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Home » Archives for Matt Dillon
Browsing Tag Matt Dillon Kristen Wiig talks about Imogene, her first project since Saturday Night Live (Video)
By Dylan P. Gadino | September 11, 2012 at 12:31 pm | No comments
In what will be her first major appearance since leaving Saturday Night Live at the end of last season, Kristen Wiig's new big-screen comedy Imogene just premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Although the Hollywood Reporter's review of the film wasn't overly...
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Your query prosecutors returned 37 results. MILLER-EL V. DRETKE[Syllabus]
VAN V. GOLDSTEIN[Syllabus]
CONNICK V. THOMPSON[Syllabus]
UNITED STATES V. RUIZ[Syllabus]
The Fifth and Sixth Amendments do not require the Government to disclose material impeachment evidence prior to entering a plea agreement with a criminal defendant.
MILLER-EL V. COCKRELL[Syllabus]
The Fifth Circuit erred when it declined to issue a certificate of appealability to review the District Court's denial of habeas relief to petitioner.
ROTHGERY V. GILLESPIE COUNTY[Syllabus]
[Syllabus]
BANKS V. DRETKE[Syllabus]
In this Texas capital case, the Fifth Circuit (in an unpublished order) overturned the district court's issuance of habeas corpus relief as to Petitioner Delma Banks' sentence. Banks contends that the Court of Appeals reached this result only by misapplying and misinterpreting well-established 'precedents of this Court regarding, inter alia, prosecutorial misuse of peremptory challenges to exclude African Americans from Banks' petit jury, and trial counsel's ineffective assistance of counsel. Specifically, Banks seeks review by this Court of the following questions: 1. Did the Fifth Circuit commit legal error in rejecting Banks' Brady claim— that the prosecution suppressed material witness impeachment evidence that prejudiced him in the penalty phase of his trial--on the grounds that: (a) the evidence supporting the claim was procedurally defaulted, notwithstanding the fact that, like in Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263 (1999), there was no reasonable basis for concluding that counsel for Banks could have discovered the suppressed evidence prior to or during that trial or state post-conviction proceedings; and (b) the suppressed evidence was immaterial to Banks' death sentence, where the panel neglected to consider that the trial prosecutors viewed the evidence to be of utmost importance to showing a capital sentence was appropriate? 2.Did the Fifth Circuit act contrary to Stricland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984)and Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362 (2000),where it weighed each item of mitigating evidence separately and concluded that no single category would have brought a different result at sentencing without weighing the impact of the evidence collectively? 3. Did the Fifth Circuit act contrary to Harris v. Nelsen, 394 U.S. 286 (1969)and Withrow v. Williams, 507 U.S. 680 (1993) in holding that Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b) does not apply to habeas proceeding because evidentiary hearings in those proceedings are not similar to civil trials? 4. Did the Fifth Circuit err in refusing to consider Bank's jury discrimination claim--virtually identical to one this Court is consider Bank's jury discrimination claim-- virtually identical to one this Court is considering in Miller-El v. Cockrell (No.01-7662)--based upon its conclusions that: (a) the state court's rejection of that claim rested upon an adequate and independent state ground; and that (b) there was inadequate prejudice to Mr. Bank's interest to excuse his counsel's failing to present, at trail, direct and statistical evidence of the prosecution's consistent policy of using peremptory challenges to keep African Americans off felony juries?
CONN V. GABBERT[Syllabus]
WADDINGTON V. SARAUSAD[Syllabus]
HARRIS V. UNITED STATES[Syllabus]
SNYDER V. LOUISIANA[Syllabus]
CARACHURI-ROSENDO V. HOLDER[Syllabus]
FLORIDA V. NIXON[Syllabus]
BOBBY V. BIES[Syllabus]
INS V. ST. CYR[Syllabus]
Amendments that the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 and the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 made to the Immigration and Nationality Act did not affect the federal courts' habeas jurisdiction to decide pure questions of law; nor did they affect the availability of discretionary relief from deportation for aliens whose convictions were obtained through plea agreements before the amendments' effective dates.
UNITED STATES V. MONTALVO-MURILLO, 495 U.S. 711 (1990)[Syllabus]
STENBERG V. CARHART[Syllabus]
1. Whether the Eighth Circuit's adoption of a broad unconstitutional reading of Nebraska's ban on partial -birth abortion, which directly conflicts with the narrower constitutional construction of similar statutes by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals and that of the State officials charged with enforcement of the statute, violates fundamental rules of statutory construction and basic principles of federalism in contradiction of the clear direction of this Court in Webster v. Reproductive Health Services? 2. Whether the Eighth Circuit misapplied this Court's instructions in Planned Parenthood v. Casey by finding that a law banning cruel and unusual methods of killing a partially-born child, is an ""undue burden"" on the right to abortion?"
MASSARO V. UNITED STATES[Syllabus]
Whether a federal criminal defendant, whose new appellate counsel fails to raise, on direct appeal, a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, is procedurally barred from asserting that constitutional claim in a habeas corpus proceeding brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2255.
ASHCROFT V. AL-KIDD[Syllabus]
HUBBARD V. UNITED STATES, 514 U.S. 695 (1995).[Syllabus]
MITCHELL V. UNITED STATES[Syllabus]
GRAY V. MARYLAND, 523 U.S. 185 (1998)[Syllabus]
RIVERA V. ILLINOIS[Syllabus]
GILES V. CALIFORNIA[Syllabus]
PREMO V. MOORE[Syllabus]
BLACK V. UNITED STATES[Syllabus]
SKINNER V. SWITZER[Syllabus]
BROGAN V. UNITED STATES, 522 U.S. 398 (1998)[Syllabus]
AYERS V. BELMONTES[Syllabus]
BREWER V. QUARTERMAN[Syllabus]
SMALL V. UNITED STATES[Syllabus]
KALINA V. FLETCHER, 522 U.S. 118 (1997)[Syllabus]
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U.S. Code › Title 19 › Chapter 12 › Subchapter VI › § 2483 19 U.S. Code § 2483 - Consequential changes in Tariff Schedules of the United States
The President shall from time to time, as appropriate, embody in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States the substance of the relevant provisions of this chapter, and of other Acts affecting import treatment, and actions thereunder, including removal, modification, continuance, or imposition of any rate of duty or other import restriction.
(Pub. L. 93–618, title VI, § 604,Jan. 3, 1975, 88 Stat. 2073; Pub. L. 100–418, title I, §§ 1213(a), 1214(j)(4),Aug. 23, 1988, 102 Stat. 1155, 1158.)
The Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States, referred to in text, is not set out in the Code. See Publication of Harmonized Tariff Schedule note set out under section 1202 of this title.
This chapter, referred to in text, was in the original “this Act”, meaning Pub. L. 93–618, Jan. 3, 1975, 88 Stat. 1978, as amended, which is classified principally to this chapter. For complete classification of this Act to the Code, see References in Text note set out under section 2101 of this title and Tables.
1988—Pub. L. 100–418substituted “Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States” for “Tariff Schedules of the United States” and inserted “removal,” after “including”.
Amendment by Pub. L. 100–418effective Jan. 1, 1989, and applicable with respect to articles entered on or after such date, see section 1217(b)(1) ofPub. L. 100–418, set out as an Effective Date note under section 3001 of this title.
Delegation of Functions
Authority of President under this section to embody rectifications, technical or conforming changes, or similar modifications in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule delegated to the United States Trade Representative by par. (4) of Proc. No. 6969, Jan. 27, 1997, 62 F.R. 4417.
Proc. No. 6914. To Modify the Allocation of Tariff-Rate Quotas for Certain Cheeses
Proc. No. 6914, Aug. 26, 1996, 61 F.R. 45851, provided:
1. On January 1, 1995, Austria, Finland, and Sweden acceded to the European Communities (EC), and the EC customs union of 12 member countries (“EC-12”) was enlarged to a customs union of 15 member countries (“EC-15”). At that time, the EC-12, Austria, Finland, and Sweden withdrew their tariff schedules under the World Trade Organization and applied the common external tariff of the EC-12 to imports into the EC-15. The United States and the EC then entered into negotiations under Article XXIV:6 and Article XXVIII of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 to compensate the United States for the resulting increase in some tariffs on U.S. exports to Austria, Finland, and Sweden.
2. On July 22, 1996, the United States and the EC signed an agreement concluding the negotiations on compensation. To recognize the membership of Austria, Finland, and Sweden in the EC-15, the tariff-rate quota (TRQ) allocations for cheeses from these countries will become part of the total TRQ allocations for cheeses from the EC-15, but will be reserved for use by these countries through 1997.
3. Section 404(d)(3) of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA) (19 U.S.C. 3601
(d)(3)) authorizes the President to allocate the in-quota quantity of a tariff-rate quota for any agricultural product among supplying countries or customs areas and to modify any allocation as the President determines appropriate. Pursuant to section 404(d)(3) of the URAA, I have determined that it is appropriate to modify the TRQ allocations for cheeses by providing that the TRQ allocations for cheeses from Austria, Finland, and Sweden will become part of the total TRQ allocations for cheeses from the EC-15, but will be reserved for use by these countries through 1997.
4. Section 604 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (“Trade Act”) (19 U.S.C. 2483), authorizes the President to embody in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS) the substance of the relevant provisions of that Act, and of other Acts affecting import treatment, and actions thereunder, including the removal, modification, continuance, or imposition of any rate of duty or other import restriction. The modification of the TRQ allocations for cheeses is such an action.
5. In paragraph (3) of Proclamation 6763 of December 23, 1994, I delegated my authority under section 404(d)(3) of the Trade Act [probably means section 404(d)(3) of the URAA, 19 U.S.C. 3601
(d)(3)] to the United States Trade Representative (USTR). I have determined that it is appropriate to authorize the USTR to exercise my authority under section 604 of the Trade Act [19 U.S.C. 2483] to embody in the HTS the substance of any action taken by the USTR under section 404(d)(3) of the URAA.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, WILLIAM J. CLINTON, President of the United States of America, acting under the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, including but not limited to section 301 of title 3, United States Code, section 404(d)(3) of the URAA, and section 604 of the Trade Act do proclaim that:
(1) Additional U.S. notes to chapter 4 of the HTS are modified as specified in the Annex to this proclamation.
(2) The USTR is authorized to exercise my authority under section 604 of the Trade Act [19 U.S.C. 2483] to embody in the HTS the substance of any actions taken by USTR under section 404(d)(3) of the URAA [19 U.S.C. 3601
(d)(3)].
(3) Any provisions of previous proclamations and Executive orders that are inconsistent with the actions taken in this proclamation are superseded to the extent of such inconsistency.
(4) This proclamation is effective on the date of signature of this proclamation, and the modifications to the HTS made by the Annex to this proclamation shall be effective on the dates that are specified in that Annex.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-sixth day of August, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and ninety-six, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and twenty-first.
William J. Clinton.
The Annex of Proclamation 6914, which amended the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States, is not set out under this section because the Harmonized Tariff Schedule is not set out in the Code. See Publication of Harmonized Tariff Schedule note set out under section 1202 of this title.
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U.S. Code › Title 25 › Chapter 22 › § 2002 25 U.S. Code § 2002 - National criteria for home-living situations
Revision of standards (1)
In general The Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of Education, Indian organizations and tribes, and Bureau-funded schools, shall revise the national standards for home-living (dormitory) situations to include such factors as heating, lighting, cooling, adult-child ratios, needs for counselors (including special needs related to off-reservation home-living (dormitory) situations), therapeutic programs, space, and privacy.
Implementation Such standards shall be implemented in Bureau-operated schools, and shall serve as minimum standards for contract or grant schools.
Revision after establishment Once established, any revisions of such standards shall be developed according to the requirements established under section 2017 of this title.
Implementation The Secretary shall implement the revised standards established under this section immediately upon completion of the standards.
In general The Secretary shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress, the tribes, and the affected schools, and publish in the Federal Register, a detailed plan to bring all Bureau-funded schools that provide home-living (dormitory) situations up to the standards established under this section.
Components of plan The plan described in paragraph (1) shall include—
a statement of the relative needs of each Bureau-funded home-living (dormitory) school;
projected future needs of each Bureau-funded home-living (dormitory) school;
detailed information on the status of each school in relation to the standards established under this section;
specific cost estimates for meeting each standard for each such school;
aggregate cost estimates for bringing all such schools into compliance with the criteria established under this section; and
specific timelines for bringing each school into compliance with such standards.
Waiver (1)
In general A tribal governing body or local school board may, in accordance with this subsection, waive the standards established under this section for a school described in subsection (a) of this section.
Inappropriate standards (A)
In general A tribal governing body, or the local school board so designated by the tribal governing body, may waive, in whole or in part, the standards established under this section if such standards are determined by such body or board to be inappropriate for the needs of students from that tribe.
Alternative standards The tribal governing body or school board involved shall, not later than 60 days after providing a waiver under subparagraph (A) for a school, submit to the Director a proposal for alternative standards that take into account the specific needs of the tribe’s children. Such alternative standards shall be established by the Director for the school involved unless specifically rejected by the Director for good cause and in writing provided to the affected tribes or local school board.
Closure for failure to meet standards prohibited No school in operation on or before July 1, 1999 (regardless of compliance or noncompliance with the standards established under this section), may be closed, transferred to another authority, or consolidated, and no program of such a school may be substantially curtailed, because the school failed to meet such standards.
A prior section 2002,Pub. L. 95–561, title XI, § 1122, as added Pub. L. 103–382, title III, § 381,Oct. 20, 1994, 108 Stat. 3984; amended Pub. L. 105–362, title VIII, § 801(c)(2),Nov. 10, 1998, 112 Stat. 3288, related to national criteria for dormitory situations, prior to the general amendment of this chapter by Pub. L. 107–110.
Another prior section 2002,Pub. L. 95–561, title XI, § 1122,Nov. 1, 1978, 92 Stat. 2318; Pub. L. 96–46, § 2(b)(5),Aug. 6, 1979, 93 Stat. 341; Pub. L. 96–88, title III, § 301(a)(1), title V, § 507,Oct. 17, 1979, 93 Stat. 677, 692; Pub. L. 100–297, title V, § 5105,Apr. 28, 1988, 102 Stat. 367, related to national criteria for dormitory situations, prior to the general amendment of this chapter by Pub. L. 103–382.
This is a list of parts within the Code of Federal Regulations for which this US Code section provides rulemaking authority.This list is taken from the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules provided by GPO [Government Printing Office].It is not guaranteed to be accurate or up-to-date, though we do refresh the database weekly. More limitations on accuracy are described at the GPO site.25 CFR - Indians25 CFR Part 36 - MINIMUM ACADEMIC STANDARDS FOR THE BASIC EDUCATION OF INDIAN CHILDREN AND NATIONAL CRITERIA FOR DORMITORY SITUATIONS
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U.S. Code › Title 7 › Chapter 84 › Subchapter II › § 5331 7 U.S. Code § 5331 - Structure of Council
In general (1)
Establishment The President shall establish, within ninety days after October 22, 1990, a National Nutrition Monitoring Advisory Council. The Council shall assist in carrying out the purposes of this chapter, provide scientific and technical advice on the development and implementation of the coordinated program and comprehensive plan, and serve in an advisory capacity to the Secretaries.
Membership The Council shall consist of nine voting members, of whom—
five members shall be appointed by the President based upon recommendations from the Secretaries; and
four members shall be appointed by Congress, of whom—
one shall be appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
one shall be appointed by the minority leader of the House of Representatives;
one shall be appointed by the President pro tempore of the Senate; and
one shall be appointed by the minority leader of the Senate.
Ex officio members The Council also shall include the joint chairpersons of the Board as ex officio nonvoting members.
Selection criteria Each person appointed to the Council shall be selected solely on the basis of an established record of distinguished service and shall be eminent in one of the following fields:
public health, including clinical dietetics, public health nutrition, epidemiology, clinical medicine, health education, or nutrition education;
nutrition monitoring research, including nutrition monitoring and surveillance, food consumption patterns, nutritional anthropology, community nutrition research, nutritional biochemistry, food composition analysis, survey statistics, dietary-intake methodology, or nutrition status methodology; or
food production and distribution, including agriculture, biotechnology, food technology, food engineering, economics, consumer psychology or sociology, food-system management, or food assistance.
Particular representation requirements The Council membership, at all times, shall include at least two representatives from each of the three areas of specialization listed in subsection (b) of this section, and shall have representatives from various geographic areas, the private sector, academia, scientific and professional societies, agriculture, minority organizations, and public interest organizations and shall include a State or local government employee with a specialized interest in nutrition monitoring.
Chairperson The Chairperson of the Council shall be elected from and by the Council membership. The term of office of the Chairperson shall not exceed 5 years. If a vacancy occurs in the Chairpersonship, the Council shall elect a member to fill such vacancy.
Term of office The term of office of each of the voting members of the Council shall be 5 years, except that of the 5 members first appointed by the President, 2 shall be appointed for a term of 2 years, 2 for terms of 3 years, and one for a term of 4 years, as designated by the President at the time of appointment. Any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the expiration of the term for which the predecessor of such member was appointed shall be appointed for the remainder of such term. No voting member shall be eligible to serve continuously for more than 2 consecutive terms.
Initial appointment The initial members of the Council shall be appointed or designated not later than ninety days after October 22, 1990.
Meetings The Council shall meet on a regular basis at the call of the Chairperson, or on the written request of one-third of the members. A majority of the appointed members of the Council shall constitute a quorum.
Limitation on Federal employment Appointed members of the Council may not be employed by the Federal Government and shall be allowed travel expenses as authorized by section 5703 of title 5.
Executive Secretary The Administrator of Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research (if appointed under section 5311
(d) of this title) shall serve as the Executive Secretary of the Council.
Termination The Council shall terminate 10 years after the final comprehensive plan is prepared under section 5313 of this title.
(Pub. L. 101–445, title II, § 201,Oct. 22, 1990, 104 Stat. 1041.)
Ex. Ord. No. 12747. National Nutrition Monitoring Advisory Council
Ex. Ord. No. 12747, Jan. 25, 1991, 56 F.R. 3391, provided:
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, including the National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Act of 1990 (“Act”) (Public Law 101–445, October 22, 1990) [7 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.] and the Federal Advisory Committee Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. App.), it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Establishment. There is established the National Nutrition Monitoring Advisory Council (“Council”). The Council shall assist in carrying out the purposes of the Act, provide scientific and technical advice on the development and implementation of the coordinated program and comprehensive plan required by section 103 of the Act [7 U.S.C. 5313], and serve in an advisory capacity to the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of Health and Human Services (“Secretaries”) with respect to their responsibilities and functions under the Act.
Sec. 2. Membership. (A) Composition. The Council shall consist of nine voting members. Five of the members shall be appointed by the President upon the recommendation of the Secretaries. Four of the members shall be appointed by the Congress, of whom one shall be appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, one shall be appointed by the minority leader of the House of Representatives, one shall be appointed by the President pro tempore of the Senate, and one shall be appointed by the minority leader of the Senate. The Council shall also include the joint chairpersons of the Interagency Board for Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research as ex officio nonvoting members.
(B) Selection Criteria. Each person appointed to the Council shall be selected solely on the basis of an established record of distinguished service and shall be eminent in one of the following fields:
(1) public health, including clinical dietetics, public health nutrition, epidemiology, clinical medicine, health education, or nutrition education;
(2) nutrition monitoring research, including nutrition monitoring and surveillance, food consumption patterns, nutritional anthropology, community nutrition research, nutritional biochemistry, food composition analysis, survey statistics, dietary-intake methodology, or nutrition status methodology; or
(3) food production and distribution, including agriculture, biotechnology, food engineering, economics, consumer psychology or sociology, food-system management, or food assistance.
(C) Particular Representation Requirements. The Council membership, at all times, shall include at least two representatives from each of the three areas of specialization listed in subsection (B), and shall have representatives from various geographic areas, the private sector, academia, scientific and professional societies, agriculture, minority organizations, and public interest organizations, and shall include a State or local government employee with a specialized interest in nutrition monitoring.
(D) Chairperson. The Chairperson of the Council shall be elected from and by the Council membership. The term of office shall not exceed 5 years. If a vacancy occurs in the Chairpersonship, the Council shall elect a member to fill such vacancy.
(E) Term of Office. The term of office of each of the voting members of the Council shall be 5 years, except that of the five members first appointed by the President, two members shall be appointed for a term of 2 years, two members for a term of 3 years, and one for a term of 4 years, as designated by the President at the time of appointment. Any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the expiration of the term for which the predecessor of such member was appointed shall be appointed for the remainder of the term. No voting member shall be eligible to serve continuously for more than two consecutive terms.
(F) Executive Secretary. The Administrator of Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research (if appointed under section 101(d) of the Act [7 U.S.C. 5311
(d)]) shall serve as the Executive Secretary of the Council.
Sec. 3. Functions of the Council. The Council shall:
(a) provide scientific and technical advice on the development and implementation of all components of the coordinated program and the comprehensive plan;
(b) evaluate the scientific and technical quality of the comprehensive plan and the effectiveness of the coordinated program;
(c) recommend to the Secretaries, on an annual basis, means of enhancing the comprehensive plan and the coordinated programs; and
(d) submit to the Secretaries annual reports that shall: (1) contain the components specified in paragraphs (b) and (c); and (2) be included in full in the biennial reports of the Secretaries to the President for transmittal to the Congress under section 102(b) of the Act [7 U.S.C. 5312
(b)].
Sec. 4. Meetings. The Council shall meet on a regular basis at the call of the Chairperson, or on the written request of one-third of the members. A majority of the appointed members of the Council shall constitute a quorum.
Sec. 5. Administration. (a) The heads of executive departments, agencies, and independent instrumentalities shall, to the extent permitted by law, provide the Council, upon request, with such information as it may require for the purposes of carrying out its functions.
(b) Members of the Council shall serve without compensation for their work on the Council. While engaged in the work of the Council, members appointed from among private citizens of the United States may be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, as authorized by law for persons serving intermittently in the Government service (5 U.S.C. 5701–5707). Appointed members of the Council may not be employed by the Federal Government.
(c) To the extent provided by law and subject to the availability of appropriations, the Department of Agriculture shall provide the Council with such administrative services, funds, facilities, staff, and other support services as may be necessary for the performance of its functions.
Sec. 6. General provision. Notwithstanding the provisions of any other Executive order, the functions of the President under the Federal Advisory Committee Act that are applicable to the Council shall be performed by the Secretary of Agriculture, in accordance with guidelines and procedures established by the Administrator of General Services.
Sec. 7. The Council shall terminate 10 years after the final comprehensive plan is prepared under section 103 of the Act.
George Bush.
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Diversity Services Office
"Triple A" Mission
Inclusive Initiatives
Outreach Connections
MSU Law's dedicated staff and distinguished faculty all collaborate toward the goal of making sure each law student's legal educational experience is exceptional. The Diversity Services Office offers a variety of programs and resources to support students and the office's Triple A mission.
A strong support network of friends, colleagues and professionals can help students fulfill their academic, social and career goals.
A. Multicultural Executive Council
The Council streamlines efforts among the multicultural student organizations and serves as a liaison to the Diversity Services Office.
B. Alliance Associations
The goal of these groups are to foster alliances between the Diversity Services Office and individuals from underrepresented populations in law school and the legal profession to ensure their success during their legal education. Student representatives of these populations volunteer to serve as liaisons to the DSO office in order to make sure the needs of their populations are being satisfied while at MSU Law.
Associations such as the Women's Alliance, African Heritage Alliance, and GBLT Alliance, have regularly scheduled programs throughout the academic year.
C. One-on-One Academic and Non-Academic Advising
The Diversity Services Office has an "open-door" policy designed to assist MSU Law students with their day-to-day needs.
D. Student Organizations
At MSU Law, we are proud of the number of student organizations that are committed to promoting diversity in the Law College. Many of these organizations collaborate regularly with the Diversity Services Office to provide support, assistance and programs to the law schools community.
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Celia Ann "Mattie" Blaylock born 1850 in Wisconsin and later raised in Fairfay, Iowa. She left home at the age of 16 and worked as a prostitute in Scott City, Kansas and then later in Dodge City. In 1873 while working in Dodge City, Kansas she met Wyatt Earp. Even though they had a relationship, she continued working her profession. Although they were considered married, it is believed that they were never officially wed.Mattie, along with Wyatt, moved to Tombstone, Arizona Territory to be with the Earp brothers. Mattie suffered from severe headaches and became addicted to Laudanum, the pain killer of the day. After Morgan Earp's assassination on March 18, 1882 she left for Colton, California never hearing from Wyatt again. On July 3, 1888 she took a lethal dose of Laudanum and Alcohol. Her death was ruled a suicide.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1506
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California | Civil Litigation
Asked on: 10/18/13, 9:54 am
I work as a volunteer at an airport information desk. Somone asked me if there was free parking around the airport area. The airport is on "county property" and passengers must pay to park on county property. But there is a street about 3 blocks away from the airport that belongs to the "city". The street doesn't have parking meters so the passengers can park there for free. Many of them do this. Problem: The airport adiministration said that the person I told about parking on the city street because he wanted a free parkig place came to them and said his car was towed and demanded that airport administration pay the towing bill. NOW the airport administration is saying that I am at fault because I was the one that told him he could park free on the city street. I'm not sure that I told him he could only part on the city street for 72 hours. I assume that everyone knows there are limits to how long you can park on a city street. Am I at fault because I didn't tell him about the 72 hour limit or does it become his responsiblity once he decided to park on the city street for free parking? Share This On:
It's his responsibility to comply with state and local laws.... Answered By:
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1507
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COURTESY LEASING, INC. et al. v. CHRISTIAN.S95A1846.(266 Ga. 187)(465 SE2d 443)(1996)CARLEY, Justice.Equity. Fulton Superior Court. Before Judge Gibson, pro hac vice.This case arises from the placement of an outdoor advertising sign on property owned by appellee Mrs. Martha Christian. Alleging that the sign had been placed on her property without her authorization, appellee filed suit for injunctive and legal relief against appellants Courtesy Leasing, Inc. and Pinnacle Outdoor, Inc. The trial court granted appellee an interlocutory injunction against appellants' continuing trespass on her property and, pending further order, also directed appellants to deposit into its registry "all rents, fees, income or other monies generated from the operation of the sign." This appeal is from that order of the trial court.Appellants concede that "[a] continuing trespass may be enjoined in equity. [Cit.]" Lanier v. Ocean Pond Fishing Club, 253 Ga. 549, 550 (2) (322 SE2d 494) (1984). All that they urge on appeal is that the trial court erred in directing them to deposit into its registry all of the "monies generated from the operation of the sign." In this state, however, every court has the power "[t] o control, in the furtherance of justice, the conduct of its officers and all other persons connected with a judicial proceeding before it, in every matter appertaining thereto. . . ." OCGA 15-1-3 (4). Pursuant to this statute, the courts of this state are given wide discretion in the management of the cases over which they preside. Atlanta Newspapers v. Grimes, 216 Ga. 74, 79 (114 SE2d 421) (1960). In this case, the entitlement as between appellee and appellants to any money received by virtue of the sign is in dispute. See OCGA 44-11-7; 44-11-8; 44-11-9. We cannot say that, in ordering appellants to pay those monies into its registry, the trial court abused its discretion. Anderson v. Middleton, 263 Ga. 299 (430 SE2d 748) (1993). See also Anthony v. Anthony, 237 Ga. 872, 875 (230 SE2d 752) (1976) (appointment of a receiver).Swift, Currie, McGhee & Hiers, Susan A. Dewberry, for appellants.DECIDED JANUARY 22, 1996.
POPE v. PULTE HOME CORPORATION. (246 Ga. App. 120) (539 SE2d 842) (2000)CAMP v. EICHELKRAUT et al.; EICHELKRAUT v. CAMP.; NICHOLSON v. CAMP. (246 Ga. App. 275) (539 SE2d 588) (2000)EICHELKRAUT et al. v. CAMP et al. (two cases). (236 Ga. App. 721) (513 SE2d 267) (1999)
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1508
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ROBINSON v. VOLUNTEER STATE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.70418.(175 Ga. App. 292)(333 SE2d 171)(1985)BIRDSONG, Presiding Judge.Action on policy. DeKalb State Court. Before Judge Carlisle.The appellant Theresa Robinson borrowed money from the Georgia Department of Education Credit Union and became disabled while the loan was in debt. She submitted a timely claim for benefits under her credit health and accident insurance in order to pay off her loan, but was refused because the policy excludes coverage of disability caused by a pre-existing condition. It is undisputed that the appellant Robinson never received any notice of such an exclusionary provision and never was given a copy of the insurance policy or certificate of insurance. The authorizing statute requires that the individual policy or group certificate of insurance "shall be delivered to the insured debtor. . . ." OCGA 33-31-7 (c) and see OCGA 33-31-7 (d). On the issue of coverage, the trial court denied summary judgment to appellant, notwithstanding the decision in Investor's Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Norsworthy, 160 Ga. App. 340 (287 SE2d 66), and granted summary judgment to the appellee Volunteer State Life Insurance Company because unlike the policy in Norsworthy, the policy was a blanket policy automatically extended to credit union borrowers, the premiums for which were paid by the credit union (not appellant Robinson) based upon the amount of loans outstanding and not upon the amount of the specific loan. Held:The trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the appellee insurance company and denying summary judgment to appellant Robinson.The authorizing statute plainly provides that the policy or certificate of insurance "shall be delivered to the . . . debtor . . ." (OCGA 33-31-7 (c)), and does not make an exception based upon whether the debtor paid the premium.Moreover, OCGA 33-31-7 (d) specifically requires the policy or certificate to be delivered to the debtor in cases where the debtor pays for the premium. The appellee insurance company urges that this case is unusual in that the credit union paid the premium and was the actual insured, with appellant being more or less the third party beneficiary, whereas in the Norsworthy case and in the ordinary situation, the debtor is the insured and the creditor is the third-party beneficiary. Appellee cites Universal American Life Ins. Co. v. Finance Corp., 118 Ga. App. 160 (162 SE2d 813) which held that the Credit Insurance Act of Georgia "was passed for the benefit of the insured borrower, who pays the premium for the policy, as well as the creditor who makes the loan or extends the credit." (Emphasis supplied.) Id. p. 162.This emphasized language in Universal American Life Ins. Co. merely assumes that the debtor pays the premium and is not intended to say that the debtor is an insured only if he pays the premium. The fact that the debtor does not directly pay the premium for credit life and disability insurance does not make her any less the insured. In Betts v. Brown, 219 Ga. 782, 785 (136 SE2d 365), the Supreme Court held that the Georgia Insurance Code, including the specific credit life, accident and sickness statutes, "evidences an intent that the insured debtor have an interest in this type of insurance and makes various provisions for the protection of that interest." Credit life insurance is " 'insurance on the life of the debtor,' " and not upon the debt. Id. In Betts at p. 786, it was said that the statute "recognizes that it is the debtor who furnishes the insurance in credit transactions"; whether the statute does so is debatable, but there is nothing debatable about the fact that the code specifically gives the debtor the right to have an option to furnish the required amount of credit insurance through existing policies owned or controlled by him or of procuring and furnishing the required coverage through any insurer authorized to transact an insurance business within the state. OCGA 33-31-11. It is therefore clear that, whoever technically "furnishes" the credit insurance or pays the premium, it is by statute intended for the benefit of the debtor as well as for the creditor. If the creditor does not give the debtor a choice and, as in this case, automatically includes the debtor in a blanket policy and does not require even an application for insurance, the statute nevertheless without distinction requires the policy or certificate of insurance be delivered to the debtor. OCGA 33-31-7 (c). The debtor who is not delivered the policy or certificate receives no notice that he may not be covered in a particular instance, and therefore, as in this case, has no chance to "furnish the required amount of insurance through existing policies . . . owned or controlled by him or . . . through any [other] insurer . . . within this state." OCGA 33-31-11. Obviously, in such a case, the debtor sustains the loss contrary to the statutory intent to protect the debtor, and the creditor loses the benefit of the policy for which it paid.Finally, it must be observed that OCGA 33-31-7 (d) provides: "If the individual policy or group certificate of insurance is not delivered to the debtor at the time the indebtedness is incurred and if an identifiable charge is made to him for credit life insurance or credit accident and sickness insurance, a copy of the application for the policy signed by the debtor or a notice of proposed insurance setting forth the name and home office address of the insurer, the name or names of the debtor, the rate or amount of premium separately in connection with credit life insurance and credit accident and sickness insurance coverage, and a brief description of the coverage provided shall be delivered to the debtor at the time the indebtedness is incurred. . . . Upon acceptance of the insurance and within 30 days of [incurrence of the indebtedness], the insurer shall cause the individual policy or group certificate of insurance to be delivered to the debtor." This code subsection specifically requires the policy or certificate to be delivered to the debtor when the debtor and not the creditor pays the premiums.These detailed provisions of subsection (d), in providing that the policy or certificate be delivered where the debtor pays the premium ("identifiable charge[s] . . . made to him" for the group credit insurance), prove that the makers of the statute, in requiring delivery of the policy without such distinction in subsection (c), were well aware of instances where the premium would be paid by the creditor and intended subsection (c) to apply in all cases.We conclude that OCGA 33-31-7 (c) requires delivery of the credit life, accident, or sickness policy or certificate to the debtor, regardless of who pays the premium. The decision in Investor's Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Norsworthy, supra, is controlling; failure of the insurer to deliver the policy or certificate prevents the insurer from relying upon exclusions of which the insured debtor has no notice. Summary judgment should have been awarded to appellant Robinson and denied to the appellee.Christopher D. Parker, Dennis M. Hall, for appellee.Jacqueline L. Payne, for appellant.DECIDED JULY 2, 1985.
BANNER FORD, INC. v. WHITLEY et al.; CREDITHRIFT OF AMERICA, INC. v. WHITLEY et al.; OLD REPUBLIC LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY v. WHITLEY et al. (190 Ga. App. 833) (380 SE2d 489) (1989)
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The Library of Congress > Law Library > Research & Reports > Legal Topics > Norway: Norwegian Criminal Law and the July 22, 2011, Massacre
Norway: Norwegian Criminal Law and the July 22, 2011, Massacre
Research & Reports | Guide to Law Online | Legal Research Guides | Legal Topics | Guides to Our Collections Back to Legal Topics
Anders Breivik, the suspect detained in the July bombing in the government district of Oslo, Norway, and subsequent mass killing on Utøya Island, near Oslo, may face charges under the country’s Penal Code for terrorist crimes, carrying at present a maximum penalty of twenty-one years in prison, or for crimes of humanity, for which the ultimate penalty is thirty years. However, if certain conditions are met, those penalties may be extended five years at a time by means of a system of preventive detention. It is also possible that Breivik, if found to be mentally unfit, could be placed under compulsory mental health care for an indeterminate time. Whatever the nature of the charges against the suspect, however, it is likely that his actions and the determination of his punishment will engender debate in Norway about the adequacy of the criminal justice system to deal with large-scale threats to public safety from extremist elements in society. This report, which is based chiefly on English-language materials, examines some of the current legal provisions in Norwegian law that may apply in the Breivik case and concludes with a look at some of the possible social outcomes that have been posited.
