Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Region hit by Sandy struggles to resume daily life

This photo provided by Metropolitan Transportation Authority shows people boarding a bus, as partial bus service was restored on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. Mass transit, including buses, was suspended during Sandy, the storm that made landfall Monday. (AP Photo/Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Patrick Cashin)

This photo provided by Metropolitan Transportation Authority shows people boarding a bus, as partial bus service was restored on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. Mass transit, including buses, was suspended during Sandy, the storm that made landfall Monday. (AP Photo/Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Patrick Cashin)

Marcus Konner, 22, boards his home in the aftermath of a storm surge from Hurricane Sandy, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, in Coney Island's Sea Gate community in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

People walk through the houses destroyed in the aftermath of yesterday's storm surge from superstorm Sandy, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, in Coney Island's Sea Gate community in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

A car is upended on a mailbox on Surf Avenue in Coney Island, N.Y., in the aftermath of Sandy on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. Sandy, the storm that made landfall Monday, caused multiple fatalities, halted mass transit and cut power to more than 6 million homes and businesses. (AP Photo/Ralph Russo)

A shed is uprooted on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, along Route 14 in Canton Township, Pa., in the aftermath of Sandy. Sandy, the storm that made landfall Monday, caused multiple fatalities, halted mass transit and cut power to more than 6 million homes and businesses. (AP Photo/The Daily Review, Eric Hrin)

(AP) ? People in the coastal corridor battered by superstorm Sandy took the first cautious steps to reclaim routines upended by the disaster, even as rescuers combed neighborhoods strewn with debris and scarred by floods and fire.

But while New York City buses returned to darkened streets eerily free of traffic and the New York Stock Exchange prepared to reopen its storied trading floor Wednesday, it became clear that restoring the region to its ordinarily frenetic pace could take days ? and that rebuilding the hardest-hit communities and the transportation networks that link them together could take considerably longer.

"We will get through the days ahead by doing what we always do in tough times ? by standing together, shoulder to shoulder, ready to help a neighbor, comfort a stranger and get the city we love back on its feet," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.

By late Tuesday, the winds and flooding inflicted by the fast-weakening Sandy had subsided, leaving at least 55 people dead along the Atlantic Coast and splintering beachfront homes and boardwalks from the mid-Atlantic states to southern New England.

The storm later moved across Pennsylvania on a predicted path toward New York State and Canada.

At the height of the disaster, more than 8.2 million lost electricity ? some as far away as Michigan. Nearly a quarter of those without power were in New York, where lower Manhattan's usually bright lights remained dark for a second night.

But, amid the despair, talk of recovery was already beginning.

"It's heartbreaking after being here 37 years," Barry Prezioso of Point Pleasant, N.J., said as he returned to his house in the beachfront community to survey the damage. "You see your home demolished like this, it's tough. But nobody got hurt and the upstairs is still livable, so we can still live upstairs and clean this out. I'm sure there's people that had worse. I feel kind of lucky."

Much of the initial recovery efforts focused on New York City, the region's economic heart. Bloomberg said it could take four or five days before the subway, which suffered the worst damage in its 108-year history, is running again. All 10 of the tunnels that carry commuters under the East River were flooded. But high water prevented inspectors from immediately assessing damage to key equipment, raising the possibility that the nation's largest city could endure an extended shutdown of the system that 5 million people count on to get to work and school each day. The chairman of the state agency that runs the subway, Joseph Lhota, said service might have to resume piecemeal, and experts said the cost of the repairs could be staggering.

Power company Consolidated Edison said it would be four days before the last of the 337,000 customers in Manhattan and Brooklyn who lost power have electricity again and it could take a week to restore outages in the Bronx, Queens, Staten Island and Westchester County. Floodwater led to explosions that disabled a power substation Monday night, contributing to the outages.

Surveying the widespread damage, it was clear much of the recovery and rebuilding will take far longer.

When New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie stopped in Belmar, N.J., during a tour of the devastation, one woman wept openly and 42-year-old Walter Patrickis told him, "Governor, I lost everything."

Christie, who called the shore damage "unthinkable," said a full recovery would take months, at least, and it would likely be a week or more before power is restored to everyone who lost it.

"Now we've got a big task ahead of us that we have to do together. This is the kind of thing New Jerseyans are built for," he said. President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit the state Wednesday to inspect the storm damage.

By sundown Tuesday, however, announcements from officials and scenes on the streets signaled that New York and nearby towns were edging toward a semblance of routine.

First came the reopening of highways in Connecticut and bridges across the Hudson and East rivers, although the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, connecting Brooklyn to Manhattan, and the Holland Tunnel, between New York and New Jersey, remained closed.

A limited number of the white and blue buses that crisscross New York's grid returned Tuesday evening to Broadway and other thoroughfares on a reduced schedule ? but free of charge. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he hoped there would be full service by Wednesday. Still, school was canceled for a third straight day Wednesday in the city, where many students rely on buses and subways to reach classrooms.

In one bit of good news, officials announced that John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York and Newark International Airport in New Jersey would reopen at 7 a.m. Wednesday with limited service. New York's LaGuardia Airport remains closed.

The New York Stock Exchange was again silent Tuesday ? the first weather-related, two-day closure since the 19th century ? but trading was scheduled to resume Wednesday morning with Bloomberg ringing the opening bell.

Amtrak also laid out plans to resume some runs in the Northeast on Wednesday, with modified service between Newark, N.J., and points south. That includes restoring Virginia service to Lynchburg, Richmond and Newport News, Keystone trains in Pennsylvania, and Downeaster service between Boston and Portland, Maine.

But flooding continues to prevent service to and from New York's Penn Station. Amtrak said the amount of water in train tunnels under the Hudson and East rivers is unprecedented. There will be no Northeast Regional service between New York and Boston and no Acela Express service for the entire length of the Northeast Corridor. No date has been set for when it might resume.

But even with the return of some transportation and plans to reopen schools and businesses, the damage and pain inflicted by Sandy continued to unfold, confirming the challenge posed by rebuilding.

In New Jersey, amusement rides that once crowned a pier in Seaside Heights were dumped into the ocean, some homes were smashed, and others were partially buried in sand.

Farther north in Hoboken, across the Hudson from Manhattan, New Jersey National Guard troops arrived Tuesday night with high-wheeled vehicles to reach thousands of flood victims stuck in their homes. They arrived to find a town with live wires dangling in the floodwaters that Mayor Dawn Zimmer said were rapidly mixing with sewage. At nightfall, the city turned almost completely dark.

About 2.1 million homes and businesses remained without power across the state late Tuesday. When Tropical Storm Irene struck last year, it took more than a week to restore power everywhere. The state's largest utility, PSE&G, said it was trying to dry out substations it had to shut down.

