RePro
Collection
Space for RePro: Training Language Models to Faithfully Recycle the Web for Pretraining
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5 items
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| 651 |
Fishing Lures
Product Image Item Name- Price
Early Shurebite Frog Fishing Lure w/Box
Nice early Shurebite Frog Fishing Lure. Lure comes with its original box and was made by Shurebite, Inc. Bronson, Michigan. Im guessing Lure is from the 1950s to early 60s. Lure itself appears to be in good condition. Some light wear to the wood top portion but Lure does not appear to have been used. The end of the Box lid does have a couple punctures in it and the top lid has in ink writing #250. Lure would make a fine addition to any Vintage Fishing collection. Buyer to pay shipping & insurance.
Fishing Lure Panatella by South Bend
Fishing Lure by South Bend a Panatella fishing lure. Red and white (now creamy) paint with tack eye. Three sets of hooks, sislver propellor.The paint is crazed & stained in some areas. 3 3/4 inches wooden lure. The panatella minnow was made (1912-1942) Red white paint tack eye. Fishing lure
Heddon 4in Dowagic Crab Wiggler Fishing Lure
Heddon 4 in Dowagesic Crab Wiggler Fishing Lure. Patented 1916 wooden lure has seen some action. Original yellow paint has cracks in the paint & some dings. The biggest ding is approximately 1/2inch x 1/8th inch on the bottom between the two hooks! It looks like a really big one that got away after biting the lure. On the collar it is etched Heddon Dowagic. SHIPS FOR $4.95 AND $1.75 INSURANCE (T1306- E402)Glass Eye. 2 treblers.
Collection of 25 Vintage Fishing Lures
Collection of 25 Vintage Fishing Lures. It includes lures that may be made of wood, formed sheet metal, plastic, animal hair, metal solids, and rubber (some are combined). Please see several 24 bit scanned images for detail close up looks. The metal wire hooks and staffs have some minor accumulations of rust/corrosion on them. 05PDP110
Jointed Lure: Creek Chub Pikie Minnow
Circa 1930. Three section body, 8-1/4 inches long with glass eyes, 3 huge treble hooks. Original yellow with black stripes and a bright red underlip, tongue is undamaged with only normal wear. A stunning vintage lure with some genuine battle scars, especially at the back end where big fish have hit it, but the lure itself is undamaged and these only add to its allure. Weight 2 oz, excellent condition. Fishing and Hobbies; Fishing Lures; Vintage; Pike; Muskelonge;
Heddon Crazy Crawler
Heddon Crazy Crawler 2 1/2 in. Wood Fishing Lure in good condition. Small amount of paint missing on dark green on top and bettween the red and yellow / black circular eyes. The patent number is inscribed on one silver wing. The name Heddon Crazzy Crawler is stamped on the bottom above the lure near the end of the head. Minimal rust on hooks, 3 trebles. cat series 2100 Patent 1677176 crazing appropriate for age and use. In display condition or for use. (T1309-E401) Heddon wood fishing lure
Fishing Lures shadow box with drawer . . .
Fishing Lures shadow box with drawer . . . This will make a great gift for the fisherman in your life. The shadow box with drawer measures 10 inches wide by 7 inches deep and about 6 inches tall. The enclosed glass display feature 2 wooden lures and line a fly and ads for the hilderbrandt spinner, the Heddons Dowagiac crab wiggler and the Heddons new Spook The box is Outings. The drawer is 8 inches by 6 inches by 2 inches. It is in good condition with only minor flea bites on the edge of the frame
Heddon Super Zonic Lure
Heddon Super Zonic Lure--This lure measures 2 inches long and is in good condition
Helin Fish Cake U20 Fishing Lure
Nice scarce Helin Fish Cake U20 fishing lure. Signed U20 on the top. 3-1/2" long. Very Good+ condition
Helin Fish Cake J20 Fishing Lure
Nice scarce Helin Fish Cake J20 fishing lure. Signed J20 on the top. 3-1/2" long. Very Good condition.
Copyright © 2015 www.antiquesnavigator.com.
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| 515 |
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Recap: The Print Blitz & Parade of Flags
The squeaking of squeegees as they ran across a fine mesh screen, over and over again, filled the air with a playful, cartoonish feeling. While the smell of ink lingered in the lower half of the gallery, residency guest artists John Hitchcock and Emily Arthur, with the help of Ryan O'Malley and Marwin Begaye were screen-printing the many images that were to be used during the Air, Land, Seed exhibition. 516 ARTS in partnership with the NPN/Visual Artists Network has started its first ever residency program, beginning with this exhibition. - Ben Tobias
The lower gallery was converted into a make-shift print studio and the public was invited into the gallery to learn about and participate in the creation of screen-printed images. The images created were then used to transform the lower gallery into a mural of paper silhouettes, paintings and screen-printed wallpaper.
As the public was invited into the gallery to join in the process of screen-printing throughout the week leading up to the opening, a special day was planned where the art and process were taken outside of the gallery. The goal was to engage, share art and create lasting impressions on the community. The Print Blitz did just that, it brought the art to the people and let them participate in and watch the process of screen-printing.
Using a mobile printing station and two other smaller stations, John, Emily, Marwin and Ryan set up an outdoor printing area nestled in Albuquerque’s Downtown Growers’ Market. The public was then invited to have their items of fabric, paper and almost anything else that would hold ink, printed on. The community was pleasantly surprised and very intrigued when they saw what was going on. Many stuck around to watch, have items printed or just talk to the artist and ask questions.
After around two hours of screen printing and friend making it was time for the Parade of Flags, which was led by the large banner from the Banner Project and included some newly printed banners by the artists as well as some coming from their Flags project at the Venice Biennale. As the group navigated its way through the Growers’ Market, screen-printed images on paper were handed out to the crowd as gifts.
The Print Blitz was a memorable experience for the artists, 516 ARTS and the community. Many community members were excited to see the process, have their item printed or just chat about what was going on. This event really brought the community into the art and allowed them to hear the squeaks of the squeegee, smell the ink on the screen and feel the anticipation of having their items printed. Many community members made it to the opening that night and were amazed again at the diversity of work and talent within the gallery.
1 comment:
1. Great to see your post here. I really appreciate your hard work man. This is one of my awesome post. Thanks a lot
516 ARTS appreciates your responses to our blog posts.
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Related Ads
5 Facts About Gallipoli
Here are 5 facts about Gallipoli
• Gallipoli is a peninsular in Turkey
• British and colonial forces attacked the peninsula in 1915 during World War I
• It was known as the Dardanelles Campaign
• Deaths were 43,000 British, 15,000 French, 8,700 Australians, 2,700 New Zealanders and 1,370 Indians
• The Allies withdrew from the campaign which is celebrated on ANZAC Day
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Search for 3 suspects in deadly Taj Mahal carjacking
20-year-old Phillip Byrd, 20-year-old Eric Darden, and 18-year-old Raheem Simmons
September 20, 2011 9:08:40 PM PDT
Atlantic County Prosecutors have released surveillance video from the ACH Casino formerly the Hilton of the three men they are searching a deadly carjacking.
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Suspect sought in burglary of Germantown historical house
December 20, 2013 10:01:25 AM PST
Police are asking the public's help in identifying the man who allegedly burglarized the historical Bringhurst House in the city's Germantown section.
The incident took place on December 12th around 1:10 p.m. on the 5400 block of Germantown Avenue.
Authorities say an unknown male was captured on surveillance video breaking a window and entering the historical Bringhurst House.
Once inside, the suspect is seen taking two large silver trays, silver tea and coffee pot, valued at $300.00, police say.
The suspect then flees on foot on Germantown Avenue, carrying a large black trash bag.
The suspect is described as a black male, 40-50 years-of-age, 5'7"-5'10" tall, medium complexion, thin gray hair, unshaven and sunken facial features
He was wearing a dark knit hat, black jacket with a multi-colored hood and dark colored pants.
To view the surveillance video: Visit The Philadelphia Police YouTube Channel.
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| 560 |
A wealth of publications on the topic of plagiarism exists. To help you navigate or locate relevant resources, we have compiled a list of print and electronic resources.
Bibliography of Print Resources
Altman, Ellen and Peter Hernon, eds. Research Misconduct: Issues, Implications, and Strategies. London: Ablex, 1997.
Anderson, Judy. Plagiarism, Copyright Violation & Other Thefts of Intellectual
Property: An Annotated Bibliography
. Jefferson, NC: McFarland 1998.
Buranen, Lisa and Alice M. Roy, eds. Perspectives on Plagiarism and Intellectual Property in a postmodern world. Albany: SUNY Press, 2001.
CQ Quarterly, "Combating Plagiarism," 13:32 (2003): 773-796
Decoo, Wilfried. Crisis on Campus: Confronting Academic Misconduct. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2002.
A guide to academic misconduct that includes a concise history that situates the phenomenon in contemporary academic practice, describes its various phases, and offers advice on detection as well as avoidance.
Dunn, Lee and Chris Morgan, Sharon Parry, Meg O'Reilly. The Student Assessment Handbook: New Directions in Traditional and Online Assessment. London: Routledge Falmer, 2004.
Includes a discussion of lagiarism.
Harris, Robert. The Plagiarism Handbook: Strategies for Preventing, Detecting, and Dealing with Plagiarism. Los Angeles: Pyrczak, 2001.
Howard, Rebecca Moore. Standing in the Shadow of Giants: Plagiarists, Authors & Collaborators. Stanford, CT: Ablex 1999.
----. "Forget about Policing Plagiarism; Just Teach." The Chronicle of Higher Education (16 November 2001): B24.
LaFollette, Marcel. Stealing into Print : Fraud, Plagiarism, and Misconduct in Scientific Publishing. Berkeley and London: University of California Press, 1992.
Meltzer, Francoise. Hot Property: The Stakes and Claims of Literary Originality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994.
Parrish, Debra. "Scientific Misconduct and the Plagiarism Cases." Journal of College and University Law 21:3 (1995): 517-54.
Includes a comparison of the National Science Foundation's and the Office of Research Integrity's definitions of plagiarism.
Randall, Marilyn. Pragmatic Plagiarism: Authorship, Profit, Power. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001.
Stillinger, Jack. Multiple Authorship & the Myth of Solitary Genius. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1981.
Tedford, R. "Plagiarism Detection Programs: A Comparative Evaluation." College & University Media REview 9.2 (2004): 111-18.
Provides a summary of several popular detection services.
Whitley, Bernard E. and Patricia Keith-Spiegel. Academic Dishonesty: An Educator's Guide. Mahwah, NJ : Erlbaum, 2002.
Webliography of Online Articles
Carbone, Nick. "Thinking and Talking about Plagiarism."
Clayton, Peter, Ann Applebee, and Celina Pascoe. "Pedagogy, Plagiarism or Pornography? Universities on the Net."
Council of Writing Program Administrators. "Defining and Avoiding Plagiarism: The WPA Statement on Best Practice."
Hamlin, Lindsay and William T. Ryan. "Probing for Plagiarism in the Virtual Classroom." Syllabus Magazine Online.
Hunt, Russ. "Four Reasons to be Happy about Internet Plagiarism."
McCormack, Ginny. "Whose Idea was that?" Stanford Magazine, September/October 2003.
Posner, Richard. "On Plagiarism." The Atlantic Online, April 2002.
Ryan, Julie J. C. H. "Student Plagiarism in an Online World." ASEE Prism Magazine (December 1998).
Discusses some tools to help detect cyberplagiarism.
Simmonds, Patience. "Plagiarism and Cyber-Plagiarism: A guide to Selected Resources on the Web." College &Research Libraries News, 64:6 (June 2003).
Standler, Ronald. "Plagiarism in Colleges in USA."
Provides a legal perspective on student plagiarism.
Surveys the use of computer usage at Australian Universities.
Webliography of Online Resources and Projects
Music Plagiarism Project. Charles Cronin, Columbia University Law School
Utopian Plagiarism, Hypertextuality, and Electronic Cultural Production. Critical Art Ensemble.
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Dunn considers ban on sagging pants
August 14, 2012 8:38:38 PM PDT
Teenagers with their "pants on the ground" could soon be in big trouble over the fashion statement.
Dunn council members are talking about whether they should outlaw young people wearing saggy pants.
At a meeting Tuesday evening, council members took the first step toward becoming the first city in North Carolina to have a "baggy pants ordinance".
The crowd at the meeting was overwhelmingly against the ban.
"What you are doing with this ordinance, you are saying yes, you are OK with seeing our teenage girls' b---s and butts but you just don't want to see young men's b---s and butts," said Dunn resident Elizabeth Credup.
"This should not be before our city council," said Dunn resident Joy Williams. "You are trying to take away people's civil liberties."
"It's just a fashion guys," said Dunn resident Thomas Kelly. "Come on, give us a break."
Speaker after speaker told city council members they did not want a baggy pants ordinance in their town.
Dunn's plans could outlaw pants sagging more than three inches below the waist.
"In this city, we have a situation that many people find offensive," said Dunn City Council Member Carnell Robinson.
The proposed law in Dunn is modeled after a similar ban already on the books in Alabama. Opponents here feel it is unconstitutional and unfairly stereotypes young African-American males.
"Throughout this country, African-American males and police are at odds with one another," said Oscar McPherson with the NAACP. "I think this is one argument that could potentially cause that to worsen here in the city."
In the end, council members voted unanimously to have the city attorney research and come up with an ordinance for them to consider.
Follow @abc11 on Twitter | Become a fan on Facebook
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2 injured in single vehicle accident in Monroe Co.
August 24, 2011 9:00:00 PM PDT
Crews were on the scene of a single vehicle injury accident at Deerfield Road and Dowell Road in Monroe County early Thursday morning. The car was traveling westbound on Deerfield when it struck a deer, went airborne off the road through a soybean field, flipped several times and landed on its side near a home. One passenger was ejected from vehicle and taken to an area hospital. The accident is under investigation.
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| 673 |
Husband's Computer Searched in Nancy Cooper Case
The husband of a slain North Carolina woman told police he did the laundry and vacuumed and scrubbed the floors on the morning his wife disappeared, according to recently released court documents, which also revealed that he had unexplained red marks or scratches on his neck.
Nancy Cooper was reported missing July 12, and her body was found two days later in a drainage pond in an undeveloped subdivision a few miles from her Cary, N.C., home. Her husband, Brad Cooper, has told police that his wife went jogging and never returned.
No charges have been filed in the case, and Cooper has not been named as a suspect. Cooper's lawyers have denied that Cooper was involved in his wife's death. The warrants "contain nothing new and shed no light on who killed Nancy Cooper," his lawyers, Howard Kurtz and Seth Blum, said in a statement.
Picture of Brad Cooper and his house. Play
"Had substantial, credible evidence pointed to Brad Cooper, he would be in custody," they said.
Cary Police Chief Pat Bazemore downplayed the importance of the documents.
"When the details of search warrants do become public, everyone must remember that investigations are as much about ruling things out as ruling things in, and that it's the evidence that comes from a search warrant -- not the warrant itself -- that makes a difference in a case," she said in a statement.
But in the affidavits, filed in July and made public Tuesday, police appear suspicious of Cooper.
Police searched Cooper's computer, looking for documents that may have contained information on how to kill someone or dispose of a body. Police also apparently found Cooper's cleaning the morning his wife disappeared unusual.
"The information provided by Brad Cooper regarding the extensive cleaning of the residence ... is not consistent with information gathered from multiple interviews with individuals who knew Brad and Nancy extensively during their marriage," according to the police affidavit.