Full Report (PDF, 97KB)
For more information on Norway see: Global Legal Monitor: Norway
Guide to Law Online: Norway
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/ In Brief
« Fundraiser slated at fire de...
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Test drives to help club
Save | The Gloversville Boys & Girls Club will team up with Brown's Ford to host "Drive 4 Ur Community" from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday. Ford Motor Co. will donate $20 to Gloversville Boys & Girls Club for every valid, completed test drive. The company can donate up to $6,000, a news release said. Participants are not pressured to purchase a vehicle to take part, the release said. The driver must have a valid driver's license and be at least 18 years old. People also will enter to win a chance to be a judge on the TV show "American Idol." © Copyright 2014 The Leader Herald. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Search Aspect ( Thomas Nicholson )
[1]Dog's Mouth Spring, Roundhay Park (Roundhay) July 2011.
View of Great Heads Beck in Roundhay Park. To the right of centre is what was originally an old drinking fountain known as Dog's Mouth Spring. In the early years of the 19th Century, under the ownership of Thomas Nicholson, there were many alterations made to the natural landscape of the park. This included the canalisation of Great Heads Beck, a natural stream and the creation of picturesque bridges, stepping stones, mini rapids, pools and drinking spots such as this one. The spring gets its name from the original carving on the soft sandstone which has now virtually disappeared. The carved dog's head can, however, be clearly seen on an old black and white image on the Leodis website, ID: 2004311_57996768. The copper drinking cup suspended from a chain and the stone vessel into which the water flowed have also gone. The Friends of Roundhay Park have restored the stone to allow the spring to emerge from the dog's mouth once again. The stones used to construct the formal edges of the stream are now to be found in the stream-bed as Great Heads Beck has followed its natural course again. Image courtesy of Graham Schofield.[internal reference; 2011712_172365:LEO 5449]
Image shows a hole in a rock from which emerges a spring of water. It can be observed to the left of the path leading down 'The Gorge' as it nears the lake, just before the old stone bridge in Roundhay Park. The Spring is the remains of Dog's Mouth Spring (compare it to an old image on Leodis at 2004311_57996768). The shape of the stone is similar but the rudimentary carving of the dog's head appears to have eroded over time. Originally, a chain with a copper drinking cup was suspended from a fixture immediately above the top of the head. The spring flowed into a stone vessel which was mounted on a carved stone plinth. The recent photograph appears to show the remains of this. The stone vessel would have fit into the circular base but much of the base is buried or missing. The stream, Great Heads Beck, is a natural one but was manipulated in the time of the estate owner, Thomas Nicholson (early part of the nineteenth century) to form mini rapids, meanders and drinking spots such as this one. The sides of the stream were 'canalised' and, now that it has reverted to its natural course, many of the edging stones are scattered in the stream-bed. Image courtesy of Graham Schofield.[internal reference; 2011712_172366:LEO 5450]
In the centre of the image Dog's Mouth Spring can be seen, situated in Great Heads Beck in Roundhay Park. Originally, the head of a dog was crudely carved in the square, soft sandstone rock and the mouth was represented by the hole through which the spring flows. This carving has all but disappeared but the flow of the spring through the rock face has, in recent years, been restored by the Friends of Roundhay Park. In the early part of the nineteenth century the canalisation and manipulation of Great Heads Beck was carried out under the instruction of the estate owner, Thomas Nicholson along with several other developmental schemes for Roundhay Park. The aim was to create a scenic waterway with rustic bridges, stepping stones, pools and mini rapids. The drinking fountain originally had a chain fixed to the rock above the carved dog's head with a copper drinking cup attached. The spring water flowed into a stone vessel mounted on a plinth. To see the drinking fountain as it once was you can view Leodis image 2004311_57996768. The stream has become naturalised again but the stones that once constructed the sides can be found scattered within it. Dog's Mouth Spring is number 6 in the Friends of Roundhay Park Geology Guide, a trail launched in 2008, and a marker stone can be seen to that effect. Image courtesy of Graham Schofield.
[internal reference; 2011712_172367:LEO 5451]
[4]Dog's Mouth Spring, site of stone vessel (Roundhay) July 2011.
Image taken in Roundhay Park at the side of Dog's Mouth Spring in Great Heads Beck. A stone vessel once fitted into the central hollow (see Leodis image 2004311_57996768) Above the vessel there was a porous sandstone rock with a hole. The rock was carved with the stylised face of a dog and its mouth was represented by the hole. The spring emerged from here and a copper drinking cup secured by a chain was provided for visitors to drink the clear water that flowed into the vessel. Dog's Mouth Spring dates from the early 19th Century and was one of the many innovations made by the then owner of the estate, Thomas Nicholson. Recently, (2008) the flow of the spring through the hole in the rock has been restored by The Friends of Roundhay Park but the face of the dog is virtually eroded. Dog's Mouth Spring can be found to the left of the path leading down 'the gorge' as it nears the lake, just before the old stone bridge. Image courtesy of Graham Schofield.[internal reference; 2011712_172368:LEO 5452]
[5]Roundhay Park, Castle Ruin (Roundhay) C1950s.
Image shows the ruined castle in Roundhay Park built in 1821 by George Nettleton for the owner of the park at the time, Thomas Nicholson. It was intended as an ornamental feature to provide entertainment for the family. The daughters of Thomas Nicholson took their sewing and enjoyed tea there.[internal reference; 20061019_162142:LEO 1336]
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Dog Days of Summer Are Here The sun is beating down on us, the thermometer is stuck at 90 degrees and there’s not a breath of fresh air. The dog days of summer are here! Ancient astronomers in Mediterranean countries came up with the phrase “dog days” for the hottest period of the summer. The dog days arrive around July 4 and are here to stay through August 11. This conjunction happened to coincide with the worst days of summer, when folks were especially plagued by disease and discomfort. The blood supply typically teeters at low levels during the summer months due to travel schedules and the closure of schools and colleges—the source of 20 percent of blood donations. To that end, we want you to know the air conditioning is on at American Red Cross blood donation drives throughout the region. So make plans to escape the heat donating blood! Locally, you may give blood on Tuesday, July 13, 2010 from 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. at United Methodist Church located at the corner of 2nd and N. Rockdale Street in Lexington. Return to top
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1513
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found 17 items where the city is Yucaipa and the state is California. Showing page 1 of 1.
search: San Bernardino County, CA. Yucaipa Branch Library.
( Yucaipa, California United States)
[Polaris] Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Calimesa Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Chapman Heights Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Dunlap Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Green Valley High School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Green Valley Independent Study.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Inland Leaders Charter School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Meadow Creek Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Oak View Hs & Education Center.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Park View Middle School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Ridgeview Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Valley Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Wildwood Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Yucaipa Elementary School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Yucaipa High School.
Yucaipa-Calimesa Joint Unified School District. Yucaipa High School Ninth Grade Campus.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1514
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LifeSize Looks to Change Telepresence EquationLarry Walsh
in ChannelnomicsWith its new Unity line of high-definition, easy-to-deploy and relatively low-cost desktop and conference room video conferencing products, LifeSize is looking to change the telepresence equation to one that doesn’t require expensive, complicated specialty room deployments. As LifeSize, a subsidiary of Logitech, aptly says, it’s taking telepresence out of the corner office.
...The new LifeSize Unity products is an important evolutionary step in bringing down the costs and improving the user experience of what will undoubtedly become mainstream technology.
See the Report
> LifeSize Looks to Change Telepresence Equation
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1515
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Home » Local News » Let’s work to prevent heart disease
Let’s work to prevent heart disease Health Matters
Dr. Karen G. Cloninger
February is American Heart Month and a good time to think about the health of our hearts. Heart disease is still the number one cause of death in both men and women in the United States. Coronary heart disease, also known as coronary artery disease, is the most common type of heart disease. Every year about 785,000 Americans have their first heart attack and another 470,000, who have previously had a heart attack, have another one.
There are conditions and lifestyle factors that put people at higher risk of developing heart disease. There are some risk factors that cannot be changed, treated or modified. These include increasing age, heredity, race and gender. However there are other risk factors that can be changed, treated or modified and, by doing so, reduce your risk for heart disease. These risk factors include hypertension, diabetes mellitus, high cholesterol levels, tobacco use and exposure, physical inactivity, and overweight/obesity. The first step in reducing your risk is to know your risk factors and then take steps to treat or eliminate them.
High blood pressure or hypertension is diagnosed when blood pressure readings are greater than or equal to 140/90. A normal blood pressure is less than 120/80. The optimal level for total cholesterol is less than 200. The goal for LDL, or bad, cholesterol varies depending on your overall risk. Your physician can help you determine what your optimal goal is. Studies have shown that in people without heart disease, lowering cholesterol and blood pressure can reduce the risk of developing heart disease. In people with heart disease, lowering cholesterol and blood pressure can reduce the risk of having a heart attack, dying from a heart attack or requiring heart bypass surgery or angioplasty. Eating a healthy diet, exercising regularly, maintaining a normal body weight, and taking medications, when needed, can help achieve these goals.
People with diabetes mellitus are at particularly high risk of developing cardiovascular disease including heart attack, stroke, heart failure and peripheral arterial disease. The optimal fasting blood glucose, or blood sugar, level is less than 100. Diabetes is diagnosed when fasting blood glucose is greater than or equal to 126. Losing weight, eating healthy, and increasing physical activity can prevent or delay the onset of diabetes in some people. Once someone is diagnosed with diabetes, it is important that they work closely with their physician and healthcare team to keep their blood glucose under optimal control since this may reduce their risk of complications, including heart disease. CMC-Lincoln has advanced inpatient diabetes certification. Free outpatient classes are offered by the CMC-Lincoln Diabetic Services every month in Lincolnton and Denver. For more information, please contact 980-212-6037.
Living a healthy lifestyle is something that we all can and should be doing to reduce our risk of heart disease as well as hypertension, diabetes mellitus and high cholesterol. Eating a healthy diet that is rich in fresh fruits, vegetables and whole grains and low in salt, saturated fats and cholesterol is recommended. At least 150 minutes of moderate exercise is recommended each week. Both of these can help with attaining and maintaining a healthy weight. The body mass index (BMI) is a measure of weight relative to height and should be less than 25. There is a BMI calculator on the www.heart.org website under “Getting Healthy/Weight Managementâ€. Being overweight or obese may increase the risk for heart disease, diabetes mellitus, and hypertension. All cigarette smoking and secondhand smoke should be avoided.
More information about heart disease and preventing heart disease can be found online at www.heart.org, which the website for the American Heart Association, and www.cdc.gov/heartdisease .
Dr. Karen G. Cloninger works with the Sanger Heart and Vascular Institute at Carolinas Medical Center-Lincolnton.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1516
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http://thelonerangeronlinefreeja.tumblr.com/
Posted by ruhymi on July 21, 2013 at 2:27pm
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1517
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Microsoft debuts Windows Everywhere, including Best Buy, but continues to blunder - LiveSide.net
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Microsoft debuts Windows Everywhere, including Best Buy, but continues to blunder
By Kip Kniskern | Posted June 13, 2013
Microsoft seems to be reshaping itself before our very eyes, most recently with what looks to be a carefully crafted new “Windows Everywhere” ad campaign, and now today the announcement of “Windows Store only at Best Buy”, a new store-within-a-store concept coming to more than 600 Best Buys (along with Future Shops) in the US and Canada. However, elsewhere within the company, that positive message hasn’t been as clearly portrayed.
The latest ad for Windows Everywhere, which debuted yesterday, is, as Geekwire’s Todd Bishop notes, not only brings together a number of Microsoft properties including IE, Bing, Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8, Skype, and Xbox, but also may help to explain the thinking behind Microsoft’s rumored re-organization:
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This new mantra, of Windows as part of a set of Microsoft services instead of the Sinofsky-led old school thinking of “all roads lead to Windows”, may be part of why Microsoft and Steven Sinofsky parted ways in the first place. Indeed, Microsoft looks to be ready to tout all of its devices and services, Windows or not, somewhat equally in its Microsoft Stores and now in Best Buy, too, even as it continues to push the “Windows” name. From the Microsoft News Center press release on “Windows Store only at Best Buy”:
Ranging in size from 1,500 square feet to 2,200 square feet, the Windows Store will be the premier destination for consumers to see, try, compare and purchase a range of products and accessories, including Windows-based tablets and PCs, Windows Phones, Microsoft Office, Xbox, and more. Each store will feature an innovation space highlighting a variety of Windows scenarios across devices; a showcase section with the latest Windows-based PC form factors such as ultrabooks, convertibles, detachables and all-in-ones — including portable devices; and a standalone area featuring Microsoft Surface.
“The Windows Store offers a large-scale, hands-on customer experience that will show customers how Windows and Microsoft devices and services can make it easier for them to work and play,” said Tami Reller, chief marketing officer and chief financial officer of the Windows Division at Microsoft. “We’re pleased to partner with Best Buy in bringing the latest technologies to consumers at scale in a unique environment where they can explore how Microsoft products fit together across entertainment, travel, music and other scenarios.”
In some other areas, however, Microsoft’s message isn’t as clear, or as positive. At this week’s E3, many are saying that Microsoft botched the message they’re trying to get out with the Xbox One. From allowing speculation to run rampant for months about buzzwords like “always on” and “used games” before only partially addressing them at E3, to giving Sony plenty of time (and ammunition) to make headway with gamers. Sony announced, to loud and sustained applause, that *their* games could be sold, traded, or given away (even though that only applies to Sony games, and it isn’t clear what 3rd party game makers will require), and Microsoft has allowed the “always on” conversation to drift from “you never have to wait while your Xbox updates” to “you can’t play games unless you’re connected”. Sony also came in at $100 cheaper than the Xbox One (although as BGR notes, if Microsoft hadn’t bundled in the Kinect, pricing would be much closer).
Both Thurrott and BGR fault Microsoft’s botched message with the Xbox One launch, but not necessarily the new console itself, for its perceived poor first impressions. While “Windows Everywhere” and new Microsoft stores are good attempts to portray this new Microsoft, there’s still lots of work left to do.
Posted June 13th, 2013 at 10:37 am
Tags: Best Buy, Microsoft Store, Windows, Xbox One Siri, why Bing? Zoom. Reinvented. Nokia sends invitation to “EOS” reveal press event on July 11 Mario Albertico
It’s a great ad, it really is. In terms of letting people know that there is one company that is behind these products and they have a cohesive vision for them, I think it works. But the execution, you’re right Kip, we’re going to have to see if they actually follow through.
Mario Albertico
Iain Simpson
People have to start to realize that the Xbox one is not just a gaming console, it offers so much more for now and for the future, they are trying to get away from using discs for gaming and go completely digital and cloud based and that’s where the future is. It will make gaming cheaper and much better. If you just want to play games stay with the 360 or go with the ps4. But if you want something that is so much more then go with the ONE.
I can’t wait to see these stores in Best Buy / Future Shop! Great idea! I’m always pissed when it’s so Apple and Android dominated in those stores.
As Iain said above, Xbox One is not really in the same class as PS4. PS4 is just an upgraded PS3, whereas Xbox One is a full new TV experience, whereas PS4 is just a gaming console. PS4 is more along the lines of competing against the updated Xbox 360.
I have a feeling that Microsoft (since they are now a devices and services company) are going to have an ‘Xbox’ family of devices similar to how it has the ‘Surface’ family of devices. Where the “One” is all-in-one (Console, Kinect, Controller, etc.)…. and they’ll probably release a newer 360 (maybe the 720?) as a sole gaming console. To be honest, they should have released both at the same time to avoid the negative comments, but I understand with such a large company it’s hard… which is why the rumored simplified restructuring is a really good thing. Can’t wait to see what happens.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1518
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LMU | LA - Loyola Marymount University
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> Loyola Marymount University > The Buzz: University News > Fighting Poverty in L.A.
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Fighting Poverty in L.A.
At Loyola Marymount University students learn to embrace the idea of giving back to the community, and many faculty and staff members lead through example by participating in the annual fundraising campaign for the United Way of Greater Los Angeles. “Our faith and Catholic heritage calls on us as a university community to be mindful of the needs of those around us and to act to meet those needs,” explained Richard T. Rocheleau, associate vice president for student life. “Providing financial assistance to agencies in the Greater Los Angeles area through the United Way is one way of meeting those needs.” The United Way of Greater Los Angeles represents more than 150 nonprofit partners whose work is devoted to improving the quality of life for others. Throughout the year, LMU students serve as volunteers at many of those nonprofits. “The great thing about the United Way is that it is tuned into the needs of a variety of local agencies and has the ability to allocate funds to make the greatest difference in our community,” said Rocheleau. In April 2008, Rocheleau and other members of the LMU community launched an internal campaign to inform faculty and staff about Creating Pathways out of Poverty, the United Way’s 10 year action plan to provide basic needs as well as education and financial stability to people across Los Angeles. Donations raised during the first year of the plan will go toward helping more homeless people get off the streets and ensuring that children have appropriate healthcare coverage. LMU has actively participated in the United Way’s campaigns for the last five years. In 2007, LMU faculty and staff members donated more than $47,000 to the United Way through payroll deductions and one-time gifts. This year that figure increased to approximately $53,400. To learn more about the United Way of Greater Los Angeles, visit www.unitedwayla.org. 310.338.2700 1 LMU Drive, Los Angeles, California 90045 Contact Employment at LMU Emergency Info Copyright + Privacy LMU Site Index Campus Maps © 2012 Loyola Marymount University
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1519
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Published On: Jul 20 2012 10:20:25 AM EDT
Updated On: Jul 20 2012 11:11:17 AM EDT
Fusing the 3,000 year-old tradition of Chinese acrobatic arts with the multidisciplinary approach of Cirque du Soleil, Dralion draws its inspiration from Eastern philosophy and its never-ending quest for harmony between humans and nature.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1520
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Jobs LMS -- SPEED's PINKS All Out to Hold Four-Wide Drag Race Competition at zMAX Dragway
Posted: Wed 4:40 PM, Apr 08, 2009
/ WVLT - Nascar
/ Article (LMS) -- CONCORD, N.C. (April 8, 2009) - SPEEDT officials today announced that the first four-wide, nationally televised, official drag racing competition will take place during the PINKS All Out television shoot at zMAX Dragway in Concord, N.C., on Saturday, April 25. The episode, which is being shot for Season Three, is scheduled to tentatively premiere on Aug. 6, and is presented by NAPA.
Traditionally, the show's technical advisors evaluate a field of 450-plus grassroots drag racers through two time trial sessions and a 32-car runoff to select a field of 16 finalists. The cars are chosen by an objective set of criteria including closeness of competition, consistency in performance and an adherence to the rule of running "All Out." Once revealed, the cars are lined up in the staging lanes, rigged with cameras and microphones, and run through a competitive eliminator commencing around dusk. That format will be altered specifically for zMAX Dragway. For this event, more than 520 racers have signed up, and each will receive two time trial runs in hopes of being selected as one of 32 cars to participate in one of eight, four-wide eliminators. The remaining eight contestants will then compete in the customary "side-by-side" format to the race's conclusion, where a best "two-out-of-three" hot lap final will determine the winner.
"Listen, we took one look at this place and we wanted to be the opening show," said Hunter Nickell, SPEED president. "Now the Smith's (Bruton and Marcus) and Christian Byrd (zMAX Dragway executive director and general manager) have this place cooking and we can't wait to get there."
Robert Ecker, SPEED vice president of programming and executive producer of PINKS All Out, talked about the decision process in offering an actual four-wide competition.
"When the prospect of bringing the show to zMAX Dragway first presented itself, the enormity of the challenge was more than a little daunting," Ecker said. "At first we thought it would be cool to just run four-wide as an exhibition, but as our discussions deepened a plan to run competitively took shape which makes tremendous sense on multiple levels.
The entire day is now designed to build anticipation for that moment when Rich Christensen stands in front of four high-powered cars and does the first nationally televised competitive four-wide arm drop in drag racing history. It promises to be an electric evening."
"This is exactly why we made this place the 'Bellagio of drag strips,'" said Bruton Smith, chairman and chief executive officer of Speedway Motorsports, Inc., and founder of zMAX Dragway. "When I heard that PINKS All Out wanted to use our facility as it was designed, at its maximum potential, by running four lanes at once, I was overjoyed. This hasn't been done in over 30 years, and has never been done on a properly maintained, state-of-the-art drag strip. Something this big and this historic could only happen at one place, and that's zMAX Dragway."
PINKS All Out is hosted by creator and executive producer Rich Christensen and offers grassroots racers a chance to win $10,000, a new NAPA tool chest and an opportunity to run their cars in front of a national cable television audience on SPEED, the definitive network for motorsports and the automotive lifestyle. All racers are asked to run "All Out," but if they are caught sandbagging (or slowing their cars to hit a perceived elapsed time) they will be eliminated from competition. The show, a production of Los Angeles-based Pullin Television, will be telecast in 720p high definition.
This will be the show's first appearance in the Charlotte area, and will be the 23rd different track visited since the inception of the show at the Texas Motorplex on Labor Day Weekend of 2006. That inaugural show premiered as a Thanksgiving evening network special later that year in front of a record-breaking television audience, which spawned the creation of the series.
"We had a tremendous show at Bristol Dragway with PINKS All Out a couple of years ago," said Jeff Byrd, president of Bristol Motor Speedway and Bristol Dragway. "It was definitely one of the largest turnouts we've ever had, outside of our NHRA events. The fans absolutely loved it and couldn't get enough of it. It's a fantastic event and zMAX Dragway should have a spectacular show, especially with them running all four lanes."
A 'Four-Wide' Historical Perspective
As with the original PINKS and now, PINKS All Out, looking back on history has been important to the show. But much like the almost mythological "racing for pink slips" scrolls that emanated from Southern California during the post World War II hot rod culture, the legend of "four-lane" racing has been best told through story time and old photos.
According to National Dragster, the official publication of the National Hot Rod Association, examples of four-wide competitions can be traced back to the 1960s, where places like Rockford (Ill.) Dragway (now known as Byron Dragway), Fort Worth's Green Valley Dragway and a strip in Fresno, Calif., among others, all held four-wide competitions. In fact, a couple of photos from Rockford depict four "slingshot" Top Fuel cars lined up four wide with famous NHRA "flagman" Bill Maddaugh readying a start.
Also from the article, former ND editor Bill Holland relayed a story where the four-lane racing was made up of "teams," as it was the two left lane cars versus the two on the right. There were many concepts promoters tried back then. There was even a promoter - at Southern California's now shuttered Fontana Drag City - that tried a four-wide race with jet cars.
Another known example comes from back in the 1970s, when then-promoter of Maryland International Raceway, Todd Mack, rolled out a four-wide Funny Car exhibition race. Current MIR Owner and President Royce Miller, who also consults and is the part-time competition coordinator for PINKS All Out, talked in further detail about some of that history.
"It was more of an exhibition than a true competition or drag race,"said Miller, whose track will be hosting a PINKS All Out shoot on June 20.
"Obviously, when you are running on a track like that, the outside lanes aren't grooved so they were kind of in the marbles out there. How it was set up was that one pair was put on the inside, and another pair put on the outside, and he had two Christmas trees. At the time, his radio promotion said, 'side-by-side-by-side-by-side' drag racing. And the racers were some of the standouts of the time with the 'Chi-Town Hustler,' Barry Setzer's famous Vega and a lot of those types of cars. Each racer got paid to make two or three runs. "The other big thing was the safety factor," Miller continued."Could you imagine how hairy that four-wide racing was back then with four cars racing down the track with nothing separating those cars except an outside guard rail - a single-strand guard rail at that? They had to stay in their territory because it could have gotten real ugly."
Miller has been instrumental in piecing together many of the logistical aspects of this race, and marveled at Smith's vision for creating such an opportunity.
"What we're going to do is not an exhibition, but an actual four-wide competition," Miller said. "For Bruton (Smith) to build a second track, and the cost of all of that concrete that's in there, it's pretty extraordinary. No one ever, in the history of the sport, has built two complete race tracks in between the grandstands. Not to mention that both tracks are of a high caliber with two, all-concrete surfaces all the way to the finish line. It is just something so unique, and I don't think there's anywhere else in the country that you could hold such a four-wide event, with evenly prepared surfaces. "We have two independent timing systems that aren't set up to run four-wide," Miller added. "What we're going to do is set up a special system of simultaneous starts on both tracks, with one starter switch. We're going to come in with special wiring in the tower to create that. One starter will start both trees, which will allow us to hold one drag race despite having independent timing systems. Once they run (set in association to Christensen's armdrop), the numbers will create a very accurate way of determining an actual winner. I think it's going to be a blast to experience that four-wide charge going down the quarter mile."
PINKS All Out, called the "Woodstock of Drag Racing," by Summit Motorsports Park President Bill Bader Jr., is an entire day's worth of on track racing and off-track activities, culminating at dusk in the running of the final 32. As part of the midway, which will feature many interactive track displays, the SPEED Mobile Theatre will be on hand providing air-conditioned entertainment and autograph sessions, while on track fun includes jet cars, wheel standers, a burnout and wheelie competition and a variety of professional and amateur drag racing equipment. Tickets for PINKS All Out, April 24-25, at zMAX Dragway are on sale now and can be purchased online at www.lowesmotorspeedway.com or by calling the Lowe's Motor Speedway ticket office at 1-800-455-FANS. Tickets for Friday's test and tune are $15, while tickets for Saturday's qualifying sessions and eliminations, including the four-wide racing are $25 for reserved seats and $20 for general admission. Kids 12 and under are free when accompanied by an adult.
SPEED is the nation's first and foremost cable television network dedicated to motor sports and the passion for everything automotive. From racing to restoration, motorcycles to movies, SPEED delivers quality programming from the track to the garage. Now available in more than 78 million homes in North America, SPEED is among the fastest-growing sports cable networks in the country and, the home to NASCAR on SPEED and an industry leader in interactive TV, video on demand, mobile initiatives and broadband services. For more information, please visit SPEEDtv.com, the online motor sports authority.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1521
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Jobs Bush is back: Portrait event stirs up odd politics
Posted: Thu 6:30 AM, May 31, 2012
/ Political
/ Article FILE - In this Jan. 16, 2010 file photo, President Barack Obama shakes hands with former President George W. Bush, in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Keep your friends close, and your former presidents closer.
President Barack Obama is welcoming his favorite foil, former President George W. Bush, back to the White House on Thursday for the official unveiling of Bush's portrait. Given the history, the scene ought to be quite a picture.
Obama is still bad-mouthing Bush's time in office, and it's not just because of the debt and the unfinished wars Obama inherited. Obama sees Bush's economic ideas as the same as his current rival, Mitt Romney, so he lumps them together.
Which makes it a little awkward that Obama is about to preside as Bush's image and legacy are enshrined forever.
Never mind all that, say the Obama and Bush camps. This is a timeout for tradition.
The political reunion is expected to put aside any campaign rhetoric, as other gatherings among past and current presidents have, to honor nostalgia and the service of the former president and his wife, Laura.
In the heart of a re-election year, Obama will to get to rise above the fray for a day and play statesman.
He and his wife, Michelle, will host generations of Bushes for a private lunch, including former President George H.W. Bush and former first lady Barbara Bush. Family members will join them.
Then, in the ornate East Room, Obama and George W. Bush will speak as the portraits of the former president and Laura Bush are unveiled. The audience will be filled with friends and officials from Bush's two terms in office.
No one close to the current or former president expects the least sign of animus Thursday, particularly given that their transition in 2009 was handled with grace and that they have since shared moments of help and healing.
"President Bush has been around politics a long time. He's been around how presidents deal with each other for a long time," said Tony Fratto, one of his former spokesmen at the White House. "He has an understanding for separating the necessities of political rhetoric from the job itself."
Still, Bush has been holding his tongue for a long time. Obama has never run against Bush, although it was easy to forget that during the 2008 race between Obama and Sen. John McCain, when Bush's tenure was so often Obama's target.
In his inaugural address in 2009, Obama declared that "we are ready to lead once more," seen by some as a dig at Bush, who was seated over his shoulder. Even now, hardly a day goes by when Obama's team does not blame Bush for a mess.
It was just one week ago that Obama, revving up campaign donors, turned Bush into a punch line. Obama depicted presumptive Republican presidential nominee Romney as a peddler of bad economic ideas, helping the rich at the expense of the middle class. He then added: "That was tried, remember? The last guy did all this."
Now the last guy is coming back.
Only 43 men in history, and five men alive, have held the job.
It will be a rare limelight moment for Bush, who has not been back in more than two years.
Obama and Bush have a cordial and respectful relationship, but they are not close.
Both are political veterans who are able to separate political tactics from what they see as an overarching community among people who have served in the Oval Office, according to people close to them.
History has marked this moment before, with grudges put aside.
When Bill Clinton came back for his portrait unveiling, Bush lauded him for "the forward-looking spirit that Americans like in a president." This after he ran for the presidency to "restore honor and dignity" after Clinton's sex scandal.
And when Clinton welcomed back George H.W. Bush, whom he had defeated, he said to him and his wife: "Welcome home. We're glad to have you here."
"I would be surprised if there's very much tension" this time around, said Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University who has long followed Bush's career.
Obama has enlisted Bush's help on earthquake relief for Haiti, and the two stood together in New York City last year in marking the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on America. They have also spoken at least three times at signature moments over the last three years, including the killing of Osama bin Laden.
Still, Obama's bashing of Bush's record sets a backdrop.
"This president is looking for someone to blame," Romney said while campaigning in Colorado this week. "Of course, he started off by blaming George Bush, and that worked for a while but, you know, after three and a half years that wears kind of thin."
The White House points out that Obama praises Bush sometimes, too, such as for taking on illegal immigration.
The visit is layered with political story lines.
Bush's brother Jeb is a potential vice presidential candidate to Romney. Bush's father has developed a kinship of sorts with Obama. And then there is Bush himself, who has endorsed Romney but is still viewed by many in his party as politically toxic.
More than any president in recent memory, Bush has not just intentionally faded from the public spotlight but all but disappeared from it.
Bush was last at the White House in January 2010 to help out with Haiti humanitarian relief.
Bush spokesman Freddy Ford said the former president and first lady are grateful to the Obamas and looking forward to catching up with faces from their past, including staff at the Executive Mansion.
Jenna Bush Hager, one of the George W. Bush's daughters, told "Fox & Friends" the day will be a chance to "celebrate his work, 'cause he worked pretty hard, so I think he deserves at least a painting."
As to where it will go, she said: "Probably in the very back somewhere. I'm just kidding."
Actually, the painting will hang prominently in the formal entrance hall to the White House, the Grand Foyer.
Strong beer sales bill headed to governor's desk Join the Conversation!
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1522
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Jobs 2 commercial flights diverted to Nashville
Posted: Wed 10:39 AM, Feb 29, 2012
/ Article NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Two commercial airline flights have been diverted to Nashville for different problems.
A Jet Blue flight from Austin, Texas, to Boston made an unscheduled landing Tuesday night at Nashville International Airport after a passenger began having chest pains, according to WTVF-TV ( http://bit.ly/w0unxB ). The passenger was taken to a hospital.
About 30 minutes earlier, a Frontier Airlines flight from Denver to Atlanta had to land after the cockpit crew detected a strange odor. The plane landed safely and the 99 passengers on board were being booked onto different flights.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1523
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Taken by thesarahshow with a Holga 120 CFN (available in our Online Shop) in Canton, Ohio, United States. This photo can also be found in the album Ex-Holga.
#9fa885
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1524
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Michael Kirkman says he's going to New York on his Facebook
posted by Gay For Feliz
He just says he's going to New York, so I'm just assuming we called him up.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1525
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Wed04162014 Business & Real Estate State holds $14 million in undelivered refunds Details
Published on Wednesday, 26 December 2012 00:00 Written by Los Altos Town Crier Town Crier Report The California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) is holding more than $14 million in state income tax refunds returned by the U.S. Postal Service. “I want to make sure all taxpayers receive their refunds and as quickly as possible,” said State Controller John Chiang, FTB chairman. “This is an easy way to update your contact information and get the refund before the holiday season.” This year, the U.S. Postal Service returned nearly 48,000 refunds as undeliverable. Taxpayers who moved and failed to update their addresses are the main reason refunds are returned. Taxpayers expecting a state refund or who are unsure if they received theirs can access their status on the FTB’s website.Click “Online Services: Where’s my refund?” to bring up the “Check Your Refund Status” screen. Updating an address is an easy process using the “Access MyFTB Account” feature on the same screen. The FTB reissues the refund automatically as soon as the correct address is received. The FTB encourages taxpayers to request direct deposit for their refunds when filing. Direct deposit is a fast and secure method to receive a tax refund within days rather than waiting weeks for a paper refund. This year, more than 6 million California taxpayers received more than $6.2 billion deposited directly into their bank accounts through direct deposits. As of Nov. 29, the FTB had issued more than 10 million refunds worth nearly $10 billion. For more information, visit www.ftb.ca.gov.
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Series - HA B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Other No results found.Other Results: 8 Challenges
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1527
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You are hereHome » News » Formula One - Canadian GP Preview
Back to Main News Related ArticlesFormula One - Monaco GP Race ReportMonday, May 28, 2012 - 08:45KIMI: P9, ROMAIN: DNFFormula One - Spanish GP Race ReportSunday, May 13, 2012 - 17:45KIMI ORDERS A DOUBLE! KIMI: P3; ROMAIN: P4Formula One - Bahrain GP Race ReportMonday, April 30, 2012 - 12:15LOTUS IS BACK! KIMI: P2, ROMAIN: P3Formula One - Chinese GP Race ReportMonday, April 16, 2012 - 10:15ROMAIN: P6, KIMI: P14Formula One - Malaysian GP Race ReportTuesday, March 27, 2012 - 12:30KIMI: P5, ROMAIN: DNFFormula One - Australian GP Race ReportMonday, March 19, 2012 - 11:30WE HAVE A LITTLE GRIN ON OUR FACES - KIMI: P7, ROMAIN: DNFFormula One - Canadian GP Preview Wednesday, June 6, 2012 - 16:00OH CANADA! Originally known as the Ile Notre Dame Circuit, set on an island in the Saint Lawrence River, it was quickly re-named after the man who won the inaugural race in 1978 – Gilles Villeneuve, one of the bravest (translation: gifted but mental) racers who ever lived.
