronto’s most exciting contemporary calypso bands. In ‘Storytelling’, these talented musicians invite us into the dazzling world of wordplay and images that define calypso tradition and Trinidadian culture, reflecting on their ten-year musical journey to Kobo Town and sharing the musical styles and legends that continue to shape it.
Creator & Producer Frances-Anne Solomon is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, and producer whose recent credits include the feature film A Winter Tale (2007), documentary series Literature Alive (2005-6), and the sitcom Lord Have Mercy! (VisionTV, 2003). She is the president and artistic director of the two companies she founded: Leda Serene Films and CaribbeanTales, and has also worked as a radio, film and television drama producer for the BBC.
Leda Serene Films is a film, television and new media production company that has produced an impressive range of award-winning programs—from feature films to more innovative multi-media projects—and has made its name as a producer of high-quality dramas and documentaries that celebrate diversity- strong personal stories from different cultural perspectives in the global diaspora.
CaribbeanTales is a not-for-profit multimedia company committed to producing educational films, videos, and new media projects that celebrate the rich tradition of Caribbean-heritage storytelling, using any and all types of media and state of the art technology. Projects include Literature Alive, a multi-facetted multimedia project including documentaries audio books, and an educational website about Caribbean-Canadian authors, and our Annual CaribbeanTales Film festival.
Category: Uncategorized October 4, 2007
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Earth Song List
Walkin' Jim Stoltz
June 1953 – September 2010
Learn more about Walkin' Jim CLICK HERE
Walkin’ Jim is widely known throughout the U.S. for his unique combination of long-distance hiking, original songwriting, and photography. Jim was an adventurer, artist, poet, photographer, author, and environmental activist.
In his lifetime, he accomplished numerous long-distance treks including the complete lengths of the Pacific Crest Trail, the Appalachian Trail, an east to west cross-continent hike, the entire U.S. Continental Divide, trips from Yellowstone to the Yukon, and many others. In total, he hiked over 28,000 miles of long-distance trips.
When not on a long trip, Walkin’ Jim could be found on any of the many trails in southwest Montana for a day hike with family and friends. He was also an avid cross-country skier. Jim also enjoyed wilderness travels by canoe.
Between trips, Jim would create, produce and perform original shows of his travels with photography and music, always incorporating his keen sense of environmental awareness and justice for all things wild. His musical, hiking, and environmental career spanned 45 years.
Jim was born in Royal Oak, MI, June 8, 1953, to Wilbur and Audra Stoltz. He graduated high school from Royal Oak – Kimball High School.
Walkin’ Jim began playing the guitar when he was in the 4th grade. He performed in several bands during the 1970s. He attained his love for the outdoors and hiking beginning with the Boy Scouts. His first long-distance hike was on the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine in 1973.
The following year, Jim began his Ocean to Ocean walk beginning in West Quodyhead, ME, and ending on the Olympic Pennisula, WA. The entire trip followed dirt roads, railroad tracks, and trails.
Jim’s first recording was “Spirit is Still on the Run,” in 1986. He also recorded, “Forever Wild,” “Listen to the Earth,” “The Long Trails,” and many others. Walkin’ Jim produced over eight musical albums and one music video for children, “Come Walk With Me.”
Jim was an accomplished poet. His poetry was published as, “Whisper Behind the Wind.” Walkin’ Jim wrote a book, “Walking with the Wild Wind: Reflections on a Montana Journey,” highlighting his inspirational travels and wilderness philosophy.
Jim also discovered his talent for painting. He developed an extensive array of work in oils specializing in interpretive environmental themes. He liked to work in the medium of oil-based cattle markers on canvas. Many of his paintings reflected themes from his songs and poetry.
Walkin’ Jim founded Music United to Sustain the Environment (MUSE) with Craig Wagner, and Joyce Rouse. MUSE was a group of professional touring musicians who are concerned about the health of our planet. Many of them draw their inspiration from the land, and feel the need to give something back toward protecting it. Walkin’ Jim stood at the forefront of many environmental causes throughout the U.S.
Jim helped with the planning and design of several trails throughout the American Southwest. A short segment of U.S. Forest Service trail in northern Arizona was recently created and named the Walkin’ Jim Trail.
To spread his love of people and song, Jim was employed for nearly 30 winter seasons at Lone Mountain Ranch, Big Sky, MT, driving horse-drawn sleighs to festive dinners where he performed his extensive repertoire of music.
Jim’s life is richly entwined by a web of countless dear friends, including thousands of children throughout the country who have learned and loved his stories and songs.
Walkin’ Jim is survived by his true friend Leslie Stoltz, Big Sky, MT, brother Mark Stoltz(Joshua, Abram, Randi Lyn), Honor, MI, and sister’s Susan Grace Stoltz, of Fairbanks, AK, and Lisa Mohr(Jessica Krueger, Sarah Krueger-Craft, James Krueger), Wixom, MI, and many nieces and nephews.
Jim’s life work and dreams centered on his desire to share the beauty, the unique character, the mood, and the value of wilderness through his music, writings, art, and activism. He leaves a special and enduring legacy to his family, friends, and innumerable list of fans. A legacy directing all of us to live lives of happiness while sharing in and protecting all things wild.
Our master troubadour and dear friend fought a heroic battle with cancer in Helena, MT. He was 57 years old.
To learn more about Walkin' Jim and his legacy visit www.walkinjim.com.
Walkin' Jim Music
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Bill Wilson Center Opens Unique Housing Complex for Transition-Age Youth
Diane Andrews Posted on POSTED 12:00 AM, June 13, 2012
Peacock Commons in Santa Clara is a very uncommon housing complex for homeless, transition-age youth. It was developed by Bill Wilson Center, and 50 percent of its $8,747,000 cost was funded by Santa Clara Redevelopment Agency money.
“Santa Clara is a leader in providing services to a vulnerable population, and Bill Wilson Center is a leader in providing for homeless youth. We put Santa Clara on the map for that,” says Bill Wilson Center CEO Sparky Harlan at Peacock Commons’ May 23 open house.
Peacock Commons is unique in a number of ways, beginning with those who live there. The renovated, two-story, 28-unit apartment complex is home to 18- to 25-year-olds who have fallen into homelessness.
“It’s a gorgeous, innovative project,” says Harlan. “It’s the first long-term, affordable housing unit for youth on the West Coast with resident counselors.”
Peacock Commons provides supportive housing where residents – who include youth with children, youth with a mental health diagnosis, and victims of domestic violence – can live as long as they need to. The complex currently houses forty-seven adults, including staff, and sixteen children.
The resident project manager, service coordinator, and counselors offer optional case management, employment and personal counseling, and independent living skills. They also serve as role models and provide 10 to 15 hours monthly of support services, such as organizing a potluck or teaching a class in the community building in the center of the complex.
“It’s a community; it’s not just an apartment building,” emphasizes Harlan in a video that can be viewed at www.billwilsoncenter.org. “One thing that the kids asked for is they said they wanted hangout places.”
A business center has internet-connected computers and printers. A children’s play area includes a playhouse with a pretend solar panel assembled by Qualcomm employees through Habitat for Humanity’s Project Playhouse. A rooftop solar system heats water for the entire complex and powers the common areas.
Residents pay rent on a sliding scale, ranging from $253/month for a studio subsidized by Santa Clara County Mental Health to $1,126 for a three-bedroom unit. It is expected that residents will work their way up and out of Peacock Commons through education and training.
“These teens had no parents to fall back on, no one, but now they have us,” says Harlan.
Peacock Commons, shaded by a 200-year-old oak tree, was purchased in 2007. Renovation of the older apartment complex began in February 2011. The first residents moved into the renovated complex in April of this year.
The project was funded by the Cities of Santa Clara, San Jose, and Sunnyvale; Santa Clara County Community Development Block Grant and Mental Health; Housing Trust of Santa Clara County; Housing and Urban Development; Corporation for Supportive Housing; Opportunity Fund; and Sobrato Foundation.
Bill Wilson Center, 3490 The Alameda Santa Clara, was founded in 1973 by the late Bill Wilson, a former Santa Clara mayor.
On May 23, Bill Wilson Center received the Santa Clara County Mental Health Board’s first Community Service Award for the provider that has made an extraordinary difference in the lives of people facing mental illness.
First Challenge Held for Earthquakes' Fans
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Special prosecutors are a big deal. Their results sometimes aren’t.
Analysis by Callum Borchers
May 17, 2017 at 7:37 p.m. EDT
The Justice Department appointed special counsel to investigate Trump and Russia on May 17. (Video: Peter Stevenson, Jason Aldag, Whitney Leaming/The Washington Post)
The Justice Department appointed former FBI director Robert S. Mueller III on Wednesday to serve as a special counsel at the head of an investigation into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.
The move figures to appease the dozens of Senate Democrats who called for an independent probe after President Trump fired James B. Comey as FBI director last week. (Mueller was Comey's predecessor.) With Trump wielding the power to nominate the next FBI director, who would then complete the investigation of Trump's campaign, the appearance of a conflict of interest seemed unavoidable.
Thus, the idea of a special prosecutor makes sense, in theory. In practice, some investigations headed by special prosecutors have rung up huge tabs while producing modest results.
Josh Chafetz, a professor at Cornell Law School, offers this reminder: “The special prosecutor's agreement with the attorney general may specify certain types of independence but, at the end of the day, the prosecutor works for the Department of Justice and can be fired by the attorney general or the president.”
Such firings have actually happened, by the way. Here's a brief history of special prosecutors:
Whiskey Ring Scandal
In 1875, Treasury Secretary Benjamin H. Bristow exposed a conspiracy by a group of whiskey distillers in St. Louis, Chicago and Milwaukee to evade federal taxes. The distillers had bribed IRS officials and planned to use unpaid tax money to help fund the reelection campaign of President Ulysses S. Grant.
Grant, who was not suspected of involvement, appointed special prosecutor John B. Henderson, whose investigation led to 238 indictments — including of Grant's personal secretary, Orville E. Babcock. Grant fired Henderson and replaced him with James Broadhead. Grant testified in Babcock's defense, and Babcock was acquitted; 110 others were convicted on charges related to tax fraud.
Star Route Scandal
President James Garfield appointed special prosecutor William Cook in 1881 to investigate the awarding of postal contracts for so-called star routes in the West and Southwest. Cook's probe produced 25 indictments on charges related to bribery but yielded only convictions, both of which were reversed in a retrial.
More Post Office bribery
In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt's attorney general, Philander Knox, appointed two special prosecutors, Charles J. Bonaparte and Holmes Conrad, to investigate another bribery scheme at the Post Office. Thirty Post Office officials and private contractors were indicted, but the postmaster general, Henry C. Payne, survived the scandal.
Oregon land fraud
Knox appointed another special prosecutor, Francis J. Heney, in 1905 to investigate a land fraud scheme in Oregon. Almost 100 people were indicted, including Sen. John H. Mitchell (R-Ore.) and Rep. John N. Williamson (R-Ore.), both of whom were convicted. Williamson won his appeal; Mitchell also appealed but died before the case concluded.
Teapot Dome Scandal
In 1924, President Calvin Coolidge appointed special prosecutors Atlee Pomerene and Owen Roberts to probe the leasing of oil fields, including the Teapot Dome reserve in Wyoming. Interior Secretary Albert Bacon Fall was convicted of bribery five years later, but served just nine months in prison.
Justice Department corruption
After a congressional probe uncovered a conspiracy among officials at the Justice Department and Bureau of Internal Revenue to fix tax cases, President Harry S. Truman appointed special prosecutor Newbold Morris in 1952. Morris was given the title special assistant attorney general.
As part of his investigation, Morris demanded that roughly 600 Justice Department officials fill out detailed personal finance questionnaires. Attorney General J. Howard McGrath refused and fired Morris, who had been on the job for only two months. McGrath then resigned, and Truman did not name another special prosecutor.
In the dark days of the Watergate scandal, President Richard Nixon pushed out two attorney generals and the special prosecutor of the investigation. (Video: Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)
In 1973, Attorney General Elliott Richardson appointed special prosecutor Archibald Cox to lead the Watergate investigation. Cox subpoenaed Oval Office audio recordings made by President Richard M. Nixon, but Nixon fought the subpoena in court. After a federal appeals court ordered Nixon to turn over the tapes, he fired Cox. Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William D. Ruckelshaus resigned in protest, in what became known as the Saturday Night Massacre.
Nixon initially said his Justice Department would take over the Watergate investigation but, under pressure, he appointed another special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, who ultimately succeeded in obtaining the tapes via a Supreme Court ruling. Nixon resigned in August 1974.
Iran-contra affair
In 1986, a three-judge panel appointed independent counsel Lawrence E. Walsh to investigate the Ronald Reagan administration's sale of weapons to Iran. (The Ethics in Government Act of 1978 had replaced the term “special prosecutor” with “independent counsel.” Attorneys general retained the power to decide when a special prosecutor was necessary, but judiciary panels assumed selection authority.)
Walsh concluded that the Reagan administration had illegally sold the weapons to secure the release of U.S. hostages and defied Congress by giving the proceeds to Nicaraguan rebels, known as contras, who were fighting to overthrow their Marxist government. Fourteen U.S. officials faced criminal charges and 11 were convicted, including Reagan's national security adviser, Navy Adm. John M. Poindexter, and Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North, the National Security Council staff aide accused of masterminding the scheme.
The convictions were overturned on appeal, however, and other officials received presidential pardons. A $39 million investigation ultimately resulted in zero prison time.
In 1994, Attorney General Janet Reno appointed Robert B. Fiske Jr. special counsel (yes, another new term) to investigate the business dealings of the Whitewater Development Corp., formed by Bill and Hillary Clinton and two partners after their joint purchase of 220 acres of land in Arkansas’ Ozark Mountains in 1978. The Ethics in Government Act had lapsed by the time Reno tapped Fiske; when it was renewed later in 1994, a three-judge panel replaced Fiske with Kenneth W. Starr.
Starr's investigation led to fraud convictions for the Clintons' partners, James B. and Susan McDougal. The Clintons were never charged. But Starr's probe expanded to include the president's personal conduct, ultimately focusing on his affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky and his statements under oath about the relationship. The House of Representatives impeached Bill Clinton in 1998, accusing him of perjury and obstruction of justice, but the Senate acquitted him in 1999.
The Whitewater investigation cost $70 million.
Valerie Plame
In 2003, Attorney General John D. Ashcroft recused himself from an investigation into whether George W. Bush administration officials illegally leaked the name of CIA operative Valerie Plame to a journalist. The Ethics in Government Act had lapsed again, leaving the Justice Department with the authority to name a special prosecutor.
With Ashcroft on the sideline, the decision fell to his 43-year-old deputy, who had been on the job for just three weeks — James B. Comey.
Comey appointed Patrick J. Fitzgerald, who sought the cooperation of New York Times reporter Judith Miller in identifying the source of the leak. Miller refused because she had promised to protect a confidential source and in 2005 spent almost three months in jail for contempt of court. Miller's source, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, chief of staff to Vice President Richard B. Cheney, ultimately released her from their confidentiality agreement and was convicted in 2007 on charges related to the leak.
Amber Phillips contributed to this report. This post has been updated.
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NED DAMERON
I am very sad to report that Ned Dameron passed on Thursday, October 20th, 2022. Born Edward Palfrey IV in 1943, "Ned" was a native of Louisiana who turned to painting after studying sculpture and figurative realism with major artists at Tulane's Newcomb School of Art. Dameron’s mother had an art gallery in New Orleans, and dealt in contemporary European paintings - many of which were of the fantastic school; this gave him the idea for painting in a similar vein. After graduation, 1966 he worked for an advertising agency then turned to easel paintings for local galleries, and freelance illustration painting under the name “Arthur Amber”. He lived and painted in San Francisco 1977-1979, and was influenced by the then emerging style sometimes called “California Visionary”. He lived in the Washington DC area for a while in the 1980s and exhibited his personal works, while taking freelance assignments in the SF/F genre. Through the 1980s and into the 1990s, Dameron’s mix of romanticized architectural backgrounds, old-world style, and colorful palette were a good match to the sorts of literary projects undertaken by specialty house publishers, especially the fully illustrated high quality hard-cover book, published in limited quantities for collectors. Almost all his commissions during that time came from two publishers, Donald M. Grant and Underwood-Miller. For their books he produced cover art and many full color plates and black-and-white drawings for interior illustrations, numbering in the dozens for each book - most of which have long been sold. In the mid 1990s Dameron moved into gaming, finding the same opportunity there to build a freelance relationship with one major client (TSR). After 2000 Ned turned back to literary small press and private commissions, which included several large sculptures in bronze. I am please to continue to offer a selection of what is left of his days as a professional illustrator, which includes works published by Donald Grant, and several color interiors for a planned Stephen King book from Cemetary Dance.
Ned Dameron: The Stand: The Cast
Ned Dameron: The Stand: Woody Woodpecker/The Visit
Ned Dameron: The Stand: Fire Pit/Flagg Searches
Ned Dameron: The Stand: Jail Cell/Flagg Motionless
Ned Dameron: The Stand: New England Village
Ned Dameron: The Stand:The Painter and his Dog
Ned Dameron: Beyond the Black River
Ned Dameron: Beings as Strange...
Ned Dameron: The Priests Consult the Oracle, Magog
Ned Dameron: "Apocalypse"
Ned Dameron: Face in the Abyss: "Two Feet Above Him"
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/24949
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Vol. 52, Issue 3 (AAS236 Abstracts)
The Netherlands-China Low Frequency Explorer (NCLE)
by L. Chen, J. Ping, H. Falcke, M. K. Wolt, and NCLE Team
Published onJun 01, 2020
In radio astronomy, the very low frequency (VLF) range, below30 MHz, as one of the last remaining unexplored spectrum regions, plays an important role to understand comprehensively the physical processes of celestial sources by observing their emissions in the entire detectable EM spectrum. However, the artificial radio frequency interference (RFI), the cutoff frequency of the Earth's ionosphere, the AKR and QTN noise make it difficult or impossible to observe the sky VLF radio emissions with terrestrial telescopes. To open up this remaining spectral window virtually, a spaceborne telescope turns to be the only possibility. The Netherlands-China Low Frequency Explorer (NCLE) is a scientific radio instrument aiming to perform the radio observations at the VLF spectrum region. It operates at the frequency band from 80 kHz to 80 MHz. NCLE consists of three 5 m monopole antennas to receive the celestial radio emissions. The radio signals sensed by the antennas are digitized by an ADC board, and then the data are processed in a Digital Receiver System (DRS) on which several dedicated science modes are implemented in a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). These scientific modes perform fast Fourier transforms to create average radio spectra, triggering to capture a short segment of the digitized signal for transient radio events, and beam-forming to map the radio sky. Raw time traces can be stored for the VLBI experiments or other ground-based post processing. More scientific analysis will be done after the data are sent back to the Earth. NCLE was developed by a joint scientific and engineering team including Chinese researchers and Dutch researchers. On May 21, 2018, it was launched onboard ChangE-4 relay satellite to an operating orbit around the Earth-Moon L2 point. In the commission phase, preliminary tests and experiments have been done with NCLE for the instrument’s safety checking and functional verification. Before the antenna deployment, the desired measurements with different system configurations were accomplished to support the next instrument calibration and radio frequency interference (RFI) mitigation. In November 2019, the three antennas of NCLE were deployed as expected, the virtual radio observations with NCLE finally began. In this work, the development and progress of NCLE will be reported and discussed including the functional tests, background measurements, and the antenna deployment, etc. Some preliminary observations will be also presented to demonstrate the capability of NCLE.
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2023-14/0020/en_head.json.gz/25190
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Hartack Foundation to honor jockey Victor Espinoza
By Clairenmike | February 26th, 2015 | 2014 Kentucky Derby, Art Sherman, Churchill Downs, Eclipse Awards, Horse of the Year, Horse Racing, Jockeys, Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Hartack Foundation to honor jockey Victor Espinoza
The Bill Hartack Charitable Foundation announced today that 2014 Kentucky Derby winning jockey Victor Espinoza is the recipient of the Hartack Memorial Award, to be presented April 2nd at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California.
The annual presentation honors the memory and lifetime achievements of Bill Hartack, one of only two jockeys to win the Kentucky Derby five times.
Espinoza, did it the hard way, ascending from jockey school in his native Mexico City in 1992 all the way to leading apprentice at the former Bay Meadows Racetrack and Golden Gate Fields. That was followed by a successful move to Southern California, where he has been leading rider multiple times at all the major meets. Espinoza had an outstanding 2014 winning his second Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes aboard Horse of the Year California Chrome, and was the regular pilot for two other Eclipse champions, American Pharaoh and Take Charge Brandi.
The Hartack Foundation will also recognize trainer Art Sherman with the “Neiman” award. The award recognizes Thoroughbred trainers for their commitment and contributions to the racing industry. At the age of 77 Art Sherman became the oldest trainer to win the Kentucky Derby. He began his career as a stable hand. He was the exercise rider for the 1955 Kentucky Derby winner Swaps and 1956 Kentucky Derby entrant Terrang. In 1957, Sherman became a licensed jockey. He began training horses in 1979. Prior to becoming the trainer of California Chrome, Sherman had trained ten graded stakes winners and is credited with over 2,100 wins. He was hired to train California Chrome in 2013. Leading up to the 2014 Kentucky Derby, Sherman had conditioned the horse through four consecutive wins, and California Chrome entered the Derby as the favorite and won. Two weeks later, California Chrome also won the 2014 Preakness Stakes. California Chrome won 2 Eclipse Awards and is the 2014 Horse of the Year .
Derby Dollars Contest – The Neiman award is named for Hartack Foundation founding board member LeRoy Neiman (1921-2012) who passed away at the age of 91. Neiman, a long-time friend of Bill Hartack, was one of America’s most popular artists known for his brilliantly colored, impressionistic sketches of sporting events and the international high life. In popularity, Mr. Neiman rivaled American favorites like Norman Rockwell, Grandma Moses and Andrew Wyeth.
Hartack Contributions to Benefit City of Hope – Contributions from this year’s Hartack Event will benefit City of Hope, a comprehensive cancer treatment center located in Los Angeles. The charity was selected by Victor Espinoza who, after visiting the center more than 10 years ago, was deeply impacted by the children being treated there and pledged to regularly donate approximately 10% of his earnings to the facility. City of Hope was founded in 1913 and is one of 41 National Cancer Institute designated comprehensive cancer centers in the United States. The center focuses on patient centered care and clinical research, and is a founding member of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
Tags: Arcadia, Art Sherman, California, California Chrome, City of Hope, Eclipse Awards, Hartack Foundation, Horse of the Year, jockeys, Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, Swaps
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Beware of Ticks this Fall
Does your dog or cat enjoy exploring the fields and forests near your home? These areas are prime habitats for ticks, small parasites that survive by drinking a host's blood. Ticks spread a variety of diseases, including Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever. During the fall, ticks become more active, which increases your pet's risk of illness.
How Ticks Make Pets Sick
Ticks may look like bugs, but they're actually arachnids, an animal class that includes spiders, daddy longlegs, and mites. You'll find ticks in shady, moist places, like tall grass, brush, shrubs, logs, wood piles, and stone fences. Your pet could pick up a tick simply by walking through a pile of wet leaves or taking an autumn walk with you through the woods.
Ticks attach themselves to a host's body with their mouths and begin to feed on that animal's blood. As the tick feeds, it may inject a virus, bacteria, or protozoa into its host's blood. A series of small hook-like structures in the tick's mouth can dig into your dog or cat's skin, making it possible for the tick to remain attached to your furry friend for hours.
Your pet doesn't automatically become sick the instant that a tick begins to feed. Disease transmission can take two to 90 hours, depending on the type of tick. Ticks aren't easy to see when they're not full of blood. In fact, they're no bigger than the head of a nail, according to the ASPCA. Once they're engorged with blood, they can grow to 1/4" or more in diameter.
Diseases Caused by Ticks in the U.S.
Your pet could develop one of these diseases if bitten by a tick:
Lyme Disease. Black-legged (deer) ticks transmit the bacteria that causes Lyme disease. Symptoms of Lyme disease include joint pain, swollen joints, fever, limping, lameness, enlarged lymph nodes, and loss of appetite. Pets that have Lyme disease may get tired easily or have less stamina than usual. If the disease isn't treated promptly, kidney failure, heart problems, or joint damage can occur.
Anaplasmosis. Black-legged and brown dog ticks can also spread anaplasmosis, a disease that has many of the same symptoms as Lyme disease. According to the American Kennel Club, some unlucky pets can have both anaplasmosis and Lyme disease at the same time.
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Rocky Mountain spotted fever has been reported in nearly every state, although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention note that the disease is most often found in Central, Eastern and Western states. If your pet has Rocky Mountain spotted fever, it may experience joint pain, fever, swollen lymph nodes, poor appetite, coughing, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, balance problems, and purple spots on the mouth or eyelids due to damaged blood vessels. In severe cases, organ failure can occur due to blood clots. The American Dog Tick, Brown Deer Tick and Rocky Mountain Wood Tick can transmit Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
Cytauxzoonosis. This tick-borne disease spread by the American dog tick and lone star tick affects cats, many of whom die from the illness. Symptoms include high fever, weakness, fatigue, dehydration, vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice, enlarged lymph nodes, abdominal pain, seizures, and coma.
Ehrlichiosis. Spread by the lone star, American dog, and brown dog ticks, ehrlichiosis can cause fever, trouble breathing, swollen lymph nodes, weight loss, swollen limbs, and bleeding disorders.
Babesiosis. Babesiosis attacks your pet's red blood cells, causing fever, anemia, swollen lymph nodes, weakness, jaundice, pale gums, fatigue, and dark brown, orange, or red urine. Your pet can develop babesiosis after being bitten by a black-legged tick.
Hepatozoonosis. A bite from either the lone star or gulf coast tick could cause hepatazoonosis. Loss of appetite, weight loss, fever, eye and nose discharge, muscle pain and weakness, and difficulty moving are common symptoms. Like other tick-borne illnesses, pets can die from hepatozoonosis without quick treatment.
How to Protect Your Pet from Ticks
Reduce your pet's risk of tick-borne diseases by:
Performing Tick Checks After a Trip Outdoors. If you find a tick, remove it by grasping the head and slowly pulling it out of your pet's skin with tweezers. Kill the tick by putting it in a container filled with rubbing alcohol. If you can't remove the tick or only removed part of it, call your veterinarian.
Watching Your Pet. Look for symptoms of tick-borne illness, which include redness around the tick bite, fever, and painful joints, for several weeks after the bite. (In some cases, symptoms may not appear for several months).
Calling Your Veterinarian. Your veterinarian can provide products that kill ticks before they can harm your pet.
WebMD: FAQ: Tick-Borne Diseases, 6/13/2021
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
American Kennel Club: Anaplasmosis: Another Tick-Borne Disease
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Snoopgate: Indian Journalists, Activists And Ministers Allegedly Spied On With Pegasus’ Spyware
Amit J
Image source: Freepik
The phone data of 50,000 numbers, including hundreds of politicians, ministers, lawyers, businessmen, judges, social workers, journalists and many other prominent public figures all over the world, have reportedly been leaked by Israel-made spyware Pegasus. India’s the Wire and the US-based publication, the Washington Post, have claimed in their reports that at least 40 Indians, including journalists, politicians, ministers, sitting Supreme Court judges and corporates, are a part of this list. The report claimed that more than 180 journalists’ phones were hacked worldwide by the Pegasus spyware.
Hours before the report came out late night on Sunday, BJP leader Subramanian Swamy, who has been vocal in critiquing the Modi government, had tweeted about the revelation of Pegasus’ attack on phones. He had said in his tweet that the Washington Post and UK’s the Guardian are publishing a report exposing the hiring of an Israeli firm Pegasus, for tapping phones of Modi’s cabinet ministers, RSS leaders, SC judges and journalists.
What Do Reports Say?
The Guardian claims in its report that hundreds of phone numbers, including those of hundreds of journalists and other famous people have been tapped across the world. These include many people from India. The report claimed that more than 1,500 phone numbers, including 300 verified Indian numbers in 10 countries – India, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Morocco, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – were under surveillance.
According to reports, at least 38 Indian journalists, majorly critics of PM Narendra Modi, may have been spied on using the Pegasus spyware. Apart from the journalists, three serving cabinet ministers of the Modi government, three opposition leaders, a constitutional authority, scientists and some government officials were included in the list.
The Wire claims that its founding editors and senior journalists Siddharth Varadarajan and M.K. Venu were named on the list. Apart from them, their freelance journalists Rohini Singh and Swati Chaturvedi, Hindustan Times executive editor Shishir Gupta, editor and former bureau chief Prashant Jha, defence correspondent Rahul Singh, Indian Express deputy editor Muzamil Jaleel, former Indian Express journalist Sushant Singh, the Hindu’s Vijaita Singh, former editor of EPW magazine and critic of PM Modi Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, and many more were on the leaked data list.
The Guardian said in its reports that hundreds of the other journalists from the Wall Street Journal, CNN, the New York Times, Al Jazeera, France 24, Radio Free Europe, Mediapart, El País, Associated Press, Le Monde, Bloomberg, Agence France-Presse, the Economist, Reuters and Voice of Americas (VoA) were also on the target list.
Who Exposed Pegasus?
The report of Pegasus’ malicious attack on thousands of public figures and journalists’ phones was exposed by the Paris-based Forbidden Stories and Amnesty International. The investigation report called ‘The Pegasus Project’, was carried out in collaboration with 80 journalists across 16 media organisations, including French daily newspaper Le Monde, the Washington Post, the Guardian, India’s Frontline and the Wire.
Congress Attacks Modi Government
The Pegasus Report was published a day before the monsoon session of the parliament that began earlier today, leading Congress to attack the PM Modi on this issue. Soon after the report came out, the former Congress president Rahul Gandhi took a jibe at the Modi government on Twitter saying, “We know what he’s been reading- everything on your phone.”
Senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor has called for an independent investigation regarding the use of the Israeli software.
AICC general secretary Priyanka Gandhi wrote on Twitter: “If true, the Modi government seems to have launched a grave and sinister attack on the Right to Privacy of people – constitutionally guaranteed to Indian citizens as a Fundamental Right.”
In a detailed reply to media organisations, the NSO Group stated, “NSO Group firmly denies false claims made in your report, many of which are uncorroborated theories that raise serious doubts about the reliability of your sources, as well as the basis of your story.”
The Centre has refuted all allegations regarding government surveillance.
Read more: Parliament Monsoon Session 2021: Centre Proposes 23 Bills For Lok Sabha Consideration
What Is Pegasus Spyware?
Israel’s cybersecurity company NSO developed the Pegasus Spyware, a malicious software that can easily hack mobile phones. Israel claimed that it was designed to tackle terrorism and sold to many countries. However, they never revealed its clients’ names.
According to experts, once the software manages to enter your phone, it can easily access your mobile numbers, chats, emails and photos. The software can also turn on your mobile phone’s camera to capture your activities.
Many governments including Bangladesh, Mexico and Saudi Arabia have purchased Pegasus from Israel’s NSO. According to reports, Saudi Arabia purchased Pegasus in 2017 to keep an eye on activists and journalists’ gadgets and phones, especially those standing against the kingdom and the royal family.
The Indian government, however, has continued to deny purchasing Pegasus spyware from Israel, although, a report has claimed that Israel-made offensive hacking technology is being used in India too.
In 2018, Toronto-based Citizen Lab, a digital surveillance research organisation had claimed in its reports that Pegasus’ operations can be found in at least 45 countries. The list of countries mentions Algeria, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, Cote d’Ivoire, Egypt, France, Greece, India, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lebanon, Libya, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Poland, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Thailand, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey, the UAE, Uganda, the United Kingdom, the US, Uzbekistan, Yemen, and Zambia.
Arunachal Pradesh Foundation Day: Celebrating 36 Years Of Statehood
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BRAINIAC: TRANSMISSIONS AFTER ZERO
Past Screenings
Shirts / Merch
In the mid 90’s the Dayton, OH music scene became a hot spot generating worldwide buzz from the influential indie rock being produced there (The Breeders, Guided by Voices). Arguably the most innovative of them all was the band Brainiac, led by musical genius and insanely charismatic front man Tim Taylor. The band was opening for Beck and slated to sign a major label record deal when Taylor was tragically killed in a bizarre auto accident leaving his family and bandmates to pick up the pieces. Over the past two decades Brainiac’s music has gone on to influence the likes of Nine Inch Nails, The Mars Volta, The National and countless others. This film explores the band’s music, legacy, massive influence on pop culture and how people survive and cope with the loss of loved ones.
FILM INFO:
This feature length documentary, making its world premiere at this year’s SXSW Film Festival is directed by Dayton native and Brooklyn based filmmaker Eric Mahoney (Madly, North Dixie Drive) and edited by musician and filmmaker Ian Jacobs. The project, the first from Production Company Hotshot Robot, features interviews from the surviving band members, Taylor family and a slew of musicians including: Fred Armisen, Steve Albini, Matt Berninger, Buzz Osbourne, Cedric Bixler-Zavala, Melissa Auf der Maur, David Yow, Stuart Braithewaite, Eli Janney, Gregg Foreman, Scott McCloud and many more…
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS:
Eric Mahoney is a Brooklyn based director, producer and musician whose debut documentary, North Dixie Drive was called, “A perfect cinematic piece of cultural anthropology” by director Jim Jarmusch. His last release, Madly, an international anthology film premiered and won Best Actress at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival. Other works from Mahoney have screened at Cannes, Melbourne, Mumbai and numerous other international film festivals.
Ian Jacobs is a video editor and musician living in New York City. He writes and performs music under the moniker Monograms, while his film and TV editorial cuts and credits have aired on VICELAND, Travel Channel, MTV, VH1, Comedy Central and Discovery Channel.
Hotshot Robot Productions
(e) [email protected]
BRAINIAC: TRANSMISSIONS AFTER ZERO Website Powered by WordPress.com.
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Hill International to Support Transport of Caspian Natural Gas in Europe Through Trans Adriatic Pipeline
Once complete, the TAP will become an important part of the Southern Gas Corridor, contributing to Europe’s energy security. One of the most important energy infrastructure projects, the pipeline will allow Caspian natural gas to flow into Europe’s energy markets.
According to the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, the natural gas demand in Europe started to rise in 2015, with the trend continuing into 2016 and 2017, reaching 548 billion cubic meters. This growth is projected to quickly increase over the next five years. Oxford Institute’s report concludes that European Union (EU) laws, including the cap-and-trade Emissions Trading Scheme and new rules for power installations, are pushing the sharing of gas in the EU’s energy mix.
Based on data from the European Commission, the EU imports 69% of its natural gas, with 37% of the imported gas provided by Russia, about 33% from Norway, and 11% from Algeria.
The Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), one of the largest energy sector projects currently ongoing in Europe, is a pipeline designed to transport natural gas. It is also the European leg of the Southern Gas Corridor.
TAP starts in Greece by the Turkish border, where it links with the Trans Anatolian Pipeline (TANAP). From there, TAP crosses the entire territory of Northern Greece, the longest segment, then proceeds onwards from east to west through Albania and the Adriatic Sea, and finally runs subterranean into Southern Italy to connect to the Italian natural gas network. Once complete, TAP will offer a direct transportation route to connect with other parts of the Southern Gas Corridor, a 3,500 kilometers (km) long gas value chain stretching from the Caspian Sea to Europe.