Outages in the state's two largest cities, Newark and Jersey City, left traffic signals dark, resulting in numerous fender-benders at intersections where police were not directing traffic. And in one Jersey City supermarket, there were long lines to get bread and a spot at an outlet to charge cellphones.

Trees and power lines were down in every corner of the state. Schools and state government offices were closed for a second day, and many called off classes for Wednesday, too. The governor said the PATH trains connecting northern New Jersey with Manhattan would be out of service for at least seven to 10 days because of flooding. All the New Jersey Transit rail lines were damaged, he said, and it was not clear when the rail lines would be able to open.

In Connecticut, some residents of Fairfield returned home in kayaks and canoes to inspect widespread damage left by retreating floodwaters that kept other homeowners at bay.

"The uncertainty is the worst," said Jessica Levitt, who was told it could be a week before she can enter her house. "Even if we had damage, you just want to be able to do something. We can't even get started."

The storm caused irreparable damage to homes in East Haven, Milford and other shore towns. Still, many were grateful the storm did not deliver a bigger blow, considering the havoc wrought in New York City and New Jersey.

"I feel like we are blessed," said Bertha Weismann, whose garage was flooded in Bridgeport. "It could have been worse."

And in New York, residents of the flooded beachfront neighborhood of Breezy Point in returned home to find fire had taken everything the water had not. A huge blaze destroyed perhaps 100 homes in the close-knit community where many had stayed behind despite being told to evacuate.

John Frawley, 57, acknowledged the mistake. Frawley, who lived about five houses from the fire's edge, said he spent the night terrified "not knowing if the fire was going to jump the boulevard and come up to my house."

"I stayed up all night," he said. "The screams. The fire. It was horrifying."

There were still only hints of the economic impact of the storm.

Forecasting firm IHS Global Insight predicted it will end up causing about $20 billion in damage and $10 billion to $30 billion in lost business. Another firm, AIR Worldwide, estimated losses up to $15 billion ? big numbers probably offset by reconstruction and repairs that will contribute to longer-term growth.

"The biggest problem is not the first few days but the coming months," said Alan Rubin, an expert in natural disaster recovery.

Some of those who lost homes and businesses to Sandy were promising to return and rebuild, but many sounded chastened by their encounter with nature's fury. They included Tom Shalvey of Warwick, R.I., whose 500-square-foot cottage on the beach in South Kingstown was washed away by raging surf, leaving a utility pipe as the only marker of where it once sat.

"We love the beach. We had many great times here," Shalvey said. "We will be back. But it will not be on the front row."

___

Contributors to this report included Associated Press writers Angela Delli Santi in Belmar, N.J.; Geoff Mulvihill and Larry Rosenthal in Trenton, N.J.; Katie Zezima in Atlantic City, N.J.; Samantha Henry in Jersey City, N.J.; Pat Eaton-Robb and Michael Melia in Hartford, Conn.; Susan Haigh in New London, Conn.; John Christoffersen in Bridgeport, Conn.; Alicia Caldwell and Martin Crutsinger in Washington; David Klepper in South Kingstown, R.I.; David B. Caruso, Colleen Long, Jennifer Peltz, Tom Hays, Larry Neumeister, Ralph Russo and Scott Mayerowitz in New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-31-Superstorm%20Sandy/id-d6832daabbd6405bb09e6fc3f636084c

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Monday, October 29, 2012

How to Train Your Facebook News Feed - Automotive Digest

How to Train Your Facebook News?Feed

facebook_6_9_2009-11_53_am.jpg

By JD Rucker

The one thing that Face?book does excep?tion?ally well from a tech?nol?ogy per?spec?tive is oper?at?ing and mod?i?fy?ing their news feed algo?rithm. Learn how to take advan?tage of it to dis?play exactly what (and who) you want to appear on your news?feed.

The news feed algo?rithm is a tech?no?log?i?cal work of art in many ways. One of the best parts about it is that you can train yours to present you with the right con?tent from the right peo?ple. Here?s how:

??Check Your Friends (and par?tic?u?larly the order they?re in)
When you got to your list of friends on Face?book which you can find at ?facebook.com/username/friends, you should see the most famil?iar faces right at the top. While it?s not an exact list?ing in per?fect order, it?s a loose inter?pre?ta?tion of how Face?book feels you rank your friends in order of impor?tance. The order of the list changes often based upon who is post?ing lately, whose posts you?ve liked lately, and any?thing that you?ve shared or com?mented on.

??Clas?si?fy?ing Your Friends
This is the easy part. Face?book makes it very sim?ple to clas?sify the peo?ple in your life into var?i?ous groups.

Sim?ply hover over their name. Their pro?file infor?ma?tion will pop up. Then, hover over the ?Friends? but?ton and your lists pop up. Face?book gives spe?cial treat?ment to ?Close Friends? and ?Fam?ily?, so the impor?tant peo?ple in your life should be clas?si?fied as?such.

You can take it a step fur?ther and add them to other lists. You should do this with all of your friends when?ever pos?si?ble, par?tic?u?larly if you use Face?book a lot and for dif?fer?ent rea?sons such as work, pol?i?tics,?etc.

??Like Sculpt?ing
Select the friends and fam?ily mem?bers who you really like a lot. It?s not nec?es?sar?ily a com?par?i?son to real life; if Uncle Dweezil is your favorite but he posts inces?sant pic?tures of his dogs and mar?i?juana plants that you don?t want to see all the time, don?t include him.

Once you have your win?ners, open their pro?files and start lik?ing away. Stay true ? don?t just ran?domly click on every?thing they post just for the sake of sculpt?ing. If they?re post?ing enough and they?re truly peo?ple you want to fol?low, you should be able to find things that they posted that match your inter?ests. If you don?t, per?haps it?s time to recon?sider the friendship.

Remem?ber, it?s not just a mat?ter of vol?ume. Per?cent?age of posts liked plays a major role, so if you have a loosely active friend who you want to see in your news feed, you can like sev?eral of their things and they should always appear on top when they posts. In other words, those who aren?t Facebook-addicts can still get pref?er?en?tial treat?ment in your news?feed.

??Lastly, do the same thing with Pages.
The posts on the pages you?ve liked in the past will never appear in your feed if you don?t like some of what they post. This is a good time to go through all of the pages you?ve liked and unlike the ones that you don?t really fol?low any?more. The ones that you do want to fol?low ? like away! Some of the best con?tent on Face?book comes from active pages.

JD Rucker is Direc?tor of New Media of?TK Car?sites and can be reached via the con?tact page.

Source: http://automotivedigest.com/2012/10/how-to-train-your-facebook-news-feed/

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

97w Satellite: History of Satellite TV - Technology - Communication ...