Although they were still living together, friends told police that the couple was planning to divorce and that Brad Cooper had admitted in an affidavit unsealed in July to having had an affair. Nancy Cooper wanted to return to Canada with the couple's two children, although Brad Cooper opposed her plan, the affidavit says.
Brad Cooper agreed to give Nancy Cooper's parents temporary custody of the couple's two young children after her death.
When police questioned Cooper on the day of his wife's disappearance, they noticed small red marks or scratches on the back of his neck, the affidavit says, but were unable to determine what caused them and Cooper "did not provide an explanation."
Police said Nancy Cooper's cell phone and keys were inside the house, although her friends told police she always carried them with her.
Police also said Brad Cooper had cleaned the trunk of his wife's car but not the interior. Cooper told police he had spilled gasoline in the trunk, but police didn't smell gas or cleaning fluid, according to the affidavit.
In a statement Tuesday, Nancy Cooper's father, Garry Rentz, said, "Our family continues to have great confidence in the Cary Police Department and applaud their efforts on behalf of one of us."
In the affidavit filed in July, Brad Cooper addressed allegations that his failing marriage may have played a role in his wife's homicide.
"Three years ago, I made a mistake while married to Nancy," Brad Cooper said in an affidavit filed Wednesday in Cary, N.C., and obtained by
"I had a single indiscretion and slept with another woman one time," Cooper said. "I deeply regretted [and still regret] that it happened."
Cooper also alleges in the affidavit that his wife admitted to having had an extramarital affair around the same time that he said he revealed his own indiscretions.
"Nancy admitted that she also had an extramarital relationship while married to me, four years ago," Cooper said in the document. "Nancy insisted that she did nothing wrong, that her relationship with the other man only happened once, it wasn't sexual and that no one even knew his name."
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| 160 |
National Autistic Society: Sensory Overload
Advertising Agency: The News, USA
Creative Director: Kit Dayaram
Copywriters: Kit Dayaram, Stine Hole Mankovsky, Oli Kellet
Art Director: Kit Dayaram
Production Company: Rattling Stick
Director: Steve Cope
Producer: Kate Taylor
Production Manager: Charlie Lodder
Editing House: Stitch
Editor: Izzy King
DOP: Clive Norman
Location Manager: Toby Haak
Production Design: Stef Grieve
Make-Up: Bev Pond-Jones
Costume: Lydia Kovacs
Sound: Munzie at Grand Central
Visual Effects: Electric Theatre Company
morse's picture
16575 pencils
The problem is dramatized well.
damnson's picture
9993 pencils
Yeah, I like this a lot.
An axe murderer of ads.
Austin Video Production's picture
Austin Video Pr...
943 pencils
Really well done.
jackie.rose.9693's picture
16 pencils
I have sensory sensitivity and really think this ad portrays it well. However with all the moving imagery and rhythmic noise it made me feel like I was watching an electronic music video, lol.
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| 2,817 |
Don’t Use Fake Due Dates in Kanban
Real Due Date
At it-agile we use a Kanban board for acquisition. Once we turned all our tickets on our acquisition Kanban board into fixed delivery date tickets. We wanted to decrease our average lead time by reminding those who where working on the tickets to keep on working. Good intention, bad execution. Here’s why.
At my company we have customer requests like “We’d like you to do a Kanban class” or “Could you help us with developing an iPad app?”. We also have a lot of experts working outside the office most of the time, who answer to such requests. We use a Kanban board to coordinate answering of customer requests. We call it acquisition board. This does not work without problems.
We have a service level agreement for answering the first customer contact. When a customer writes us an email, our team assistants turn the email into a ticket and put it into the ready queue of our acquisiton board. The ticket also gets a due date, which turns it into a fixed delivery date ticket. Now we wait that someone of us pulls that ticket. If it’s not pulled before the due date, our team assistants call the customer and turn down his request by saying that we’re sorry but we actually do not have the capacity to help him.
Now that is what I find a good use of a service level agreement in combination with a due date. So did others in my company, and that’s why they started using due dates for other things than just answering to the first contact. The idea was to decrease our lead time of the whole ticket by having due dates all the time, in all columns. That due date would mean something like “I want to work on that ticket until [due date].” Imagine an acquisition board full of tickets with dates on it – most of them red, indicating that they’re overdue.
Overdue tickets could mean that most of my colleagues pulling those tickets are lazy, uncoordinated or just too busy to keep up working on acquisition, but from a systemic point of view that’s just ridiculous. Maybe it’s because of the due dates all over that it’s not working?
Fixed delivery date tickets are explained by David Anderson in his book Kanban
like this:
“Requests of this nature carried a significant cost of delay, whether direct or indirect … There would be a date when a penalty (or fine) would be incurred … [or] there would be a requirement to cease some activity … This second, indirect cost is a cost of lost opportunity – the potential lost revenue during the period of delay.”
Is there a penalty if we do not answer the first contact of a customer? Nope, it’s legal to do so. Is there lost revenue because of a delay? Sure there is, the customer could be upset if we don’t answer his request in time. Like Henrik Kniberg said, a request is like a bun and when it “comes in it is warm, juicy and soft“, but when you wait too long, you won’t enjoy your bun anymore.
But what happens after the first contact? There’s still no penalty. But there could be a cost of delay (e.g. not calling back for a long time), but there does not necessarily has to be one. Often, we talk to customers for months until everythings settled for a training. Sometimes it’s the customer who needs time (because she is on holiday), and sometimes we need time (because we are on holiday), and very rarely that results in four weeks of silence between me and the customer (my holiday was first, followed by her holiday). In that particular event where I didn’t have contact with the customer for four weeks it still resulted in a good business transaction. So there seems to be no necessity to set an arbitrary due date.
Having said so, arbitrary due dates are well known, not in Kanban, but in the Getting Things Done (GTD) community. GTD is a personal organization method, focused on tasks. The idea is, to organize the tasks externaly so you don’t have to remind yourself all the time on all the stuff you have to deal with. Kanban and GTD have lots of similar ideas; there’s even a Personal Kanban book out there which focusses on similar topics.
In GTD, arbitrary due dates are called false due dates or fake due dates. Chris smith wrote on Lifehack about fake due dates, that they are
“… dates that you set up for actions within a project that are due before the actual due date project. In my experience these types of due dates don’t work. What they tend to do is allow procrastinators procrastinate more, because when they see due dates they push everything back to the last minute.”
Procrastinators procrastinate more? Outch, sounds like increased lead time.
Some time ago I used to put fake due dates on all of my tasks in my personal task list. Shortly afterwards I was highly demotivated. It seemed that I wasn’t able to commit myself to the simplest stuff I planned on doing at a specific date, my fake due date. Turns out, it was not because I was undisciplined, but because I used fake due dates.
“[…] I’ve discovered over time that I have a strange habit of arbitrarily assigning due dates to some tasks, not because they must be completed by then, but because I think they might be or should be. This undermines the trust in my system and adds an unnecessary psychic burden, as tasks without a concrete due date begin to pile up in the “overdue” column. That aint good. The reason I haven’t completed those tasks is because I haven’t had the time or energy to do them. Making them artificially overdue is like being punished for something that’s not my fault. That was an important insight for me, enough to make me open my task list and remove due dates from every task that doesn’t explicitly require one. I feel a lot better already.” (by Todd Mundt)
I felt relieved after I threw all fake due dates away and kept only the real due dates (less than a hand full of them).
In another domain it’s the same: If you use your calendar to mark due dates, you are very likely to end up failing:
“Setting up false due dates will not only clutter your calendar, but will also make you frustrated and possibly even less productive. False due dates are those things that you add to your calendar when you say, ‘well, I think that I should have this part of my project done by this date here,’ and then mark it with your fake due date.
This isn’t to say that there is anything wrong with milestones, but to put a hard date a piece of a project when it isn’t actually do will most likely set you up for failure.” ( Chris Smith on Lifehack )
Well, we’re still struggeling in my company with the fake due dates – but I managed to get of the hook, i.e. the need for me to use due dates on the tickets I pull. I assure you, the flow is back now and I work much better on those tickets.
Don’t use fake due dates in Kanban. They put pressure on you, have you feel unproductive and guilty, and increase your average lead time. Only use real due dates.
About Bernd Schiffer
18 Responses to Don’t Use Fake Due Dates in Kanban
1. Stefan Roock says:
For me the dates in the tickets of the acquisition board aren’t due dates but check dates. When the date has come I should check again status with the customer to stay in touch. Perhaps it is just a wording problem?
• I experienced that differently. If it were a check date, it would mean something like “From the [check date] on I contact the customer again. It doesn’t matter if I do this exactly on the [check date], as long as I don’t do it before the [check date].” That not the case with our due dates. A week before the due date, the date turns into yellow, indicating approaching cost of delay. From the day of the due date, the date turns into red, indicating a serious problem. Pressure on all levels occure, ones a due date turns red. That’s not something I’d see with a check date.
2. Hi,
my second comment on this, WP killed the first one :-/
Kanban did its duty, I guess. The solution is – as always – outside the Kanban and Kanban simply made it explicit. You guys modeled an approach into a Kanban board and either it does not work or is not explicit enough. Before Stefan posting, I was sure it wouldn’t work for a certain reason but now I’m not sure anymore.
Let’s assume it could work and there is the wording issue that Stefan mentions. Then do a quick retrospective, get your senses together, make the approach more explicit by clarifying the wording and off you go.
But still, I am afraid, the issue lies deeper. I guess you are not aligned on the underlying model of ‘How to treat customer requests’. The technical term that Bernd brings in is SLA. But I think it is still deeper. I think there are different expectations in the room as how to treat those requests and you need to discuss it and then commit to one way, which then can be modeled as work item types, classes of service, whatever fits the outcome of the discussion.
If this will work with the capacity you have and if the process will work at all, will show the application of the next iteration of the Kanban board. If i were you I would come up with explicit expectations on the next level of achievement of the new approach as kind of a target condition, even if you don’t have a clue how to achieve it.
But as I tweeted before, the whole issue is completely out of the scope of Kanban and Kanban is one many tools which would make this issue explicit. I guess this issue is so obvious that in fact any tool would make it explicit ;)
• Don’t agree with you that this is “completey out of the scope of Kanban”. Fixed delivery date tickets are part of Kanban, and they have due dates. Due dates can be faked, and it happens, not only on our board, but I’ve seen that on customer’s boards, too. For me, faked due dates are related to Kanban. And maybe it’s obvious for you, but there are lots of folks out there for whom it’s not obvious – including me short time ago :)
I agree with you that we need to discuss it – in fact, we’re doing that a lot – and come up with new ideas on how to solve the issue.
• Arne Roock says:
I agree with Stefan: There´s confusion on the meaning of due dates here. As you mentioned in your post, we do not really have fixed date tickets on our board (as described as a class of service by David). But we´re using a feature of our tool that is designed for such fixed date tickets. From this “feature abuse” you seem to reason that we´re dealing with fake due dates. They´re no due dates. And they´re no fale due dates. They are check dates (as Stefan said). And I find them useful.
• Hm, maybe I miss something. What’s the difference for you between a due date, a check date and a fake dute date?
• Arne Roock says:
You´re quoting Smith “dates that you set up for actions within a project that are due before the actual due date project”.
That seem to be due dates for you, right? In our context, there are no “actual due dates”. So how can there be “fake due dates”?
BTW: I just set my alarm clock for 7pm for tomorrow morning. Because I think it´s a reasonable time to get up. Would you consider this a fake due date and thereful harmful?
• Markus Andrezak says:
7am IS harmful but no (fake) due date.
3. Your recommendation thingy is really annoying :-/
On the iPad is hovers above all the important real estate, here on the Mac it is irritating while reading and writing. Zero added value, way too much distraction. And I can’t even get completely rid of it, I can only make it smaller :-(
I even tried hitting the question mark. It informed me I can opt out of the recommendations. Guess what – after checking the opt-out, it just stalls and I can’t save my preference. Could be done by MS in it’s worst days …
• Thanks for the feedback. I’m still trying it out and I track the conversation rate. Will keep your in mind for a (later) decision on this. Will also report that the opt-out doesn’t work. Sorry for the annoyance.
4. Bang, there it goes again :-/
5. As I learned from Jerry Weinberg, fake due dates are not the problem, rather our reaction to fake dates (or the information that they reveal, as Markus put it). To explain that, I will explain how I use the dates, and why it’s working for me – to some degree.
When I start working on a ticket, I set a target date, i.e. when I would like to work on the next step in process. I take a look in my calendar to check for a reasonable date, and maybe add a buffer if that date could turn out likely to be too optimistic. When I have a home office day, I take a look on the board, start my todo list for the day, and get going.
Sure, I have forgotten one or teo tickets over the course. And I learned from it. When I am certain to have a tight schedule, I add a day or two when I feel comfortable to be working on that ticket.
That said, I acknowledge that this system appears to work fine for me (until now), and I recognize others who feel unfomfortable wih it. So, rather than demanding a process for everyone (no fake due dates, no due dates at all, everything has a due date), I recognize the differences in our working, and appreciate the process of others. I think this is a good way to cope with the situation.
6. After lots of hard thinking ;), I came to the conclusion that you simply designed a Wiedervorlage system, in which you still have to decide on what is happening with different types of outcome. No?
• It would still be a Wiedervorlage system (I think the English term is follow-up system) without any (fake) due dates, wouldn’t it? I mean, every visualization with a Kanban board reflects the system’s state all the time – it’s not a follow up, it’s a persistent or permanent system. Why would I have to put due dates on those tickets, if they are visible all the time anyway?
• Markus Andrezak says:
I thought we are way beyond the due date discussion. They are none to anybody. And I’m only rephrasing the discussion. The dates are simply an indication for you guys to be able to coordinate the stuff in your schedules with some slack.
And yes, it is a follow-up system invariant of if these are due dates, fake due dates or … muffins.
7. @Arne: Due tue threading limitations, I’ll reply here.
You wrote: “You´re quoting Smith ‘dates that you set up for actions within a project that are due before the actual due date project’. That seem to be due dates for you, right? In our context, there are no ‘actual due dates’. So how can there be ‘fake due dates’?”
I think it’s bad to have fake due dates before an actual due date, and I think it’s even worse to have fake due dates without any actual due date.
A fake due date is an appointment with a task without the need of that appointment. For me, getting up is not related to a specific task. If it were, I’d consider that a fake due date.
8. Markus Andrezak says:
I guess I simply don’t get the point you want to make :(
Leave a Reply
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| 105 |
Message Board
Paul Charles Message Board
Author Charles's Book Reviews
I Love the Sound of Broken Glass
St. Martin's, Nov 2004, 22.95, 240 pp. ISBN: 0312319029 Hearing fire trucks in his neighborhood, Detective Inspector Christy Kennedy goes to look and sees that the home of Peter O'Brien, founder of Camden Tour Records, has burned to the ground. He later learns arson caused the blaze as someone placed an incendiary device inside a cassette holder. A few days later Kennedy's girlfriend reporter Ann Rea tells him that Peter has not been to his off...
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| 689 |
Coffee Chocolate Chip Cookies
Coffee Chocolate Chip Cookies
Cindy Carnes 133
"These cookies are a step above any you have ever tasted."
I Made it Rate it Share Print
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servings 112 cals
Serving size has been adjusted!
Original recipe yields 48 servings
• Calories:
• 112 kcal
• 6%
• Fat:
• 5.1 g
• 8%
• Carbs:
• 15.5g
• 5%
• Protein:
• 1.9 g
• 4%
• Cholesterol:
• 13 mg
• 4%
• Sodium:
• 61 mg
• 2%
Based on a 2,000 calorie diet
See full nutrition
Nutritional Information
1 Serving
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Amount Per Serving
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2. Toast almonds in oven for 10 minutes or until brown.