The onshore sections of TAP will be approximately 773 km (Greece 550 km; Albania 215 km; Italy 8 km). The pipeline will be concealed once built, buried at least one meter beneath the ground. Only facilities such as the pipeline receiving terminal, compressor, and block valve stations will be above ground, designed and constructed with minimal visual and environmental impacts. TAP’s highest elevation will be 2,100 meters in the mountains of Albania.
TAP will traverse the Adriatic Sea at the shortest crossing, between Fier in Albania and Italy’s southern Puglia region, a distance of 105 km. This route accounts for strict environmental protection requirements and the ecosystem of the Adriatic seabed. The deepest point of the pipeline below sea level will be 820 meters in the Strait of Otranto.
TAP’s initial capacity of 10 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas per year is equal to the energy consumption of approximately 7 million households in Europe. In the future, the anticipated addition of two extra compressor stations could double the amount to 20 bcm as more energy supplies come on stream in the wider Caspian region.
The project is currently in the construction phase, which started in 2016. Every day hundreds of meters of TAP’s Right of Way (ROW) are cleared and pipe is strung, welded, lowered into the trenches, and backfilled according to scope specifications and schedule. At the end of the second quarter of 2018, the TAP project was more than 76% completed.
TechnipFMC Italy has been awarded a contract by TAP for certain project management services under the TAP integrated project management team.
Hill International is currently implementing a contract for Technipetrol Hellas S.A., a subcontractor of TechnipFMC Italy (previously an affiliate), to provide project manpower support in connection with construction of the TAP.
Find out the latest news regarding TAP by visiting the project website at https://www.tap-ag.com/
March 9, 2023 | Articles
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Tuff Pupil: A Hip Hop Series about Global STEM Issues
CS Profs. John Kubiatowicz and Ken Goldberg, along with Berkeley's Director of Research IT, Ken Lutz, have collaborated with the Lawrence Hall of Science (LHS) and the Lawrence Berkeley Lab (LBL) to create an animated series called "Tuff Pupil" which teaches children, ages 7 to 10, about important cyber security concepts and other global STEM issues. Familiarizing children with these topics has become even more critical since the full-scale adoption of computers for remote learning in response to the pandemic. Tuff Pupil has so far launched three 5-minute animated video episodes featuring "high school hip hop duo" Taye and Flori (Tommy Soulati Shepherd and Kaitlin McGaw of Grammy-nominated Alphabet Rock) who rap about data privacy in catchy ways that evoke the Schoolhouse Rock shorts of the 1970s and 80s. Parents, educators, librarians and community leaders are encouraged to share these videos with children in their "homes, schools and youth organizations to support conversations about how to safely and smartly use the internet." New episodes are planned for 2022 which will demystify everyday phenomena related to "data science, climate disruption, contagion, clean energy, and artificial intelligence."
That's DATA: Tuff Pupil Ep 01
The Lawrence: Tuff Pupil
Deanna Gelosi wins Best Full Paper Award at ACM IDC 2021
"PlushPal: Storytelling with Interactive Plush Toys and Machine Learning," co-authored by CS Masters student Deanna Gelosi (advisor: Dan Garcia), has won the Best Full Paper Award at the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Interaction Design for Children (IDC) conference 2021. IDC is "the premier international conference for researchers, educators and practitioners to share the latest research findings, innovative methodologies and new technologies in the areas of inclusive child-centered design, learning and interaction." The paper, which was presented in the "Physical Computing for Learning" conference session, describes PlushPal, "a web-based design tool for children to make plush toys interactive with machine learning (ML). With PlushPal, children attach micro:bit hardware to stuffed animals, design custom gestures for their toy, and build gesture-recognition ML models to trigger their own sounds." It creates "a novel design space for children to express their ideas using gesture, as well as a description of observed debugging practices, building on efforts to support children using ML to enhance creative play." Gelosi's degree will be in the field of Human-Computer Interaction and New Media, and her research interests include creativity support tools, traditional craft and computing technologies, digital fabrication, and equity in STEAM. She is a member of the Berkeley Center for New Media (BCNM), the Berkeley Institute of Design (BID), and the Tinkering Studio--an R&D lab in the San Francisco Exploratorium.
ACG Digital Library: PlushPal: Storytelling with Interactive Plush Toys and Machine Learning
Deanna Gelosi's home page
Rediet Abebe and Jelani Nelson to participate in U-M Africa Week
CS Prof. Jelani Nelson and Assistant Prof. Rediet Abebe will be participating on a panel about the "Role of Computing in Africa's Economic Future" at the University of Michigan Africa Week conference on Tuesday, February 16th, from 9:30 am to 10:45 (EST). U-M Africa Week brings together "thought leaders in higher education, industry, and government for a series of discussions on the key issues and opportunities that will shape Africa in the coming decades." Nelson is a member of the UC Berkeley Theory Group and is the founder and co-organizer of AddisCoder, a free intensive 4-week summer program which introduces Ethiopian high schoolers to programming and algorithms. Abebe studies artificial intelligence and algorithms, with a focus on equity and justice concerns. She is co-founder and co-organizer of the multi-institutional, interdisciplinary research initiative Mechanism Design for Social Good (MD4SG). The conference will run from February 15 to 19, 2021.
U-M Africa Week
Ken and Blooma Goldberg show you "How to Train Your Robot"
A 15-minute video version of the children's book "How to Train Your Robot," written by CS Prof. Ken Goldberg and his daughter, Blooma, has been released by the CITRIS Banatao Institute. Aimed at children ages six to eleven, it tells the story of a group of 4th graders who decide to build a robot to clean their workshop. Designed to inspire girls and members of other under-represented groups to explore engineering, robotics, and coding for themselves, it's the perfect introduction for kids who are curious about robots and want to know more about how they work. The video utilizes animatics with story narration, and is subtitled in English, Spanish, Japanese, Hindi, and simplified Chinese. Co-written by Ashley Chase and illustrated by Dave Clegg, the book was published with support from the NSF and the the Lawrence Hall of Science in 2019.
"How To Train Your Robot" free downloadable book
"How To Train Your Robot" video
Nolan Pokpongkiat wins third place David L. Kirp Prize
Third-year Computer Science undergraduate Nolan Pokpongkiat is the third place winner of the KIDS FIRST: David L. Kirp Prize, funded by the U.C. Berkeley Institute for the Study of Societal Issues. The prize recognizes "students who have developed innovative strategies to increase opportunities for children and youth, as well as students who have demonstrated a commitment to improving the future of children and youth." Pokpongkiat co-founded Helix, a non-profit organization with the goal of diversifying the healthcare field by empowering young people to pursue futures in medicine. As Managing Director, Nolan brought together a team to design a month-long summer program where high school students spend a week living at UC Berkeley training in basic clinical skills, getting CPR-certified, and learning about possible healthcare careers. Then, through partnerships with UCSF Health, John Muir Health, and Kaiser Permanente, along with a network of over 160 medical professionals, students rotate through shadowing placements in the hospital, on the ambulance, and in community clinics for the remainder of the month.
Winners: KIDS FIRST: David L. Kirp Prize
College of Engineering reports 7% increase in female students admitted for 2018-19
UC Berkeley’s College of Engineering has seen a 7 percent increase in the number of female students admitted for the 2018–19 academic year, according to the college’s admissions statistics. Multiple strategies have been implemented in recent years to increase the number of female engineering students: reaching out to middle school students, making work more relevant to societal needs, offering hands-on experience, and building community. Female engineering students have faced difficulty entering the male-dominated college. In 2017, women constituted 25 percent of freshmen and 19 percent of transfers, this year, women made up 32 percent of incoming freshmen and 26 percent of transfers.
The Daily Cal: UC Berkeley College of Engineering reports 7 percent increase in female students admitted for 2018-19
Kevin Wang tackles technology with TEALS program
Alumnus Kevin Wang (B.S. '02) is mentioned in an Observer Reporter article titled "Trinity tackles technology with TEALS program." Wang, who went on to earn an M.Ed. in Technology, Innovation, and Education (TIE) from Harvard, created a Microsoft Philanthropies program called Technology Education and Literacy in Schools (TEALS) to showcase technology's influence to students . TEALS is a grassroots program designed to help high schools teach computer science by recruiting, training, and mentoring teams of high tech professionals who partner with classroom teachers. It is currently being implemented at Trinity High School in Washington County, Pennsylvania.
Observer Reporter: Trinity tackles technology with TEALS program
Dan Garcia praises educators working to expand CS learning in Alabama's schools
Teaching Prof. Dan Garcia is quoted in a WBRC Fox 6 News article which discusses how a group of Alabama teachers are working to expand computer science education opportunities for students in rural Alabama and inner-city Birmingham. Garcia, who was part of the 2017 Alabama Teachers Computer Science Summit at The University of Alabama, praised efforts of teachers and advocates in Alabama and across the country, for their work to expand CS education. "Graduation day is the happiest day of my life, when I see all of the people who took my course four years ago, and got hooked on it," Garcia said. "They can do anything. Every single industry is being affected by data."
WBRC Fox 6 News: Educators work to expand computer science learning in Alabama's schools
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Press Release: Simon & Schuster to Launch New Imprint
Esteemed children's book editor Caitlyn Dlouhy will launch an eponymous imprint, Caitlyn Dlouhy Books, Simon and Schuster Children's Publishing announced today. The newly formed imprint will reside within the larger Atheneum Books for Young Readers and will publish roughly twenty titles a year beginning in Spring 2016. The projects will range in age from picture books to young adult, and will have the literary quality and commercial appeal expected from one of publishing's most decorated editors. The news was announced by Justin Chanda, Vice President and Publisher of Atheneum Books for Young Readers, to whom Ms. Dlouhy will continue to report.
"The creation of this new imprint within Atheneum Books for Young Readers is a celebration of quality books for kids, and also a celebration of one of the publishing industry's finest editors," said Chanda.
Jon Anderson, President of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing added, "Caitlyn Dlouhy epitomizes editorial excellence. An eponymous imprint is the natural next step in a career that has produced an unparalleled number of critical and commercial successes."Ms. Dlouhy, whose new title is Vice President, Editorial Director, Caitlyn Dlouhy Books, first joined Atheneum in July of 1998. In her sixteen years at Simon & Schuster, she has proven herself to be an inspired and meticulous editor and a tireless advocate for her books. Her projects include works by bestselling and acclaimed authors and illustrators-Laurie Halse Anderson, Kathi Appelt, Ashley Bryan, Andrew Clements, Doreen Cronin, Frances O'Roark Dowell, Sharon Draper, Richard Jackson, William Joyce, Cynthia Kadohata, Uma Krishnaswami, Betsy Lewin, Alison McGhee, Phyllis Reynolds Naylor, Jason Reynolds, Peter Reynolds, Janne Teller, Tor Seidler, and David Small, to name but a few. In 2014 alone,her books garnered over twenty-five starred reviews. The list of accolades Dlouhy's books have received include: a Newbery Award, a Newbery Honor,a Printz Honor, three Coretta Scott King Award winners, two Coretta Scott King Honors, a Pura Belpré Award, three National Book Award nominees,one National Book Award, two Edgar Awards, five Christopher Awards, a Batchelder Honor, a Jane Addams Peace Award,two Josette Frank Awards, Simon &Schuster's first ever Pen USA Award in Children's books and first ever Bologna Ragazzi Award, an E.B. White Award, a Canadian Governor General's Award, a Stonewall Honor, and a Charlotte Zolotow Award.
Simon and Schuster Inc.
Caitlyn Dlouhy
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Johnson Controls, Arkansas State University sign $15 million energy performance contract
Published on Friday, February 26, 2016 by Expansion Solutions Magazine
First contract of its kind in Arkansas; project will improve various systems, pay for itself in 20 years
Milwaukee — Johnson Controls, a global multi-industrial company, and Arkansas State University have signed a $15 million energy performance contract that will dramatically advance the university’s sustainability initiatives, including improvements to lighting, water conservation, waste management, energy management, HVAC and utility monitoring systems.
The energy performance contract, featuring a 20-year payback and operational savings, is the first of its kind in Arkansas. Recent energy legislation has enhanced the Arkansas Energy Performance Contracting program. Energy performance contracting is a financing mechanism used to pay for energy efficiency improvements, which are then paid back through annual energy and operational savings.
“We’re thrilled to be working with Johnson Controls to make significant upgrades to our energy infrastructure,” said Dr. Charles L. Welch, president of the Arkansas State University System. “Those upgrades will benefit everyone in the Arkansas State community – students, parents, alumni, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus.”
The upgrades, scheduled for completion by Nov. 30, 2016, will include:
Lighting – Johnson Controls will install new LED lights and replace emergency lighting fixtures throughout campus.
Water conservation – Johnson Controls will either replace or retrofit plumbing fixtures, toilets, urinals, aerators on lavatory faucets and kitchen sinks, and showerheads with water-efficient fixtures and systems.
Waste management – Johnson Controls will install four industrial-grade trash compaction systems, one each at the Convocation Center, Facilities Management building, Education and Communications building, and Centennial Bank football stadium.
Energy management – Johnson Controls will make various software, server, workstation and database improvements at more than a dozen facilities throughout campus.
Heating, ventilating and air conditioning (HVAC) – Johnson Controls will replace an aging chiller with an energy-efficient chiller at the IT Services building, replace three air-handling units with new units at the Education and Communications building, and replace two air-handling units with new units at the Lab Sciences East building.
Lab hood improvements – The Arkansas Bioscience Institute (ABI) building has several lab fume hoods which are critical during experiments and research. The existing fume hood controls are failing and causing room pressure issues, as well as excessive use of energy. Johnson Controls will replace the existing failed controls and sensors with new TSI lab controls. This will provide a safe environment for faculty and students, as well as decrease the building’s overall energy usage.
Utility monitoring – Johnson Controls will install an energy management platform that will provide real-time monitoring of electric power demand and consumption.
As part of the energy performance contract, Arkansas State University will work closely with Johnson Controls and the Arkansas Energy Office to implement the upgrades. The office offers assistance to state agencies, institutions of higher learning, municipalities and counties through its seven-step energy performance contracting program.
“The Arkansas State project is setting the standard by which other energy performance contracts will be measured in the state,” said Chet Howland, energy program manager for the Arkansas Energy Office. “We expect the project to have an economic impact of more than $30 million with no upfront cost to Arkansas State, as guaranteed energy savings will pay for the project over the next two decades.”
Johnson Controls helped establish energy performance contracting in 1983 and has implemented more than 3,000 energy performance contracts in North America alone, including many at four-year colleges and universities, technical colleges and community colleges. Some of the larger, more notable projects include Florida State University, Tulane University, University of Central Oklahoma, University of Massachusetts-Amherst and University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.
To learn more about Johnson Controls’ expertise with energy performance contracting, visit http://www.johnsoncontrols.com/buildings/services-and-support/energy-and-efficiency-services/energy-performance-contracting
About Johnson Controls
Johnson Controls is a global diversified technology and industrial leader serving customers in more than 150 countries. Our 130,000 employees create quality products, services and solutions to optimize energy and operational efficiencies of buildings; lead-acid automotive batteries and advanced batteries for hybrid and electric vehicles; and seating components and systems for automobiles. Our commitment to sustainability dates back to our roots in 1885 with the invention of the first electric room thermostat. Through our growth strategies, and by increasing market share, we are committed to delivering value to shareholders and making our customers successful. In 2015, Corporate Responsibility Magazine ranked Johnson Controls 14th in its annual “100 Best Corporate Citizens” list. For additional information, please visit http://www.johnsoncontrols.com or follow us @johnsoncontrols on Twitter.
About Arkansas State University
Focusing on its mission to educate leaders, enhance intellectual growth and enrich lives, Arkansas State University is the catalyst for progress in the Mid-South. Founded in 1909, Arkansas State meets the challenges of continuing as a destination university for more than 13,000 students through the combination of world-class research with a long tradition of student-friendly instruction. The second largest university in Arkansas, Arkansas State is a doctoral-level national institution with more than 150 degree programs, including a robust online program, and a diverse student body from across the nation and the world.
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SKU: BCN-9505
Iron deficiency remains the most prevalent nutrient deficiency, as well as the most common cause of anemia worldwide.
Depleted iron stores impair mitochondrial function and cellular respiration even in the absence of anemia, particularly in
metabolically active cells, contributing to symptoms ranging from fatigue and exercise intolerance to cognitive
and cardiac impairment. The mainstay for replenishing iron levels in the majority of cases is oral iron supplementation,
which is preferable to parenteral administration (injections) in the absence of severe symptoms or contraindications.
However, many oral iron formulations have limited tolerability, primarily due to frequent gastrointestinal symptoms.
In contrast, iron bisglycinate chelate, which is composed of two glycine molecules chelated to ferrous iron (Fe2+),
has demonstrated significantly greater bioavailability than standard forms of iron such as ferrous sulphate, ferrous
fumarate, and polymaltose iron. This form has much greater tolerability, allowing for effective restoration of iron levels
using lower doses. For example, at ¼ to ½ the dose of ferrous sulphate, iron bisglycinate chelate has shown similar
effects on hemoglobin, ferritin, and other markers of hematological status in controlled trials, with better tolerability.
It has also been found to be effective and well tolerated in a variety of patient populations, including pregnant women
and children with celiac disease. At 45 mg of elemental iron per capsule, higher than most formulations, it is consistent
with current recommendations for restoring depleted iron levels in pregnant women, though lower than the threshold
typically associated with adverse effects
1 capsule per day or as directed by a health care practitioner. Take with food, a few hours before or after taking other medications or natural health products.
Serving Size: 1 Vegetarian Capsule
Each Vegetarian Capsule Contains: Iron (bisglycinate) .................................................................. 45 mg
Non-medicinal Ingredients: Vegetarian capsule (carbohydrate gum [cellulose], purified water), microcrystalline cellulose, vegetable grade magnesium stearate (lubricant), stearic acid, silica
Keep out of reach of children. There is enough iron in this package to seriously harm a child. Some people may
experience constipation, diarrhea, and/or vomiting. Stop use if hypersensitivity occurs
Ferrochel® Iron Chelate
Ferrasorb
Iron SAP
Nutritional Fundamentals for Health (NFH)
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Home / Banking/Finance / House passes bill to fund infrastructure
House passes bill to fund infrastructure
By: Stephen Ohlemacher Associated Press March 24, 2010 0
U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., left, joins House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Sander Levin, D-Mich., at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday after the House passed a jobs bill. (AP photo)
WASHINGTON – Local governments would receive billions of dollars for construction projects and welfare programs under a bill passed Wednesday in the House, the latest in a series of election-year jobs bills Democrats are pushing in Congress.
The bill combines $13.2 billion in interest subsidies for local construction bonds with $3.6 billion in tax cuts for small businesses and $2.5 billion in aid to states to pay for expanded welfare programs through September 2011.
The House passed the measure 246-178, with nearly all Republicans opposed. It now goes to the Senate.
The Democrats aim to pass a series of modest measures to address unemployment as congressional elections approach in November. With unemployment hovering near 10 percent, jobs and the economy are sure to be big issues in elections.
Last week, President Barack Obama signed a bill that offers tax breaks to companies that hire unemployed workers. On Wednesday, the House also passed a bill that would provide $5.1 billion to fund local disaster relief projects, including some that date back to Hurricane Katrina, and $600 million for summer jobs programs. The bill passed 239-175.
Democrats said the economy is starting to rebound, but with high unemployment persisting, they will continue to work on the issue.
“The recovery program is beginning to work, this will make it work better,” said U.S. Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich. chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said, “As long as millions of Americans remain out of work, through no fault of their own, we have not reached the goal.”
Republicans said the bills are evidence that last year’s massive economic recovery package was ineffective.
“Another week, another stimulus,” said U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas.
Republicans said the tax cuts in the bill passed Wednesday are too small and the spending too inefficient to make a significant dent in joblessness. They also opposed a key provision to pay for the bill, a crackdown on multinational companies that use tax havens to avoid taxes on profits made in the U.S.
“This bill increases spending, increases taxes and will not create private sector jobs,” said U.S. Rep. Dave Camp of Michigan, the top Republican on the Ways and Means Committee.
The largest provision in the bill would expand the Buy America Bonds program, which subsidizes interest costs paid by local governments when they borrow for construction projects. The program, which was included in the economic stimulus package enacted last year, would be extended though March 2013, at a cost of $7.5 billion.
The bill would also exempt long-term investments in certain small businesses from capital gains taxes. The economic stimulus package allowed investors to exempt 75 percent of the gains from such investments for 2009 and 2010. The new bill would exempt all the gains from taxation for qualified stock purchased from March 15 through the end of 2011, at a cost of about $2 billion.
The bill would be paid for in large part from a series of measures designed to crack down on companies that avoid taxes through aggressive tax planning.
The biggest provision would raise an estimated $7.7 billion by preventing some foreign multinational corporations from avoiding withholding taxes on U.S. profits by funneling those profits through subsidiaries in different countries.
The provision targets corporations based in countries that don’t have tax treaties with the U.S., such as the Cayman Islands and Bermuda. Those companies are required to pay withholding taxes on profits made in the U.S., unless they funnel the profits through subsidiaries in other countries that do have treaties with the U.S., said U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas.
“If I were a multinational tax dodger, I would think my taxes had gone up under this bill, and they should,” said Doggett, who wrote the provision.
The bill would also raise $4.5 billion over the next decade by limiting taxpayers’ ability to avoid gifts taxes by setting up trusts known as Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts, or GRATs. Another provision would raise $2.5 billion by increasing reporting requirements for people who write off expenses on rental property.
Barack Obama Dave Camp Sander Levin Steny Hoyer 10:38 pm Wed, March 24, 2010 The Journal Record
Stephen Ohlemacher
Tagged with: Barack Obama Dave Camp Sander Levin Steny Hoyer
Former Oklahoma lawmaker to help ensure government transparency
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2023-14/0021/en_head.json.gz/8746
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News - 26 August 2021
THE BEATLES GET BACK TO LET IT BE WITH SPECIAL EDITION RELEASES
Let It Be Presented with New Mixes in Stereo, 5.1 Surround, and Dolby Atmos;
Expanded with Never Before Released Session Recordings, Rehearsals & Studio Jams; And the Previously Unreleased 1969 Get Back LP Mix by Glyn Johns
The Beatles present their 1970 chart-topping album Let It Be in sweeping new Special Editions, as you’ve never heard it before.
Featuring new mixes by producer Giles Martin and engineer Sam Okell in stereo, 5.1 surround, and Dolby Atmos; expanded with previously unreleased session recordings and demos.
Available everywhere now.
Order The Beatles’ Let It Be Special Edition
The physical and digital Super Deluxe collections also feature 27 previously unreleased session recordings, a four-track Let It Be EP, and the never before released 14-track Get Back stereo LP mix compiled by engineer Glyn Johns in May 1969.
Happy 90th Birthday Yoko!
Celebrate Valentine's Day at The Beatles LOVE
SUPER DELUXE 5CD + Blu-ray
SUPER DELUXE VINYL
DELUXE 2CD
STANDARD 1LP
STANDARD 1CD
On January 2, 1969, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr kickstarted the new year together on a cavernous soundstage at Twickenham Film Studios in London. The Beatles jumped into rehearsals for a project envisioned to get them back to where they once belonged: onstage. For 21 days, cameras and tape recorders documented almost every moment: first at Twickenham and then at The Beatles’ own Apple Studio, where Billy Preston joined them on keyboards. Together they rehearsed brand new originals and jammed on older songs, all captured live and unvarnished.
On January 30, the cameras and recorders were rolling as The Beatles, with Preston, staged what was to be their final concert on the chilly rooftop of their Savile Row Apple Corps headquarters before a small assembly of family and friends, and any others who were within wind-carried range of their amps. The midday performance brought London’s West End to a halt as necks craned skyward from the streets and the windows of neighboring buildings were flung open for better vantage. A flurry of noise complaints drew police officers to the rooftop, shutting the concert down after 42 minutes.
Work to compile an album to be called “Get Back” was carried out in April and May by Glyn Johns, who, for his version, included false starts, banter between songs, early takes rather than later, more polished performances, and even “I’ve Got A Feeling” falling apart with John explaining, “I cocked it up trying to get loud.” The Beatles, however, decided to shelve the project’s copious tapes, film reels, and photos, in order to record and release their LP masterpiece, Abbey Road. Drawn from the tapes made in January 1969, plus some sessions which preceded and followed those recordings, The Beatles’ final album, Let It Be, was eventually issued on May 8, 1970 (May 18 in the U.S.) to accompany the release of the Let It Be film.
The sessions that brought about the Let It Be album and film represent the only time in The Beatles’ career that they were documented at such great length while creating music in the studio. More than 60 hours of unreleased film footage, more than 150 hours of unreleased audio recordings, and hundreds of unpublished photographs have been newly explored and meticulously restored for three complementary and definitive Beatles releases this fall: a feast for the senses spanning the entire archival treasure. The new Let It Be Special Edition is joined by “The Beatles: Get Back”, the hotly-anticipated documentary series directed by three-time Oscar®-winning filmmaker Peter Jackson, and a beautiful new hardcover book also titled The Beatles: Get Back. The raw sources explored for the new projects have revealed that a more joyous, benevolent spirit imbued the sessions than was conveyed in the 1970 Let It Be film’s 80 minutes.
“I had always thought the original film Let It Be was pretty sad as it dealt with the break-up of our band, but the new film shows the camaraderie and love the four of us had between us,” writes Paul McCartney in his foreword for the Let It Be Special Edition book. “It also shows the wonderful times we had together, and combined with the newly remastered Let It Be album, stands as a powerful reminder of this time. It’s how I want to remember The Beatles.”
Let It Be Special Edition: Super Deluxe Editions
5CD + 1Blu-ray (album’s new stereo mix in hi-res 96kHz/24-bit; new 5.1 surround DTS and Dolby Atmos album mixes) with 105-page hardbound book in a 10” by 12” die-cut slipcase
180-gram, half-speed mastered vinyl 4LP + 45rpm 12-inch vinyl EP with 105-page hardbound book in a 12.5” by 12.5” die-cut slipcase
Digital Audio Collection (stereo + album mixes in hi res 96kHz/24-bit / Dolby Atmos)
• Let It Be (new stereo mix of original album): 12 tracks
• Previously unreleased outtakes, studio jams, rehearsals: 27 tracks
• Previously unreleased 1969 Get Back LP mix by Glyn Johns, newly mastered: 14 tracks
• Let It Be EP: 4 tracks
o Glyn Johns’ unreleased 1970 mixes: “Across The Universe” and “I Me Mine”
o Giles Martin & Sam Okell’s new stereo mixes: “Don’t Let Me Down” & “Let It Be” singles
The Super Deluxe CD and vinyl collections’ beautiful book features Paul McCartney’s foreword; an introduction by Giles Martin; a remembrance by Glyn Johns; insightful chapters and detailed track notes by Beatles historian, author, and radio producer Kevin Howlett; and an essay by journalist and author John Harris exploring the sessions’ myths vs. their reality. The book is illustrated, scrapbook style, with rare and previously unpublished photos by Ethan A. Russell and Linda McCartney, as well as never before published images of handwritten lyrics, session notes, sketches, Beatles correspondence, tape boxes, film frames, and more.
Let It Be Special Edition: Deluxe Edition
2CD in digipak with a 40-page booklet abridged from the Super Deluxe book
• Previously unreleased 1970 mix for “Across The Universe”
Let It Be Special Edition: Standard
1CD in digipak (new stereo mix of original album)
Digital (album’s new mixes in stereo + hi res 96kHz/24-bit / Dolby Atmos)
180-gram half-speed mastered 1LP vinyl (new stereo mix of original album)
Limited Edition picture disc 1LP vinyl illustrated with the album art (new stereo mix of original album)
Making The Album
When The Beatles arrived at Twickenham in January 1969, their self-titled album (AKA ‘The White Album’) was still topping charts around the world following its November 1968 release. They had an ambitious plan in mind for a project that would include a stage performance for a “TV spectacular” and a live album. Michael Lindsay-Hogg was hired to direct the concert and document the rehearsals with unfettered “fly-on-the-wall” filming and mono audio recording on two camera-linked Nagra reel-to-reel tape machines. Ethan A. Russell was brought in for exclusive all-access photography. Beatles producer George Martin and engineer Glyn Johns supervised the sound. Johns remembers, “Paul told me he had this idea to do a live concert and he wanted me to engineer it, because I had a reasonably good track record of making live albums.” Impressed by the band’s day-to-day progress with their slate of new songs, Martin later recalled, “It was a great idea, which I thought was well worth working on. A live album of new material. Most people who did a live album would be rehashing old stuff.” After 10 days on the soundstage, The Beatles and the film crew later moved to the band’s more intimate and cosy Apple Studio. There, Johns manned the controls of borrowed equipment from The Beatles’ old stomping ground, Abbey Road Studios, to record on eight-track tape. Billy Preston was invited to play keyboards with the band at Apple, lifting the sessions with his boundless talent and buoyant bonhomie.
In April 1969, The Beatles rush-released their worldwide number one single “Get Back”/“Don’t Let Me Down”. Promoted as “The Beatles as nature intended” and “as live as can be, in this electronic age,” both sides of the disc were credited to “The Beatles with Billy Preston”. “The greatest surprise was when the record came out,” Preston remembered in 2002. “They didn’t tell me they were going to put my name on it! The guys were really kind to me.” The “Let It Be” single produced by George Martin, released March 6, 1970, is different from the album version “reproduced” by Phil Spector. Exemplifying Spector’s signature Wall of Sound production style on the Let It Be album is his orchestral overdub on “The Long and Winding Road”, which became The Beatles’ 20th U.S. number one single.
Directed by Peter Jackson (“The Lord of the Rings” trilogy, “They Shall Not Grow Old”), “The Beatles: Get Back” takes audiences back in time to the band’s intimate recording sessions during a pivotal moment in music history. Because of the wealth of tremendous footage Jackson has reviewed, which he has spent the past three years restoring and editing, “The Beatles: Get Back” will be presented as three separate episodes. Each episode is approximately two hours in length, rolling out over three days, November 25, 26 and 27, 2021, exclusively on Disney+.
The documentary series showcases the warmth, camaraderie and creative genius that defined the legacy of the iconic foursome, compiled from over 60 hours of unseen footage shot in January 1969 (by Michael Lindsay-Hogg) and more than 150 hours of unheard audio, all of which has been brilliantly restored. Jackson is the only person in 50 years to have been given access to these private film archives. “The Beatles: Get Back” is the story of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr as they plan their first live show in over two years, capturing the writing and rehearsing of 14 new songs, originally intended for release on an accompanying live album. The documentary features – for the first time in its entirety – The Beatles’ last live performance as a group, the unforgettable rooftop concert on London’s Savile Row, as well as other songs and classic compositions featured on the band’s final two albums, Abbey Road and Let It Be. The music in the series is also newly mixed by Giles Martin (“Rocketman”) and Sam Okell (“Yesterday”).
Ahead of the series’ debut, Apple Corps Ltd./Callaway Arts & Entertainment will release The Beatles: Get Back book worldwide on October 12. Available in English and nine international language editions, The Beatles: Get Back is the first official standalone book to be released by The Beatles since international bestseller The Beatles Anthology. Beautifully designed and produced, the 240-page hardcover complements the “Get Back” documentary series and Let It Be Special Edition with transcriptions of many of The Beatles’ recorded conversations from the three weeks of rehearsals and sessions and hundreds of exclusive, never-before-published images, including photos by Ethan A. Russell and Linda McCartney. The Beatles: Get Back begins with a foreword written by Peter Jackson and an introduction by Hanif Kureishi. The book’s texts are edited by John Harris.
Order The Beatles: Get Back - Book by The Beatles
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Home Blog Ecnec approves development projects worth Rs579bn – Business
Ecnec approves development projects worth Rs579bn – Business
The Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (Ecnec) on Thursday approved development projects worth Rs579 billion, which include improving water management, measures to increase agricultural production and modernize Karachi, among others.
During a meeting, chaired by the Adviser to the Prime Minister of Finance, Dr. Hafeez Shaikh, the committee agreed to allocate Rs125.184bn for Phase 1 of the 10 billion Tsunami Tree Program, in which there are more than three billion Young trees, of which 10 percent would be fruit trees, will be planted throughout the country. The government aims to promote ecotourism, conserve and develop forests, increase grassland and grassland, create income opportunities for the local population, maintain and develop national wildlife parks, etc., explained the adviser.
It was also agreed that Rs78.384bn will be allocated to the construction of the BRT Red Line Project in Karachi "in order to improve the quality of public transport, transfer motor vehicle users to public transport and reduce traffic congestion in the city ".
The project would include two corridors: a 24.2-kilometer dedicated corridor that runs from Numaish to Malir Halt Depot and a 2.4-km common corridor between the Municipal Park and the Merewether Tower. The project also includes the construction of 29 bus stations, eight routes outside the corridor and the acquisition of 199 buses that will use ecological biomethane gas as fuel. The equipment for an intelligent transport system (ITS) and a safety mechanism are also included in the project.
In addition, it was agreed that Rs16.708bn would be allocated to Phase I of the Karachi Water and Sewer Services Improvement Project (KWSSIP) to improve the city's water and sanitation services.
Ecnec also approved Rs31.935bn for the Sehat Sahulat Program, which will provide free medical care to 2.7 million families across the country.
Eight important projects related to agriculture, worth Rs95bn, were also approved. Ecnec also approved the National Program for the improvement of the water course in Pakistan Phase-II, which will cost Rs154.542bn.
Ecnec also agreed to allocate Rs46.804bn for the 500 KV HVDC Transmission System between Tajikistan and Pakistan for the Central Asia and South Asia Transmission Interconnection project (CASA-1000) to ensure uninterruptible power supply to consumers and export any surplus energy to other countries.
Approximately Rs13.103bn will be allocated to the Sindh Secondary Education Improvement Program (SSEIP), which will include the construction of secondary schools throughout the province, teacher training and the provision of laboratory equipment.
Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/1502397/ecnec-approves-development-projects-worth-rs579bn
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7 Feb 2023 2:38 am AEDTDate Time
Interactive Cyber-Physical Human Moves Whole Body
Humans naturally perform numerous complex tasks. These include sitting down, picking something up from a table, and pushing a cart. These activities involve various movements and require multiple contacts, which makes it difficult to program robots to perform them.
Recently, Professor Eiichi Yoshida of the Tokyo University of Science has put forward the idea of an interactive cyber-physical human (iCPH) platform to tackle this problem. It can help understand and generate human-like systems with contact-rich whole-body motions. His work was published in Frontiers in Robotics and AI.
Prof. Yoshida briefly describes the fundamentals of the platform. “As the name suggests, iCPH combines physical and cyber elements to capture human motions. While a humanoid robot acts as a physical twin of a human, a digital twin exists as a simulated human or robot in cyberspace. The latter is modeled through techniques such as musculoskeletal and robotic analysis. The two twins complement each other.”
This research raises several key questions. How can humanoids mimic human motion? How can robots learn and simulate human behaviors? And how can robots interact with humans smoothly and naturally? Prof. Yoshida addresses them in this framework. First, in the iCPH framework, human motion is measured by quantifying the shape, structure, angle, velocity, and force associated with the movement of various body parts. In addition, the sequence of contacts made by a human is also recorded. As a result, the framework allows the generic description of various motions through differential equations and the generation of a contact motion network upon which a humanoid can act.
Second, the digital twin learns this network via model-based and machine learning approaches. They are bridged together by the analytical gradient computation method. Continual learning teaches the robot simulation how to perform the contact sequence. Third, iCPH enriches the contact motion network via data augmentation and applies the vector quantization technique. It helps extract the symbols expressing the language of contact motion. Thus, the platform allows the generation contact motion in inexperienced situations. In other words, robots can explore unknown environments and interact with humans by using smooth motions involving many contacts.