Check out the futuristic architecture around the island, like that big glass ball thing (technical name: geodesic dome). The place used to be home to the 1967 World Fair.
ON TRACK:
Set upon public roads in a park, the circuit starts the weekend very ‘green’ with about as much grip as a fisherman trying to wrestle an eel into a bag. That means muchos accidents in free practice. The star of the stack show is the outside of the final corner, known as the wall of champions because it’s stamped its authority on the likes of Michael Schumacher, Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve (who sadly never managed to win at his dad’s track).
The characteristics of this track are high speed straights and low speed corners. This may suit McLaren and Mercedes better than the Renault-engined Lotus and Red Bull cars, which have an appetite for flowing corners. Due to the stop-start nature of the layout, gearboxes are put under enormous strain. They experience around 2,000 changes during the 70 lap race. Safety cars are common place here because there’s little run off – even less than Melbourne. That means the result could be a lottery. Last year Jenson Button won the race, yet at one point he was tooling around at the back.
RACE DETAILS:
Local start time: 15h00
Number of laps: 70
Circuit length: 4.361km
Race distance: 305.270km
Lap record: Rubens Barrichello (Ferrari, 2004), 1m13.622
WHAT THE DRIVERS SAY:
Kimi Räikkönen : “I have always liked the Canadian Grand Prix. I won there in 2005 so Montreal has good memories. The city is one of the best places to visit on the calendar. I really enjoy the stop-start nature of the circuit layout and the challenge of the track. To do well in Canada the car needs to be good under braking because it’s very tough on brakes at this circuit. You also make use of the kerbs and our car has been pretty good in this area. It’s also a circuit with different track surfaces and sometimes the surface itself can change over the course of the race weekend. This is interesting as it means different grip levels, so another challenge there. It’s a street course, but there are still places to overtake so you don’t have to change all of your focus to qualifying like you do in Monaco. It is a race that sees a lot of safety cars; there has probably not been a Canadian Grand Prix without having a safety car. Most likely it will happen again. A safety car makes it difficult for the strategy as you can’t predict when it might come. If the safety car is employed, then you have got to hope that it happens at the right time.”
Romain Grosjean: “It will be my first time in Canada so it’s another new experience for me this year. I’m looking forward to it because it’s a track which many drivers have told me they like. It’s also a track which can bite you, and we’ve seen that over the years with the champions’ wall. Even though I’m not a Formula One champion, I’ll be giving that part of the track some respect! Normally I enjoy street circuits – I was right on the pace in Monaco. I enjoy the sensation of being close to the walls. Finally, the weather in Montreal can be quite changeable, as we saw last year. I’m sure it’ll be a challenging and exciting grand prix.”
OFF TRACK:
That story about the man who was crushed beneath a vending machine while trying to shake a Coke can out of it wasn’t an urban myth. His name was Kevin, and he was from Quebec. Gilles Villeneuve and Jim Carrey were/are Canadian too, and their photos are in the dictionary under crazy. It’s important to understand this before embarking on a jet boat tour up the wildest stretches of the Lachine Rapids. For god’s sake wear a life jacket.
It’s said there are all sorts of ghosts, ghouls and spectres haunting the narrow lanes of Old Montreal. Take one of the ghost tours and listen to the creepy stories about child murderers, witches, and kleptos. You can also take a jet boat tour up the St Lawrence and take in a show at the Cirque de Soleil.
Montréal is where this circus arts phenomenon first started. Founder Guy Laliberté is a huge F1 fan. A while back he blew $35m on a 12-day trip to space. With money like that, it’s a surprise he’s not racing for Marussia this year.
After a boutique hotel? The Hotel de l’Institute is actually set on the top floors of the Institut de Tourisme et d’Hôtellerie, where people come from all over the world to study Canadian hospitality. The hotel employs a lot of its own students. Therefore, if you ring reception to say you need an ironing board, bear in mind that they’re in the middle of a dissertation and can’t you just put a towel over the desk and do it?
Montreal’s numero ‘une’ steakhouse, La Queue de Cheval, is hugely popular with drivers and team principals and serves the paddock’s favourite plonk – Jarno Trulli wine. Inside it looks like a gentlemen’s club (no, not the sort Montreal is famous for) with polished dark wood and private dining rooms. Kimi recommends the ribeye.
Au Pied du Cochon - P.D.C, as the local gastros call it - will probably give you a heart attack. But at least you’ll die happy. Their namesake dish, a pig’s foot, is the size of a man’s forearm and is poached, stuffed and roasted in a wood oven. A layer of foie gras is layered over it like a saddle before it comes to your table. Foie gras is in no short supply here. You can have it on a burger, on a pizza, on pancakes or simply with chips. Or go for ‘Duck in a Can’ which does, indeed, come with a can opener.
Indie music is a major force in Canada, and you can judge breakthrough acts at La Sala Rossa, an atmospheric, chandelier-lit gig venue, which used to be a left-wing political centre and once hosted Eleanor Roosevelt. While most of the acts here are unsigned, it has drawn some ‘known’ indie bands such as The Datsuns, British Sea Power, Hot Chip and Arcade Fire – the latter band being Montréal-based, and a frequent sight at this venue. La Sala Rossa cooks up a good paella too, as well as great music.
Jacques Villeneuve: World Champion, singer-songwriter, hair-dye enthusiast, and owner of Montréal’s hottest real estate, Newtown - his (kind of) eponymous resto-bar-club. The basement dance-floor has a colourful disco screen at the back that looks like Canada’s biggest battenburg. If you used to engineer JV’s car you might be offered a free round of drinks. Unless you worked at BAR-Honda. In which case, keep a low profile.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1528
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Go out in style amid the millennial hysteria of the Mayan 2012 apocalypse
December 21, 2012 - 4:08am
by Cameron Miquelon
Whether the world ends in a reign of fire or a reign of light tomorrow, be prepared to go out in style. From leather jackets to floral maxis, this style idea guide will take you through the millennial hysteria of December 21, 2012 and the Mayan apocalypse.
Sometime Friday, whether when the clock strikes midnight, the sun rises (or sets) or the winter solstice commences at 11:12 UTC (6:12 a.m. in Louisville), the world will either end in a deluge of fire, flood and famine, or it will undergo a cosmic ascension the likes of which haven’t been...
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1529
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November 10, 2008 College of Business receives $75,000 grant
Loyola press release - November 10, 2008
The Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation awarded Loyola University New Orleans' Joseph A. Butt, S.J., College of Business a $75,000 grant to cultivate interest in the teaching of economics.
Professor Dr. Walter Block’s work in the field of Austrian economics made him the logical person to approach the Koch foundation about supporting Loyola’s students and faculty. Block is one of the top publishers in the field and internationally known for both his writings and his devotion to the development of undergraduate and graduate students.
While the foundation only makes grants to nonprofit institutions, Block says the foundation admired his work in encouraging undergraduate students to become professors of economics. Economics Professor Dan D’Amico, Ph.D., is one of Block’s former students.
“Walter, Bill Barnett and John Levendis have succeeded not only in presenting a consistent front in favor of free markets but they do an amazing job at participating in the production of good economic theory and good economics students,” D’Amico said. “I can only hope to live up to the high standards that they have set for the department in the future.”
According to the foundation’s website, it “primarily supports research and education programs that analyze the impact of free societies, in particular how they advance the well-being of mankind. Building on this knowledge, the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation fosters the partnership of scientists and practitioners in order to integrate theory and practice.”
The grant, which was awarded about a month ago, will be used for travel, scholarships and fellowships. For the latest updates about Loyola University New Orleans, follow us on Twitter @LoyolaNOLANews or become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/loyno.
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News > L-Soft Press Releases > L-Soft Recognized as the 17th Fastest Growing Tech Company in Maryland
L-Soft Recognized as the 17th Fastest Growing Tech Company in Maryland
Deloitte & Touche Honors L-Soft with its Maryland Technology Fast 50 Award
Landover, MD (October 17, 2000) – L-Soft, creator of the renowned LISTSERV® mailing list manager, was ranked as the 17th fastest growing technology company in Maryland by leading professional services firm Deloitte & Touche. The Maryland Technology Fast 50 award recognizes rapid growth among local technology companies. Founded in 1994, L-Soft is privately held and has been profitable since its inception. Over 1,500 customers use L-Soft solutions worldwide, including 34 of the Fortune 100 companies such as Microsoft, Compaq Computer and Lucent Technologies.
"We have come a long way since I flew to the U.S. and founded L-Soft with three thousand dollars and a laptop," says L-Soft CEO Eric Thomas. "We owe our success to the reliability and scalability of our offerings, and to our corporate culture that promotes diversity and encourages employees to develop to their fullest potential."
Thirteen languages are currently spoken at L-Soft, where 55 percent of employees are women (50 percent among the managers). L-Soft provides software and services for electronic newsletters, discussion groups, and personalized direct e-mail campaigns.
"In today's fast-paced world of technology, where multi-million dollar technology companies seem to appear overnight, it's an honor to be named one of the fastest growing technology companies," says Gary Tabach, Partner in Charge of Deloitte & Touche's Technology Communication Practice. "We commend L-Soft for making the commitment to technology and delivering on the promise of market longevity."
To qualify for the Maryland Technology Fast 50 award, a company must have had operating revenues of at least $50,000 in 1995 and $1 million in 1999, be a public or privately held company headquartered in Maryland, develop proprietary technology, experience explosive revenue growth, and invest in research and development.
Winners of the 21 regional Technology Fast 50 programs are automatically entered for the Deloitte & Touche Technology Fast 500, which recognizes the 500 fastest growing tech companies in the U.S. The results of this prestigious national award will be announced in the November 27, 2000, issue of Forbes ASAP
About L-Soft
L-Soft specializes in the development of solutions for professional e-mail communication management. Since 1994, L-Soft has been the pioneer of the e-mail communication industry with LISTSERV®, the premier software for e-mail list management. L-Soft's technology is tailored for commercial usage, offering outstanding performance, reliability, and scalability. L-Soft's comprehensive outsourcing services and software applications facilitate the administration of e-mail lists, newsletters, and discussion groups. With more than 100 million subscriptions to LISTSERV lists worldwide, L-Soft is a business partner to 34 of the Fortune 100 companies, including Citigroup, Ford Motor, and IBM.
About Deloitte & Touche
Deloitte & Touche, one of the nation's leading professional services firms, provides assurance and advisory, tax, and management consulting services through 30,000 people in more than 100 U.S. cities. Deloitte & Touche is part of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, a global leader in professional services with more than 90,000 people in over 130 countries. Deloitte & Touche refers to Deloitte & Touche LLP, Deloitte Consulting LLC, and related entities. For additional information, please visit Deloitte & Touche's web site at www.us.deloitte.com
L-Soft Press Contact
Susan Brown [email protected]
LISTSERV is a registered trademark licensed to L-Soft international, Inc.All other trademarks, both marked and unmarked, are the property of their respective owners.See Guidelines for Proper Usage of the LISTSERV Trademark for more details.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1531
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MICHELLE CRUMM: Visit the Adaptive Materials website More about Alternative Energy at Lawrence Tech
Leaders & Innovators Image gallery of 2013 Leaders & Innovators Award Reception 2007-13 Reception Galleries Co-Founder and Chief Business Officer, Adaptive Materials Inc. (AMI) in Ann Arbor. AMI provides alternative energy through portable fuel cell systems. Crumm has led AMI to continued high double-digit growth in revenue and profitability. Without outside investment, AMI has been able to bring in more than $34 million to advance its alternative energy portable product lines. Crumm has steered the company through the transition from a high-technology, research-and-development start-up to a second stage, fast-growing manufacturing organization. Awards include the Inc. 500 fastest growing companies, Michigan 50 Companies to Watch, and the 2003 Great Lakes Entrepreneur Quest grand prize. Prior to founding AMI, Crumm spent nearly five years at Kellogg Co. in internal audit, investor relations, and procurement. She is a board member for the Washtenaw County American Red Cross, treasurer of the Great Lakes Entrepreneur Quest executive board of directors, and a member of the Women�s President Organization. She received her bachelor�s degree in accounting from Purdue University and an MBA from the University of Michigan. WHERE BORN: "Knox, in the northwest corner of Indiana."
MOST INFLUENTIAL PERSONS: "My husband, Aaron, who always encourages me, believes in me, and pushes me to excel. My mom, who passed away last winter, was the one who made me recognize that everyone matters and that I need to appreciate the little things in life. My cousin Jennifer who has taught me that you don�t need a lot of material possessions to have everything you could ever want in the world. My WPO (Women�s President Organization) family who empowers me to succeed and helps me get back on track when I stumble."
LAST BOOK READ: "Let My People Go Surfing by Yvon Chouinard."
WORDS THAT DESCRIBE ME: "Passionate, optimistic, energetic, competitive, tenacious."
WHERE MY FIELD/INDUSTRY IS HEADED: "The sky is the limit for alternative energy. We power possibility � the possibility for products to have power that has never been available before. Soldiers are safer and more efficient, Homeland Security needs more power on borders for devices, and emergency response providers will have the power they need to save lives. Our fuel cell systems are powered off readily available fuels and do not use elusive hydrogen. The fuel is wherever you are when you need it. This fuel availability gives our company a significant advantage over other fuel cell companies. Fuel cell products will happen and they will enable you to get the power you need, and the power you haven�t even thought about yet."
FAVORITE TECHNOLOGICAL GADGET: "I love technology � iPod, digital picture frame, Treo, Garmin watch, etc., but I would have to say my favorite is our AMI fuel cell systems."
FAVORITE PLACE: "Charleston, South Carolina."
FAVORITE HOBBIES: "Soccer mom, jewelry making, investing, exercise."
FAVORITE FOOD: "Godiva Dark Chocolate Cappuccino Truffles."
MY HIDDEN TALENT: "Matchmaking."
HOW I WANT TO BE REMEMBERED: "I love to bring out the best in people and help them see that they have the ability to succeed in their passions. I want to make my mark on the world by pushing others to be more than they thought they could be, give more than they thought they had, and take time to smell the Gerbera daisies along the way."
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1532
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Lufthansa Highlights Bilbao
The Bilbao Effect - Spanish City of Wonders
Suddenly everything changed: When the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao opened, it ushered in a new era. After decades in the doldrums, the Basque city is now seeing an unprecedented boom and attracting an influx of diverse creative talents normally only found in the world’s biggest cities. Everywhere you look, the cityscape reflects these changes
Back to the overview
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1533
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Lulu Blog
Adventures in Self-Publishing
About Lulu Self-Publishing
Articles tagged "animal farm"
by Max Rivlin-Nadler
Banned Books? You Bet.
Tagged: animal farm, banned books, catcher in the rye, george orwell, harriet beecher stowe, huckleberry finn, jd salinger, lolita, mark twain, tom sawyer, uncle tom's cabin, vladimir nabokov What causes a book to be banned? Throughout history, banned books are often those that push boundaries, lead us to question the way we live and reveal uncomfortable truths. By banning them, schools, libraries, governments and other institutions are, in effect, affirming the power of written words and the ideas they express.
“So this is the little lady who started this great war,” Abraham Lincoln once said of Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. And while not every banned book incites civil war, you might be surprised how many do make the list, even in a country dedicated to protecting the freedom of the press. You also might be surprised by how many of these titles you recognize and have read:
1) The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn & The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Books written by Mark Twain deal frankly with race and include words that have fallen out of favor since the time of publication. These two books continue to be banned by school districts across the country, unsure of how to deal with the delicate matter of verbiage.
2) The Catcher in The Rye. This JD Salinger book is one of the most taught books in American schools, and also the most frequently banned. The book deals with sexuality and vulgarity, as well as smoking, drinking, and cursing at a young age. Taught because of its ability to speak to adolescent readers through its young, articulate narrator, the book is frequently banned for its rejection of both education and authority.
3) Animal Farm. George Orwell, a liberal who was skeptical of any government which infringed on basic human rights, wrote this book out of frustration with both the capitalist and communist systems. Continue Reading »
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Luminous Landscape Forum > The Art of Photography > But is it Art? > Art or Just Plain Creepy?
Pages: « 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 ... 10 » Bottom of Page
Topic: Art or Just Plain Creepy? (Read 34911 times)
brianrybolt
Re: Art or Just Plain Creepy?
A bit of levity for this discussion.
petermfiore
Now that IS offensive on so many levels. Peter
www.peterfiore.com
Quote from: Doug Frost on May 19, 2013, 09:42:19 PMNo, Rob, it's you who doesn't get it. It's not spying if you look at a person in an open window in the apartment building across the street from yours. There's nothing in Svenson's photos that he and everyone else in his apartment building couldn't see with their naked eyes when they looked out their windows.Absolutely, but Svenson used a telephoto lens to focus in on his unwitting subjects, that changes things quite dramatically. I seem to recall in some places paparazzi can get into trouble for using telephoto lenses to capture celebrity shots of people on their own property. QuoteIt's not immoral if you publish faceless and anonymous photographs of your neighbors who choose to hang out in full view of you.Being in your own home is not hanging out in full view though. It would be absurd to insist that people need to keep curtains closed 24 hours a day or put up with people taking photos or peering at you with a telescope. I easily could take photos of the vicar and his family in the vicarage opposite me if I wanted. I would need a long lens to do so and I'm pretty sure it would be seen as a bad thing by most people here in UK and not just because he's just happens to be a vicar.And in California, these photos would probably fall foul of these laws.
Quote from: BobFisher on May 20, 2013, 06:04:25 AMKen, I'll come back to what I said earlier. That we can't recognise the people in Svenson's photos isn't relevant. The people who the images are of know and, quite probably, their neighbours may know who they are. The shots are not 'unfocused'.Bob, I don't think you are reading what I wrote correctly. I didn't say the shots are unfocused - just that some of the body parts depicted in them are - which is the case. The fact that we can't recognize the people is relevant in the context in which I mentioned it - that of questioning the view that there is a black and white difference between what Svenson is doing and street photography. Invasion of privacy is surely diminished where people aren't recognizable to anyone (not just themselves or their neighbours) who sees both them and the photograph. I don't hold the view that you seem to be attributing to me - ie, I don't believe the fact that the people are unrecognizable in that sense is a complete defense of what Svenson did. As you say, his neighbors might still be unhappy, and I wouldn't presume to tell them that they shouldn't be. His behavior was certainly unneighbourly. But I still quite like the photographs. « Last Edit: May 20, 2013, 08:08:30 AM by kencameron »
If I painted these views from life by observation would that be a problem for anyone?Peter
RFPhotography
Quote from: petermfiore on May 20, 2013, 08:28:26 AMIf I painted these views from life by observation would that be a problem for anyone?PeterThat question was posed before, Peter, with some examples linked. From my standpoint, it would be problematic, yes. Ken, I guess I misunderstood your point. Sorry for that. I still think we're on opposite sides of the debate.
Quote from: BobFisher on May 20, 2013, 09:42:10 AMThat question was posed before, Peter, with some examples linked. From my standpoint, it would be problematic, yes. Wow, I missed that point years ago in Art school. Very disconcerting, not for me, for you.Peter
nemo295
Quote from: jjj on May 20, 2013, 07:26:12 AMAbsolutely, but Svenson used a telephoto lens to focus in on his unwitting subjects, that changes things quite dramatically. I seem to recall in some places paparazzi can get into trouble for using telephoto lenses to capture celebrity shots of people on their own property. laws.Context counts for a lot in these situations. You have to keep in mind the setting in which Svenson was shooting. This was Manhattan and his neighbors would have been about 200 ft. away. He could have taken those shots and shown just as much with a Nikon D800 with a normal lens and cropped the photos. At most he'd only need about a 135mm lens and do a small amount of cropping. We're not talking about paparazzi lenses here. These peoples' lives were in his face when Svenson looked out his window.QuoteBeing in your own home is not hanging out in full view though. It would be absurd to insist that people need to keep curtains closed 24 hours a day or put up with people taking photos or peering at you with a telescope. I easily could take photos of the vicar and his family in the vicarage opposite me if I wanted. I would need a long lens to do so and I'm pretty sure it would be seen as a bad thing by most people here in UK and not just because he's just happens to be a vicar.Hanging out in your home is being in full view if people can see you with their naked eyes. I can't speak to the laws of the UK, but if your vicar lived in Manhattan and everyone could see him banging a church choir soprano through his open window I would encourage him to keep his curtains closed. QuoteAnd in California, these photos would probably fall foul of http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/asm/ab_2451-2500/ab_2479_bill_20100930_chaptered.pdfNo, they wouldn't. There was no assault, because given the close proximity of the street and other apartment buildings his subjects knowingly exposed themselves to the public. The U.S. Supreme Court has already defined the legal test for a reasonable expectation of privacy. No extraordinary means were necessary for Svenson to take his pictures. He was merely recording nearby scenes easily visible from his window.
« Last Edit: May 20, 2013, 10:11:19 AM by Doug Frost »
Seems to me that if all this legalise were around in____________ (pick a date) a whole bunch of Art would never have come to fruition. How very sad for the world. But we would have the Law. Peter
Does this guy have a valid point here?
"The difference which you can make between fine arts and commercial or little art is today corresponded by the difference between the art that obeys and the art that does not obey. Great art does not obey. All others are arts that are of low quality, even pitiful. " - Paul Virilio
Quote from: Gulag on May 20, 2013, 10:48:12 AMDoes this guy have a valid point here?He may think he has a moral point, but the law doesn't back him up. It's not up to him whether or not a trademark or copyright is valid.
Quote from: BobFisher on May 20, 2013, 09:42:10 AMKen, I guess I misunderstood your point. Sorry for that. I still think we're on opposite sides of the debate.No problem. I think where we differ is that I am prepared to "suspend" the moral judgement and value the photograph - and maybe that I think it is a similar moral judgement that has to be "suspended" in Svenson's case and in a lot of street photography. It is a bit like the "suspension of disbelief" that is necessary to enjoy a lot of fiction. I also think other kinds of artists can behave badly in the cause of their art - eg, writers who dump on their families or their exes. Some of this comes within the ambit of the law but most doesn't. If the "art" is not much good (as is the case quite a bit of "art", IMO), there is nothing left but the bad behaviour but if it is, (as in Svenson's case, IMO), then, up to a point, I am prepared to enjoy it.
Quote from: BobFisher on May 19, 2013, 10:10:29 AMThere is no expectation of privacy when one is in a public place. I do street photography, but I wouldn't even consider doing what Svenson did.True, Bob, but when you're inside your house you have an expectation of privacy and if some turkey is outside on the street shooting through your windows and then shows the result, chances are you can sue him. On the other hand even if you won I doubt you'd end up on the plus side of the ledger with the suit.Street photography is wonderful and fun, but you've got to be reasonable. Never, never, never take unfair advantage of anybody with your camera. I'm with you on Svenson.
Quote from: RSL on May 20, 2013, 05:30:10 PM Never, never, never take unfair advantage of anybody with your camera. That is good advice. But would you say that all the great street photographers have reliably followed it? I would be interested in your take on some of the alleged counter-examples people have raised earlier in this thread.
Whether it's on the street or in people's apartments or where ever, It comes down to how you personally feel about it inside your gut. If you feel queasy about taking the picture, don't do it. In the end, you'll be hurting yourself more than the people you're taking pictures of.
Quote from: RSL on May 20, 2013, 05:30:10 PMTrue, Bob, but when you're inside your house you have an expectation of privacy and if some turkey is outside on the street shooting through your windows and then shows the result, chances are you can sue him. On the other hand even if you won I doubt you'd end up on the plus side of the ledger with the suit.Street photography is wonderful and fun, but you've got to be reasonable. Never, never, never take unfair advantage of anybody with your camera. I'm with you on Svenson.Fair points, Russ, and agreed.Ken, you're right, not all street shooters do. I'm drawing a blank on the name but there's a famous street shooter who used to go up to people and blast a flash in their faces for his shots. You likely couldn't get more intrusive. As for the 'all for the sake of art' idea, as I mentioned earlier, I have a different boundary line,
Quote from: BobFisher on May 20, 2013, 08:19:12 PM. . .there's a famous street shooter who used to go up to people and blast a flash in their faces for his shots.That's Bruce Gilden, and as far as I know he's still doing it. Here's a clip of his street photography "technique:" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRBARi09je8. I don't understand how Bruce has managed to live this long.
Quote from: RSL on May 21, 2013, 10:57:56 AMThat's Bruce Gilden, and as far as I know he's still doing it. Here's a clip of his street photography "technique:" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRBARi09je8. I don't understand how Bruce has managed to live this long.Great post! Thanks for the share.Peter
Quote from: RSL on May 21, 2013, 10:57:56 AMI don't understand how Bruce has managed to live this long.Gilden is about as aggressive a street photographer as one can be. Joel Meyerowitz's street photography is, in my opinion, more interesting and his approach is a lot less confrontational.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Qjym5uliDw
Bruce Davidson always asks permissions first when he does street photography. http://youtu.be/NXjJs6n3m2U
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“My understanding of photography took a quantum leap in a short period of time as a result of Ben Long's exceedingly well-written and well-executed videos.” —Nelson E.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1537
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“You've got my back. When a customer expects me to know something, I know where I can find it fast and get a clear, simple explanation.” —Richard R.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1538
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New Hope for Michigan Welfare Reform
By Lawrence W. Reed, published on Feb. 1, 1992
Welfare programs cost too much, foster dependency, and tear families apart. Consequently, they actually increase and perpetuate the very poverty which they are intended to remedy. What is required now is a sharp break from prevailing practices-a new philosophy of public assistance. This special report argues that Lansing lawmakers must restructure our state's welfare programs to provide incentives to keep families together and encourage people to work their way off welfare. The sixteen-point program for Michigan welfare reform, the first comprehensive proposal on the subject after the 1990 election, sparked a vigorous statewide debate. Dr. Gerald Miller, then director of the Michigan Department of Social Services, stated in June 1992, "Eleven of the Center's proposals were incorporated into Governor Engler's program." 7 pages.ContentsIntroductionProblems with the Status QuoLessons from a NeighborRecommendations for MichiganEndnotesAbout the Authors
SKU: S1992-02
The Mackinac Center, Free Speech and the MEA
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1539
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Posted September 06, 2010 in MH Roanoke VA:
I Will Keep Being There
by Margarita Guerrero.
Though I was raised Catholic, there was a time when I believed that abortion was simply a woman’s choice. I even figured that, given the circumstances, I myself would consider getting one without much of a moral dilemma. But over the years, personal experiences with abortion have opened my eyes.
There was, for example, the sixteen-year-old boy who told me with tears and great emotion that his girlfriend had aborted their baby without his knowledge and that when he went to talk with her about it, her parents had mistreated him.
Then there was the friend who, fearing that she was pregnant, asked me to go to Planned Parenthood with her. I did. She was hoping she wasn’t pregnant because she couldn’t bear to go through another abortion. She’d already had three.
Then there was the classmate I found in a dark hallway weeping uncontrollably. She had had an abortion and couldn’t live with herself.
In my belief about abortion, I went through various stages. At one point I had a vague notion that abortion is wrong, but I didn’t feel compelled to do anything about it.
That began to change when a former college acquaintance introduced me to her seven-month-old baby whom she thanked me for "saving." All I had done was listen to her and sugges
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1540
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Demanding Rights, Resources and Results for Women Worldwide
Say NO to Safeguarding "Traditional Values" at the Expense of Women's Human Rights
Posted on: Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Keywords: MADRE endorses this call to action, opposing any re-opening of negotiations on established international agreements on women's human rights. We call on all governments to demonstrate their commitment to promote, protect and fulfill human rights and fundamental freedoms of women. Read below for more information, and click here to add your signature to this effort. Feminist and women's rights organisations say NO to safeguarding "traditional values" at the expense of the human rights of women! Call to Action: Click here to add your name to the endorsementsDeadline: 5 April 2012 This month the UN Commission on the Status of Women failed to adopt agreed conclusions at its 56th session on the basis of safeguarding "traditional values" at the expense of human rights and fundamental freedoms of women. Together different feminist and women's rights organisations say NO to any re-opening of negotiations on the already established international agreements on women’s human rights and call on all governments to demonstrate their commitments to promote, protect and fulfill human rights and fundamental freedoms of women. We have outlined our concerns in the statement below, which will be submitted to UN Member States, CSW, the media and other relevant UN human rights and development entities. Thank you for your support. In solidarity, MADREAsia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD)Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID)International Women's Heath Coalition (IWHC)International Women's Rights Action Watch Asia Pacific (IWRAW ASIA PACIFIC)Women Living under Muslim Laws/ Violence is not our Culture CampaignSTATEMENT OF FEMINIST AND WOMEN’S ORGANISATIONS ON THE VERY LIMITED AND CONCERNING RESULTS OF THE 56TH SESSION OF THE UN COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN We, the undersigned organisations and individuals across the globe, are alarmed and disappointed that the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) failed to adopt agreed conclusions at its 56th session. This failure has diminished the considerable work, energy, time and costs that women all over the world invested on the 56th session of the CSW. The advancement of women’s human rights should not be put on hold because of political battles between states. We say NO to any re-opening of negotiations on the already established international agreements on women’s human rights and call on all governments to demonstrate their commitments to promote, protect and fulfill human rights and fundamental freedoms of women. We are particularly concerned to learn that our governments failed to reach a consensus on the basis of safeguarding “traditional values” at the expense of human rights and fundamental freedoms of women. We remind governments that all Member States of the United Nations (UN) have accepted that “the human rights of women and of the girl-child are an inalienable, integral and individual part of universal human rights” as adopted by the 1993 World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna. Governments must not condone any tradition, cultural or religious arguments which deny human rights and fundamental freedoms of any person. After more than 60 years since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was embraced and adopted by the UN, the relationship between traditional values and human rights remains highly contested. We affirm the UDHR as not only ‘a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations’ but a common standard of assessment for all traditional values. The UDHR is an embodiment of positive traditional values that are universally held by this community of nations and are consistent with the inherent dignity of all human beings. We remind governments that under the Charter of the United Nations, gender equality has been proclaimed as a fundamental human right. States cannot contravene the UN Charter by enacting or enforcing discriminatory laws directly or through religious courts nor can allow any other private actors or groups imposing their religious fundamentalist agenda in violation of the UN Charter. “No one may invoke cultural diversity to infringe upon human rights guaranteed by international law, nor limit their scope. Not all cultural practices accord with international human rights law and, although it is not always easy to identify exactly which cultural practices may be contrary to human rights, the endeavour always must be to modify and/or discard all practices pursued in the name of culture that impede the enjoyment of human rights by any individual.” (Statement by Ms. Farida Shaheed, the Independent Expert in the field of cultural rights, to the Human Rights Council at its 14th session 31 May 2010) Amongst other things, it is alarming that some governments have evoked so-called “moral” values to deny women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights. Sexual and reproductive rights are a crucial and fundamental part of women’s full enjoyment of all rights as well as integral to gender equality, development and social justice. Social and religious morals and patriarchal values have been employed to justify violations against women. Violence against women, coercion and deprivation of legal and other protections of women, marital rape, honour crimes, son preference, female genital mutilation, ‘dowry’ or ‘bride price’, forced and early marriages and ‘corrective rapes’ of lesbians, bisexuals, transgender and inter-sexed persons have all been justified by reference to ‘traditional values’. We remind governments that the CSW is the principal global policy-making body dedicated exclusively to gender equality and advancement of women with the sole aim of promoting women’s rights in political, economic, civil, social and educational fields. Its mandate is to ensure the full implementation of existing international agreements on women’s human rights and gender equality as enshrined in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women, the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the International Conference on Population and Development Programme of Action as well as other international humanitarian and human rights law. We strongly demand all governments and the international community to reject any attempt to invoke traditional values or morals to infringe upon human rights guaranteed by international law, nor to limit their scope. Customs, tradition or religious considerations must not be tolerated to justify discrimination and violence against women and girls whether committed by State authorities or by non-state actors. In particular, we urge governments to ensure that the health and human rights of girls and women are secured and reaffirmed at the coming Commission on Population and Development and the International Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20). Any future international negotiations must move forward implementation of policies and programmes that secure the human rights of girls and women. We call upon the member states of the UN and the various UN human rights and development entities to recognise and support the important role of women’s groups and organisations working at the forefront of challenging traditional values and practices that are intolerant to fundamental human rights norms, standards and principles. MADRE ASIA PACIFIC FORUM ON WOMEN, LAW AND DEVELOPMENT (APWLD)ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN’S RIGHTS IN DEVELOPMENT (AWID)INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S HEALTH COALITION (IWHC)INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S RIGHTS ACTION WATCH ASIA PACIFIC (IWRAW ASIA PACIFIC)WOMEN LIVING UNDER MUSLIM LAWS (WLUML) / VIOLENCE IS NOT OUR CULTURE CAMPAIGNDownload the full statement here Take 30 seconds to endorse our statement here.Deadline: 5 April 2012 If you have any questions, or would like further information, please contact Misun Woo:[email protected].
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Visiting Manchester Home | Address Book
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Contact: Jeri Kornegay
Director of Media and Public Relations
260-982-5285 [email protected]
Read more about Professor Ken Brown
Peace studies pioneer Ken Brown honored for lifetime achievement by national association
Manchester College Professor Kenneth L. Brown, a national peace studies pioneer, has received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Peace and Justice Studies Association. More than 300 colleges and universities are members of the group.
For more than 50 years, Brown has been a nonviolent activist and educator for peace and justice. For 25 years, he directed the peace studies program at the 1,100-student Manchester College in northern Indiana. An ordained minister in the Church of the Brethren (one of the historic peace churches), Brown has founded several organizations, including the church’s grassroots anti-war organization and the War Tax Resisters' Penalty Fund. Brown assumed the leadership of the college’s Peace Studies Institute and Program in Conflict Resolution in 1980. The interdisciplinary curriculum integrates study of conflict resolution, global studies, religious and philosophical bases of peacemaking with nonviolence theory and practice. With leadership in merging study with action, Brown has served as consultant to peace studies programs across the country and has led study teams to Vietnam, Brazil, Northern Ireland, Haiti, Thailand, India, Jamaica, Colombia, Nicaragua, Mexico and Cuba. International activists such as Elaine Zoughbi, who has worked for enduring peace in Palestine for decades, and Yvonne Dilling, whose work on behalf of human rights in Central America has received international acclaim, say Brown inspired them to lead lives of active service for peace and justice in challenging international settings.