Human imagination has the power to visualize the future, seek visionary solutions to problems, guide people to inventions that change the face of the earth, and the fate of humankind. Inventions and discoveries for centuries, motivated by inspiring ideas of a few, including the heretic science fiction stories of Jules Verne, H.G. Wells and others, have helped us to reach this stage of modern technology.

Such has been the revelation of Arthur C. Clarke in his classic 'Extraterrestrial Relays', published in 1945, in which he wrote about having satellites in special orbits 22,300 miles above the equator, based on calculations done in 1928 by the astronautics pioneer Herman Potocnik Noordung, to facilitate global communication. The idea sparked and broke like fire, with the Russians coming up with the world's first satellite, Sputnik in 1957, closely followed by the Americans in early 1958.

Modest Beginning of Satellite TV

The first Satellite TV transmission across the Atlantic was in 1962, from the Telstar satellite launched by NASA. This was the first little step taken in preparation for the giant leap. Soon Arthur's vision of geosynchronous communication satellite came true, with the launch of Syncom 2 by NASA in 1963, delivering low quality TV transmission, which improved with NASA's Relay 1 in late 1963. This was credited with the first television program broadcast from the United States to Japan and Europe, on the life of John F. Kennedy after his assassination. The first geostationary communication satellite was Syncom 3, launched in 1964, which worked in tandem with Relay 1 to broadcast the Summer Olympics from Tokyo to the United States and Europe. Intelsat I, the world's first commercial communication satellite, is known for facilitating the first live global Satellite television broadcast in 1967 of 'Our World', a combined effort of 14 countries.

Mature Satellite TV Developments

Having tried and tasted the fruits of success, leading countries of the world hastened their research and development of Satellite television. The Russians led by creating Orbita in 1967, the nationwide network of Satellite television by using Molniya satellites. Canadians were the first to have national domestic satellites to carry television in 1972. It was in 1974 that NASA launched ATS-6, in collaboration with the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), to experiment, study, and practically demonstrate the next step in the development of satellite television - the Direct-To-Home (DTH) television broadcasting. The Russians, with the launch of Ekran, started the first such national service in 1976.

The Early American Satellite TV Story

Benefiting from NASA's research and experimental initiatives of the 60s, there was a rush of further developments in the late 70s by many private companies. RCA Americom built and got its own communications satellite, Satcom 1, launched in 1975, which helped HBO and other cable TV channels like Superstation TBS and CBN, establish themselves, apart from helping the national television networks like ABC, CBS, and NBC, to distribute their programming among the local affiliate stations.

Home Box Office (HBO), which had leased a transponder on the satellite, became the first programmer to transmit programming signals to the cable TV providers, and that really encouraged the cable TV industry. In 1977, the first satellite-delivered basic cable service, Christian Broadcasting Network, or the CBN Cable Network started functioning, which was followed by Turner Broadcasting System (TBS).

Direct To Home Beginnings

The Birth of American Direct To Home (DTH) Satellite System for consumers took place in 1976, in the garage of H. Taylor Howard, who had been a NASA scientist and Professor at Stanford University. His experiments on receiving video transmissions from communications satellites, by using a big military radar dish and a self-made satellite receiver, resulted in picking up programming signals meant for the cable TV service providers, sent by the American as well as Russian communication satellites. He later tried to pay for the HBO programming he had been enjoying, though to his surprise the money was returned stating that they do not deal with individuals but only with cable companies. This incident inspired Taylor to write a "How to" guide about building of amateur satellite system, and later start a company for manufacturing the parts of his system.

Another development in 1975 was by the BBC transmitter engineer Stephan Birkill, who successfully experimented with his equipment, and received the NASA-ISRO Satellite Instructional Television transmission at his home in UK, which was originally meant for India. He also monitored the C-Band Russian TV and telecoms satellites with success.

The Big Dish and Free Satellite TV Era

The credit for the first launch of Television broadcast through satellite goes to the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), with its Public Television Satellite Service in 1978. There was a surge of interest in free-to-air Television Receive Only (TVRO) satellite technology, also known as the Big Ugly Dish (BUD) system. With many such players in the market, the government passed the Satellite Home Viewers Act, which allowed using their own home satellite system consisting of C-band equipment and a big signal-receiving dish. This was a revolution in itself, as the rural area, earlier devoid of cable TV, now got a chance to view good, quality television broadcast consisting of many channels, with just a one time investment and no monthly fees.

The Beginning of Pay Satellite TV

With increased objections from the Pay TV stations against the free use of their programming channels, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) founded the Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) in 1980, which required people to have a black box or DTH satellite receiver, purchased from the broadcaster to receive the scrambled programming signals.

Cable TV was still preferred in those times, as the big satellite dishes were cumbersome to install and the satellite TV system was very costly. With time and technological developments, the size of the dish kept reducing and the system prices dropped dramatically.

The satellite and cable TV industry still faced the illegal capturing and piracy of programming signals that compelled the U.S. Congress to pass the Cable Act in 1984, which declared the stealing of satellite signals as illegal, and allowed the encryption of signals.

Modern Stage of American Satellite TV

The early 90s saw the use of digital encryption technology that completely secured the programming signals, and saw the entry of many Satellite TV providers who were willing to act as brokers to all programming channels and build a strong subscriber base. Primestar was the first Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) system that started in 1991, followed by Hughes's DIRECTV Satellite System in 1994. EchoStar's Dish Network changed the Satellite TV market in 1996 by introducing lower rates and spurring tough competition.

Today only two major satellite service providers have stood the test of time and strength - DISH Network and DIRECTV. The Satellite TV industry has grown tremendously at a fast rate, with new technological developments enhancing its features, making it compact, integrating it with telecommunications, networking, music, entertainment, and other industries. It is now only a matter of imagination to see where satellite TV leads us in the future.

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Source: http://97wsatellite.blogspot.com/2012/10/history-of-satellite-tv-technology.html

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Source: http://nashorville.typepad.com/blog/2012/10/97w-satellite-history-of-satellite-tv-technology-communication.html

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The Real Meaning and Future of Apple's Mantra: Designed in California [Design]

Apple is a hardware design company. It owns ideas not factories. And because it runs its own operating systems, an intrinsic part of the design of its products is software. But this crucial area is showing signs of weakness as competitors copy its innovations. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/V5AUYYNO82w/the-real-meaning-and-future-of-apples-mantra-designed-in-california

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Comparing the days of working moms and stay at home moms ...

665826b4832811e181bd12313817987b 7 300x300 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working MomI?m kind of lucky in that I?ve done a myriad of the ?mom? positions. For the majority of motherhood, I?ve been a working mom (aka a mom that works outside of the home). I?ve also been a work-at-home mom as a Product Manager for Microsoft and with my current gig at Babble. ?I?ve done the stay-at-home mom part the least and lots of folks might argue that I?ve never really done it, because maternity leave and a month in the spring don?t really count. The majority of my closest friends are stay at home mommas but I work in a company that holds working moms in high regard, so I feel like I get the best of all worlds quite often.