In effect, the author puts forward three challenges. These pertain to the general descriptors, continual learning, and symbolization of contact motion. Navigating them is necessary for realizing iCPH. Once developed, the novel platform will have numerous applications.
“The data from iCPH will be made public and deployed to real-life problems for solving social and industrial issues. Humanoid robots can release humans from many tasks involving severe burdens and improve their safety, such as lifting heavy objects and working in hazardous environments. iCPH can also be used to monitor tasks performed by humans and help prevent work-related ailments. Finally, humanoids can be remotely controlled by humans through their digital twins, which will allow the humanoids to undertake large equipment installation and object transportation,” says Prof. Yoshida, on the applications of iCPH.
Using the iCPH as ground zero and with the help of collaborations from different research communities, including robotics, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, and biomechanics, a future with humanoid robots is not far.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2022.1019523
About Professor Eiichi Yoshida from Tokyo University of Science
Eiichi Yoshida is a Professor at the Department of Applied Electronics, Faculty of Advanced Engineering in the Tokyo University of Science. He received a Doctorate in Engineering from the University of Tokyo in 1996. He is an IEEE Fellow. He received Chevalier, l’Ordre National du Mérite from the French Government in 2016. His research interests include mechanics and mechatronics, robotics and intelligent systems, and intelligent robotics. He has published over 200 research papers, which have been cited more than 8,000 times. He is currently working on the interactive cyber-physical human platform that can understand and synthesize contact-rich whole-body human-like motions.
Website: https://www.rs.tus.ac.jp/yoshida-lab/en/
This research was mainly supported by the project “Comprehensive data-driven learning, prediction, and generation of whole-body contact motions based on cyber-physical human model” of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research.
Tags:AI, artificial intelligence, Asia, cyberspace, Engineering, French, Government, industrial, intelligence, Japan, machine learning, neuroscience, Nobel Prize, technology, Tokyo, University of Tokyo
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Billie Eilish Cleaned Up at the Grammys
Billie Eilish won a pile of Grammys for her album When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? Photograph: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty
The 18-year-old won five of the six awards for which she was nominated.
Hello, and welcome to another edition of The Monitor, WIRED’s entertainment news roundup. There’s been a lot happening in national and international news lately, so you’d be forgiven for missing the latest in the world of pop culture. Let’s get you caught up.
Billie Eilish Pretty Much Swept the Grammys
Last night, during a telecast that was preceded by the death of NBA star Kobe Bryant and a huge shakeup at the Recording Academy, Billie Eilish made history. The pop star won five of the six awards for which she was nominated—Record of the Year (“Bad Guy”), Album of the Year (When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?), Song of the Year (“Bad Guy”), Best Pop Vocal Album (When We All…), Best New Artist—and became the youngest person (she recently turned 18) to be nominated for, and win, all four general-field categories (Album, Record, Song, New Artist). Meanwhile, Lizzo won three awards for Best Traditional R&B Performance (“Jerome”), Best Urban Contemporary Album (Cuz I Love You), and Best Urban Contemporary Album (Cuz I Love You) and Lil Nas X won the Best Pop Duo/Group Performance trophy for “Old Town Road [ft. Billy Ray Cyrus].”
Chance the Rapper Is Rebooting Punk’d on Quibi
Remember Punk’d, the Ashton Kutcher-hosted MTV prank show on which Justin Timberlake once cried? Well, it’s coming back! This time around, Chance the Rapper will be psyching stars out on the mobile video platform Quibi. “Punk’d is one of MTV’s most iconic franchises,” Chance said in a statement. “I grew up watching this show, and it’s surreal to be in the driver’s seat this time around.” The show will launch on April 6.
1917 Wins DGA Top Honors
Speaking of awards, the Directors Guild of America honors were held on Saturday. Director Sam Mendes took home the top honors for his film 1917. The win greatly increases Mendes’ chances of bringing home some little gold men at the upcoming Academy Awards considering, 64 of the last 71 DGA winners have gone on to win Best Director. Relatedly, Greta Gerwig won the USC Scripter Award for her adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, a good omen for her forthcoming Oscar bid.
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Angela Watercutter is a senior editor at WIRED covering pop culture. She also serves as the publication's deputy bureau chief in New York. Prior to joining WIRED she was a reporter for the Associated Press. Watercutter was also a senior editor of Longshot magazine and a contributor to Pop-Up Magazine.... Read more
TopicsThe Monitor
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Star Wars: The Force Awakens Cast Lands on the Cover of Empire
By Spencer Perry
The Force Awakens cast featured on six different Empire covers
With the release of the film less than a month away, Empire has revealed the covers to their latest issue featuring the cast of Star Wars: The Force Awakens! Check them out in the gallery below and stay tuned for one more, the magazine’s subscriber’s cover.
Opening in theaters on December 18, 2015, Star Wars: The Force Awakens is set 30 years after the events of Return of the Jedi, and features a new generation of swashbuckling heroes and shadowy villains, as well as the return of fan-favorite smugglers, princesses, and Jedi.
Directed by J.J. Abrams, the highly-anticipated movie stars Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Lupita Nyong’o, Andy Serkis, Domhnall Gleeson, Anthony Daniels, Peter Mayhew and Max Von Sydow. Kathleen Kennedy, J.J. Abrams and Bryan Burk are producing with Tommy Harper and Jason McGatlin serving as executive producers. The screenplay is by Lawrence Kasdan & J.J. Abrams and Michael Arndt.
Star Wars: The Force Awakens will be followed on December 16, 2016 by Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Star Wars: Episode VIII on May 26, 2017, and the Han Solo anthology movie on May 25, 2018. No release dates have been announced for Star Wars: Episode IX or for the third anthology movie. It was recently confirmed, however, that Jurassic World‘s Colin Trevorrow will be helming the third Saga chapter.
You can watch all the previously-released trailers and TV spots for the film by clicking here.
Spencer Perry
Spencer Perry is the Executive Editor for ComingSoon.net.
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Rooney Mara Biography, Net Worth and Career
stam vic January 21, 2023
Rooney Mara Biography:
The American actress Rooney Mara made her acting debut in the 2010s The Social Network before landing the main part in the Hollywood adaptation of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.
Rooney was born and raised in New York. Her father’s grandfather, Tim Mara, created the New York Giants, while her mother’s grandfather, Art Rooney, Sr., founded the Pittsburgh Steelers.
There’s a lot to say about Rooney Mara in this blog post, so keep reading to find out more about Her biography, net worth, and career;
Rooney Mara’s Personal Life:
Mara was raised in Bedford, New York, a Westchester County town about 40 miles (64 km) north of New York City, where she was born on April 17, 1985.
The New York Giants and the Pittsburgh Steelers were founded by Mara’s parents’ families.
Her mother, Kathleen McNulty (née Rooney), works part-time as a real estate agent, and her father, Timothy Christopher Mara, is the senior vice president of player personnel for the New York Giants.
She is the third of four children; her siblings include an actress-turned-elder-sister Kate, a younger brother named Conor, and an older brother named Daniel.
Rooney Mara Career:
Mara originally appeared in films starring her sister as an extra, and she even had a small part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film Urban Legends: Bloody Mary.
She found work on television and made her professional debut as a teenager who taunts overweight children in a 2006 episode of the drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
Mara made her feature film debut with Dream Boy (2008), played Megan in two episodes of NBC’s ER, and played a heroin addict in an episode of The Cleaner.
She additionally made cameos in the courtroom dramas The Cleaner and Women’s Murder Club.
In the adaptation of the 1984 horror film A Nightmare on Elm Street, Mara portrayed Nancy Holbrook, a high school student who was assaulted by Freddy Krueger.
READ MORE: Katia Washington Biography, Net worth, and Career
Rooney Mara’s Net Worth:
American actress Rooney Mara has a net worth of $20 million.
Rooney Mara Few Movies:
Friends (With Benefits)
Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot
Rooney Mara Biography Summary:
Full Name: Patricia Rooney Mara
Nickname: Rooney Mara
Place of Birth: Bedford, New York, United States
Resides in: Los Angeles, California, United States
Profession: Actress and Model
Ethnicity: Irish, German and French-Canadian Descent
High School Elementary School, New York, United States
University: New York University, New York, United States
Hometown: Bedford, New York
Father: Timothy Christopher Mara
Mother: Kathleen McNulty
Siblings: Conor Mara, Daniel Mara, Kate Mara
Partner: Joaquin Phoenix
Rooney Mara Social Media:
Instagram: @rooneymaradaily(Unofficial)
The film “A House in the Sky,” which is based on Amanda Lindhout’s memoir of the same name, is now in the planning stages with Mara as co-producer. The film will star Mara as Lindhout and is now in pre-production.
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2023-14/0021/en_head.json.gz/13547
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Soros-Backed Lobbying Hotline Launched for EU Officials
The new hotline was created with the support of the Corporate Europe Observatory, which received just under €800,000 in funding from the Soros Open Society Foundation since 2014.
Thomas O'Reilly
A new Soros-linked hotline has been launched to better enable the reporting of illicit lobbying within the EU, The Guardian reports. The initiative, titled ‘LobbyLeaks,’ has already received cross-partisan backing from MEPs in the S&D group, Greens, the Left, and Renew Europe as it was launched this week.
The project is a joint initiative of two anti-corruption NGOs—the Corporate Europe Observatory and LobbyControl—that operates through an encrypted website that allows for anonymous tip-offs regarding ‘shady lobbying’ occurring in the European Parliament.
The Corporate Europe Observatory is a Dutch-registered charity operating out of Brussels producing reports and investigations into corporate lobbying within the EU. According to its most recent financial reports, it has received just under €800,000 of funding since 2014 from the George Soros-run Open Society Foundation. The Observatory was founded in 1997 and has an annual budget of €900,000 through a variety of philanthropic institutions. The Open Society Foundation, which gave the group €174,000 in 2020, is its most significant donor.
Other backers of the Observatory include the Sigrid Rausing Trust, Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, and the left-leaning Isvara Foundation. The Sigrid Rausing Trust is managed by Swedish industrial heiress Sigrid Rausing and has earned a reputation for its funding of human rights- and LGBT-related initiatives across the world.
The Observatory has been instrumental in opposing the controversial TTIP free-trade deal between the EU and the U.S., with its research being regularly syndicated by media sources, The New York Times and Reuters. Earlier this week, Hungarian government spokesman Zoltán Kovács criticised the role of the similarly Soros-funded Transparency International Group in producing biassed reports on Hungary.
The other partner for the hotline is German-based transparency organisation LobbyControl, which receives money from civil society groups Olin gGmbh and The Schöpflin Foundation. When asked to provide a reason for the hotline, Dutch Social Democrat MEP Paul Tang cited understaffing of the EU’s transparency register.
A main focus of the hotline is to examine the lobbying efforts of large tech companies that use front organisations and astroturfing (corporate interests disguised as grassroots organisations), including the influencing of officials over social media. The Observatory has previously produced reports into big tech lobbying of EU institutions finding that corporate actors spend €97 million lobbying officials through 612 entities.
In recent months, there has been an increased spotlight on the role lobbyists and influence operations have on MEPs following the Qatargate scandal and revelations regarding EU officials.
Neither the Corporate Europe Observatory nor LobbyLeaks responded to questions raised by The European Conservative regarding their funding.
Thomas O’Reilly is an Irish journalist working for The European Conservative in Brussels. He has an educational background in chemical sciences and journalism.
Tags: anti-corruption, Corporate Europe Observatory, EU lobbying hotline, LobbyLeaks, Open Society Foundation, Thomas O'Reilly
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Economic Glossary
Published 2014-06-17 | By Moon Wong
The acronym for an association of five major emerging economies: Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
Acronym in full: The Group of Eight
The Group of Eight (G8) is a forum for the governments of eight of the world’s largest national economies, United States, Japan, Germany, United Kingdom, Italy, Canada and Russia. With the G20 major economies growing in stature, world leaders from the group announced in 2009 that the group will replace the G8 as the main economic council of wealthy nations.
Acronym in full: World Trade Organization
The World Trade Organization (WTO) commenced operation in 1995 after the Uruguay Round negotiations and the signing of the Marrakech Agreement. WTO is an organization for trade opening. It operates a system of trade rules which has a basic structure of the Marrakech Agreement and its four annexes. Annex 1 includes trade in goods (GATT), trade in services (GATS) and intellectual property rights (TRIPS); Annex 2 is on dispute settlement, Annex 3 on trade policy review and Annex 4 on plurilateral agreements. As of March 2013, WTO has 159 member economies.
The World Bank Group aims at ending extreme poverty and sharing prosperity. The Group consists of five organizations.
(1) The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) which lends to governments of middle-income and creditworthy low-income countries,
(2) The International Development Association (IDA) which provides interest-free loans and grants to governments of the poorest countries,
(3) The International Finance Corporation (IFC) which helps developing countries achieve sustainable growth by financing investment, mobilizing capital in international financial markets, and providing advisory services to businesses and governments,
(4) The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) which offers political risk insurance (guarantees) to investors and lenders to promote foreign direct investment into developing countries, and
(5) The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) which provides international facilities for conciliation and arbitration of investment disputes.
Acronym in full: The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) was founded in 1960 by five countries, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Currently it has a total of 12 member countries, including Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar and UAE.
Accronym in full: The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation
The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) is the second largest inter-governmental organisation (after the United Nations) and has 57 member states. OIC was established in September 1969 at a historical summit in Rabat, Morocco, with the objective of safeguarding and protecting the interests of Muslims and promoting peace and harmony around the world.
Acronym in full: The Association of Southeast Asian Nations
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was established in 1967 with the signing of the ASEAN Declaration (Bangkok Declaration) by Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Brunei Darussalam then joined in 1984, followed by Vietnam, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Cambodia subsequently, making up what is today the ten Member States of ASEAN. The aims and purposes of ASEAN are mainly to promote economic growth, social progress and cultural development in the region though collaboration and mutual assistance, with a goal to establish an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) by 2015.
Acronym in full: ASEAN Economic Community
ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) is the goal of regional economic integration by 2015. The ASEAN Economic Blueprint signed by ASEAN leaders at the ASEAN Summit in 2007 serves as the master plan guiding the establishment of the AEC. Visions of the AEC: (a) a single market and production base, (b) a highly competitive economic region, (c) a region of equitable economic development, and (d) a region fully integrated into the global economy.
WTO Ministerial Conferences
The topmost decision-making body of the WTO is the Ministerial Conference, which usually meets every two years. It brings together all members of the WTO, all of which are countries or customs unions. The Ministerial Conference can take decisions on all matters under any of the multilateral trade agreements.
APEC SME Summit
Acronym in full: Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) is a forum for facilitating economic growth, cooperation, trade and investment in the Asia-Pacific region. Its 21 Member Economies are Australia; Brunei Darussalam; Canada; Chile; People’s Republic of China; Hong Kong, China; Indonesia; Japan; Republic of Korea; Malaysia; Mexico; New Zealand; Papua New Guinea; Peru; The Republic of the Philippines; The Russian Federation; Singapore; Chinese Taipei; Thailand; United States of America; Vietnam.
Acronym in full: International Monetary Fund
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is an organization of 188 countries, working to foster global monetary cooperation, secure financial stability, facilitate international trade, promote high employment and sustainable economic growth, and reduce poverty around the world. It provides policy advice and financing to members in economic difficulties and also works with developing nations to help them achieve macroeconomic stability and reduce poverty.
Acronym in full: The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) was established in 1961 to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world. The OECD provides a forum in which governments can work together to share experiences and seek solutions to common problems. Current membership include 34 countries span across the world, they are Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Chile, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, United States of America.
Acronym in full: Trans-Pacific Partnership
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a proposed trade agreement under negotiation by Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the US and Vietnam. The US is now the prime mover in TPP negotiation. Once ratified, the TPP which will eliminate most tariff and non-tariff barriers to trade and investment, will have a huge impact on regional and global economic growth.
Acronym in full: European Central Bank
The European Central Bank (ECB) is the central bank for conducting the single monetary policy for Europe’s single currency, the euro. Its main task is to maintain the euro’s purchasing power and thus price stability in the euro area. The euro area comprises the 17 European Union countries that have introduced the euro since 1999.
Acronym in full: European Union
The European Union (EU) is an economic and political union. It now comprises 28 member states, namely, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
EFTA
Acronym in full: European Free Trade Association
The European Free Trade Association (EFTA) was founded by the Stockholm Convention in 1960 to promote free trade among its members and closer economic cooperation with the western European countries. EFTA has signed free trade agreement with the EU and concluded a worldwide network of free trade and partnership agreements. While some of its founding members have joined the EU, today the EFTA has only four members, namely Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.
Acronym in full: Economic and Monetary Union
The Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) represents the convergence of member states of the European Union by the adoption of a single currency, euro, with the conduct of a single monetary policy under the responsibility of the ECB.
The European Parliament is one of the EU’s main law-making institutions, along with the Council of the European Union. Its members (MEPs) are elected once every five years by voters from across the 28 Member States.
Acronym in full: Group of Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors
Group of Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors (G20) is a forum for cooperation and consultation on matters pertaining to the international financial system. The G20 started in 1999 as a meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors in the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis. In 2008, the first G20 Leaders Summit was held, and the group played a key role in responding to the global financial crisis. The G20 members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, European Union, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States. They represent the largest industrialised and developing nations in the world.
Acronym in full: APEC Business Advisory Council
The APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC) was established in 1995. ABAC comprises up to three senior business people from each APEC economy. ABAC represents a diverse range of sectors and includes small and large enterprises. ABAC meets four times per year to discuss business sector priorities and concerns, and to present advices and recommendations to APEC Leaders in an annual dialogue.
Acronym in full: regional trade agreement
Regional trade agreements (RTAs) have become increasingly prevalent since the early 1990s. All RTAs in the WTO have in common is that they are reciprocal trade agreements between two or more partners. In recent years, there is a global trend towards continent-wide mega-regional trade agreements such as the TPP or RCEP.
Fair trade is a social movement that promote greater equity in trade. It focuses, in particular, on exports from developing countries to developed countries, notably coffee, tea, chocolate, honey, handicrafts, etc. There are several recognized Fairtrade certifiers, including Fairtrade, IMO and Eco-Social.
Anti Dumping
According to the WTO, if a company exports a product at a price lower than the price it normally charges on its own home market, it is said to be “dumping” the product. If dumping is proved after investigation, anti-dumping measures can be imposed on imports of the product concerned.
Acronym in full: non-market economy
In general, the termf “non-market economy” means any economy that does not operate on market principles of supply and demand, so that sales of merchandise in such economy do not reflect the fair value of the merchandise. According to the WTO, a country is regarded as a non-market economy if the government has a complete or substantially complete monopoly of its trade and where all domestic prices are fixed by the State. In cases of dumping investigation, since a strict comparison with home market prices may not be appropriate, importing countries can exercise significant discretion in the calculation of normal value of products exported from non-market economies.
The middle income trap is a phenomenon of which fast growing developing economies plateau or stagnate after reaching middle income levels, and fail to advance to the rank of high-income economies. The problem usually arises when developing economies experience rising wages and become less competitive than low income economies in manufacturing and exports. Meanwhile, they are not able to compete with advanced economies in high-skill innovations and technology.
Acronym in full: Free Trade Agreement
Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is a treaty between two or more countries/economies, such as CEPA or NAFTA, to form a free trade area, whose members agree to eliminate tariffs and non-tariff barriers for goods and services traded between them.
Acronym in full: The General Agreement on Trade in Services
The General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) is a treaty of the WTO. In view of the growing importance of trade in services, GATS aims to establish a multilateral framework of principles and rules for trade in services with a view to the expansion of such trade.
Acronym in full: Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) is a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) scheme of the 10 ASEAN Member States and its FTA Partners (Australia, China, India, Japan, Korea and New Zealand) to be concluded by the end of 2015. RCEP negotiations were launched by the Leaders of the 16 participating countries in the margins of the East Asia Summit in November 2012. The core of the negotiating agenda will cover goods trade, trade in services, investment, economic and technical cooperation, and dispute settlement.
Acronym in full: Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) is a treaty of the WTO. As intellectual property became more important in trade, TRIPS aims to narrow the gaps in the way these rights are protected around the world, and to bring them under common international rules. It establishes minimum levels of protection that each government has to give to the intellectual property of fellow WTO members.
Acronym in full: The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was a multilateral agreement regulating international trade. Its objective was to substantially reduce tariffs and other trade barriers on a reciprocal basis. GATT was signed in 1947 and lasted until 1994, when it was replaced by the World Trade Organization in 1995. An updated General Agreement is now the WTO agreement governing trade in goods.
Acronym in full: quantitative easing
Quantitative easing (QE) is an unconventional monetary policy used by central banks to stimulate the economy when standard monetary policy has become ineffective. With the objective to lower interest rates and increase money supply, the central bank may introduce QE by purchasing a predetermined quantity of government bonds or other financial assets from the market. QE was first used by the Bank of Japan to fight domestic deflation in the early 2000s. Since 2008, QEs have been adopted by the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Eurozone to mitigate some of the adverse effects of the global financial crisis.
CAFTA
Acronym in full: China-ASEAN Free Trade Area
China-ASEAN Free Trade Area (CAFTA) include China and the 10 ASEAN countries. In 2002, the Framework Agreement on Comprehensive Economic Co-operation between ASEAN and China was signed with the intention of establishing CAFTA by 2010. Subsequently both parties signed the Framework Agreement on Trade in Goods, the Framework Agreement on Trade in Services and the Framework Agreement on Investment, and started implementation of the liberalising. By 2010, the establishment of CAFTA was basically completed. In merchandise trade in particular, for China and the old members of ASEAN (Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand), the tariffs for the majority of goods except sensitive ones were reduced to zero beginning 1 January 2010. For new ASEAN members (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam), tariffs will be cut every two years beginning 2011 until zero tariffs are achieved by 2015.
Acronym in full: North American Free Trade Area
The North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA) comprises the United States, Canada and Mexico. The Free Trade Area was formed in 1994 after the conclusion of the North America Free Trade Agreement which aims to remove all duties and quantitative restrictions for trade, promote investment, enhance intellectual property protection and establish a trade dispute settlement mechanism.
ABTC
Acronym in full: The APEC Business Travel Card
ABTC was introduced in 1997 to allow fast and efficient travel for business people within the APEC region. Citizens of the APEC participating economies can apply for a ABTC at their national government. The ABTC removes the need to individually apply for visas or entry permits and allows multiple entries into participating economies during the three years the card is valid. Card holders also benefit from faster immigration processing on arrival via access to fast-track entry and exit through special APEC lanes at major airports in participating economies.
Acronym in full: Energy-using Products
Directive of Eco-design Requirements of Energy-using Products (EuP) was adopted by the EU in 2005 and took effect in 2007 to promote the Integrate Product Policy (IPP). EuP establishes a framework under which manufacturers of energy-using products will, at the design stage, be obliged to reduce the energy consumption and other negative environmental impacts that occur during the product’s life cycle.
Acronym in full: Generalized System of Preferences
The Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) allows WTO member to lower tariffs for the least developed countries, without also lowering tariffs for rich countries. The principle of GSP was agreed at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), and is a facility granted to developing countries (“beneficiary countries”) by certain developed countries (“donor countries”). The GSP schemes offered by the various donor countries and their rules of origin differ fundamentally.
OBM
Acronym in full: original brand manufacturing
Original brand manufacturing (OBM) means the manufacturers own the brands and are responsible for developing and designing their own products.
Acronym in full: original design manufacturing
Original design manufacturing (ODM) refers to the production arrangement under which manufacturers provide the pre-production services, mainly product concept development and detailed product design, as well as manufacture the products under the buyer’s label.
Acronym in full: compound annual growth rate
Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is the average year-over-year growth rate over a specified period of time. It is is calculated by taking the nth root of the total percentage growth rate, where n is the number of years in the period being considered.
Acronym in full: central business district
Central business district (CBD) is the commercial heart of a city. Hong Kong is generally reckoned as a CBD for Asia due to its effectiveness in reaching out to the Asian markets and conducting sourcing in the region.
HKTDC Export Index
The HKTDC Export Index is designed to monitor the current export performance of Hong Kong traders and guages their near-term prospects. With a reading above 50, the Index indicates that more than half of the surveyed traders incline towards the upside, which can be interpreted as an upward trend and an increase in confidence.
GPA (WTO)
Acronym in full: Agreement on Government Procurement
The Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA) is a legally binding agreement in the WTO focusing on the subject of government procurement. It is a plurilateral treaty administered by a Committee on Government Procurement, which includes the WTO Members that are Parties to the GPA. GPA is designed to make laws, regulations, procedures and practices regarding government procurement more transparent and to ensure they do not protect domestic products or suppliers, or discriminate against foreign products or suppliers.
Acronym in full: regional distribution centre
Regional distribution centre (RDC) is defined as a facility/location that distributes finished goods or parts to more than one country or economy in a region, with VAS frequently being provided in order to prepare goods for distribution. Common forms of VAS include storage, packaging and repacking, labelling and re-labelling, quality checking, documentation and customs clearance, compliance and modifications. Hong Kong is a RDC in Asia.
Gini-coefficient
Gini-coefficient is the most commonly used measure of income inequality. The coefficient varies between zero to one. A zero coefficient reflects complete equality and one indicates complete inequality. i.e. the smaller the Gini-coefficient, the more equal in income distribution.
Offshore trade
Offshore trade in Hong Kong refers to trade that is handled by companies in Hong Kong, of which the goods concerned are originated outside Hong Kong and are being dispatched to an overseas buyer through direct shipment or transshipment without touching Hong Kong.
Acronym in full: online to offline e-commerce
Online to Offline e-commerce, i.e. attracting users online and directing them to offline physical stores which may involve online payment to download e-vouchers, e-coupons and e-tickets, offline verification or redemption.
Posted in Export Terms & Practices | Tagged Economic Glossary
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Irish documentary Hubert Butler: Witness to the Future available on Netflix this Friday
29 Oct 2021 : Nathan Griffin
Director Johnny Gogan
Netflix has acquired Irish documentary Witness to the Future, directed & produced by Johnny Gogan of Bandit Films, which releases on the streaming platform this Friday, October 29th.
The documentary features interviews with John Banville, Julia Crampton (daughter), Olivia O'Leary, Robert Tobin (biographer), Chris Agee, Fintan O'Toole, Roy Foster, Lara Marlowe, Joe Hone, Suzanna Crampton (granddaughter), Dr. Michael Kennedy, and Antony Farrell.
Witness to The Future was first broadcast on RTE (August 2017) in one hour form as the Nuncio and the Writer. This will be the first opportunity for TV audiences to see the film in feature length form (98mins) following its release in Irish venues in 2016.
Irish essayist and human rights champion Hubert Butler (1900-1991) wrote brilliantly about the “inter-war Jewish crisis,” smuggled Jewish people into Ireland from Vienna before the war and, after the war, exposed the genocide of Jews and Serbs in World War II Yugoslavia. He anticipated the re-emergence of these animosities in a future Balkan War. Butler paid a price for these insights in his home country when, in 1952 he was targeted by the authorities. He was ultimately celebrated as a champion of pluralism.
Using recently de-classified documents in Ireland and focusing on historical events still working their way out in today's international sphere – not least in the rise of populism - this highly visual and expansive film explores why, in the words of Olivia O'Leary, Butler “was fifty years ahead of his time” and, as echoed by Roy Foster and John Banville, “one of the great Irish writers," arguably its greatest modern exponent of the essay form.
However, Butler fell foul of censorship when a "caveat" was issued by Irish President Seán T. O'Kelly in 1952 in the wake of Butler's crossing of the Papal Nuncio. As a result, Butler, whose stature was growing in the early 1950s Ireland as a public figure given his extensive knowledge of European culture, was effectively silenced. The state would have nothing to do with him.
Nearly forty years later, his work came to the notice of publisher Antony Farrell of Lilliput Press. Butler became an overnight publishing success at the age of 85, with three Lilliput collections in his lifetime followed by New York and Paris collections.
Director, producer, and cinematographer of Witness to the Future, Johnny Gogan has just released his second novel Station to Station - a political thriller set in Spain - with Lepus Print. He is the director of ten feature length films including this year's Groundswell, described by The Guardian's Chief Critic Peter Bradshaw as "a lesson to communities here and everywhere else to stay vigilant" and for which he has been shortlisted for this year's Radharc Trust award for feature length human rights documentaries.
Gogan’s feature dramas include the award-winning The Last Bus Home (1997); Mapmaker (2002); and Black Ice (2013). Black Ice will be available to stream on Netflix from December 3rd. Founding editor of the Film Base publication, Film Ireland in 1987, and of the innovative Adaptation Film Festival (2005-2012), Gogan’s many short films and TV documentaries include his Galway Film Fleadh award winning short film Stephen (1990).
Hubert Butler: Witness to the Future is available on Netflix from Friday, October 29th.
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HOME ABOUT MUSIC CONTACT
John Thomas Taylor
Producer, Drummer, Musician
John Thomas Taylor is a drummer, producer, and songwriter from Atlanta, Georgia. In addition to his solo music career, John has also been a cornerstone of music groups such as Outsight, Veris, and Corey Crowder.
Born with a sense of rhythm, John grew up banging on boxes with lincoln logs. After graduating to Mom’s pots and pans became unacceptable, John received his first drum kit at age 12.
John’s expertise grew quickly, allowing him to become a leader in school percussion programs while also learning the guitar and recording skills necessary to release his first solo and group albums. Since then, John has contributed his talent on hundreds of tracks and performed in countless live shows alongside popular acts such as Willie Nelson, Lady Antebellum, Underoath, and Zac Brown Band.
You’ve probably heard John’s audio production on tracks for television shows like MTV’s The Real World and The WB’s One Tree Hill.
In composition and collaboration, John often uses the Nashville Number System. He also treats digital technology as a modern musical instrument rather than just a tool. John continues to create and perfect a sound uniquely his own. When he’s not the man behind the instrument, his audio mastering company SoundOps is dedicated to helping other musicians sound their best.
- Addison Williams
Click titles below to play
Sorry, your browser does not support the HTML5 audio player.
Is This What You Mean
2004. Lyrics
I'm Gone
2006. Cover of the song by Alison Krauss.
Dear Unknown
In Eyes Whispers Lie
Heartless Fidelity
Separate Sides
2009. Cover of "Brothers On A Hotel Bed" by Death Cab for Cutie.
2012 Compilation
2012. Covers of the songs "Someday You Will Be Loved" by Deathcab for Cutie, "Country Roads" by John Denver, "Something's Always Wrong" by Toad The Wet Sprocket, "River" by Joni Mitchell, and "We Might As Well Be Strangers" by Keane.
Someday (I Won't Be)
2010. See video below. Cover of the song by The Beatles. Featuring musician Christian Owens (lead guitar).
2006. Cover of the song by Bush.
Genuineness
2013. Cover of the song by Sarah McLachlan. Featuring musicians Will Duke (piano) and Emily Reep (cello).
Guitar Choir
2004. Cover of the song by Heart of Esther
Indescribable Everything
2003. Cover of the song by Outsight.
BetterTrades jingle
2009. Promo jingle for the company.
Heartless Fidelity (music only)
Something's Always Wrong
2004. Cover of the song by Toad The Wet Sprocket.
Would love to chat with ya. Send me a message:
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Quantum-safe identities for a digital future
Posted by Jennifer Read | Feb 7, 2023 | Associations, Design, News, Smart Factory
The security of digital identities is threatened by future quantum technologies. In the hands of attackers, quantum computers will be able to break classical encryption methods. To fend off such attacks, four partners launched the Quant-ID project. In this project, they are researching the development of novel methods and systems that guarantee cryptographic security in the long term based on quantum random numbers and post-quantum cryptography. Highly critical areas, such as government institutions, banks or insurance companies, will thus receive the necessary protection. The BMBF-funded project started in September 2022 and will run for three years.
In order to achieve greater acceptance for the digitization of services and business processes in society, user-friendly, reliable and privacy-protecting procedures must be established. In the project “Secure Quantum Communication for Critical Identity Access Management Infrastructures (Quant-ID)”, Quant-X Security & Coding GmbH, the Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS, MTG AG and the University of Regensburg are jointly researching reliable digital identities. The use of currently used network protocols is intended to facilitate the transition from classical encryption algorithms to quantum-safe methods. Deviating from the original physical term, quantum security here refers to protection against attacks by quantum computers.
“Our goal is to develop quantum-safe authorization of users in an IAM (Identity Access Management) architecture with the help of quantum random numbers and post-quantum cryptography,” explains Dr. Alexander Noack, group leader at the Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS. Post-quantum cryptography (PQC) refers to cryptographic algorithms that are used on classical hardware but promise security against attacks with quantum computers. In the project, the true random numbers required for these methods will be generated by a quantum random number generator (QRNG) to increase security. “In addition, we also want to secure network communication, signatures and database encryption using post-quantum cryptography,” said Dr. Alexander Noack. Another goal of the joint project is to develop a quantum-safe “single sign-on” approach that enables access to various services with a single central login.
At the end of the project, the digital identities and quantum-safe authorization will be tested in a demonstrator in a realistic application using existing network protocols. In the process, the capabilities of the developed system will be compared with classical methods. The results of the subprojects will also be applicable on a modular basis. This offers network administrators and system managers the option of integrating either the entire system or only partial aspects.
By developing the concept in Germany, sovereignty regarding the security of national information technology systems will be strengthened. This results in a particularly high market potential for the project solution in highly sensitive areas and critical infrastructures such as in the area of banks, insurance companies, companies in the healthcare sector as well as public authorities and state institutions. These players in particular are dependent on meeting high security standards, as they are often exposed to increasingly complex attack structures. To support the application of the quantum random number generator, certification by the German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) is also being sought.
The consortium’s motivation is to build up an interdisciplinary project team, to establish partnerships in Germany for overall solutions and to make safeguarding technologies against attacks by quantum computers accessible to everyone. “With this project, we want to create the basis for interdisciplinary collaborations for the efficient realization of quantum security in Germany” says the Fraunhofer IPMS group leader. The resulting quantum-safe version of OpenID Connect will be made available to the public for low cost as an open-source library.
Thus, Quant-ID creates the basis for highly secure protection in critical infrastructures in an end-to-end solution in Germany. The use case “Quantum-Secure eID” will increase the level of security against cyber-attacks for all resident companies and government institutions. At the same time, a basis for the long-term security of identity data and other sensitive data of German citizens will be created. “Through this path, the project pursues to protect Germany’s ethical, social and economic values early enough against foreign governmental and criminal attacks,” concludes Dr. Alexander Noack. The international positioning as a German consortium in a newly to be created public OpenID working group with the goal of defining “OpenID quantum” also guarantees the parallel connection to international standardization projects. Further information can be found on the project website at: https://quant-id.de/.
Participating institutions of the Quant ID project
Network coordinator:
Quant-X Security & Coding GmbH is a startup with a focus on information security. The company’s expertise is based on 10 years of consulting experience for fintechs and banks. The consulting services include conception, planning, development, control, and quality assurance in the area of information security. Experts from Quant-X have been contracted to implement and troubleshoot IAM infrastructures in several projects, including Deutsche Bank, and Federal Press. With various quantum theory and security experts Quant-X investigates selected open questions on quantum security with focus on concrete applications.
The Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS researches microelectronic and micromechanical low-power sensors, actuators, and optical wireless high-speed data communication. As an innovative development service provider for electronic and photonic microsystems, innovative products based on technologies developed at IPMS can be found in all major markets – such as information and communication, automotive, semiconductors, measurement, and medical technology. High-speed FPGA and mixed-signal ASIC design are also part of the portfolio. The electronic control and evaluation of qubits and active photonic single elements up to computing accelerators via dedicated integrated electronics are in focus.
Since its foundation in 1995, MTG AG has been one of the leading specialists for sophisticated encryption technologies in Germany. MTG’s innovative IT security solutions effectively secure critical infrastructures and the Internet of Things. MTG is participating in the QuantumRISC funding project of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and has successfully completed the Use-A-PQClib funding project of the Hessian Ministry of Science and the Arts (HMWK). Within the framework of these two research projects, MTG has gained extensive experience in the development and integration of PQC procedures in software.
The University of Regensburg (UR) is a Bavarian comprehensive university whose youngest faculty, the Faculty of Computer Science and Data Science (FIDS), was only founded in 2020. Since 2021, the chair for data security and cryptography is held by Prof. Dr. Juliane Krämer. The research group QPC (Quantum and Physical attack resistant Cryptography) of Prof. Krämer investigates all five families of post-quantum cryptography regarding different aspects, e.g. [ABB+20, GHK+21, GKS21, KS20, RKK20]. The group is part of several research projects, e.g. DFG-SFB CROSSING, QuantumRISC, Aquorypt, 6G-RIC. In the present project Quant-ID Prof. Krämer contributes her extensive expertise in the analysis, development and integration of PQC methods.
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2023-14/0021/en_head.json.gz/17912
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2014 Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted Report Released
In the Line of Duty
Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted, 2014 Report Released
On May 29, 2014, a 42-year-old trooper with the New York State Police made a traffic stop on an interstate highway north of Binghamton. The veteran trooper parked behind the stopped car and approached the driver’s side window. In that fleeting moment, a truck traveling in the same direction at about 90 miles per hour suddenly swerved, sideswiping the car and striking the trooper, killing him instantly. The truck’s driver, a 60-year-old male with a criminal record, admitted after his capture that he intentionally veered to hit the trooper.
The chilling account of the unprovoked attack is just one of dozens of detailed narratives recounting the felonious deaths of law enforcement officers in the United States in 2014. The accounts are a central component of the latest Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted (LEOKA) report, issued today, which shows that 96 law enforcement officers were killed in the line of duty last year—51 as a result of felonious acts and 45 in accidents. The annual report, released by the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, also shows that 48,315 officers were victims of line-of-duty assaults in 2014.
In addition to the narratives, the online-only report includes comprehensive data tables that provide a closer look at the incidents: officer profiles, circumstances, weapons, locations, and identified suspects.
The felonious deaths of the 51 officers—all males—occurred in 24 states and Puerto Rico. The figure represents a significant increase over the number that occurred in 2013, when 27 officers were killed, but is lower than the numbers from 2009 (56 officers) and 2005 (55 officers).
Among the report’s findings:
The average age of the officers who were feloniously killed was 39, and they had served for an average of 13 years.
Offenders used firearms to kill 46 of the 51 victim officers: 33 were slain with handguns, 10 with rifles, and three with shotguns.
59 alleged assailants (54 of them males) were identified in connection with the line-of-duty deaths; 50 had prior criminal arrests.
39 of the officers feloniously killed with firearms were wearing body armor at the time of the incidents.
The largest percentage (30.8) of assaults on police officers occurred while they were responding to disturbance calls.
The LEOKA publication contains data on duly-sworn city, university/college, county, state, tribal, and federal law enforcement officers. The information in the report comes from various sources: the law enforcement agencies participating in the UCR Program, FBI field offices, and several non-profit organizations, such as the Concerns of Police Survivors and the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.
In addition to collecting details about the critical aspects of fatal confrontations and assaults, the FBI’s LEOKA Program conducts extensive research on the data that eventually gets incorporated into officer safety awareness training the FBI provides for partner agencies.
- Full Report: Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted, 2014
- UCR Program
FBI Releases 2014 Statistics on Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted
Annual ‘Officers Killed’ Report More Than a Tally of Losses
Cyber Tip: Defense in Depth for the Everyday User
Home users can apply “Defense in Depth” principles to protect their own personal data.
Director Urges Closer Ties Between Police, Communities
Director Comey urged closer ties between police and communities at a forum in Ohio.
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Animal Feed Exporters in India
Animal Feed Exporters
The animal feed may contain a wide range of additional substances besides rendered manure, animal products, plant- and animal-based fats, antibiotics, and metals. Global animal feed production surpassed 1.07 billion tons in 2017. More than 60 percent of China’s whey powder imports are utilized as animal feed, primarily in producing lactose- and protein-rich post-weaning meals for piglets. In this article we would be sharing a list of biggest animal feed exporters.
CP Group
The C.P. Group's holding firm is Charoen Pokphand Group Co., Ltd. In addition to having stakes in subsidiaries in Thailand and other countries across the globe, Charoen Pokphand Group Co., Ltd. is a holding company. There are eight Business Lines and thirteen Business Groups within the Group's activities that cover various industries, from industrial to service.
Shree Salasar Balaji Enterprises
Incorporated on October 7, 2010, Sri Salasar Balaji Enterprises Private Limited is a private firm. In 2010 it was initially registered as a private company. It is registered with the Registrar of Companies in Cuttack as a non-governmental organization (NGO). Intriguingly, the Company is a well-known exporter of animal feed both in India and worldwide. One of the leading manufacturers, exporters, and suppliers in India, Dinesh H. Aswani's Company, was established quickly.
Located in Minnetonka, MN, and incorporated in Delaware, the Company's headquarters are located there. Minnetonka, Minnesota-based Cargill, Inc., a privately held American multinational corporation with corporate headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, is the Company's corporate headquarters. In the year 1865, Cargill was founded.
Cooperative creameries in Minneapolis and St. Paul are represented by the Minnesota Cooperative Creamery Association, founded in 1921 and based in Arden Hills, Minnesota. As one would think, this newspaper focuses mainly on the dairy business. The Arden Hills, Minnesota-based Land O'Lakes is primarily a dairy-focused agricultural cooperative. Arden Hills is also home to the Company's headquarters.
Wen's Food Group
Guangdong In Guangdong Province, the Wens Foodstuffs Group, is a privately owned agricultural enterprise that is a leader in the field. Some of the Company's businesses include food trading, livestock breeding, animal health care items, agricultural and animal husbandry equipment, food processing, vegetable cultivation, organic fertilizer, and investment and finance. There are about 34,581 people employed by the Wens Foodstuffs Group (WFG), a global conglomerate with 129 wholly-owned or managed subsidiaries.
Muyuan Foodstuff Co.Ltd.
Pig breeding is the focus of Muyuan Foodstuff Co., Ltd. The Company grows boars, porkers, and other varieties of pigs for breeding purposes. In addition to food products, Muyuan Foodstuff also offers animal feed components. With its subsidiaries, Muyuan Foods Co., Ltd. is a Chinese hog producer that operates in its hog industry.
BRF S.A.
As a result of the merger of Sadia and Perdigo, a Brazilian food company, BRF S.A., was created. Over 13,000 integrated farmers work daily in the fields to provide the business with the vital components for its food production on the Company's poultry and domestic pig farms. BRF's net revenue for the fiscal year 2018 was R$ 34,529 million.
Tyson Foods Inc.
It is a food production and distribution company based in Springdale in the United States with worldwide operations. Poultry, beef, and pork are the Company's primary products. To manufacture high-quality ingredients for animal feed, pet food, human food, and a range of other specialist products, Tyson Ingredient Solutions uses chicken parts.
ForFarmers N.V.
It is a worldwide feed company that offers Total Feed solutions for conventional and organic livestock production. ForFarmers (Lochem, the Netherlands) With an annual feed sales volume of roughly 10 million tonnes, ForFarmers is one of the most successful players in the European feed sector.
Nutreco N.V.
The Dutch firm Nutreco N.V. produces a variety of goods, including animal feed, fish feed, and processed meats. It has more than 100 factories in more than 30 countries worldwide. A management buyout of BP Plc's feed and nutrition division, funded by Cinven, created the Company in 1994.
For more details related to Animal Feed exporters in India feel free to contact us.
animal feed, export
Newer Best Rice Exporter For African Countries
Older Animal Feed Import From India
Animal Feed Import From India
All across the world, animal feed is traded on international marketplaces. According to the export research, around 117 nations and ter...
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Calhoun: Announce New Leaders
CALHOUN COMMUNITY COLLEGE ALUMS NAMED PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT OF THE FOUNDATION BOARD
Decatur, AL – Today, the Calhoun College Foundation announced Rex Cheatham as the new President and Kim Lewis as the first Vice President of the College’s 2020-2021 Foundation Board.
Rex Cheatham, a native of Decatur, Alabama, brings more than 44 years of experience in the education sector where he served as the Executive Director of the Governor’s Education Reform Commission. He also served as the Governor’s Education Liaison, UniServ Director for the Alabama Education Association of District 2, and as a Teacher and Supervisor for Attendance and Testing for Morgan County Schools. He graduated ...
... with honors from Calhoun and earned an Associate of Science in General Studies, a Bachelor of Science in Secondary Education from Athens State University, and a Master of Arts in Supervision and Administration from the University of North Alabama.
Mr. Cheatham has a plethora of awards and honors which include Alabama’s Outstanding Young Educator, Decatur’s Outstanding Young Man, Who’s Who among America’s Outstanding Leaders in America’s Elementary and Secondary Schools, Who’s Who in America’s Universities and Colleges, Distinguished Service Award at Calhoun Community College, Alumnus of the Year at Athens State University, and Outstanding Young Man of America.
Kim Lewis, a native of Huntsville, Alabama, earned an Associate of Science degree in Computer Science from Calhoun. In 2002, she later became Co-Founder and CEO of PROJECTXYZ, which is a minority-owned, woman-owned small business under the US Small Business Administration’s government contracting program. The company provides engineering, logistics, programmatic, and alternative energy solutions for government customers around the world. Today under her leadership, the company has grown to over 100 employees and has been recognized by Inc. magazine as one of the fastest-growing privately held companies in the US.
Aside from her career accomplishments, in 2019, Mrs. Lewis became the first African American woman appointed to serve as Board Chair of the Huntsville/Madison Chamber of Commerce. As a role model, leader, and community advocate, she serves on numerous boards and actively supports organizations to include HEALS, Inc., Women’s Economic Development Council (WEDC), the National Children’s Advocacy Center, Huntsville Association of Small Businesses in Advanced Technology (HASBAT), Women in Defense (WID), National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA), and the North Alabama International Trade Association (NAITA).
“Rex and Kim will provide exceptional leadership in fulfilling the Calhoun Foundation mission which is to provide educational and training assistance to citizens of Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan counties,” commented Johnette Davis, Calhoun Foundation Board Director and ex-officio member. “As Calhoun alums with such diverse backgrounds, they bring a very unique perspective to their newly appointed positions, and we are so excited to see all that we will accomplish under their leadership”, added Davis.
The Calhoun College Foundation was established in 1975. The Foundation supports scholarships, programs, professional development, curriculum improvement, and promotion of Calhoun Community College. As of today, the board currently has 36 members.
For all media inquiries, please contact Calhoun’s Public Relations office at 256-306-2560 or 256-306-2965. You may also email Sherika Attipoe, Acting Assistant Director of Public Relations & CETV at [email protected] or Wes Torain, Acting Director of Public Relations & CETV at [email protected].
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Culture of Brazil
The music of Brazil encompasses various regional musical styles influenced by European, American, African and Amerindian forms. Brazilian music developed some unique and original styles such as forró, repente, coco de roda, axé, sertanejo, samba, bossa nova, MPB, música nativista, pagode, tropicália, choro, maracatu, embolada (coco de repente), frevo, brega, modinha and Brazilian versions of foreign musical styles, such as rock, pop music, soul, hip-hop, disco music, country music, ambient, industrial and psychedelic music, rap, classical music, fado, and gospel.
Samba has become the most known form of Brazilian music worldwide, especially because of the country's carnival, although bossa nova, which had Antônio Carlos Jobim as one of its most acclaimed composers and performers, have received much attention abroad since the 1950s, when the song "Desafinado", interpreted by João Gilberto, was first released.
The first four winners of the Shell Brazilian Music prize[1] have each left a legacy on Brazilian music and are among the representatives of Brazilian popular music: Pixinguinha (choro), Antônio Carlos Jobim (bossa nova), Dorival Caymmi (samba and samba-canção).
Instrumental music is also largely practiced in Brazil, with styles ranging from classical to popular and jazz influenced forms. Among the later, Naná Vasconcelos, Pixinguinha, Hermeto Pascoal and Egberto Gismonti are significant figures. Notable classical composers include Heitor Villa-Lobos, Carlos Gomes and Cláudio Santoro. The country also has a growing community of modern/experimental composition, including electroacoustic music.
Little is known of the music of Brazil before the area's first encounter with Portuguese explorers on 22 April 1500. During the colonial period, documents detail the musical activities of the major Roman Catholic cathedrals and the parlors of the upper classes, but data about musical life outside these domains are sparse. Some information is available in writings left by such travellers as Jean de Léry, who lived in Brazil from 1557 to 1558 and produced the first known transcriptions of native American music: two chants of the Tupinambá, near Rio de Janeiro.[2]
Venid a sospirar (José de Anchieta) - score available at Musica Brasilis website.
Further registration of musical activity in Brazil came from the activities of two Jesuit priests in 1549. Ten years later, they had already founded settlements for indigenous people (the Reduções), with a musical-educational structure.
One century later, the Reduções of the southern Brazil, which were founded by Spaniard Jesuits, had a strong cultural development, where some music schools were founded. Some of the reports of that time show the fascination of the indigenous people for European music.[3] The indigenous people also took part in the music, with both the construction of musical instruments and practice of vocal and instrumental performance.
The 18th-century school
Ouro Preto, in Minas Gerais: one of the most important musical centers in Brazil during the 18th century.
In the 18th century, there was intense musical activity in all the more developed regions of Brazil, with their moderately stable institutional and educational structures. The previously few private orchestras became more common and the churches presented a great variety of music.
In the first half of this century, the most outstanding works were composed by Luís Álvares Pinto, Caetano de Mello de Jesus and Antônio José da Silva ("the Jew"), who became successful in Lisbon writing librettos for comedies, which were performed also in Brazil with music by António Teixeira.
In the second part of the 18th century, there was a great flourishing in Minas Gerais, mostly in the regions of Vila Rica (currently Ouro Preto), Mariana and Arraial do Tejuco (currently Diamantina), where the mining of gold and diamonds for the Portuguese metropolis attracted a sizable population. At this time, the first outstanding Brazilian composers were revealed, most of them mulattoes. The musical pieces were mostly sacred music. Some of the noteworthy composers of this period were Lobo de Mesquita, Manoel Dias de Oliveira, Francisco Gomes da Rocha, Marcos Coelho Neto and Marcos Coelho Neto Filho. All of them were very active, but in many cases few pieces have survived until the present day. Some of the most famous pieces of this period are the Magnificat by Manoel Dias de Oliveira and the Our Lady's Antiphon by Lobo de Mesquita. In the city of Arraial do Tejuco, nowadays Diamantina, there were ten conductors in activity. In Ouro Preto about 250 musicians were active, and in all of the territory of Minas Gerais almost a thousand musicians were active.[4]
With the impoverishment of the mines at the end of the century, the focus of the musical activity changed to other centers, specially Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, where André da Silva Gomes, a composer of Portuguese origin, released a great number of works and dynamized the musical life of the city.
Also, the oldest Orchestra of all Americas is situated in São João del-Rei, Minas Gerais, called Lira Sanjoanense, conducted, today, by Modesto Flávio Fonseca.
The Classical period
José Maurício Nunes Garcia.
A crucial factor for the changes in the musical life was the arrival of the Portuguese Royal family to Rio de Janeiro in 1808. Until then, Rio de Janeiro was musically similar to other cultural centers of Brazil but was even less important than Minas Gerais. The presence of the Portuguese Royal family, in exile, radically changed this situation, as the Capela Real of Rio de Janeiro was established.
The king John VI of Portugal brought with him to Brazil the great musical library from the House of Bragança, one of the best of Europe at that time, and ordered the arrival of musicians from Lisbon and the castrati from Italy, re-ordering the Royal Chapel. Later, John VI ordered the construction of a sumptuous theater, called the Royal Theater of São João. The secular music had the presence of Marcos Portugal, who was designated as the official composer of the household, and of Sigismund von Neukomm, who contributed with his own work and brought the works of the Austrian composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Joseph Haydn. The works of these composers strongly influenced the Brazilian music of this time.
José Maurício Nunes Garcia, the first of the great Brazilian composers, emerged at this time. With a large culture for his origin – he was poor and mulatto – he was one of the founders of the Irmandade de Santa Cecília, in Rio de Janeiro, teacher and mestre de capela of the Royal Chapel during the presence of John VI in Brazil. Nunes Garcia was the most prolific Brazilian composer of this time. He also composed the first opera written in Brazil, Le Due Gemelle (The Two Twins), with text in Italian, but the music is now lost.
Other important composers of this period are Gabriel Fernandes da Trindade, who composed the only Brazilian chamber music from the 19th century which has survived to the present times,[5] and João de Deus de Castro Lobo, who lived in the cities of Mariana and Ouro Preto, which were decadent at this time.
This period, however, was brief. In 1821, John VI went back to Lisbon, taking with him the household, and the cultural life in Rio de Janeiro became empty. And, despite the love of Peter I of Brazil for the music – he was also author of some musical pieces like the Brazilian Independence Anthem – the difficult financial situation didn't allow many luxuries. The conflagration of the Royal Theater in 1824 was another symbol of decadence, which reached the most critical point when Peter I renounced the throne, going back to Portugal.
The Romantic period
Antônio Carlos Gomes.
The only composer who had a relevant work in this period was Francisco Manuel da Silva, disciple of Nunes Garcia, who succeeded him as kapellmeister. In spite of his few resources, he founded the Musical Conservatory of Rio de Janeiro. He was the author of the Brazilian National Anthem's melody. His work reflected the musical transition for the Romanticism, when the interest of the national composers was focused in the opera. The most outstanding Brazilian composer of this period was Antônio Carlos Gomes, who composed Italian-styled operas with national themes, such as Il Guarany (based on José de Alencar's novel O Guarani) and Lo Schiavo. These operas were very successful in European theaters, like the Teatro alla Scala, in Milan. Other important composer of this time is Elias Álvares Lobo, who wrote the opera A Noite de São João, the first Brazilian opera with text in Portuguese.
The opera in Brazil was very popular until the middle of the 20th century, and many opera houses were built at this time, like Teatro Amazonas in Manaus, Municipal Theater of Rio de Janeiro, Municipal Theater of São Paulo, and many others.
At the end of the 19th century, the greatest composers for the symphonic music were revealed. One of the most outstanding name of this period was Leopoldo Miguez, who followed the Wagnerian style and Henrique Oswald, who incorporated elements of the French Impressionism.
Heitor Villa-Lobos.
In the beginning of the 20th century, there was a movement for creating an authentically Brazilian music, with less influences of the European culture. In this sense, the folklore was the major font of inspiration for the composers. Some composers like Brasílio Itiberê da Cunha, Luciano Gallet and Alexandre Levy, despite having a European formation, included some typically Brazilian elements in their works. This trend reached the highest point with Alberto Nepomuceno, who used largely the rhythms and melodies from the Brazilian folklore. There were local cultural movements to consolidate regional identities through music as for example, José Brazilício de Souza, who wrote the state anthem of Santa Catarina and his son Álvaro Sousa, who was a noticeable musician, music educator, and composer there.[6]
An important event, later, was the Modern Art Week, in 1922, which had a large impact on concepts of national art. In this event the composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, regarded as the most outstanding name of the Brazilian nationalism, was revealed.
Villa-Lobos did researches about the musical folklore of Brazil, and mixed elements both from classical and popular music. He explored many musical genres such as concertos, symphonies, modinhas, Fados, and other symphonic, vocal and chamber music. Some of his masterworks are the ballet Uirapuru and the two series of Chôros and Bachianas Brasileiras.
Other composers of Brazilian national music of this era include Oscar Lorenzo Fernández, Radamés Gnattali, Camargo Guarnieri, Osvaldo Lacerda, Francisco Mignone, and Ernesto Nazareth.
The avant-garde movement
See also: Tropicalia
As a reaction against the nationalist school, who was identified as "servile" to the centralizing politics of Getúlio Vargas, in 1939 the Movimento Música Viva (Living Music Movement) appeared, led by Hans Joachim Koellreutter and by Egídio de Castro e Silva, defending the adoption of an international style, derived from the dodecaphonism of Arnold Schoenberg. This group was integrated by composers like Cláudio Santoro, César Guerra-Peixe, Eunice Catunda and Edino Krieger. Koellreutter adopted revolutionary methodes, in respect to the individuality of each student and giving to the students the freedom of creativity before the knowledge of the traditional rules for composition. The movement edited a magazine and presented a series of radio programs showing their fundaments and works of contemporary music. Later, Guerra-Peixe and Santoro followed an independent way, centered in the regional music. Other composers, who used freely the previous styles were Marlos Nobre, Almeida Prado, and Armando Albuquerque, who created their own styles.
After 1960, the Brazilian avant-garde movement received a new wave, focusing on serial music, microtonal music, concrete music and electronic music, employing a completely new language. This movement was called Música Nova (New Music) and was led by Gilberto Mendes and Willy Corrêa de Oliveira. An important fact was the introduction of electronic music in Brazil, with the pioneering works of the carioca Jorge Antunes in 1961.
Brazilian Opera
Carlos Gomes was the first composer on non-European origin to achieve wide recognition in the classical music environment of the Golden age of Opera in Italy. Bossa Nova was created as anti-opera in a time when opera seemed to represent the art-form of the elite. [5] In recent years the style has been revived with works by Jorge Antunes, Flo Menezes, and others.
Since 2014 the International Brazilian Opera (IBOC) has been producing new works, most notably by its artistic director and resident composer Joao MacDowell.
Claudia Leitte along with Pitbull and Jennifer Lopez, she recorded "We Are One (Ole Ola)", which served as the official song of the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
Nowadays, Brazilian music follows the guidelines of both experimentalism and traditional music. Some of the contemporary Brazilian composers are Amaral Vieira, Sílvio Ferraz, Nestor de Hollanda Cavalcanti, Flo Menezes, Marcos Balter, Alexandre Lunsqui, Rodolfo Caesar, Felipe Lara, Edson Zampronha, Marcus Siqueira, Rodrigo Lima, Jorge Antunes, Roberto Victorio and João MacDowell. From the new generation of Brazilian composers, Caio Facó has achieved international recognition for his work.
Brazil has a large number of internationally recognized orchestras and performers, despite the relatively low support of the government. The most famous Brazilian orchestra is probably the São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra, currently under conductor Thierry Fischer. Other Brazilian orchestras worthy of note are the São Paulo University Symphony, the Orquestra Sinfônica Brasileira, Orquestra Filarmônica de Minas Gerais and the Petrobras Sinfônica, supported by the Brazilian state oil company Petrobras.
There are also regular operas scheduled every year in cities such as São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The state of São Paulo also hosts the Winter Festival in the city of Campos do Jordão.
Some of the most famous Brazilian conductors are Roberto Minczuk, John Neschling and Isaac Karabtchevsky. The instrumentalists include, among others: Roberto Szidon, Antonio Meneses, Cussy de Almeida, Gilberto Tinetti, Arnaldo Cohen, Nelson Freire, Eudóxia de Barros, Guiomar Novaes and Magda Tagliaferro. And some of the most famous Brazilian singers were, historically, Zola Amaro, Constantina Araújo and Bidu Sayão; living singers include Eliane Coelho, Kismara Pessatti, Maria Lúcia Godoy, Sebastião Teixeira, and others.
In the 1980s, a wave of Brazilian heavy metal bands gained public attention. The most commercially successful of these was Sepultura, founded in São Paulo in 1983, preceded by Dorsal Atlantica and followed by Sarcófago.
The intrusion of alien elements into Brazil's cultural system is not a destructive process. The return of a democratic government allowed for freedom of expression. The Brazilian music industry opened up to international styles and this has allowed for both foreign and local genres to co-exist and identify people. Each different style relates to the people socially, politically, and economically. "Brazil is a regionally divided country with a rich cultural and musical diversity among states. As such, musicians in the country choose to define their local heritage differently depending on where they come from." This shows how globalization has not robbed Brazil of its identity but instead given it the ability to represent its people both in Brazil and the rest of the world.
In recent years Brazilian artists have become more interested in Africa, the Caribbean and their own indigenous and folk music. While there are some artists who continue to perform rock and Western pop, there are now just as many contemporaries playing a fusion of African and European influences with those from across The Americas. Some artists have even become influenced by Asian music, noticing some parallels between music from the Northeast of Brazil and music from India.
Indigenous and folk music
Brazilian dance-song lundu, c. 1835.
Maracatu.
Repentista.
The native peoples of the Brazilian rainforest play instruments including whistles, flutes, horns, drums and rattles. Much of the area's folk music imitates the sounds of the Amazon Rainforest. When the Portuguese arrived in Brazil, the first natives they met played an array of reed flutes and other wind and percussion instruments.
The Jesuit missionaries introduced songs which used the Tupi language with Christian lyrics, an attempt to convert the people to Christianity,[7] and also introduced Gregorian chant and the flute, bow, and the clavichord.
Capoeira music
Main article: Capoeira music
The Afro-Brazilian sport of capoeira is never played without its own music, which is usually considered to be a call-and-response type of folk music. The main instruments of capoeira music include the berimbau, the atabaque and the pandeiro. Capoeira songs may be improvised on the spot, or they may be popular songs written by older, and ancient mestres (teachers), and often include accounts of the history of capoeira, or the doings of great mestres.
Main article: Maracatu
This type of music is played primarily in the Recife and Olinda regions during Carnaval. It is an Afro-Brazilian tradition. The music serves as the backdrop for parade groups that evolved out of ceremonies conducted during colonial times in honour of the Kings of Congo, who were African slaves occupying symbolic leadership positions among the slave population. The music is played on large alfaia drums, large metal gonguê bells, snare drums and shakers.
An important variant is found in and around Fortaleza, Ceará (called maracatu cearense), which is different from the Recife/Olinda tradition in many respects: triangles are used instead of gonguês, surdos or zabumbas instead of alfaias. Also, important female characters are performed by cross-dressed male performers, and all African and Afrobrazilian personages are performed using blackface makeup.
Afoxé
Main article: Afoxé
Afoxé is the name given to a group dedicated to playing ijexá, which is a kind of religious music, part of the Candomblé tradition. In 1949, a group called Filhos de Gandhi began playing afoxé during carnaval parades in Salvador; their name translates as Sons of Gandhi, associating black Brazilian activism with Mahatma Gandhi's Indian independence movement.
The Filhos de Gandhi's 1949 appearance was also revolutionary because, until then, the Carnaval parades in Salvador were meant only for light-skinned people.
Northeastern Brazil is known for a distinctive form of literature called literatura de cordel, which are a type of ballads that include elements incorporated into music as "repentismo", an improvised lyrical contest on themes suggested by the audience.
Similar to Repentismo, appears among the Caipira culture a musical form derived from viola caipira, which is called cururu.
Main article: Choro
Choro guitar.
Urubu Malandro
"Urubu Malandro", recorded in 1930 by Pixinguinha in the flute
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Harmonia Selvagem
Choro "Harmonia Selvagem" composed by Dante Santoro. Recorded by Dante Santoro (flute) in 1938.
"Atraente", composed by Chiquinha Gonzaga, recorded by Pixinguinha (saxophone) and Benedito Lacerda (flute).
Choro (literally "cry" in Portuguese, but in context a more appropriate translation would be "lament"), traditionally called chorinho ("little cry" or "little lament"). Instrumental, its origins are in 19th century Rio de Janeiro. Originally choro was played by a trio of flute, guitar and cavaquinho (a small chordophone with four strings). The young pianist Ernesto Nazareth published his first choro (Não Caio Noutra) in 1878 at the age of 14.[8] Nazareth's choros are often listed as polkas;[9] he also composed waltzes, schottisches, milongas and Brazilian Tangos. (He resisted the popular term maxixe to represent Brazilian tango.)[10] Chiquinha Gonzaga was another important composer of choros and started shortly after Nazareth. Chiquinha Gonzaga composed her first success, the polka-choro "Atraente", in 1877. In the beginning, the success of choro came from informal groups of friends which played in parties, pubs (botecos), streets, home balls (forrobodós), and also the musical scores published by print houses.[11] By the 1910s, much of the Brazilian first phonograph records are choros. The mainstream success of this style of music (By the 1930s) came from the early days of radio, when bands performed live on the air. By the 1950s and 1960s it was replaced by samba and Bossa Nova and other styles of Brazilian popular music, but was still alive in amateur circles called "rodas de choro" (informal choro gatherings in residences and botecos). However, in the late 1970s there was a successful effort to revitalize the genre carried out by some famous artists: Pixinguinha, Waldir Azevedo and Jacob do Bandolim.
Main article: Samba
Singer and actress Carmen Miranda.
In 1929, prompted by the opening of the first radio station in Rio de Janeiro, the so-called radio era began spreading songs – especially the novelty Samba in its current format – to larger masses. This period was dominated by few male interpreters – notably Almirante, Braguinha, Mário Reis, Sílvio Caldas, Francisco Alves and singer/composer Noel Rosa and even fewer chanteuses such as Aracy de Almeida and sisters Aurora Miranda and Carmen Miranda, who eventually came to Hollywood becoming a movie star.[12]
Na Pavuna
Almirante, released in 1929.
Alô... Alô?
Carmen Miranda and Mário Reis, released in 1934
Popular music included instruments like cuicas, tambourines, frying pans ('played' with a metal stick), flutes and guitars. Noteworthy Samba composers at this early stage included said Noel Rosa plus Lamartine Babo and, around World War II time, Ary Barroso.
MPB (Popular Brazilian Music)
Main article: Música popular brasileira
MPB's early stage (from World War II to the mid-1960s) was populated by male singers such as Orlando Silva, Nelson Gonçalves, Jamelão, Agostinho dos Santos, Anísio Silva, Ataulfo Alves, Carlos Galhardo, Ciro Monteiro, Ismael Silva, João Dias, Jorge Goulart, Miltinho, Jorge Veiga and Francisco Egídio and female singers started to mushroom: Nora Ney, Dolores Duran, Ângela Maria, Emilinha Borba, Marlene, Dalva de Oliveira, Maysa Matarazzo, sisters Linda Batista and Dircinha Batista, among others.[13]
MPB's second stage – after the split Bossa Nova (1959) / Jovem Guarda (1965) / Tropicalismo (both 1967) – refers to mainstream Brazilian pop music. Well-known MPB artists include, among many others, singers such as Elis Regina, Gal Costa, Nara Leão, Maria Bethânia, Mônica da Silva, Simone, Chico Buarque, Caetano Veloso, Roberto Carlos, Jorge Ben Jor, Milton Nascimento, Gilberto Gil, João Bosco, Ivan Lins, Djavan.
Main article: Bossa nova
The first bossa nova records by João Gilberto, in the last years of the 1950s, quickly became huge hits in Brazil. Antonio Carlos Jobim and other composers helped further develop this fusion of jazz harmonies and a smoother, often slower, samba beat, which developed at the beach neighborhoods of Ipanema and, later, the Copacabana nightclubs. Bossa nova was introduced to the rest of the world by American jazz musicians in the early 1960s, and song "The Girl from Ipanema" remains probably the best known Brazilian musical export, eventually becoming a jazz standard.
Brazilian gospel
Diante do Trono, the main worship ministry in Latin America.
Gospel music emerged in Brazil before the 1960s with hymnals that were brought and translated into Portuguese by American missionaries. From the late 1960s the first singers of Christian music groups emerged in Brazil, but the songs were not highly valued. Gospel music became popular in Brazil in the late 1990s, with the emergence of congregational singing and bands such as Diante do Trono, led by Ana Paula Valadão. Diante do Trono has become the largest contemporary worship music ministry in Latin America.
Brazilian rock
Main articles: Brazilian rock and samba rock
The musical style known in Brazil as "Brazilian rock n' roll" dates back to Nora Ney's "Ronda Das Horas", a Portuguese version of "Rock Around the Clock" in 1954. In the 1960s, young singers like Roberto Carlos and the Jovem Guarda movement were very popular. The 1960s also saw the rise of bands such as the "tropicalistas" Os Mutantes and the experimental (mixing progressive rock, jazz and Música popular brasileira) Som Imaginário.
The 1970s saw the emergence of many progressive rock and/or hard rock bands such as O Terço, A Bolha, A Barca do Sol, Som Nosso de Cada Dia, Vímana and Bacamarte, some of which attained some recognition internationally; Rita Lee, in her solo career after Os Mutantes, championed the glam-rock aesthetics in Brazil; Casa das Máquinas and Patrulha do Espaço were more bona-fide hard rock bands, and the likes of (Raul Seixas, Secos e Molhados, Novos Baianos and A Cor do Som) mixed the genre with traditional Brazilian music. In the late 1970s, the Brazilian punk rock scene kicked off mainly in São Paulo and in Brasília, booming in the 1980s, with Inocentes, Cólera, Ratos de Porão, Garotos Podres, etc.
The real commercial boom of Brazilian rock was in the 1980s, with many bands and artists like Blitz, Gang 90, Barão Vermelho, Legião Urbana, Lobão, Engenheiros do Hawaii, Titãs, Kid Abelha, Paralamas do Sucesso, and many others, and festivals like Rock in Rio and Hollywood Rock. The late 1980s and early 1990s also witnessed the beginnings of an electronica-inspired scene, with a lot more limited commercial potential but achieving some critical acclaim: Suba, Loop B, Harry, etc.
Fernanda Takai, lead singer of Pato Fu
In the 1990s, the meteoric rise of Mamonas Assassinas, which sold more than 3 million copies of its only CD (a record, by Brazilian standards) came to a tragic end when the band's plane crashed, killing all five members of the band, the pilot and the co-pilot. Other commercially successful bands included Jota Quest, Raimundos and Skank, while Chico Science & Nação Zumbi and the whole Mangue Bit movement received much critical attention and accolades, but very little commercial success – success that declined after the death of one of its founders, Chico Science. It was also in the 1990s that the first seeds of what would grow into being the Brazilian indie scene were planted, with the creation of indie festivals such as Abril Pro Rock and, later in the decade, Porão do Rock. The band Pato Fu was considered by Time magazine one of the ten best bands in the world outside the United States.[14] It is also known to re-record hits Brazilian and international versions of toy instruments.
Female singer Pitty is also very popular. The indie scene has been growing exponentially since the early 2000s, with more and more festivals taking place all around the country. However, due to several factors including but not limited to the worldwide collapse of the music industry, all the agitation in the indie scene has so far failed in translating into international success, but in Brazil they developed a real, substantial cultural movement. That scene is still much of a ghetto, with bands capturing the attention of international critics, but many playing again in Brazil when they become popular in the exterior, due to the lack of financial and material support which would allow for careers to be developed. One notable exception is CSS, an alternative electro rock outfit that has launched a successful international career, performing in festivals and venues in North America, Europe, Asia and Australia. Other unique example of success through independent music scene that made to the mainstream is the band Móveis Coloniais de Acaju. The band has its own style, somewhere between rock and folk, and is recognized as the most important independent band in Brazil. The record company Trama [1] tries to support some bands with structure and exposure, and can be credited with early support to CSS and later to Móveis Coloniais de Acaju.