“Ken’s class transformed my life,” said Robert C. Johansen, a widely published expert on international relations and global governance. “We sensed that we were children of the universe, standing on an ethical foundation that transcended race, nation, and our time in history, gently breathing the air of immortality.” Johansen, who studied under Brown in the early ’60s, is a senior fellow with the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame.
For more about Manchester College’s peace studies program, visit
www.manchester.edu
For more about The Peace and Justice Studies Association, visit
www.peacejusticestudies.org
About Manchester
Manchester Magazine
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search Defusing the Pension Bomb
DESPITE the improving national and regional economy, New York City's budget remains stuck in a hole. With operating expenses momentarily in check, the city's continuing fiscal imbalance stems mainly from big projected increases in the cost of Medicaid, debt service, employee health benefits - and, seemingly out of nowhere, pension contributions.
Since 2001, municipal pension costs have more than doubled, growing by over $1.3 billion - enough to consume the lion's share of this year's record property-tax increase.
And it's not over yet. The city expects pension contributions to jump from $2.5 billion in fiscal 2004 to $4.3 billion by 2007.
Gotham's predicament is not unique. Counties, cities and towns across New York, as well as the state government itself, are grappling with similar pension-cost explosions.
The problem is not simply a function of the 2001-02 stock- market slump or the big benefit hikes enacted by the Legislature and governor just before the market crashed (although both helped precipitate the crisis). The ultimate cause is the outmoded and inherently volatile pension structure itself, which obscures costs and wreaks havoc on long-term financial planning.
Because the state Constitution doesn't allow pension benefits to be "diminished or impaired" for current public employees, nothing can be done to reverse the run-up in pension costs. This system will remain a ticking time-bomb - ready to explode again with the next market down-cycle - if it's not reformed.
How to permanently defuse the pension bomb - and to ensure lasting stability and transparency for the pension system? Replace New York's old-fashioned defined-benefit pension with the sort of defined-contribution plan that's come to dominate private-sector retirement planning.
Defined-benefit (DB) plans give workers a guaranteed retirement benefit based on their career longevity and peak income while working for government. But to make good on this, the pension fund's investments must perform strongly.
When investment returns sink, as state and city pension funds did starting in 2001, employer contribution must rise to pick up the slack. Conversely, when the rate of return rises above projections, employers may temporarily get to contribute less.
Since stock markets often decline during recessions, DB plans force governments to spend more money on pensions when unemployment is up and revenues are down - exactly when they can least afford it.
This pattern has particularly dire implications for New York City and state, which depend heavily on tax revenues from the stock market. It makes it even harder to weather downturns without raising their already high taxes, which in turn depresses the local economy and harms the business climate.
Defined-contribution (DC) retirement plans consist of individual accounts supported by employer contributions, usually matched in part by the employees' own savings. Funds in the accounts are managed by private firms and invested in a combination of stocks and bonds.
One key difference is timing: Under a DB system, the employer promises to finance a future retirement benefit for a group of current and former workers. Under a DC system, the employer promises to make current contributions to the retirement accounts of each employee.
The size of the ultimate retirement benefit generated by a DC plan depends on the amount of savings and investment returns the worker accumulates over the course of his or her working life. Both the risk of unanticipated investment losses and the potential upside of unanticipated investment gains shift from the employer to the employee.
The most common example of a defined-contribution plan is the 401(k), which has become the backbone of retirement planning in the private sector, where DB plans are dying out.
A DC plan is now being phased in as the sole pension for state government employees in one major state (Michigan) and as an option in another (Florida). And for decades now, a DC plan also has been the retirement vehicle of choice for most employees of public higher-education systems throughout the country, including both SUNY and CUNY.
A defined contribution plan would gradually ensure that pension costs remain well below today's high levels, relative to payroll. At the same time, a personalized, savings-based pension would provide city and state employees with benefits that are flexible, portable - and comparable to those offered by most private-sector retirement plans.
Even in times of retrenchment, the city and state need to hire thousands of new employees every year just to maintain current service levels. At the moment, these new employees are becoming permanent members of a costly and inequitable pension system - adding to the future obligations of a costly and inequitable system.
The sooner New York switches to a new pension plan, the sooner taxpayers and employees alike can begin to reap the many advantages of individual retirement accounts.
Original Source: http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/_nypost-defusing_pension.htm
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Home › Movies › Monsters University TV SPOT Monsters University TV SPOT
Series: Monsters University TV SPOT
Imagine You at MU By Robert T. Trate January 02, 2013
The animation here is terrific and as always Pixar nails it on the content as well. Are you ready for the prequel to Monsters, Inc?The Plot: Mike Wazowski and James P. Sullivan are an inseparable pair, but that wasn’t always the case. From the moment these two mismatched monsters met they couldn't stand each other. “Monsters University” unlocks the door to how Mike and Sulley overcame their differences and became the best of friends.The original film was nominated for four Oscars: Best Animated Feature Film, Best Original Score, Best Sound Editing and Best Original Song—“If I Didn’t Have You,” for which it won.Monsters University features the voice talents of Billy Crystal, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, Dave Foley, Julia Sweeney, Joel Murray, Peter SohnMonsters University will be released on June 21, 2013 MOVIES REVIEWS
1 almostunbiased 1/2/2013 8:23:05 AM
I doubt my kids will want to see this. This should have come out a long long time ago. Wiseguy 1/2/2013 9:11:50 AM
This is the rare exception when it comes to Pixar, really not much interest in this from my part.
Mossy1221 1/2/2013 4:35:08 PM
I forsee Cars 2 all over again.... (Maybe. Too Early.) mikemc2 1/3/2013 3:39:44 AM
Not afraid to admit, I loved the 1st movie, insanely cute (little girl made the movie for me)..
"Imagine You at Monster University" .. Hmm, don't have too.went to University of Maryland (couldn't resist, LOL) MrEt 1/4/2013 4:50:26 AM
Oh please let this be a toy story deserving story not the Cars 2 BS I had to put up with. 1 ADD A COMMENT
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1544
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Home › Movies › How To Train Your Dragon 2: Teaser Trailer How To Train Your Dragon 2 Update
Series: How To Train Your Dragon 2: Teaser Trailer Are you ready to return? By Robert T. Trate July 12, 2013
Dreamworks and 20th Century Fox have released the first teaser trailer for How To Train Your Dragon 2. The original is a modern day classic. Will the sequel be able to capture that same feeling? Only 11 months to go until we find out. Synopsis: “The story will move beyond the small, North Sea island that was the setting of the original film as it traces the further adventures of Hiccup as he grows toward becoming the leader of his Viking clan.”How To Train Your Dragon 2 features the voice talents of Jay Baruchel, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Kit Harington, Kristen Wiig, Gerard Butler, Jonah Hill, and is directed by Dean DeBlois. How To Train Your Dragon 2 flies into theaters June 20th, 2014. MOVIES REVIEWS
1 blankczech 7/12/2013 10:48:23 PM
How can they call this How to Train Your Dragon 2 when there's a 20 episode animated series (Dragons: Riders of Berk) on the Cartoon Network with the same characters? monkeyfoot 7/13/2013 5:49:32 AM
Wow! That is an excellent teaser! It looks like a perfect little clip from the actual movie that illustrates what its all about.
Blank, I was thinking the same thing. Doesn't having a TV show cancel out a movie sequel? RobertTrate 7/13/2013 7:05:45 AM
Only if the sequel ignores or negates anything in the TV show... again I agree with both of you. jedibanner 7/13/2013 8:27:42 AM
The TV show is a prequel to this sequel, that is why he look older in this teaser.
Can't wait for this one, in my mind when this came out I though this way so much better then Toy Story 3. axia777 7/13/2013 8:54:31 AM
HELL YEAH!! They finally made a sequel. EXCELLENT. horcruxx 7/13/2013 9:26:07 AM
Yhis movie clearly takes place several years, as Hiccup is now grown up. Maybe in the movie they will make reference to the tv series if they want to include it. Cant wait to see the rest of the gang grown up...Astrid oh yeah. Wiseguy 7/13/2013 6:24:06 PM
I didn't need to see anythying to pique my interest, I'm there when it opens. SarcasticCaveman 7/14/2013 11:30:15 AM
Sweet...can't wait. By the way, everybody is overthinking this sequel title in relation to the TV series entirely too much. It's like asking, how can they be called episodes II and III when The Clone Wars takes place between them?...because they are. That's all. 1 ADD A COMMENT
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1545
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Alyssa Sandeen has been offered a heart for transplant. She is shown here in the Rochester hospital in March.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1546
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Facebook joins Nasdaq 100, may boost stock
A Facebook worker outside of the social-media giant's headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. / Paul Sakuma, AP by Matt Krantz, USA TODAYby Matt Krantz, USA TODAY Filed Under
As a new member of the Nasdaq 100 index, Facebook's comeback may get a boost on Wall Street.
The closely watched index represents the 100 most valuable, non-financial stocks trading on Nasdaq. Facebook (FB) shares will be added Dec. 12.
Analysts say being in the Nasdaq 100 is a potential boon for shares of the No. 1 social-networking giant.
The Nasdaq 100 is a Who's Who of big technology companies, such as Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOG) and Microsoft (MSFT).
Big chunks of Nasdaq 100 company shares are often bought and held long term by exchange traded funds and major mutual funds that invest mostly or only in key stock indexes.
Inclusion in the index could even be considered a victory for Facebook, which has struggled mightily to appeal to investors since its May 18 initial public offering that was mired in technical problems.
"The company is a lot more seasoned now," says Francis Gaskins of IPO Desktop Premium, a website devoted to IPOs. Being in the Nasdaq 100 "takes away some of the stain of the botched IPO."
Facebook's addition to the the Nasdaq 100 underscores the company's stock price rebound. Shares made their debut at $38 apiece, but quickly fell apart as investors discovered more about the IPO's problems and began to worry about the company's strategy to make money off its massive base of users.
The shares peaked at $43 but then plummeted to just under $17.75 a share in September.
Facebook stock finished up 25 cents, 0.9%, to $27.71 Wednesday, 44% higher than the stock's recent Nov. 9 low of $19.21 apiece.
The stock has rallied in recent weeks, despite concerns about a series of post-IPO lockup expirations that released hundreds of millions of shares for sale on the open market. Many feared the huge supply rush would push Facebook's shares even lower.
Now, investors who build portfolios based on the Nasdaq 100 are likely to take a closer look at the stock, says Joseph Bonner of Argus Research in an e-mail to USA TODAY.
"Inclusion in the Nasdaq 100 should be a positive for (Facebook), since a bunch of index funds and ETFs now have to buy to maintain a match with the benchmark," Bonner says.
The exchange rebalances the Nasdaq 100 index each year as the values of companies in it change. Facebook is joining the Nasdaq 100 early due to the departure of outsourcing firm Infosys (INFY), which is moving to the larger New York Stock Exchange.
Including all classes of its stock, Facebook would rank 13th in the index, with a market value of nearly $60 billion, behind eBay (EBAY) but ahead of News Corp. (NWS).
Including only Facebook's A shares, valued at $30 billion, the company would be the 24th most valuable company in the index.
Apple, even after its $37.05 fall, 6.4%, to $538.79 Wednesday, remains the most valuable stock in the index, with a $516 billion market value.
Investors had largely anticipated Facebook's addition to the index this year, explaining why there wasn't more reaction to the announcement, says Josef Schuster of IPO tracker IPOX Schuster.
Investors are likely far more interested in when Facebook might be added to the broader Standard and Poor's 500 index, which isn't likely anytime soon, Schuster says. "The S&P is much more important."
Copyright 2014 USATODAY.comRead the original story: Facebook joins Nasdaq 100, may boost stock
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1547
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Home > Baby > Sick-baby care > Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS)
Sick-baby care
If you think your baby is sick, call his provider.
If your baby needs emergency care, call 911.
Make an emergency care plan for your baby. Overview
Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) Neonatal abstinence syndrome (also called NAS) is a group of conditions a newborn can have if his mother is addicted to drugs during pregnancy. NAS happens when a baby gets addicted to a drug before birth and then goes through drug withdrawal after birth. NAS can last from 1 week to 6 months after birth. If you’re pregnant and you use street (illegal) drugs or abuse prescription drugs, tell your health care provider right away. She can help you get treatment to quit using these drugs and help prevent NAS in your baby. If you’re not pregnant, quit using drugs before you get pregnant. This is the best way to prevent NAS.
What causes NAS?
If you take drugs during pregnancy, they can pass through the placenta to your baby in the womb. The placenta grows in your uterus and supplies your baby with food and oxygen through the umbilical cord. If your baby’s body starts to depend on a drug during pregnancy, he may have withdrawal symptoms after birth. Using drugs like these during pregnancy can cause NAS: Marijuana (pot) Cocaine Amphetamines (like speed, Adderall® and Dexedrine®) Opioids (like heroin, oxycodone, Oxycontin®, Vicodin®, Percocet®, morphine and codeine) Barbiturates (like phennies, yellow jackets and Amytal®) Benzodiazepines (like sleeping pills, Valium® and Xanax®)
Some of these drugs, like cocaine and heroin, are street drugs and illegal to use. Some, though, like Oxycontin and Valium, are prescription drugs. Prescription drugs are medicines that a health care provider has prescribed for you to treat a certain health condition. If you abuse prescription drugs, it means you take more than has been prescribed for you, you take someone else’s prescription drug, or you get the drug from someone without a prescription. Just like street drugs, some prescription drugs can hurt your baby during pregnancy and cause NAS after birth..
In most cases, it’s best to stop using street drugs immediately to give your baby the best chance to be born healthy. But if you’re pregnant and using opioids, like heroin or oxycodone, don’t stop taking them without treatment from your health care provider. Quitting suddenly (sometimes called cold turkey) can cause severe problems for your baby, including death. Talk to your health care provider or a drug-treatment center about treatment with drugs like methadone or buprenorphine. Getting treatment can help you stop using drugs and is safer for your baby than getting no treatment at all. What are the symptoms of NAS?
Babies with NAS may show these symptoms in the first 10 days following birth:
Body shakes (tremors) or seizures (convulsions) Being very fussy, excessive crying or having a high-pitched cry Poor feeding, poor sucking or slow weight gain Breathing really fast Fever Sweating Trouble sleeping Patchy or uneven skin color Diarrhea or throwing up Hyperactive reflexes Tight muscle tone Stuffy nose or sneezing
Call your baby’s health care provider if your baby has any of these symptoms. Not all babies with NAS have the same symptoms. Symptoms depend on: What drug you used during pregnancy, how much you used and how long you took it How your own body breaks down the drug If your baby was born prematurely (before 37 weeks of pregnancy)
How do you know if your baby has NAS?
Your baby’s provider can use these tests to see if he has NAS:
Neonatal abstinence scoring system. This system gives points for each NAS symptom depending on how severe it symptom is. Your baby’s provider uses the score to decide what kind of treatment your baby needs. Test of your baby’s first bowel movements (also called meconium) Test of your baby’s urine How is NAS treated?
Your baby’s treatment may include:
Taking medicines to treat or manage severe withdrawal symptoms. Your baby’s provider may give her a medicine that’s similar to the drug you used during pregnancy. This can help relieve your baby’s withdrawal symptoms. Once these symptoms are under control, your baby gets smaller doses of the medicine over time so her body can adjust to being off the medicine. Medicines used to treat severe withdrawal symptoms include morphine, methadone and buprenorphine. Getting fluids through a needle into a vein (also called intravenous or IV). Babies with NAS can get very dehydrated from having diarrhea or throwing up a lot. If a baby’s dehydrated, she doesn’t have enough water in her body. Getting fluids through an IV helps keep your baby from getting dehydrated. Drinking higher-calorie baby formula. Some babies with NAS need extra calories to help them grow because they have trouble feeding or slow growth.
While your baby’s being treated for NAS, he may be fussy and hard to soothe. Doing these things can help calm him: Swaddle your baby in a blanket. Gently rock your baby. Keep your baby in a quiet, dimly lit room.
Substance Abuse Treatment Facility Locator
Organization of Teratology Information Specialists
Last reviewed January 2013 See also: Drugs and pregnancy, Alcohol during pregnancy
Call your doctor now if your baby...
Has a temperature above 100.4 F
Has trouble breathing or is hard to waken
Has blood in her vomit or stool
Has yellowish skin or eyes
Is having a seizure
Most common questions Is there any way to prevent RSV?
The season for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection in the United States is usually October to April. It's wise to take precautions to help prevent it. The main thing to do is wash your hands often and thoroughly with soap and water. Make sure everyone who touches your baby has clean hands. Keep your baby away from crowds of people. Do not allow anyone to smoke around your baby. Cover your mouth when you cough or sneeze and don't share cups, spoons and forks with others. RSV is very contagious. Almost all babies get it before the age of 2. Talk to your baby's health care provider about ways to prevent RSV.
What is diphtheria?
Diphtheria is a disease caused by a bacteria. The disease causes a thick coating in the nose, throat and airway. It can lead to breathing problems, heart failure, paralysis or even death. Diphtheria can be spread by coughing and sneezing. Symptoms may include a slow onset of a sore throat and low-grade fever. The DTaP (for children) and Tdap (for adults) vaccines can protect against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis. Your baby gets the DTaP vaccine in four doses: at 2 months, 4 months, 6 months and between 15 and 18 months. If you’re thinking about getting pregnant, make sure you’re protected against diphtheria. If you need to get vaccinated, get the adult vaccine before pregnancy.
What is Haemophilus influenzae type b?
Hib is a serious disease caused by bacteria. It usually affects young children. Hib is spread from person to person through coughing or sneezing. Hib can cause meningitis, pneumonia and other serious health problems.
The Hib vaccine protects against this disease. Your baby gets the Hib vaccine in three to four doses: at 2 months, 4 months, 6 months (some brands of the vaccine require a shot at 6 months, but others don’t) and between 12 and 15 months.
What is hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B is caused by the hepatitis B virus. It can lead to serious liver disease. Signs of hepatitis B infection include belly pain, joint pain, dark urine, loss of appetite, nausea, fatigue and jaundice. However, most people who have hepatitis B infection never show any signs. You can catch hepatitis B if you’re in contact with bodily fluids of someone who has it. For example, you can get the virus from kissing or having sex with an infected person. You also can get it if you share needles with someone who has the virus. During pregnancy, a mom with hepatitis B can pass the infection on to her baby during childbirth. Pregnant women are tested for hepatitis B at a prenatal care visit.
Most people with hepatitis B get better and may not need treatment. However, if you have chronic (long-lasting) hepatitis B infection, you may need treatment with medicines called antivirals that fight the virus. If the liver is badly damaged, you may need a liver transplant. Babies and children are much more likely than adults to get chronic hepatitis B infection.
The hepatitis B vaccine can prevent infection in babies and adults. Your baby gets three doses of hepatitis B vaccine: at birth, 2 months and between 6 and 18 months.
What is measles?
Measles is a disease that is easily spread and causes rash, cough and fever. In some cases, it can lead to diarrhea, ear infection, pneumonia, brain damage or even death. Measles can cause serious health problems in young children. It also can be especially harmful to pregnant women and can cause miscarriage. The measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine protects against these three diseases. Your baby gets the MMR vaccine in two doses: the first between 12 and 15 months, the second between 4 and 6 years.
If you’re thinking about getting pregnant, make sure you’re protected against measles. If you need to get vaccinated, get the MMR vaccine before pregnancy. Wait at least 1 month before trying to get pregnant after getting the shot.
What is meningitis?
Meningitis is an infection that causes swelling in the brain and spinal cord. It’s usually caused by a virus or bacteria. The infection can spread from person to person through coughing, sneezing, kissing or sharing drinks. Most people get meningitis from a virus. If you get this kind of meningitis, you’ll probably get better in a few days without treatment. But the meningitis caused by bacteria can lead to brain damage and even death.
Adults may have symptoms like headache, fever and a stiff neck. These symptoms are sometimes mistaken for the flu. Babies may show different symptoms, like high fever, constant crying or even seizures.
If you think anyone if your family has meningitis, see your health care provider right away.
The Hib vaccine can protect against bacteria that cause meningitis. Your baby gets the Hib vaccine in three to four doses: at 2 months, 4 months, 6 months and between 12 and 15 months. Some brands of the vaccine require a shot at 6 months, but others don’t. Ask your provider if you have questions about when your baby gets the vaccine.
What is mumps?
Mumps is a disease that spreads easily from person to person, usually through coughing or sneezing. It causes fever, headache and swollen glands around the jaw. It can lead to hearing loss, meningitis and painful, swollen testicles in men.
The measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine prevents against these diseases. Your baby gets the MMR vaccine in two doses: the first between 12 and 15 months, the second between 4 and 6 years.
If you’re thinking about getting pregnant, make sure you’re protected against mumps. If you need to get vaccinated, get the MMR vaccine before pregnancy. Wait 1 month before trying to get pregnant after getting the shot.
What is pertussis?
Pertussis (whooping cough) is a disease caused by bacteria. Pertussis leads to coughing and choking that can last for several weeks. Babies who catch pertussis can get very sick, and some may die. Most deaths from pertussis happen in babies less than 4 months old. The number of pertussis cases in this country has more than doubled since 2000. This may be because protection from the childhood vaccine fades over time. In the last few years, there have been several large pertussis outbreaks. Outbreaks are common in places like schools and hospitals. The disease spreads easily from person to person, usually by coughing or sneezing. Most infants who get pertussis catch it from someone in their family, often a parent. The DTaP vaccine for children and the Tdap vaccine for adults can protect you and your children from pertussis, diphtheria and tetanus. Your baby gets the DTaP vaccine in four doses: at 2 months, 4 months, 6 months and between 15 and 18 months. The pertussis part of the vaccine may weaken as your child gets older. So for the best protection, she gets a fifth shot before she starts school, around 4 to 6 years old.
All new parents need the pertussis vaccine. Until your baby gets her first pertussis shot at 2 months, the best way to protect her is for you to get the adult vaccine before pregnancy or soon after you have your baby. The vaccine prevents you from getting pertussis and passing it along to your baby. Caregivers, close friends and relatives who spend time with your baby should get vaccinated, too.
What is pneumonia?
Pneumonia is an infection in the lungs caused by bacteria or viruses. Pneumonia can cause coughing, shortness of breath and chest pain. You can catch it from another person, even if he doesn’t look or feel sick.
Several vaccines can protect you from pneumonia by preventing infection from certain bacteria or viruses. One vaccine that protects against pneumonia is pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV). Your baby gets the PCV vaccine in four doses: at 2 months, 4 months, 6 months and between 12 and 15 months. Other vaccines that help protect against pneumonia include: (Hib) Influenza (flu) , mumps, rubella (MMR) , and (DTaP for children and Tdap for adults) Varicella (chickenpox) If you’re thinking about getting pregnant and are at risk for pneumonia, your provider may recommend that you get vaccinated before pregnancy. Talk to your provider if you think you may be at risk for pneumonia.
What is tetanus?
Tetanus (also called lockjaw) is a disease caused by bacteria that attacks the nervous system (that includes the brain, spinal cord and nerves). Stiffness in the neck or stomach muscles may be early symptoms of tetanus. Tetanus also can cause the jaw to “lock,” so that a person can’t open his mouth or swallow. It also can cause serious, painful spasms of all muscles. It sometimes causes death.
Tetanus is not passed from one person to another. Instead, the bacteria that causes tetanus can enter your body through a break in your skin and cause infection. For example, if you step on a nail, cut your skin in an accident, or get a splinter, you may be at risk of tetanus infection.
The DTaP (for children) and Tdap (for adults) vaccines can protect you from tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis. Your baby gets the DTaP vaccine in four doses: at 2 months, 4 months, 6 months and between 15 and 18 months.
If you’re thinking about getting pregnant, make sure you’re protected against tetanus. If you need to get vaccinated, get the adult vaccine before pregnancy.
What’s an umbilical hernia?
This common hernia in infants usually appears as a soft lump or bulge beneath the belly button. You may see it most clearly when your baby is crying, pushing her belly outward. It happens when a portion of the intestine bulges through the abdominal wall. This happens when the muscles in the area fail to close around the belly button after the umbilical cord falls off. It's more common in girls, particularly African Americans, or premature babies. Umbilical hernias usually aren't serious or painful to the baby and they go away without treatment by the fifth birthday - often much sooner. If you suspect your baby has a hernia, call your child's health care provider. It’ll be important to watch it for changes over time. If it enlarges or swells, or if you baby has severe pain, vomiting or weakness, call your child's health provider right away, as a serious complication could exist. If surgery is required, it’s usually a quick fix. Have questions?
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1548
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Wounded Warrior Project will help vets hurt by shutdown
By Gregg Zoroya USA Today
A non-profit group that helps those wounded in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars says that if the government shutdown results in cutting off VA compensation benefits, it will send out $20 million to some 40,000 young veterans it has assisted in the past.The decision announced Tuesday by Florida-based Wounded Warrior Project is among the largest initiatives by a private group or individuals to cover unmet needs in the wake of the government shutdown Oct. 1.�You�re hearing (from veterans) a lot of fear, and you�re hearing a lot of anger and frustration,� says Steven Nardizzi, a co-founder and the executive director of Wounded Warrior Project.Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki told Congress last week that if the shutdown continues through the end of October, the VA will not be able to send out Nov. 1 monthly checks totaling $6.25 billion to more than 5 million beneficiaries, including nearly 4 million veterans.Nardizzi says the money his group would provide, if necessary, to 40,000 veterans is admittedly modest � $500, enough to cover some basic needs.But, he added, �we had to do more than just a call to action. We had to do everything we could to provide support to those families.�He said many Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have a complex array of disabilities that include amputations, spinal injuries, brain injury and emotional issues. Many are receiving benefits for more than one disability and rely heavily on a VA compensation check amounting to several thousand dollars the first of each month, he says.�You have folks who are dealing with mental health issues who are concerned about am I going to be able to feed my family at the end of the month,� Nardizzi says.A common refrain from many of them, Nardizzi says, is �I served my country, I did my part, I did what was asked of me. And now my country is breaking its promise to me.� Right now they�re so angry with the government, but they understand that the public is still behind them.�The potential $20 million offer of assistance from Wounded Warrior Project would be the among largest initiatives by a private group or individual to cover unmet needs in the wake of the government shutdown Oct. 1.A Texas billionaire couple donated $10 million to help keep the federal Head Start programs running.And the Fisher House Foundation, which builds residences on the grounds of military hospitals for families visiting their wounded loved ones, is providing $725,000 as gifts to the families of 29 troops who have died since the shutdown, some of them in combat. Those families were initially denied death gratuities from the Pentagon because of the shutdown. Congress last week restored the $100,000-per-family payments.
A non-profit group that helps those wounded in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars says that if the government shutdown results in cutting off VA compensation benefits, it will send out $20 million to A link to this page will be included in your message.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1549
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Trailer Bridge Expands Dominican Service
Trailer Bridge, Inc. (NASDAQ Global Market: TRBR) announced that it is expanding its Dominican Republic sailings from every two weeks to weekly. The company will provide this service utilizing its existing vessels that currently link the ports of Jacksonville, Fla., San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic. The new service is expected to commence in the last week of January 2010. The company originally commenced sailing to the Dominican Republic in August 2007, and has grown its customer base significantly over the past two years. The added frequency of sailings will provide additional options for the company’s existing shipping customers, while also making Trailer Bridge’s value proposition more attractive for potential new shippers. Trailer Bridge’s Chief Executive Officer, Ivy Barton Suter, stated, “We continue to search for cost-efficient methods to improve our operations and, as a result of existing customer demand, decided to expand our service to the Dominican Republic’s growing market without a significant increase in cost. This expansion was planned prior to the earthquake that struck Haiti earlier this week. As a service provider in the Caribbean, we are concerned for all those affected. Trailer Bridge is currently working with the U.S. and local governments and private parties to explore options for use of our additional available vessels in the relief effort.” Suter also noted that on January 13, 2010, Trailer Bridge completed its previously announced purchase, in privately negotiated transactions, of another $1m of its 9 1/4% Senior Secured Notes maturing on November 15, 2011. Since September 2009, the company has repurchased $2.5m of these Notes, which have an outstanding balance of $82.5m. (www.trailerbridge.com) Tweet
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1550
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Man Convicted of Scuttling Boat
The U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California stated that a man was convicted six federal charges related to the scuttling of his boat in the port of Los Angeles in 2005. The convictions were for two counts of water pollution, one count of attempting to obstruct the Coast Guard investigation, two counts of making false statements to Coast Guard investigators, and one count of sinking a boat in a navigation channel. He faces a maximum sentence of 26 years imprisonment.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1551
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Market Research > List All Publishers > Supplier Relations US, LLC
Supplier Relations US, LLC Supplier Relations US, LLC. is an independent U.S. based information technology and publishing company. The company publishes more than 700 industry reports based on the NAICS definitions of the U.S. manufacturing sector, composing the most extensive industry research in this sector. These reports are commonly used as an in-depth analysis of the industry, an industry reference guide, an aid for benchmarking and forecasting, and as a tool for uncovering new business opportunities. Supplier Relations' industry reports rely heavily upon the company's proprietary market research and database technology.
List of reports from Supplier Relations US, LLC
Petrochemical Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
2/17/2014 | published by: Supplier Relations US, LLC
... industries, and trade data. This 2014 report's 168 pages and over 150 charts and tables cover the domestic market, global market and overseas growth opportunities. Find the latest data on shipments, inventory, international trade, and ...
$599.00 Jewelry (except Costume) Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... pricing, and trends during the current environment, including the output and shipment changes over the past months. At 169 pages with over 150 charts and tables, the report covers topics such as current macroeconomic trends, ...
$599.00 Secondary Smelting and Alloying of Aluminum Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... cost and pricing, and trends during the current environment, including the output and shipment changes over the past months. At 157 pages with over 150 charts and tables, the report covers topics such as current ...
$599.00 Tire Retreading Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... trends during the current environment, including the output and shipment changes over the past months. At 164 pages with over 150 charts and tables, the report covers topics such as current macroeconomic trends, granular product ...
$599.00 Creamery Butter Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... inventory data available through December 2013. This update provides the data necessary to make informed forecasts and business planning after the recent seasonal changes in output. This 162-page report includes the most recent information on ...
$599.00 Other Animal Food Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... and downstream industries, and trade data. This 2014 report's 164 pages and over 150 charts and tables cover the domestic market, global market and overseas growth opportunities. Find the latest data on shipments, inventory, international ...
$599.00 Flour Milling Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Frozen Specialty Food Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... and inventory data available through December 2013. This update provides the data necessary to make informed forecasts and business planning after the recent seasonal changes in output. This 172-page report includes the most recent information ...
$599.00 Fruit and Vegetable Canning Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Dried and Dehydrated Food Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... and pricing, and trends during the current environment, including the output and shipment changes over the past months. At 169 pages with over 150 charts and tables, the report covers topics such as current macroeconomic ...
$599.00 Fluid Milk Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... and trends during the current environment, including the output and shipment changes over the past months. At 166 pages with over 150 charts and tables, the report covers topics such as current macroeconomic trends, granular ...
$599.00 Cheese Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Animal (except Poultry) Slaughtering Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Rendering and Meat Byproduct Processing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... upstream and downstream industries, and trade data. This 2014 report's 167 pages and over 150 charts and tables cover the domestic market, global market and overseas growth opportunities. Find the latest data on shipments, inventory, ...
$599.00 Poultry Processing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... data available through December 2013. This update provides the data necessary to make informed forecasts and business planning after the recent seasonal changes in output. This 169-page report includes the most recent information on the ...
$599.00 Seafood Canning Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Retail Bakeries Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Commercial Bakeries Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Cookie and Cracker Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Dry Pasta Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... downstream industries, and trade data. This 2014 report's 163 pages and over 150 charts and tables cover the domestic market, global market and overseas growth opportunities. Find the latest data on shipments, inventory, international trade, ...
$599.00 Tortilla Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Roasted Nuts and Peanut Butter Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
... trade, shipment, and inventory data available through December 2013. This update provides the data necessary to make informed forecasts and business planning after the recent seasonal changes in output. This 165-page report includes the most ...
$599.00 Other Snack Food Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Flavoring Syrup and Concentrate Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
$599.00 Soft Drink Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its International Trade [2014 Edition]
Research assistance US: 800.298.5699 Int'l: +1.240.747.3093 Join Alert Me now!Receive bi-weekly email alerts on new market research Sign up today! Phone: 800.298.5699 (US) or +1.240.747.3093 (Int'l)
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1552
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BlackBerry Limited NASDAQ : BBRY
TSX : BB
BlackBerry Announces Plans to Divest Canadian Real Estate Holdings
WATERLOO, ONTARIO--(Marketwired - Jan. 21, 2014) - BlackBerry® Limited (NASDAQ:BBRY)(TSX:BB), a world leader in mobile communications, today announced that it intends to divest the majority of its real estate holdings in Canada. In partnership with CBRE Limited, BlackBerry intends to strategically divest the majority of its commercial real estate portfolio through a combination of sale-leaseback and vacant asset sales. The properties to be offered for sale comprise over 3 million square feet of space. "BlackBerry remains committed to being headquartered in Waterloo and having a strong presence in Canada along with other global hubs," said BlackBerry CEO and Executive Chair, John Chen. "This initiative will further enhance BlackBerry's financial flexibility, and will provide additional resources to support our operations as our business continues to evolve."
BlackBerry will not comment on the potential value of a sale and will disclose further information as required in connection with any definitive sale transaction. For more information on the sale of these properties, contact CBRE Limited.
About BlackBerry A global leader in mobile communications, BlackBerry® revolutionized the mobile industry when it was introduced in 1999. Today, BlackBerry aims to inspire the success of our millions of customers around the world by continuously pushing the boundaries of mobile experiences. Founded in 1984 and based in Waterloo, Ontario, BlackBerry operates offices in North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and Latin America. The company trades under the ticker symbols "BB" on the Toronto Stock Exchange and "BBRY" on the NASDAQ. For more information, visit www.blackberry.com. The convertible debentures have not been and will not be registered under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933 (the "U.S. Securities Act"), and may not be offered or sold in the United States or to, or for the account or benefit of U.S. persons (as defined in Regulation S under the U.S. Securities Act), absent registration or an applicable exemption from registration requirements. This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of the convertible debentures in any state in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state.