But there?s always a common thread in all the different roles I?ve held and the friends I?ve encountered ? whether our career is in the home or in an office, we all have our worries and struggles. More often than not, those worries and struggles and exhaustion are so eerily similar that it makes me wonder why the divide between moms in our roles.

So I asked two good friends of mine if they would mind being ?interviewed.? I asked them the same questions and I answered the questions, giving a perspective from a WM (working mom) and a SAHM (stay-at-home mom) and a WAHM (work-at-home mom).

Here?s what we all had to say about our days, our fears, what we wear, and how we pee:

?

  • thumbs 1f96f7282d6511e1abb01231381b65e3 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: How many cups of coffee have you had today?

    "2 very large cups and sometimes they get left in the microwave!" Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-how-many-cups-of-coffee-have-you-had-today

  • thumbs a972740c070511e2be981231380f620c 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: How many cups of coffee have you had today?

    "I have learned recently that a "cup" of coffee is 6oz. (I did not know this) So I must drink a heck of a lot. I never get to finish it while it's warm, but maybe I do when it's reheated for the 4th time and tastes like the inside of my microwave." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-how-many-cups-of-coffee-have-you-had-today

  • thumbs 6c4580e0cf5d11e182e122000a1e884c 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: How many cups of coffee have you had today?

    "Ummm...5? 6? I think I had two this morning & then grabbed a grande latte after lunch for a pick-me-up." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-how-many-cups-of-coffee-have-you-had-today

  • thumbs walks14 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: What is the best part of your day?

    "When my girls go to bed? I kid!! I really love picking them both up at school (2 day preschool and kindergarten). The both love school and are so unbelievably happy and talk my ear off on the way home. I am sort of a nerd so I love that they love school and love learning. Plus they are making friends, behaving, and creating their own little lives. It makes my heart swell because I feel like we must be doing something right." Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-what-is-the-best-part-of-your-day

  • thumbs beachsleep Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: What's the best part of your day?

    "Nap. Well, nap and after nap activities (crafts, etc) are fun. Also I love when our sitter gets here and I get to go write for a few hours at Starbucks in total peace and quiet." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-whats-the-best-part-of-your-day

  • thumbs 0835c526476111e1a87612313804ec91 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: What is the best part of your day?

    "It's a strong tie between the morning when it's just me & Harrison having breakfast. & I adore when I pick him up from school & he's chatting about everything he did that day & how much fun he had. It makes me feel like we made a good choice with his daycare." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-what-is-the-best-part-of-your-day

  • thumbs 97fd06040a5e11e283e822000a1d011d 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: Did you pee alone today?

    "I have peed alone but I've also had company." Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-did-you-pee-alone-today

  • thumbs feet3 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: Did you pee alone today?

    "Not yet. Here's hoping." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-did-you-pee-alone-today

  • thumbs b1372fbaaa7711e1b2fe1231380205bf 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: Did you pee alone today?

    "I've done both. The worst is when you're doing more important business & your coworkers are just hanging out in the bathroom, chatting like it's 10th grade." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-did-you-pee-alone-today

  • thumbs e5907ff40e6911e28b3522000a1e9f89 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: What are you serving for dinner tonight?

    "Black bean soup and a simple salad but I am sure the girls will hate it! I'll add a grilled cheese to the mix for them." Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-what-are-you-serving-for-dinner-tonight

  • thumbs 58af62a2487711e1a87612313804ec91 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: What are you serving for dinner tonight?

    "I just realized I'm supposed to make dinner. So... leftover minestrone." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-what-are-you-serving-for-dinner-tonight

  • thumbs df416b56153411e19896123138142014 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: What are you serving for dinner tonight?

    "It's Taco Tuesday! So I'm making enchiladas that are super-quick & heating up some rice & beans. I try to keep meals under 30 minutes for prep." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-what-are-you-serving-for-dinner-tonight

  • thumbs 5921283208bd11e19896123138142014 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: Where do you spend the majority of your day?

    "Split 50/50 between my car & my kitchen." Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-where-do-you-spend-the-majority-of-your-day

  • thumbs work12 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: Where do you spend the majority of your day?Where do you spend the majority of your day?

    "I'm all over, but maybe at my desk writing, the living room playing, or the kitchen." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-where-do-you-spend-the-majority-of-your-daywhere-do-you-spend-the-majority-of-your-day

  • thumbs 9e2d7058200e11e19896123138142014 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: Where do you spend the majority of your day?

    "I'm in a cubicle, smack in front of my computer screen for seven hours. Thankfully, I no longer have my hellish commute or I'd have to count the three hours we spend in the car." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-where-do-you-spend-the-majority-of-your-day

  • thumbs movies19 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: What's the hardest part of your day?

    "Getting them out the door for school! Ugh! We are a family of non-morning people. It doesn't matter what time we all go to bed the night before nobody wants to get up. It is a struggle every morning and forget it if someone doesn't like the clothes I've picked out!" Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-whats-the-hardest-part-of-your-day

  • thumbs 951023b598fa4a31aea4ef90dfece9af 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: What's the hardest part of your day?

    "In the morning when my inbox is flooded with emails while Bella melts down about her cereal and the dog being near her chair. Also the days that there is no nap." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-whats-the-hardest-part-of-your-day

  • thumbs 17f3b10ea6bf11e19894123138140d8c 7 300x300 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: What's the hardest part of your day?

    "Dropping him off in the morning. He ALWAYS cries even though he loves school. It's so hard to walk away from your sobbing toddler. It makes me feel so cold & uncaring even though it's the opposite." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-whats-the-hardest-part-of-your-day

  • thumbs 618c97cabe4011e1b00112313800c5e4 7 300x300 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: On a scale of 1-10, one being manic & 10 being dead, what is your exhaustion level when you crawl into bed after a normal day?

    "Probably 7ish. Higher if they are sick... sick kids are exhausting!" Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-on-a-scale-of-1-10-one-being-manic-10-being-dead-what-is-your-exhaustion-level-when-you-crawl-into-bed-after-a-normal-day

  • thumbs da2d337e04a411e28ed022000a1fbc58 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: SAHM: On a scale of 1-10, one being manic & 10 being dead, what is your exhaustion level when you crawl into bed after a normal day?

    "Oh man. Like a 7?" Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-sahm-on-a-scale-of-1-10-one-being-manic-10-being-dead-what-is-your-exhaustion-level-when-you-crawl-into-bed-after-a-normal-day

  • thumbs 13b7ec5a193311e1abb01231381b65e3 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: SAHM: On a scale of 1-10, one being manic & 10 being dead, what is your exhaustion level when you crawl into bed after a normal day?