Brazilian heavy metal
See also: Brazilian thrash metal
Sepultura: Brazilian Heavy Metal Band
Brazilian metal originated in the mid 1980s with three prominent scenes: Belo Horizonte, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The most famous Brazilian metal bands are Sepultura, Angra, Krisiun and the singer Andre Matos. Sepultura is considered an influential thrash metal band, influencing the development of death metal.
Famous bands of the 1980s include Korzus, Sarcófago, Overdose,[15][16] Dorsal Atlântica, Viper, MX, PUS, Mutilator, Chakal, Vulcano and Attomica.[17] Bands from the 1990s include Andralls, MQN, Macaco Bong, Black Drawing Chalks, Superguidis, Mental Hor, The Mist, Scars, Distraught, Torture Squad, Eterna and Silent Cry. Bands from the 2000s include It's All Red, Eyes of Shiva, Autoramas, Tuatha de Danann, Claustrofobia, Quimere, Apokalyptic Raids, Project46, Wizards and Andragonia.
There's also Massacration, a Brazilian satirical heavy metal band, self-proclaimed the "greatest band in the world".[18][19] They began as a sketch on the MTV show "Hermes & Renato", but were so successful amongst fans, that the comedians decided to turn it into an actual band. Originally parodying Manowar, they eventually became a spoof of Hair Metal bands of the 1980's.
As well as Thrash metal, Brazil is also a reference in Death Metal, the main bands in the scene include Krisiun, Torture Squad, Claustrofobia, Rebaelliun, Visceral Leishmaniasis (Brazil), Obskure, Vulcano, Mental Horror and the precursors Sepultura and Sarcófago. There is a growth in the appearance of Brazilian death metal bands with women in formation, especially Nervosa, who gained a lot of prestige after their performance at Rock in Rio in 2019. The female trio were invited to participate in the Wacken Open Air festival in 2020, but the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[20][21] Brazilian Death Metal scene is spread across all regions in the country, especially in the Northeast region where it is represented by bands like Headhunter D.C., Escarnium, Decomposed God, Infested Blood, Heavenless, Torment the Skies, Pandemmy, Burning Torment, Infectos, Krenak and especially Cangaço which is a band that mixes Death metal with elements of Baião (regional rhythm of Northeast Brazil) and on 2010 was the winner of W.O.A Metal Battle Brazil and went to the finals of the Wacken Open Air festival.[22]
Brazilian folk/folk-rock
The new Brazilian folk scene is not to be mistaken with folkloric Brazilian music. The first to break into the mainstream was internet phenomenon Mallu Magalhães, who played covers of her favourite artists in English and her own songs in both English and Portuguese (as well as other languages). Magalhães only released her first album in 2008, though by then she was already widely recognised as the voice of this sudden new Brazilian folk scene. Her ex-boyfriend Hélio Flanders is the lead singer of another Brazilian folk group called Vanguart. Though Vanguart had an album released before Mallu Magalhães, it was her emergence that consolidated them both and others as a fully recognised mainstream scene, topping charts and being featured in prime time television and advertising. Other acts emerged after the market was opened up to folk. Writing in English is more and more common among Brazilian rock and folk artists. This has been highly criticised by Portuguese language purists, though it has helped to promote Brazilian artists in other countries (CSS is a perfect example). The new Brazilian folk scene has just come to the public's attention and it continues to thrive.
Os Mutantes, 1969. National Archives of Brazil.
Brazilian psychedelic rock
Main article: Mangue Bit
Brazil has a long tradition of psychedelic music since artists like Os Mutantes, Ronnie Von and other rock bands from the late 60s. Nowadays, there exists a revival of this psychedelic/vintage inspired music represented by artists like Jupiter Apple, Violeta de Outono, Nação Zumbi, Mundo Livre S/A, Cidadão Instigado, Otto, China, Kassin, Pata de Elefante, Orquestra Abstrata, among others.
Main article: Música sertaneja
Chitãozinho & Xororó.
Música sertaneja or Sertanejo is a term for Brazilian country music. It originally referred to music originating among Sertão and musica caipira. (Caipira music appeared in the state of São Paulo, and some the regions of Mato Grosso do Sul, Goiás, Minas Gerais, Paraná and Mato Grosso. Musical rhythm is very spread out in the Southeastern and southern regions of Brazil.)
The genre is extremely famous in the country, having as some of its greatest exponents Chitãozinho & Xororó, Leandro e Leonardo, Zeze Di Camargo e Luciano, Chrystian & Ralf, João Paulo & Daniel and Sérgio Reis. Additionally, over the past few years, artists such as Jorge & Mateus and Marília Mendonça have been on the rise.
Northeastern Music
Statue of Luiz Gonzaga
North eastern music is a generic term for any popular music from the large region of Northeastern Brazil, including both coastal and inland areas. Rhythms are slower and are derived from guitars instead of percussion instruments like in the rest of Brazil—in this region, African rhythms and Portuguese melodies combined to form maracatu and forró. Most influentially, the area around the state of Pernambuco, the home of frevo and maracatu.
Gaucho music (Southern music)
Southern music, or Brazilian gaucho music (Portuguese: Música gaúcha) is a general term used for the music originally from the Rio Grande do Sul state, in Southern Brazil. Some of the most famous musicians of this genre are Teixeirinha, Gaúcho da Fronteira, Renato Borghetti, Yamandu Costa, Jayme Caetano Braun and Luiz Marenco, among others.
Music of Salvador: Late 60s to mid-70s
In the latter part of the 1960s, a group of black Bahians began dressing as Native Americans during the Salvadoran Carnaval, identifying with their shared struggles through history. These groups included Comanches do Pelô and Apaches de Tororó and were known for a forceful and powerful style of percussion, and frequent violent encounters with the police. Starting in 1974, a group of black Bahians called Ilê Aiyê became prominent, identifying with the Yoruba people of West Africa. Along with a policy of loosening restrictions by the Brazilian government, Ilê Aiyê's sound and message spread to groups like Grupo Cultural do Olodum, who established community centers and other philanthropic efforts.
Frevo
Main article: Frevo
Frevo is a style of music from Olinda and Recife. Frevo bands always play during the Carnival.
Sambass
Main article: Sambass
Sambass is a fusion of samba and Drum & Bass. The most famous sambass musicians are DJ Marky and DJ Patife whose hit Sambassim might be the most known sambass track.
Funk Carioca
Main article: Funk Carioca
Funk Carioca is a type of dance music from Rio de Janeiro, derived from and was until the late 1990s, superficially similar to Miami Bass. In Rio it is most often simply known as Funk, although it is very different musically from what Funk means in most other places and contexts. Funk Carioca, like other types of hip-hop lifts heavily from samples such as international rips or from previous funk music. Many popular funk songs sampled music from the movie Rocky.[23] Funk was introduced to Brazil in a systematic way in the 1980s. Many funk artists have openly associated themselves with black movements and often in the lyrics of their songs, comment on race relations and openly express black pride.[24] The genre went public with great impact in the 80s, with songs like Feira de Acari by MC Batata, with Furacão 2000, MC Marlboro and Brazilian versions of freestyle songs by the singer Latino, later turning into a more aggressive song, with an apology for violence, drugs, weapons and promiscuity in the 1990s, with precarious lyrics and several MCs with direct links with drug trafficking.
Brazilian pop music
Anitta, (center) with singers Caetano Veloso (left) and Gilberto Gil (right) performing at the 2016 Summer Olympics opening ceremony
National pop music was slow to gain popularity in Brazil. Only from 2013, with the song "Show das Poderosas", the singer Anitta became the first name of the genre in Brazil.[25] The singer Ludmilla was also a relevant name in brazilian pop music, the singer emerged from funk carioca and passed a mix of the genres.
Ludmilla's success propelled other funk carioca singers to adopt pop music in their repertoire. Thus a new generation of singers emerged, among them, Valesca Popozuda, Pabllo Vittar, MC Biel and Melody.
The expansion of the pop genre in Brazil prompted singers of other styles to join the movement, such as Luan Santana, Banda Vingadora, Jhama, Gaby Amarantos, Tiago Iorc, among others.
In São Paulo and other places in the south of Brazil, in more urban areas, hip hop music is very popular. They dress similarly to American rappers.[26]
Brazilian hip hop is heavily associated with racial and economic issues in the country, where a lot of Afro-Brazilians live in economically disadvantaged communities, known in Brazil as favelas. São Paulo is where hip hop began in the country, but it soon spread all over Brazil, and today, almost every big Brazilian city, including Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Curitiba, Porto Alegre, Belo Horizonte, Recife and Brasilia, has a hip hop scene. São Paulo has gained a strong, underground Brazilian rap scene since its emergence in the late 1980s with many independent labels forming for young rappers to establish themselves on.[27]
Brazilian bass
Main article: Brazilian bass
Brazilian bass is a subgenre of house that originated as a derivation of mainstream deep house music of early 2010s, fused with tech house elements and some minimalistic influences from bass house. The tempo typically range from 120 to 125 bpm. The genre is characterized by distinguishable deep punchy basslines, often making use of low-pitched and filtering effects. The genre was created in Brasília around the mid-2010s, but its national and international repercussion only happened in 2016 with DJs Alok, Bruno Martini and Sevenn.[28]
Notable record labels
Far Out Recordings
Malandro Records
Mr Bongo Records
Som Livre
Latin music portal
List of Brazilian composers
List of Brazilian singers and bands of Christian music
^ "Prêmio Shell de Música – Shell Brasil". Archived from the original on 24 February 2014. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
^ Olsen, D.A.; Sheehy, D.E. (1998). Brazil:Central and Southern Areas in Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Volume 2 (digital). Retrieved from Music Online: The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music database: Routledge. ISBN 0415994047.
^ apud Padre Noel Berthold, in: "Trevisan, Armindo", in A Escultura dos Sete Povos. Brasília: Editora Movimento / Instituto Nacional do Livro, 1978. (Portuguese)
^ Mariz, Vasco. História da Música no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Nova Fronteira, 2005. 6ª ed. (Portuguese)
^ Castagna, Paulo. Encarte do CD Gabriel Fernandes da Trindade – Duetos Concertantes. São Paulo: Paulus, 1995. (Portuguese)
^ "FLORIANÓPOLIS: VALORIZAÇÃO DA CULTURA MUSICAL CATARINENSE". Revista Brasil-Europa.
^ Music. Fmpsd.ab.ca. Retrieved on 23 November 2011. Archived 10 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine
^ Childhood Secrets *. bn.br
^ Ernesto Nazareth – Rei do Choro. Chiquinhagonzaga.com. Retrieved on 23 November 2011.
^ "Polkas and Tangos". Archived from the original on 29 May 2007. Retrieved 29 May 2007.
^ Livingston-Isenhour, T.; Garcia, T. G. C. (2005). Choro: A Social History of a Brazilian Popular Music. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253345413.
^ A nação das cantoras Archived 20 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Veja.abril.com.br. Retrieved on 23 November 2011.
^ Singers Brazil MPB
^ Butler, Rhett (15 September 2001). "Best Bands: And Our Winners Are". Time. Archived from the original on 12 December 2007.
^ Jeffries, Vincent. "Progress of Decadence > Review". Allmusic. Macrovision. Retrieved 12 April 2009. One of the best-known, if not the premier, metal bands in Brazil, Overdose had actually released several discs during the eight years prior to Progress of Decadence—the group's first record to receive international distribution.
^ Jeffries, Vincent. "Circus of Death > Review". Allmusic. Macrovision. Retrieved 12 April 2009. On 1999's Circus of Death, Brazil's second most famous metal band try again to emerge from beneath the shadow of Sepultura with their neo-prog thrash.
^ Rivadavia, Eduardo. "Attomica > Biography". Allmusic. Macrovision. Retrieved 12 April 2009. Arriving in stores in 1991, the LP's [the band's third album, Disturbing the Noise] "ultra-speed" style cemented Attomica's standing as one of Brazil's top thrash acts; the promo clip for single "Deathraiser" was showcased on several TV video shows, including the Brazilian MTV affiliate.
^ "Maior banda de metal do mundo", Massacration anuncia turnê pelo Brasil
^ Massacration: Tosco, politicamente incorreto e absurdamente engraçado
^ 27 bandas nacionais com mulheres na formação
^ Após Rock in Rio, Nervosa é confirmada no Wacken, icônico festival de metal
^ Cangaço: banda pernambucana vence Wacken Metal Battle 2010
^ "Funk Carioca". Sheepish.org. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
^ Béhague, Gerard (2006). "Rap, Reggae, Rock, or Samba: The Local and the Global in Brazilian Popular Music (1985–95)". Latin American Music Review. 27 (1): 79–90. doi:10.1353/lat.2006.0021. JSTOR 4121698. S2CID 191430137.
^ "BBC - Class of 2018: Are these the pop icons of the future?".
^ Sansone, Livio (2002). "The Localization of Global Funk in Bahia and Rio". In Perrone, Charles A.; Dunn, Christopher (eds.). Brazilian Popular Music & Globalization. London: Routledge. pp. 135–160. ISBN 0415936950.
^ "The rhymes by African-Americans get a translation". Archived from the original on 9 May 2009. Retrieved 9 May 2009. ((cite web)): CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^ Staff (11 January 2017). "Brazilian Bass: Learn More About This Genre of Music". WIDE FUTURE. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
Brill, Mark (2017). Music of Latin America and the Caribbean (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 9781138053564.
Leymarie, Isabelle (1996). Du tango au reggae: musiques noires d'Amérique latine et des Caraïbes. Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 2082108139.
Leymarie, Isabelle (2015). Del tango al reggae: Músicas negras de América Latina y del Caribe. Zaragoza: Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza. ISBN 978-8416272747.
Murphy, John P. (2006). Music in Brazil: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195166833.
(in French) Audio clips: Traditional music of Brazil. Musée d'Ethnographie de Genève. Accessed 25 November 2010.
BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Forro, coco and cowboys. Accessed 25 November 2010.
BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Candomble, Samba and Renato Rosa. Accessed 25 November 2010.
BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Rio, the samba and Mart'nalia. Accessed 25 November 2010.
BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Maracatu, ciranda and Mangue bit. Accessed 25 November 2010.
BBC Radio 3 Audio (60 minutes): Coco music, the pifano flute and Sebastian Dias. Accessed 25 November 2010.
Brazilian Embassy in London – Music Section Brazilian music links
Sounds and Colours Brazil – resource dedicated to Brazilian music and culture Accessed 17 June 2014.
Brazil beyond clichés Vast archive of podcasts covering Brazilian music of all styles, regions and time periods, from vintage sambas to modern blends.
Scores and biographies by classical Brazilian composers available in Musica Brasilis website
Colonial Brazil (1500–1815)
United Kingdom (1815–1822)
Empire (1822–1889)
First (Old) Republic (1889–1930)
Vargas Era (1930–1946)
Fourth Republic (1946–1964)
Military dictatorship (1964–1985)
Sixth (New) Republic (1985–present)
Brazilian Antarctica
Extreme points
National Congress
Real (currency)
States by HDI
Malandragem
Music from Lusophone countries
Brazilian hip hop
Brasília hip hop
Stronda
Vigilante rap
Brazilian jazz
Brazilian thrash metal
Chamarrita
Funk melody
Funk ostentação
Proibidão
Rasteirinha
Sertanejo music
Partido alto
Samba-canção
Samba de breque
Samba-enredo
Fusion genres of Samba
Samba-choro
Samba-jazz
Samba reggae
Samba de Gafieira
Colá
Coladeira
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Tabanka
Cante Alentejano
Hip hop tuga
Pimba
Portuguese rock
Music of Latin America
United States: Tejano
Music of South America
other territories
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You are at:Home»News»Event News»ITS Australia announces technical tours for ITS World Congress in Melbourne
ITS Australia announces technical tours for ITS World Congress in Melbourne
By Tom Stone on May 10, 2016 Event News, ITS, Partnerships, Acquisitions & Mergers
As part of the 23rd Intelligent Transport System (ITS) World Congress being held on October 10-14, 2016, ITS Australia will be hosting technical tours designed to showcase the innovative features of Australia’s transport systems, particularly those of the host city of Melbourne.
To be held at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, the city will host the ITS World Congress for the first time, with the event’s theme, ‘ITS Enhancing Liveable Cities and Communities’, considered to be especially apt, as Melbourne was again named the ‘World’s Most Liveable City’ last year.
A selection of Melbourne’s most innovative transport organizations will guide attendees through technical tours to experience the city’s advanced transport system from within. As well as the host city, ITS Australia has also arranged technical tours in Sydney, Brisbane, and Auckland (New Zealand), where participants will be given a unique insight into the intricate details of systems that support the region’s cities. Focused on supporting the delivery of safer transport operations, and supporting environmentally sustainable transport across public and private models, ITS Australia invites delegates from around the world to see Melbourne’s networks for themselves. These will also be detailed by keynote speakers and presentations during the Congress.
“Melbourne is the perfect destination to demonstrate the Congress’s theme,” said ITS Australia’s CEO, Susan Harris. “We all know the importance of transport in assisting the ease of living, and it’s no coincidence that Melbourne has been named the World’s Most Liveable City for the fifth year in a row [in 2015]. The technical tours provide a rare opportunity for international ITS Congress attendees to obtain a valuable insight into Melbourne’s transport system, one which they will not see anywhere else.”
Delegates will have the opportunity to take technical tours to:
CityLink – Go behind-the-scenes at one of the world’s first fully electronic toll roads (conducted by Transurban);
EastLink – Melbourne’s newest and safest fully electronic tollway tour of Operations, Traffic Control and Maintenance Facilities (conducted by ConnectEast);
Managed Motorway Operation the largest managed motorway network in Australia (conducted by VicRoads);
SmartWork Zones and the construction of Managed Motorways (conducted by VicRoads);
SmartRoads to achieve improved network performance (conducted by VicRoads);
VicRoads Traffic Management Center (conducted by VicRoads);
Auckland’s Transport Management Systems, Devonport Ferry, Public Transport Control and Integrated Ticketing System (conducted by ITS New Zealand, in conjunction with New Zealand Transport Agency and Auckland Transport);
Tour Victoria’s Public Transport Control Centers, Yarra Trams and Metro Trains (conducted by Public Transport Victoria);
Port of Melbourne the largest container port in the Southern Hemisphere and driver of urban economic growth tour of Operations Facilities (conducted by the Port of Melbourne Corporation);
Melbourne Port System Tour – enhancing future freight productivity with ContainerChain (conducted by the Port of Melbourne Corporation);
Port of Melbourne – Operations Control Center and Hydrographic Survey Boat (conducted by the Port of Melbourne Corporation);
Melbourne Airport – Managing Traffic, providing an overview of recent infrastructure developments and using ITS solutions to improve the traffic flow (conducted by Melbourne Airport);
Aerospace, Automotive and Manufacturing Laboratory Showcase at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (run by the RMIT University);
Factory of the Future, Smart Structures and Research-Led Innovation at Swinburne University of Technology (run by Swinburne’s Hawthorn Campus).
For more information on the Congress or to reserve a place for a technical tour click here.
Miovision acquires near-miss safety analytics specialist MicroTraffic
WEBINAR: Europe’s largest connected vehicle deployments – the inside story
Registration for ITS European Congress now open – plus second free webinar announced
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Physician - Nuclear Medicine Generalist Radiologist
Location: Richmond, Virginia
We are looking for a skilled Physician - Nuclear Medicine Generalist Radiologist is physicians assigned to Radiology, Interventional Radiology and Nuclear Medicine Service and are responsible for providing appropriate diagnostic radiology, interventional radiology, and nuclear medicine care to patients. To qualify for this position, you must meet the basic requirements as well as any additional requirements (if applicable) listed in the job announcement. Applicants pending the completion of training or license requirements may be referred and tentatively selected but may not be hired until all requirements are met. Currently employed physician(s) in VA who met the requirements for appointment under the previous qualification standard at the time of their initial appointment are deemed to have met the basic requirements of the occupation. Basic Requirements: United States Citizenship: Non-citizens may only be appointed when it is not possible to recruit qualified citizens in accordance with VA Policy. Degree of doctor of medicine or an equivalent degree resulting from a course of education in medicine or osteopathic medicine. The degree must have been obtained from one of the schools approved by the Department of Veterans Affairs for the year in which the course of study was completed. Current, full and unrestricted license to practice medicine or surgery in a State, Territory, or Commonwealth of the United States, or in the District of Columbia. Residency Training: Physicians must have completed residency training, approved by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs in an accredited core specialty training program leading to eligibility for board certification. (NOTE: VA physicians involved in academic training programs may be required to be board certified for faculty status.) Approved residencies are: (1) Those approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), b) OR [(2) Those approved by the American Osteopathic Association (AOA),OR (3) Other residencies (non-US residency training programs followed by a minimum of five years of verified practice in the United States), which the local Medical Staff Executive Committee deems to have provided the applicant with appropriate professional training and believes has exposed the physician to an appropriate range of patient care experiences. Residents currently enrolled in ACGME/AOA accredited residency training programs and who would otherwise meet the basic requirements for appointment are eligible to be appointed as "Physician Resident Providers" (PRPs). PRPs must be fully licensed physicians (i.e., not a training license) and may only be appointed on an intermittent or fee-basis. PRPs are not considered independent practitioners and will not be privileged; rather, they are to have a "scope of practice" that allows them to perform certain restricted duties under supervision. Additionally, surgery residents in gap years may also be appointed as PRPs. Proficiency in spoken and written English. Preferred Experience: Nuclear Medicine Fellowship preferred however nuclear medicine physician will be considered Few years-experience preferred Must be able to start lutetium program Potential leadership position Reference: VA Regulations, specifically VA Handbook 5005, Part II, Appendix G-2 Physician Qualification Standard. Physical Requirements: Applicants must meet physical standards for the position. A physical examination prior to placement is required. This is a designated drug testing position. After appointment, you will be subject to random testing for illegal drug use. Requires lifting 15-44 pounds; pushing (approx. 2 hours); reaching above shoulder; use of fingers and both hands; walking and standing from 3-5 hours and kneeling. Ability for rapid mental and muscular coordination simultaneously. Must have depth perception and ability to distinguish basic colors and shades of colors. Hearing aid is permitted. ["The Richmond VA Medical Center, located in Richmond, Virginia, is a level 1a 349-bed facility offering primary, secondary, and tertiary health care in medicine, surgery, neurology, rehabilitation medicine, intermediate care, acute and sustaining spinal cord injury, skilled nursing home care, and palliative care. The medical center has four community-based outpatient clinics located in Charlottesville, Fredericksburg, Emporia and Spotsylvania County, Virginia, and a strong and mutually beneficial affiliation with the Medical College of Virginia. Residency programs exist in virtually all general and specialty areas of medicine, rehabilitation, surgery, psychiatry, and dentistry. The medical center has an active cardiac transplantation program. VA offers a comprehensive total rewards package. VHA Physician Total Rewards. Pay: Competitive salary, annual performance bonus, regular salary increases Paid Time Off: 50-55 days of paid time off per year (26 days of annual leave, 13 days of sick leave, 11 paid Federal holidays per year and possible 5 day paid absence for CME) Retirement: Traditional federal pension (5 years vesting) and federal 401K with up to 5% in contributions by VA Insurance: Federal health/vision/dental/term life/long-term care (many federal insurance programs can be carried into retirement) Licensure: 1 full and unrestricted license from any US State or territory CME: Possible $1,000 per year reimbursement (must be full-time with board certification) Malpractice: Free liability protection with tail coverage provided Contract: No Physician Employment Contract and no significant restriction on moonlighting Radiologists and Nuclear Medicine Physicians are physicians who have completed an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education {ACGME} accredited Radiology or Nuclear Medicine residency program, or an equivalent foreign program, and who perform and interpret diagnostic imaging, interventional or nuclear medicine studies. Radiologists follow the guidelines of the American College of Radiology (ACR}, and they are guided by the Appropriateness Criteria developed by ACR or Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging {SNMMI}. The responsibility of the physician includes but is not limited to: Review all service, facility, VISN and VHA policies, procedures and guidelines which are available in the share drives Document their procedures, consultations and healthcare decisions in the medical record. Communicate emergent findings directly to the treating physician/service in a timely manner. Supervise the administration of medications, including contrast agents, by technologists and/or nurses. Development of, and adherence to, standard procedures and protocols. Maintain, direct, and encourage radiation and MRI safety practices. Ensure patient privacy and confidentiality of patient medical information; ensure accurate CPT coding Inform Consent and a pre-procedure note should be placed in the electronic medical record (CPRS) before the procedure is started. Enter a pathology request when a specimen is obtained. Abnormal Coagulations and eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate) must be addressed in every pre-procedure note. Prompt medical record documentation in the electronic medical record (CPRS), which includes, but is not limited to co-signing notes where this service provider has been made cosigner, signing one's own notes, co-signing resident notes. Make sure medication orders are entered in the electronic medical record (CPRS) when administered during the procedure, at their direction. Medicine reconciliation will be completed whenever medications are changed, started or stopped (i.e. typically done before or after CT /US/ IR procedures). Work Schedule: Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM; Require to be on-call after hours, including weekends and holidays"]
https://careers.acofpca.org/jobs/18318488/physician-nuclear-medicine-generalist-radiologist
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Final steps for crucial preservation of over 400,000 acres in Colorado
The CORE Act would honor Cape Hale legacy and provide important habitat protections for wildlife
A view of the proposed Camp Hale National Historic Landscape in Colorado. (Mason Cummings/Courtesy of The Wilderness Society)
The Colorado Outdoor Recreation and Economy Act includes four measures — the Continental Divide Recreation, Wilderness, and Camp Hale Legacy Act; the San Juan Mountains Wilderness Act; the Thompson Divide Withdrawal and Protection Act; and the Curecanti National Recreation Area Boundary Establishment Act — that will protect over 400,000 acres in Colorado through new wilderness, recreation and conservation areas, and establish a new historic landscape designation for Camp Hale, where the U.S. Army’s 10th Mountain Division trained during World War II.
The CORE Act protects Camp Hale by creating the first-ever National Historic Landscape, preserving nearly 29,000 acres surrounding Camp Hale. From November 1942 through June 1944 Camp Hale housed 14,000 troops — along with 4,000 mules and 250 sled dogs — of the 10th Mountain Division, who learned to rock climb, perform military maneuvers on skis, and endure a brutal climate in preparation for mountain warfare. Over 18 grueling months soldiers trained to fight at high altitudes.
The Colorado Backcountry Hunters & Anglers chapter is committed to helping pass the CORE Act, securing long overdue recognition and protection for Camp Hale along with preserving 400,000 acres of wildlife habitat that safeguards backcountry fishing and hunting opportunities and preserves healthy habitat for native trout, elk, mule deer, bighorn sheep, moose, black bears and other game species.
The CORE Act passed the U.S. House of Representatives in February 2021. During May 2022 the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee took up the CORE Act in an official “mark-up,” a critical step toward advancing the bill in the Senate. There’s only one more step, a Senate floor vote, before it can go to the president’s desk. We’re hopeful this will occur during 2022. However, Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert opposes the bill, calling it a “land grab.”
More than 8 in 10 Coloradans support protections for CORE Act areas.
Unfortunately, Boebert has made a habit of adopting anti-hunting/habitat protection positions. For example, she’s a co-sponsor of the RETURN Our Constitutional Rights Act of 2022, which was introduced to essentially repeal the Pittman-Robertson Act and the Dingell-Johnson Act. In a nutshell, these two longstanding acts place taxes on purchases related to hunting, fishing, shooting gear and equipment.
These taxes were put in place at the request of the sportspersons’ community decades ago. They asked to be taxed for the benefit of all wildlife that Americans enjoy. The funds these taxes generate are then redistributed to all 50 states’ wildlife and fisheries agencies, helping fund hunter education and safety programs, wildlife conservation and restoration, and a whole lot more.
“So, it’s with ever-growing dismay and frustration that I see Colorado’s own Lauren Boebert providing yet another example of her incompetence as my district’s representative,” explained Adam Gall, a licensed outfitter from Hotchkiss. “She has signed on as a co-sponsor of this poorly thought-out bill to take away a very significant, longstanding and widely supported means of funding our outdoor legacy that’s the envy of the world.”
Perhaps Boebert doesn’t know that, according to a recent poll commissioned by the Center for Western Priorities, more than 8 in 10 Coloradans support protections for CORE Act areas. The CORE Act is a result of a decade-long collaborative process, drawing on input from counties, businesses, ranchers, outdoor recreation groups, conservationists, hunters and anglers to protect our shared public lands.
Colorado BHA Central West Slope Regional Director Craig Grother said, “The bill … reflects the clear desires of local communities to have these lands protected in perpetuity.”
“The San Juan Mountains portion of the CORE Act … protects the headwaters of three watersheds in the region, including the Colorado River’s cutthroat trout habitat,” Craig added. “It also safeguards wildlife corridors and critical habitat for elk, mule deer, rocky mountain bighorn sheep and desert bighorn sheep.”
The future of our hunting and fishing heritage and the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation depends on our ability to conserve intact landscapes and address the needs of wildlife in the face of increasing challenges. The CORE Act provides important habitat protections that will have long-term benefits for wildlife. We thank CORE Act sponsors Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper and Rep. Joe Neguse for championing this public lands legislation and honoring our World War II veterans.
The 10th Mountain Division was deactivated in 1945 and subsequently re-activated in 1985, based out of Fort Drum, New York. Since then, the 10th has deployed to Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia and Afghanistan, but no matter where they’re based members honor their alpine legacy by retaining the Mountain tab on their sleeve insignia. Learn more about the CORE Act at coreact.org.
by David Lien, Colorado Newsline
David Lien of Colorado Springs is a former Air Force officer and co-chairman of the Colorado Backcountry Hunters & Anglers. He’s the author of “Hunting for Experience: Tales of Hunting & Habitat Conservation” and during 2014 was recognized by Field & Stream as a “Hero of Conservation.”
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XPRIZE Announces Teams Advancing in $15M Global Learning XPRIZE AT EdTechXEurope
XPRIZE
Eleven Teams from Seven Countries Move Forward in Competition to Develop Open Source and Scalable Educational Software for Children in Developing Countries
LONDON (June 21, 2017) — Today, XPRIZE, the world’s leader in designing and managing incentive competitions to solve humanity’s grand challenges, announced 11 semi-finalists advancing in the $15M Global Learning XPRIZE. Announced at this year’s EdTechXEurope, XPRIZE is challenging these semi-finalist teams to develop open source and scalable software that will enable children in developing countries to teach themselves basic reading, writing and arithmetic within 15 months.
“Throughout my career, I’ve seen the many ways technology has evolved to help children access an education they may otherwise not have," said Matt Keller senior director of the Global Learning XPRIZE. “What most excites XPRIZE about these semi-finalist teams is the possibility that their innovative software solutions can exponentially transform the way learning happens across the world, especially in places where children simply cannot get to school.”
The semi-finalists were chosen by an independent judging panel of 11 experts from a field of 198 teams following XPRIZE’s initial launch in September 2014. Semi-finalists will have one month to update and finalize their solutions before the judges select five finalist teams to proceed to the final round of the competition.
The 11 teams advancing are:
AutoCognita (Hong Kong, China & Bellingham, United States) is focused on helping students acquire core literacy and numeracy skills through a structured curriculum, active learning pedagogy and user experience-focused design.
CCI (New York, United States) is developing structured and sequential instructional programs, in addition to a platform seeking to enable non-coders to develop engaging learning content in any language or subject area.
Chimple (Bangalore, India) is developing a learning platform aimed at enabling children to learn reading, writing and mathematics on a tablet through more than 60 explorative games and 70 different stories.
Education Apps for All (Lynchburg, United States) is developing an app that aims to systematically teach the building blocks of reading while encouraging oral language development and reading comprehension.
Leap to Know (Pretoria, South Africa) is developing an app rich with culturally relevant stories that help to build learning foundations for children at different education levels.
Learn Leap Fly (Ottawa, Canada) is using social software and story-based learning to deliver a culture and language-adaptable learning platform for reading, writing, and arithmetic.
LiteracyApp.org (Kristiansand, Norway) is using exponential technologies like face recognition and machine learning to build an artificial intelligence (AI) tutor able to adapt itself to different children.
onebillion (UK/Malawi/Tanzania) is merging numeracy content with new literacy material to offer directed learning and creative activities alongside continuous monitoring to respond to different children’s needs.
RoboTutor (Pittsburgh, United States) is leveraging Carnegie Mellon's research in reading and math tutors, speech recognition and synthesis, machine learning, educational data mining, cognitive psychology, and human-computer interaction.
Kitkit School (Berkeley, United States) is developing a learning program with a game-based core and flexible learning architecture aimed at helping children independently learn, irrespective of their knowledge, skill, and environment.
The School of Games (San Francisco, United States) is creating a series of games to teach reading, writing, numeracy and speaking skills that adapt to different learning styles.
To be announced this September, the five finalist teams will each receive a $1 million milestone award. With the competition’s global partnerships including the United Nations’ Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the World Food Programme (WFP), and the government of Tanzania, the teams’ solutions will be field-tested with 4,000 children in 150 villages in the Tanga region of Tanzania for approximately 15 months on 8,000 Pixel C tablets donated by Google. At the end of the field-testing phase, the team whose solution enables the greatest proficiency gains in reading, writing and arithmetic will receive the Grand Prize of $10 million, to be announced in April 2019. In addition, each of the five finalists will be required to open source both their code and their content which will be free and available for anyone to build on.
An estimated 250 million children around the world cannot read, write or demonstrate basic arithmetic skills. UNESCO estimates that the world needs 1.6 million more teachers globally, a number set to double by 2030. The Global Learning XPRIZE will help prove that with the right education technology resources and partnerships, children can teach themselves to read, write and do arithmetic. By ensuring each finalists’ solutions are open source, XPRIZE also aims to proliferate solutions worldwide at the intersection of technology and learning.
For more information about the competition structure, important dates, and the competing teams please visit learning.xprize.org.
About XPRIZE
XPRIZE, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, is the global leader in designing and implementing innovative competition models to solve the world’s grandest challenges. XPRIZE utilizes a unique combination of gamification, crowd-sourcing, incentive prize theory, and exponential technologies as a formula to make 10x (vs. 10%) impact in the grand challenge domains facing our world. XPRIZE’s philosophy is that—under the right circumstances— igniting rapid experimentation from a variety of diverse lenses is the most efficient and effective method to driving exponential impact and solutions to grand challenges. Active competitions include the $30M Google Lunar XPRIZE, the $20M NRG COSIA Carbon XPRIZE, the $15M Global Learning XPRIZE, the $7M Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE, the $7M Barbara Bush Foundation Adult Literacy XPRIZE, the $5M IBM Watson AI XPRIZE, the $1.75M Water Abundance XPRIZE and the $1M Anu and Naveen Jain Women’s Safety XPRIZE. For more information, visit www.xprize.org.
Eric Desatnik / Jackie Wei
XPRIZE Sep 22 2014
XPRIZE Announces Its Next Moonshot: Bringing Literacy to 250 Million Children Around The World
Annie Nguyen
Equality in Learning, Equality of Play
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Section Navigation: Forensic Science Program
Careers in Forensic Science
Crime Scene House
Section Navigation: Facilities
Hands-on learning is more than just a catch phrase for Mason student scientists.
The college offers many innovative learning environments that immerse students in their field of study, from biohazard research labs to crime scene houses.