Forward-looking statements in this news release are made pursuant to the "safe harbor" provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and applicable Canadian securities laws. When used herein, words such as "expect", "anticipate", "estimate", "may", "will", "should", "intend", "believe", and similar expressions, are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on estimates and assumptions made by BlackBerry Limited in light of its experience and its perception of historical trends, current conditions and expected future developments, as well as other factors that BlackBerry believes are appropriate in the circumstances. Many factors could cause BlackBerry's actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements, including those described in the "Risk Factors" section of BlackBerry's Annual Information Form, which is included in its Annual Report on Form 40-F (copies of which filings may be obtained at www.sedar.com or www.sec.gov). These factors should be considered carefully, and readers should not place undue reliance on BlackBerry's forward-looking statements. BlackBerry has no intention and undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.
BlackBerry and related trademarks, names and logos are the property of BlackBerry Limited and are registered and/or used in the U.S. and countries around the world. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. BlackBerry is not responsible for any third-party products or services.
Media Relations Contact:BlackBerry Media Relations(519) 888-7465 [email protected]
BlackBerry Limited
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Anthony J. ViolaAssociate ProfessorCorbly Hall [email protected]
Ph.D. (Ohio University)
Specialization(s):
Creative Writing; Composition; Workplace Writing; 20th Century American Literature; Short Story
He is an Associate Professor of English at Marshall, coming to us from his work as Associate Director of the Writing Program at the University of Kentucky in 2004-06. He holds a BA in English from East Stroudsburg University and an MA in English with a creative thesis from the University of North Dakota. He received the PhD in English with a creative specialty in Fiction from Ohio University. Among his specialties are composition, the short story, introductory and advanced courses in creative writing (particularly fiction), multimedia writing, and American modernism. His stories have appeared in Gulf Coast and Pleiades, with “Everybody Smells like Fish” being named to the list of 100 Other Distinguished Short Stories by Best American Short Stories 2007 and “What to Do After” receiving a nomination for the Pushcart Prize in 2008.
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Massage Therapy Schools USA
Find the Best Massage Therapy Schools in The USA!
Massage Therapy Training Courses in Inverness FL, Find The Best SchoolsSend to Kindle Looking for Massage Therapy schools in Inverness, FL? We can help you find the best Massage Therapist training courses near Inverness, FL.
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The most important thing that you must do is have an understanding of the massage therapy occupation in general in addition to the different methods of massage treatment. The U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics furnishes an in-depth assessment of the occupation of Massage Therapist. Here you will find out about the structure of the job, training and other qualifications, employment, job outlook, projections Data, Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) data, related occupations, together with sources of supplemental information. An additional wonderful resource for accumulating information about the massage therapist industry is the American Massage Therapy Association (AMTA). The National Center for Complementary And Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) also provides a summary of the profession, that includes the history of massage.
Recommended Massage Therapy Schools near Inverness, FL
Keiser University Campus
Keiser University offers accredited degree programs in today's in demand careers: Healthcare, Technology, Paralegal, Business, Nursing and Legal Studies.
Programs:Massage Therapy, ASLocations: Port Saint LucieEverest UniversityAt Everest University you can get a higher education designed to meet the demands of employers in some of today's hottest fields.Programs:Massage TherapyLocations: JacksonvilleSanford-Brown College
Sanford-Brown can help prepare you for a rewarding career in health and dental care, business, paralegal, criminal justice, Design & Media Arts or information technology. With nearly 20 campuses in the Sanford-Brown Institute and Sanfo
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MastersCollege
Charles W. Smith Hall Men's and Women's Dormitory
Some history of the dorm:
C.W. Smith Hall is the newest dorm on campus (often called "C-dub"). It was completed in Spring 2003 to alleviate the need for the college to house growing numbers of students in off-campus rented apartments. In fact, students were moved mid-semester from the off-campus apartments (named Oak Tree and Manzanita) into the newly finished dorm in an effort that nearly the entire campus participated in--accomplishing the huge task in one afternoon.
Smith Hall was named in honor of the beloved Bible professor Charles W. Smith. He came to the school in 1987 and was a favorite of students for his general bible class on the book of Romans and other upper division theology and greek classes. Before he retired but after he was diagnosed with terminal cancer, he gave the 2002 Commencement Address with the memorable line "These are the things for the past 50 years I've tried to give my students to teach them how to live...and now it is time to teach you how to die." He dedicated 50 years of his life to educating Christian young people, 35 years at Bob Jones University and the last 15 years at The Master's College. He went to be with the Lord in 2003. There is a C.W. Smith Biblical Endowment fund to give scholarships to students studying biblical languages and theology.
What is C.W. Smith Hall like?
C.W. Smith Hall is a three-story building in a slight-"V" shape. Between two large wings of rooms are: two spacious lounges on the first and third floors with spectacular views of the Santa Clarita Valley, a large laundry facility on the second story, and two apartments for the Resident Directors on the second and third stories.
The dorm is divided into six wings, two men's wings on the bottom floor and four women's wings on the second and third floors. Each wing has a large central shower and restroom area and 13-14 rooms. Each room is fully furnished for two students including beds, built-in shelving, drawers, closet space, desks, and an individual heater/air-conitioner unit. The wings are normally referred to as "Upper-East", "Upper-West", "Middle-East", "Middle-West", "Lower-East", and "Lower-West" with reference to their location from the central dorm entrance on the first-story lounge. Because of its relatively recent consturction C.W. Smith is the only dorm with an elevator and so is fully ADA-compliant.
Some old and new traditions:
Annual Men's Camping Trip
The C.W. Smith Hall Black and White Year End Celebration
Smith men's 2011 winning Spring Sing video entitled "I'll Make a Man Out of You"
Residence LifeCommunity CovenantDorm LifeDixon HallHotchkiss HallSlight HallSweazy HallSmith HallWaldock HallMeet the DeansMeet the Resident DirectorsStudent Handbook
Give to TMC
Student Career Center
21726 Placerita Canyon RoadSanta Clarita, California 91321Phone: 800.568.6248
Copyright 2011-2013, The Master's College. All rights reserved.
Problem with this page?
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KatsyTO
Enjoying life in New York City and looking to meet the right person.
KatsyTO has been notified that you want to learn about him.
30 Miles of Church Street, New York, United States
I moved to NYC in 2012 to work for a financial services start-up. After spending my life in Toronto, it was a bit of a risk, but it has brought me closer to my brother and his family -- and most important my two nephews.
I am hoping match.com is a good way to meet new people and to hopefully find the right person to spend time with it.
It's never easy to describe yourself, but I think I am a considerate, caring, and loyal person with a good sense of humor. I'm looking for a women who has the same qualities and a mutual attraction is also important.
I realize this profile isn't too long, so please feel free to ask any questions and I would be happy to answer them.
Interests: Dining out, Music and concerts, Playing sports, Travel/Sightseeing, Watching sports
Sports & exercise: Baseball, Golf, Weights / Machines, Hockey
My family has a toy australian shepherd.
College: Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB
I love being active -- avid sports fan and golfer. I try and run and go to the gym 4-5 times per week as my work schedule permits.
I really like Tribeca in NYC, where I currently live.
I'm pretty easy going. I like all sorts of things and it's hard to pick favorites.
Flash Boys - a must read for anyone who invests in the stock market.
I work for a Financial Services company as the controller.
My Mom and Dad were born in Canada and Japan respectively. I was born and raised in Toronto.
I went to Mount Allison University in Sackville, NB.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1557
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Tests and ProceduresCombination birth control pills
BasicsDefinitionWhy it's doneRisksHow you prepareWhat you can expectIn-DepthMultimediaResources
RisksBy Mayo Clinic Staff
An estimated 8 out of 100 women taking combination birth control pills will get pregnant in the first year of use. Although taking combination birth control pills during early pregnancy doesn't increase the risk of birth defects, it's best to stop taking birth control pills as soon as you suspect you're pregnant. Combination birth control pills won't protect you from sexually transmitted infections. Combination birth control pills can cause side effects such as: Breakthrough bleeding or spotting (more common with continuous or extended-cycle pills)
Breast tenderness
Decreased libido
Some side effects — including nausea, headaches, breast tenderness and breakthrough bleeding — may last only a few months or be less noticeable if you take the pill at the same time every day. Combination birth control pills increase the risk of certain conditions. Some of these complications can be serious. They include the following: Blood clots in the legs (recent studies suggest that the type of progestin used in the pill may affect the risk of blood clots, with pills containing drosperinone showing a higher risk)
Gallbladder disease
Heart attacks and stroke (smoking greatly increases the risk of these complications)
Liver tumors
Consult your health care provider as soon as possible if you're taking combination birth control pills and have: Abdominal pain
Breast lump
Difficulty speaking
Eye problems, such as blurred or double vision or loss of vision
Jaundice (yellowish discoloration of the skin)
New or worsening headaches
Severe allergic skin rash
Severe leg pain or swelling
Severe mood swings
Two missed periods or signs of pregnancy
Why it's doneHow you prepare
FAQs: Birth control pills. The American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. http://www.acog.org/publications/faq/faq021.cfm. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Update to CDC's U.S. Medical Eligibility Criteria for Contraceptive Use, 2010: Revised Recommendations for the Use of Contraceptive Methods During the Postpartum Period. MMWR. 2011;60:878.
Frequently asked questions: Birth control methods. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. http://www.womenshealth.gov/faq/birth-control-methods.pdf. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Cullins V. Counseling women seeking hormonal contraception. http://www.uptodate.com/home/index.html. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Kaunitz AM. Hormonal contraception for suppression of menstruation. http://www.uptodate.com/home/index.html. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Martin KA, et al. Overview of the use of estrogen-progestin contraceptives. http://www.uptodate.com/home/index.html. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Martin KA. Risks and side effects associated with estrogen-progestin contraceptives. http://www.uptodate.com/home/index.html. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Schorge JO, et al. Contraception and sterilization. In: Schorge JO, et al. Williams Gynecology. New York, N.Y.: The McGraw-Hill Companies; 2008. http://www.accessmedicine.com/content.aspx?aID=3151449. Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
Hatcher RA, et al. Contraceptive Technology. 19th ed. New York, N.Y.: Ardent Media, Inc.; 2007:1.
In: Combined (estrogen and progestin) contraceptives. Zieman M, et al. A Pocket Guide to Managing Contraception. Tiger, Ga.: Bridging the Gap Communications; 2010:94.
Lidegaard O, et al. Risk of venous thromboembolism from use of oral contraceptives containing different progestogens and oestrogen doses: Danish cohort study, 2001-9. BMJ. 2011;343:6423.
Hannaford PC. The progestogen content of combined oral contraceptives and venous thromboembolic risk. BMJ. 2011;343:6592.
See alsoChoosing a birth control pillBirth control pill FAQDelaying your periodPremenstrual syndrome (PMS)Premenstrual dysphoric disorderFibrocystic breastsFibrocystic breast changes: Linked to breast cancer?AmenorrheaBreast painOvarian cystsOvarian cysts and fertility: Is there a connection?MittelschmerzShow moreShow less
Combination birth control pills
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The microeconomics of personalized medicine
Personalized medicine promises to increase the quality of clinical care and, in some cases, to decrease health care costs. The biggest hurdles are economic, not scientific.
| byJerel Davis, Philip Ma, and Saumya Sutaria
Diagnostics is the key to personalized medicine, a tailored approach to treatment based on the molecular analysis of genes, proteins, and metabolites. Yet although this approach has generated much excitement, few personalized-medicine tests have achieved high levels of clinical adoption. To understand better the challenges to the development and acceptance of personalized medicine—and how to overcome them—we interviewed more than 60 leading experts in this and related fields1 1.
Our interview subjects included payers, providers, regulatory experts, executives of pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, academic opinion leaders, and executives of diagnostics and clinical-laboratory companies.
and conducted microeconomic analyses of various stakeholder issues.
We focus here on the US market, but the challenges are also relevant elsewhere. Our proposals for overcoming them could significantly accelerate the adoption of personalized medicine.Stakeholder incentives and challenges
Our investigation highlighted three main obstacles to the advancement of personalized medicine: scientific challenges (a poor understanding of molecular mechanisms or a lack of molecular markers associated with some diseases, for example), economic challenges (poorly aligned incentives), and operational issues. Although scientific difficulties remain, the economic challenges and operational questions now seem to be the biggest hurdle. Operational issues can often be largely resolved within a particular stakeholder group, but correcting the incentive structure and modifying the relationships between stakeholders could be more complex.Payers
Investors and analysts have suggested that personalized medicine can dramatically reduce health care costs and help payers market products to the most attractive customers. Yet most payers have been slow to invest in personalized medicine. Leaders in payer organizations say that several factors could explain this reluctance. First, it is hard to identify which tests truly save costs. Second, the belief that it is difficult to track much earlier-stage and experimental testing leads to fears that although individual tests may not be very expensive, the overall eventual costs could be unjustifiably high. A third concern is the difficulty of enforcing standard protocols to ensure that physicians follow through with appropriate patient care based on test results. Fourth, test information could be misused—particularly in the early stages of investigation and development—which could harm patients. Finally, there is no longitudinal accounting, which would enable payers to capture long-term cost savings from near-term testing. To understand which tests avert costs, we analyzed various types of tests. Two primary factors determine a test’s cost effectiveness from a payer’s perspective: per patient savings (the difference between the cost of treating a disease and the cost of the intervention indicated by the test) and the likelihood that a test suggests an intervention for any particular patient (Exhibit 1). Tests that help avoid the use of expensive therapies (for example, cancer therapies such as trastuzumab or imatinib), minimize costly adverse events (such as the warfarin dosing test), or delay expensive procedures can be extremely cost effective for payers. Although such tests cost $100 to $3,000 each, they save $600 to $28,000 per patient. Tests that save a small amount per patient or have a low probability of identifying patients requiring intervention are not cost effective. BRCA1 testing to predict the risk of breast cancer can save around $25,000 per patient identified, for example. But mutations are so rare in the general population that this test, which costs up to $3,000 per patient, is cost effective only when performed on a patient with a family history of breast cancer. Exhibit 1Not all diagnostic tests cut costs for payers.Enlarge
The payers’ adoption of personalized-medicine tests is further complicated by the high customer turnover of many commercial payers in the United States. This makes it less economically attractive for payers to reimburse prophylactic tests that minimize the likelihood of conditions occurring much later in life: the costs accrue to the payer that screens the patient and performs the intervention, the benefits to the payer covering the patient when the disease actually arises. The pharmacoeconomics for the BRCA1 test illustrate the point (Exhibit 2). This longitudinal-accounting issue is particularly acute for diseases with a late or delayed onset: insurers for the elderly—for example, the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)—get the benefit of interventions paid for years earlier by commercial payers. Notably, payer systems that have low patient turnover, such as integrated systems like Kaiser Permanente in the United States or single-payer systems in Europe, are less exposed to this incentive challenge. Exhibit 2Markers for prevention are least cost effective for programs with high patient turnover.Enlarge
Because the actual cost savings of personalized-medicine tests may not be known until a test has been on the market for some time, it will remain in the interests of payers to delay adopting such diagnostics until they can differentiate between cost-saving and cost-creating ones. The winning strategy for diagnostics companies may therefore be to collaborate with stakeholders whose economics are more aligned with theirs (for example, Kaiser Permanente, large self-insured employers, and the US Veterans Affairs system, which have relatively low membership turnover). Generating high-quality health economic evidence will provide the confidence that enables payers more rapidly to adopt tests and will align physicians’ incentives with patient care and outcomes rather than procedures. Such developments could create a source of competitive advantage for payers that are better at identifying and implementing policies to promote cost-saving diagnostics.Providers
Today’s procedure-based reimbursement system for providers also presents a challenge: provider economics create incentives for some personalized-medicine tests but discourage others. Physicians could be more likely to embrace tests that increase the number of procedures performed than tests that diminish procedure volume. A test that identifies three times more patients at high risk of colon cancer than current approaches do would align well with the interests of gastroenterologists, for example, since a patient’s lifetime value related to such a molecular diagnostic is around $2,000. Other tests may be cost neutral or have microeconomic disincentives. Oncotype DX, a gene-based breast cancer diagnostic test used to assess the likelihood of benefit from chemotherapy, for example, reduces the number of patients that physicians treat with it and thus the revenue those patients generate. Yet Oncotype DX has been widely adopted because of its clinical merit.Pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies
Biomarkers (an indicator of a biological state) are now helping pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to aid R&D. In some cases, companies will develop these markers as companion diagnostics—tests to identify a patient’s likelihood of responding to a drug or experiencing side effects. R&D executives at 16 of the top 20 biopharmaceutical companies interviewed in a 2007 McKinsey survey indicated that, on average, 30 to 50 percent of drugs in development have an associated biomarker program and suggested that this number would probably increase. By contrast, the same executives also suggested that less than 10 percent of drugs that now have biomarker programs would be launched with a companion diagnostic over the next five to ten years (this is highly dependent on the disease area). In theory, companion diagnostics can improve R&D productivity by decreasing trial sizes, reducing attrition, or increasing speed to market, as well as enhance commercial performance by boosting market share or supporting higher drug prices. Many companies, however, are moving slowly to use biomarkers and companion diagnostics: while the most aggressive players have biomarker programs for 100 percent and companion diagnostics for 30 percent or more of their compounds, the average company has far fewer (30 to 50 percent and less than 10 percent, respectively). Moreover, many experts we interviewed said that their companies hadn’t prioritized companion diagnostics and were taking a cautious approach to investments. Scientific and clinical factors place some limits on the pace of development. In certain disease areas, understanding of molecular mechanisms is insufficient to select biomarkers at early stages of development. In others, there is no big clinical need for companion diagnostics. In many disease areas, however, companies are moving slowly despite scientific advances. Our research suggests that the potential to generate greater value after marketing, through increasing prices and market share, is vastly more important for the economics of pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies than making development more productive (Exhibit 3). Indeed, companion diagnostics may do little to improve development productivity. Often, they might actually increase overall costs and delay development. Experts suggested that Phase II clinical trials must frequently be larger when companion diagnostics are employed. Trials often need to be designed with several potential candidate biomarkers in Phase II (and sometimes Phase III), as it is unclear which markers will be predictive. In addition, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is likely to require that marker-negative patients be included in Phase III trials, given concerns that drugs could be used off-label by these patients. This is likely to eliminate the widely cited upside from smaller trials. Other commonly cited applications of personalized medicine during drug development also seem unlikely to improve drug-development productivity much. Exhibit 3The potential to generate greater value after marketing is vastly more important for the economics of pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies than making development more productive.Enlarge
Nonetheless, companion diagnostics could create significant potential commercial benefits from increased market share and pricing power. Yet there are also significant risks, as companion diagnostics divide the treatable patient population into subsegments and can reduce market share. They are therefore most likely to create value for later-to-market entrants in crowded markets characterized by significant pricing flexibility.
If two drugs are already on the market and relatively undifferentiated, for example, the third drug on the market is likely to capture a relatively small share—say, 5 to 20 percent. A companion diagnostic that identifies a segment of patients who will respond especially well to a drug or will find it less toxic, and thereby enables higher pricing, could generate value. A key determinant is the payers’ price scrutiny and sensitivity, which varies dramatically by disease area, particularly in the United States. For instance, BiDil, a fixed-dose combination of two generic cardiovascular drugs (hydralazine hydrochloride and isosorbide dinitrate), has been approved by the FDA specifically for African Americans with heart failure. Attempts to charge a price premium faced aggressive differential copay tiering by payers, which contributed to lower-than-expected sales. In therapeutic classes where payers scrutinize prices less intensely (oncology drugs, for example), companies would be more likely to charge a premium and maintain coverage.
These companies are rightly considering investing in personalized medicine in certain disease areas. To highlight those where near-term investment in companion diagnostics is most likely to occur, we segmented drug classes according to their scientific and commercial potential (Exhibit 4). This segmentation reflects not only quantitative factors but also qualitative factors from interviews. Our analysis indicates that companies are most likely to invest in diagnostics in areas such as oncology, immunology, and infectious disease. The segmentation also reveals disease areas where incentives are not aligned to drive investment, despite technical feasibility and clinical need. These areas, such as anticoagulants, antipsychotics, and antidepressants, are ripe for development by other organizations, such as diagnostics companies. Exhibit 4Companies are likely to invest in areas with the highest potential rewards.Enlarge
Companies should also realize that the payer environment is evolving rapidly and that personalized-medicine tools will increasingly be required to preserve value. Although pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies must be aware of areas where diagnostics can destroy value by subsegmenting existing markets, it will be equally important to prepare for the day when regulatory bodies will demand greater proof of patient outcomes to justify approval, reimbursement, and prices. Companies should thus act quickly to build the required capabilities and experience. Diagnostics companies
Companies that develop diagnostics and life science tools enable a wide variety of test types, including companion diagnostics (often in collaboration with a biotechnology or pharmaceutical company), early-stage diagnostics, disease recurrence and monitoring tests, adverse-drug-events tests, and genotypic-risk-marker analyses. However, diagnostics developers have faced difficulty capturing the full value they generate. Diagnostic tests are estimated to influence 60 to 70 percent of all treatment decisions, for example, yet account for only 5 percent of hospital costs and 2 percent of Medicare expenditures. Molecular diagnostics are often cited as a more attractive market segment than typical diagnostics, given the potential for higher prices ($100 to $3,000 per test, compared with $20 to $50 for a typical diagnostic test) and higher gross margins (50 to 70 percent for a sample molecular diagnostic, compared with 30 to 50 percent for most diagnostics of typical large laboratory companies). Indeed, a number of emerging companies, including Celera, Genomic Health, Myriad, Monogram Biosciences, and XDx, have successfully raised funding and developed innovative molecular-diagnostic tests.
Unfortunately, the molecular-diagnostics business case still holds significant risk (Exhibit 5) as a result of factors such as development costs, the timing of development and approval, time-to-payer coverage, rates of provider adoption, and peak sales prices. To understand these factors’ relative importance, we modeled the economics of a hypothetical start-up and then performed a sensitivity analysis using upside and downside scenarios for each variable. Exhibit 5The molecular-diagnostics business case still holds significant risk.Enlarge
Our model, intended to test the importance of risk factors, was based on benchmarks from a few molecular-diagnostics businesses. It doesn’t represent a specific company, and the economics of companies with products now on the market vary significantly. This model suggests that the expected ten-year net present value (NPV) of an average diagnostic test is around $15 million. The most important factors influencing profitability are the time to approval and the rate of payer adoption. If the time to approval is delayed by a year, the ten-year NPV becomes negative, at around –$10 million. This finding is relevant, since it remains unclear how the FDA will regulate in vitro diagnostic multivariate index assays (IVDMIAs)—tests like Oncotype DX for breast cancer recurrence, which is already on the market. At the time of writing, the FDA had suggested that a 510(k) approval process for diagnostics may be sufficient for tests that are prognostic indicators, but pre-market-approval from the FDA will probably be required if a test directly influences therapy decisions. A pre-market-approval review is likely to increase time to market by at least a year. Nonetheless, good communication between the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research and the Office of In Vitro Diagnostic Device Evaluation and Safety may partially mitigate this problem through priority reviews. Approval timelines for other systems remain unclear. The European Medicines Agency and Japan’s Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency also have yet to establish clear guidelines for approving personalized-medicine tests.
The case of Oncotype DX demonstrates the challenge of slow coverage by payers. Although the test was launched in 2004, analysts and company estimates suggest it will be 2010 before all payers routinely cover it. Coverage stands at about 85 percent, contrasting starkly with typical adoption rates for new drugs, which are generally reimbursed immediately at launch or within the year in the United States. In Europe, drug coverage may take slightly longer, depending on the extent of the review, but is unlikely to take more than four years—the adoption timeline of Oncotype DX.
Start-up diagnostics companies therefore face challenging economics. However, as more tests become available and payers, regulators, and molecular-diagnostics companies gain experience, development and adoption times are likely to shorten. Likewise, as the regulatory process becomes clearer—but potentially longer—the adoption rates of payers may also increase. Given their unease with personalized-medicine testing, it will therefore be advantageous for leading diagnostics companies to help shape the development of rigorous but efficient regulatory and approval standards.Potential catalysts for personalized medicine
Conversations and analyses conducted during the course of our investigation revealed four main catalysts that could significantly affect the adoption of personalized medicine in the near term.Regulatory environment
First, regulatory bodies such as the FDA must improve the clarity and efficiency of regulatory-approval processes, both for stand-alone and companion diagnostics. These clarifications are critical to help diagnostics companies plan ahead and design trials. Our conversations with more than 60 experts indicate that the key questions regulatory bodies ought to address include the following:Should marker-negative patients be required for Phase III trials?Will the use of retrospective analyses on archived samples be permitted for approving companion diagnostics (and if so, under what circumstances)?What regulatory standards and oversight should be required to let personalized-medicine tests, especially laboratory-developed ones, be used in therapy decisions?
For regulations under consideration, the authorities must weigh short-term costs against long-term benefits. Current plans include basing the classification of tests as Class I, II, or III on the level of risk of the intended use. As a result of higher approval standards, IVDMIA changes promoting more rigorous evaluation of safety and effectiveness may have long-term benefits, encouraging faster adoption by payers and physicians. However, the near-term consequences may harm short-term market investments. For diagnostics companies, the approval process can actually be an opportunity to justify higher pricing by showing a willingness to set appropriately stringent standards and by shaping regulatory guidelines to bolster the industry and protect patients. The FDA should work to minimize approval delays resulting from higher standards and help mitigate any negative impact on investment in development. Leading pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and diagnostics companies should seek opportunities to help shape the development of these guidelines and standards. To drive changes in market incentives, regulators could decide not to require the collection of clinical data on marker-negative patients, thus lowering development costs. Concerns about the use of therapeutics in this population could be reduced through parallel moves by payers and regulatory bodies to increase barriers to off-label use. Furthermore, regulators could increase the flexibility of trial designs and even allow the approval of companion diagnostics on the basis of retrospective tests of the DX marker (that is, performed on archived samples). Finally, governments and regulators could directly reward the development of companion diagnostics by increasing the patent life for drugs developed with them, providing tax-based incentives, and continuing to award grants for R&D.Payer coverage
In the United States, approval and reimbursement-coverage decisions are discrete processes with minimal coordination between the FDA and CMS. Uncertainty remains about how this coordination will work elsewhere in the world. Processes have not been established—for example, at the time of writing, the United Kingdom’s National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) does not have any guidance on reviewing molecular-diagnostics tests. State payers, private payers, and diagnostics companies can help fuel growth in the personalized-medicine market by making coordinated efforts to improve the pace and process of coverage decisions.
One step could be for CMS to take a lead in aligning the reimbursement process with the regulatory-approval process. Presubmission meetings to delineate data requirements for regulatory and coverage approval and ongoing joint reviews can facilitate interagency collaboration. Optimal alignment across the two agencies implies that if suitably stringent guidelines were set, CMS would provide coverage and adequately reimburse companies that meet the hurdles. Additional health economic data or regulatory approval for clinical claims, for instance, may be reasonable prerequisites for coverage and could thus help ensure adequate reimbursement, pricing, and value for diagnostics players.
The development of formal guidelines could make decisions on coverage more transparent and efficient. CMS now typically makes coverage decisions for molecular diagnostics at the regional rather than national level. Decisions are thus made many times, based on different guidelines and processes and often with different outcomes. Private payers also lack clear guidelines for these decisions. Both CMS and private payers have an important role to play in shaping coverage and payment decisions. Private payers we interviewed are waiting to understand (and potentially follow) CMS coverage policies, as often occurs with therapeutics. One way to improve coverage guidelines in both systems and processes would be to establish an agency to assess the clinical and cost effectiveness of tests. This agency—which could take the form of a third-party nonprofit agency, a consortium, or a new government agency—could be a coordinated effort by payers, CMS, pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, and diagnostics players. The formation of new oversight agencies (for example, an FDA center for diagnostics) could also help. Notably, single-payer systems, such as those that predominate in Europe, have two advantages in adopting personalized medicine: they are not as susceptible to longitudinal-accounting issues, and coverage decisions can be less complex and involve fewer decision makers.Physician incentives
Aligning physicians’ incentives could further hasten adoption. In many countries, physicians get disproportionately higher rates for procedure-oriented services than for evaluation and management. They therefore often have a real financial disincentive to perform tests that might make further treatment unnecessary.
Efforts are under way to shift toward a more outcome-based approach to reimbursement, so that physicians will have incentives to use and act on appropriate personalized-medicine diagnostics. Yet to encourage adoption, payers should also work to develop a system ensuring that physicians are reimbursed for the test itself. Moreover, in the United States, personalized-medicine tests are now billed by a nonscalable approach called “CPT2 2.
Current procedural terminology.
code stacking,” which can encourage laboratories to game the system. Eventually, individual codes that are commensurate with a test’s cost and value and that provide appropriate reimbursement to physicians will have to be developed for each molecular diagnostic.Investment by pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies
Pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies should take a long term–investment view. Some already do: of the leaders we interviewed, those who have invested most heavily in personalized medicine suggested that they are renewing the focus on outcomes and clinical value in the process of drug discovery. They realize that the drugs their companies develop today will be entering markets with more competitors, more pricing pressure, and a higher bar for differentiated clinical outcomes. An aggressive move toward value- or outcomes-based pricing by CMS or private payers could greatly increase the financial value of personalized medicine and so the incentive to invest in it. One possibility might be innovative risk-sharing models for drug and diagnostic coverage. Payers could, for instance, follow the examples in Europe of bortezomib (Velcade) for multiple myeloma and the interferon-beta drugs for multiple sclerosis: reimbursement is contingent upon patient outcomes. Payers could also create innovative risk-sharing agreements with diagnostics companies. A test could, say, receive conditional, partial reimbursement for a number of years until its clinical effectiveness was definitively demonstrated, when the diagnostics company would be paid in full. The payer would limit cost exposure by covering part of the costs for a limited time; diagnostics companies would benefit from early coverage decisions.
Over the next few decades, the development of “omics” sciences (such as genomics) and supporting technologies will enable the creation of more and more personalized-medicine tests. Yet poorly aligned incentives for stakeholders could hamper their use. All stakeholders should therefore work together to reshape these incentives and so reap the benefits of personalized medicine.About the authorsJerel Davis is a consultant in McKinsey’s Silicon Valley office, where Saumya Sutaria and Laura Furstenthal are principals, and Edd Fleming and Philip Ma directors; Amar Desai is a consultant in the Los Angeles office; Troy Norris is a consultant in the New York office. A version of this article, titled “The microeconomics of personalized medicine: today’s challenge and tomorrow’s promise,” was first published in Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, April 2009, Volume 8, No 4, pp. 279–86. This article also appeared in Invention reinvented, a compendium of articles setting out McKinsey’s perspectives on pharmaceutical R&D. To read other articles from the collection, please visit the pharmaceutical and medical products section of mckinsey.com. PDF
The material on this page draws on the research and experience of McKinsey consultants and other sources. To learn more about our expertise, please visit the Pharmaceuticals & Medical Products Practice.
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FASAE Main Page
Program Book
Event Suppliers & Donors Event Sponsors
Group of Seven Fashion Designers
Fashion as Art: Exposed!
Event Committee Members Honourary Patrons Jeanne Beker
Charles Coffey
Robin Kay
Charles Pachter
John Tory
Event Chair
Tina Tehranchian
Event MC
Jeanne Beker
Event Décor Leesa Butler, Divine Lab, Inc.
Event Committee Victoria Amaral
Olga Bressan
Wendy Bannerman
Leesa Butler
Tony Carella
Medina Esmail
Sabrina Fiorellino
Jan Gandhi
Karen Goldenberg
Meegan Guest
Diana Hamilton
Audrey Hyams Romoff Leyla Kashani Jane Knop
Janice Locke
Stacey Robinson
Felice Sabatino
Nancy Sahota
Marianne Gelbert-Serrani
Sandy Stagg
Marsha Stall
Kirsti Stephenson
Ingrid Van Weert
Alexandra Wilson
Diane Wilson
McMichael Board of Trustees Upkar Arora, Chair
Jamie Cameron, VC
Victoria Dickenson, EO
Peter Carayiannis
Diana MacKay
Linda Rodeck
Richard Self
John Silverthorn
Rosemary Zigrossi
Group of Seven Fashion Designers Joeffer Caoc (pronc. joe-fur kay-awk) is a leading Canadian fashion designer known for intelligent, modern and sexy design. Unexpected, artistic and architectural detailing is Joeffer Caoc’s signature. Intricate yet subtle tucking, fluid lines, drapery, pleating, asymmetry, and gathering, combined with meticulous fit and classic tailoring, create truly unique pieces with enduring style. The fit, construction and unconventional detailing of Joeffer Caoc’s garments are exceptional. Born in the Philippines and raised in Canada, Joeffer graduated from Toronto’s Ryerson University Fashion Design program, where he received an Outstanding Recent Graduate Award. He launched his first label in 1995 and has received outstanding recognition and support ever since. Joeffer Caoc’s clothes are a favourite for music and film personalities including; award-winning singer Nelly Furtado, supermodels Coco Rocha and Daria Werbowy, legendary screen beauty Jacqueline Bisset, Angela Bassett, Jill Hennessy, and fashion maven Jeanne Beker. All have embraced his distinct style and precise design sensibility. His work is often seen on the cover and in the editorial pages of leading fashion magazines.
The made-in-Canada JOEFFER CAOC collection consists of daywear separates, eveningwear, cocktail dresses, and gowns. The collection targets the woman who desires the longevity and fit associated with classic tailoring, but also seeks the forward styling for which Joeffer Caoc is famed. It is available in fine specialty stores in Canada and the USA and at select Hudson Bay locations. The creative team behind the successful Comrags label is Joyce Gunhouse of Victoria, B.C. and Judy Cornish of Burlington, Ontario. The partners met while studying Fashion Design at Ryerson Polytechnic in Toronto, deciding to go into business together when they discovered a compatible design sensibility and work ethic in each other.
Comrags, currently in its 28th year of business, has evolved from a small, local design team into one of Canada’s most well-known labels.