    "Probably at a 7. I'm completely burnt out of interaction & thinking by about 8pm. I like to curl up with a book to decompress, but there's always laundry & dishes waiting on my ol' aching bones." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-sahm-on-a-scale-of-1-10-one-being-manic-10-being-dead-what-is-your-exhaustion-level-when-you-crawl-into-bed-after-a-normal-day

  • thumbs e1bec754069511e2b0a81231381f24bf 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: What did you wear today?

    "This is very unusual but I am in a dress (only because it is machine washable) and boots. A lot of days I wear my workout clothes all day... either because I haven't had a chance to shower & change OR I still haven't gotten to my workout." Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-what-did-you-wear-today

  • thumbs 2b6577100eeb11e2bf341231381b775d 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: What did you wear today?

    "Jeans, tshirt, I put on nice shoes for my daughter's play therapy. Instead of my TOMS." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-what-did-you-wear-today

  • thumbs okayba2 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: What did you wear today?

    "Jeans, tshirt, cardigan, & a scarf. This is pretty much my uniform, but I'm lucky to work in a casual-dress office. I used to work where dresses & heels & hosiery were the norm." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-what-did-you-wear-today

  • thumbs 032df74cf75611e194a422000a1e8aa6 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    SAHM: What is the most frustrating thing about your job?

    "The pay? The toddler tyrant? Potty training! My 2nd will pee on the toilet but no go with the poop and it's been like this for months. I do not understand why pooping in your pants is better than on the toilet! And meal time! I have a very strong willed almost 3 year old who would happily eat bread, yogurt, and raspberries ONLY! If I put something other than one of those 3 things on her plate it is total meltdown... like I am trying to poison her. When she started eating solids she would eat anything I put in front of her and then one day it was like a switch and she wouldn't touch anything. I admit that some days I give in and she eats bread, yogurt, and raspberries because at least she is eating something. I will keep trying to branch out but some days I feel like I am banging my head against a wall!" Suzi

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#sahm-what-is-the-most-frustrating-thing-about-your-job

  • thumbs b9f4508847ad11e1abb01231381b65e3 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WAHM: What is the most frustrating thing about your job?

    "The last minute-ness of writing/working online while having a 3 year old who doesn't like playing by herself very often. Also the fact that everything happens at once. I can go days with an email here and there and a few posts, and then this week have 16 posts to do and a bazillion emails waiting." Diana

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wahm-what-is-the-most-frustrating-thing-about-your-job

  • thumbs ba30532e0a7d11e2a9d522000a1cd9f8 7 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

    WM: What is the most frustrating thing about your job?

    "Just trying to fit in EVERYTHING. I still do all the cooking, cleaning, & organizing of my family on top of my office hours. It's hard to squeeze it all in & do it all well. I always feel like something is slipping." Beth Anne

    /toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/#wm-what-is-the-most-frustrating-thing-about-your-job

More from BA:

What I?m struggling with as a momma.

Symptoms of pneumonia in toddlers.

Symptoms of Hand, Foot, Mouth Disease

The food allergy debate.

Beth Anne writes words & takes pictures at?Okay, BA!?You can also find her on theTwitters?&?Facebook.

 Comparing the Days:  Stay At Home Mom, Work At Home Mom, and Working Mom

Source: http://blogs.babble.com/toddler-times/2012/10/17/comparing-the-days-stay-at-home-mom-work-at-home-mom-and-working-mom/

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Illini OL Klachko Retiring After 'Numerous' Concussions ? CBS ...

General photo of Illini football players. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

General photo of Illini football players. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

(CBS) Illinois head coach Tim Beckman confirmed Tuesday on the Big Ten teleconference that offensive lineman Ryan Klachko has decided to retire because of ?numerous? concussions.

Klachko, who played high school football at Springfield Sacred Heart-Griffin, transferred from Nebraska during the offseason and was sitting out the season because of NCAA transfer rules. He was still eligible to practice, however, and sustained ?numerous? concussions, according to Beckman.

Klachko joins UCLA?s Patrick Larimore, a captain and team MVP, as college players who retired this season because of concussions. Larimore, a linebacker, announced his retirement in August after repeated concussions that went as far back as high school.

Beckman said Klachko wants to remain close to the team and is interested in being a strength and conditioning coach. He can remain under scholarship with a medical hardship waiver.

Source: http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/10/16/illini-ol-klachko-retiring-after-numerous-concussions/

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

LGBT History Month: 30 GLBT Artists And Performers To Follow ...

  • Alan Cumming

    "The Good Wife"s Alan Cumming is an unlikely insider, an actor with classical roots whose exuberant talents for singing, dancing and <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/22/alan-cumming-adele_n_1373051.html">hamming it up</a> make him likable enough for prime time without losing him <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/10/alan-cumming-susan-sarandon_n_1268778.html">the throne at Manhattan society parties</a>. Cumming's most recent show of talent -- a one-man "Macbeth" run that had him <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/10/macbeth-review-alan-cumming_n_1661425.html">playing every one of the play's characters, including Lady Macbeth</a> -- showed he's capable of putting his multiple personalities to good use on a single stage.

  • Del LaGrace Volcano

    Last month, gender-variant photographer Del LaGrace Volcano returned to the U.S. for his/her first ever American show, a pointed decision considering how outre Volcano's work is. In an <a href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCIQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.huffingtonpost.com%2F2012%2F09%2F18%2Fdel-lagrace-volcano-gender-variant-photographer-exhibition-new-york_n_1891863.html&ei=QptzUITHOMnp0gH2v4GICg&usg=AFQjCNFgx5rgb0T2Jkmr8PrV--5s_gqwYw">interview with the Huffington Post</a>, the iconoclastic photographer was positive about the changing U.S. art scene: "While not always unproblematic, there seems to be a much greater willingness to see and engage with lives outside the norm."

  • Julie Mehretu

    The gay Ethiopian Midwesterner (and now New Yorker) is known for her <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/perry-garvin/fake-interview-julie-mehr_b_682650.html">expansive, layered paintings</a>. One of the artists participating in<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/01/artists-for-obama-limited_n_1929583.html"> fundraising for President Obama</a>, Mehretu isn't shy about getting political with her art. In an interview with BOMB Magazine, Mehretu called her raison d'etre "<a href="http://bombsite.com/issues/91/articles/2714">our current situation, whether it be political, historical or social, and how it informs me and my context and my past.</a>"

  • Susan Mikula

    Artist Susan Mikula may be less known than her partner, Rachel Maddow, but her work <a href="http://www.shewired.com/box-office/refined-beauty-artist-susan-mikula-finding-beauty-industry-exclusive">capturing lonely stretches of Gulf Coast beachfronts</a> showed her to be as interested in the American story as her TV pundit girlfriend. Talking to the Advocate, Mikula cited <a href="http://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/photography/2011/10/22/artist-spotlight-susan-mikula">Julian Schnabel, Joan Mitchell, Cy Twombley, and Gerhardt Richter among her influences</a>.