Mason's Campuses
Fairfax Campus
The Fairfax Campus location, Mason's original campus, is the principal center for undergraduate studies, with residence halls that house more than 6,000 of our 37,000-plus students. The campus, on 677 wooded acres within 25 minutes of downtown Washington, D.C., offers academic programs in nine colleges and schools:
Science and Technology Campus
The Science and Technology Campus, formerly known as the Prince William Campus, was established in Manassas, Virginia, in 1997. This campus provides convenient university access for citizens of Prince William, Fauquier, and western Fairfax counties; the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park, and adjoining areas to the west and south. The campus is often referred to as SciTech.
Arlington Campus
George Mason University’s Arlington Campus is located in the Virginia Square neighborhood of Arlington County. The Arlington Campus hosts the Antonin Scalia Law School, the Schar School of Policy and Government, the School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, programs in Arts Management and the School of Business, and continuing professional education through Mason’s Executive and Professional Education. Most of the programs offered are at the graduate and professional levels.
Science Facilities
Mason’s Biomedical Research Laboratory (BRL)
The BRL, classified as Biosafety Level-3, allows scientists to research infectious diseases as well as both emerging and potential bio-threat agents. The BRL supports research programs of the Center for Infectious Disease Research (CIDR), and provides students the opportunity to perform groundbreaking research on diseases such as the influenza virus, Rift Valley Fever, Zika, HIV, Bacillus anthracis, and more.
Potomac Science Center
The Potomac Science Center serves as a focal point for connecting science at Mason with the local community. Home to the College of Science’s Potomac Environmental Research and Education Center (PEREC), the Potomac Science Center is a place for environmental education, for scientific research, and for community outreach and connection. The facility includes teaching labs and smart classrooms, as well as eight research lab suites including aquatic ecology and wet chemistry labs. The location also features a hands-on discovery lab for K-12 students, collaborative space, an exhibit hall, and special event space for hosting a variety of mission-related activities.
The Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation (SMSC)
The SMSC occupies part of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI) in Front Royal, Virginia. Nestled alongside the Shenandoah National Park, the entire facility covers 3,200 acres of forest, grassland, and pastures. An active research facility, SCBI houses a range of endangered mammals, birds, and amphibians, which creates a compelling and engaging learning environment for program participants.
Mason’s Crime Scene House Laboratory
The Crime Science House Laboratory offers real-life experience for forensic science students to immerse themselves in evidence collection from a variety of authentic mock crime scenes. These graduate students practice processing evidence in the Crime Scene House Laboratory.
The Greenhouse classrooms
Located on the roof of Exploratory Hall, the greenhouse classrooms provide students with the opportunity to work with a wide variety of plants, from species indigenous to Virginia, to rare plants from Madagascar. Our greenhouse, under the direction of the Biology Department, uses new technology such as a fully automated climate control system, a drip irrigation system, and automated shades and vents to simulate the various growing environments. The Biology Department also maintains the Ted R. Bradley Herbarlum, a collection of dried, pressed plant specimens used for the teaching global research.
Mason’s Observatory
The George Mason Observatory, supported by the Department of Physics and Astronomy, provides opportunities for students to conduct research while working directly with observatory equipment that includes a 32″ Ritchey-Chretien Telescope, 12″ Cassegrain (Mancini), 6″ Solar Telescope, 16″ Dobsonian (Strickland), 2 Meade 12″ SCTs and two telescopes from Mason’s original observatory. The observatory also offers tours and events for the public.
The Ted R. Bradley Herbarium
The Ted R. Bradley Herbarium is an internationally-recognized scientific collection of dried, pressed plant specimens that are maintained for research and teaching. Its specimens are prepared with archival-quality materials, are intended to last for centuries, and are loaned to researchers nationwide and around the world. The Herbarium aims to engage the next generation of botanists and champions the careful stewardship of Virginia’s plant diversity through hands-on education, collections-based research, and public outreach.
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Archive - A
I produce greenery and soon may be even “greener”.
What molecule am I?
Ammonia is a colorless, poisonous gas with a familiar noxious odor. It occurs in nature, primarily produced by anaerobic decay of plant and animal matter; and it also has been detected in outer space. Some plants, mainly legumes, in combination with rhizobia bacteria, “fix” atmospheric nitrogen to produce ammonia.
Ammonia has been known by its odor since ancient times. It was isolated in the 18th century by notable chemists Joseph Black (Scotland), Peter Woulfe (Ireland), Carl Wilhelm Scheele (Sweden/Germany), and Joseph Priestley (England). In 1785, French chemist Claude Louis Berthollet determined its elemental composition.
Ammonia is produced commercially via the catalytic reaction of nitrogen and hydrogen at high temperature and pressure. The process was developed in 1909 by German chemists Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch. Both received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their work, but in widely separated years: Haber in 1918 and Bosch in 1931. The fundamental Haber–Bosch process is still in use today.
In 2020, the worldwide ammonia production capacity was 224 million tonnes (Mt). Actual production was 187 Mt. It ranks ninth among chemicals produced globally.
Most ammonia production—≈85%—is used directly or indirectly in agriculture. Chemical fertilizers made from ammonia include urea, ammonium phosphate, ammonium nitrate, and other nitrates. Other important chemicals produced from ammonia include nitric acid, hydrazine, cyanides, and amino acids.
Ammonia was once used widely as a refrigerant. It has largely been displaced by chlorofluorocarbons and hydrochlorofluorocarbons, which are also under environmental scrutiny. Probably the most familiar household use of ammonia is in glass cleaners.
Ammonia is highly soluble in water; its exact solubility depends on temperature (see fast facts). Aqueous ammonia is also called ammonium hydroxide, but that molecule cannot be isolated. When ammonia is used as a ligand in coordination complexes, it is called “ammine”.
Currently ammonia is made from fossil fuel–derived hydrogen and is therefore not a “green” product, despite its widespread use in agriculture. But environmentally green ammonia may be on the horizon if the hydrogen is made by other means, such as wind- or solar-powered electrolysis of water.
Ammonia can be burned as a fuel in standard engines. A study by the catalyst company Haldor Topsoe (Kongens Lyngby, Denmark) concluded that replacing conventional ship fuels with green ammonia would be cost-efficient and would eliminate a significant source of greenhouse gases. It potentially can be used in aircraft fuels as well. During a transition period, ammonia could be mixed with conventional fuels.
Ammonia hazard information
Hazard class*
Hazard statement
Gases under pressure, liquefied gas H280—Contains gas under pressure; may explode if heated
Skin corrosion/irritation, category 1B H314—Causes severe skin burns
Serious eye damage/eye irritation, category 1 H318—Causes serious eye damage
Acute toxicity, inhalation, category 3 H331—Toxic if inhaled
Hazardous to the aquatic environment, acute hazard, category 1 H400—Very toxic to aquatic life
Hazardous to the aquatic environment, long-term hazard, category 2 H411—Toxic to aquatic life with long-lasting effects
*Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals. Explanation of pictograms.
MOTW update
L-Tryptophan was the Molecule of the Week for November 20, 2017. It is an essential amino acid that must be part of the human diet. Among other functions, it enables the body to synthesize serotonin and melatonin. Recently, tryptophan appeared in two biochemical studies.
In one, researchers at Pennsylvania State University (University Park) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge) discovered that the enzyme tryptophan 2C methyltransferase, which catalyzes the addition of a methyl group to tryptophan’s indole ring in the synthesis of the antibiotic thiostrepton, does not use a radical mechanism as do most enzymes in its class. Instead, a carboxylate group in the enzyme acts as a general base to deprotonate the tryptophan substrate.
In the second study, A. Keith Dunker at Indiana University (Bloomington) and Klára Hlouchová at Charles University (Prague) collaborated in a quest to discover how life on Earth began. They hypothesized that inherently disordered proteins (IDPs), ones that don’t hold to a specific conformation, but move around, were involved early in the process. They believe that the unstructured proteins formed by IDPs were eventually augmented by the later-forming aromatic amino acids tryptophan and tyrosine, which are larger and give proteins a greater degree of structure. They tested their ideas by replacing the aromatic amino acids in a key enzyme with leucine; the modified, less structured enzyme retained some activity, but ultimately failed to perform as efficiently as the original.
Ammonia fast facts
CAS Reg. No. 7664-41-7
SciFinder
nomenclature Ammonia
Empirical formula H3N
Molar mass 17.03 g/mol
Appearance Colorless gas
Boiling point –33.3 ºC
Water solubility ≈530 g/L (20 ºC)
≈320 g/L (25 ºC)
MOTW update:
Ammonia's main use is in agriculture, but now it may have a “greener” use—as a transportation fuel. This past week, an article in Chemical & Engineering News presented an industrial update of the options and obstacles that will determine whether ammonia is indeed the “fuel of the future”.
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PoliticsHillary Clintontoo small to failhillary clinton early education
Hillary Clinton Pushes For Early Education In Campaign
Hillary Clinton Targets Littlest Learners
Joy Resmovits
Senior Education Reporter, The Huffington Post
Oct 3, 2013, 03:05 AM EDT | Updated Oct 3, 2013
As Head Start centers around the country close because of the federal government shutdown, Hillary Clinton is advancing herself as an advocate for the nation's littlest learners -- an important, popular and risk-free position.
Clinton, the former secretary of state and first lady, early Thursday posted an op-ed to the website of Too Small To Fail, an advocacy campaign coordinated by former Clinton staffer Ann O'Leary. The campaign, Clinton wrote, will help educate parents and push for more workplace flexibility.
Clinton is framing the expansion of early childhood education as a question of equity, playing off profound "word gaps" between rich and poor children before they even start school. According to this research, by the time they turn four, kids growing up in upper- and middle-class homes hear 30 million more words than tots whose families are on welfare.
"Coming to school without words is like coming to school without food or adequate health care," Clinton wrote. "It makes it harder for kids to develop their creativity and imagination, to learn, excel, and live up to their full potential. It should spur us to action just like child hunger and child poverty." The op-ed accompanies the release of a report Too Small calls a "roadmap" laying out the research behind and campaign for early childhood education improvements.
The op-ed is mostly a rehash of existing ideas on preschool, but may provide insight into a potential Clinton presidential run in 2016.
The article suggests that Clinton may initially be risk-averse, friendly to the business community and the middle class, and support a platform around child welfare issues. Education reform in K-12 schools has become politically fraught, dividing teachers unions, one of which endorsed Clinton during her 2008 presidential run, from Democrats in the Obama administration over issues such as teacher tenure, performance evaluations and school accountability.
But early childhood education is generally less divisive, uniting Democrats, some Republicans and business leaders. In his State of the Union Address this year, President Barack Obama proposed an expensive new preschool program that would use state and federal funding to put more than one million children into new preschool slots.
More recently, New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio (D) made a similar plan a major plank of his successful campaign in the Democratic mayoral primary.
Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs is getting in on the early childhood education action, as well. Business leaders have been supportive of the Obama initiative, and Goldman is lending up to $4.6 million to an early childhood education program in Salt Lake City. Goldman's loan, known as a "social impact bond," could ultimately turn a profit. It's also paying social dividends: Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman's CEO, is slated to appear on an early education panel at next week's NBC Education Nation summit.
Few in the early-education community expect Congress to adopt the Obama plan. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has travelled the country in search of a Republican governor to become the face of the program, to no avail.
Clinton did not mention Obama's idea by name in her piece. "I have been an advocate for early childhood development for my entire adult life, ever since I was a young law student working at the Yale Child Study Center," Clinton wrote. "And the more I learn about the new research in the field, the more I am convinced that this is an issue vital to the future competitiveness of our country, the strength of our families, and the health of our communities. That’s why I’ve made early childhood development a major focus of my new work at the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation. "
James Heckman, a Nobel prize-winning economist, has shown that every dollar spent on quality early childhood education yields a 7 percent to 10 percent return on investment. But fewer than half of American children ages 3 and 4 are in a pre-kindergarten program of any kind.
Clinton wrote that Too Small To Fail will conduct a "public action campaign" to educate parents on "having quality interactions with their babies." The campaign will work with the business community to give parents more flexibility.
"The Head Start community is very much engaging parents in various literacy activities and would especially welcome her [Clinton's] outreach to employers of the low-income workforce," said Yasmina Vinci, who leads the National Head Start Association.
O'Leary, a leader of the Too Small To Fail campaign, previously worked as Clinton's senatorial legislative director, and served on President Bill Clinton's White House Domestic Policy Council. She now heads child-focused initiatives at the Next Generation, a San Francisco-based nonpartisan nonprofit that explores child welfare policies.
CORRECTION: This article has been updated to reflect that Next Generation is based in San Francisco.
Hillary Clintontoo small to failhillary clinton early educationbarack obama early childhood educationPolitics
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2023-14/0021/en_head.json.gz/23069
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Yoed Nir
Cello, Composition
http://www.yoednir.com/
Whether secluded in his studio on the upper west side of Manhattan, or travelling the globe accompanying awe-inspiring popular musicians such as Judy Collins and Regina Spektor, Israeli born cellist Yoed Nir has truly captured a unique voice and musical homogeny that stands as a reflection of the landscape of our world today. Endorsed by Yamaha, he has emerged, fully formed, in command of his craft, identity and music through his debut record Suspended Hours.
Nir has performed on more than 500 albums with renowned performers such as Judy Collins, Regina Spektor, Rufus Wainwright, Shawn Colvin, Paul Banks (Interpol), Diane Birch, Of Montreal, Kishibashi, The Mountain Goats, Sonya Kitchell, Hurt and singer Yael Naim.
With an impressive touring history and a highly skilled ability to arrange, layer and overdub string sections on many iconic artists’ records, Nir has accomplished a wealth of experience. His work on Yael Naim’s 2008 album was recognized, as it was awarded “Best World Music – Album of the Year” in France. Nir also recorded on legendary singer/songwriter Judy Collins’ record Bohemian, arranging string parts for five of her songs, all layered on one cello. He performed with Collins at the The Temple of Dendur at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The concert was broadcasted on PBS, and made available as a DVD/CD. It was also nominated for a 2013 New York Emmy.
He has toured extensively with Regina Spektor, most notably on her latest world tour opening for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, to promote her latest record What We Saw From The Cheap Seats. He also recorded on her previous album and DVD Far, both released under Warner Brothers Music Inc. Nir has had the privilege of recording with Paul Banks, most widely known for his successful group Interpol, where he arranged all the string sections on his most recent two solo albums. Drawing back to his classical roots, Nir recently had the honor of performing Bach’s Six Suites for Solo Cello at Bargemusic, one of New York’s premier chamber music venues.
Nir has performed in renowned venues such as The Beacon Theatre, Radio City Music Hall, London’s Royal Albert Hall, the Sydney Opera House, Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Merkin Concert Hall, the Kodak, Greek and El-ray Theatres in Los Angeles, the Konzerthaus Hall in Vienna, the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco and the Rose Theatre at Lincoln Center, just to name a few.
Content by Yoed Nir :
Yoed Nir (Cello)
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« Discovering the Scottish Borders: “Peel towers”…
A Very Merry Christmas from Sarlat in Dordogne !!! »
Happy Hogmanay, Happy Hogman-eh, Happy New Year et Bonne Année 2023!
The Scottish word for New Year’s Eve, Hogmanay, refers to the ancient Norse festival of Yule, celebrated at the turn of the year.
Today, the New Year’s eve party in Edinburgh, is one of the grandest, most spectacular, and most extravagant street festivals on earth.
In Glasgow, the partying starts early, on the stroke of midnight, when the city erupts with a pyrotechnic display of fireworks.
New Year’s Eve celebration Hogman-eh! is the largest outside of Scotland, as well as the largest Hogmanay celebration in Eastern Ontario.
A two-month celebration of Scottish culture, OttScot is the flagship event of the Scottish Society of Ottawa’s OttScot Festival, which includes St. Andrew’s Day celebrations, Hogman-eh!, Robbie Burns celebrations and the Great Canadian Kilt Skate.
Approximately fifteen percent of Canadians are descended from the Scottish people.
Arrival of Scottish Settlers, Pictou, Nova Scotia
Early settlers in Eastern Canada include families from Glasgow, Edinburgh, Inverness, Aberdeen, Dundee, St. Andrews, Stirling, and other towns throughout Scotland.
They built thriving communities in areas named after their native lands, such as Glengary, Perth, Renfrew, and others.
Today, there are an estimated two million Scots living in North America. Of these, approximately one million live in the United States, with another million living in Canada and a million or so scattered throughout the rest of the world. Indeed, the Canadian city of Montreal, Quebec, boasts the largest concentration of people of full-blooded Scot descent in the world.
Glengarry Highland Games – Ontario, Canada
In the National Capital region, it is estimated that twenty percent of the communities are founded upon the names of cities, towns and villages within Scotland, and another ten percent are based on surnames.
The earliest known reference to Saint Andrews Day celebrations in Ottawa dates back to the year 1838.
Each year, thousands of visitors come to the nation’s capital to celebrate this unique holiday. Created in the early 19th century, this tradition continues today.
The Scottish Society of Ottawa held its very first event on New Year’s Eve of 2012.
It was a New Year’s Street Party, held at Ottawa city hall. The event replicated the excitement experienced in Edinburgh, Scotland, when time strikes twelve, marking the transition into the new year.
It is a combination of traditional and modern music and dance, along with tastings, all accompanied by great food and drinks. It has become an Ottawa tradition, drawing crowds of up to seven thousand, of all ages, from all different backgrounds.
LIVE STREAMING – SATURDAY NIGHT ON YOUTUBE
✨ Getting ready to participate, along with all our Scotttish friends worldwide, to the many attractions celebrating 2023’s arrival 🎈🎈
Details: ottawafestivals.ca/event/hogman-eh/
Our team wishes our readers, friends, and fans of Scotland a very happy new year!
I hope that our Scottish adventures spur you on to travel and walk on La Belle Alba’s wonderful paths.
Janice, Mairiuna, Jean-Claude, Iain, Margaret.
December 31st, 2022 |Category: Canada, Events, Festivals, Holidays, Scots Abroad
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Henry Rifles: An American Classic (1)
W.H. "Chip" Gross
There is no more truly American firearm than the lever-action rifle. After all, what’s more iconic than a cowboy with a six-shooter on his hip and a lever-action in his saddle’s rifle scabbard?
The gun was developed more than a century and a half ago, in the late 1850s, when a young gunsmith by the name of Benjamin Tyler Henry was hired by Oliver Winchester of the New Haven Arms Company. Henry was tasked with improving an earlier design of one of Winchester’s repeating rifles. After three years of tinkering, testing and tweaking, in 1860 Henry produced and patented the rifle that retains his name yet today.
Henry rifles first became popular during the Civil War; some 10,000 of the guns saw service, used mostly by Union soldiers. Of .44 caliber and holding 16 rimfire cartridges, firearms historian Herbert G. Houze claimed that one man armed with a Henry was the equivalent of 14 or 15 men equipped with single-shot muzzleloading rifles. One Confederate officer, Colonel John Mosby, became so exasperated upon first encountering Henrys in battle that he dubbed it, “That damned Yankee rifle that can be loaded on Sunday and fired all week.”
After the war, Henry rifles became more ubiquitous as Americans headed west. The gun even played a role in the Battle of the Little Bighorn, when in 1876, Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and his soldiers of the 7th Cavalry found themselves not only outnumbered but outgunned. They discovered too late that many of the Lakota, Dakota, Northern Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors opposing them had armed themselves with Henry rifles.
The Henry rifle eventually evolved into the famous Winchester Model 1866 lever-action rifle. And with the introduction of the new Model 1866, the New Haven Arms Company was renamed the Winchester Repeating Arms Company.
Today, Henry rifles and shotguns are manufactured by the Henry Repeating Arms Company located in Bayonne, New Jersey, with a second plant in Rice Lake, Wisconsin. The corporation is exceedingly proud of its American heritage, its logo stating: Henry: Made in America or not made at all.
“We are a family-owned business and stand behind every firearm that leaves our plants,” said Anthony Imperato, president. “I personally guarantee 100-percent satisfaction for the life of the rifle or shotgun. No exceptions.”
Henry Repeating Arms Company was started by Louis Imperato and his son, Anthony Imperato, in Brooklyn, New York, in 1996. There is no affiliation or lineage to Benjamin Tyler Henry or the New Haven Arms Company, who sold the original Henry rifle from 1862 to 1864. Imperato secured the trademark to the Henry name in 1996. The first model produced was the Henry H001 Classic Lever Action .22, and the first shipments were made in March 1997. In December of 2017, while celebrating its 20th Anniversary, Henry manufactured their millionth H001 rifle.
One of the company’s most popular rifles is the award-winning, octagon-barreled Henry Golden Boy, available in .22, .22 Magnum, or .17 HMR calibers. The rifle gets its name from the highly-polished Brasslite receiver cover, Brasslite barrel band and solid-brass buttplate. The rifle is stocked with American walnut, as are all Henrys.
But Henry rifles are not just for plinking or small game. One of their newest offerings is the Henry Big Boy All-Weather. Available in .45 Colt, .44 Mag and .357 Mag handgun-caliber chamberings, this lever-action makes a good deer rifle, especially as a brush gun. The barrel is chrome-plated steel, the receiver sporting a chrome-satin finish.
Other popular Henry rifles include their many Tribute Editions saluting military, law enforcement, firefighters, farmers, truckers and others. To see all the many options available, you can order a free Henry catalog by sending an email request to [email protected]
If you’d like to view an original Henry rifle, five are on display at the NRA National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, Virginia. Also on exhibit is Tom Selleck’s reproduction Henry from the movie Last Stand at Saber River.
One special historic Henry, on exhibit at the Smithsonian in Washington D.C., was presented as a gift to President Abraham Lincoln. Richly engraved, gold-plated, and bearing serial number 6, the rifle is considered priceless and a national treasure. Original Henry rifles currently fetch anywhere from $50,000 to $250,000 at auction.
Henry Repeating Arms, Henry Golden Boy, Anthony Imperato, Henry rifles, lever-action guns, lever guns, American history, Chip Gross, NRA National Firearms Museum, Henry Big Boy
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Ethiopian Airlines,Singapore Airlines expand codeshare agreement
in Top Stories, Transport
Star Alliance members, Ethiopian Airlines and Singapore Airlines will expand their code share agreement as of 1June 2017, offering customers travelling between Africa and Asia seamless connectivity options.
Ethiopian Airlines’ daily non-stop services to Singapore from Addis Ababa, due to be launched in June 2017, will be covered by the expanded code share agreement.
Under the expanded agreement, Ethiopian Airlines customers will be able to access multiple destinations in Australia, China, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Thailand and Vietnam across Singapore Airlines’ wide network. In turn, Singapore Airlines customers will enjoy access to Ethiopian Airlines’ vast intra-African network including countries like Botswana, Burkina Faso, Chad, Cote D’Ivoire, Kenya, Nigeria, Mozambique, The Republic of Congo,Rwanda, Seychelles, South Africa, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
Mr. Girma Shiferaw, Acting Vice President, Strategic Planning and Alliances, remarked:“I wish to thank Singapore Airlines for the successful completion of this vital agreement. The two airlines will synergize their respective networks in Asia and Africa to offer customers the best connectivity options with one ticket and one single check-in at the first boarding airport. It will also play a critical role in enhancing investment, trade and tourism ties between a rising Africa, and a highly developed, innovative, and business-friendly Singapore.”
Singapore Airlines Senior Vice President Marketing Planning, Mr Tan Kai Ping, said, “We are delighted with our expanded code share operations with Ethiopian Airlines. This significant expansion of our important partnership is in line with our ongoing effort to continuously expand our network reach and to offer customers more travel options and convenience when travelling between Africa, Asia and Southwest Pacific.”
The airlines first began code sharing on each other’s flights to and from Dubai in 2011. The expanded code share flights are subject to regulatory approvals and will be progressively made available for sale across various sales channels.
Ethiopian Airlines operates the youngest fleet on the African continent with an average aircraft age of less than five years, serving more than 90 international destinations across five continents with over 240 daily departures.
Singapore Airlines operates a modern passenger aircraft fleet of more than 100 aircraft. Together with wholly owned passenger airline subsidiaries SilkAir, Scoot and Tigerair, the SIA Group’s combined network covers more than 130 destinations around the world.
By: citibusinessnews.com/Ghana
Renegotiate Ameri deal to save $ 24m annually- IMANI
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KX Extends Relationship With NASA Frontier Development Lab and the SETI Institute
London, UK (10 July 2018) Announcing today that the NASA Frontier Development Lab (FDL) will continue to use KX’s analytics capabilities to build on its space research success in this summer’s mission. KX will be partnering with FDL and the SETI Institute on two key areas, including Space Weather and Exoplanet Identification.
Entering its third year, the Frontier Development Lab is the latest NASA sponsored activity to push the boundaries of state-of-the-art in computing – specifically applied artificial intelligence – to assist in solving knowledge gaps in space science and exploration relevant to NASA and humankind. The final results of FDL 2018 will be presented at Intel in Santa Clara on August 16th.
KX’s ability to analyze large volumes of historic and streaming data in real time makes it ideally suited for AI and space applications. KX is teaming up with the SETI Institute and other tech leaders, including Intel, Google, IBM and NVIDIA; private space partners include Lockheed Martin, KBRWyle and XPRIZE.
Brian Conlon, CEO of KX, commented: “We are delighted to be continuing our relationship with the NASA FDL team and other great partners. The ultra-high performance capabilities of KX technology make it the ideal platform to address space challenges, from Earth observation to space weather. This mission demonstrates the power and scalability of KX technology.”
James Parr, FDL Director, commented: “KX was early to build expertise in deriving insights from time-series data using AI. This has made them valuable partners for FDL style science applications – where rapid insight is a key value proposition.”
“FDL is an exciting and impactful example of the power of public-private partnership to deliver extraordinary results,” said Bill Diamond, President and CEO of the SETI Institute. “KX brings their unique capabilities in advanced data analytics, delivering highly complementary synergies to the program’s team of interdisciplinary partners. It’s wonderful to have KX on board again this year!”
About KX
KX is a division of FD, a global technology provider with 20 years of experience working with some of the world’s largest finance, technology, retail, pharma, manufacturing and energy institutions. KX technology, incorporating the kdb+ time-series database, is a leader in high-performance, in-memory computing, streaming analytics and operational intelligence. KX delivers the best possible performance and flexibility for high-volume, data-intensive analytics and applications across multiple industries. The Group operates from 14 offices across Europe, North America and Asia Pacific, including its headquarters in Newry, and employs more than 2,300 people worldwide.
For more information about KX please visit www.kx.com. For general inquiries, write to [email protected]. For press inquiries, write to [email protected]
About the NASA Frontier Development Lab (FDL)
Hosted in Silicon Valley by the SETI Institute, the NASA FDL is an applied artificial intelligence research accelerator developed in partnership with NASA’s Ames Research Center. Founded in 2016, the NASA FDL aims to apply AI technologies to challenges in space exploration by pairing machine learning expertise with space science and exploration researchers from academia and industry. These interdisciplinary teams address tightly defined problems and the format encourages rapid iteration and prototyping to create outputs with meaningful application to the space program and humanity.
Founded in 1984, the SETI Institute is a non-profit, multi-disciplinary research and education organization whose mission is to explore, understand, and explain the origin and nature of life in the universe and the evolution of intelligence. Our research encompasses the physical and biological sciences and leverages expertise in data analytics, machine learning and advanced signal detection technologies. The SETI Institute is a distinguished research partner for industry, academia and government agencies, including NASA and NSF.
Click here for more mission details
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In all things - Eamon O'Kane
126 presents:
In all things
Eamon O'Kane
June 13th - July 7th 2012
Preview: Saturday June 9th - 7pm
Image courtesy of the artist
For his most recent exhibition artist Eamon O´Kane has chosen to focus on the chemical element Carbon. O´Kane has produced a series of charcoal animations and constructed a site-specific installation of new charcoal wall drawings and sculptures examining the molecular and crystal structure of carbon and other elements. Carbon is the 15th most abundant element in the Earth's crust, and the fourth most abundant element in the universe by mass after hydrogen, helium, and oxygen. It is present in all known life forms, and in the human body carbon is the second most abundant element by mass (about 18.5%) after oxygen. This abundance, together with the unique diversity of organic compounds and their unusual polymer-forming ability at the temperatures commonly encountered on Earth, make this element the chemical basis of all known life.
The work in the show also draws on the legacy of Frederich Fröbel (the inventor of the Kindergarten) and the effect of his education techniques on society, especially in relation to the development of creativity. Fröbel originally trained as a crystallographer and then he designed the educational play materials known as Fröbel Gifts, or Fröbelgaben, which included geometric building blocks and pattern activity blocks. These simple wooden blocks and shapes have inspired many artists, architects, mathematicians, engineers and designers such as Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, Piet Mondrian, and Charles Eames. Who were all were educated in early childhood using Fröbel Gifts. In addition the works in the exhibition relate to his childhood home in Co. Donegal including the history of this house, which has been central to the artists practice for many years. In this exhibition the artist brings together all the disparate aspects of his art practice together under one theme.
Eamon O' Kane (b. in 1974 in Belfast, Ireland. Lives and works in Bergen, Norway and Odense, Denmark).
O’Kane studied at National College of Art and received MFAs from University of Ulster and from Parsons School of Design, New School University, NY. Solo exhibitions include Rare Gallery, New York, USA; Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, Ireland; ArtSway, New Forest, UK; Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris, France; Economist Plaza, London, UK. He has participated in e v+ a, Limerick seven times including 2005 when he received an OPEN e v+ a award. He is recipient of awards including the Taylor Art Award, The Tony O’Malley Award, The Pollock Krasner Foundation grant and a Fulbright Award. His artwork is in numerous collections worldwide including Deutsche Bank; Burda Museum, Baden Baden, Germany; Sammlung Südhausbau, Munich; Aspen RE, London; Rugby Art Gallery and Museum Collection.
www.eamonokane.com
"Apposite Extravaganza: Cheating Progress" - Volvo...
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The Week In Data: Marriage, Music Festivals And The Confederacy
Jun. 28, 2015 , at 10:48 AM
By Mona Chalabi
Filed under Week In Data
This is the Week in Data, our data journalism roundup. Here you’ll find the most-read FiveThirtyEight articles of the past week, as well as gems we spotted elsewhere on the Internet.
Will D’Angelo Russell Help The Lakers Call On The Hall Again?
Ode To The Underrated: Andrei Kirilenko Edition
We Tried — And Failed — To Identify The Most Banned Book In America
Projecting The Top 50 Players In The 2015 NBA Draft Class
Can Jordan Spieth Complete The Grand Slam?
How A-Rod’s 3,000 Hits Stack Up
The Receding Of Sarah Palin, In One Chart
Change Doesn’t Usually Come This Fast
Lindsey Graham May Have Already Won
The USWNT Better Fix Its Midfield Against China, Because Tougher Sledding Awaits
ELSEWHERE ON THE INTERNET
History of slavery: Up until the end of the 19th century, the transatlantic slave trade wasn’t concentrated in North America — the vast majority of enslaved Africans were brought to the Caribbean and Brazil. This interactive shows the paths of the 12.5 million Africans who were enslaved and transported by Europeans over 315 years. [Slate]
A whole nation: On Friday, the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples had a constitutional right to marry, a decision that overturned bans on gay marriage in 13 states. These charts show how legislation on the issue has evolved in the U.S. since 1922. [The New York Times]
Who wants to get married?: To coincide with the Supreme Court’s decision on Friday, Pew looked at how many U.S. adults who identify as LGBT would like to get married someday. Fifty-two percent said they would like to get married. Like the general public, most respondents cited companionship and commitment as “very important” reasons to wed. [Pew Research Center]
Graying Glastonbury: As the Glastonbury music festival kicked off this week in the U.K., the Economist looked at headline acts at major music festivals and found that the average age of lead singers and solo artists has crept up by 10 years since 1996. [The Economist]
Call me “Diamond”: You know we at FiveThirtyEight love anything to do with names. This interactive from Time allows you to put in your name, look at its popularity and see which names had the same ranking over time. For example, Mona was the 668th most popular girl’s name the year I was born, so in terms of comparable rarity I’d be a Margo if I was born in 1910 and a Diamond in 2015. [Time]
Confederate monuments: The journalists that made this map are the first to admit that it’s “by no means scientific or comprehensive” but with a little help from readers, they hope to crowdsource the locations of the remaining monuments to the Confederacy. [Fusion]
Mona Chalabi is data editor at the Guardian US, and a columnist at New York Magazine. She was previously a lead news writer for FiveThirtyEight. @MonaChalabi
Roundup (311 posts) Ctrl + ← (71) Ctrl-Back (69) Week In Data (34)
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Former Westside Water District Boss Indicted in $25 Million Water Theft
Latest Local
Bill McEwen, News Director
Dennis Falaschi, former GM of Panoche Water District, is charged with conspiracy, theft of government property, and filing false tax returns. (Fresno State)
A federal grand jury returned a five-count indictment Thursday against Dennis Falaschi, a former general manager of Panoche Water District, charging him with conspiracy, theft of government property, and filing false tax returns, U.S. Attorney Phillip A. Talbert announced in a news release.
Falaschi, 75 years old and now residing in Aptos, exploited a leak in the Delta-Mendota Canal and engineered a way to steal more than $25 million worth of water from the federal Central Valley Project, according to court documents.
The Panoche Water District is headquartered in Firebaugh and serves farmers in Fresno and Merced counties, who grow a variety of crops on 38,000 acres.
The scheme allegedly began in 1992 when Falaschi learned that an abandoned drain turnout near milepost markers 94.57 and 94.58 on the Delta-Mendota Canal was leaking water into a parallel canal under the Panoche Water District’s control.
Falaschi told an employee to install a new gate inside a standpipe at the spot of the leak so that the site could be opened and closed on demand, according to court documents. In addition, the employee was told to install a lid and lock to conceal and secure the apparatus. The original gate in the standpoint had been cemented shut years earlier.
Water Thefts Discovered in 2015
Falaschi subsequently told employees to use the site to steal federal water from the Delta-Mendota Canal on multiple occasions before the site was discovered in April 2015. He used the theft proceeds to pay himself and others exorbitant salaries, fringe benefits, and personal expense reimbursements, prosecutors contend.
Additionally, Falaschi was charged Thursday with filing false tax returns in 2015 through 2017. According to court records, he failed to report more than $900,000 in income to the Internal Revenue Service that he received from private water sales.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Barton is prosecuting the case, which was investigated by the Interior’s Office of Inspector General, IRS-Criminal Investigation, and the FBI.
Panoche Agreed to Repay $7.5 Million to Bureau of Reclamation
In 2021, Panoche agreed to pay the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation nearly $7.5 million to compensate for the “unauthorized diversion of water” from two federal canals, The Sacramento Bee reported.
The district also agreed to pay $798,000 plus $172,000 in interest to the San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority, which delivers water from the Bureau of Reclamation to Panoche and 28 other member districts.
Easter Brings Promise of Hope for Churches Hit by Disaster
Where Should New Industrial Sites Go in Fresno? It’s a Billion-Dollar Question.
Bill McEwen is news director and columnist for GV Wire. He joined GV Wire in August 2017 after 37 years at The Fresno Bee. With The Bee, he served as Opinion Editor, City Hall reporter, Metro columnist, sports columnist and sports editor through the years. His work has been frequently honored by the California Newspapers Publishers Association, including authoring first-place editorials in 2015 and 2016. Bill and his wife, Karen, are proud parents of two adult sons, and they have two grandsons. You can contact Bill at 559-492-4031 or at Send an Email
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The Exploration Museum
Könnunarsögusafnið
Das Erforschungsmuseum
Il Museo dell’Esplorazione
Le Musée de l’Exploration
El Museo de la Exploración
2020 Leif Erikson Awards
Download press release as PDF
HUSAVIK, Iceland (August 18, 2020) – The sixth annual Leif Erikson Exploration Awards, sponsored by the Exploration Museum, this weekend recognized Canadian George Kourounis, and Americans Ulyana N. Horodyskyj and Jeff Blumenfeld. Also recognized was Scottish private space company Skyrora that launched their Skylark rocket from Langanes near Húsavík in northern Iceland on Aug. 16.