Comrags has been described as “feminine despite themselves” and “prettiness with an edge” inspiring legions of die-hard fans. Inspiration for Comrags’ designs comes from everywhere: the street, television, art and literature. In the words of their creators, Comrags clothes are for women of any age; women with a modern attitude toward style; women with self-confidence.
Comrags is proud to say that it is still made in Canada.
Greta Constantine is an accessible luxury line of ready-to-wear womenswear based in Toronto, Canada. Designers Kirk Pickersgill and Stephen Wong, considered the “jersey boys of Toronto,” have rapidly accumulated a clientele comprised of international socialites and celebrities alike. The label itself is derived from the combination of the name of Stephen’s mother, Greta, with that of Kirk’s grandfather, Constantine. The pair works together in their Toronto area studio—conceptualizing, exploring, and challenging the fashions of today for the women of tomorrow.
Greta Constantine and Ezra Constantine regularly garner a high level of attention from Canadian and international media with appearances in: Vogue, British Vogue, FASHION, Flare, Nylon, FQ, WWD, Elle Canada, US Weekly, Hello! Magazine, House and Home, The Toronto Star, National Post, and Glow among others. Moreover, our pieces have been featured on covers for FASHION, Zink!, Azure, Spade, FQ, and Lush. They have also been featured online on iwantigot.geekigirl.com, finalfashion.ca, and stylebubble.com. They have had runway shows during Toronto Fashion Week, in addition to New York Fashion Week, and have collaborated with Audi, ALDO, MAC Cosmetics, Kiehl’s, RADO, and Schwarzkopf among many other lifestyle brands. The Greta Constantine collection appeals to the sleek, worldly, empowered and sophisticated woman and offers clothes with a modern sensibility for truly effortless dressing. Some of their A-list clientele include: Jennifer Hudson, Nelly Furtado, Angelina Jolie, Iman, Kreesha Turner, Hilary Duff, Victoria Beckham, Jully Black, Grace Park, Camilla Al Fayed, Jessi Cruickshank, Alexandra Weston, Jeanne Beker, Yasmin Warsame, Stacey Kimmel, and Naomi Campbell.
Designers, Kirk Pickersgill and Stephen Wong met in Toronto and became fast friends. Sensing that the current state of Canadian fashion was in decline, they sought to pursue their lifelong dreams of starting their own label. Kirk, a stylist by trade based in Milan, Italy, has worked for international designers such as Dsquared2 and Neil Barrett. He has used his wealth of experience to fulfill his role as a guest teacher at the renowned Istituto Marangoni in Milan. Stephen began his career as a costume designer in Toronto for Susan Dicks & Co. and has made clothing for several films such as The Last Day of Disco, American Psycho, Glitter, Chicago, and Hairspray. Born in Toronto, Canada and trained at the prestigious Ryerson University, David Dixon enjoys tremendous media acclaim and stands out among his Canadian contemporaries as one of the leaders in women’s fashion design.
Dixon apprenticed with well-known Canadian designer Alfred Sung and in 1995, established the David Dixon label. Starting out at the Toronto Fashion Incubator, a highly respected organization focused on assisting new designers, he began wholesaling and manufacturing his line and in 1999, David left the Incubator to open his own design and production studio based in Toronto. David Dixon remains affiliated with the Incubator by sitting on their Board as an advisor.
Today, David Dixon is sold across Canada, the United States, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Switzerland, Germany, Hong Kong, and Tokyo. He possesses a modernist openness towards emerging design and rejects the notion of radically changing from one fashion trend to another. Dixon’s innovative designs have won him a following among the elite communities of film and fashion including; Jann Arden, Pamela Anderson, Meg Ryan, Wendy Crewson, Ashley MacIsaac, Holly Cole, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Kari Matchett, Paul Gross, and newcomer Kristin Booth.
The overriding theme in Dixon’s collection is quiet elegance. His belief is that women respond first to colour and texture, so when silhouettes are simplified and modern, he can explore with textiles. Whether it’s creating signature fabrics or searching the globe for new fabrications, Dixon’s clothing combines luxury with the functional and fantasy with sensibility. Thien Le is an artist of many trades. A visual artist at heart, he now imparts his natural eye for line, style and colour into his vibrant creations. As a youth, his artistic energy was expressed through sculpture and painting. Later, fashion became the vehicle for his visual creativity and in 1996, he enrolled at the International Academy of Design. In addition to his studies, he worked full- and part-time positions in visual merchandising at various retailers and costuming at the Canadian Opera Company. In 1998, he graduated from the International Academy of Design and received the Best Evening Wear Designer award. Having refined his skills from his work experience, Thien launched his own label in 1999.
Since then, Thien Le’s designs have taken centre stage. Thien Le’s creations were presented at the launch of Chrysalid: Lancome’s new line of makeup and he collaborated with Elizabeth Arden the “Red Door Salon” in Los Angeles and New York City. He continues to be known for his intricately detailed designs and elegant formalwear. Romanian-born fashion designer Lucian Matis grew up in his mother’s tailor shop and began designing at a very early age, with his first customers being his school teachers.
Prior to moving to Canada in 1999, Matis studied art and completed a specialization in painting and graphics at the Sibiu Art Institute in Transylvania. In 2000, Matis continued his education in the Fashion Design program at Ryerson University where his talent was very quickly noticed. Along with being granted an early graduation in 2003, he also received multiple awards including: The Fur Council of Canada Award (2002), Le Chateaus Menswear Competition (2002), Peoples Choice Award for Best Sketch (2002), Semi-finalist for the International Young Designer Competition (2002), and Alfred Sung Award for great design talent (2003).
Lucian’s first professional collection was presented at L’Oreal Fashion Weeks Fall/Winter 2007 shows, and was received with great accolades and praise from the Canadian industry.
Matis has gone on to secure an unmatched presence in television, online and print media. He was requested for a special guest appearance on the season finale of the highly rated Canada’s Next Top Model where his collection was featured in its entirety. Matis was also invited to participate on the first season of Slice network’s hit reality TV show, Project Runway Canada, where he gained a vast fan base across the country and took a contentious second place. In addition, Matis has been featured in several in-depth profiles on Fashion Television, and has done regular on-air runway reports on his collections for etalk, Entertainment Tonight Canada, Breakfast Television, CityLine, Marilyn Dennis, Global Television, CBC World News, and CP24.
Matis’ collections have graced the pages and covers of numerous national and international publications including Flare, Elle Canada, Lush, Applied Arts, The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star, The National Post, ION, Tribute (France), Women’s Wear Daily (USA), and Launchpad (USA).
The name D’Arcy Moses is synonymous with innovative fashion. Moses, a South Slave Dene of the Northwest Territories, first made an impact on the Canadian fashion scene as a resident of the Toronto Fashion Incubator and a participant of the New Labels Show during Toronto Fashion Week.
From the beginning of his career, it was apparent that D’Arcy possessed the unique talent of bringing together his indigenous and adopted cultures in new and unusual ways—his relationship to fur and hide is innate; his design vocabulary reflective of an age-old cultural history; his design statement brings cultural legitimacy to today’s fashion.
During his career, D’Arcy has created an international awareness of Canadian Fur and Canadian First Nation Design talent. His innovative approach, charismatic ambience and inherent passion for his work made his collections with Montreal Fur Manufacturers a favourite in New York and the United States.
In addition, D’Arcy had spent a number of years nurturing the talents of his own people through the development of Nats’enelu, a centre for indigenous creative talent in the heart of the Northwest Territories. His lines for MWG Apparel Limited sold to major U.S. retailers including Orvis Limited and Mark’s Work Wearhouse. Last season, he worked cooperatively with Paula Lishman and designed a capsule collection of casual, sexy urban men’s and women’s fur separates.
D’Arcy has designed for Her Excellency, the Governor General, Adrienne Clarkson, and His Excellency, John Ralston Saul, using both traditional Moose hide and woolen cloth jackets decorated with exquisite local beadwork. He also attended the Governor General’s State Visit to Germany as a member of her personal entourage in October 2001. And in October 2002, D’Arcy received the Queen Elizabeth Golden Jubilee Award for his contribution to fashion and the arts.
Presentation Partner for the Group of Seven Fashion Designers
ContactPrivacyAccessibilityAcknowledgementCaring for Artwork
© 2014 McMichael Canadian Art Collection - An Agency of the Government of Ontario
© 2014 McMichael Canadian Art Collection
- An Agency of the Government of Ontario
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2006 News Index
Drug Attacks Prostate Cancer in Mouse Model by Destroying Its Blood Supply M. D. Anderson News Release 06/06/06A medication used to treat other types of cancer strangles drug-resistant, metastatic prostate cancer by cutting off its blood supply, researchers from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center report in the June 7 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.Imatinib, known commercially as Gleevec, worked best when combined with the chemotherapy paclitaxel to slash the incidence of bone metastases and the size of tumors in mice injected with a multiple-drug resistant form of prostate cancer. Tumors were found in only 4 of 18 mice treated with the combination, median tumor weight was one tenth of a gram, and the cancer spread to the lymph nodes in three cases. Tumors grew in all 19 control mice, their median tumor weight was 1.3 grams, and all metastasized to the lymph nodes.This extremely drug-resistant form of the cancer, designed by the research team to emulate the grim clinical reality of prostate cancer that has spread into the bone, successfully warded off the combined medications in lab experiments, said Isaiah J. Fidler, D.V.M., Ph.D., chair of the Department of Cancer Biology and director of the Cancer Metastasis Research Center at M. D. Anderson."Why, then, did it work so well in the animal? Because we didn't attack the tumor, we attacked the blood vessels. We target and destroy the vasculature that provides oxygen and nutrients to tumor cells," said Fidler, the paper's senior author.Fidler and colleagues show in the JNCI paper that imatinib killed tumor-related blood vessel (endothelial) cells by inactivating the platelet-derived growth factor receptors (PDGF-R) on the cell surface. This prevents the receptor's activation either by PDGF binding to it externally or by a signal generated internally by the cell.Activation of PDGF-R stimulates the birth of new blood vessels, promotes cell division and migration, and inhibits a protective form of cell suicide known as apoptosis, all harmful effects in the service of a cancer cell. With imatinib preventing activation of PDGF-R, Fidler said, the endothelial cells died by apoptosis first, with tumor cells following suit one to two weeks later. Fidler said the findings are a vibrant example of the "seed and soil" hypothesis in metastasis - the deadly spreading of a cancer from its organ of origin to other organs, a process that kills 90 percent of all patients who die from their disease.In landmark findings, Fidler and colleagues demonstrated that the vast majority of cancer cells that depart a tumor die swiftly once in circulation and that metastases originate from less than 1 percent of a cancer's cells and even can arise from a single cell.When these metastatic "seeds" enter circulation, they still need to find the exact microenvironment that permits them to grow. For prostate cancer, the second-leading cause of cancer death among men, that microenvironment is the bone.Earlier research by Fidler and colleagues showed PDGF-R activation in metastatic prostate tumors adjacent to the bone but not in tumor cells next to muscle. PDGF-R also was activated in tumor-associated endothelial cells in the bone, but not in those blood vessel cells in neighboring muscle.A JNCI paper by Fidler and colleagues in 2003 showed that blocking PDGF-R signaling in the mouse model of metastatic prostate cancer cut the incidence of cancer, reduced the size of tumors and incidence of metastasis.The question was whether the combination of imatinib and paclitaxel achieved this by attacking the tumor itself or the tumor-related blood vessels. This week's JNCI paper answers that question: it kills the blood vessels first. "Here, we attack the soil. The seeds can be resistant. Kill the endothelial cell, you kill the soil," Fidler said.Imatinib had an effect by itself, but the best result came from the pairing with paclitaxel, known commercially as Taxol, which induces apoptosis in non-resistant cancer cells. Taxol, developed by the Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., is frontline therapy for prostate cancer but eventually loses its effect as resistant tumor cells proliferate.Gleevec, developed by Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, is used to treat chronic myelogenous leukemia and gastrointestinal stromal tumors. Cancer cells are biologically diverse and genetically unstable, Fidler says, so it is highly unlikely that a single therapy will prevail, necessitating a multi-modal attack on the disease.This research project was funded by a Cancer Center Support Core grant and a Specialized Programs in Research Excellence (SPORE) grant, both from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health. Fidler, Mathew and Logothetis have research projects that are sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals.Co-authors of the JNCI paper, all from M. D. Anderson, are: first author Sun-Jin Kim, M.D., Ph.D.; Hisanori Uehara, M.D., Ph.D.; Sertac Yazici, M.D.; Joseph Erik Busby, M.D.; Toru Nakamura, M.D., Ph.D.; Junqin He, M.D.; Marva Maya; Christopher Logothetis, M.D.; Paul Mathew, M.D.; Xuemei Wang; Kim-Anh Do, Ph.D.; and Dominic Fan, Ph.D. News
M. D. Anderson Study Finds Pre-Surgical Stress Management Improves Mood, Quality of Life for Prostate Cancer Patients (04/06/2009)
Study finds Selenium, Vitamin E Do Not Prevent Prostate Cancer (12/09/2008)
SUMO wrestles SENP1 over response to hypoxia, providing possible cancer targets (11/01/2007)
Researchers Identify Gene as Protector of DNA, Enemy of Tumors (08/03/2006)
Obesity in Prostate Cancer Patients Predicts Cancer Recurrence and Progression After Radiation Treatment (06/26/2006)
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1561
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A Study of the Health-Related Quality of Life and Work-Related Stress of White-Collar Migrant Workers Link:
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1562
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[To Parent Directory] Friday, April 18, 2008 1:07 PM 32294 GARFIELD_ALC_2007_2005_1.PDF Friday, April 18, 2008 1:07 PM 53424 GARFIELD_ALC_2007_2005_2.PDF Friday, April 18, 2008 1:06 PM 34017 GARFIELD_ALC_2007_2005_3.PDF Tuesday, April 15, 2008 12:02 PM 30978 GARFIELD_ALL_CRASHES_2007_1.PDF Tuesday, April 15, 2008 12:01 PM 51416 GARFIELD_ALL_CRASHES_2007_2.PDF Tuesday, April 15, 2008 12:01 PM 32668 GARFIELD_ALL_CRASHES_2007_3.PDF Tuesday, April 15, 2008 3:35 PM 3686 GARFIELD_BIKE_PED_2007.PDF Monday, July 21, 2008 8:35 AM 38980 GARFIELD_HISTORY.PDF Wednesday, April 16, 2008 11:45 AM 3494 GARFIELD_OCCUPANT_2007.PDF Tuesday, April 15, 2008 3:02 PM 5811 GARFIELD_TIME_2007.PDF
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1563
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Lexus IS F: Big ride, big price
By Len Ingrassia
— Much of what this car will do is illegal on most roadways in the U.S. but it certainly is exhilarating getting up to speed. The newest iteration of the Lexus IS F is flashy, fast and furious.
This high performance sedan runs in the fast lane with the likes of Mercedes-Benz C63 AMG and BMW M3 and, depending on driving manners, will achieve the highest fuel economy of the trio.
Its eight-speed transmission, nearly twice the number of gears in most cars, seamlessly shifts up or down in less than one-tenth of a second. Manual paddle shifters are mounted behind the steering wheel for the sportier driver. There is no manual transmission in the Lexus lineup.
The Lexus F series has just two high performance models, the IS F and the outlandish and sleek LFA with 552 horsepower and a starting price of $375,000.
Do not get the idea the smaller version is not up to speed, so to speak. The IS will throw you back in your seat on its climb from zero to 60 miles per hour in just 4.3 seconds. For the price difference, you get a one of a kind futuristic skin on the LFA and a powerplant that will catapult to 60 mph in 3.9 seconds. One of the thrills of spending time with the IS F is exploring its driving dynamics, starting with selecting gear modes between Normal, Snow and Sport. Normal is the default setting. Besides using the ‘snow’ during well, snow, it is particularly useful when you want to optimize fuel consumption and muffle a throaty exhaust.
Sport mode is for those times when you want to justify paying 60 large plus for an all-out performance car. Hit the start button and the V8 engine roars to life with a not-so-muffled rumble at idle. It gets louder and meaner with acceleration.
After a week of test-driving the rear-wheel drive IS F, I can sum up its driving modes this way.
For family driving, push the auto start and then the ‘snow’ button hidden from driver view on the lower dashboard under the steering wheel. Gearing is relaxed and fuel economy can reach 23 m
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1564
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Bare-chested women playing darts attracted huge publicity but did
little to improve audience ratings,which remained constrained by the channel's limited
cable distribution UK's Live TV, wacky cable
at its best, pulls the plugGone:
Topless darts, stripping stock tipster
By Simon Bond
The closure of cable station Live TV, announced last
week, marks the end of one of the braver attempts to bring original programming to the
otherwise bland offerings of multi-channel TV in the UK.
However, before we get too deep into our wake for the channel
that bought us stammering news presenters, a stripping stock tipster called Tiffany,
trampolining dwarves, and a bikini-clad weather forecaster who delivered her bulletin in
Norwegian, it is important to remember that at best Live scored just over 1 per of a cable
audience that has yet to exceed 4 million homes.
Rarely has so much been said about a television station that was
watched by so few. From its launch in 1995, Live TV was rarely out of the headlines.
Despite the wealth of publicity, the slow progress of cable acceptance
in the UK finally bled the station dry and the Trinity Mirror group, which owns the
station, has made the decision to close Live down. Sobriety and financial good sense has finally won the day over the
self-promotion and sensationalism that was the basis of the channel's launch back in 1995.
At the time, three of the most colorful figures in the UK media industry
conspired to launch Live.
David Montgomery, who had left News Corp. in 1992 to run the
competing Mirror Group of newspapers, put his weight behind the channel as a foil to
Rupert Murdoch's expanding pay-TV empire. Janet Street-Porter, who had been the high priestess of youth television at
the BBC, was brought in to run Live, which it is claimed she envisaged as "Hello!
magazine on acid." Finally, Kelvin MacKenzie, the former editor of Rupert Murdoch's
best selling UK tabloid The Sun, was enlisted to provide his own style of populism and
"cunning stunts" to keep the channel in the news.
This heady mixture of personalities soon proved
itself to be totally unworkable. Following a series of clashes with MacKenzie that were well
documented in a no-holds-barred, fly-on-the wall documentary about the channel's launch,
Street-Porter walked out. Street-Porter's career then followed a tortuous path, but she
has now settled in the editor's seat of the Independent on Sunday newspaper.
Following Street-Porter's departure from Live, MacKenzie was able
to steer the channel according to his own uniquely tabloid agenda. In January 1996, he launched "Topless Darts," the programming
strand for which Live will go down in history for creating. The showing of bare chested
women playing darts attracted huge publicity but did little to improve audience
ratings,which remained constrained by the channel's limited cable distribution. The continuing frustration with getting an audience for Live
eventually proved too much for MacKenzie, and after a brief stint as deputy chief
executive of the Mirror Group he also left the channel to set up his own company and
successfully bid for Talk Radio, the national station which he runs today.
Ironically, after years of its balance sheets hemorrhaging red
ink, Live recently announced that it had finally turned the corner towards profitability.
However, it was already too late as far as its owners at the
Trinity Mirror group were concerned and they condemned the channel as a "non-core
asset."
Trinity Mirror is now reported to be in advanced negotiations
with the UK's leading cable operator, NTL, which are interested in buying the channel for
around $30 million in order to exploit its carriage contracts.
For viewers, the closure will mean little as so few had the
opportunity to watch the channel in the first place.
But for the TV industry it may be some time before we can enjoy the
spectacle of such an explosive mixture of personalities combined in a TV channel again.
-Simon Bond writes from outside of London.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1565
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MAPP Video
Free Report Call Toll Free - (1-866-334-2243)
Mary had been widowed for nearly five years when a series of strokes made it obvious that she could no longer live alone. She sold her home and moved into a care facility. The proceeds from the sale totaled about $100,000, which she had always assumed would go to her son. But, with her monthly costs approaching $5,000, it was obvious her entire estate would be completely gone in about two years. It was simply a question of who was going to live longer... her or her money. When she and her son talked to Medicaid about eligibility, they learned that as a single (widowed) patient, she would not qualify for benefits until her assets were spent down to $2,000. In addition, the Medicaid worker indicated that the "spend down" had to be used for her care. (And although there are alternatives to spending all the money on care, it is certainly what Medicaid wants you to believe.) Her friends told her that she should have transferred the title to her home to her son at least five years previous. There seemed no way around the problem until she and her son discovered the MAPP Program. After viewing the videos, they were able to quickly put together and implement a plan to protect assets. Utilizing the suggested pattern of transfers, she was ultimately able to transfer a total of $64,000 to her son, and then qualify for Medicaid eligibility. And although she is currently on Medicaid, she remains today in the same care facility in which she had started out, receiving exactly the same care. The only difference is that Medicaid is now paying most of the bill, while her son has $64,000, in his name, sitting in a separate bank account. Had she not purchased the MAPP Video Package, but instead listened to her friends and the Medicaid worker, she would still, no doubt, be on Medicaid today, but the $64,000 would be gone, forever.
Medicaid Eligibility | Medicaid Asset Protection
Sarah's condition had been slowly deteriorating for many years. As time went by, it had become more and more obvious to her daughter that it was really not safe for her mother to live alone. She really hadn't reached the stage where she needed to be in a care facility, as long as there was someone there to watch over her and help with some of her personal needs (dressing, bathing, transportation, etc.). Therefore, her daughter made the decision to move into her mother's home and become her caregiver. Even so, over a period of time, Sarah's condition continued to deteriorate. Eventually, the daughter reluctantly came to the conclusion that her mother would, sooner than later, need to move into a care facility. When she checked with Medicaid, she was told that although Mom could qualify right away (she had no savings to speak of), she would have to put her home up for sale as a condition of continued Medicaid eligibility. When the home eventually sold, her mother would be taken off Medicaid, because she would then have money. Realizing that it would not be long before there really would be no other choice, the daughter made up her mind to go ahead and find a facility for her mother, get her moved in and apply for Medicaid eligibility. In the meantime, though, she had purchased the MAPP Video Package in order to learn if there was any way she might save some of the proceeds from the home, once it sold. While viewing the videos, she learned, to her great surprise, that if she continued to take care of her mother for only three more months before applying for Medicaid, her mother could transfer the title of her home to her daughter, and still be able to qualify for Medicaid immediately. Even if the daughter had to hire help, the ability to transfer a $200,000 home was certainly worth the additional three months. Of course, this was not something that was even mentioned during her discussions at the local Medicaid office. Had the daughter not purchased the MAPP Video Package and learned about this rule, she would have placed her mother in the facility right away, loosing forever her opportunity to receive her mother's home, free and clear.
Medicaid Planning | Medicaid Asset Protection
John's physical health had been declining for years. His wife had been his caregiver, but when she died he moved to Oregon so his daughter could help take care of him. They both soon realized that with her own work and family commitments he really needed to go into an assisted living facility. Between the small house he still owned back in Iowa and his savings, his assets totaled approximately $75,000. His monthly shortfall - the difference between his income and his expenses (including the cost of care)--totaled about $1,500. Using the strategies we they learned about in the MAPP Video Package, nearly $56,000 of his estate was transferred to his daughter, and he was on Medicaid within 11 months.
Medicaid Eligibility Rules | Medicaid Asset Protection
Harriet, a 75-year-old widow living in California, had been in excellent health until her devastating stroke, which left her partially paralyzed and unable to speak. After 12 days in the hospital, she was sent to a skilled nursing facility for rehabilitation. Her family was relieved to learn that Medicare, along with her Medicare supplement insurance policy, would pay for the cost of care during her rehabilitation period. But, after only 20 days of rehab, they were told that she was being moved to the intermediate care wing, and would thereafter be on private pay. The cost would exceed her Social Security by about $3,500 per month. Even though she had about $150,000 in savings, at that rate it would just be a matter of time before most of it would be gone. But by putting together a plan, utilizing the proper strategies and timing found in the MAPP Program, $125,000 was transferred out of her estate and protected, and she was on Medi-Cal (Medicaid) in just seven months.
Medicaid Qualification | Medicaid Asset Protection
The Financial Aid Center for Long Term Care has developed the MAPP Video Package which will teach you how to transfer assets and still qualify for Medicaid - quickly - using techniques approved in both Federal and state Medicaid rules, including the changes contained in the Deficit Reduction Act! Save tens, even hundreds of thousands of dollars!
Use MAPP risk-free for the next 90 days! Click here to view our Guarantee. Expensive Mistakes YouDon't Want to Make!
Click Here toView Free Report Q & A:
Learn How Medicaid
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FROM MEDICAID
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View Video and hear what others are saying
about the Medicaid Asset Protection Plan
What is the Difference between Medicare & Medicaid?
Real Life Situations
"When my family realized that my grandma's dementia would soon force us to place her
in a special care facility, I was the one (as usual) who was given the job of finding
out about Medicaid. I went to the local Medicaid office where I learned that because she had more than $2,000 she didn't qualify. When I asked what could be done, the lady said to use her money for her care until it was gone, and then she could qualify for
Medicaid. My brother-in-law, who thinks he's an expert on everything, claimed that it was illegal to give away assets in order to get on Medicaid. Against his 'better judgement,' I ordered your video and forced him to watch it. (I figured with a money back
guarantee I had nothing to lose.) After watching the video twice, and talking with you on the telephone, he was finally convinced. To make a long story short, Grandma is currently in a wonderful facility, on Medicaid, and we have set aside nearly $200,000 for her family.
Even my brother-in-law had to admit that if it wasn't for your video we would have probably lost it all." * * * * *
"My father had all his assets in a Living Trust. The trust salesman said it would protect
them from Medicaid. After his third stroke we realized he couldn't live alone. We went to
Medicaid, but they said they would count all the assets in the trust so he didn't qualify.
My father was devastated. He figured he was going to lose everything to the nursing home. A friend told me about your site. We called and talked to you and then purchased the MAPP
video. It was everything you promised and more. We were eventually able to protect over $125,000, and today he is in a care facility on Medicaid. I just wish we had found
your organization before we found the trust salesman -- we could have saved even more." Site
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Medication Experience Survey - Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ’s)
What is the genesis of the survey?
Dr. Feldman, a practicing dermatologist and a Professor of Public Health Science at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, devoted to enhancing patient outcomes, sought to better understand and improve patients’ experience with medications.
What if none of the answers fit my situation? Use closest answer that best fits your situation.
Can I skip a question(s)?
So that the study gives the best information on patients’ experience with their medications, the survey is set to require an answer to each question. Having an answer to each question will help make the survey results more uniform and interpretable.
Can I change my answer?
Yes, you can change answers before the final submission. Because we want to make sure we capture your opinions about your medicine as accurately as possible, please use the "previous" button to modify your previous answer if needed.
Privacy protection?
Your survey results are important to the outcome of our study. We anticipate that the survey results will help improve patients' experience with their medications. Research results from this study may help improve the health care of all patients with medical illnesses. Those results will be presented as summary data, combining many patients' survey data so that individual data will not be identifiable. If you would like a copy of the report concerning your medication, please contact us. In some circumstances, there may be a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requirement to report individuals' adverse event information. We understand and support the FDA's adverse event reporting requirement, recognizing its importance for assuring the safety of patients.
What are the terms and conditions of this survey?
Your participation in this survey is a gift that we greatly appreciate, and we want to make things as easy as possible for you. This survey does not require a legalistic, multi-page consent form. If you complete all or part of the Survey, the presumption is that you have agreed to participate. While there may be no direct benefit to you from participation, we hope that the results will help improve the medication experience of patients in general. This site is not intended to be a substitute for professional advice, diagnosis, or treatment from your physician or other health professional. For side effects from the current medication that are more than mere annoyance, please contact your physician or other health care provider.
Who can I contact about this survey?
If you have any questions regarding this survey, please contact us at [email protected].
Copyright © 2013, medRxsurvey.com. All rights reserved
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1567
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Go to: Forum List•Message List•New Topic•Search•Log In•Print ViewRe: Steven Tyler V KissPosted by:
()Date: October 14, 2012 07:09PMLyrics for kids?That covers 95% of the bands we both listen to regularly. I favour the more 'mature' lyrical approach, but singling out KISS (especially against Aerosmith) is pretty ironic._________________________________________________________Always takin', Always fakin', Ignorance is so frustrating."I've done the math enough to know the dangers of our second guessing...."Navigate: Previous Message•Next MessageOptions: Reply•QuoteSubjectViewsWritten ByPosted
Steven Tyler V Kiss
Re: Steven Tyler V Kiss
Re: lol as if Aerosmith is even
d2cheer
Re: Steven Tyler V Kiss164
Nunzio Soprano
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1568
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Early Virginia Religious Petitions The Library of Congress > American Memory Home > Browse Collections > Collection Home
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Petitioning in Eighteenth-Century Virginia
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Political and Religious Life in Eighteenth-Century VirginiaPetitions in Eighteenth-Century Virginia | The Church and State DebateCirculation and Presentation of Petitions
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Petitions in Eighteenth-Century Virginia
Petitioning played a vital role in the political life of eighteenth-century Virginia. Encouraged by their legislative representatives, citizens made widespread use of petitions to propose legislation or seek redress of grievances; in return, the delegates guaranteed consideration of every petition with serious attention and due procedure. Between 1700 and 1800 petitions were responsible for generating more legislation than any other single source. They served as a direct register of popular opinion on matters of both private and public significance.
The practice of citizens sending petitions to their government had roots deep in the medieval period of English history and was frequently used by Englishmen for several centuries before American colonization. The practice was transplanted to Virginia during the first year of settlement at Jamestown, and by 1700 petitioning had assumed an important role in the political process. The right to petition was beneficial to the new colony of Virginia in two ways. First, it provided a structured mechanism through which problems arising in colonial administration could be brought to the attention of Parliament or the king. Secondly, it served to bring some order to the jumble of grievances submitted by the colonists themselves to the colonial government. Until the early eighteenth century, petitions from the colonial administration to the king or Parliament were usually concerned with the internal needs of the colony. Requests concerning charter changes and defense requirements, court jurisdiction, or land disputes were typical of petitions made by the colony during its first hundred years.
So useful were petitions to the internal affairs of the colony that the House of Burgesses made it an invariable rule never to consider private matters unless they were properly introduced in the form of a petition. By such means, all sorts and degrees of requests were delivered to the House, from complaints against taxes to a petition for a reward for discovering a method by which warts could be removed. Furthermore, England's Bill of Rights of 1689 included the declaration "that it is the right of subjects to petition the king, and all commitments and prosecutions for such petitioning are illegal," thereby providing protection for petitioners against retaliation for the presentation of grievances.
Top Thus, petitions after 1689 concerned themselves more and more with questions of public policy. As a result, particularly in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, petitions became a considerable influence on the course of political decisions and a substantial outlet through which the needs of the people could be made known.
After the colonies declared independence, their new political authorities continued most legal traditions inherited from England, including the right to petition. In Virginia, after the outbreak of hostilities, petitions were received by the convention that established the first Revolutionary government. In some cases these petitions were acted upon immediately. In others, however, the convention postponed consideration and instead referred certain memorials to the initial session of the new House of Delegates, which replaced the House of Burgesses as the lower body of the General Assembly in 1776. Thereafter, with the exception of a few private petitions to the governor, petitions were normally submitted to the House of Delegates.
Finally, in 1791, with the adoption of the first ten amendments to the federal Constitution, the right to petition was guaranteed to all American citizens. By the first article of the Bill of Rights, the people were assured of their right "peaceably to assemble and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
In Virginia, the right to petition was not restricted by any requirements involving class, sex, or even race. Members of all social classes exercised their right to petition and received responsive action from their government. Although they were denied the right to vote, women, free blacks, and occasionally even slaves employed petitions to participate in the political process and make their opinions known. One 1779 debate over the division of Drysdale Parish, for example, engendered several petitions both for and against the proposal, signed by more than a dozen women. Because all petitions were granted the same due process, they proved a remarkably effective form of popular activism.
Gradually, however, the influence of petitions declined, a result of the improvements in transportation and communications that began to be felt in the first half of the nineteenth century and the growth of sectionalism that diminished common causes. And although a few grievances (such as women's suffrage or Prohibition) have brought large numbers of petitions pouring into the U. S. Congress, petitions have been a relatively unimportant influence on the passage of legislation in the United States since the Civil War. Improvements in transportation and communications rendered petitions no less valuable, but rather less useful. They were replaced through the technological revolution whose successive innovations have included the railroads, telegraphy, the telephone, and most recently electronic mail. As indicators of the opinions, problems, and desires of Virginians of all social and economic classes from the Revolution to the Civil War, however, petitions stand virtually unchallenged.
Top The capitol of the Virginia colony...Williamsburg, Va. Photographed by Howard R. Hollem, April 1943. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Collection. Reproduction Number: LC-USW361-754
Petition signatures
The Library of Congress | Legal
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1569
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Shaken baby symptoms Shaken baby syndrome is a severe form of head injury caused by the baby's brain rebounding inside of the baby's skull when shaken. In this injury there is bruising of the brain, swelling, pressure, and bleeding (intracerebral hemorrhage). This can easily lead to permanent, severe brain damage or death. If a child has this injury there are usually no outward physical signs of trauma, but there may be a change in the child's behavior such as irritability, lethargy, pale or bluish skin, vomiting, and convulsions.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1570
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Yes - vocals
Jon Anderson - vocals, guitar, keyboards
King Crimson - vocals
Dream Theater - spoken word
Born on: 25.10.1944Official websiteJon Anderson was born John Roy Anderson in Accrington, Lancashire, England, to Albert and Kathleen Anderson. His father was from Scotland whilst his mother was of Irish ancestry.[1] Anderson dropped the "h" from his first name in 1970.[1]
Anderson attended St. John's Infants School in Baxenden, Accrington. There he made a tentative start to a musical career playing the washboard in "Little John's Skiffle Group", which played songs by Lonnie Donegan, among others. After leaving school at the age of fifteen he tried a series of jobs including farm hand, lorry driver and milkman. He also tried to pursue a football career at Accrington Stanley F.C., but at 5 feet 5 inches (1.65 m) tall[2] he was turned down because of his frail constitution. He remains a fan of the club.[1]
In 1962, Anderson joined The Warriors (also known as The Electric Warriors),[1] where he and his brother Tony shared the role of lead vocalist. He quit this band in 1967, released two solo singles in 1968 under the pseudonym Hans Christian,.[3] One of Anderson's first producers at EMI was songwriter Paul Korda.