6. Bake for 10 minutes.
1. 90 Ratings
Most helpful positive review
I read the reviews, and decided to give this recipe a try. I made it exactly as it is on the site, it was wonderful. Then, I decided to try some stronger coffee, we love the flavor at our house...
Most helpful critical review
I was very excited to make these cookies. And I'll have to admit, I was a little bit disappointed with the results. The cookies were a bit too heavy for my taste. I had some friends of mine try ...
These cookies were incredibly delicious! Instead of instant coffee, I substituted in 1/4 cup of a hispanic brand of non-instant coffee called Cafe Bustelo with 4 tablespoons of water -flavor tu...
AWESOME recipe. Made exactly like it says here, tried the espresso powder as suggested in one review. I will make them this way forever! That powder gives such a rich, coffee flavor. Very good, ...
I usually like to rate recipes for how they are exactly without adding or taking anything away, but this time I was without liquer so I just used real coffee and was very impressed! SUPER GOOD
I have been making these for a few years, since I found the recipe on this site. They are really good, easy to make, and even kids like them. I toast the almonds a little longer,so they are a ...
I was needing a comfort junk food fix and this fit the bill. I did as some suggested and added 1/2 c. coffee and left out the almonds, as I did not have any on hand. Very soft texture which I ...
Nice...I've messed up some of the highly-rated recipes here but this one turned out just right. I used coffee powder instead of granules and the taste was just right. One weird thing though- I a...
There is no better!! If you love chocolate & coffee this is the recipe for you. It's a bit time consuming but well worth it.
Heavenly! I used Starbucks espresso powder instead of coffe, I also doubled the vanilla. Other than that I followed the recipe exactly. I froze the cookies in a ziplock bag and remembered the...
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| 665 |
Pumpkin Apple Cobbler
Pumpkin Apple Cobbler
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1 h servings 303 cals
Serving size has been adjusted!
Original recipe yields 8 servings
• Calories:
• 303 kcal
• 15%
• Fat:
• 12.3 g
• 19%
• Carbs:
• 46.8g
• 15%
• Protein:
• 2.8 g
• 6%
• Cholesterol:
• 34 mg
• 11%
• Sodium:
• 216 mg
• 9%
Based on a 2,000 calorie diet
See full nutrition
Nutritional Information
1 Serving
Servings Per Recipe:
Amount Per Serving
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• Prep
• Cook
• Ready In
2. In a medium bowl, stir together the apples and pumpkin butter. Spread evenly in a 8 or 9 inch square baking dish. Pour the pumpkin bread mix into a bowl, and cut in the butter until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Sprinkle over the top of the apples.
3. Bake for 45 minutes in the preheated oven, or until the apples are tender enough to insert a fork. Serve warm with whipped cream.
1. 32 Ratings
Most helpful positive review
Awesome! I was looking for a recipe to use pumpkin butter in and found that I had all of these ingredients. The apple and pumpkin taste amazing together!
Most helpful critical review
This was not bad, just can't say it was better than a standard apple cobbler.
Very good and very easy. The only thing I did different was cut butter and cream cheese into the pumpkin bread mix and then sprinkled that on top.
This was a huge hit at work that I forwarded a link to this page and had to add a picture to this delicious and easy to make treat! For recipe to fit a 9x13 pan just calculate ingredients for 12...
This recipe is super easy, and gets tons of compliments! It was abig hit at a fall party I recently attended. I use Trader Joe's stuff for all the ingredients as follows: 1 box of bread mix, 1 s...
The cobbler was delicious, but not as wet as I'd like. Next time, I think I'll add a little apple cider to give it a little more juice. And I think I'll just put the butter pats on top rather ...
This recipe was super easy and awesome, and I am not a big fan of pumpkin. I doubled the recipe in a 13 x 9 pan and used two jars of Trader Joe's pumpkin butter and 1 box of bread mix as another...
This recipe was delicious. So quick and easy. I will definitely be adding this to my list of favorites.
made this recipe over the holidays for two family get togethers, it got rave reviews. I had a request to make it today for a super bowl party. I couldn't find pumpkin butter, so I've used cream...
I made this and everyone in my family loved it. I couldn't find pumpkin butter anywhere, though I'm sure I can find a recipe for it somewhere. So I just replaced it with apple butter. I'm goi...
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| 3,309 |
Favorite Revolutionary War Site to Visit?
My favorite site is Yorktown. There’s enough still there to give you a sense of stepping back in time. You can see the French ships in the bay. Second is Bunker Hill. That takes more imagination but it’s still worth a visit.
Thomas Fleming
I want to say Kettle Creek, Georgia, because I have published so much on it from 1974 to the present but the truth is that I like Ninety Six, South Carolina better. It is perfectly laid out as to give you the feeling that the fighting there ended last month not more than two centuries ago. It is one of the rare places where history and legend occupy the same ground.
Kettle Creek is like that too but has nothing from the war that lets you feel the past. I get the same “Ninety Six” type feeling at the Revolutionary War church and earthworks at Ebenezer, Georgia and at Fort Ticonderoga.
Robert Scott Davis
Fields Point Boat Ramp, Colleton County, S.C., at the end of a dirt road off County Road 161, about a half-mile south of Wiggins, on the Combahee River. This is the closest the public can get by car to Tar Bluff. There, on Aug. 27, 1782, Col. John Laurens and 50 men either charged into or were ambushed by a larger British force. Many thought Laurens had a death wish, and his wish was fulfilled. He was Hamilton’s closest friend, son of a ex-president of Congress, and a former Washington aide. His death shook both rebels and loyalists, the loyalists because of his moderation toward them. Washington put it this way: “In a word, he had not a fault that I ever could discover, unless intrepidity bordering upon rashness could come under that denomination…”
Don Glickstein
This is a split between Brandywine Battlefield and Princeton Battlefield. Both are extremely well kept and, except for a few streets and buildings, the battlefields remain relatively pristine. They aren’t huge forts either, basically they’re just large swaths of high grass. If you didn’t know about its significance you might drive right by them. But that is partly what makes them so special. It demonstrates to us that the most extraordinary events can happen basically anywhere.
Thomas Verenna
This is a tough choice since there are so many outstanding sites. I’m going to go with Valley Forge based on the experience of my first visit there. When I arrived it was near dusk and in December. The park was empty because it was late in the day and very cold and windy. Walking around the recreated soldiers’ huts in those conditions really gave me a feel for the bleak conditions the Continentals experienced that winter.
Jim Piecuch
Valley Forge. Not only is it a beautiful and historic site, it has some great museums. And other important and interesting historic sites are little more than a stones throw away.
Norman Fuss
My favorite RevWar site to visit is Fraunces Tavern. Just approaching the building, I can’t help but sense the presence of the officers that gathered there in December, 1783, to bid farewell to General Washington. Their feelings must have been electric, triumphantly entering New York City after 7 years, the war over, and American independence finally sealed. Their farewell to Washington was a powerfull, emotional event. The images help remind me of the ultimate humanity of all of the participants of the Revolution.
Michael Schellhammer
There can be only one real contender – Yorktown, Virginia. Its importance to the War of Independence is unquestionable. Indeed, without Yorktown, most other Revolutionary war sites, including Independence Hall, would long have passed into obscurity. The preservation at Yorktown ensures that nobody can visit the site without being able to picture the siege as it unfolded. Yorktown is also an exemplary instance of good combined-arms operations and a vital reminder of the importance of the French army and navy to American independence. Finally, Yorktown is situated at a spectacularly beautiful location a few miles upriver from the Chesapeake Bay – what more do you need?
Matthew P. Dziennik
Exciting things are happening at Valley Forge National Historical Park, often called the “Birthplace of the American Army.” The 1777-78 Valley Forge encampment is well known for General Washington, hungry soldiers in tattered clothing, and demonstrated fortitude and determination. But this summer there are also storytelling benches in the park, an archaeological dig, daily ranger led walks, talks each day about General Washington’s leadership, and costumed interpreters and park rangers at Washington’s headquarters and the reconstructed soldiers’ huts. There are special activities just for kids, too: the Junior Ranger program, “Secrets and Spies,” military drills, and discovery stations. Explore the park’s 3,600 acres on foot, in your car, by rented bike (or bring your own), or trolley. Carillon concerts, an art gallery, bird walks, and an outstanding book store are also yours to enjoy. Most activities are free. Click on the park website for more information: www.nps.gov/vafo
Nancy K. Loane
The Saratoga Battlefield, about 30 miles north of Albany, NY has to rank as a favorite to anyone who has visited. The highly informative visitor center affords a three dimensional map of the two principal battles showing animation as to how the battles developed, were fought and resolved. The so-called “battlefield” is really a large piece of land with forests, creeks, ravines and meadows, left basically intact since 1777. Redoubts, fortifications and other points of interest are well-posted and opposing lines are shown by colored stakes. The road system, together with a self-guided tour via a CD bought at the visitor center, provides an informative and scenic route that helps the visitor understand the conflict. At each site, a small parking lot enables the visitor to get out and explore the locations. At certain spots, the high ground affords spectacular views. What makes this site so extraordinary is that a visitor is experiencing the same topography, woodland and vegetation that the Americans and British did. While modern roads pass over the several ravines, a visitor can experience how difficult it must have been to move the artillery. One can easily see how and why the commanders selected their encampments and defensive grounds and how the area contributed to tactical decisions. The surrounding areas also afford opportunities to follow Burgoyne’s march to Saratoga and visit the ancillary battlefields of Hubbardton and Bennington and the scene of surrender.
Steven Paul Mark
I choose the Powder House in Somerville, Massachusetts, because it’s right across the street from Tufts University and therefore a great place for an outdoor lecture. On September 1, 1774, General Thomas Gage sent 260 men to seize the province’s gunpowder from this place of storage. Although the redcoats encountered no resistance, a rumor began that the soldiers had killed some colonists. The next day, thousands gathered at Cambridge Common, leaving their firearms outside of town but pointedly carrying sticks. They chased a customs officer back to Boston, and another rumor spread: Gage had sent another expedition into the countryside. As T. H. Breen illustrates, thousands of armed men now began mobilizing all over New England and marching toward Boston, before the truth turned them back around. I like using this site to demonstrate that a small incident exploded into the dress rehearsal for Lexington and Concord. Read more.
Benjamin L. Carp
After the fall of Ft. Ticonderoga in 1777, the American rear guard and assorted wounded and stragglers fought a battle with the advance elements of British invasion forces on a grassy knoll beneath the Green Mountains in Hubbarton, Vermont. The undeveloped, compact battlefield site appears how it did in the Revolution and consists of series of locations of small unit engagements. Visitors easily envision how the topography impacted the battle outcome by funneling combatants into compact open spaces among the hills leading to heavy casualties on both sides.
The State of Vermont maintains an easy to follow interpretive trail that provides a realistic sense of how the battle unfolded and what it was like to be a soldier in this short, but intensively bloody battle. There is also a small, well-managed visitors center to aid in understanding the battle site and the costly British victory.
Gene Procknow
John Ferling
Valley Forge National Historic Park. There’s something for everyone there. The museum is great. The soldiers’ huts and Washington’s headquarters are neat to see, too. The park is big but walkable, and you can even tour by trolley. A day at Valley Forge not only brings to life the most critical period for the Continental Army. It also puts on display the sacrifices and struggles of a diverse group of common soldiers. The site gives you a real appreciation for what the Revolution was about.
Daniel Tortora
The marker commemorating Christopher Seider’s tomb in Boston’s Old Granary Burying-Ground misstates his name and age. It dates from the early 1900s, and the tomb where that boy’s body was laid is probably long gone. I wouldn’t even call that site my “favorite” to visit. But whenever I pass, I feel compelled to look over with respect. Young Christopher Seider was the first person to die in violence arising from the political disputes that led to the Revolutionary War, and his death was also my entry point into Revolutionary research.
J. L. Bell
There are so many rich RevWar sites scattered throughout the East Coast and in the Midwest. My personal favorite, however, would have to be the largely-preserved Battle Road northwest of Boston, Massachusetts. For anyone who wanted to really get the flavor of the Lexington and Concord conflicts, one cannot do much better than to trek this trail. From Lexington Green to Concord’s Old North Bridge, its like a time travel trip back to the days of the opening shots of the Revolutionary War.
John L. Smith, Jr.
While it is hard to beat the Lexington green on an April morning, I believe an underrated site is the Jacob Ford Mansion, in Morristown, New Jersey, where Washington and his staff kept their headquarters during the brutal winter of 1779-1780. The spacious building has been restored as it was when it served as the headquarters building, complete with hammocks for Hamilton and other young aides. And there are good tours, with a variety of quality reenactments as part of the tours.
Christian McBurney
Tucked away in the Midwest, I haven’t visited most of the sites on my bucket list yet. I loved my Rev War sightseeing in Boston and Charleston with my favorite stops being the Old State House (Boston), Buckman Tavern and the Hancock-Clarke House (Lexington, MA). The Corps of Discovery group tours by Southern Campaigns of the America Revolution helped me experience many Rev War sites around Charleston, South Carolina, in one weekend. Outside of Boston and Charleston, Mount Vernon, Fraunces Tavern, the Hale Byrnes House and Colonial Williamsburg have been highlights. And I’m looking forward to a September trip to Fort Ticonderoga.
Todd Andrlik
Saratoga Battlefield in New York. It’s large, and gives you a good feel of the battle.
Derek W. Beck
Boston’s Freedom Trail. The Freedom Trail spans 2.5 miles and contains 16 historic sites, nearly all of which played a role in revolutionary events between 1765 and 1776. I credit the Freedom Trail with igniting my passion for the American Revolution and its War for Independence. My parents made the Trail a part of my life at a young age. Although there are many great sites on the trail, my favorite is the Bunker Hill Monument. I spent five summers giving Bunker Hill battle talks for the National Park Service. I also learned to shoot my first musket at the site. My second favorite site is the Granary Burying Ground. This powerful site contains the remains of Paul Revere, Robert Treat Paine, Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and James Otis, among others.
Elizabeth M. Covart
This was the most difficult of this set of questions. Whom could deny the importance of the Old South Meeting House, Lexington Green, or St. John’s Church in Richmond? I’d cast a vote for any of them. But my favorite site is the small monument in Saratoga National Historic Park that honors the leg of Benedict Arnold. It reminds us all that the American Revolution was a messy, complicated affair, one in which our greatest hero–the man without whom Burgoyne would not have been defeated, certainly according to no less than Burgoyne himself–would become a byword for enemy and traitor. That very small site makes us all ask a very big question: why? Why would arguably patriots’ best field commander choose to forsake his country? Money? Principle? The questions themselves deserves to be regularly asked for us to better understand the moment, the conflict, and ourselves. That’s my kind of place.
Taylor Stoermer
[FEATURED IMAGE AT TOP: Old Powder House, Somerville, MA, stored explosive gunpowder. Source: Wikimedia Commons]
• Wayne Lynch says:
Kudos to Elizabeth for mention of the Granary Burial Grounds. I confess to having visited very few revolutionary war sites but I have been to Boston once many years ago. My visit to the cemeteries was very memorable.
• roy clevenger says:
Though nothing beats Independence National Historical Park for historic or inspirational impact, my favorite is the two parks on either side of the Delaware River at Washington Crossing PA/NJ. PA has the point of embarkation, unknown soldiers’ graves & a copy of Leutze’s painting. NJ has a superb artifact collection &
a wooded path taken by soldiers on the march to Trenton. Both wonderful stare-run parks.