  • Stephen Merritt

    Singer/songwriter Stephen Merritt has funneled clever, hummable songs to the world through his band The Magnetic Fields for decades. He's also been challenging concepts of gender in his lyrics for as long, a trick that played heavily in last year's "Andrew In Drag," Merritt's <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/04/andrew-in-drag-video_n_1254430.html">song about a bro who falls in love with his best friend</a>.

  • Ojay Morgan

    Artist Ojay Morgan created the character Zebra Katz as part of his senior thesis, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/15/fashion/zebra-katz-you-have-to-know-the-context.html">according to the New York Times</a>. That Morgan, as Katz, went on to create <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/15/fashion/zebra-katz-you-have-to-know-the-context.html?_r=0">the hippest song of 2012</a> isn't something he could possibly have planned in his thesis pitch. "Ima Read," a hip hop meditation on black culture, has taken on a life of its own, and we can only expect there's more to come from its <a href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCIQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.guardian.co.uk%2Fmusic%2F2012%2Fjun%2F09%2Fzebra-katz-rise-of-gay-rappers&ei=9phzUOSJCfLG0AHF6YC4Bg&usg=AFQjCNE8dB-O9xf8pM33UobfhYtsXh97dw">out and proud mastermind</a>.

  • Heather Cassils

    A performance artist and body builder who played Lady Gaga's <a href="http://velvetparkmedia.com/tags/telephone-heather-cassils">prison boo in "Telephone,</a>" Heather Cassils uses her body as her canvas. Cassil's conceptual pieces are statements on gender, identity and appearance that depend on her willingness to transform herself. In <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/09/heather-cassils-creates-v_n_1660244.html">a recent issue of <em>Huffington.</a></em>, she told us about her current project, "Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture," involving 23 weeks of a strict weightlifting regime, steroids, and a diet fit for a 190 pound male athlete. That's commitment.

  • Antony Hegarty

    The British artist Antony Hegarty is a triple threat: composer, singer and visual artist. His affinity for synth pop as well as his ethereal voice has made him a new favorite of the NPR crowd. Johnson is also a savvy cross-pollinator of his interests, enlisting <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/09/antony-and-the-johnsons-cut-the-world_n_1760727.html">Marina Abramovic to star in his devastating music video for "Cut The World,"</a> and pulling off <a href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B01EEDA1730F931A15752C0A9649D8B63">a high profile MOMA concert commission</a> earlier this year.

  • Camille Paglia

    Earlier this summer, the curmudgeonly intellectual Camille Paglia told a Huffington Post blogger that she doesn't get along with other lesbians. "T<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/christina-patterson/camille-pagila-interview_b_1842500.html">hey don't like me, and I don't like them," she said, </a>after discussing details of her 14 year relationship with the artist Alison Maddex. Whether you fall in the anti-Paglia camp or not, it's hard to deny that the cultural commenter is still compelling -- if increasingly absurd -- in her 60s. As she tours for her latest book, "Glittering Images: A Journey Through Art From Egypt to Star Wars," the writer and historian hasn't been shy about <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/28/arts/design/camille-paglia-scowls-at-the-metropolitan-museum.html?pagewanted=all">floating assertions about George Lucas' artistic pre-eminence, as well as the too-tall galleries</a> at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

  • Amos Mac

    The photographer and editor has made a career of snapping friends and strangers in <a href="http://www.amosmac.com/photos/bedrooms/">slick, Terry Richardson-esque muted jewel tones</a>, while helming two significant trans publications, Translady Fanzine and Original Plumbing. In an interview with the Queerist about OP, Mac called it only "natural" for him to want to "create a space for other trans artists and [to create] events catering to people who appreciate queer art."

  • Laurie Lipton

    Laurie Lipton's <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jill-robinson/laurie-lipton-la-is-paris_b_1666705.html">eerie black and white pencil drawings</a> are her signature trademark. The encyclopedic, gothic creations inspire comparisons to M. C. Escher, but Lipton's conscious influences (the<a href="http://eclectixetc.wordpress.com/2011/12/07/laurie-lipton-eclectix-interview-27/"> photographer Diane Arbus</a>) trend away from the illusionists, and toward style.

  • Zanele Muholi

    <a href="http://www.zanelemuholi.com/about me.htm" target="_hplink">Zanele Muholi</a> is a South African photographer whose work has focused primarily on the black female body and its historical representation in documentary film. She has also worked as a community relations officer for the Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW), a black lesbian organisation based in Gauteng, and as a photographer and reporter for Behind the Mask, an online magazine on lesbian and gay issues in Africa.

  • Richard Fung

    As an openly gay video-artist born in Trinidad, the work of <a href="http://www.richardfung.ca/" target="_hplink">Richard Fung</a> investigates a broad spectrum of issues ranging from homophobia and AIDS to colonialism, immigration and Asian identity. He's also published a number of essays and teaches in the Integrated Media program at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto, where he now resides.

  • Mickalene Thomas

    <a href="http://mickalenethomas.com/" target="_hplink">Mickalene Thomas</a> is a New York-based artist known for her ornate paintings decorated with rhinestones, enamel and acrylic. Her work has been praised for representing a female perspective of same-sex desires as well as various moments of African-American culture. IMAGE: MICKALENE THOMAS, Sleep: Deux Femmes Noires, 2011 mixed media collage, 23.75 x 31.25 inches (paper)

  • K8 Hardy

    <a href="http://www.reenaspaulings.com/WK.htm" target="_hplink">K8 Hardy</a> is a multimedia artist whose photographs, performance pieces and sculptures explore issues of class, race and gender. In her photos, she often places herself as the subject of her own work, responding to the traditional practice of male artists objectifying female models. She is also a founding member of the queer feminist journal and artist collective LTTR, and some of her work is permanently housed at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

  • Ellsworth Kelly

    Ellsworth Kelly has been an ardent explorer of color spectrums and panel paintings, dabbling in painting, printmaking and sculpting. Comparing Kelly to contemporary Jasper Johns, the Chelsea art dealer Matthew Marks who now represents Kelly told <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/arts/design/ellsworth-kelly-explorer-of-shape-line-and-color.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all" target="_hplink">The New York Times,</a> "To a great extent Jasper is a literary artist. His work is coded with secret messages. Ellsworth is purely a visual artist. With Ellsworth there is no message, just an experience."