The Leif Erikson Awards, also known as the Exploration Awards, are awarded annually by the Exploration Museum for achievements in exploration and for work in the field of exploration history.
The awards ceremony was held Aug. 15 in Húsavík, the main and final event of the annual Húsavík Explorers Festival.
The Leif Erikson Exploration Award, recognizing an explorer for a recent or a lifetime achievement in the field of exploration, goes to George Kourounis, Toronto, Ontario, who explores and documents extreme natural events, working with scientists or local experts. He has also documented many forms of severe weather, including tornadoes, hurricanes, blizzards, floods, hail, and lightning.
The Leif Erikson Young Explorer Award, awarded to an explorer under the age of 35 for great achievements in exploration, goes to Dr. Ulyana Horodyskyj, Broomfield, Colorado, recognized for her work as a science communicator. Horodyskyj is passionate about inspiring others to become involved in glaciology, geology and astronomy. She is the founder of Science in the Wild, bringing citizen-scientists into the field.
The Leif Erikson Exploration History Award, which recognizes a person or an organization that has worked to promote and preserve exploration history, was bestowed upon Jeff Blumenfeld, editor and publisher of Expedition News, who for 26 years has chronicled both worldwide expeditions and adventures. Blumenfeld, from Boulder, Colorado, has devoted his career to documenting exploration and helping new explorers gain funding. He is a longtime Fellow of The Explorers Club and served as the club’s communication director. His books include Get Sponsored: A Funding Guide for Explorers, Adventurers and Would-Be World Travelers, and Travel With Purpose: A Field Guide to Voluntourism.
Skyrora Ltd., a private space company from Scotland founded in 2017, received the Leif Erikson Lunar Prize for their work developing innovative high-grade fuel made from waste plastics designed to minimize the environmental impact of rocket launches.
Previous winners include American Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt, Australian around-the-world sailor Jessica Watson, American planetary scientist Carolyn Porco, and British exploration historian Dr. Huw Lewis-Jones.
The museum is located in the town of Húsavík on the northern coast of Iceland, 30 miles from the Arctic Circle. It is dedicated to the history of human exploration, from the early explorers to the exploration of space. Husavik is featured in the Will Ferrell film Eurovision: The Story of Fire Saga, currently streaming on Netflix.
The awards are named for Icelandic explorer Leif Erikson, considered the first European to land in North America and who, according to the Sagas of Icelanders, established the first Norse settlement at Vinland, tentatively identified with the Norse L’Anse aux Meadows on the northern tip of Newfoundland in modern-day Canada.
For more information: www.explorationmuseum.com
Orly Orlyson
Founder and director of The Exploration Museum
Húsavík, Iceland
(354) 848-7600, [email protected]
Húsavík Cape Hotel
Höfði 24, 640 Húsavík
[email protected]
The Explorers Festival 2022 takes place from November 16 to 20.
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PressPress Release
Littler Enters Fifth European Country with Dutch Employment Firm CLINT Joining its Global Platform
(May 1, 2018) – Littler, the world’s largest employment and labor law practice representing management, is pleased to announce that CLINT, a leading labor and employment law boutique in the Netherlands, is joining its global platform. This marks the fifth European country Littler has expanded into in recent years, in addition to continued growth in North and South America, and is part of a strategy that includes combining with labor and employment focused firms in key international markets. Littler’s global footprint now includes more than 1,500 attorneys across 80 offices and 18 countries.
“We are excited to further expand our European presence to the Netherlands and to combine forces with CLINT, a firm that is well-respected for providing companies with exceptional counsel on complex labor and employment matters,” said Tom Bender and Jeremy Roth, co-managing directors of Littler, in a joint statement. “This addition continues our successful global expansion strategy, having already established a presence in Europe’s largest economies, and will directly benefit Dutch and multinational organizations operating across the continent.”
Founded by partners Dennis Veldhuizen, Wouter Engelsman and Eric van Dam, the CLINT team consists of eight labor and employment lawyers based in Amsterdam. The firm counsels clients on human resources and employment law matters related to transactions, including due diligence, labor relations, negotiations, day-one readiness support and post-merger integration. They also offer strategic employment law counsel related to international and national co-determination law, pension amendments, labor unions, collective bargaining agreements and international relocation of employees. CLINT lawyers also represent clients in employment litigation matters, mediations and arbitrations, as well as various issues related to the employer-employee relationship, including flexible employment relationships, restrictive covenants, disability accommodation, terminations and employment contracts and policies.
“Joining Littler’s global platform and leveraging the firm’s international reputation, commitment to outstanding client service, and technological resources will further differentiate our capabilities for local and multinational corporations,” said Veldhuizen. “Our experience in Dutch labor and employment matters, coupled with Littler’s vast resources and capabilities across the globe, will provide significant value to our collective clients.”
Veldhuizen counsels international companies, including in the medical device, healthcare, retail and hospitality sectors, on a variety of employment matters. Engelsman represents clients in such sectors as automotive and oil and gas on matters related to works councils, labor unions, collective bargaining agreements and co-determination law, among other areas. With a background that includes holding several management board positions within the fashion industry, van Dam counsels retail, consumer goods and automotive companies on employment law issues related to international expansion, employee privacy, and mediation and related disputes.
“Combining with CLINT is a key step forward for the firm’s international strategy, and provides our clients with access to lawyers in yet another of Europe’s most robust economies,” said Stephan Swinkels, a Littler shareholder based in Amsterdam who helps lead the development and integration of the firm’s global practice. “Together with our other European outposts in France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom, the addition of the Netherlands will nicely complement our services to employers operating in Europe and around the world.”
Peter Susser, Littler’s Global Practice Leader and chair of the firm’s International Employment Law practice, added that, “through the course of our work supporting clients in international labor and employment matters, activity from Dutch companies, and multinational corporations with operations in the Netherlands, has increased substantially. This combination will provide immediate support for our clients from highly knowledgeable attorneys on the ground in the region.”
Littler’s international operations span three continents – North America, South America and Europe – and include Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, France, Germany, Guatemala, Honduras, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, the United Kingdom, the United States and Venezuela. The firm’s global capabilities also include U.S.-based lawyers with exceptional international experience, who are dually licensed practitioners in Australia, Brazil, Japan and South Africa.
About Littler
Littler is the largest global employment and labor law practice, with more than 1,500 attorneys in 80 offices worldwide. Littler represents management in all aspects of employment and labor law and serves as a single-source solution provider to the global employer community. Consistently recognized in the industry as a leading and innovative law practice, Littler has been litigating, mediating and negotiating some of the most influential employment law cases and labor contracts on record for over 75 years. Littler Global is the collective trade name for an international legal practice, the practicing member entities of which are separate and distinct professional firms.
About CLINT
CLINT is a boutique law firm specializing in ‘corporate’ employment law and based in Amsterdam. Founded in 2016, CLINT renders advice and carries out employment litigation for large and middle-sized Dutch and international companies, as well as for executives and managing directors. CLINT is also involved in M&A related employment law and acts as strategic advisor for professional practitioners. CLINT is recognized in its field by Legal 500. For more information visit: www.clintlegal.com.
Jeremy A. Roth
[email protected]
Dennis Veldhuizen
[email protected]
Wouter Engelsman
[email protected]
Eric van Dam
[email protected]
Stephan C. Swinkels
[email protected]
Peter A. Susser
[email protected]
International Employment Law
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The Forgotten WWII Films Of Basil Dearden
by Mark Steiner
Although it’s better known for the series of sublime, witty comedies that included The Ladykillers, Kind Hearts And Coronets, and The Lavender Hill Mob, London’s Ealing Studios was incredibly prolific during WWII, producing films that attempted to raise morale during the war, and examine the toll that war took on the people and the landscape of Great Britain during the postwar era. During this time, Ealing’s most prolific filmmaker was Basil Dearden. Dearden was less of an auteur than incredibly competent craftsman, adept at making comedies, romances, mysteries, and epics, as well as tackling controversial subjects like race relations, sexism, and homophobia in an era when such topics were generally taboo. In films like The Black Sheep Of Whitehall, The Bells Go Down, The Halfway House, Frieda, Cage Of Gold, and I Believe In You, Dearden examined, with compassion, humor, and sincerity, multiple facets of British life during and after World War II.
One of the goals of our Wish List project is to fill in holes in the directors sections, and our new additions to the Dearden section are:
The Black Sheep Of Whitehall, 1942: A spy comedy starring Will Hay, the UK’s answer to W.C. Fields
The Bells Go Down, 1943: A rousing tribute to the fire and rescue brigades that served during the Blitz on London, utilizing documentary footage of the actual fires raging during the German air raids.
The Halfway House, 1943: A sort of Grand Hotel, except that the hotel is a bombed-out inn in the Welsh countryside, and the inhabitants are not genteel bourgeoisie, but rather ordinary citizens trying to survive the war.
Frieda, 1947: Meeting bigotry and anti-German sentiment head-on, this postwar romance introduced English-speaking audiences to Mai Zetterling as an “enemy” war bride who encounters prejudice as she accompanies her new husband home after rescuing him from a POW camp.
Cage Of Gold, 1950: Jean Simmons & David Farrar star in this melodrama about WWII veterans and an unwanted pregnancy.
I Believe In You, 1952: In this powerful melodrama with a taste of social realism, WWII veterans take on the difficult task of becoming parole officers.
← New Releases for March 27!
New Releases for April 3 →
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GRECIAN DELIGHTS
About Civitavecchia, Italy
Sorrento Neapolitan: Surriento is a town overlooking the Bay of Naples in Southern Italy. A popular tourist destination, it can be reached easily from Naples and Pompeii as it is at the south-eastern end of the Circumvesuviana rail line. The Sorrentine Peninsula has views of Naples, Vesuvius and the Isle of Capri. The Amalfi Drive, connecting Sorrento and Amalfi, is a narrow road that threads along the high cliffs above the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Heraklion is the largest city and the administrative capital of the island of Crete. It is the fourth largest city in Greece. The Bronze Age palace of Knossos, also known as the Palace of Minos, is located nearby. Heraklion is close to the ruins of the palace of Knossos, which in Minoan times was the largest centre of population on Crete. Though there is no archaeological evidence of it, Knossos may well have had a port at the site of Heraklion as early as 2000 BC. Around the city can be found several sculptures, statues and busts commemorating significant events and figures of the city's and island's history, like El Greco, Vitsentzos Kornaros, Nikos Kazantzakis and Eleftherios Venizelos.
Messina, Italy
Messina is a harbor city in northeast Sicily, Italy. It is the capital of the Italian Metropolitan City of Messina, and has close ties with Reggio Calabria. The city's main resources are its seaports (commercial and military shipyards), cruise tourism, commerce, and agriculture (wine production and cultivating lemons, oranges, mandarin oranges, and olives). The city has been a Roman Catholic Archdiocese and Archimandrite seat since 1548 and is home to a locally important international fair. The city has the University of Messina, founded in 1548 by Ignatius of Loyola. Messina has a light rail system, Tranvia di Messina, that was opened on 3 April 2003. This line is 7.7 kilometres (4.8 mi) and links the city's central railway station with the city centre and harbour. The city is home to a significant Greek-speaking minority, rooted in its history and officially recognised.
Katákolo
Katakolon, or Katakolo is a seaside town in the municipality of Pyrgos in western Elis, Greece. It is situated on a headland overlooking the Ionian Sea and separating the Gulf of Kyparissia from the rest of the Ionian. It is 11 km west of downtown Pyrgos. The small village of Agios Andreas, which in ancient times was the natural harbour for Ancient Olympia, lies northwest of Katakolo. A railway connects Katakolo with Pyrgos and Olympia, but along with the rest of the rail network in the Peloponnese, services have been suspended since 2011 for economic reasons.
Piraeus is a city in the periphery of Attica, Greece and within the Athens urban area, located 12 km southwest of its center and upon the Saronic Gulf. According to the 2001 census, Piraeus has a population of 175,697 people within its administrative limits, making it the third largest municipality in Greece and the second within the Greek capital following the municipality of Athens. The Piraeus urban area extends beyond the administrative city limits to the suburban municipalities, with a total population of 466,065.
Civitavecchia is a town and comune of the Metropolitan City of Rome in the central Italian region of Lazio. A sea port on the Tyrrhenian Sea, the name ''Civitavecchia'' means "ancient town". The modern city was built over a pre-existing Etruscan settlement. The massive Forte Michelangelo was first commissioned from Donato Bramante by Pope Julius II, to defend the port of Rome. The upper part of the "maschio" tower, however, was designed by Michelangelo, whose name is generally applied to the fortress. North of the city at Ficoncella are the Terme Taurine baths frequented by Romans and still popular with the Civitavecchiesi. The modern name stems from the common fig plants among the various pools. And also next to the town is the location of the cruise ship docks. All major cruise lines start and end their cruises at this location, and others stop for shore excursion days that allow guests to see Rome and Vatican sights, which are ninety minutes away.
Corfu, an island off Greece’s northwest coast in the Ionian Sea, is defined by rugged mountains and a resort-studded shoreline. Nicknamed ''the island of the Phaeacians'', Corfu is home to the Ionian University. Known also as Kerkyra, is the northernmost of the Ionian Islands in Greece. Located off of the far northwest coast of the country, Corfu lies in the Adriatic sea, east of Italy and southwest of Albania. Historically Corfu has been controlled by many foreign powers, notably the Venetians, French, and British.
PEARLY PACIFIC SANDS
Auckland, Los Angeles, Tahiti
MAYAN & MIAMI MONTAGE
From Miami
Miami, Roatán, Great Stirrup Cay
MEDITERRANEAN HAVENS
From Sorrento
Sorrento, Marseille, Monte Carlo, Florence, Piraeus, Civitavecchia, Barcelona
PRISTINE PATAGONIA
From Coquimbo
Coquimbo, Lima, Montevideo, Pisco, Costa Rica, Arica, Chek Chue, Mission San Rafael, Puerto Montt, City of Valparaiso, Buenos Aires F.D., Puerto Chacabuco, Ushuaia
MEDITERRANEAN GALLERY
From Menorca
Menorca, Pisa, Ibiza Town, Portofino, Cinque Terre, Monte Carlo, Corsica, Valencia, Civitavecchia, Saint-Tropez, Barcelona
BEACHES TO BRIDGES
From Municipio de Corinto
Municipio de Corinto, Ensenada, Miami, Colon, Cartagena, Costa Rica, San Francisco, Acapulco de Juárez, Cabo San Lucas, Acajutla, Havana
POSTCARDS FROM CUBA
From Santiago de Cuba
Santiago de Cuba, Miami, Cienfuegos, Great Stirrup Cay, Havana
VIKING TALES
Stockholm, Riga, Helsingborg, Helsinki, Tallinn, Warnemünde, Moscow, Copenhagen
RENAISSANCE TREASURES
From Cinque Terre
Cinque Terre, Palamós, Marseille, Monte Carlo, Florence, Cannes, Civitavecchia, Saint-Tropez, Barcelona
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Great Lakes Advocates to Gather in Sandusky, Ohio, to Earn Commitments from Clinton, Trump
Jordan Lubetkin
Representatives from Trump and Clinton Campaigns to Attend Candidate Forum September 22
Sandusky, OH – As the presidential race nears the home stretch, Great Lakes advocates are gathering in Sandusky, Ohio, to press Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump campaign officials to explain their Great Lakes platforms. The gathering is part of the 12th Annual Great Lakes Restoration Conference, hosted by the Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition, which attracts hundreds of people from the states of Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, New York, Indiana, Illinois, and Pennsylvania.
Representatives from the Clinton and Trump campaigns will attend a campaign forum on Thursday, September 22.
At 9 a.m. Trump campaign representative Mike Budzik, past chief, Ohio Division of Wildlife under Ohio Gov. Bob Taft, will speak during the first 45-minute session.
At 11:10 a.m. Clinton campaign representative David Hayes, former deputy secretary, Department of Interior in Obama Administration, will speak during the second 45-minute session.
The Coalition will broadcast the sessions live on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/healthylakes/
“Millions of people are counting on the next president of the United States to stand up for the Great Lakes,” said Todd Ambs, campaign director for the Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition. “We look forward to hearing from Clinton and Trump representatives to learn how they intend to tackle the ongoing serious threats to the Great Lakes. It will be imperative for the next president to embrace a strong Great Lakes restoration platform to protect the drinking water, health, jobs, and way of life for the millions of people who call this region home.”
Great Lakes advocates are looking to maintain momentum for federal efforts to restore the largest source of surface freshwater on the planet – one that provides drinking water to more than 30 million people – by securing commitments from both presidential contenders to maintain current restoration efforts into the next White House administration.
The conference, which runs September 20-22, comes days before the first presidential debate in New York. The Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition, chambers of commerce, mayors, and industry leaders from around the eight-state region recently called on Clinton and Trump to explain their positions on federal restoration efforts. The groups have issued a Great Lakes Protection and Restoration Presidential Platform, asking candidates to maintain funding for Great Lakes restoration programs, invest in drinking water and waste water infrastructure, and commit to tackling harmful algal blooms in the region to prevent disasters like the 2014 algal bloom that poisoned drinking water for more than 400,000 people in Greater Toledo for three days.
Presidential leadership has been essential to the progress being seen in communities across the region. In 2004, then-president George W. Bush led a region-wide effort involving more than 1,500 citizens from conservation organizations, the business community, academia, Tribes, and state and federal government to craft a plan to restore and protect the Great Lakes. In 2009, newly elected President Barack Obama launched the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, a multi-year investment in the Great Lakes aimed at funding the region-wide strategy by confronting urgent problems such as invasive species, habitat destruction, toxic pollution and run-off from farms and cities.
The next president and U.S. Congress face tough budget choices. Ongoing budget negotiations over infrastructure, taxes, and healthcare could affect critical restoration efforts. Yet the drinking water problems in Flint, Mich., Toledo, Ohio, and communities across the region demonstrate why Great Lakes restoration must remain a budgetary priority.
Voters in Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania and New York want the federal government to continue its investment to protect and restore the Great Lakes, according to a poll commissioned by the Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition. More than six in ten residents – 63 percent – strongly support continued funding. Only 9 percent want to reduce federal funds for this purpose. Voters from across the political spectrum – Republicans, Democrats and Independents – support Great Lakes restoration work. The poll also found that voters would be less likely to vote for a presidential candidate promising cuts to federal restoration funds.
About the Great Lakes Restoration conference
The more than 300 people will be attending the Great Lakes restoration conference to hear from experts discussing current and emerging Great Lakes issues, including the threat of harmful algal blooms, environmental justice issues including developments in Flint, Mich., as well as successful restoration efforts in communities around the region. The conference also features field trips so that attendees can explore and see first-hand issues being discussed at the conference. Read the agenda.
Follow conference proceedings at http://conference.healthylakes.org/ and Detroit Public Television’s www.GreatLakesNow.org, as well as on Twitter by following @HealthyLakes. Plenary sessions will be broadcast live on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/healthylakes/.
Background on federal Great Lakes restoration efforts
Over the past seven years, the U.S. Congress and Obama Administration has invested more than $2.2 billion in more than 2,900 projects through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative to clean up toxic pollution, restore fish and wildlife habitat, reduce runoff from cities and farms, and combat invasive species. A Brookings Institute study has confirmed how effective these funds are: every $1 investment in Great Lakes restoration leads to at least $2 in economic benefit in the form of increased fishing, tourism, and property values.
The Healing Our Waters – Great Lakes Coalition has chronicled more than 140 successful projects in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, New York, Wisconsin, and Minnesota.
The Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition consists of more than 140 environmental, conservation, outdoor recreation organizations, zoos, aquariums and museums representing millions of people, whose common goal is to restore and protect the Great Lakes. Learn more at www.healthylakes.org or follow us on Twitter @healthylakes.
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Meet Canada's Top Winner At 65th Grammy Awards
Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images
Canada’s top Grammy winner on Sunday was Tobias Jesso Jr., a Vancouver native who made history as the first recipient of the Songwriter of the Year award.
"I feel very humbled and grateful to have won this award," Jesso told reporters in the press room, "but I kind of feel like this is more for all the other songwriters out there in all the other years that this category could have been a thing."
The 37-year-old was honoured for his contribution to crafting Adele’s “To Be Loved” and “Can I Get It,” Harry Styles’ “Boyfriend,” Omar Apollo’s “No Good Reason,” King Princess’ “Dotted Lines,” FKA Twigs’ “Careless” and “Thank You Song” and fellow Canadian Orville Peck’s “C’mon Baby Cry.”
Jesso Jr. picked up the award during the Grammys premiere ceremony on Sunday afternoon.
As a co-writer on Harry’s House, which won Album of the Year, Jesso Jr. also earns a Grammy in that category.
MORE GRAMMYS COVERAGE:
Beyoncé Makes History At 65th Grammy Awards
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It was the first time Jesso Jr. has been up for Grammys (he was also nominated for Album of the Year thanks to his contribution to Adele’s 30) but he was nominated for Songwriter of the Year at the JUNO Awards in 2016 (he lost to The Weeknd).
Jesso Jr. released his debut album Goon in 2015 and co-wrote “When We Were Young” and “Lay Me Down” for Adele’s album 25.
“As a Grammy winner hopefully I will get a lot more friends,” Jesso Jr. joked, adding that he is anxious to work next with “anyone super famous and successful."
Montreal’s Yannick Nézet-Séguin also won two Grammys: Best Opera Recording and Best Classical Vocal Performance.
Other Canadian winners on Sunday were Drake and Michael Bublé. Matthew Stevens, who was born in Toronto, shared the Grammy for Best Instrumental Jazz Album (for New Standards Vol. 1) with Vancouver-born, Calgary-raised Kris Davis.
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About Tuhin
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Tuhin A. Sinha is an Indian author. He is known for the novels, The Edge of Desire, Of Love and Politics, That Thing Called Love and 22 Yards.
Tuhin was born and brought up in Jamshedpur, Jharkhand. He completed his schooling at Loyola School, and obtained a B.Com (H) from the Hindu College, University of Delhi and Post Graduate Diploma in Advertising and Communications Management from the National Institute of Advertising, New Delhi. He is married to Ramyani DasGupta Sinha.
Tuhin's first novel, That Thing called Love, was released on 25 September 2006. It is set in the backdrop of Mumbai monsoons and explores relationships in the contemporary urban set up of the city, in the phase of changing moralities. The book has sold over 70,000 copies.
The Captain is his second novel and is a chronicle of a fictitious Indian Cricket Team Captain's journey through the fickleness of life and the cricket world. The novel was originally published as "22 Yards" in August 2008 by Westland. Later Rupa Publishers re-published it in 2011 with a new name.
Both That Thing Called Love and The Captain have been brought out in the Hindi and Bengali languages as well. Regional language versions were published by Diamond Books, Delhi. The Marathi version of That Thing Called Love is being published by Mehta Publishing House, Pune.
Of Love and Politics, published by Hachette India was released on 2 July 2010 at IHC, New Delhi by renowned politician, Ravi Shankar Prasad and TV journalist Bhupendra Chaubey. The Delhi event was followed by high profile events in Mumbai, Kolkata, Bangalore and Pune. The book is known for its peculiar interplay between personal relationships and political alliances which are present throughout the book.
Apart from writing novels, Tuhin has contributed guest columns to India's leading print media publications. They include The Times of India and Grazia.
Tuhin has also scripted several TV popular Tv shows. He is presently the co-writer of one of the most popular soaps on Star Plus, Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai. Some of the other serials on which he has worked include Pyar Ki Kashti Mein (Star One-2004-5), Koi Dil Mein hai (Sony-2004-5), Dekho Magar Pyar se (Star 2005) and Waqt Batayega Kaun Apna Kaun Paraya (Sony-2008). A TV film, Phir Se, based on a story written by Tuhin and premiered on Sahara One, won the RAPA Award for the best tele-film in 2005.
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Copyrights Reswerved © 2012 Tuhin A. Sinha
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Social Welfare in East Asia and the Pacific
Information Type: Book ReviewTopic: Social Work
Sharlene B.C.L Furuto (Ed)
Published by: New York: Columbia University Press, 2013, 304 pages
Review author: Aytakin Huseynli, Brown School, Washington University
Book review published: November 28, 2017
Social Welfare in East Asia and the Pacific is an excellent general work on social welfare and social work in selected countries in East Asia and the Pacific. It fills the gap in academic literature on global social welfare and social work, offering a useful examination of international social development, welfare and social policy in countries that are less well represented in literature. The editor, Sharlene B.C.L. Furuto (Ed), manages to incorporate historical and cultural background, social welfare provisions and social work practice. Examples of developed and developing nations within the the region help readers appreciate the diversity in trends and challenges of this area.
This book begins with an overview of social challenges, the status of social welfare and social work practice in eleven East Asian and the Pacific countries: Hong Kong SAR, Taiwan, South Korea, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Guam, Samoa and American Samoa.
Written by subject specialists, each chapter begins with historical events important in the development of these countries such as colonization, war, and civil war and genocide, followed by the history, structure and ideologies of social welfare in these countries. After discussing contemporary social issues, the authors give general information current status of the social work profession and education.
With the exception of China and Thailand, the Pacific countries discussed in this book were colonized, and as a result suffered economically, politically, socially and emotionally, with varying levels of successful recovery. Cambodia, Indonesia, the Micronesian region, and Samoa are still not faring well economically, while Hong Kong SAR, Taiwan, and South Korea continue to improve their standards of living. Today, Indonesia, South Korea and Samoa are independent republics; American Samoa, Cambodia, Hong Kong SAR, Taiwan, Malaysia and Thailand are democracies, and China is communist. With differing governance and history, these countries have developed independent social welfare systems. Where government ownership is high, in for example South Korea, Hong Kong SAR, Taiwan, and Thailand, we see well organized and sustainable welfare policies and services; however, in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Samoa where government ownership is low, people enjoy fewer services and policies. Social welfare seems well established in countries whose government is transparent, economically stable, fiscally sound and social-policy oriented.
The social work profession and social work education, are intrinsically connected to the history and pace of development of the countries studied here. Early social work education programs started in South Korea (1947), Hong Kong SAR (1950), Taiwan (1950), Thailand (1950) and Indonesia (1957). Twenty years later social work education programs became available in Malaysia (1970), the Micronesian region (1980), Samoa (1990), and more recently in Cambodia (2008). Social work education in China, was interrupted when the Chinese Communist Party came to power in 1949, but reemerged in 1984.
Asian and Pacific cultures seem to share more similarities than with the divergent cultures of Europe and the United States. They clearly face similar social issues such as poverty, aging, child welfare; but some are localized- for example, one child issue, rural poverty, lonely elderly, human trafficking, young pregnancy, early marriages, youth delinquency, discrimination against migrants, health, child labor, imported brides, conflicts with neighboring countries and undocumented laborers. Religion – mainly Confucianism and Buddhism – place group and family needs over personal ones, and value highly the family and encourage people to seek help within their families and clans. In the Pacific Islands, different indigenous cultures play a prevailing role in approaching the system for help that require culture-specific social work practice. Cultural barriers were obvious obstacles for effective practice of social work in the region, and in the majority of the countries studied here, social work is confused with charity and volunteerism.
The book ends with selected best practices from the countries featured in the book, which are applicable to countries which share similar cultural values and historical events.
In conclusion, Social Welfare in East Asia and the Pacific is a valuable resource on regional social welfare by focusing on social welfare systems in East Asia and the Pacific and showing social work as a vital part of social welfare and to further overall progress. However, if Furuto had selected fewer countries to discuss, she could have offered a more detailed, in-depth analysis of the issues.
Aytakin Huseynli is a PhD student at Brown School of Social Work, Washington University. He is also the founder and a board member of the Azerbaijan Social Work Public Union.
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Lisa J. Farkouh, MD
(Not yet rated)
Maternal-Fetal Medicine
Northwest Perinatal Center - East (503) 482-1800
Northwest Perinatal Center - West (503) 297-3660
Lisa Farkouh, MD, is a board-certified maternal-fetal medicine physician and surgeon at Northwest Perinatal Center in Portland, Oregon.
Dr. Farkouh grew up in New York City. She was first introduced to medicine and realized her calling as a high school student working summers in the research lab of her cousin, a surgeon. Instilled with a strong work ethic by her first-generation American parents, she was accepted into an accelerated undergraduate/medical school program as a high school senior. As part of this six-year program, she received her undergraduate degree in biology from Union College in Schenectady, New York, and her medical degree from Albany Medical College, also in New York. The program required participation in summer internships, which is where she was introduced to Maternal-Fetal Medicine, publishing her first paper and discovering her field.
Dr. Farkouh completed her OB/GYN residency at the State University of New York in Stony Brook and her Maternal-Fetal Medicine fellowship at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. After completing her fellowship in 1997, she remained in Denver as a perinatologist in private practice for 16 years. She also served as the associate director of Maternal-Fetal Medicine at Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center-Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children and as the medical director of the Center for Perinatal Medicine at Exempla St. Joseph Hospital, both in Denver.
In caring for women with high-risk pregnancies, Dr. Farkouh’s passion is making sure her patients and their families understand what is happening, all their questions are answered and they never leave feeling confused. Her goal is to care for the whole patient, getting to know her, her family and their situation to arrive at treatment and management plans that are best for them. Clinically, she has particular interest in vaccinations during pregnancy. She is also internationally recognized in the area of delayed-interval delivery in multifetal pregnancies. This procedure can be used in select instances of multiple gestations to deliver one sibling and allow the other(s) to remain in the uterus for further development.
Dr. Farkouh and her family recently relocated to the Portland area from Denver. She and her husband and their two young daughters enjoy the outdoors, and she has recently started teaching her kids to ski.
Providence Portland Medical Center
Providence St. Vincent Medical Center
Maternal-Fetal Medicine, American Board of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2001
Maternal Fetal Medicine, University Of Colorado Health Sciences Center, 1997
OB/GYN, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1995
OB/GYN, Temple Univeristy Hospital, 1993
Doctor of Medicine, Albany Medical College, 1991
Bachelor of Science, Biology, Union College, 1989
American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine
Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine
Oregon Medical Association
Thyroid Disease in Pregnancy: An Update, Perinatal Progress, August, 2016
Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy: An Update, Perinatal Progress, April, 2015
High-risk Obstetrics
Northwest Perinatal Center Open on Portland's...
Northwest Perinatal Center - East
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2023-14/0022/en_head.json.gz/6716
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25th Anniversary Tour of Mamma Mia! Will Launch This Fall
See Who's Starring in U.K. and International Tour of Mamma Mia!
Meet The New Stars of West End's Mamma Mia!
West End's Mamma Mia! Welcomes New Stars to the Stage October 10
West End's Mamma Mia! Announces Its New Stars
Awards Olivier Awards Reveal 2023 Industry Recognition Recipients
The special career awards honor leaders in the British theatrical world.
By Margaret Hall
Amanda Parker, Andrew Bruce, Pippa Ailion, and Peter Wilson
The Olivier Awards have announced the recipients of their Industry Recognition Award ahead of the April 2 ceremony. Nominees for the competitive production, design, and performance categories were announced February 28. Read the complete list here.
The honors, which celebrations individuals who have demonstrated excellent leadership within the British theatrical world, will be awarded to Pippa Ailion, Andrew Bruce, Amanda Parker and Peter Wilson.
Ailion is a casting director, former resident associate director of the Old Vic, and a Drama teacher. As a casting director, she has organized more than 200 productions internationally, including the current West End productions of Ain’t Too Proud; Moulin Rouge! The Musical; TINA – The Tina Turner Musical; The Book of Mormon; and The Lion King.
Bruce is a sound designer who began his career in opera prior to founding Autograph Sound Recording, the leading British sound design and audio equipment rental company. His West End design credits include Les Misérables, Chess, Into the Woods, Mamma Mia!, Sweeney Todd, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, and Mary Poppins.
Parker is an activist and advocate for creative, contractual, and economic rights within the UK's arts sector workforce. A former BBC broadcaster, she oversaw the UK's first industry wide research into gender diversity in television directing, as well as many more equality, diversity, and inclusion campaigns.
Wilson is the executive chairman and joint chief executive of PW Productions. Additionally, he is the former producer for Norwich's Theatre Royal, and a board member of Theatre Royal Stratford East. As producer and director he has worked with the National Theatre, the RSC, Matthew Bourne, Ed Hall, I Fagiolini, Peter Hall, Stephen Daldry, Hampstead Theatre, and the Tricycle.
The Industry Recognition Award Recipients will be honored at the Nominees Celebration event March 17, prior to the April 2 Olivier Awards ceremony.
For a complete look at the 2023 nominees for London's highest theatrical honors, click here.
Andrew Bruce
Peter Wilson
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SCOOP4C
The Stakeholder Community: Once-Only Principle for Citizens (SCOOP4C) project is implemented by five partners:
University Koblenz-Landau
]init[ Digital Communication
Centre for Research and Technology Hellas
e-Governance Academy
IT-Kommunal GmbH
The University of Koblenz-Landau is a mid-size German University with more than 16,000 students subscribed to various study programs that are run by a total of eight faculties. The faculty of computer science – being among the larger computer science faculties in Germany, and being very active in EU-funded projects - has twenty-five working groups ranging in their focus from core to applied computer sciences. The departments of the faculty cover computer science, computer visualistics, information systems, and management of information.
The research group e-government is part of the Department for Information Systems Research and investigates aspects of ICT usage in the public sector. Topics in research cover issues such as e-government and e-participation policies and strategies, data and process analysis and simulation process, ontology developments, content structuring and knowledge portals, stakeholder engagement, standardisation and interoperability, and evaluation of ICT solutions for the public sector. The group's research is driven by design science research, supporting the transition of government, governance and citizen engagement to innovative interaction modes in the Internet.
More details can be found on the group's web page: http://www.uni-koblenz.de/agvinf/
The University of Koblenz-Landau is coordinating SCOOP4C.
]init[ Digital Communication is one of the leading German digital communication services providers. National and international public administrations, financial institutions, and industry enterprises place their trust in ]init[‘s 20 years of expertise in e-government IT projects and over 300 staff. ]init[‘s full-service portfolio encompasses IT consulting services, software development, communication design, content creation, editorial and customer service, operations and maintenance.
The company was founded in 1995 as a web programming start-up. Today, ]init[‘s experts create tailor-made e-government and digital communication solutions. ]init[ is financially and technologically independent, relying solely on the success of client projects. In addition to its headquarters in Berlin, ]init[ has a number of branches in Germany and an office in Brussels.
]init[ has long-standing experience in working with public administrations and international organisations and has been built around their specific project requirements, such as high public accountability, complex institutional procedures and aims, and diverse target audiences. Thus, ]init[ offers the full range of modern IT services and digital communication under one roof – from data analysis and modelling, requirements engineering, IT consulting on topics such as IT security and interoperability, to conceptually designing and visualising web applications, multimedia content production, and operating numerous e-government applications in ]init[‘s own security certified data centre.
The Centre for Research and Technology-Hellas (CERTH) is the only research centre in Northern Greece and one of the largest in the country. CERTH has received numerous awards and distinctions such as the European Descartes Prize, the European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant, Microsoft International Contest Prize, the Trading Agents Competition Award and many more and is listed among the Top-20 EU Research Centres with the highest participation in FP7 competitive research grants.