• Don Newton says:
I think one of the most pristine and less visited sites is Castine, Maine. I have always found the Penobscot Expedition to be the most fascinating event in the AWI and a guided walk of the battlefield a couple of years ago left nothing to the imagination regarding terrain and troop movements. From Ft. George to Trask’s Rock the site is as it was in the day.
• JMS says:
Having grown up very near Washington’s Crossing, PA I agree with Don’s recommendation of that site.
But having also lived in rolling hills of Morristown and Morris Township, NJ for 17 years of my adult life, my choice for best Revolutionary War site is the Morristown National Historical Park. Morristown proudly calls itself the “military capital of the Revolution.” Located 35 miles west of New York City (where the British were headquartered), the 1,500 acre park was created by Congress in 1933 to commemorate the four winter cantonments of the Continental army from 1777-1782. It contains four separate units: 1) in Morristown, the Ford Mansion that served as Washington’s headquarters in 1779-1780, and the newly refurbished research library; 2) also within Morristown, Fort Nonsense (not really a fort, but a beautiful overlook of the nearby neighborhoods and hills; 3) 5 miles south of Morristown, Jockey Hollow, a well-watered and wooded area where the troops were quartered, containing a few soldier’s huts, the Wick family farmhouse and gardens, a visitor’s center and best of all, a beautiful system of inter-looping hiking trails extended throughout the 500 acre site; and 4) the New Jersey Brigade site of 1779-1780 near the beautiful old Cross Estate (which is actually in adjacent Somerset County). Undoubtedly, this park comprises “the most complete known remains of the Continental army to be found anywhere.” While lovely during any season, especially during the lush summers, Jockey Hollow is best experienced by a cold wintry hike.
• Jim Gallagher says:
Having been to most of the sites mentioned, I feel a sense of reverence regarding all. But this is about favorites. I’m very partial to Yorktown, as a volunteer there, and would name it if not for Tompkins Bridge.
On 8 March 1781 Col Dundas landed from the Poquoson river to plunder the halfway house (the foundations of which are in my back yard) between Hampton and Yorktown, after which he led his and JG Simcoe’s 400 men down the only road (at that time) towards Hampton and Newport News. Col Francis Mallory, who farmed the plantation next to George Wythe’s “Chesterville”, responded with 80 men and raced towards Tompkins Bridge intending to pull up the planks and trap the Redcoats on the far side of the marsh, where another 250 militia under his brother Edward’s command were enroute to ambush them. Sadly, Mallory was late, and rounded the bend in the road to blunder directly into the lead elements of the raiding party, many of whom had already crossed the bridge. Attempting to buy time, Mallory and his men stood their ground, exchanging volleys for an hour until Simcoe’s Commissary Officer led a mounted charge of between 40-60 riders and overran Mallory’s position. Just before the charge Jacob Wray (Jefferson’s “intelligencer”) appeared on scene and offered Mallory a mount for his escape. Wray pointed out that Mallory had only recently been released by the Brits and would not be treated well if taken. Mallory refused the offer, saying he could not accept escape when his men had no such means to effect their own. After the attack Mallory’s pregnant wife found his nearly unrecognizable body was found trampled into the mud with three bullet and eleven bayonet holes in his vest; which she preserved. He was buried at Chesterville, little more than a mile away.
Tompkins Bridge, on a small back road, was also the site of “Big Bethel”, the first manuever battle of the Civil War. There’s no revolutionary war historical marker and almost nobody knows what happened there in 1781 – even the wikipedia entry is incoherently muddled with a different skirmish. I drive over it twice each day, past the small cemetary, and it reminds me of the unsung sacrifices made by so many for so many reasons, all of them hinging upon the extreme value of “liberty”. Its personal, poignant, and so my “favorite”.
• David Brooks says:
Having lived the majority of my life in upstate New York – most of the sites I have visited are in NY and particularly along the Mohawk Valley. Most memorable of those are Fort Stanwix (Schuyler), and Oriskany. However, I am less a battlefield site kinda person and prefer the other wonderful sites of the colonial and early republic in the area.
Like many other area’s that saw continuous action in either the American Revolution or Civil War, many of the sites can be visited during a daily expedition or weekend visit (thanks modern transportation technology!)
• steven paul mark says:
If I had to pick a second favorite, it would be the Battle of Bennington site. As a smaller action, it had important effect on the Saratoga conflict. It is a bit off the beaten path so I suspect not heavily frequented. At the highest vantage point signs describe the action and depict how the surrounding topography contributed to the American victory. It also affords a terrific view of the countryside. Well worth a visit. Despite the name, the park is located in New York.
Leave a Reply
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| 4,820 |
Showering at Night, Bedhead in the Morning
Hi pretty lady!
You have helped me before with some complicated and some not so complicated problems. So since I trust your advice, I am here again, with probably the least complicated question ever to hit your inbox. Amy, help me have pretty hair!
My whole life I have been a shower-in-the-morning person. It helps me wake up, it’s nice to feel clean and it’s easy to style wet hair. Right? If I actually woke up in time, 15 minutes with a blowdryer and either a round brush or a flat iron and I was good to go.
Well then I went and had babies. Yeah, two of them. And mornings have gotten very very complicated, not to mention that my one son cries when I run the blowdryer. So, for the first time in my life I am a shower-at-night person.
Amy how the heck do I avoid looking like I slept in my hair? It seems regardless of how carefully I compose my style before bed, I still wake up with one side smashed down, one side sticking up and the whole thing just generally looking ratty. I don’t have any time to myself to attack it with styling tools in the morning, so I have been heading in to work looking a bit of a frazzled mess (a bit MORE of a frazzled mess) ever since I started showering at night.
Do you, or any of your readers, have any ideas, tips or advice on styles or shortcuts that can help my bedhead look professional? For what it’s worth, I have straight to wavy hair that extends about two inches past my collarbones. If that helps. I hope it helps.
Thank you!
I have done long stretches of showering at night, then switched back to showering in the morning. Then back to night. I’ve gone months without touching the blowdryer, then gone back to that, too. I’ve sworn that hot rollers were the only way to go for months, then downgraded back to a curling iron. Currently I’m reaching the end of a months-long diffuser-and-scrunch kick and opting for the round brush again.
In other words, I have pretty much tried it all and YES I HAVE SOME IDEAS FOR YOU. Here are my recommendations, in no particular order:
1) Let your hair dry completely before sleeping on it. You don’t mention whether or not you bust out the blowdryer at night, or if your son is still up and around and available for traumatizing if you were to use it. But a lot of bedhead-related weirdness can be eliminated if you make sure your hair is 100% dry before sleeping on it. If your hair air-dries relatively quickly, that’s another option, depending on if it frizzes up or not and/or if you can use styling products without overnight oil issues.
2) Divide your hair in two parts, and put each side up in a soft, loose bun. (Think Princess Leia.) If you sleep on your side most of the time, simply pull all the hair up to the very top of your head and put the bun there. Some people can get away with using hair elastics around the base of the bun, but if your hair is fine like mine, this will result in those bandy-line-dents (and breakage). So I do the bun using bobby pins and those snap barrettes. This is the best night-style option I’ve tried (as opposed to braids or wrapping my head in a scarf or whatever), since it usually results in soft, messy waves that you can actually style quite easily in the morning with a little smoothing cream or scrunching product or hair spray.
3) If your hair isn’t long enough for top-knot buns or you’re still unhappy with the results, try this: Blow dry your hair most of the way. Divide the hair on the top of your head into three or four sections (going in lines from back to front/bangs). Add smoothing cream, if you use it. (I do not.) Pull each section up and blast the roots with a little hairspray, then roll it backwards into a circle like you’re wrapping in around an invisible roller. Secure the little hair-roll with bobby pins or one of those long metal hairstylist clips. Do three or four of these rolls, spray with hairspray, go to bed. In the morning you should have some really nice volume on the top of your head and the pinned hair should be able to camouflage any smushed/bent loose hair that you slept directly on. (Unless your hair is super layered, alas.) Unclip, lightly brush down over the sides and back. (You can also backcomb the roots of the pinned sections as you releash them if you want mega-volume for going out.)
4) DO NOT CONDITION YOUR ROOTS. Ends only! This applies to morning showers too, but it’s even more important if you need your roots to bounce back from being slept on all night.
5) Wash those pillowcases! I have read that satin or silk pillowcases are extra-forgiving for washed-at-night hair, but I have not tried that. I will say that sleeping on a dirty, due-to-be-washed cotton pillowcase, though, is never going to result in fresh, non-stanky hair in the morning.
6) If all else fails, embrace the low side bun. Brush your hair out, maybe hit it with some appropriate-for-dry-hair styling product of your choice (I’ll have a list of suggestions in a bit) while flipped upside down to keep it from looking too flat. Then pull your hair back and over behind one ear like you’re going to put it in a side ponytail. Instead, wrap it into a loose, purposely messy-type bun. I basically wrap and mash my hair into a crazy blob-bun the size of my fist, then wrap a hair elastic around it a couple times. Then I tuck ends in and pull other bits out and secure it fully with a booby pin or two. (Note that for us fine-haired types this look works best when paired with the invisible roller trick described in three and backcombing, so your crown still has some oomph to it.) If your hair is short enough that you have pieces that don’t reach all the way around your head, try curling a couple of them into loose face-framing ringlets, or buy some super cute decorative clips or bobby pins (HELLOOOOOO ETSY) and pin the crap out of it, the more random the better.
PRODUCT RECOMMENDATIONS: Note that I do not use ALL of these products ALL the time, but it more depends on the look I’m going for (smooth/wavy, volume/controlled) or the problem I’m attempting to solve. And note that my hair is baby-fine and oil-prone, which yours may absolutely not be. But these are my favorites to have in my general-use arsenal of Dealing With Mah Hairs, particularly in the fluff-it-back-up-without-adding-oil-or-weight department:
Lush The Big Tease styling gel (discontinued)
Lush No Drought dry shampoo
Lush Veganese conditioner
Lush Jumping Juniper solid shampoo
Pureology Volume shampoo
Bumble & Bumble Salt Spray
BedHead Superstar volumizing leave-in conditioner
Fekkai Gloss smoothing cream
BigSexyHair Spray & Play hair spray
Paul Mitchell Extra Body Finishing Spray
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38 Responses to “Showering at Night, Bedhead in the Morning”
1. Kristen Dec 31 at 1:36 pm Reply Reply
I too, have become a night time showerer, because of work and kids, etc. I have very fine, prone to oiliness hair and the best thing I have found to use in the morning is dry shampoo. It gives volume, gets rid of any grease that might have appeared over night, is all around awesome. And I love the tresemme dry shampoo, under $6 at Target, WIN!
2. Suzy Q Dec 31 at 1:43 pm Reply Reply
I am a night-shower person with no kids. Also lazy. I productize and blowdry with a round brush, rather haphazardly, as I am no Vidal Sassoon. My savior in the morning is hot rollers. Love them!
3. pumpkinpie Dec 31 at 2:11 pm Reply Reply
My best method for avoiding bedhead (I too am a post-baby night showerer) is to sleep in my nursing chair all night with a baby who won’t sleep in a crib. Now that my second is nine months, though, I don’t get that opportunity often. (Good, of course, for many reasons except the bedhead.)
4. sue Dec 31 at 2:16 pm Reply Reply
Well……..back in the 70’s when we were going for the Farrah Fawcett hair – we would wrap our damp hair on top of our head around a sock, (using the sock like a roller) then tie the ends of the sock like a knot and go to bed. In the morning there were some curls and a lot of volume. Easier than bobby pins and clips and worked like a charm!
5. Sarah Dec 31 at 3:25 pm Reply Reply
I have had good luck with got2B’s Rockin’ It dry shampoo more so than the Tresemme, plus it’s available at Walgreens. I shampoo every other day and this stuff keeps the oil slick manageable. I usually add some defrizzer on the ends to help with the dryness.
6. Kacie Dec 31 at 3:27 pm Reply Reply
I am not alone!! Except, I have all but given up on my hair (though I would like to change). I just wear it in a pony or bun every day (and I hate that. But I also hate the feeling of my hair loose, so I don’t know what else to do).
I too shower at night because of convenience, though I wonder if I did a morning shower and tried some of those tricks if I’d feel better about my hair and overall appearance.
My hair is long, brastrap length and so fine and limp and prone to flying all over the place. I think that’s part of why I don’t like wearing it down, because it’s a hot mess. I should just go to a salon where someone will show me what in the world to do with my hair, so I can do it on a daily basis without getting frustrated.
Because as it goes now, I shower at night, put it in a bun and wake up with a rat’s nest of tangles. Meep!
• Claire Jan 01 at 5:06 am Reply Reply
So me! All this, so me. My hair is longer though – waist, but super fine. It gets washed, plaited before bed then scruffy bun during the day. That’s it! Too lazy for anything else. Positives though, my ends are awesome because I use no heat whatsoever.
7. Gillian Dec 31 at 3:31 pm Reply Reply
After your hair is completely dry, continue drying it with the ‘cool’ setting on your dryer until it’s completely cool. When I go to bed with ‘hot’ hair, my hair just forms to the shape it cools down in (not a good look). I do it after flat ironing my hair & it works like a charm.
8. Heather K Dec 31 at 4:53 pm Reply Reply
I have short hair, so maybe this won’t work for long haired ladies, but I like to use a squirt bottle and squirt the hair all over till damp (or sometimes sopping wet) enough to re-style. In my case I don’t have to blow it dry, just some product and go. But there is NO way to sleep on it without complete bed head, no matter how dry my hair was to begin with, and I do NOT have the time to shower in the morning, so this works for me.
• Olivia Jan 03 at 7:02 pm Reply Reply
My hair is short, too. I just stick my head under the faucet, get it nice and wet and then style as usual.
9. The Tutugirl Dec 31 at 4:56 pm Reply Reply
Flat iron. As long as you’re not wearing your hair curly, that sucker can fix just about anything, and it doesn’t involve a ton of noise. I use a heat protectant before blow drying, and then I can straighten it perfect in the mornings.
10. danielle Dec 31 at 6:08 pm Reply Reply
I am a night showerer with a baby as well. I use some curlers I made and roll my wet hair with those. I pluck the curlers out in the morning and go. The bun sounds easy, but I don’t blow dry my hair. Takes about 5 minutes to roll my hair. If you Google life with monkey the fabric curlers tutorial is there. They are super comfy!
11. Amuse Dec 31 at 6:44 pm Reply Reply
Satin pillow cases are The Bomb. They really do keep the hair smooth, since the hair just glides and slides across it. They reduce split ends and nape-tangles! Back in the 1960s, they were essential to keep Mom’s Bouf poufed between salon visits. Walmart sells them for under 10 bucks. A bonus is they keep your pillow feeling cool.
I’m a huge fan of the bun method. I use the top of the head bun with my bra-length hair. One elastic and 8 bobby pins. It lifts the roots and the hair has incredible bounce and body. My hair is very dry, so I don’t shampoo daily, just bun it up dry, then heat it very briefly with a hairdryer in the AM, let it cool, take it down and run a pick thru it. Voila! The combo works quite well on wavy to frizzy hair like mine.
12. Stef Dec 31 at 11:50 pm Reply Reply
Does any helpful person know how to tame curly hair if forced to shower at night? My hair is fine but super curly (think Shirley Temple). It is shoulder length but takes a long time to dry after a shower (an hour plus). As for a blow dryer? Child please, you can’t straighten this hair so don’t even try. Even my hairdresser can’t get it straight, so lets move on.