  • Brian Kenny

    <a href="http://briankenny.blogspot.com/" target="_hplink">Brian Kenny</a>'s art - typified by his deconstruction of American flags - explores his multiple roles as an American citizen, a supporter of the Occupy Movement, and a gay man. As he told the <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/20/brian-kennys-hole_n_1612236.html" target="_hplink">Huffington Post</a>, "I'm proud to be an American and my Russian boyfriend just recently became an American citizen, but we both find it ridiculous that even after eight years together we still don't have access to collective rights as a couple that heterosexual people have in marriage. And, like many Occupy supporters, I feel discontent with the current political and economic system that allows for so much corruption and social injustice."

  • Vaginal Davis

    <a href="http://www.vaginaldavis.com/" target="_hplink">Vaginal Davis</a> is an Amerian performing artist associated with a number of conceptual art bands and the formation of the Queercore Zine Movement. In Davis' performances, she portrays a range of characters that draw from her own relationships as well as fictional imaginations.

  • David Hockney

    <a href="http://www.hockneypictures.com/" target="_hplink">David Hockney</a> is considered by many to be one of the most famous living painters in Britain, praised for his playful, pop-primitivist works. He combines cubism with a cartoonish flare to create art that has remained popular for over 30 years. IMAGE: Winter Timber, 2009 , Oil on fifteen canvases , 274.3 x 609.6 cm (each 91.4 x 121.9 cm), Private collection, ? David Hockney, Photo credit: Jonathan Wilkinson.

  • Adi Nes

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/22/israeli-artist-adi-nes_n_1499681.html" target="_hplink">Adi Nes</a> is a gay Israeli artist whose work, including his latest -- "The Village," explores concepts of masculinity and power. He has been praised by Richard Goldstein at the Village voice for his unique vision, who stated, "No young artist has so vividly captured the hidden cost of victory, the fine line between power and fragility, the interplay of arrogance and despair that shapes wartime identity."

  • Zackary Drucker

    <a href="http://www.zackarydrucker.com/" target="_hplink">Zackary Drucker</a> is a transgender performance artist whose participatory pieces confront perceptions of gender and sexuality. The artist, who uses a female pronoun, has said that she envisions her work to be "a platform to exorcize my struggle with self-acceptance." IMAGE: Zackary Drucker and Amos Mac, "Distance is where the heart is, Home is where you hang your heart," #13, 2011, digital pigment print, 36 x 54 in, Courtesy of Luis De Jesus, Los Angeles.

  • Annie Leibovitz

    Annie Leibovitz is one of the most famous American portrait photographers and has captured an array of popular culture in the United States and beyond, including her infamous work for The Rolling Stones.

  • Breyer P-Orridge

    Genesis Breyer P-Orridge and Lady Jaye Breyer P-Orridge made up the single pandrogynous entity, Breyer P-Orridge. In contrast to transvestism or transgender, their concept of <a href="http://www.believermag.com/exclusives/?read=interview_p-orridge_rushkoff" target="_hplink">pandrogeny </a>eliminated ideas of genders entirely, focusing on the union of opposites. In pursuit of this union, the two performance artists/musicians underwent a series of identical body modifications in order to transcend the binary world of gender. The ongoing experimentation spurred several mixed-media exhibitions including "Painful But Fabulous."

  • Jasper Johns

    <a href="http://www.jasperjohns.com/" target="_hplink">Jasper Johns</a>, the famous painter of flags, maps and targets, formed a creative community in the 1950s with fellow artists Robert Rauschenberg, Merce Cunningham and John Cage. The work of Rauschenberg and Jasper in particular challenged the machismo of abstract expressionism.

  • Laurie Toby Edison

    <a href="http://www.laurietobyedison.com/" target="_hplink">Laurie Toby Edison</a> began as a visual artist who focused on jewelry and sculpture, and has since moved to photography as well. She became involved with the feminist movement when she was in her 30s, guiding her work with the "Women En Large" project and "Familiar Men," reflections on the nude in art.

  • Gilbert & George

    <a href="http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/gilbert_and_george/" target="_hplink">Gilbert & George</a> is the dapper collaborative duo responsible for the large scale photo works, "The Pictures." The artists' work has been both praised and criticized for its subversive and provocative content, as it explores themes of religion, sexuality, race and urban life.

  • Catherine Opie

    <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/26/arts/design/26opie.html?pagewanted=all" target="_hplink">Catherine Opie</a> is a lesbian artist whose photography examines American identity through iconic images and redefinitions of landscapes. She has investigated members of the LGBT community, surfers and football players though her documentary photography projects.

  • Isaac Julien

    <a href="http://www.isaacjulien.com/home" target="_hplink">Isaac Julien</a> is an installation artist and filmmaker who rose to cult fame with his 1989 documentary <em>Looking for Langston</em>. Much of his work addresses black and gay identity as he attempts to break down disciplinary barriers by incorporating dance, photography, painting and sculpture in film.

  • Frank Ocean

    Even if you've never heard a note sung by the young prodigy Frank Ocean, you might have noticed when he made the decision to come out. The thoughtfully worded post by the hip hop star is <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/23/hip-hops-anti-gay-tone-frank-ocean_n_1824494.html">credited with ushering a new era for the genre</a>.

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/11/lgbt-art_n_1950024.html

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    Learning From Our Mistakes-101 - This Full House: Gone Shopping

    I am very honored to be working with Hallmark as a Life is a Special Occasion featured blogger and for their sponsoring this blog post, allowing me to share personal stories, insights and inspirations in enjoying simple, every day moments, with you (yes, YOU!)

    Scaling the Walls

    Learning to walk his hard, learning to fall is even harder.

    My youngest daughter (she's 11) is in the 6th grade (no, I have absolutely NO idea how that happened...either) and, much to the chagrin of her siblings, Hope positively loves school.

    I mean, she loves, Loves, LOves, LOVes, LOVEs, LOVES SCHOOL!

    "Ah, man, what, ANOTHER day off?"

    This kid would go to school...EVERY DAY...if she could.

    "I hate holidays!"

    Other parents I know would argue:? well, she IS the youngest of 4, growing up in a house brimming over with estrogen (or, in my case, extremely hormonally-challenged, as well as internally imbalanced...you're welcome), DER!

    Hope also shares a room with her sisters (the bathroom is on the left, but PLEASE do NOT open the door on the right, it's scary in there!) oh, then there's the lack of privacy (hers, mine, ours, etc...) and, well, DUH!

    "Do you have any homework?"

    Being the youngest child is hard:? whether you've got 1 or 20, raising tweens and teens is even harder.? Although, I really try not to make a habit of speaking for other folks (seriously, I'm more of a don't do as I do/done/did sort of gal, thankmeverymuch!), I truly believe allowing your child to fail is no walk in the park for any parent.

    "Yes, but I already finished my homework...in school."

    Or, perhaps her sisters and brother are right and she's just weird like that.