The Information Technologies Institute (CERTH / ITI) is one of the leading Institutions of Greece in the fields of Informatics, Telematics and Telecommunications, with long experience in numerous European and national R&D projects. For the last 10 years, the publication record of ITI includes more than 150 scientific publications in international journals, more than 400 publications in conferences and 45 books and book chapters.
CERTH-ITI has yearlong experience in e-governance and policy making with expertise in public service provision, public policy making, user centricity, stakeholder engagement, identification of good practice, and lately relevant to Linked Data and Open Data, including Open Governmental Data and Open Statistical Data.
For more information see: www.certh.gr, www.iti.gr, islab.uom.gr
The e-Governance Academy (eGA) is a think tank and consultancy organization founded for the creation and transfer of knowledge and best practice concerning e-governance, e-democracy, national cyber security and the development of open information societies. It creates and transfers knowledge and best practices on e-governance, e-democracy, open information societies and national cyber security.
eGA trains and advises leaders and stakeholders in using information and communications technology (ICT) to increase government efficiency and to improve democratic processes. Additionally, in cooperation with IT-companies eGA assists in the implementation of e-government technical solutions.
eGA has trained 3000 officials from more than 50 countries and led or participated in more than 60 international ICT projects on the national, local and organizational levels. It has mainly worked in transitional societies, especially in Central, Eastern Europe and in Africa. Additional cooperation projects have taken place with EU countries such as the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden, Latvia etc.
eGA is an independent and mission-based non-profit, non-governmental organisation, jointly brought into existence by the United Nations Development Programme, Open Society Institute and the Government of Estonia in 2002.
IT-Kommunal GmbH is an IT service provider for cities and towns in Austria, constituted as a public-private-partnership with public shareholders. The company’s main objective is to allocate high quality IT-solutions, which are usually developed in close cooperation with its customers. As a result the provided services are fully matched to the specific needs of municipalities and are later on made available on favourable conditions and easy terms to a wide range of users.
Beside the specialization on IT services for municipalities, IT-Kommunal covers furthermore areas such as consulting (for Austrian public sector as well as cooperation and international projects), provision of online media and web-2.0 platforms and provision of specialized could-services for local authorities (e.g. E-government – online forms).
IT-Kommunal was in the past already involved in different EU projects as well as multiple national projects.
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2023-14/0022/en_head.json.gz/8323
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Stories of American history, tradition, heroism, weaponry and war.
Air Force Col. (ret.) Joseph Kittinger, who set parachute record, dies
Kittinger, a Vietnam War fighter pilot and former POW, parachuted from 19 miles high, a record that stood for more than 50 years.
Last of Mexico’s World War II veterans dies at age 98
The sergeant served with 300 other Mexican soldiers alongside U.S. Army Air Forces in the Philippines.
Six killed after vintage military aircraft collide at Dallas air show
Six people were killed after a B-17 Flying Fortress bomber and a P-63 Kingcobra fighter plane crashed during a Dallas air show Saturday, officials said.
Historic military planes collide at Dallas air show
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and a Bell P-63 Kingcobra collided and crashed, authorities say.
Military identifies remains of WWII B-17 crew member taken prisoner
Tech. Sgt. William F. Teaff was assigned to the 351st Bombardment Squadron, 100th Bombardment Group (Heavy), 8th Air Force, when his plane was shot down in March 1944.
23 things veterans may carry for life
Tinnitus, knee pain, an old pair of combat boots.
New Hindenburg documentary sheds light on the decades-old disaster
It's been 84 years since airship Hindenburg crashed in Lakehurst, New Jersey.
Thousands of name errors possible in new Korean War remembrance wall, advocates fear
Data errors mean that there could be hundreds of mistakes included on the planned Wall of Remembrance at the Korean War Veterans Memorial in the nation's capital.
National Vietnam Veterans Day celebrations adapt for second year in pandemic
Vietnam Veterans Day is March 29.
31 presidents who served in the military
A list of all the U.S. Presidents that served in the military.
The long road to an independent Air Force
The Air Force celebrates its 73rd birthday today. But its creation was controversial for decades.
Hitler released his failed plan to invade England 80 years ago today
Operation Sea Lion was an amphibious invasion intended to result in the German defeat of England.
A brief history of the Korean War
The "Forgotten War" in Korea broke out 70 years ago along the 38th parallel. It hasn't officially ended.
The quest to recover one Vietnam-era Air Force pilot lost in Lake Huron crash
On June 13, 1966, U.S. Air Force Maj. William J. Vinopal climbed into his Convair F-106A Delta Dart, a single-seat, flight interceptor aircraft, for a routine training mission over the lake. It would turn out to be his last flight. Now, over 50 years later, a group of veterans is on a mission to locate the wreckage and recover Vinopal’s remains.
How one organization is working to correct cases of Jewish WWII soldiers mistakenly buried under Latin Cross headstones
“It is very important for us for a soldier who lived and died as an American be acknowledged for posterity as an American. It is also equally important for us that a soldier who lived and died as a Jew, be recognized as a Jew.”
These Air Corps pilots’ actions at Pearl Harbor made them among the first heroes of World War II
Two heroic American aviators led a spirited defense against the Japanese at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941.
Air Force and Army veteran duo aims to restore WWII submarine
Air Force veteran Mark Gatton got the idea to save the USS Ling and bring it to Louisville, Ky., when he learned that the sub was going to be scrapped in New Jersey.
The GI Bill should’ve been race neutral, politicos made sure it wasn’t
While white veterans got into college with relative ease, black service members faced limited options and outright denial in their pursuit for educational advancement.
Restored F-117 Nighthawk coming to Reagan Library
A restored F-117A Nighthawk stealth fighter, one of the most iconic aircraft in Air Force history, will soon be on permanent display at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley, California.
Frozen in time, US Embassy a monument to Iran hostage crisis
What initially began as a sit-in devolved into 444 days of captivity for 52 Americans seized in the embassy.
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2023-14/0022/en_head.json.gz/8657
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Gebroe-Hammer’s Philadelphia Multi-Family Brokerage Team Arranges Sale Garnering a $206,818 Per-Unit Price
Dec 27, 2018 | Gebroe-Hammer Associates
Philadelphia, Pa. – With the 2018 multi-family investment year drawing to a close, Gebroe-Hammer Associates has arranged the sale of 22 units at 909 Corinthian Ave., in the Francisville neighborhood of Philadelphia. Sales Associate Joseph Gehler along with Senior Vice President Eli Rosen exclusively represented the seller and procured the buyer in the trade, which garnered a $206,818 per unit sale price.
The turn-of-the-century elevator building is strategically located at the corner of Corinthian Avenue and Cambridge Street, within the city’s trendy Art Museum District alongside Fairmount Park. “This entire 28-block district is undergoing sweeping revitalization and is literally on the front lines of gentrification,” said Gehler, who has been a member of the firm’s Greater Philadelphia brokerage team for two years. “It has tremendous appeal among the young-professional renter base, which accounts for 75% of the overall population and is attracted to the neighborhood’s direct connection to Center City via Ridge Avenue.”
The extremely well maintained, distinct-in-character five-story property features a mix of one- and two-bedroom layouts, on-site parking and laundry facilities. Neighborhood amenities include an array of outdoor leisure opportunities at Fairmount Park. Nearby academic landmarks encompass Girard College and Temple University.
The mass-transit-dependent population is served by SEPTA’s Broad Street Subway stations at Fairmount and Girard as well as trolley route 15 at Girard Avenue and bus routes 2, 33 and 61.
“Similar to so many of the cities in the Northeast, Philadelphia’s outer neighborhoods offer proximity and affordability to a thriving city center, which in this case is Center City,” added Rosen. “In turn, multi-family is benefiting from a rippling effect in terms of sound property-value fundamentals, steady asking-rent appreciation and the establishment of popular of lifestyle service providers and centers that meet the requirements of today’s young and established millennials, academics and even empty nesters.”
In the past six months, the Gebroe-Hammer Philadelphia Metro team has arranged multi-family investment sales encompassing over 775 apartment units sold for more than $126.18 million. The assets were located in Philadelphia city proper as well as area suburbs.
The Gebroe-Hammer Greater Philadelphia team represents clients with investment interests in their urban and suburban submarkets of specialization as well as those that extend throughout the Pennsylvania/New Jersey/New York State geographic area and the greater Northeast. Collaboratively, the team has effectively expanded the firm’s client base from private individual owners to now include REITs, private equity firms and institutional investment entities.
Gebroe-Hammer is the leading and most trusted multi-family investment sales brokerage firm in the Pennsylvania/New Jersey/New York State tri-state region. The firm specializes in suburban and urban high-rise and garden-apartment properties and also markets mixed-use and free-standing office and retail properties. Widely recognized for its consistent sales performance, Gebroe-Hammer is a 14-time CoStar Power Broker and has been named a Top Multi-Family Influencer in the nation.
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About President Emeritus Leo M. Lambert
Leo M. Lambert led Elon’s rise to national prominence from 1999 to 2018, promoting a student-centered culture that values strong relationships between students and their faculty and staff mentors. Focused on developing students as global citizens, ethical leaders and creative problem-solvers, Lambert led two, decade-long strategic plans, creating a model for the modern liberal arts university.
Led by President Lambert, Elon built a national reputation for academic excellence across the curriculum, and for its innovative programs in study abroad, undergraduate research, leadership, interfaith dialogue, civic engagement and community service, and preparing students for meaningful careers and advanced study.
The academic climate of the campus strengthened considerably during his tenure; a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was sheltered in 2010 and both a School of Law (2006) and a School of Health Sciences (2011) were founded.
With a priority on expanding partnerships with K-12 public education, Lambert was instrumental in the creation of the Elon Academy in 2007, an enrichment program for academically talented high school students who have financial need or no family history of college attendance. Lambert also created the Center for Access and Success at Elon, which houses the Odyssey Scholars program, providing outstanding undergraduate students with significant financial aid and mentoring support.
Elon’s physical plant grew tremendously during Lambert’s presidency, with more than 100 new buildings added to the campus. Under President Lambert’s leadership, Elon invested heavily in shaping its residential character, building four major neighborhoods, integrating academic and residence life programs and nurturing a flourishing intellectual climate.
Elon is a member of NCAA Division I athletics and was invited to join the Colonial Athletics Association in 2014. Elon’s varsity athletic facilities were dramatically improved during his tenure and the university acquired the South Campus property to host student recreation and intramural competitions.
Lambert is currently writing a book (with Peter Felten) about placing meaningful mentoring relationships at the heart of undergraduate education (Johns Hopkins University Press). Lambert is also the co-author of “The Undergraduate Experience: Focusing Institutions on What Matters Most,” (Jossey-Bass, 2016) and co-editor of a book about university teaching (Syracuse University Press, 2005). In 2009, he received the inaugural William M. Burke Presidential Award for Excellence in Experiential Education from the National Society for Experiential Education. His alma mater, the State University of New York at Geneseo, awarded him an honorary doctorate of humane letters in 2002. The North Carolina Campus Compact Leo M. Lambert Engaged Leader Award is named in his honor. In 1998, he was named by Change magazine as one of the nation’s outstanding young leaders in higher education.
Dr. Lambert is a member of the board of directors of the Association of Governing Boards, The Washington Center, and the John N. Gardner Institute for Excellence in Undergraduate Education. He has previously served on the board of directors of Association of American Colleges and Universities, the American Council on Education, Campus Compact, Project Pericles, and the NCAA Division I President’s Forum.
Lambert assumed the title of president emeritus on March 1, 2018, and is a professor in the Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education.
Speeches & Articles
Follow Dr. Lambert:
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Home Centers & Initiatives Lakers fans No. 1 in NBA according to new ranking, analysis
Lakers fans No. 1 in NBA according to new ranking, analysis
ATLANTA (Oct. 17, 2019) – A ranking of NBA fans released today by Michael Lewis, Professor of Marketing at Emory University’s Goizueta Business School, puts Los Angeles Lakers fans at the top of the list for loyalty and engagement.
Lewis conducts regular statistical analysis of sport teams’ data (including NFL fans loyalty) to determine the value of fans, including measurements of winning, attendance, pricing, population, and other key factors. Lewis collects and analyzes three consecutive recent years of data to “average out” possible swings and inconsistencies in data.
This year, Lewis’ analysis of NBA teams’ home revenue, Twitter reach, and attendance at away games ranks Lakers fans as the most loyal in the NBA. They are closely followed by the Golden State Warriors, Chicago Bulls, Boston Celtics, and Cleveland Cavaliers. Lewis’ local team, the Atlanta Hawks, came in at number 18 of the 30 NBA teams.
Since Lewis’ last analysis of NBA fans’ loyalty in 2016, the New York Knicks have fallen out of the top five, and the Golden State Warriors have risen in fan loyalty. Lewis attributes much of the Warriors’ ascendance to the team’s recent championship wins and excitement about its star players, including Steph Curry and Kevin Durant.
Even though the Warriors did not win the NBA Championship in 2019, their other wins and outstanding players keep fans engaged and high on the ranking.
“The Warriors are a great example of how powerful brands are created,” Lewis said. “Golden State was a second-tier team for many years, but now, with Curry, Durant, and others winning championships, the Warriors have become a premier brand with a national following of engaged fans. It is not enough to win once. Brands are built through repeated championships.”
They are also built on star players.
“In the current era, the NBA has been the most star-driven sports league,” Lewis said. “Over the last 40 years, the NBA’s story has been the story of Julius Erving, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, and Steph Curry—to name a few. Star power draws fans to the team. When LeBron James was in Cleveland, the Cavs were a top brand. When he moved on, the Cavs quickly moved to being second tier. This means it’s tough to disentangle team loyalty from player loyalty, and that’s reflected in the rankings.”
The teams ranked lowest in fan loyalty are the Washington Wizards (30), followed by the Memphis Grizzlies (29), Charlotte Hornets (28), Brooklyn Nets (27), and Detroit Pistons (26).
Most of the teams at the bottom of the rankings have not had winning seasons or star players in recent years. See the full ranking list here.
Lewis is also Faculty Director at the Emory Marketing Analytics Center. Lewis’ research focuses on issues, such as consumer response to loyalty programs, methods for customer valuation and dynamic pricing. His blog and podcast, Fanalytics with Mike Lewis, provide insights into the research on how sports business works. Follow him on Twitter: @FanalyticsMike and @sport_analytic.
About Goizueta Business School
Business education has been an integral part of Emory University’s identity since 1919. That kind of longevity and significance does not come without a culture built around success and service. Emory University’s Goizueta Business School offers a unique, community-oriented environment paired with the academic prestige of a major research institution. Goizueta trains business leaders of today and tomorrow with an Undergraduate degree program, a Two-Year Full-Time MBA, a One-Year MBA, a Master of Science in Business Analytics, an Evening MBA, an Executive MBA (Weekend and Modular formats), a Doctoral degree and a portfolio of non-degree Emory Executive Education courses. Together, the Goizueta community strives to solve the world’s most pressing business problems. The school is named for the late Roberto C. Goizueta, former Chairman and CEO of The Coca-Cola Company.
Marketing Analytics Center
“Subscription fatigue: More companies are charging monthly fees. How much can consumers take?” USA Today
“The Uncomfortable, Messy Truth of Watching This NFL Season,” The Ringer
“Go Viral, Get An ‘A’: Content Marketing Course Puts Gen Z’s TikTok Skills To The Test,” Yahoo!
Goizueta professors release fan equity study
CNBC: No #MarchMadness means plenty of lost revenue
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Eddie Manion
Coastin' In
Eddie "Kingfish" Manion is celebrated for his tenor and baritone saxophone work as a member of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes and as horn director for Little Steven's Disciples of Soul. He is an additional member of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band as well as an original member of Springsteen's other group The Sessions Band. As a long-standing member of The Miami Horns, he appeared on Gary U.S. Bonds' terrific 1981 comeback album Dedication and in the early 90's was a member of the Robert Cray Band.
Full disclosure: not only have I witnessed Mr. Manion in concert as a member of the Jukes, the E Street Band and the Disciples, I once briefly joined him and the Miami Horns onstage during a club show in Belmar, New Jersey back in 1989. But perhaps the less said about that, the better.
With Coastin' In ,the follow-up to his 2015 Nightlife release, Manion steps to the frontlines to present a highly personal piece of work. The album consists of a selection of well-chosen rock and R&B favourites to which the saxophonist applies his rich tones to.
The quickly-likeable album opens with the Charlie Chaplin standard "Smile," leading directly into the classic mid-paced "Spooky." Here Manion's Disciples of Soul bandmate Marc Ribler unloads razor-sharp guitar licks while Andy Burton adds soulful organ.
Originally released by Bread in 1971,"If" has Manion inhabiting the melody with mournful but appropriately elegant shading.
The Beach Boys' "God Only Knows" from 1966 features a sweet female vocal chorus, a lush string section and fellow Disciple of Soul Jack Daly's rumbling bass guitar while Manion's bright sax pierces the proceedings.
For the album's upbeat title track, Manion shifts to a fun, funky mode. Welcome support is provided from Clifford Barnes' B-3 organ and Paul Thompson on stand-up bass trading off during the solo. "Coastin' In" is a Manion original composition.
"He Ain't Heavy He's My Brother," recorded by the Hollies in 1969, has Manion replacing Allan Clarke's vocal melody with aching sax shapes matched by Rob Paparozzi's delicate harmonica.
In an inspired move, Manion and crew blend Steve Winwood's 1988 hit "Roll With It" with the 1966 song "(I'm a) Roadrunner" by Junior Walker & The All Stars. Since Winwood's tune borrowed so liberally from the earlier song, this medley makes perfect sense. The track features a blasting saxophone, forceful drumming from Rich Mercurio and soulful female support vocals during the chorus.
The jazz standard "Deep Purple" features a clean, ringing guitar solo from Mark Strickland.
Coastin' In wraps up with "Yeh, Yeh" a 1965 #1 U.K. hit for Georgie Fame and The Blue Flames. This brief, up-tempo number has a barking sax throughout and returning female vocals on the chorus.
The CD version of Coastin' In includes the bonus track "The Lights are on at Old St. John's." Another Manion original, "St. John's" is a celtic-flavoured seasonal number featuring the saxophonist on lead vocals. A limited edition vinyl release, pressed on translucent blue wax, consists of just the proper 11 song album.
And for fans looking for more music from Eddie "Kingfish" Manion, the saxophonist is already looking forward to a Coastin' In follow-up project in the near future.
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Siddhesh Joshi
I enjoy creating and spreading knowledgeable content for everyone around the world and try my best not to leave even the smallest of mistakes go unnoticed.
Julie Anne Robinson
Other names Julie Ann Robinson
Role Theatre Director
Name Julie Robinson
Years active 1998–present
Shows Blackpool
Occupation Theatre director, television director, film director
Nominations British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Serial, British Academy Television Award for Best Single Drama
Movies The Last Song, One for the Money, Coming Down the Mountain
Similar Jason O'Mara, Bobby Coleman, Daniel Sunjata, Greg Kinnear, Patrick Fischler
Star movies vip access the last song julie anne robinson
Julie Anne Robinson is a British theatre, television, and film director perhaps best known for her work on British television. She earned BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations for directing the first half of the BBC miniseries Blackpool. In 2009, Robinson completed work on her first feature film, the American Touchstone Pictures film The Last Song.
Einmal ist keinmal Julie Anne Robinson Regie ber Stephanie Plum
19982008 Theater and television
20092010 ABC contract and films
Einmal ist keinmal - Julie Anne Robinson (Regie) über Stephanie Plum
1998–2008: Theater and television
Robinson's career began with theatre. In 1998, she directed the play Terms of Abuse; The New York Times' Sheridan Morley wrote that "Julie-Anne Robinson's production never quite manages to hold it all together [...] what might have made for a highly dramatic 50 minutes on television seems sprawling even as a short evening in the theater." However, Robinson received favourable reviews for the play Yard, which she directed later the same year. Scriptwriter Kaite O' Reiley earned the Peggy Ramsay Award for writing the play, which takes place in a butcher shop. The Daily Telegraph wrote that under Robinson's direction, "the cast's constant work with flopping slabs of flesh is both fascinatingly naturalistic and humorously gruesome." Robinson followed with Blagger in 2000; The Daily Telegraph's Charles Spencer remarked that it was "notably well-acted under Julie-Anne Robinson's direction" in his review. In 2000, Morley reviewed the play A Place at the Table as "tightly directed by Julie-Anne Robinson".
Robinson began directing television episodes in 2000, when she helmed an episode of the British soap opera Doctors. From 2001 to 2004, she directed two more episodes of Doctors, along with episodes of Cutting It, No Angels, and Holby City. In 2004, Robinson directed the first half of the miniseries Blackpool. For this, she earned a BAFTA nomination for "Best Drama Serial". When the series was released to American audiences the following year under the name Viva Blackpool, Robinson was among the nominees for the Golden Globe for "Best Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television". Robinson and Blackpool writer Peter Bowker planned to create a spin-off of the miniseries that would take place in Funny Girls, a burlesque cabaret featuring male drag performers located in the town of Blackpool; However, this never materialised. Also in 2004, Robinson directed the play How Love Is Spelt, which Dominic Cavendish of The Daily Telegraph reported "risk[ed] becoming at once disjointed and schematic, but, in Julie Anne Robinson's full-bodied production, it keeps ringing painfully true to life."
From 2005 to 2006, Robinson directed two more episodes for Holby City and the first three episodes of Goldplated. Also in 2006, she began directing episodes for the American television series Grey's Anatomy, beginning with "Band-Aid Covers the Bullet Hole". The episode, which aired on 12 March, was seen by 22.51 million Americans. She also directed the season 3 episode "From a Whisper to a Scream", which aired on 23 November 2006. Robinson's first film, the made-for-television movie Coming Down the Mountain aired on 2 September 2007 on BBC. The movie earned Robinson her second BAFTA nomination, this time for "Best Single Drama". Following this, Robinson directed episodes of more American television series. She directed five episodes of Weeds, Private Practice, and Samantha Who? which aired in 2007 and 2008. Robinson's Grey's Anatomy episodes "Wishin' and Hopin'" and "The Becoming" also aired during this time.
2009–2010: ABC contract and films
In 2009, episodes Robinson had directed for Big Love and Pushing Daisies aired. In addition, Robinson entered a blind directing contract with ABC Studios, which broadcasts Grey's Anatomy. She directed the pilot episode for the ABC series The Middle; The sitcom was picked up on 8 October 2009 and Robinson's pilot aired on 30 September 2009 to an audience of 8.71 million Americans.
Notably in 2009, Robinson accepted her first feature film. She was signed on in May to make her motion picture debut directing Disney's The Last Song, a coming of age drama starring Miley Cyrus and Greg Kinnear based on a novel by Nicholas Sparks. The movie was filmed throughout the summer of 2009 and was released under the Touchstone Pictures banner on 31 March 2010. In August 2009, Warner Brothers announced that Robinson would direct The Last Summer (of You and Me), an adaptation of Ann Brashares' novel by the same name. Robinson's second feature film, One for the Money, based on a novel by Janet Evanovich and starring Katherine Heigl and Jason O'Mara, was released on 27 January 2012.
Robinson is the mother of two children (2010).
Julie Anne Robinson Wikipedia
Similar TopicsBobby Coleman
Daniel Sunjata
Greg Kinnear
Bobby Coleman
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(-) Remove People filter People
(-) Remove Religion filter Religion
(-) Remove Reproduction filter Reproduction
Legal (1) Apply Legal filter
Reproductive Health Arizona (1) Apply Reproductive Health Arizona filter
(-) Remove Articles filter Articles
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 items.
Horatio Robinson Storer (1830–1922)
Horatio Robinson Storer was a surgeon and anti-abortion activist in the 1800s who worked in the field of women’s reproductive health and led the Physicians’ Crusade Against Abortion in the US. Historians credit Storer as being one of the first physicians to distinguish gynecology, the study of diseases affecting women and their reproductive health, as a separate subject from obstetrics, the study of pregnancy and childbirth.
Format: Articles
Subject: People, Reproduction, Religion
Pope Innocent XI (1611-1689)
Pope Innocent XI, born Benedetto Odescalchi, made considerable contributions to the Roman Catholic approach to embryology by condemning several propositions on liberal moral theology in 1679, including two related to abortion and ensoulment. His rejection of these principles strengthened the Church's stance against abortion and for the idea of "hominization," meaning the presence of human qualities before birth.
Subject: People, Religion, Reproduction
Barry Morris Goldwater (1909–1998)
Barry Morris Goldwater was a Republican Arizona Senator and US presidential candidate in the twentieth-century whose policies supported the women's reproductive rights movement. Goldwater, a businessman and Air Force reservist, transitioned into politics in the 1950s. He helped align popular support for a conservative Republican Party in the 1960s. Throughout his life, he worked to maintain personal liberty and to limit governmental intrusion into citizens' private lives. Goldwater, influenced by his wife Margaret (Peggy) Goldwater, supported women's rights to abortions.
Subject: People, Reproduction, Legal, Religion
Pope John Paul II (1920-2005)
Pope John Paul II's views on abortion and embryology have been very influential to the Roman Catholic Church. He strictly forbade abortion and other threats to what he regarded as early human life in his encyclical entitled "Evangelium Vitae," meaning the "Gospel of Life." His authority on moral and social issues was highly regarded during his lifetime.
Pope Paul VI (1897-1978)
Pope Paul VI, born Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini, has been crucial to the clarification of Roman Catholic views on embryos and abortion in recent history. His 1968 encyclical "Humanae Vitae" spoke to the regulation of birth through various methods of contraception and sterilization. This encyclical, a result of Church hesitancy to initiate widespread discussion of the issue in a council of the Synod of Bishops, led to much controversy in the Church but established a firm Catholic position on the issues of birth control and family planning.
Pope Sixtus V (1520-1590)
Known for dropping a long-held distinction in the Catholic Church between the animated and unanimated fetus, Felice Peretti was born in Grottamare, Italy, in 1521, son of a Dalmatian gardener. In his early years, Peretti worked as a swineherd, but soon became involved in the local Minorite convent in Montalto, where he served as a novice at the age of twelve. He went on to study in Montalto, Ferrara, and Bologna, continuing his devotion to religious life, and in 1547 Peretti was ordained as priest in the city of Siena.
Pope Pius IX (1792-1878)
Pope Pius IX, born Giovanni Maria Mastai-Ferretti, marked his contribution to the abortion debate by removing the distinction between an "animated" and "unanimated" fetus from Catholic doctrine, and established the edict that a human should be protected starting from the moment of conception onward. This proclamation made abortion at any time of gestation punishable by excommunication. Pope Pius IX's decision became Canon Law of the Catholic Church.
Father Frank Pavone (1959- )
Father Frank Pavone, a key proponent of the Roman Catholic Church's pro-life movement, has devoted his life's work to ending abortion, euthanasia, embryonic stem cell research, and other techniques and procedures that he believes threaten human life from conception to death. His contributions to the pro-life movement include founding a new religious order called the Missionaries of the Gospel of Life and participating in high-profile protests and television interviews for the pro-life cause.
Pope Pius XII (1876-1958)
Pope Pius XII was born Eugenio Maria Giuseppi Giovanni Pacelli on 2 March 1876 in Rome, Italy, to Virginia and Filippo Pacelli. Known for his oft-disputed role in the Roman Catholic Church's approach to the Nazis and World War II, Pope Pius XII also contributed a number of important documents regarding conception, fertility, abortion, and reproductive control to the Vatican's collection of writings and doctrine on procreation.
Mother Teresa (1910-1997)
Mother Teresa, a Roman Catholic nun known for her charitable work and attention to the poor, was born 26 August 1910. The youngest child of Albanian parents Nikola and Drane Bojaxhiu, she was christened Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu and spent her early life in the place of her birth, present-day Skopje, in the Republic of Macedonia. In addition to her unwavering devotion to serve the sick and the poor, Mother Teresa firmly defended traditional Catholic teachings on more controversial issues, such as contraception and abortion.
Pope Gregory XIV (1535-1591)
Pope Gregory XIV, born Nicolo Sfondrati, reversed the bull of Pope Sixtus V, Effraenatum, under which an abortion at any time of gestation can be punished by excommunication. He supported the Aristotelian distinction between an "animated" and "unanimated" fetus, making abortion of an unanimated fetus punishable by lesser means. This decision contributed to the historical debates within the Roman Catholic Church on when a fetus has a soul, and when abortion was punishable by excommunication.
Pope Pius XI (1857-1939)
Pope Pius XI, born Ambrogio Damiano Achille Ratti, was born to the wealthy owner of a silk factory on 31 May 1857 in Desio, Italy. He was ordained to the priesthood at the age of eighteen, at which time he began a long life devoted to study, peacekeeping, and the betterment of societies around the world. Pius XI is noted here for his contribution to the Roman Catholic Church's early twentieth century approach to issues regarding contraception and abortion, which was presented in his December 1930 encyclical "Casti Connubii."
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Pertandingan-pertandingan
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Seluruh Pertandingan Info Hanya Siaran Langsung
Hak Siar diperoleh dari beIN SPORTS USA
Ligue 1 (2018 - 2024)
Africa Cup of Nations Qualification (2022 - 2023)
CAF Champions League (2022 - 2023)
CAF Confederation Cup (2022 - 2023)
Copa Libertadores (2023 - 2026)
Copa Sudamericana (2023 - 2026)
Recopa Sudamericana (2023 - 2026)
Super Lig (2021 - 2024)
BeIN Sports USA is an English-language pay-TV sports channel in the United States. It is owned by beIN Media Group, which also operates its Spanish-language sister channel, beIN Sports en Español.
BeIN Sports USA launched in the US ahead of the 2012/13 season, announcing itself as the new home for the Spanish La Liga. Before then, the broadcast rights for La Liga in USA had been held primarily by American soccer-themed network, GolTV. However, a higher bid from then-owners Al Jazeera changed the landscape, hence giving soccer fans new ways of following Europe’s top soccer leagues on U.S. TV.
BeIN Sports USA, which was better known as beIN Sports 1 in its early days, first made its debut on DirecTV on August 16, 2012, before joining other platforms such as Dish Network and Verizon Fios. Since then, it has covered a host of sporting events as live, delayed and repeat telecasts from different sports. Disciplines it has covered over the years include motorsports, tennis and professional wrestling, in addition to college sports.
Soccer has constituted a large part of beIN Sports USA’s programming in the past, as the network has not only aired both full and summarized games, but also match analysis and exclusive programs, including documentaries and magazine shows.
BeIN Sports USA’s history of soccer broadcast rights include top leagues such as La Liga, the French Ligue 1, Italian Serie A, Turkish Super Lig, Swiss Super League and English Championship. In the past, it has also covered domestic cup competitions such as the English League Cup, French Cup and Coupe de la Ligue, Coppa Italia and Spanish Copa del Rey.
But beIN Sports USA’s soccer coverage has gone far outside of Europe over the years. Its portfolio has been expanded over time to include continental club competitions such as the Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana from the CONMEBOL region. The network has additionally provided live English-commentary broadcasts for major international tournament, including the Copa America, Africa Cup of Nations and FIFA World Cup Qualifiers. Smaller events such as the Toulon Tournament and international friendlies have also been telecast.
BeIN Sports USA’s content is made available to stream online on the network’s official TV Everywhere service, beIN Sports Connect, which comes at no extra cost to customers of participating TV providers. The latter can be used on PC, Mac and mobile devices via official Android and iOS apps. Alternatively, live streaming of beIN Sports can be done via partner OTT providers.
Info Hanya Siaran Langsung Seluruh Pertandingan
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2023-14/0022/en_head.json.gz/12307
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Parklands to Open The Strand September 30
21 Century Parks, Inc. is set to open the northern end of The Strand at 11:15 a.m. on Friday, September 30. This highly anticipated event will be honored with a ribbon-cutting ceremony near John Floyd Community Building in Pope Lick Park at 11 a.m. on September 30.
Following the ceremony, guests are invited to join 21st Century Parks founder and CEO Dan Jones for a bike ride through The Strand. During the 12-mile, round-trip journey, participants will see a few of The Strand’s special areas, including The Ascent, featuring a three-span bridge more than 670 feet long, and The Palisades—a gorgeous, limestone cliff towering over Floyds Fork.
Completion of this two-mile stretch connects Beckley Creek, Pope Lick, Turkey Run and Broad Run Parks via the Louisville Loop Trail and Floyds Fork. In addition to 20 miles of water trail, Parklands visitors will now have access to 19 miles of continuous, multi-recreational trail for walking, running, biking and exploring.
“The Strand and its three leaping bridges offer visitors beautiful scenery winding along Floyds Fork,” said Parks Director Scott Martin. “Guests interested in a longer journey will be able to hop on the Loop at Shelbyville Road in the north and ride all the way down to Bardstown Road in the south. That’s a 38-mile roundtrip entirely within one park system on a paved pathway dedicated to non-motorized use.”
There are no roadways to access The Strand, so visitors arriving by car will need to park in Pope Lick Park in the north or Turkey Run Park in the south before exploring this new area.
To help celebrate this milestone, Blue Moon Bicycles, exclusive outfitter for bike rentals at The Parklands, will set up at John Floyd Fields in Pope Lick Park from 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. on Friday, September 30. Blue Moon Bicycles will also re-locate their operations to Pope Lick Park throughout the month of October, giving weekend visitors the opportunity to explore The Parklands newest area by bike. Hours of operation for Blue Moon Bicycles are 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. on Saturdays and 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. on Sundays. For more details on pricing, including a special discount for Parklands Members, please visit www.theparklands.org/bikerentals.
If you are interested in exploring The Parklands with a paddling trip on Floyds Fork, check out Blue Moon Canoe & Kayaks at www.bluemooncanoeky.com.
Since opening its first area in 2011, The Parklands of Floyds Fork has quickly become a popular destination for outdoor adventure. With all four parks now open, Louisville’s newest urban park is on track to reach 2 million visits in 2016. For more information on The Strand opening ceremony and The Parklands of Floyds Fork, please visit www.theparklands.org/strandopening or contact Communications Coordinator Anna Rosales-Crone at (502) 815-0267 or [email protected].
About the Louisville Loop
The Louisville Loop is a 100-mile multi-recreational non-motorized path planned to encircle the city and link neighborhoods to parks and civic attractions, creating transportation alternatives and recreation opportunities. 21st Century Parks built 19 miles of the Louisville Loop through The Parklands four parks—Beckley Creek Park, Pope Lick Park, Turkey Run Park and Broad Run Park. These 19 miles will be maintained by The Parklands. Metro Louisville is responsible for construction and funding of the other 81 miles. Learn more about the Louisville Loop project and construction progress at www.LouisvilleLoop.org.
About The Parklands of Floyds Fork
The Parklands of Floyds Fork is a nearly 4,000-acre donor-supported public park system within the Floyds Fork watershed in eastern and southeastern Louisville. The $125 million project was funded through more than $70 million in private donations, combined with almost $50 million from federal, state and local government sources. Ongoing operations and maintenance are funded solely through private donations and an endowment fund. Community members may contribute to the annual fund by becoming a Parklands Member. Learn more at www.theparklands.org/member.
One of the largest and most ambitious metropolitan park projects in the nation, The Parklands is a dream realized by 21st Century Parks, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization established to create and preserve new unexcelled parks that serve as city-shaping infrastructure. 21st Century Parks is responsible for fundraising, land acquisition, construction, and long-term operations of the new park system.
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