My little guy is 16 months and I’ve had 0 success with the whole shower at night thing. Sadly my husband has been diagnosed with cancer and I have lost the luxury of a morning shower (it’s all about me dammit).
Anyone know how to tame curls in the morning after they have been flattened overnight? Ponytails are getting pretty boring.
• Tiffany Jan 02 at 10:15 am Reply Reply
Stef – Try a dry shampoo formatted for curly hair. I promise, they work! Then add a little smoothing cream and you’re good to go.
• Marnie Jan 02 at 11:46 am Reply Reply
Fellow curly girl hair with short hair! I spritz my hair with a water bottle in the morning then scrunch to freshen up the curls. Not so much water that it’s drenched by any means, but enough that it will dry on it’s own. If I put too much on, I’ll use the diffuser for about 5 mins or so. The type of product you use makes a difference too! I use DevaCurl gel products. Expensive but worth it!! Especially on 2nd day hair!
• Mnt Mama Jan 03 at 10:51 am Reply Reply
I second the DevaCurl products. I think they are worth the money. I do exactly as Marnie does and have had some good success. I spritz with water bottle then use the DevaCurl Set It Free spray…just need a little. if i use the spray at night after a shower, I sometimes just need the water spritz in the morning and it resets the DevaCurl spray for the next day.
• Christine Jan 12 at 2:54 pm Reply Reply
No one has mentioned a little spiffy device called a Q-Redew that is PERFECT for curly hair. (It works great on my slightly wavy hair too, but really it is ideal for curls) It is basically a mini humidifier that provides just the right amount of warm mist to reset your hair. I use it instead of dry shampoo, it’s great for next day hair!
13. Jessica Jan 01 at 9:22 am Reply Reply
I have this combo hairdryer with attachment thingy from Phillips that is fabulous for a morning smooth out and style. It has a round brush and a flat iron attachment so you’re basically doing a fully dry and straighten with one go.
If it’s particularly bad I’ll wet it a little and then redry the top bits.
Also, a bun can be funned up any number of ways that basically amount to a fun barrette or hairband that take zero effort or time.
14. Hillary Jan 02 at 10:47 am Reply Reply
I think I should be paid on commission for how much I’ve recommended this book:
If you have any curl at all, check it out. It has totally transformed my hair routine. I also shower at night and have 2 babies. The mornings are hard to make myself look presentable and I found just letting my hair do what it needs to do (i.e., curl) has made a huge improvement in my appearance. I “wash” and condition/gel at night, let it air dry, and in the morning I lean way over, run my fingers around my scalp to loosen things up, and spritz with water to revive the curl. Voila. Super easy, no tools or implements required. Satin pillow cases are a must. So is a good haircut.
• Melissa Jul 17 at 5:09 pm Reply Reply
I love that book too. I’ve never been able to sleep on my curls and have them work the next morning though.
Do you have corkscrew curls or something?
jealous! :)
15. Kate Jan 02 at 11:59 am Reply Reply
I was a morning showerer/blow-dry/straighten devotee for years until I, you know…grew up, got a real job and had a bunch of kids. Who has time for that crap, honestly?
I have crazy, CRAZY thick and also very frizz prone straight to wavy hair that stops right below my shoulder blades. The best hair I’ve ever had in my life comes from my new routine:
Wash at night (now I only wash my hair twice a week or so, the benefit of having the dry, dry hair) let it air dry or even sleep on it wet. In the morning, spread some of the Fx Silk Drops (use sparingly) and flat iron (takes me less than 10 minutes). Between washes I just flat iron again for a minute or two in the morning.
And in the realm of product recommendations – can I say that I’ve tried like damn near every salon and store product for shampoo and conditioner that is SLS free, and spent up to like $60 a bottle, and the best stuff EVAR is the SimplyU moisturizing shampoo and conditioner at walmart for like $7 for the big pump bottles? That stuff is amazeballs, honestly.
16. Kat Jan 02 at 11:59 am Reply Reply
Dry shampoo and a good hair cut (maintained every six or eight weeks) works wonders for me. I swear my hair looks best when I shower at night and skip a wash every other day. Dry shampoo at night (seriously – AT NIGHT before you go to bed. If you wait until your hair is already greasy you are fighting an uphill battle!) creates natural looking volume and texture, I just run a flat or curling iron around the parts that are wonky, smoothing cream on the ends only and off we go! I use Suave Professionals dry shampoo (works awesome, and it’s like $4 at Target. It beats out the one I was paying $23 for ANY DAY) and a Bumble and Bumble “smoothing” cream (name escapes me, comes in a bronze tube) Side note: I was really afraid to skip a wash (my hair is pretty oily after one day) but after a few weeks of this routine my hair looks so much shinier and healthier and the dry shampoo totally takes care of the oil as long as I do it at night.
17. MR Jan 02 at 12:07 pm Reply Reply
I have fine, straight hair and could never get it to do anything. After years of pulling it up in a pony or bun all the time, I cut it to a chin length bob. After years of that, I was bored and told my stylisti wanted something different and asked if I should grow it out or what. Knowing my complete inability to do anything with my hair, she gave me a totally cute pixie cut (I had had short before and disliked it, but this is soooo cute) and she told me not to wash it more than once a week. It took some getting used to, but not washing it makes a HUGE difference. Now, my least favorite hair days are the days I was it. I started working out recently and have thus started washing my hair more and it sucks. I am going to look into the dry shampoo. My hair really needs to be kind of dirty to look good. The days I get the most compliments on my hair are the days where I am seriously thinking my hair feels gross and I want to wash it. Lol. So weird.
• tasterspoon Jan 05 at 12:29 am Reply Reply
All my life I’ve had greasy, greasy hair. Then I read this article where Brooke Shields said her hair looks its best on the 4th day after washing, and I was all, Wuuuut?? But I was pregnant with #2 and foresaw how convenient washing my hair only twice a week would be… so I started washing every other day…now every third day. I’ve gone 4 days out of necessity but feel gross. Just to say, washing less frequently might actually be an option even for those for whom the idea seems unfathomable. You just have to get over the mental ickies. I need to get back into an exercise routine, though, so I’m not sure how to work that out.
Oh, and those who’ve recommended the satin pillowcase – GREAT idea I’m going to try with my 2 year old who wakes up with a rats’ nest every day.
18. Karen Jan 02 at 4:15 pm Reply Reply
This is the most useful post and set of comments. Ever. Thank you.
19. Sarah Jan 02 at 6:17 pm Reply Reply
I have the flatside morning look, too. Wetting the hair at the roots and blowdrying it again (against the grain, especially) can fluff and reshape. It only takes a minute.
Dreadfully jealous of those people who can go to bed with wet hair, wake up, comb it out, and go.
20. Stephanie Jan 02 at 8:19 pm Reply Reply
This sounds totally crazy, but it really works, and it’s free. I have fairly thick, slightly wavy hair that’s prone to frizziness and is a bit hard to manage. I read this tip in a magazine years ago, and it works wonders, except on super short hair (my current style, alas). Get a washcloth wet with really hot water, ring it out, and put it on your head, making sure to cover the wonkiest parts of your hair. Leave it on while you brush your teeth. Remove the washcloth and fluff. You may need to use a curling or flatiron on a few spots. It’s like magic. The weight of the washcloth helps flatten crazy spots and the steam calms it all down while at the same time sort of rejuvenating the style.
Seriously, try it.
• Sal Apr 29 at 6:12 am Reply Reply
Thanks Stephanie…..I’m gonna try this!
21. Corie Jan 02 at 10:43 pm Reply Reply
I’ve been a night time showerer for years because I am so NOT a morning person. I go to bed with wet hair and let it dry on its own overnight. In the morning I either use the curling/straightening iron on it (depending on which I’m using at the time) if I’m wearing it straight or stick my head under the faucet to get it wet again if I’m wearing it curly (since I let it air dry then, too). If I’m doing the curly thing I get my hair wet as soon as I get up, wrap it in a towel and let it dry a bit while I brush my teeth and put in my contacts, and then I style it. Once I’m don’t with my hair I do my makeup and get dressed.
One of the things I started doing after I had my son was getting up early enough that I could get myself completely ready to go and the car loaded with my work stuff and his day care stuff before I woke him up to get ready. It didn’t always work out as planned – sometimes he would wake up early and I’d have to juggle things around – but most of the time it worked. I’ll do the same thing when I go back to work in a few weeks after having my daughter (although I’m REALLY not looking forward to getting up at 4:45 again!).
22. Kristin Jan 03 at 4:57 pm Reply Reply
I’m so excited about this post and the comments too! I really want to try the tip about using dry shampoo at night because my hair is so fine/thin and gets greasy so fast, dry shampoo barely helps. (If my hair is not squeaky clean, it kind of sticks together and leaves spots in the top/back where you can see the scalp. Ugh)
Also, this morning I tried Amy’s suggestion of a messy side bun, and since I don’t normally do anything to my hair except let it hang down, I’ve gotten more compliments today than I have in a long time! Thanks Amy! :)
23. Jasmine Jan 03 at 7:36 pm Reply Reply
I have fine, straight dark hair. To have lovely voluminous falling waves in the morning I do the hair donut trick.
Here’s an excellent tutorial –
24. autumn Jan 04 at 6:19 pm Reply Reply
Otherwise there the old pomade and nice ponytail trick. Really defined part and smooth everything down with a hair paste product of your choice. I try to only do it once a week to make it look like a “style” choice rather than I didn’t have time to do my hair how I would prefer to.
25. Eileen Oct 31 at 1:35 am Reply Reply
what I have found it doesn’t really make much difference when you wash your hair because if you wash it today tomorrow you sit with the same problem because you can’t wash your hair everyday because it will become damaged what I suggest you do is to place a stocking over your hair to keep it in place so that it won’t become all mattered and miss placed you can style it before you do that I have tried it and it does work
26. Jen Jan 21 at 3:45 pm Reply Reply
This is great! I shower at night often and can definitely use these tips!
27. Kerry Feb 21 at 2:41 pm Reply Reply
I have always been a shower at night person, for just about as long as I can remember. I have long, wavy hair and usually when I get out of the shower I’ll put some mousse and anti frizz cream in it then pull my hair in a bun sitting on the top of my head. I wake up in the morning, take my hair down, and it’s still ever so slightly damp, but it quickly air dries. The result is beautifully wavy and no frizz what so ever. The bun on the top of the head really helps keep the hair out of my face and so I can roll around in bed without having a big bump to deal with making it uncomfortable to lie down. Sometimes if I’m feeling it I’ll do a quick french braid (being careful not to pull or break my hair), which gives a tighter wave/curl effect.
28. Sal Apr 29 at 6:09 am Reply Reply
I have wavy hair and always wash in the morning. I find the first day my waves are pretty and bouncy but the second day is disastrous! my hair looks terrible, scruffy and kind of frizzy. Products make it look even worse and oily! HELP
1. How to Look Great Before You Wake Up | Soshable | Social Media Blog - Aug 06
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| 435 |
Hopefully, we can avoid World War III
If nuclear missiles aren't launched from North Korea in the next few days, then the United States can breathe a collective sigh of relief.
Former NBA basketball flake Dennis Rodman this week visited the oppressive and dangerous country, mysterious and dangerous in both its closed society and nuclear threat.
But Rodman, known in his 15-year NBA career for his crazy antics and bi-polar personality, is riding to the diplomatic rescue.
He declared his eternal friendship Thursday with North Korea's supreme leader, Kim Jong Un.
"You have a friend for life," Rodman told him as they sat next to each other to watch an unusual basketball exhibition in Pyongyang, North Korea.
Didn't see that one coming, a union of "The Worm" and Jong Un. There aren't two bigger opposites on the planet. It's funny just picturing those two together.
Rodman was with a group that included Harlem Globetrotters Bull Bullard, Buckets Blakes and Moose Weekes.
But there was no international incident. In fact, Rodman was spreading the love for Jong Un, who is reportedly a basketball fan.
"I come in peace. I love the people of North Korea!" Rodman wrote on Twitter when he arrived in Pyongyang earlier in the week.
Later, Rodman tweeted that he was "honored to represent The United States of America."
Later, he tweeted, "I'm not a politician. Kim Jung Un & North Korean people are basketball fans. I love everyone. Period. End of story."
According to CNN,the weeklong trip by these "basketball diplomats" is not an official U.S. mission, but for a TV documentary production. The video will be shown in an installment of a monthly series produced by Vice Magazine for HBO.
The visit comes at time when tension is again heightened between North Korea and the West. Earlier this week, North Korea threatened "miserable destruction" in response to routine military exercises planned between South Korea and the United States.
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| 255 |
Halladay deadline set
Posted: Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Toronto Blue Jays general manager J.P. Ricciardi still hasn't received an appropriate trade offer for Roy Halladay and has set a July 28 deadline to complete a deal for the 2003 Cy Young Award winner.
"At this point, it's probably unlikely that we'll trade Doc," Ricciardi said Tuesday.
MLB Notebook
Baseball's nonwaiver trade deadline is July 31.
Back problem shelves Wakefield: All-Star knuckleballer Tim Wakefield is headed to the disabled list.
The Boston Red Sox said Wakefield, who turns 43 next week, has a strained lower back.
Right-hander Clay Buchholz was recalled from Triple-A Pawtucket to start in Wakefield's place tonight against the Texas Rangers.
Danks to miss start: John Danks will miss his scheduled start tonight for the Chicago White Sox against the Tampa Bay Rays because of a blister on his left index finger.
Carlos Torres will be called up from Triple-A Charlotte to start in his place.
The White Sox do not expect Danks to miss more than one start.
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| 231 |
Odile Mary Zientek
Posted: Saturday, December 22, 2007
Odile Mary Zientek, 87, of Amarillo died Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2007.
Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. today in St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church with Monsignor Joseph Tash as celebrant. Burial will be in Llano Cemetery by Schooler Funeral Home, 4100 S. Georgia St.
Born Jan. 5, 1920, in Port au Prince, Haiti, to Clotilde and Sylvester Suhre, she was raised in Le Havre, France. She came to the United States in 1938, living in Baltimore, where she met and married Ralph John Zientek. After living in Chicago and Cumberland, Md., they became longtime residents of Amarillo.
She was a member of the Art Alliance and the Amarillo Little Theatre. She was also a charter member of the HPBH Auxiliary and a member of St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church Altar Guild.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ralph.
Survivors include two sons, Ralph Zientek Jr. and wife Edy of Victoria and David Zientek and wife Colleen of Austin; a daughter, Odile Tyler and husband John of Houston; seven grandchildren, Grace, John, Rachel and Daniel Tyler and Emily, Sarah and Kate Zientek.
The family suggests memorials be to the Amarillo Museum of Art, P.O. Box 447, Amarillo, TX 79178.
Amarillo Globe-News, Dec. 22, 2007
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| 608 |
U.S. soldiers injured in ambush
Posted: Sunday, July 28, 2002
BAGRAM, Afghanistan - Five American soldiers were injured and two Afghan militiamen were killed Saturday in a 4-hour gun battle in eastern Afghanistan during a search for Taliban and al-Qaida fighters thought holed up in the lawless region.
At least three of those who opened fire on the U.S. and Afghan troops from a mud-brick compound also were killed, said Col. Roger King, military spokesman at Bagram, the main U.S. base in Afghanistan. One attacker was wounded and is now in U.S. custody.
It was the fifth time U.S. forces have been attacked since hostility against them rose sharply after a U.S. air strike July 1 that Afghan officials say killed 25 people at a village wedding party.