In March 1968, Anderson met bassist Chris Squire and joined him in a group called Mabel Greer's Toyshop, which had previously included guitarist Peter Banks. Anderson fronted this band but ended up leaving again before the summer was over. He remarks on his website that his time with the band consisted of "too many drugs, not enough fun".
Anderson, Squire and Banks went on to form Yes with drummer Bill Bruford and keyboardist Tony Kaye. Their debut album was released in 1969. Rick Wakeman joined in 1971, and Anderson stayed with the group until a 'bitter dispute' in 1979.[4] Anderson is recognized as the main instigator of a series of epic works produced by Yes at the time; he played a role in creating such complex pieces as "Close to the Edge", "Awaken" and especially "The Gates of Delirium".[citation needed]
He rejoined a reformed Yes in 1983 which produced their most commercially successful album 90125 with newcomer Trevor Rabin. He departed again in 1988 over creative differences relating to the band's continued pursuit of major commercial success and mainstream radio play. In 1989 Anderson and other former Yes members formed the group Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman, Howe (ABWH), augmented by bassist Tony Levin, who had played with drummer Bruford in King Crimson. After the successful first ABWH album, a series of business deals caused ABWH to reunite with the then-current members of Yes, who had been out of the public eye while searching for a new lead singer. The resulting eight-man band assumed the name Yes, and the album Union (1991) was assembled from various pieces of an in-progress second ABWH album, as well as recordings that the "Yes proper" band had been working on without Anderson. A successful tour followed, but the eight-man line-up of Yes never recorded a complete album together before splintering in 1992. Many more personnel changes followed, but Anderson stayed in the band until 2008. He appears on all Yes albums except for their 1980 album Drama, and their 2011 album Fly From Here.
Anderson was fond of experimenting within the band and in so doing contributed to occasionally conflicted relationships within the band and with management. He originally wanted to record the album Tales from Topographic Oceans in the middle of the woods, and instead decided to put hay and animal cut-outs all over the recording studio.[5] In another incident Anderson had tiles installed in the studio to simulate the echo effect of one's vocals in a bathroom. Anderson last performed with Yes in 2004. A tour planned for summer 2008 with Anderson was cancelled when he suffered acute respiratory failure. The band have since announced a tour without him and he has been replaced by Benoît David,[6] the lead vocalist in Yes tribute act Close to the Edge.[7]
As of mid-2011, Anderson is collaborating with Rabin and Wakeman on a new Anderson-Wakeman-Rabin album, and likely some concerts in 2012. They are writing music, and Wakeman said he hopes the album is completed by the end of 2011. On tour, the group plans to perform Yes songs and new music.[8] The group has unsuccessfully attempted to recruit Bruford to drum on the album
It is a commonly held misconception that Anderson sings falsetto, a vocal technique which artificially produces high, airy notes by using only the ligamentous edges of the vocal cords; however, this is not the case. Anderson's normal singing/speaking voice is naturally above the tenor range. In a 2008 interview with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Anderson stated, "I'm an alto tenor and I can sing certain high notes, but I could never sing falsetto, so I go and hit them high."[10] He is also noted for singing in his original Lancashire accent. Anderson is capable of hitting many high notes, such his E5s at the end of "Heart of the Sunrise" from the album Fragile (1971), and is able to get at least as low as G#2, which he displays once and briefly in the song "The Ancient (Giants Under The Sun)" from Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973).[11]
Anderson is also responsible for most of the mystically themed lyrics and concepts which are part of many Yes releases. These have occasionally alienated some members of the band (most notably Bruford and Rick Wakeman), contributing to their leaving the group. The lyrics are frequently inspired by various books Anderson has enjoyed, from Tolstoy's War and Peace to Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha. A footnote in Paramahansa Yogananda's Autobiography of a Yogi inspired an entire double album Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973). Recurring themes include environmentalism, pacifism and sun worship.
In 1970, Anderson appeared as a featured guest singer with King Crimson on the track "Prince Rupert Awakes", recorded on their Lizard album. The tune was outside the range of the group's then-vocalist, Gordon Haskell. He also co-wrote the song "Pearly Gates", which appears on Iron Butterfly's January 1975 album Scorching Beauty. In September 1975 he appeared on the Vangelis album Heaven and Hell and in the following year released his first solo album Olias of Sunhillow, in which he performs lead and backing vocals, guitars, harp, keyboards, sitar, flutes, mandolin, koto, percussion, and other instruments. In 1979 he composed the score for a ballet, Ursprung which was part of a grouping of three dance works, collectively entitled Underground Rumours, commissioned and performed by The Scottish Ballet. The choreographer was Royston Maldoom, the theatrical set and costume designer was Graham Bowers, and the lighting designer was David Hersey. The principal dancers were Andrea Durant and Paul Russell. In 1979, while Yes was on a hiatus, Anderson started recording again with Vangelis; this resulted in the first Jon & Vangelis album, Short Stories (1980).
Following Anderson's departure from Yes in March 1980, the singer began work on his second solo album, Song of Seven, which appeared in November, followed by a major British tour with The New Life Band. In 1981 he appeared on Rick Wakeman's concept album 1984. He also released an album with Vangelis in July 1981 called The Friends of Mr. Cairo. The album produced two singles: "I'll Find My Way Home" and "State of Independence"; the latter was a bigger hit for Donna Summer than for Jon and Vangelis, getting to #14 in the British Charts. The album was also notable for the title track, which was an ode to classic Hollywood gangster films of the 1930s and '40s, with voice impressions of Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre and James Stewart which paid homage to the classic film noir The Maltese Falcon. In 1982, he released Animation and in 1983 he appeared on Mike Oldfield's "In High Places" from the album Crises as well as another song called "Shine". In the same year he also appeared with Béla Fleck and the Flecktones. During this year, he tried to form a trio with Rick Wakeman and Keith Emerson, but it did not come to fruition.
In 1984, Anderson appeared on the song "Cage of Freedom" from the 1984 soundtrack for a re-release of the Fritz Lang silent film Metropolis. In 1985, his song "This Time It Was Really Right" was featured on the soundtrack for the movie St. Elmo's Fire. He also sang "Silver Train" and "Christie" on the film soundtrack Scream for Help. Along with Tangerine Dream, he appeared on the song "Loved by the Sun" for the 1985 film Legend directed by Ridley Scott. The 1986 film Biggles: Adventures in Time features a song sung by Anderson. During this year, he recorded some demo tracks that would later be reworked. He and Vangelis also started writing new songs and recording demos for another album. Though the album was not made, they performed live together on 6 November 1986.
The last three years of the 1980s saw him singing (and briefly appearing in the music video) on "Moonlight Desires" on Gowan's album Great Dirty World in 1987. He recorded the album In the City of Angels and also sang on "Stop Loving You" on the Toto album The Seventh One in 1988, and in 1989 he recorded an album that would later be released as The Lost Tapes of Opio. He also sang on the songs "Within the Lost World" and "Far Far Cry" for the Jonathan Elias album Requiem for the Americas.
Upon completion of the Big Generator tour in 1988, Jon Anderson teamed up with ex-Yes members Steve Howe, Rick Wakeman and Bill Bruford. The result was Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe, released in 1989 and supported by a successful tour. Because of the separate existence of Yes (part of the band's name still being owned by Anderson), this alternate incarnation were forced to use their surnames as the band's name (after Chris Squire threatened legal action). Meanwhile, Yes began composing and recording material for their follow-up, while Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe did the same, beginning production at Miraval Studios in the South of France in April 1990. Bowing to record company pressure to resurrect the Yes banner, Squire and Anderson came up with the idea of merging both projects, which resulted in the 1991 album Union.
Although the supporting world tour was a commercial and critical success, praised by fans and band as one of Yes' best ever, the album was not as well-received, resulting in sales figures equivalent to those of the ABWH album (750,000 copies worldwide). Union would turn out to be Yes' last studio album to have significant sales, though it did not match the popularity of 1987's Big Generator. One of Union's singles, "Lift Me Up", became Yes' biggest hit on Billboard's Album Rock Tracks chart, reaching the top spot and remaining there for six weeks in early 1991.
In 1992 Anderson appeared on Kitaro's album Dream, adding both lyrics and vocals to three songs: "Lady of Dreams", "Island of Life" and "Agreement". He planned to release an Ancient America-influenced solo album called The Power of Silence in 1993, but it was not released due to issues with Geffen Records. He also toured South America with a band that included his daughters, Deborah and Jade. He appeared on the song "Along The Amazon" which he co-wrote for violinist Charlie Bisharat's album of the same name. He also recorded an orchestral solo album called Change We Must in 1993; it was released the following year.
In 1994, Anderson released a solo album of Latino-influenced music called Deseo. There were plans to release a live album called The Best of South America, but it was not released due to management issues (though some copies were already released by Yes Magazine). Anderson sang on the 7th Level children's video game Tuneland. Also, his son Damion released a single called Close 2 the Hype, which featured him and Jon on vocals. The next year he released a solo album called Angels Embrace and spoke of a plan to tour and record in China, but this idea was soon abandoned in favour of focusing on work with Yes. In 1996, The Power of Silence was released under the title Toltec. This release included sound effects that were not on the original recording. Anderson also played a Mother's Day concert in San Luis Obispo.
The year 1997 saw Anderson recording and releasing a Celtic-influenced solo album called The Promise Ring, around the time he married Jane Luttenberger. During their honeymoon, Earthmotherearth was recorded and later released, followed in 1998 by an album called The More You Know that Jon and Jane recorded in Paris, France, with Francis Jocky. Anderson appeared on the song "The Only Thing I Need" by act 4Him in 1999; it was recorded for a multi-group album called "Streams". Steve Howe's tribute album Portraits of Bob Dylan also featured a cover of the Bob Dylan song, "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands", with Jon's vocals. He also recorded with a band called The Fellowship on the album In Elven Lands, inspired by the works of J.R.R. Tolkien.
In 2000, Anderson and then-Yes keyboardist Igor Khoroshev worked on an album called True You, True Me. A tour was to commence in 2001, but due to Khoroshev's sexual assault charges during Yes's 2000 Masterworks Tour, the project was shelved. In 2002, Anderson started recording songs for a project called The Big If, which has not been released (as of 2010). In 2004, he appeared with the Contemporary Youth Orchestra of Cleveland. The concert was recorded but only released to the orchestra members. He also recorded live on XM Satellite Radio in Washington, D.C. on 1 April. This show was released on a DVD called Tour of the Universe in 2005, which incorporated visual effects. This release coincided with the release of Jon Anderson's single "State of Independence".
Anderson's earlier albums Olias of Sunhillow and Song of Seven were re-issued in 2006. Animation was tardily released on CD to complaints about the professionalism of the sound.[citation needed] To some ears,[who?] a later pressing used a better master, although the label Voiceprint denies any differences between the pressings. In Elven Lands, an album containing Anderson's recordings with The Fellowship, was also released as were the first seven volumes of a box set called The Lost Tapes. Also in 2006, Anderson appeared with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra (East Coast Troupe) during two 16 December shows in Philadelphia to play "Roundabout".
In 2007, Anderson contributed vocals to an album Culture of Ascent by American progressive rock group Glass Hammer; and appeared as part of a vocal ensemble on the track "Repentance" from the Dream Theater album Systematic Chaos. During that year, Anderson also toured both the USA and England with The Paul Green School of Rock Music. Anderson's 1985 Christmas album 3 Ships was also released on CD with bonus tracks.
The year 2008 saw an ambient album using Anderson's voice and bird song called From Me to You added to The Lost Tapes. Anderson appeared on the song "Sadness of Flowing" which he co-wrote for Peter Machajdík's album Namah and he made similar contributions to a re-mastering of Tommy Zvoncheck's album ZKG.
In 2009 Anderson played on a European tour called "Have Guitar, Will Travel". Later that year, his 1997 album EarthMotherEarth was re-released with bonus tracks. Rather than just have Jon Anderson's name, it was released under "Jon and Jane Anderson". In The City of Angels and Change We Must were also reprinted during this year.
Anderson played a series of shows in Canada and the United States in 2010. He and Rick Wakeman began an autumn tour of the UK at the Cambridge Corn Exchange, on 9 October. A sample of Anderson's vocals from Mike Oldfield's "In High Places" is prominently featured in Kanye West's 2010 album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy in the opening track "Dark Fantasy".
In 2011, Anderson played a rendition of "Owner of a Lonely Heart" with the Youth Orchestras of San Antonio (YOSA) Philharmonic of San Antonio. That same year, Anderson released a single-track album entitled Open, featuring orchestration by Stefan Podell.[12]
In late 2012, a site for Anderson's next concept album was launched, with the title Zamran Experience. It is to be a sequel of Olias of Sunhillow.[13] The site features a preview video.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1571
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Metro.us▶ CA$H OUT Keyword: CA$H OUT Yo Gotti is on ‘a good ride’
Yo Gotti played the historic Orpheum Theatre in Memphis in June. The evening itself was also historic as well: It […]
Posted in Entertainment, Music Tagged B.B. King Blues Club, beale street, CA$H OUT, epic records, hip hop, J. Cole, Lil Wayne, meek mill, Ne-Yo, rap, Shy Glizzy, T.I., the troc, touring, Trocadero, Wale, YG, yo gotti, Zed Zilla | Reply
Yo Gotti Featuring YG, Zed Zilla, Shy Glizzy, CA$H OUT There is no denying that Yo Gotti is one of […]
KISS Jam 11
KISS Jam 11 – Ace Hood, K Michelle, August Alsina and CA$H OUT Join us for KISS 101.7 FM’s 11th […]
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1572
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Diamond Rio Lyrics
It's All In Your Head Lyrics
"It's All In Your Head" was written by Martin, Tony / Stephenson, Van / Wilson, Reese. Edit
"It's All In Your Head" was written by Martin, Tony / Stephenson, Van / Wilson, Reese.
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Lester Mittendorf
Nov 30, 2011 | 1690 views | 0 | 10 | | Lester Hubert Mittendorf, 82, of Metropolis, died Monday, Nov. 28, 2011 at Western Baptist Hospital in Paducah.Funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at First United Methodist Church in Metropolis. Burial will follow at the Masonic Cemetery in Metropolis.Visitation will be held from 10 a.m. until the funeral hour on Friday at the church.Other arrangements are pending at Miller Funeral Home in Metropolis.
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BTN Channel Finder Hotels with the BTN Chris Allen
Position:Director of Skill Development
Experience:3rd Season
Chris Allen is in his third year with Michigan football. He is the Director of Skill Development and the Associate Director of Strength and Conditioning.
Allen spent five seasons as a member of the West Virginia strength and conditioning program (2003-07); he worked with the football, men's basketball, wrestling, track and crew teams. He worked two years in Internet technology support in Atlanta, Ga., prior to joining the Mountaineers staff. He was a volunteer strength coach at Stephenson High School in Stone Mountain, Ga.
A sprinter on the WVU track team from 1997-2000, Allen graduated in 2000 with degrees in accounting and MIS. He has a master's degree in athletic coaching education. Allen is a native of Kingston, Jamaica.
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Thoughts Along the Way
Thoughts on the interaction of God, people, truth, and our world
Olympic Trials - First Half Recap
I have the honor of serving as an official at this summer's USA Track and Field Olympic Trials in Eugene, OR. This is the third Trial's that I have worked and it is always a privilege that I don't take lightly. It is an opportunity to help select our Olympic team. Also, there is no better meet in the US than the Olympic Trials and, if you are a track and field fan, you owe it to yourself to attend at least one. But I also don't take this lightly because there are a lot of very dedicated and qualified officials - many of them good friends of mine whom I respect as great officials - who don't get the chance to be here.If you haven't been keeping up with the Trials, here are a few of the highlights from the first four days. The photos come from a variety of online sources, including the Oregonian and Track and Field News.Places and Standards - I want to make a distinction that often confuses those don't work in track and field on a regular basis. The common understanding is that the athletes who finish in the top three places in an event will represent the US at the Olympics in London. But that is only true if they hold the necessary Olympic "A" qualifying mark in their event. In some cases, an athlete may finish in the top three but have to stay home. For instance, in the women's 10,000 meters, the athletes who finished first, fourth, and seventh here in Eugene will go to London. The second-place finisher does not have the "A" standard and the third-place finisher (who does have the "A" standard) will run the marathon instead of the 10,000 in London. The women who finished fourth and seventh are highest placers with the "A" standard.Hammertime - The Trials actually began before the meet officially began with the hammer competitions. If you are not familiar with the hammer, it is a facsinating event. Think of a shot put at the end of a three foot wire cable and thrown over 2/3 the length of a football field. These were held the day before the meet actually started on the Nike campus in Beaverton, OR. The hope was that moving the event to its own separate time and place would generate more attention to the event (and open up more room in Eugene to park television trucks). Hammertime did draw a larger and more enthusiastic crowd than they probably would have in Eugene and the reports from officials and athletes all seem to be positive.Rain - There really aren't many places better for a major track meet than Eugene, OR. The facilities are great and they draw large, enthusiastic, and knowledgeable crowds. But Oregon also gets rain, and that has been a major story line (especially in the pole vaults) through the first half of the Trials.Ashton Easton - I love the Combined Events and appreciate the athletes that compete in them. There is a comradery among them that is rare in athletics at this high of a level. But they realize that their primary competition is them vs. the event. So they support and encourage one another in a way that is unique. And the main story of the Trials to this point as to be Ashton Eaton. On Saturday, the 24 year-old University of Oregon graduate broke the world decathlon record (held for the past eleven years by Romen Sebrle of the Czech Republic) by scoring 9,039 points in conditions that were often less than ideal. I also appreciated the acts of sportsmanship demonstrated by some of his competitors as Ashton approached the final event - the 1,500 run. Realizing that Ashton had the victory wrapped up but that he needed to run the 1,500 considerable faster than he had ever run it before to break the world record, the two best 1,500 runners among the decathletes - Joe Detmer and Curtis Beach - chose to run with Ashton, encouraging and "pushing" him. Then, as they neared the finish line, rather than racing ahead (which they could have easily done), they backed off and let Ashton cross the line first with the new world record. It was all a very moving display of sportsmanship by Joe and Curtis and a great display of athletic ability by Ashton. And he is still probably several years away from this athletic peak.A Dead Heat - During women's 100 meter dash final on Saturday, the unthinkable happened. Two athletes - Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh - tied for third place (and the final spot of the Olympic Team). First of all, to have two athletes tie in a race to the 1/1000 of a second is very rare. But, in most cases, it wouldn't be a big deal. They would be listed as tied for third place and you would move on. But in this case, this also meant who would or wouldn't make the US Olympic Team. There is only room for one of them to go. And USA Track and Field had no procedure in place to break that tie, because this is more of an administrative issue (who makes the team) versus a competitive issue (who finished third, they both did). It took them a couple of days to figure out a tie-breaking solution and they won't actually break the tie until next weekend. The whole process left USATF open to some criticism along the way. By the way, you need to read this interview from Sports Illustrated with my friends Roger Jennings and Bob Podkaminer. It will explain the whole scenario in more detail and it is really interesting.Come-backs, Young Guns, and the Women's Vault - Sunday found a lot of exciting competition in both track and field. On the track, Justin Gatlin and Tyson Gay finished one and two in the men's 100 meter dash. This was a comeback for both of them. Six years ago, Gatlin began a four-year suspension for using performance enhancing drugs. On Sunday, he won a US Championship, a spot in the London Olympics by running as fast (or faster) than he ever has. Tyson, who finished second, did it in just his fourth race back after having hip surgery and not running for almost a year. He should be in even better condition when the Olympics come around. In the men's long jump, "youngsters" Will Claye and Marquis Grissom battled back and forth with Claye grabbing the lead on his final jump only to see Grissom take it back on the very next jump. Both men are great pressure jumpers. Finally, Sunday also had the women's pole vault final. Three women with ties to the Razorbacks were entered. Katie Stripling Tannehill no-heighted while Janice Keppler tied for ninth and April Steiner Bennett (who make the 2008 Olympic team) tied for fifth.Men's High Jump Final - Though we had officiated the decathlon high jump and the men's qualifying round earlier, our crew had its first final on Monday with the men. We again faced wet conditions, but our crew and the facility crew at Hayward Field did a great job of keeping water off of the apron so that the athlete's could jump without slipping. The wet conditions kept the athletes from jumping exceedingly high, but it was a very exciting competition won by 35 year-old Jamie Nieto. Jamie won the 2004 US Olympic Trials and went on to place fourth in the London Olympics. In 2008, Jamie finished tied for second at the Trials but did not have the necessary Olympic "A" standard (see above) and so he didn't get to go to Beijing. But this year, he has both the standard and the victory and will be going to London, along with Eric Kinyard (a great young jumper from Kansas State) and Jesse Williams, the defending world champion. Jesse actually finished fourth - but the third-place finished didn't have the "A" standard. And one final high jump note: all three members of our men's Olympic high jump squad are coached by Cliff Rovelto, head coach at Kansas State University. Posted by
I'm in my 32nd year of ministry to college students at the University of Arkansas and serve in various leadership roles from the local to national level. I blog a few times a week on leadership and spiritual formation - with other items of interest along the way. I invite you to subscribe and share your feedback. I have been married to Gina for 34 years and we have two grown and married daughters. I have also been a track and field official for over 20 years.
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Home > Gaming
> PC, Mac Gaming
> PC, Mac Games
Sims 3 Plus Supernatural Expansion Pack (PC/Mac)
Become supernatural in new world full of magic, mystery and mischief. Enter the mysterious town of Moonlight Falls, where strange things happen by the light of the moon. Create supernatural beings from menacing werewolves and cackling witches to mischievous fairies and more intriguing vampires. Then stalk the night, use your wand to cast spells, stay home and claw the furniture and more. You can mix dozens of elixirs from turning Sims into zombies to transforming them into gold. Share your enchanted brews with any friends who have The Sims 3. Spooky surprises are in store for you in the world of The Sims 3 Supernatural!
Mfr Part#014633169775
T: Teen
Rating Explanation
Titles rated T (Teen) have content that may be suitable for ages 13 and older. Titles in this category may contain violence, suggestive themes, crude humor, minimal blood, simulated gambling, and/or infrequent use of strong language.
Supported Windows Operating Systems
Windows Vista/XP
Supported Macintosh Operating Systems
Mac OS X 10.5.7 Leopard or higher
Supported Video Card Chipsets
PC - NVIDIA GeForce series (FX 5900, FX 5950, 6200, 6500, 6600, 6800, 7200, 7300, 7600, 7800, 7900, 7950, 8400, 8500, 8600, 8800, 9300, 9400, 9500, 9600, 9800, G100, GT 120, GT 130, GTS 150, GTS 250, GTX 260, GTX 280, GTX 285, GTX 295), ATI Radeon Series(9500, 9600, 9800X300, X600, X700, X800, X850, X1300, X1600, X1800, X1900, X1950, 2400, 2600, 2900, 3450, 3650, 3850, 3870, 4850, 4870), Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA 3-Series, GMA 4-Series ); Mac - NVIDIA GeForce series(7300, 7600, 8600, 8800, 9400M, 9600M GT, GT 120, GT 130), ATI Radeon Series(X1600, X1900, 2400, 2600, 3870, 4850, 4870), Intel Graphics Media Accelerator GMA 3-Series.
Main Website: www.ea.com/
Support Website: support.ea.com/
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1577
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middlesborodailynews.com UK, U of L women both ranked in Top 10 Gary B. Graves AP Sports Writer
LOUISVILLE (AP) — There is a battle brewing for women’s basketball supremacy in the Bluegrass State.The Louisville and Kentucky women’s teams are ranked in the top 10 and have national championship aspirations after making deep runs in last year’s NCAA tournament.The fifth-ranked Cardinals will start the season Saturday against Loyola-Chicago after their stunning march to the national championship game with an injury-depleted roster. Louisville is healthy, welcoming back three regulars to have one of its deepest rosters in several seasons.Kentucky, ranked No. 7, opens Friday at Marist with its sights set on reaching the Final Four coming off the Wildcats’ third regional final appearance in four years. The Wildcats lost No. 2 career scorer A’dia Mathies to the WNBA but have added two high school All-Americans to the rotation.“It’s just incredible, I think, for the Commonwealth of Kentucky,” Kentucky coach Matthew Mitchell said Wednesday of both schools’ success. “It’s just a real point of pride and basketball brings people together, it excites people, it motivates people. I think it’s a terrific place to be and I’m humbled to be here during this exciting time.”The Kentucky men’s team is ranked No. 1 and defending national champion Louisville is No. 3.The women’s teams won’t have to wait long to settle bragging rights. Louisville travels to Lexington on Dec. 1, aiming to avenge last year’s 48-47 loss decided by freshman Janee Thompson’s 3-pointer with 8.4 seconds remaining.Before that in-state showdown, the Wildcats and Cardinals continue honing the chemistry that has both teams excited about their championship prospects.Louisville’s cohesion has been a work in progress in recent years as hip injuries sidelined senior guard Tia Gibbs for the past two seasons while 6-foot-1 senior forward Asia Taylor sat out last year. Junior forward Shawnta’ Dyer tore the medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligaments in her left knee last December.The Cardinals (29-9, 11-5 Big East Conference) endured some frustrating losses along the way but hit stride in the NCAA tournament, highlighted by a monumental 82-81 upset of No. 1 and defending champion Baylor in the regional semifinal. Louisville led for all but a few seconds in the final minute, winning on Monique Reid’s two free throws with 2.6 seconds left.Upsets of Tennessee and California followed before Connecticut trounced Louisville 93-60 in the championship at New Orleans.Taylor can’t wait to be part of what she hopes is a return trip down Interstate 65 to Nashville for this year’s Final Four.“I was happy for my teammates and the program,” she said, “but as a competitor you want to be out there and be in a big game like that. The fact that I knew I was coming back was my motivation to work hard.”Though forward Sheronne Vails is out for the year following offseason knee surgery, Walz is eager to see if having his healthiest squad in some time can carry the Cardinals past favored UConn in the newly renamed American Athletic Conference and deeper in the NCAA tournament.Besides senior guard and leading scorer Shoni Schimmel (14.2 points), Louisville returns junior forward Sara Hammond (10.8 points, 6.4 rebounds), wing Antonita Slaughter and junior guard Bria Smith (9.5 points).“We’ll probably have the biggest game of rock-paper-scissors that you’ve ever seen, and the last five will be our starters,” Walz joked about the process of choosing a lineup. “It’s a great problem to have.”Mitchell can say the same thing about his own well-stocked Kentucky roster.The returns of senior forward and leading scorer DeNesha Stallworth (12.5 points, 6.0 rebounds) and Samarie Walker (8.7 points, 8.1 rebounds) provide a strong post presence for the Wildcats (30-6, 13-3 Southeastern Conference), who fell to UConn in the regional final for the second straight year.“It took some months, and we still look back and wonder why didn’t get over that hump,” Stallworth said. “We’ve gotten better in our offensive execution and are looking good. We don’t want to be in that spot (of missing the Final Four) for the fifth straight year.”Kentucky’s backcourt is its deepest area with senior Kastine Evans, juniors Bria Goss and Jennifer O’Neill and sophomore Thompson able to play anywhere in the three-guard alignment. The additions of McDonald’s All-Americans Linnae Harper and Makayla Epps could pay off right away for a Wildcats team determined to go a step further — and possibly meeting a familiar foe along the way.“We’re such a dynamic team this year that there’s not just one scorer anymore,” Evans said. “We’re just really fortunate to have a whole bunch of scoring opportunities on this team.” Link:http://www.middlesborodailynews.com/article/20131107/news/311079951/
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1578
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If the lockout happens, who gets the playbook?
By Velveeta
@StoyWare
It looks to me like the lockout is going to happen. The owners are in a position of strength, and the players have shown no indication of budging. In the past, teams in this situation have given playbooks and plans for practice to the players to hold practices themselves. Also, with no CBA in place, it's impossible to trade current players. Whether the worst-case scenario transpires or not, teams would be wise to prepare for the worst. For now, the Broncos are stuck with two legitimate starting quarterbacks in Kyle Orton and Tim Tebow. Without a CBA, there can neither be a trade, nor a competition. While Elway said that Tebow needed to develop as a pocket passer, he wasn't specific whether he thought it best to develop as a backup or under live fire. Elway also said that there would be "competition" for the starting QB job, but an extended lockout would prevent any competition. The decision will have to be made before the lockout. Assuming that one player will lead the offense through the offseason/ preseason: Who will it be?
The journeyman incumbent with six years of experience in the NFL, and two in the Broncos' current offense. However his lame-duck status may impinge upon his leadership ability, which isn't great in the first place. Orton is also an alternate NFLPA representative to Brian Dawkins, who may not be returning. Given that the Broncos will be stuck with him until the CBA is resolved (at which point may be too late to trade him) it may be wise to stay the course, let him start for another mediocre rebuilding year, and trade him as a starter prior to the 2012 season. If that's the plan, the Broncos may hand him the playbook if they expect the lockout to extend into the regular season. On the other hand, it's doubtful that Orton would be helpful in the development of his inevitable successor.
The kid is still raw, there's no doubt about that. The lockout would happen at the worst possible time for Tebow, who needs more coaching than anyone. With that said, his abilities as a leader on the field are unquestioned, and the players seem to be behind him (N=Brandon Lloyd). However, his legendary work ethic as a player might work against him as a de facto coach, as he may attempt to drive the other players as hard as he drives himself. Anarchy
Chaos reigns, and the players go their separate ways until the CBA is resolved. Some players will work out together, but this will progress willy-nilly, and the offense will remain fragmented until the new CBA is announced. On the other hand, having player-organized practices during strikes/ lockouts is viewed by some as cheating, so this possibility wouldn't pose any additional risk to the Broncos' scuffed reputation. This situation could also lead to a locker room divided by the groups players practiced with during the lockout.
Another Player
Assuming that an offensive player would have to lead the offense... Who would it be? Brian Dawkins? Brady Quinn? Correll Buckhalter? Kris Kuper?
Again, this is strictly speculative and dependent on the ownership's belief in the imminence of a protracted lockout. The ultimate question is simply what happens to the team during the lockout. I'm assuming the coaching staff will give instructions to a player who will lead the team during the lockout, but that will not necessarily the case. If that doesn't happen (or even if it does) is there a chance that one player will assert leadership and lead a cohesive offseason program without any direction from the coaching staff?
Who leads the Broncos offense during the lockout?