    "Oh, and I put a pile of test papers, on your laptop, to sign."

    But, a good kind of weird.

    "Uh, sweetie, what happened here?"

    This time, however, she got a 60 on her math test and placed it at the bottom of the pile and...5...4...3...2...

    "I...DON'T...KNOW!"

    Did I mention that she's 11?? Otherwise known as the year of:? DUDE, WHERE'S MY KID?!?

    Seriously, there should be a t-shirt or some sort of warning to help younger parents NOT freak out when observing a tweenage-meltdown at the shopping mall or movie theater, like:

    "DANGER...DANGER...DANGER...WILL ROBINSON...PRETEEN HORMONES AT WORK!"

    Will Robinson?? I know.? I'm old.? Shuddup!

    "Congratulations, sweetie!"

    [eyes go wide]

    "Wait, what, you're happy I failed a math test?"

    Yes and no.? I'm not saying that we ought to throw her a party (that WOULD be weird, even for me)? however, speaking purely from past experience, I also happen to believe that kids should learn how to fail, really well, too.

    "No, I'm not happy you failed a math test, but I'm sorta glad you did."

    At the risk of sounding like the mother of mediocrity (I know, too late, right?) I can't help but feel that life would be a little easier if Learning From Our Mistakes-101 were a requirement, rather than an elective...for parents, too.

    "Math is hard."

    Yes, math is hard, but this everyday math thing?? She IS the devil!!!

    "I know, aaaand it's gonna get even harder!"

    [grabs a ruler, adopts a light-saber-battle-ready stance]

    "BRINGIT!"

    Moral of the story:? the next time this kid faces failure (oh, yes, sadly, there WILL be a next time) she WILL be ready for bah-tull!

    How do I know?

    "You are SO weird, Mom."

    Because...I am her mother...DER!!!

    #Hallmark #LIASO #Fall CollageI love the latest batch of kids encouragement cards we received AND that Hallmark has a sense of humor, when it comes to raising tweens and teens, too.

    Now that our oldest daughter is heading off to college in the spring (hold me!) and we're beginning the college search, all over again, with the middle girl (see previous parenthesis!) it recently occurred to me that these kids are going to have to learn how to fall...OVER AND OVER, AGAIN!
    Yodavia Hallmark: message inside -- totally kick but you will!

    Sooooo, good thing we've got plenty of rulers...not to mention, plenty of pretend light sabers laying around the house...right?!??

    ? 2003 - 2012 This Full House

    LIASO_HOR_PMS267Disclosure:???I am being compensated for my services for the length of the program.? The stories, opinions and words shared here are all mine.? To receive notices on Hallmark products and special offers, feel free to sign up for the?newsletter (when you have time, of course!)

    Source: http://www.thisfullhouse.com/reviews/2012/10/learning-from-our-mistakes-101.html

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    Former teen who had sex with Polanski writing book

    FILE - In a Monday, May 21, 2012 file photo, director Roman Polanski arrives for the screening of "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" at the 65th international film festival, in Cannes. Samantha Geimer, the former teen whom Roman Polanski was convicted of having sex with in 1977, leading to one of Hollywood's most notorious scandals and the director's flight from the U.S., is writing a memoir. Geimer, now 47, has a deal with Atria Books for "The Girl: Emerging from the Shadow of Roman Polanski." Atria, a Simon & Schuster imprint, announced Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012 that the book will come out next fall. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

    FILE - In a Monday, May 21, 2012 file photo, director Roman Polanski arrives for the screening of "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" at the 65th international film festival, in Cannes. Samantha Geimer, the former teen whom Roman Polanski was convicted of having sex with in 1977, leading to one of Hollywood's most notorious scandals and the director's flight from the U.S., is writing a memoir. Geimer, now 47, has a deal with Atria Books for "The Girl: Emerging from the Shadow of Roman Polanski." Atria, a Simon & Schuster imprint, announced Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012 that the book will come out next fall. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

    (AP) ? The former teen whom Roman Polanski was convicted of having sex with ? leading to one of Hollywood's most notorious scandals and the director's flight from the U.S. ? is writing a memoir.

    Samantha Geimer, now 47, has a deal with Atria Books for "The Girl: Emerging from the Shadow of Roman Polanski." Atria, a Simon & Schuster imprint, announced Tuesday that the book will come out next fall. According to Atria, Geimer will provide "insight into many dimensions of the story that have never previously been revealed."

    "I am more than 'Sex Victim Girl,' a tag the media pinned on me," Geimer, who long ago identified herself as Polanski's victim, said in a statement released through Atria. "My friends in junior high, scolded by their parents to stay away from that girl, also labeled me. I offer my story now without rage, but with purpose ? to share a tale that in its detail will reclaim my identity. I have been dogged by tired thinking and easy tags nearly my entire life. I am not a stick figure. I know what it is like to be a woman and a victim in the realest possible way."

    Financial terms were not disclosed. Geimer's attorney, Lawrence Silver, will contribute to the book, adding "his insights on the many fascinating and even shocking legal aspects of the story."

    Polanski was accused of plying Geimer with champagne and part of a Quaalude during a 1977 modeling shoot at Jack Nicholson's house and raping her. He was initially indicted on six felony counts, including rape by use of drugs, child molesting and sodomy, but pleaded guilty to one count of unlawful sexual intercourse.

    In exchange, a Los Angeles judge agreed to drop the remaining charges and sentence him to prison for a 90-day psychiatric evaluation. He was released after 42 days by an evaluator who deemed him mentally sound and unlikely to offend again, but the judge threatened further sanctions and Polanski fled the United States.

    The 79-year-old Polanski, whose films include "Chinatown" and "Rosemary's Baby," is restricted by an Interpol warrant in effect in 188 countries, but he moves freely between Switzerland and France. He was freed from Swiss house arrest in 2010 after the government refused to deport him to the United States.

    Geimer sued Polanski in December 1988, alleging sexual assault, intentional infliction of emotional distress and seduction. In 1993, Polanski agreed to pay her $500,000 to settle the lawsuit, although years later it was unclear if he actually paid. She has said that she forgives him and has joined his bid for dismissal.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-10-09-Books-Polanski%20Victim/id-a60633ecf7fe4c02ae77f51c93cbc074

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    Workshop: Cooking Up a Home-Based Food Business

    Cooking Up a Home-Based Food Business

    Thursday, October 18, 6:30-8:30pm

    Now is your opportunity to start a food business in your home! Recent changes in Washington State Law enables entrepreneurs to start small food businesses from their homes. Learn how you can start your own business in this two-hour workshop with Jennifer Lewis and Zoe Bartlett, two successful food entrepreneurs.

    Source: http://www.shorelineareanews.com/2012/10/workshop-cooking-up-home-based-food.html

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