The wounded soldiers were flown to Bagram. Four of them, wounded early in the attack, had injuries that were not life-threatening. The condition of the fifth, wounded late in the gunfight, was not immediately known.
The Khost region, about 90 miles southeast of Kabul, the capital, is regarded as one of the most insecure areas of Afghanistan and forces of the U.S.-led coalition have repeatedly conducted operations there aimed at flushing out holdouts of the Taliban and al-Qaida.
It is exceptionally difficult terrain, where soldiers clamber among arid, steep mountains that provide an array of hiding places for fugitives and perches for snipers. Mud houses cling to slopes above the passable byways.
King said about 50 U.S. soldiers and allied Afghan militia were trying to confirm intelligence about an enemy operative in the area when they came under small-arms fire about 1 p.m.
The injured soldiers' names were not released pending notification of relatives.
King said a team was continuing reconnaissance in the area.
"It suggests that we're facing a committed enemy," King said. "It suggests what we've tried to say all along, that this is not a quick fix, it's not going to be over tomorrow. It will be a long drawn-out campaign. ...
"We are doing a lot of our operations in there because of its proximity to the border, because of the history of the area and its connection to the people we are looking for," King said. "Those things work together to make the border region a focal point."
Afghan anger against the United States has risen since the July 1 air strike that Afghans say killed 48 people - 25 of them celebrating a wedding - and wounded 117 in Uruzgan, in the center of the country.
U.S. officials say they believe civilians were killed, but have not said how many. Officials say the attack was provoked by persistent anti-aircraft fire from sites in the village. The military is investigating the incident.
Since then, U.S. troops have come under fire five times.
On July 13, a U.S. convoy was attacked while traveling along a road between Bagram and Kabul. No one was injured.
Two days earlier, a U.S. Special Forces compound near Kandahar was hit by grenades and small arms. Again, there were no injuries.
In a separate incident the same day, a U.S. soldier from the 82nd Airborne Division suffered a concussion when a bullet struck his helmet while on patrol near Kandahar.
On July 2, a U.S. military convoy was fired on as it returned from the hospital in Kandahar where Afghan victims of the U.S. air strike were being treated. One soldier was shot in the foot.
Fifteen U.S. servicemen have been killed in combat or hostile situations in Afghanistan since the U.S.-led anti-terror campaign began last autumn. The most recent fatality occurred May 19.
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| 352 |
In the Nation: Guardsman's court-martial gets under way
Posted: Tuesday, August 31, 2004
FORT LEWIS, Wash. - A court-martial began Monday of a National Guardsman accused of passing military information to undercover agents he thought were al-Qaida members.
Spc. Ryan Anderson, 27, could get life in prison without parole if convicted.
Anderson, a Muslim convert, pleaded innocent Aug. 9 to five counts of trying to provide the al-Qaida terrorist network with information about U.S. troop strength and tactics, and methods for killing American soldiers.
Capt. Jay Stephenson, a spokesman for the military prosecutors, said the charges against Anderson amount to attempted treason.
Anderson's attorney, Maj. Joseph Morse, has refused to comment.
McGreevey's accuser says he will not sue
NEW YORK - A former aide who claims New Jersey Gov. James E. McGreevey sexually harassed him said Monday he will not sue the governor.
The governor's resignation announcement was sufficient admission of his wrongdoing, Golan Cipel said in a statement released Monday by an Israeli public relations agency. Cipel is in seclusion with his family in Israel.
McGreevey announced Aug. 12 that he is gay and would resign from office because he had an extramarital affair with a man. Administration sources identified the other man in the relationship as Cipel.
McGreevey has said the relationship with consensual.
But Cipel denied he is gay, and insisted he had been sexually harassed and pressured by the governor.
Florida's Supreme Court to hear Schiavo case
On The Net:
Florida Supreme Court: www.flcourts .org/pubinfo/schiavo/index.html
Terri Schindler-Schiavo Foundation: www.terris fight.orgP>
American Civil Liberties Union of Florida: www.aclufl.org
CLEARWATER, Fla. - The Florida Supreme Court will hear arguments in the Terri Schiavo case today.
The brain-damaged woman is at the center of one of the nation's longest, most bitter right-to-die disputes, one that has pitted her husband against her parents.
The question before the court is whether the law that Gov. Jeb Bush signed in October to keep 40-year-old Schiavo alive violates her constitutional right to privacy and the separation of powers between the branches of Florida's government.
Trending this week:
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| 653 |
Copper Thefts Reflect Desperate Financial Times
Copper Caper
By Mark Anderson
A disturbing symptom of America’s economic downtown is that copper from air conditioners, wiring, gravemarkers—anything thieves can get their hands on—is fair game in the ever-expanding scrapping racket, carried out by a cashstrapped element of the populace that cannibalizes nearly everything in its path.
This scene is being played out across the country. In the case of Georgia, Tom Gillis, an Avondale, Ga. police officer, told this writer that he had to help form a three municipality task force to fight the metal-stealing frenzy that is growing not only geographically, but also in the variety of objects stolen and the sheer audacity involved in taking them.
“This week a graveyard got hit for dozens of bronze markers,” Gillis told AFP. “We’ve even had manhole covers stolen. I also had a stack of [stolen] state-direction signs with ‘Georgia Department of Transportation’ stamped on the back of them.”
Police in Georgia and across the country are partnering with scrap yards so the type and quantity of metal traded in for cash can be monitored, much in the way that pawnshops are watched when there are spikes in stolen merchandise.
In DeKalb County east of Atlanta, within the area of Gillis’s task force, police broke up a ring that stole dozens of air conditioning units worth $200,000. Chicago thieves stole two air conditioners from an animal shelter, costing the facility $25,000.
Even indirect fatalities have resulted. Vandals who stripped copper from Miami streetlights contributed to the death of Thelma Morrow. A Toyota Corolla struck her on a rainy September night.
“The driver told police the streetlight outages helped make the crash difficult to avoid, and firefighters needed emergency floodlights to tend to Mrs.Morrow. She died weeks later at age 52,” the South Florida Sun-Sentinel sadly noted.
Gillis is warning homeowners everywhere to lock their crawl-space entrances or scrappers might literally yank the plumbing right out from under their homes. The nation’s countless foreclosures and abandoned homes are similarly a major target. But the scrappers hardly stop there. According to the East Peoria Times-Courier, Rep. Mike Unes (R-Ill.) has filed H.B. 3825 to make the resale of stolen metals harder.
“This summer alone, dozens of households in our region have been the targets of copper and aluminum theft, especially copper coils found in commercial air conditioners. Thieves are also targeting local churches, farms, and businesses causing tens of thousands of dollars of damages,” Unes told the Times-Courier.
Illinois farmer Ernie Runyon’s irrigation systems have been hit hard. Last summer, more than a dozen of his 31 irrigators were robbed of their copper wire. One irrigator was hit three separate times. The loss is $4,000 to $10,000 per irrigator. His insurance provider canceled his policy covering these systems because of the number of claims.
Unes’s legislation provides an example that could help stem the tide. His bill orders metal dealers to no longer pay cash for air conditioners, condensers or evaporator coils. This includes any type of copper. Moreover, payments cannot be made at transaction time. Instead, they can only be finalized after three business days have passed—and only by check or money order. Scrap yards must keep better records and cannot purchase anything marked as belonging to the government or a business.
Amid these acts of desperation, iron and steel air conditioner cages are selling nearly as fast as air conditioners are being stolen—a hot item to deny thieves some cool cash.
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| 1,051 |
High gas prices more likely due to oiligopoly than collusion
The knee-jerk reaction of many Canadians, including Industry Minister Tony Clement, is to assume that high gas prices and inflated profit margins are likely to be explained by collusion among the big oil companies to fix prices at higher than acceptable levels. It may well be true that that there are price setting agreements reached among the major players in Canada, as Lorne Gunter suggests has happened before, but explicit collusion is not the only plausible explanation for high refining margins in Canada. The refinery sector should be under the lens of the Competition Bureau because the potential exists for the abuse of market power in this sector due to high concentration ratios, significant barriers to entry, and a product market with inelastic short run demand. Market power does not imply collusion or some grand conspiracy – it simply implies that the competitive forces in the market for refined products aren’t sufficient to drive prices down to marginal cost.
There is no question that oligopoly, or oil-igopoly if you will, exists in the Canadian refining sector. Canadian refinery capacity is a little under 1.85 million barrels per day (bpd), of which 85% is controlled by the 5 largest operators – what economists refer to as the 5-firm concentration ratio. The major players are Suncor (380,000 bpd), Imperial Oil (500,000 bpd), Irving (300,000 bpd) and Shell (172,000 bpd after closing its Montreal refinery). Generally speaking, a 4- or 5-firm concentration ratio above 50% would raise concerns about market power, while a 4- or 5-firm concentration ratio above 80% indicates a near-monopoly.
Since refineries have quasi-fixed capacity, and it would be clear if refiners were systematically rationing quantities to force higher prices, we should expect them to compete in the prices they set at the rack. This is where the high entry costs and time frames really matter. In the standard Bertrand model of price competition among firms in an oligopoly, the gains to any single firm from lowering their price relative to their competitors’ lies in taking over some or all of their market share. These potential gains to cutting prices serve to drive prices down to marginal cost even with a small number of firms in the market.
With a refinery, large shifts in market share aren’t possible. A refinery operator cannot decide to lower their prices tomorrow, and expect to be able to supply all 1.9 million bpd of refined products, since they do not have to capacity to do so, and could not create that capacity in the short term. So, in this case, a refinery which lowers their prices will not be able to capture a much greater market share, and they will simply earn a little less money per barrel and enable higher margins for their downstream clients at the retail level.
While the capacity constraints on each of the individual firms make it more likely that price exceeds marginal costs, there is a limit on the degree to which firms with market power can extract high margins – the limit comes from the twin threats of entry or regulation.
The refinery industry has significant fixed costs of entry – you can’t build a refinery quickly to take advantage of high margins. Rather, you must invest billions of dollars in capital on the belief that those margins will continue to exist. As many have suggested, increasing refinery capacity will likely lower margins, which in and of itself makes investing in a new refinery less attractive. In this type of an environment, we would expect to see limit pricing behavior in which existing refineries each benefit from keeping margins high, but not so high as to encourage entry. A second incentive, and perhaps where some of the value lies in the political posturing we have seen this week in Canada and the US, is the need to limit prices to avoid regulatory intervention in the market. In both of these cases, this could imply that the collusive outcome has lower prices than if there were no collusion at all.
So, is there collusion in gasoline markets? I have no idea. The potential certainly exists in the refinery sector for either explicit or tacit collusion. But, it’s just as likely that the collusion serves exactly the purpose to which Lorne Gunter alludes in his piece – to keep prices lower than they might otherwise be to avoid new entrants, government intervention, and/or long-term demand destruction – as it is that coordination exists to keep prices high. The refinery sector just isn’t set up so for competitive forces to push prices downward in the first place.
If you want to decrease refinery margins, the only guaranteed ways to do it are by increasing the elasticity of gasoline demand through more public transit, denser communities, more flexible work environments, or by deploying alternative energy sources for or means of transportation. If the impact of high gasoline prices were a sharp decrease in consumption, then you would start to see competitive forces erode margins much more quickly than a dressing down before a Parliamentary committee ever will.
4 responses to “High gas prices more likely due to oiligopoly than collusion”
1. godot10
Refining is an oligopoly because it is 99% of the time a low margin business with which the government interferes with regularly with constantly changing regulations.
Refiners don’t control the price of their major input cost (oil) nor their major output products (gasoline, diesel, heating oil), all of which are independently trading in transparent regulated commodities markets (mostly the Nymex).
i.e. Refining is a necessary but usually marginally profitable business for those who engage in it.
The reason for the current spike in the crack spreads is that gasoline is trading off the world price for oil (Brent) whereas the North American price of oil (WTI) is depressed because Cushing, Oklahoma is full to the brim with oil with insufficient takeaway capacity.
Refiners who have WTI oil as an input are currently making a killing. Refiners (like those in Montreal and points East and in the US Gulf Coast) are having a tough slog because their oil inputs trade off the world price.
The fact that 15% of the US refining capacity is currently under the threat of flooding is also impacting North American gas prices.
2. David Wilson
“Lorne Gunter eludes” (?) … do you possibly mean ‘alludes’?
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Sign up ×
Within the last few days, my Wi-fi setting keeps switching to "off".
It does this even when the screen is on and I'm actively using the device.
I've checked the couple apps I still have that help with conserving battery and none of them seem to affect wi-fi. In any event I haven't installed any recently nor updated any settings in them.
What should I be checking? How can I fix this?
Motorola Droid, Android 2.2.1, unrooted
share|improve this question
Have you tried more than one WAP or is this all happening on one? – Matt Feb 3 '11 at 22:09
You would probably know this, but have you checked to see if you have any rogue Tasker profiles configured? – user739 Feb 3 '11 at 22:51
2 Answers 2
I had this happen to me once. I think it had something to do with WiFi being turned on while flight mode was on, but I don't know why. I fixed it by:
1. Turning off WiFi
2. Turning on flight mode
3. Rebooting
4. Turning off flight mode
5. Rebooting
6. Turning on WiFi
share|improve this answer
up vote 1 down vote accepted
Well color me dumb.
I'd recently installed an app called "Autopilot". It's supposed to put the device in Airplane mode when there's no cellular signal. I work in the middle of an office building so it happens a lot. It burns through battery while it tries to establish a signal.
The settings led me to believe that it wouldn't touch wi-fi unless I turned a specific setting on. I didn't, because I didn't want to mess with that.
However, after I uninstalled the app, the behavior has stopped.
I should have checked that first.
Let that be a lesson: Just because you don't think it's that new app you installed giving you grief, it just might be after all.
share|improve this answer
Your Answer
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| 216 |
6fd3 Mr. Billy C. Pool Skip Navigation
Angelo State University
University Health Clinic and Counseling Services
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Information for:
Mr. Billy C. Pool
• Profile Image
University Health Clinic and Counseling Services
Director of Counseling Services
• Bachelor’s degree in sociology, Angelo State University, 1978
• Master’s degree in counseling psychology, Angelo State University, 1992
Years in practice: I have 25 years experience working in mental health counseling with 16 years working in psychiatric hospitals, and for the past nine years as director of counseling at Angelo State University. My experience working in psychiatric care provided me a background in diagnosing and treating a variety of mental health issues using both psychotherapy and medication to provide the maximum therapeutic benefit for our patients.
I like my job because: I enjoy the challenge of working with college students because I find them to be intelligent, motivated and open to change. I also enjoy working with the interdisciplinary team at the University Health Clinic, where we can provide a holistic program of care for our students. The counselors work in conjunction with the medical staff, which allows us to provide a comprehensive program of care and follow-up treatment for our students.
Outside interests and hobbies: In my off-time, I enjoy music, activities with my family, gardening and playing with my dog, Max.
31.441924; -100.463854
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Sam Ko, MD, MBA
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Sam Ko, MD, MBA's Profile
Sam Ko graduated with honors from Seattle University achieving the status of Bannan Scholar. He then received a combined MD and MBA at the University of Rochester, receiving an International Medicine Grant and graduating Beta Gamma Sigma.
Currently, he is in Emergency Medicine training at the Loma Linda University in California and realizing the power of the "visual stethoscope" that ED bedside ultrasound provides.
Want more information?
Sam Ko's CV
Sam's Emergency Medicine Blog
Disclaimer: All opinions expressed here are those of the author and not of the employer.