Orton (11 votes)
Tebow (50 votes)
Anarchy (7 votes)
Other (who?) (3 votes)
usurpation
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Best for Vets: Career & Technical Colleges 2013
Community colleges dominated our ‘career & technical' ranking
| Last Updated: Sep. 12, 2012 - 05:59PM | Comments Tweet
Mount Wachusett Community College, No. 1 on our list, is a public two-year school in North Central Massuchetts. The wind turbines provide power for the colleges, known for its natural resources and energy management programs. (Courtesy of Mount Wachusett Community College) By George AltmanStaff writer
Best for Vets
* The rankings* The methodology
Community colleges face unique challenges among institutions of higher learning.They provide technical training and are often first on the line when a new industry comes to town and needs specialized workers quickly. They also focus on general education, preparing students to receive bachelor's degrees at four-year schools. Despite obstacles, these schools dominated our first-ever review of the best career and technical colleges for veterans.Public community and technical schools accounted for six of the top 10, with Mount Wachusett Community College in Massachusetts taking the top spot.For Mount Wachusett, catering to veterans and active-duty service members is "woven into the fabric of this college," said Kristine Larkin, assistant director of the school's Center of Excellence for Veteran Student Success, one of 15 such centers in the country paid for by Education Department grants. "This college has a reputation for serving veterans � even in the 1970s, when it wasn't cool. This is a way of giving back," Larkin said.ECPI University, Stevens-Henager College and Virginia College ranked as the top private schools. All are for-profit institutions. Some such schools have faced tough questions in recent years about their quality of education and handling of veterans' education benefits.But Mike Betz, general manager for military student initiatives at Education Corporation of America � parent company of Virginia College, Ecotech Institute and the Golf Academy of America, among others � said veterans rely heavily on each other for advice when it comes to choosing a college, meaning schools that perform well are rewarded with more students while bad actors eventually see their enrollments fall. The company was not one of those looked at in Sen. Tom Harkin's highly publicized investigation into 30 for-profit education providers unveiled this summer.Most of the service members who attend schools within Betz's company enrolled thanks to word of mouth, he said, not elaborate advertisements.(Page 2 of 2)"If you take good care of our veterans, word will get out," Betz said. "We've made a commitment � we've made a serious investment in our military support services."Betz said that as career and technical institutions, his company's schools have a different goal from that of big, traditional state colleges. "It's not just the attainment of a higher degree. It's the attainment of a vocational skill set related to an occupation."The surveyMilitary Times EDGE considered some 140 schools in the review. Colleges participating in our annual survey self-identified as career and technical schools. We'll review more colleges and universities in the November issue.The nearly 150-question survey asked about support services, academic policies and financial aid beneficial to student veterans.Answers indicated that schools as a whole have room for improvement. More than half said they have no veterans office on campus, and nearly six in 10 said faculty and staff do not receive training to handle the unique issues veterans face in the classroom and the financial aid office.There were positive signs for service members, as well. For example, more than 70 percent of schools indicated that they accept American Council on Education credits, which convert military training into academic hours.A similar proportion of schools said they offer online education programs, which can be crucial for troops taking classes on active duty."We do have a distance-learning program so we can reach out to active-duty military who are abroad," said Elise Davis-McFarland, vice president for student services at Trident Technical College. "We have service people in Afghanistan who are enrolled in our programs."Many of the community colleges recorded graduation rates that could raise concerns among prospective students.But Mount Wachusett's Larkin said that unlike many four-year schools, two-year colleges are not focused primarily on graduating students.People can leave her school without an associate degree � bringing down the graduation rate � but still be success stories if they're departing for good jobs or to continue their studies at a university.That said, Larkin doesn't view Mount Wachusett's top finish as a sign that the school and its veteran support systems can stand pat."It's great that we're being recognized, but it's a continuous, daily effort," she said. "It's a work in progress. It's never going to be perfect … [but] we're sure as heck going to do the best we can to try." Page Previous 1 2 Next Tweet
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Frank Joseph Barno / Margaret Dean Family Tree
Frank Joseph Barno 03/18/1905 - 01/06/1978 Married 06/28/1927
Margaret Dean 04/16/1906 - 04/29/1989
William Barno 08/12/1928 - 10/31/2009 Married 10/04/1952
Mary Murphy 06/13/1929
David William Barno 07/05/1954 Married 06/26/1976
Susan Vescio 08/14/1952
Michael Barno 05/06/1980
Robert Barno 12/26/1982
Katherine Barno 09/15/1988
Mark Richard Barno 03/22/1956 Married 10/14/1989
Allison Kosty 06/15/1959
Colleen Barno 12/25/1996
Brian Francis Barno 01/24/1958 Married 02/14/1987
Carol Aspell 05/18/1955
Eileen Barno 04/20/1989
Emily Barno 03/31/1991
Erin Barno 03/31/1991
Karen Ann Barno 12/17/1959 Married 11/13/1982
David Sabatini 10/03/1954 Divorced --/--/----
Meaghan Sabatini 11/25/1983
Gaelan Sabatini 11/19/1985
Terrence James Barno 05/28/1963 Married 12/30/1988
Mary Beth Dollar 11/15/1966
Courtney Barno 08/11/1992
Bailey Barno 09/08/1995
Eugene Richard Barno 09/16/1929 - 02/24/2008 Married 07/04/1952
Madeline Ann Purtell 07/31/1930
Sharon Ann Smith 10/02/1954 - 05/27/2002 Married 06/15/1978
Cara Nolan 01/22/1978
Ryan Smith 12/24/1985
Edward John Barno 10/14/1955 Married 05/19/1979
Sharon Going 05/29/1956
Andrew Barno 04/08/1982 Married 08/02/2008
Sistina Giordano 04/07/1982
Meagan Barno 08/08/1984
James Francis Barno 01/10/1957 Married 12/02/1989
Linda Hamlin 09/22/1954
Margaret Mary Stackhouse 04/27/1958 Married 04/28/1984
Todd Stackhouse 09/07/1984
Theresa Marie Barno 08/02/1959 Married 10/30/1982
Steve Rossi 06/06/1955
Josh Rossi 06/14/1983
Nick Rossi 07/08/1986
Marie Rossi 12/06/1992
Graham Rossi 05/25/1994
Gary Eugene Barno 09/18/1960 Married 07/18/1992
Michelle Gangi 02/18/1962
Matthew Barno 10/22/1994
Shannon Barno 07/05/1997
Patrick Joseph Barno 09/23/1961 Married 11/10/1990
Lisa Bozek 09/11/1965
Jessica Barno 01/02/1996
Benjamin Barno 06/23/1999
Robert David Barno 05/15/1931 Married 08/03/1957
Anna June Del Vecchio 10/10/1932
Leslie Ann Barno 01/28/1959 Married 05/01/1982
Carmen Joseph Dean 03/18/1959
Lauren Dean 06/10/1983 Married 09/13/2008
Bernard Sousa 09/25/1977
Alyson Dean 08/23/1985
Emily Dean 10/08/1987
Kathleen Mary Barno 02/08/1960 Married 09/03/1983
Raymond Frank Buglione 09/08/1958
Dana Buglione 06/11/1986
Brendon Buglione 03/20/1988
Robert Buglione 06/18/1989
Brian Buglione 10/30/1991
Cameron Buglione 05/14/1993
Susan Elaine Barno 04/19/1962 Married 10/13/1984
Charles Barton Backus 04/18/1962 Divorced 07/17/2001
Colin Backus 07/02/1987
Erika Backus 05/18/1989
Sean Backus 08/24/1991
Susan Elaine 2nd Husb Barno 04/19/1962 Married 01/17/2003
Michael Ward 06/11/1960
Nancy Lynn Barno 03/28/1966 Married 08/10/1991
Daniel Reynolds 04/12/1965
Martin Reynolds 07/08/1994
Margaret Elizabeth Reynolds 04/23/1996
Eamon Francis Reynolds 11/21/1997
Catherine Anna Reynolds 03/08/2001
Joan Elaine Barno 04/21/1936 - 09/22/1999 Married 01/03/1959
Robert George Gibson 01/07/1935
Christopher Robert Gibson 12/11/1959 Married 08/11/1984
Lisa Ann York 03/28/1960
Ryan Christopher Gibson 02/05/1988
Lindsay Ann Gibson 01/12/1990
Colin Robert Gibson 02/10/1992
Daniel Carl Gibson 03/02/1994
Kevin Robert Gibson 04/19/1963 Married 10/30/1999
Patricia Maureen Colman 12/24/1969
Margaret Joan Gibson 05/30/2001
Michael Kevin Gibson 03/15/2003
Thomas Steven Gibson 02/26/2005
James Walter Gibson 02/22/2007
Dianne Joan Gibson 02/10/1967 Married 06/19/1993
Craig David Smith 12/05/1965
Emma Kathleen Smith 02/21/1998
Hayden Robert Smith 04/07/2000
Return to Roots Of The Barno Tree
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Search this site: Books William Souder revisits ‘Silent Spring’ with a new Rachel Carson biography
By Amy Goetzman | 09/07/12 Photo by Dani WernerWilliam SouderIn the late 1980s and early '90s, William Souder was best known as the film critic at the Twin Cities Reader. But when he wasn’t at the movies, he worked as a stringer for the Washington Post, reporting on local stories of national interest. Although he considered himself very much a generalist, he was a fisherman
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1582
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LUV Is in the Air, but Southwest Airlines Co. May Need More Thrust
By Market IQ JUL 24, 2013 3:26 PM
Favorable macroeconomic and industry conditions may aid the company, however a highly competitive environment and tech failures could adversely impact its performance.
In an industry where major US commercial airlines have experienced near-constant flirtation with bankruptcy, Southwest Airlines Co. (NYSE:LUV) has defied the odds by achieving a four-decade streak of profits. As America’s iconic low-cost carrier, Southwest continues to spread its wings to become a behemoth in the industry and to carry on its deep-rooted legacy of success.
The airliner operates with a “point-to-point” strategy instead of a conventional “hub-and-spoke” system, which allows for more direct nonstop routing, and thus enables the carrier to control delays and total trip time. The “point-to-point” structure helps the company offer cheap flights to passengers who just want to get from point A to point B with no bells and whistles.
While justly famous for its productivity, the low-cost carrier has seen its cost base edge up over the years as it has matured and gained in scale. In response Southwest has adapted its business model, and has started to fly from crowded markets, such as New York’s LaGuardia.
Additionally, the 2011 AirTran acquisition, the biggest in Southwest’s history, further accelerated the process of expansion, bringing the company a large position in the Atlanta domestic market and also short-haul international destinations in the Caribbean and Mexico.
The integration with AirTran supports management’s plan to achieve $400 million of net synergies in 2013. Higher fares and synergy benefits from the AirTran integration have supported Southwest's revenue growth by 2.3% year over year to $4.1 billion in Q1 2013. The carrier’s passenger traffic has also increased marginally due to support from the AirTran integration.
For Q1 2013, Southwest reported earnings and revenue that exceeded Wall Street expectations (EPS: $0.07 per share, Revenue: $4.08 billion vs. EPS: $0.02 per share, Revenue: 4.07 billion). Additionally, average passenger revenue per available seat mile rose 1.8% along with an increase in passenger traffic by 0.3%.
Keeping the strong numbers in mind from the last quarter, analysts are optimistic about Q2 2013 earnings ($0.39 a share, up from $0.36 during Q2 2012).
Q2 2013 covers the early part of the summer vacation season, so it’s expected that Southwest will earn higher revenue. Southwest Airlines is also expected to benefit from lower jet fuel prices witnessed during the quarter: Jet fuel prices declined from $3.22 per gallon in February 2013 to $2.77 per gallon in June 2013, driven in part by the weak global economic growth outlook. As fuel costs constitute nearly 37% of the company’s operating expenses, the decline in jet fuel prices will improve the carrier’s operating profits. However, hedging losses will likely offset some gains from lower fuel prices.
Investors will be closely eyeing Southwest’s expectations for travel demand, including whether there might be a chance to push fares higher. Since Southwest has an oversized influence on prices charged by rivals, a decision to increase fares would help increase revenues across the industry.
Market IQ proprietary Fundamental metrics give Southwest Airlines a Neutral rating. Market IQ characterizes Southwest Airlines as an average quality but low value stock (see below).
The company’s qualitative strengths can be seen in multiple areas such as revenue growth, return on equity (ROE), and financial strength.
Over the trailing 12 months, revenues have increased by 3.84%. Growth in revenue appears to have helped boost the earnings per share. Additionally, revenue growth surpasses the industry average of 3.75%.
ROE increased to 5.47% in Q1 2013 vs. 3.8% in Q1 2012.
Southwest Airlines has an equity to debt ratio of 0.86, which is higher than the industry average of 0.42, indicating strong financial strength relative to its peers.
Based on Market IQ’s valuation metrics, Southwest is trading at a premium relative to its peers (see below).
Going forward, favorable macroeconomic conditions and improving industry conditions will likely aid growth for the company. Southwest Airlines has also adopted a number of strategies to increase revenues and reduce costs in the upcoming quarters. These include fleet restructuring, network expansion, capacity management and various customer friendly programs such as Wi-Fi on board. These initiatives will attract customers and strengthen the company’s position in the industry. A healthy financial profile will further support its endeavors.
However, a highly competitive environment and technological failures may adversely impact the performance of the company. Moreover, increased regulations and higher taxes may pose major impediments to growth in the near-term: In May 2013, the Obama administration announced a proposal for a $14 tax on all airline passengers in an effort to boost revenue for airport maintenance. This might unnerve some of Southwest’s clients since the charge may be more prominent for those looking for cheap flying options.
Southwest is at a pivotal point in its life. From being what was once a mere domestic carrier, it has now reached beyond to transport its fliers internationally – spreading some love from its domestic hubs into the outskirts of the US and, perhaps soon, into the rest of the world.
This article was written by Selena Ing, an analyst at Market IQ.
An integrated solution to help you understand your investment's strengths and weaknesses quickly and effectively, the Market IQ Terminal offers investment analysis and portfolio optimization based on proprietary fundamentals, market sentiment, analyst sentiment, and technical parameters. No positions in stocks mentioned. This commentary is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. Market IQ expressly disclaims all liability in respect to actions taken based on any or all of the information on this writing.
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Obama Rejects the Keystone Pipeline -- For Now
Ashim Midha Jan 19, 2012 9:00 am
The pipeline was not rejected because of its strengths and weaknesses, but rather because "the rushed and arbitrary deadline...prevented a full assessment of the pipeline's impact," explained the White House.
Another chapter in the country's energy independence saga unfolds: President Barack Obama decided to reject the TransCanada (TRP) Keystone XL pipeline that would have brought Athabasca Tar Sands bitumen from Alberta south to the Gulf Coast, specifically to refineries near Houston and Port Arthur, TX. In addition to the existing TransCanada pipeline phases running from Hardisty, Alberta, to Patoka, IL, and from Steele City, NE, to Cushing, OK, Keystone XL would have increased flow capacity by more than 700,000 barrels/day.
After encountering resistance from Nebraska legislators in mid-November 2011, TransCanada decided to re-route the pipeline around the Sand Hills, under which the crucial Ogallala aquifer is located. Then, the Obama administration secured a delay on the pipeline decision until 2013.
Republicans agreed to a stopgap deal in December 2011 that extended the payroll tax holiday and unemployment benefits, but only by bundling its passage with a significant condition: that the State Department expedite its decision on the Keystone XL pipeline by February 2, 2012.
It is important to note, however, that the pipeline was not rejected because of its strengths and weaknesses. Rather, the White House stated that "the rushed and arbitrary deadline insisted on by Congressional Republicans prevented a full assessment of the pipeline's impact, especially the health and safety of the American people, as well as our environment." This decision comes six days before the president's State of the Union address. The State Department also provided a statement which explained that the rejection "does not preclude any subsequent permit application or applications for similar projects," suggesting that TransCanada could re-apply.
Still, the administration's recommendation was immediately met with harsh criticism from several prominent Republicans, including GOP Presidential candidates Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich, who claimed that the decision was "a stunningly stupid thing to do." Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) asserted that President Obama "expedited the approval of the Solyndra loan project but won't approve a project that's been under review for over three years."
Rumors of the decision sent TransCanada shares down as low as $39.74. After President Obama's speech, however, they rebounded before closing at $41.41, only 0.8% lower than the previous day's close.
Despite Republicans' frustrations, the assessment is not expected to remain permanent. Look to TransCanada to file a permit for approval in the near future. Although many environmentalists cheered the decision, it is more of a delay than an absolute rejection. The statement reflects the Obama administration's attitude that it would not be cajoled into making hasty decisions. As was the status quo in late November 2011, before Republicans in Congress forced the process to be accelerated, expect a decision by early 2013.
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Brian Tracy-Is This Success Guru Popular For Good Reasons? Posted on
October 27, 2009 @ 12:29 pm Does the name Brian Tracy ring a bell? When I first encountered his name, I had no clue who he was or that he was so important in the self-help world. After being asked to attend one of his seminars by my boss I decided to do some further research of my own and I quickly saw that his knowledge base was bigger than you can imagine. Nonetheless, sitting through a long seminar with him discussing his own achievements and credentials was not something I wanted to be doing.
However, I decided to go and after listening to his expertise on financial matters, personal development, and self-help strategies, my initial perception of him changed. It wasn’t about the four thousand seminars he’s lectured, or the fact that he works closely with major corporations like ours in the United States. It was his ability to open my mind to bigger and better things, and realizing I had tunnel vision regarding my own personal situations.
I am well aware that much of the self-help videos, audios, books and different programs out there never really do what they promise, but the Brian Tracy information was simply extraordinary. A key element that is frequently not noticed is the misconception that the self-help expert will make changes in your life on your behalf.
Nevertheless, the focus is on you to make the difference and an individual like Brian Tracy is just there to help you down the right road.
One of the most educational methods I was taught when listening to him was the step-by-step method of accomplishing your goals. He asked us to write on a piece of paper the 10 largest goals we wished to work on. When the list was finished, we had to circle the goal that would have the biggest affect on our life, right now, or in the next 24 hours.
In my case it was paying off my credit card debt, which would open up my finances and allow me to do more (vacations, purchase a new car, etc.). So then we had to write this goal on the other side of the paper at the top, and then list all the ways to achieve this goal. The mindset was to make you work towards the goal by completing each part of the list. Then of course he stressed that we needed to work on it everyday.
Even though when I first heard this it sounded like common sense, the fact was I wasn’t obtaining any goals. The main reason was due to not seeing them in front of me, and just thinking about all of them throughout the day. You will hear him explain this, and actually tell you to set a deadline for your goal to make you work towards it.
There are plenty of additional topics discussed in the seminar, and I still watch my videos for knowledge and inspiration and the feeling that things are taking shape in life. I would recommend the teachings of Brian Tracy to anybody because the information is very valuable to people that have the desire for positive changes in life.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1585
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#1 “What is fashion?”
Friday, December 10th 2010
Miu Miu 57th street, New York
"What is fashion?" was the question posed by host Shala Monroque for the first Miu Miu Musing salon which took place at the Miu Miu boutique on 57th Street in New York on December 10th 2010.
Vogue US contributing ed
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1586
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GIANFRANCO FERRE FF59604 Made In Italy Ladies Sunglasses
original brand name: gianfranco ferre made in: italy product type: sunglasses model: ff59604Other Information total item length: 5.75 inch height: 60mm
Gianfranco Ferre was a fashion designer who was known as the “architect of fashion” due to his background and his original attitude toward creating fashion design. Ferre was born in Legnano, Italy but has a degree in architecture from Milan. He started his fashion design business in the 1970s and began with designing accessories. Gianfranco Ferre has been given the award of best Italian designer 6 times now. Ferre is also known for being the stylist director for Christian Dior for a number of years. Ferre is known for a more relaxed and simple style than other Italian fashion brands. Gianfranco Ferre accessories can also be found in Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue and their own boutiques worldwide.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1587
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Louis Vuitton Multicolore Monogram Trouville Tote, 8/10 Condition
Brand Name: Louis VuittonItem Type: HandbagsItem: ToteMade In: FranceGender: WomenCondition: 8/10Material: Coated canvas, cowhide leather trimDimensions: approx. 11" x 8" x 4" Dust Bag: Original includedZip top Alcantara lining Retail prices are approximated due to item's vintage nature 10
Known worldwide, Louis Vuitton is one of the most notable names in fashion. It was founded in 1854 and has been growing ever since. High quality materials and attention to detail are part of what keeps people buying this brand. Louis Vuitton began manufacturing trunks in Paris in 1854, and the company he started went on to become one of the world's most famous makers of luxury goods, known especially for its designer luggage pattern: a beige-on-chestnut monogram, "LV." Vuitton's high-quality travelling trunks were such a hit that he had to expand his factory within a few years, relocating to Asniéres in 1860. As the years went by the Vuitton line gained international recognition, thanks in part to a bronze medal at the 1867 World's Fair and a gold medal at the 1889 World's Fair, both held in Paris. After Louis died in 1892, his son, Georges, took the company to new heights, developing what is recognized as the first "designer label" on a product. (Widespread copying of Vuitton patterns pushed Georges to design the distinctive "LV" monogram.) Vuitton's luggage company has since become a world leader in luxury consumer goods, with products that include travel books, perfume, distilled spirits and designer clothing.
Louis Vuitton has become a sort of status symbol over the years, with the popularity continuously growing.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1588
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Salvatore Ferragamo FE2175 Sunglasses
Salvatore Ferragamo FE2175 SunglassesBrand Name: Salvatore FerragamoItem Type: EyewearItem: SunglassesMade In: ImportedGender: WomenCondition: Brand NewSquared lens designAcrylic frameSolid nose padsFade-away tint"Ferragamo" lettering at templesComes with protective case if photographed with one
Salvatore Ferragamo S.p.A. is the parent company of the Ferragamo Group, one of the world's main players in the luxury goods sector. The Ferragamo label's origins can be traced back to 1927. The Group is active in the creation, production, and sale of shoes, leather goods, clothing, silk products and accessories, as well as fragrances for men and women. Their product range also includes eyewear and watches. Attention to uniqueness, exclusivity, style, creativity, and innovation with typical "Made in Italy" quality and craftsmanship have always been the hallmarks of the Group's products. With approximately 2,800 employees and a network of 578 mono-brand stores, the Ferragamo Group runs operations in Italy and worldwide. This fashion empire provides the brand with a broad footprint that spans Europe, America, and Asia.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1589
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Do People become Angels After They Die?
Posted by Jan Tincher on January 10, 2012 at 2:26pm in General Conversation
Hm. Do people become Angels after they die? What do you think? I’d love to hear your response.
Meanwhile, I’ll tell you mine. My response is a question. Do Angels start out as humans? I don’t think so. So following that train of thought, I think the answer is no. Angels are not glorified human beings, they are God’s Angels. It is, however, a wonderful thing to say to children when someone they love dies. That their loved one is now an Angel. It gives them hope that they have their own personal Angel. And, really, we all have a touch of the Angels in us, so it’s not a big stretch for them to believe that.
But when you look at the situation realisticly, there is a difference. And there will always be a difference.
Permalink Reply by Lisa Cash Hanson on January 11, 2012 at 3:39am No you are right we do not turn into angels and they were never human. That is if one believes the Bible it's pretty clear about that. As a matter of fact they desire to be like us because they can't understand salvation- pretty amazing thing.
Permalink Reply by Robin Barr on January 21, 2012 at 2:48pm I help run a support group for people who have had near-death experiences (NDE) or spiritually transformative experiences. I fully realize there are those from various religions who will want no part of this discussion or thinking, but I can tell you that we're not humans having a spiritual experience, we are loving spirits having a human experience. When people share about their NDE's, it's often filtered thru whatever their religious upbringing was but the core event is generally consistent with the millions of accounts throughout the world since the beginning of recorded history. If this is a topic of interest to anyone, the best website to start with is the International Association of Near Death Studies, referred to as IANDS (click on the word IANDS) Here's a link to a Dr. Oz episode when he had a guest, a surgeon, who had an NDE. Click here.(click on the word 'here'). I don't think I answered your question directly, but this leads to it. ▶ Reply
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love your financial life
So You Want to Start a Blog...
101 Ways to Make Extra Money
How to Make an iPhone App When You Don’t Know How to Program
by Jackie Beck
I’m not a programmer, but I still went from vague idea to my first app store sale in a matter of months. Since then I’ve made thousands of dollars over the past year with my debt snowball iPhone app, Pay Off Debt. Here’s a breakdown of the process. Find a need in an area you know well
Since I’m a personal finance blogger, when I got my iPhone I began poking around the available Financial apps. I immediately noticed something missing: a debt snowball app. I also observed people trying to use a regular credit card app to track their debt snowball, and complaining that it wasn’t working. That’s actually when I got the idea to create an app, since it seemed there was a need.
Evaluate your skills and available time
It doesn’t matter if you’re non-techy and busy, as long as you are committed to getting the job done and willing to have others do the things you either don’t know how to do or don’t have time to do.
My programming ability was zero. I had also never designed software before or brought a product to market. Skills I did have? Knowledge of how a debt snowball worked, experience designing instructional materials, a little graphic design experience, and a dec
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The Moore American
Maisanos remember Sara
MOORE — Sara Maisano loved animals. Starting at about age two, she was attracted to petting zoos and had a particular fondness for goats. She gravitated toward stray animals and was so soft-hearted she would have filled up the Maisano house with adopted animals if her family would have let her.
“I used to joke with her that I had her on the ‘do not adopt list’ at the shelter,” said Sara’s father, Norman Deputy Police Chief Jim Maisano. “I was afraid another kitten or another puppy would end up in her pocket and come home with her.”
Sara watched with great interest as plans for the new Norman Animal Shelter developed. “She really liked the idea of that little sun room for the cats,” Jim Maisano said. “When the project came in and was over budget, she was really sad that the sun room wasn’t going to be there.”
Sara, 23, was murdered during a domestic dispute on June 27. As Jim, his wife Alicia and daughter Melissa, struggled to walk through the pain and grief, happy memories of Sara’s giving spirit and love of animals brought some small consolation.
Now, her family is working to turn tragedy into something positive for the Norman community. As a tribute to Sara, her family is raising the extra money needed to build the cat porch for the new animal shelter planned on South Jenkins Avenue.
“The renovated building is expected to last for at least 20 years, so adding this area would continue and share her love for animals for years to come,” Jim Maisano said. “It is estimated that total cost would be about $9,000 to add this item back into the project.” Generous donations from the community and family friends have already raised over $3,000, and matching donations in the amount of $2,000 are expected from two local veterinarians.
Jim Maisano is committed to making the cat porch a reality.
“We don’t want Sara to be just that poor girl that was killed,” he said. “She loved animals.”
A rescued goose was taken to Wildcare and Sara checked on its progress. She doted on her animal companions, a Chihuahua named Cora and a tabby cat named Henry. Alicia and Jim Maisano are now caring for Sara’s orphaned pets and say they will continue to treat them with “the same special care and love that she dedicated to them.”
And Sara had a particular fondness for goats, her father said.
Sara had just finished her phlebotomy training and was working at Norman Regional Hospital when she was killed. “She wanted to be somebody that could help people,” Jim Maisano said. Sara worked in the oncology clinic at times, taking blood from people who were going through so much. She would talk to her family about her empathy for those she was trying to help, how when she had to draw blood from a child she tried to be extra gentle. “She’d help anybody she could,” Jim Maisano said. The family will donate Sara’s scrubs back to the hospital. Because she worked primarily at Moore Medical Center, they are hoping some of the employees who lost everything in the tornado might get some use from her scrubs — it’s what Sara would have wanted. “Sara’s death was such a tragic loss to us and it was so senseless,” he said. “We’re trying to look at something positive to do.”
The murder occurred in Grady County. Steven Thompson has been charged with the crime. Thompson is also accused of severely beating his fiancé Katie Garner. “This really impacted all of us,” Jim Maisano said. “Just a month after her death, I had a cardiac incident and was taken to the hospital.”
Maisano said the murder felt like a terrorist act against his family and all of their friends — so many people were affected by the violence of Sara’s death. “We’ll never see her have grandkids and we’ll never see her raise her family,” he said. “We’ll never be back to normal —we’ve got to find a new type of normal, now, without her.”
As an officer of the law, the death of his daughter was particularly brutal for Maisano.
“That was one of my hardest things to deal with in this,” he said. “I’ve spent close to 30 years here trying to protect people from things like this. And then this type of action happens to my family.”
Maisano said he’s had to deal emotionally with the fact that he couldn’t protect Sara.
“She didn’t go down there with the intent to get killed,” he said. “She went down there to be with a friend of hers from work.”
The Maisano family is hoping that doing something positive in Sara’s memory will bring healing while also giving back to the Norman community in a way Sara would have liked. “We would welcome any donations from others who share Sara’s love for the care and well-being of animals housed in the Animal Welfare Center,” Maisano said. “All donations, $20, $50, $100 or more, adds together quickly to make this project a success which will benefit and assist in adoptions of animals for years to come.”
Maisano is raising the money for the cat porch as a father, not in his position as deputy police chief. Donations can be mailed to: Norman Animal Welfare Center, Norman Police Department, 201-B West Gray Street, Norman, OK 73069. To ensure that the donation is credited to Sara’s project write “Sara” or “Cat Porch” on the memo line.
Joy Hampton 366-3544 jhampton@ normantranscript.com
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HomeBulk FoodsSunflower seeds, Raw hulled - whole
Sunflower seeds, Raw hulled - whole
Looking for a health-promoting snack? Enjoy a handful of mild nutty tasting sunflower seeds with their firm but tender texture to take care of your hunger and get a wealth of nutrition at the same time. The various health benefits of sunflower seeds can be attributed to the high levels of polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats, vitamin E, selenium, protein, copper, folates, iron, zinc and B vitamins that it contains.
Sunflower seeds are a highly nutritious food that we often supply to our parrots and chickens, yet neglect it in our own diets. Sunflower seeds are power-packed with healthy fats, proteins, fibers, minerals, and phytochemicals - all important to the nutritional quality of the diet and of fundamental importance to human health. Sunflower seeds can be used to enrich any meal. They can be sprinkled over cereals, salads, soups, mixed with vegetables, used on desserts or as snacks.
The most important health benefit of sunflower seeds is imparted by the polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats that it contains. These components protect the heart against various heart diseases like blockage of arteries, by lowering cholesterol and eliminating bad cholesterol or low density lipoprotein. More than 90% of the fat that sunflower seeds contain is unsaturated fat which help maintain high density lipoprotein.
Vitamin E Sunflower seeds are an excellent source of vitamin E. Vitamin E rids the body of free radicals, that cause heart ailments like atherosclerosis and can also cause cellular damage. The vitamin E, contained in sunflower seeds have antioxidant properties and help in the rapid clotting of blood and healing of wounds, regulates the functioning of the circulatory system and reduces the risk of developing heart ailments and diabetes. Vitamin E also imparts anti-inflammatory properties to sunflower seeds, that is essential in the cure and reduction of arthritis symptoms.
Selenium Selenium is an important trace mineral which works in conjunction with vitamin E to impart antioxidant properties, that prevent the formation of cancerous cells and heart problems. Selenium promotes DNA repair and induces apoptosis and the synthesis of damaged cells. This is an health benefit.
Proteins The proteins that sunflower seeds contain enable the supply of amino acids to the body. These amino acids are essential for the maintenance, growth and repair of tissues.
Folates Folate, also known as folic acid, is a type of B vitamin that is very essential for pregnant women as it aids the production of new cells in the body by forming their DNA and RNA which is very important for the growth and development of the fetus. It works together with vitamin B-12 to form hemoglobin in red blood cells. Intake of folate also lowers the risks of developing heart ailments.
Magnesium Magnesium contained in sunflower seeds prevents the entry of calcium into the nerve cells, muscles and blood vessels which enables the prevention of muscle spasms and sudden nerve contractions. Magnesium also lowers blood pressure and reduces and prevents asthma attacks and migraine headaches.
Tryptophan Sunflower seeds contain tryptophan, an amino acid that helps in the production of serotonin, which is an important neurotransmitter. Serotonin relieves tension, calms the brain and promotes relaxation.
Phytochemicals Sunflower seeds contain phytochemicals like choline, phenolic acids, lignan and betaine. Phytochemicals are plant chemicals, that are known to prevent heart diseases and the growth of cancerous cells, that cause breast colon and prostate cancer.
Dietary Fiber Fiber that sunflower seeds contain promotes easy digestion and prevents constipation, lowers blood cholesterol levels and manages blood sugar levels. These fibers also help control weight and prevent obesity.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1593
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The New Kalamazoo Stove
The popularity of renewable energy sources has put new life in a grand old name: the Kalamazoo stove.
The old Kalamazoo Store Company is long gone, but a new woodburner (inset) now bears the once-popular name.
PHOTO: ENVIRONMENTAL ENERGIES INC
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During the first half of this century, the slogan "A Kalamazoo Direct to You" was one of the best-known trademarks in the nation. It was a time when the old Kalamazoo Stove Company's line of wood and coal-fired kitchen ranges, parlor stoves, and furnaces kept winter at bay—and pots simmering—in homes all across the country. In fact, back in the 1930's the Michigan firm's 2,700 employees used more than 300,000 pounds of iron and steel per day, while more than 2,000 railroad cars distributed 100,000 stoves annually.
The company was a success from its beginning in 1902, but in the years after World War II it was so hard hit by competition from gas and electric appliances that—by the time the stove manufacturer closed its doors in 1952—there were only 100 employees on its payroll.
Now, however, thanks to the renewed popularity of wood-fueled energy alternatives, the Frey Company (a major stove and fireplace distributor, owned by Tom Frey) has joined with Environmental Energies, Inc. (which has researched and marketed wind- and solar-powered generators since 1970, and also spent five years broadening its expertise by fabricating Fisher and Timberline stoves for the Midwest) to make and sell a product that meets today's strict safety and efficiency standards at a reasonable cost. The result is the new Kalamazoo Stove Company, which offers six models ranging in price from $400 for a "country woodburner" to $600 for a "fireplace insert deluxe".
For those of us who toasted our toes in front of a crackling warm old Kalamazoo, the rebirth of the name is a nostalgic flash from the past ...and perhaps a sign that "those good old days" may soon become "these good new times."
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1594
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Crime and Mystery, Drama, Thriller
Daughter of Darkness was based on They Walk Alone, a play by Max Catto. The heroine of the play can be described as a "homicidal nymphomaniac," which understandably posed censorship problems when the Catto original was adapted to the screen. Read More
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1595
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We're sorry, we currently have no items available for "24 (TV)".
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1596
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{"url": "http://www.moviepostershop.com/24-tv-movie-poster-2001/EF0537", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.moviepostershop.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:17:55Z", "digest": "sha1:5IRIM7VS3WKSELORJ6GNSZUYX7MEQVVG"}
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Nevada Smith
27 x 40 Movie Poster - French Style C
11 x 17 Movie Poster - Italian Style E
11 x 17 Movie Poster - German Style D
The half-breed Nevada Smith (previously introduced in Harold Robbins' story "The Carpetbaggers" and film of same name) seeks the outlaws who killed his parents. Standard western plot, characters. Later remade as a TV movie.
Paramount Pictures, Joseph E. Levine.
Steve McQueen, Karl Malden, Brian Keith, Arthur Kennedy, Raf Vallone, Suzanne Pleshette, Paul Fix, Pat Hingle, Janet Margolin, Howard da Silva, John Doucette, Gene Evans, Val Avery, Lyle Bettger
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1597
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{"url": "http://www.moviepostershop.com/nevada-smith-movie-poster-1966/GE8634", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.moviepostershop.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:03:27Z", "digest": "sha1:NKYZY2EJEMXOIKWGZERZEZBLVOXAB3M6"}
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Board approves teachers� contract
New agreement will cost district $1.14 million By TERRY SMITHExpress Staff Writer
Top, Lonnie Barber; above, Mike Chatterton
The Blaine County School District board of trustees voted 4-0 Tuesday to approve a new contract with the Blaine County Education Association.
Trustee Paul Bates recused himself from the vote, saying he did so “in order to avoid any conflicts of interest.” Bates did not explain his reason, but presumably it was because he has been involved in a long-term relationship with a teacher at Hemingway Elementary School.
The contract was approved by the Education Association, often referred to as the teachers’ union, on Monday by a vote of 121-2.
School board approval came at a 17-minute long special meeting late Tuesday afternoon.
The agreement between the district and the teachers’ union was finalized last Friday, May 17. The new contract goes into effect with the beginning of fiscal year 2014 on July 1.
The contract provides for a 1.25 percent pay increase in the base salary for teachers, an increase in payments to retirement accounts and an increase in payments for health insurance.
In an interview Thursday, district Business Manager Mike Chatterton said the total cost to the district with the new contract provisions will be $1.14 million, with $475,000 accountable for the salary increases, $523,000 for increased health insurance costs and $142,000 for increased payments into teacher retirement accounts.
Chatterton explained that the increased health insurance payments will maintain the current benefit level but are necessary because of a 4 percent increase in premiums. He said the increase in payments to retirement accounts is necessary because of a new state law requiring that school districts pay a larger portion into the retirement system.
The new contract also provides for continuation of the district’s “steps and lanes” program, wherein teachers can move to a higher salary grade with years of experience and by furthering their education.
Chatterton said that increased salaries—because of the steps and lanes program—costs the district about $750,000 each year.
The new contract will establish a teacher pay range starting at a low of $35,438 annually to a high of $85,172.
The school board will decide at its next regular meeting on June 11 whether the 1.25 percent pay increase will be given to all district staff, such as has been the practice with the district in the past.
Negotiations were conducted on May 9, May 10, May 16 and May 17. Under state law, they were open to the public.
Members of the district negotiating team were Chatterton, board Chairman Steve Guthrie, Superintendent Lonnie Barber, Assistant Superintendent John Blackman and Wood River Middle School Principal Fritz Peters.
Representing the teachers’ union were association President Tryntje Van Slyke and association board members Maritt Wolfrom, Kari Haugen, Jamie Harding, Erika Greenberg and Michael Walsh.
At Tuesday’s board meeting, Barber described the new agreement as acceptable to all parties involved in negotiations.
“We do feel good about it, but it really doesn’t keep up with inflation,” Barber said.
In answer to questions from the board, Barber explained the district has the resources to easily pay new costs resulting from the contract.
“We’re solvent for a number of years out,” Barber said.
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1598
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Robert McClary, MD
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2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1599
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