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| 1,258 |
Sparrow Is The Best Email App For Your iPhone Since Apple's Own
Sparrow by Sparrow icon
Sparrow ($2.99) by Sparrow is the much-anticipated email app for your iPhone. Is it everything you dreamed of in an iPhone email client?
I've been using Sparrow on my Mac since the first beta. It is my main email client, and I just can't bring myself to go back to Mail on Mac. I love the beautifully designed interface intertwined with simplicity. It also has the best elements of what was then known as Tweetie, which I loved. In fact, the app just makes mail not feel so boring. So when I heard that Sparrow was coming for iPhone, I was ecstatic about the release and kept up-to-date throughout the development.
Sparrow for iPhone fully supports IMAP email accounts (POP is not supported yet). This means that you can use your Gmail, Google Apps, iCloud, Yahoo, AOL, Mobile Me, and even custom IMAP email accounts with Sparrow. Seeing as how this covers most email accounts, you should be fine. Unless you use something like Google Exchange.
I highly recommend linking up your Facebook account (if you have one) with Sparrow, because it will retrieve profile photos for your contacts. I have it enabled on the desktop version as well, and I must admit that being able to put a picture to every name really does make all the difference.
With the iPhone app, the design still retains most of the elements from the desktop version. You still have the Tweetie-like sidebars, although because of the limited space estate on the iPhone, it’s divided into three panels: Accounts, Folders/Labels, and Messages. You can navigate between them via buttons, or with intuitive swipe gestures.
Sparrow by Sparrow screenshot
The Accounts view allows you to check individual accounts, or you can go for the Unified Inbox. Just like the regular mail app, you will be able to see a count of how many unread messages you have in each. A simple tap on an account will take you directly to the Inbox, though you can swipe left-to-right to access your folders and labels.
Ever have a moment when you need to search through your mail? I know I do – fortunately, just like the Mac app, you can search through all of your messages at the top of the messages screen, and filter by From, To, Subject, or All. You can even pull-to-refresh to check for any new messages, something that I wish the native Mail app had (it’s kind of amazing that Apple has yet to implement it).
A message can be swiped on (from right-to-left) to reveal a contextual menu, similar to the Quick Swipe from the official Twitter app. With this menu, you can quickly reply to a message, star it, label it, archive or delete it. It's a quick way to do something with a message without actually opening it. You can also batch move, archive, and delete, which can really come in handy. Of course, there will be times when you have to read a message. Just tap on it to view it, and you will get a beautiful format for viewing individual messages. The From information is revealed, but you can always tap on Details to reveal more information. Sparrow presents HTML and plain text emails just fine, so nothing changes there. You can quickly mark the message as unread by tapping the empty circle, reply, or use the bottom menu bar for more options. If it’s part of a thread, swiping up and down on the screen allows you to quickly navigate between each threaded message, offering much more convenience than the default Mail app ever did.
Composing messages is quite a different experience than with the normal Mail app, thanks to the two-step composer feature. When composing a message, you’ll first see the “Send to:” screen, where you pick who you want to send the message to. Sparrow features the Smart Contact list, which will show your most frequently contacted people at the top of the list. Each name will show a Cc or Bcc button, which you just tap on to add that person to the designated field. The best part is that each is color coded – normal recipients are blue, CCs are green, and BCCs are orange. This is much more elegant than Apple’s way, and it’s much easier to identify the people you’re sending to.
The actual compose area is pretty much what you would expect from a mail app, with the subject and message body. If you wish to attach a photo (either imported or just snap a new one), you can do so by tapping the paperclip icon in the subject line. Thumbnails will appear in that area once attached; swipe back to the beginning to add more. When you send a message, you’ll be able to see the progress at the bottom of the screen, just as you would in the default Mail app (and even desktop version of Sparrow). It all just feels natural to me.
Sparrow by Sparrow screenshot
I’m absolutely loving the animations when navigating through the app. The design and experience also feel perfect to me, though of course I can be a bit biased since it’s my default mail client on my Mac.
It’s clear that the developers and designers behind Sparrow put a lot of effort into creating the app with the perfect amount of polish, and it really shines. However, I noticed that you can’t swipe back to the messages list while you’re viewing a message – not sure why this is the case, but it feels inconsistent with the rest of the app. It’s just a small nitpick of mine that could hopefully be addressed in the future with the developers. Oh, and it seems that the app is only usable in portrait mode, but I would imagine that landscape support is in the future.
Now, the biggest complaint will be that there is no push or local notifications in Sparrow for iPhone. While the beta versions seem to have included notifications, it did not make it into the public release. The reason behind this is because Sparrow was "abusing" a VOIP-only API to be continuously running in the background. Apple did not allow this, so they had to resubmit the app sans local notifications. Also, the developers don't really want to channel your mail through a push server, since they would be liable for security of your information.
However, if you really want notifications, you could always help them convince Apple to change their mind.
Regardless of push notifications or not (there are other workarounds to this, such as Boxcar), I am officially going to drop Apple's Mail client just like I did on my MacBook Pro. Sparrow has a great design and interface, and it improves the email experience on my iPhone greatly. It is pretty much everything I've been waiting for (excluding push notifications), and I couldn't be happier.
On another note, please keep in mind that Sparrow is not a universal app. Why they decided to not make a universal or iPad app is beyond me, but hopefully they’ll be working on that soon, especially since I’d imagine the app would look amazing on a third generation iPad.
Let us know: will Sparrow be replacing Mail on iPhone for you?
Mentioned Apps
Related Articles
Sparrow Is The Best Email App For Your iPhone Since Apple's Own
Sparrow Is The Best Email App For Your iPhone Since Apple's Own
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Architect: T. Butler Wilson
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1938 – Ritz Cinema, Athlone, Co. Westmeath
Architect: Michael Scott & Associates The original perspective drawings for the Ritz Cinema, include large areas of glazing on the...
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| 1,854 |
LAS CRUCES >> After the tour of the historic Amador Hotel with El Paso Ghost Tours, Robert Moore felt a burning sensation at the fold of his arm.
"I didn't feel it until I came here (downstairs)," Moore said holding out his arm so ghost investigators could take photos. "And all of the sudden, it started burning."
Two scratch marks in the shape of a crude "Y" got redder by the minute.
It was Moore's first time on a ghost tour and Saturday night was one of the more active nights for a small group of about 15 curious tourists and ghost enthusiasts.
"I was really shaky and really hot," said Priscilla Ortiz, another tourist who was scratched by some paranormal presence.
While this was going on, a flash light in the room was flickering off and on. Ortiz began feeling her right arm get warm and had a feeling like she was being touched, she said.
Ortiz had a pair of scratches on her lower back, which started out as a burning sensation, just like Moore's.
"Right after I was scratched, we got really scared and we got out of there," she said. "I do believe in ghosts and maybe they target people that are believers."
The Amador Hotel is one of the oldest buildings in Las Cruces with its original structure built in 1866. It's a favorite location for El Paso Ghost Tours because numerous ghosts supposedly make it their home.
"We get lots of shadows here, a lot of meter play, flashlights turning on and off," said Michael Starkey, an investigator with the tour group. "And it's getting more active. They (the ghosts) seem to know how to interact with the equipment."
During the tour, guests had a chance to hold ghost meters that gauge the amount of energy in the atmosphere. When a spirit's energy is near, these meters will light up and their needles will go from 0 to 5. The investigators use these instruments to communicate with the other side.
Andi Murphy Sun-News A group of visitors on an El Paso Ghost Tour of the Amador Hotel watch ghosts meters respond to paranormal activity on the floor of
Andi Murphy Sun-News A group of visitors on an El Paso Ghost Tour of the Amador Hotel watch ghosts meters respond to paranormal activity on the floor of one of the rooms.
Annie, the spirit of a little girl who resides in one of the upstairs rooms, seemed particularly playful Saturday night. As guests filled her room, she played with a flashlight and -- while communicating through the ghost meters -- told investigators that next time guests come, they should bring a purple toy for her.
"It's not so much to get you to believe in ghosts, but to get you to experience what we've experienced and let you make up your own mind," Starkey said.
Amador Hotel is one of the most haunted places in Las Cruces, and there are a few other places in town that allegedly harbor more malevolent spirits who bang on walls and scream aloud.
"That place (the old Doña Ana County court house and jail) was one of the most active places we've ever done," said Patrick Olona, founder of Southwest Paranormal Investigators, a Las Cruces group. "One of our investigators was attacked. We captured it on video, audio, everything. One of the most haunted places in Las Cruces."
Captured on film were shadow people and an invisible force disconnecting a camera cable. Audio recorders caught voices and answers to the investigator's questions.
"These were intelligent haunts. They knew we were there. They interacted with us," Olona said. "They hear us, they probably see us."
Andi Murphy Sun-News Don Ward, historian for El Paso Ghost Tours, takes a picture of scratches on Robert Moore’s arm at the historic Amador Hotel.
Andi Murphy Sun-News Don Ward, historian for El Paso Ghost Tours, takes a picture of scratches on Robert Moore's arm at the historic Amador Hotel. An unseen, paranormal presence caused the burning scratches while he was touring the upstairs rooms, Moore said.
On Olona's list of most haunted locations is the Genesis building on the NMSU campus. Investigators don't even need equipment to hear voices and see shadows.
"Some of them were vicious, vicious pounding," he said.
Also on every ghost chasers list is the old Memorial Medical Hospital, Rio Grande Theatre, Tom Young's, Double Eagle, Dripping Springs, the old city hall and the Fountain Theatre.
SPI explores haunted areas as a hobby. They offer their services to the public for free if people feel their home is haunted, Olona said. And he's always overwhelmed with calls from private home owners who are scared to go home and go to sleep because they've seen shadows, balls of light or full, ghostly figures.
Andi Murphy Sun-News Visitors hope that flash pictures and the grid pattern of a laser pen will document ghostly presences at the Amador Hotel, one of
Andi Murphy Sun-News Visitors hope that flash pictures and the grid pattern of a laser pen will document ghostly presences at the Amador Hotel, one of the most haunted places in Las Cruces.
"I'm convinced that we're surrounded," he said. "I'm getting calls from people in new homes too."
Haro Paranormal Investigators also deal with restless spirits in Las Cruces.
"They (ghosts) were once people and they should be treated as a person," said Alina Haro of HPI. "Not all ghosts are stuck, most can come and go as they please."
Paranormal activity happens when a location looks familiar to a ghost. 'They' could even be loved ones or family members coming back to say "hi," she said.
"I think it is natural to be afraid of something you can't see," Haro said. "You hear noises or see a shadow and there is no explanation for it. I have been scared many times on investigations and tours, and lately more so because I feel they are trying to get my attention and they want me to know they are there, perhaps to pass on a message."
Andi Murphy may be reached at 575-541-5453.
El Paso Ghost Tours
Where: Amador Hotel, 180 W. Amador Ave.
When: 8 to 10 p.m. Oct. 26 and every second and fourth Saturday of the month
How much: $15 if reserved online or $20 at the door. A portion of the proceeds will go to the restoration of Amador Hotel.
Info: Find information on all upcoming ghost tours at and 1-877-GHOST-10
Ghost hunting classes
Haro Paranormal Investigators hosts ghost hunting classes at Doña Ana Community College. The next set of classes, including one for kids 8 to 15, are slated to start Jan. 22 and Feb. 26. Info: 575-527-7527 and
Local ghost stories
Readers shared some chilling stories on Facebook.
"My mom passed away in October of 2000. Then 6 days later she appeared in her bedroom sitting on the end of my dad's bed smoking a cigarette. She looked great. Her hair looked (like it was) 15 years ago and her clothes and sneakers were the kind she wore 20 years ago. She was smiling. It was a real special visitation."
-- Patti Eileen Adams
"I used to live in Stahmann's Farms with my family and almost every night we would see a Native American's face on the window. He was very ugly, scary looking and had long hair in a braid with feathers. I was about 5 years old when I lived there... We heard a lot of noises in this house. I also saw my grandma standing by the dresser of my room next to my bed after the night of her funeral."
-- Elvira Cortez
"There is a lady that walks the road by the cemetery in Silver City. When you pull over to help, she disappears. Seen her four times."
-- April Bledsoe
"My friend had a ghost in her house in Tortugas named Ophelia. She lived in her back room and I used to stay there. My cat refused to go in that room and when I would take him in there, he would flip out! I always felt Ophelia's presence there."
-- Rosemarie Toni Wiseman
"Mesquite cemetery. I've seen dark shadows run so fast from point to point in a blink of an eye. And also hear little kids crying down the road at night. It's pretty creepy, check it out."
-- Jose Ramirez
"Moved to Las Cruces from California in 2006. Bought property in the East Mesa area and when I was unpacking lots of boxes I took a break for about 30 minutes and when I went back to unpacking dishes they were all loaded in the dishwasher and it had already gone through the whole cycle and put away. I never loaded the washer and I sure didn't put them all away. I was all alone in the house and the time. Also, even though my son is here with me, a few times I have seen him and he was all grown and he would look at me and smile. My son was not at the house at the time; he was in town."
-- Terrie Ginn
"My mother lives in an old adobe house in the Alameda Railroad District. Although I never had a supernatural experience the few short years that I had lived there, my mother related to me that on several occasions, while she was in bed, she would feel that someone would sit down at the end of the bed. When she would turn on the light, nobody was there. Several years passed. My mother approached me one day asking if I would be willing to take over the house (house sitting). The first few months were uneventful. One night I was in bed and almost asleep. Then I felt it! The mattress at the end of the bed definitely went down as if somebody had sat on it! Heart racing and fully awake, I fumbled for the light switch and ... nobody was there! More often than not, I would be in bed, almost asleep and I would feel the pressure on the end of my bed as if someone who was very weary and very old was sitting down. I was no longer alarmed by it. I named him El Abuelito (The Grandfather) because that's how I perceived him to be."
-- Carola F. Griffin
"In June 2011, my dad died unexpectedly -- which left us all devastated. In December of that same year, I was working security at a local church here in Las Cruces. It was still daylight when I was done with my shift. As I was walking towards my pickup from the left driver side, I noticed my dad sitting inside on the driver seat looking straight ahead and I could see his left side of his face. He looked the same as the last day I seen him in the hospital before he died. While I approached the truck, I was not afraid cause I knew it was my dad, but when I got closer he disappeared."
-- Angelina Sedillo
Videos of other local haunts
A shadow person is seen crawling across the floor at the old city hall building in downtown Las Cruces. By Southwest Paranormal Investigators
A white ball of light flies past a ghost investigator as they explore the Carlotta Room at the Double Eagle. By Southwest Paranormal Investigators.
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| 118 |
ONJava.com -- The Independent Source for Enterprise Java
oreilly.comSafari Books Online.Conferences.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
The Cocoa Controller Layer
Subject: Save and Loading the Array-Data
Date: 2004-04-12 05:55:02
From: AlexKid
Thats a nice article of a great technologie. But could somebody show me the way to save the data colectet in the text view to a file and to load it again. I have some idees but I don t know realy how to do this.
I hope somebody can show me a tuturial or an example program. Or tell me what i have to do.
Thanx AlexKid
1 to 1 of 1
1. Save and Loading the Array-Data
2004-04-15 05:51:49 kool [View]
1 to 1 of 1
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| 1,254 |
PHP DevCenter
oreilly.comSafari Books Online.Conferences.
Looking into Zend Studio 3.0
by John Coggeshall
In early September, Zend launched the new version of their PHP development environment Zend Studio 3.0, which, by many accounts, is a drastic step forward in PHP development technologies. I've acquired a copy of the new Studio, and today I'll try to give you a reasonable rundown of what this new Studio is all about and if it is worth its price tag.
I've been a PHP developer for a long time, using many different development environments in my PHP projects. When I was asked to do a review of the new Zend Studio, I decided that the best way to really judge it was to actually use it in my day-to-day development. So for a week, I set aside my trusted ActiveState Komodo 2.5 and sat down with Zend Studio 3.0. Here is what I found, what I liked, and how it compared to what I was expecting.
What I Liked
From installation to development, there is one word that I can use to describe Zend Studio 3.0 — easy. Unlike many other PHP-supporting development environments, Zend Studio was incredibly intuitive. Installation on both Windows and Linux platforms (I used Red Hat 8) was quick and simple, requiring little effort to get myself started in development. Once installed, the first thing I noticed when comparing it to previous versions was a drastic increase in speed. Zend Studio 3.0 loaded faster and, as I found, responded nicely no matter how quickly I typed, clicked, or stressed the environment. I must say, I didn't expect this performance from a Java-based application. This was quite the pleasant surprise.
Once the studio was installed, I began immediately using it in the development of a PHP project I was working on. Immediately, I was impressed with the intuitive nature of the environment. Although many environments support things like syntax highlighting, Zend Studio took things a step further with integration with many resources I use on a day-to-day basis, such as the online PHP manual, FTP servers, and CVS repositories. A tabbed sidebar let me open documents from the local filesystem, a project, and remote locations via FTP, as well as browse the complete PHP function list. In larger projects, opening multiple scripts is handled nicely by assigning each open file a tab for easy switching. Zend Studio also boasts a robust syntax-highlighting-and-checking and code-completion system that I found very easy to use. (It even supported the still-beta PHP 5 syntax.)
What's Missing
With all of the positives Zend Studio provides, when compared to other environments I have used which cater to PHP, there are a few features I missed. For instance, the lack of any sort of split-pane viewing of scripts (very useful for very large PHP scripts), the inability to un-dock or otherwise move panes within the environment, and the lack of any sort of internal HTML rendering were some major features I found missing.
Editor's Note: Jason Halla points out, "Actually, you can move & re-dock each of the workspace windows in Studio (such as the File System or Output windows). Go to Tools | Customization | Desktop. Look for the 'Dock workspace windows' option — set the drop-down menu to "Enabled". Hit Apply. Now you can drag and drop the workspace windows wherever they suit you best."
Interesting Features
Once you scratch the surface of the Zend Studio, you find that it contains several incredibly valuable tools that can drastically reduce the amount of time needed to develop large-scale PHP applications. From conception to completion, Zend Studio has something for every phase of an application's life cycle.
Note: Although Zend Studio 3.0 does provide support for new PHP 5/Zend Engine 2 syntax, it does not yet provide debugging or profiling capabilities for PHP 5. It is reported that support for these features in PHP 5 will be released following the Beta 2 release of PHP 5.
The first and most commonly sought feature is the studio's remote debugging capabilities. Zend Studio 3.0 supports line-by-line debugging of PHP scripts remotely from within the development environment itself. The debugger is by all measures full-featured, with support for breakpoints, step-throughs, stack traces, and variable watching. It even allows you to preview the contents of the current output buffer. Zend Studio also provides a useful code analyzer, which can help quickly and easily point out common potential problems in your scripts that can lead to both bugs and security vulnerabilities. During my trials of the Studio, I used these features extensively and was quite impressed with how quickly they assisted me in the development of quality PHP scripts.
Since every time a web page powered by PHP is executed, the entire PHP script behind that page is executed, efficiency in large-scale enterprise applications becomes a critical component to success. Once an application has been debugged and is functioning properly, the next logical step is to make each of your scripts function as efficiently as necessary. For this purpose, Zend Studio provides an invaluable remote profiling tool — one of the single biggest strengths of the new Zend Studio. This tool allows developers to profile a script on a function-by-function basis to identify the amount of time each step of execution took to complete. This information can be displayed as a simple itemized list or as a pie chart, allowing you to quickly and easily identify potentially inefficient code in your applications. Even during my trials, I found several different functions and scripts within my own applications that were slower than they should have been. This tool is simply a must-have for anyone interested in developing large-scale enterprise applications in PHP.
On the Server
Beyond the Zend Studio IDE itself (in which you actually do the coding for your applications), an entirely separate facet of Zend Studio resides on your development web server. This server-side component provides the functionality within PHP that allows for the other aforementioned components such as the profiler and debugger to function. However, the server side of Zend Studio also provides a great deal of useful functionality completely independently of the client IDE. The Zend Server Center is a very useful PHP application which, when installed on your server, allows you quick and easy access to all of the configuration settings available in PHP, the Zend-Studio-specific configuration options, and a wealth of information regarding the server itself. Zend Studio also comes with the Zend Information Center, which serves as an online reference manual for the studio and can be accessed by any modern web browser.
When all is said and done, my opinion regarding this product was perfectly clear. When you take Zend Studio as a whole, there is no single product available on the market today that can help you become a more effective developer of PHP applications. For those developers who are looking for a PHP development environment, Zend Studio 3.0 is one of the best choices you can make.
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| 196 |
FDU names Herenda men's hoops coach
3:07 PM, Apr 26, 2013 | comments
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Teaneck, NJ (Sports Network) - Fairleigh Dickinson has named Greg Herenda as its new men's basketball coach.
Herenda spent the past five seasons at UMass-Lowell, where he posted a record of 95-54 en route to becoming the Division II program's all-time winningest coach.
"I cannot tell you how excited my family and I are to be coming back to New Jersey and to be the head coach at Fairleigh Dickinson University," said Herenda, a 52-year-old native of nearby North Bergen. "This is a dream come true. This will be my 30th year of coaching college basketball, and the road has taken me all over the country and the world. It's incredible that I start my Division I career at home."
Herenda has also been a head coach at Division III Cabrini College (2007-08) and Elgin (Ill.) Community College. He's also been an assistant at East Carolina, Yale, Seton Hall and Holy Cross on the Division I level.
Fairleigh Dickinson needed a replacement for Greg Vetrone, whose contract was not renewed after four years and a record of 26-95.
The Sports Network
Most Watched Videos
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| 457 |
Chris Fleck
Wednesday - November 09, 2011
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Mona L. Nomi has been promoted by Bank of Hawaii to vice president of the Investment Management Services Operations Department. Nomi joined Bank of Hawaii in 2010 as a trading process manager. Prior to joining the bank, she was a senior trade operations specialist at Watershed Asset Management in San Francisco, Calif.
Colette Abe has recently joined RIM Design as an interior designer and project manager in the Honolulu office. Prior to joining RIM Design, Abe worked as a designer for Architects Hawaii Ltd. and Leo A. Daly. She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Chaminade University. She is a professional member of the International Interior Design Association (IIDA) and is a LEED Accredited Professional with the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC).
Terry Tanaka has been appointed vice president and branch manager II of Central Pacific Bank’s Mililani Branch. Tanaka comes to Central Pacific Bank with 20 years of banking experience. His responsibilities include developing and executing sales and service strategies, providing and reinforcing exceptional customer service, and managing branch personnel. Prior to joining Central Pacific Bank, Tanaka was vice president and branch manager at Bank of Hawaii’s Wahiawa Branch.
Kenton Eldridge co-founder and partner of Aina Koa Pono and co-founder and managing director of Sennet Capital, has been elected chairman of the Board of Trustees for The Nature Conservancy of Hawai’i. A former U.S. Army intelligence officer who served in Europe and Vietnam, Eldridge has 40 years of business experience, including 25 years in retail management with Federated Department Stores and Duty Free Shoppers. He has served as a mentor and investor for several Hawai’i start-up companies, including Hoku Scientific.
Lance Wilhelm, senior vice president and Hawaii area manager of Kiewit Building Group Inc., has joined Enterprise Honolulu’s Board of Directors. Wilhelm, a veteran of Hawaii’s construction industry, has been with Kiewit for 22 years. He is responsible for the company’s strategic and business planning, construction operations, marketing and business development, contract negotiations, labor relations, personnel development, legal and contract administration, and corporate philanthropic program.Wilhelm is active with several community organizations. He recently chaired the March of Dimes’ 2011 March for Babies. and also serves as a board member for YMCA, Boy Scouts Aloha Council, University of Hawai’i Foundation and Island Pacific Academy.
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Times Supermarket
Tiare Asia and Alex Bing
were spotted at the Sugar Ray's Bar Lounge
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| 553 |
Contact the AMA Service Center:
Error Message ......
Nonthrombogenic Extracorporeal Portosystemic Shunt
Donald W. S. Yim, MD; Akio Wakabayashi, MD; Junichi Hirai, MD; Nisha D. Mukherjee, MD; John E. Connolly, MD
Arch Surg. 1970;100(4):367-371. doi:10.1001/archsurg.1970.01340220043008.
Text Size: A A A
Published online
In spite of ideal present day management, 25% of patients who bleed from esophageal varices continue to succumb to hemorrhage. Those who fail to respond to conservative measures require surgical intervention. Major surgery on a patient already taxed by exsanguinating hemorrhage and hepatic decompensation is accompanied by a high mortality.
White et al,1 Piccone and LeVeen,2 and Christopherson et al3 have recently described the use of an umbilical systemic vein shunt with low operative mortality to control bleeding from esophageal varices. Their reports indicate that flows obtained under existing portosystemic pressure differentials were sufficient to abate exsanguination.
Gott et al4 have described a non thrombogenic coating technique for surfaces using graphite, heparin sodium, and benzalkonium chloride. Zarins et al5 have recently reported their results with splenofemoral or external jugular shunts to relieve portal hypertension in dogs utilizing the Gott graphite-benzalkonium-heparin coating. We6 have developed
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| 788 |
The Spearing Has Stopped But The Anger Lingers
May 17, 1989|By John Husar, Chicago Tribune.
EAGLE RIVER, WIS. — Voices here in the North Woods quiver with anger and hurt.
Eyes are puzzled and fearful.
People feel resentful and ashamed.
Many are galled by their perception from the outside world.
``There was nothing racist about our opposition to the Indian spearfishing,`` insisted a fellow who`d collared me for half an hour in a motel lobby.
Then he described how vile were the Indians to exercise their court-approved treaty rights, how almost everyone up here should have nothing more to do with them, how they should be hurt legislatively for not bowing to the wishes of the whites.
``It`s going to take a long time to heal the wounds,`` a friend confided as we cooked our walleyes over a campfire at dusk on one of the local lakes.
Across the water, the scene was billboard perfect. A crappie fisherman worked the edge of an emerging weedbed. A large beaver rippled the surface beneath our bluff. Three drake mallards pressured their captive jenny into a springtime ritual as old as life itself.
I had to walk only 30 feet to find more dry wood for the crackling fire. To some of us, this might have been a scene from heaven.
But just a week earlier, the crystal waters of these northern lakes had been anything but idyllic. Chippewa spearers were escorted to 106 lakes in several counties by armies of deputies to isolate them from hordes of chanting, harassing protesters, mostly local businessmen who`d never done anything like this before.
There were epithets, rocks and obscenities at the boat landings, occasional gunshots in the woods, prying boats on the water that made the Indians nervous, angry and vengeful. Loud-mouthed drunks turned dignified protests into rowdy scenes of sickening hatred.
One local newspaper dared to demonstrate the depth of that emerging hatred, printing a schoolchild`s classroom drawing of a giant fish spearing an Indian ``brave.``
``I don`t think a lot of people around here are proud of all of this,``
said a moderate businessman who had hoped that the boat ramp confrontations would not simmer out of hand and blacken the image of these communities.
Instead, some 200 protesters were arrested, some of them several times, to make a political point. As cameras turned, the world watched crowds of presumably ordinary Wisconsonians vilify neighbor Indians. These scenes backfired on the protesters, presenting a sense of racial confrontation that may have as negative an effect upon tourism as the spearfishing itself.
The protest leaders felt they were accomplishing their goals, bringing the spearing controversy squarely onto center stage in the minds of state and federal politicians. That hadn`t happened in the four preceding years, when protests were little more than minor squawks. Legislators and congressmen had paid scant attention to what seemed a benign constituency.
Now they saw voters emerging by the thousands, galvanized by fears for their tourism livelihoods. Horrified politicos heard calls for their necks.
That alone might have been enough to lead to a spearing settlement. Politicians count votes, and they saw plenty of angry voters.
The Chippewas also were surprised, and leery of forcing nasty confrontations. Many are lukewarm toward spearing, anyway, and only a comparative handful pursue fish this way. Some of their leaders seemed prepared to offer concessions if safety could be assured while their people carried out legal rights. Maintaining those rights were important to the Chippewas` pride.
Wisconsin`s governor had begged the protesters to avoid any boat ramp confrontations, but they were enjoying this flexing of muscle. They wanted to nail home their point and pressed more numbers onto the ramps. Unfortunately, many included the drunks who made the most obnoxious threats. The issue suddenly had fallen into the wrong hands, articulated by the drunks and dregs. That`s what the world saw in newspapers and on the nightly news, anyway.
``Why does the media play up this racism thing?`` I was asked again and again. ``It`s not a racist issue to us. We`ve gotten along with Indians for years. All we are doing is protecting our livelihoods.``
But few seemed to believe me when I tried to explain that the media does not sit around and hatch ways to present stories. That the media is mainly a bunch of people who want to get their report done and go home, that it only reflects what it hears and sees, what it is shown. That here in northern Wisconsin, the media saw bald hatred and fear. That this media was drawn by assurances of dangerous confrontations. That without them, the media would get bored and go home. That the people up here practically browbeat the media to come and witness the racism.
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| 431 |
What Others Are Saying
May 08, 2006
Part of [Sen. John] McCain's appeal is that he seems to straddle ... partisan political calculations. He's the victim of torture who opposes torture, the man caught in the "Keating Five" ethics scandal who insists on reform, the critic of Iraq policy who insists that America must win the war, the conservative who is beloved by moderates. A McCain candidacy, if he makes the formal decision next year to run, will be rooted in his image as a man of principle. But it will also be something of a balancing act--one that the candidate himself is likely to find uncomfortable.
-- Columnist David Ignatius in The Washington Post
With bluster and bravado, Bolivia's new populist president announced the nationalization of his country's natural gas production. Evo Morales' dispatch of soldiers to guard gas fields is the world's showiest sign of greater state control of energy, but not the only disturbing one. Several countries with rich oil and gas deposits are riding a wave of nationalism and higher energy prices to exert greater government control over these natural resources, cutting the stake of private investors. ... But modern history is dotted with governments which at first jumped at the prospect of oil and gas wealth, only to later land on their keisters.
-- Christian Science Monitor
A congressional emergency spending measure is meant to be a quick response to sudden, unexpected and generally one-time events, the Gulf Coast hurricanes being an excellent example. The emergency bills are handled outside the regular budget process and under much looser rules. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, although obviously serious, hardly qualify as emergencies in the normal sense. Yet that is how the Bush administration and Congress insist on funding them, even though we're in our fifth year on one and fourth year on the other. The result is that Congress has a poor grip on the wars' costs and how they fit in with other competing budget priorities. And the process has allowed Congress to avoid the question of how we are going to pay for those wars.
-- Rocky Mountain News
Sending bricks in the mail to Congress to indicate support for a border wall--now that seems like potentially a highly effective bit of political theater. ... Remember, a wall or fence is not necessarily a "conservative" solution. It seems less disruptive--to illegal workers, especially--than other methods of border enforcement, including "interior" enforcement by requiring employers to check documents. And the better the wall, the easier it is to eventually legalize those on this side of it.
-- Slate political blogger Mickey Kaus
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