Sunday, April 22, 2012

NBA will review World Peace elbow to Harden


The NBA will review the play, and if Harden is out for any length of time, that Could affect the length of what in all likelihood will be a suspension for World Peace.
"I got real emotional and excited, and it was unfortunate That James had to get hit with the unintentional elbow," said World Peace, WHO had scored 12 points and played solid defense on Durant. "I hope he's OK. Oklahoma, they're playing for a championship this year. I apologize to the Thunder and James Harden. It was just unfortunate."
Bryant and other Lakers acknowledged World Peace is Likely to face a multi-game suspension with one game left in their regular season.
"I'm just happy my teammate is all right," said Durant, WHO scored 35 points on 11-for-34 shooting. "It was a bad play. Hopefully Ron (World Peace) did not do it intentionally or have any malicious intentions on that. We've got to move past that."
Harden left the court, but CAME out of the locker room to the Thunder bench in the third quarter intending to try to give it a go after passing the baseline tests administered by the Lakers physician for a possible concussion. Instead, he returned to the locker room without playing.
Harden, WHO had 14 points, ABC reporter Lisa Salters of toll he had "a little bit of a headache."
ABC / ESPN 's Magic Johnson, a Hall of Famer and former Laker, said of World Peace's play, "It was intentional - and a cheap shot."
World Peace, WHO changed his name from Ron Artest last year, has been mostly well-behaved during his three seasons with the Lakers, Including contribution to an NBA championship. Infamy precedes him, most Notably his 86-game suspension for participating in the brawl in the Palace of Auburn Hills stands while playing for the Indiana Pacers against the Detroit Pistons in November 2004.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Toilet Earth Day - New Envirolet Composting Toilet FlushSmart 800 Looks Great in the Bathroom

Just in time for Earth Day, Sancor introduces the all-new Envirolet composting toilet FlushSmart 800 Series system. FlushSmart 800 models feature a great-looking, large ceramic bowl.
The new System 800 FlushSmart was introduced at the recent Spring Cottage Life Show in Toronto and received a very positive reception from consumers.
The system is designed to appeal to Those looking for the same "conventional toilet" They are used to style. The attractive ceramic toilet in the bathroom is all that the user sees with the composting system Safely tucked away in an outside box or shed or in the basement. Out of sight, out of mind.
"This new conventional-looking design truly brings Envirolet composting toilet systems to the mainstream," says actor and respected environmentalist, Ed Begley, Jr..
What separates the Envirolet FlushSmart 800 from a conventional toilet is that? It uses only 0.2L (6oz) of water per flush and converts waste to compost using an advanced Automatic Six-Way Aeration process and natural microbe-action.
The new FlushSmart 800 is part of the unique Envirolet That FlushSmart Series offers many advantages over other composting toilets Including its ease of installation, styling and performance.
In 2009, the Envirolet FlushSmart was listed as one of the "25 Products That Might Just Change The World" in Bloomberg BusinessWeek.
The Envirolet FlushSmart Series is superior to other composting toilets on the market does not Because It require a gravity connection for installation, ie, the toilet does not have to be above the composting unit. It can flush as far away as 70 feet horizontally and 12 feet up (vertical) using a powerful vacuum unit processor. Up to three toilets can be connected.
Operation is the same as any toilet, although single-ply toilet tissue is recommended. Once or twice a year, the user will easily remove a small amount of finished compost from the system Completing the process. Systems are clean, sanitary and odor-free.
Envirolet systems, also available in Waterless models, are used in applications Including Various homes, cottages, cabins, work shops, garages, basements, pool cabanas, commercial applications and almost anywhere else That requires an economical and environmental sanitation solution. Available in AC electric, 12VDC and non-electric (off-the-grid) and single or double tank configurations to handle capacity requirements.
Is this a new concept? Not at all. Envirolet turned 35 this year, having been first manufactured in North America in 1977. Envirolet Continues to be made in the USA and Canada. Browse Hundreds of customer testimonials and see in-the-field installation photos on Envirolet Buzz.
"Envirolet Composting Toilets are saving the planet one toilet at a time, and have been for over 30 years. With Envirolet, you can conserve valuable water by flushing with little or no water at all. Save money compared to alternatives like septic That can cost Thousands. Envirolet is the premium choice in composting toilet systems available today with the longest warranty, more installation options and superior features. " - Ed Begley, Jr.., Actor and Environmentalist
# # #
About Sancor Industries Ltd.Headquartered in Oshawa, Ontario, Sancor Industries Ltd. is a leading manufacturer and marketer of advanced environmental composting toilet systems under the brands Envirolet and Santerra Green. Envirolet has been sold factory direct to consumers worldwide since 1977. Santerra the Green is sold through select retailers and dealers in the United States and Canada. Sancor Continues to manufacture in North America and offers the longest warranty in the composting toilet industry. The newly introduced FlushSmart Series has revolutionized the industry by changing the perception of what a composting toilet looks like. For more information, visit http://envirolet.com or http://santerragreen.com. Follow Envirolet on Twitter for the latest.
See Envirolet at Two Upcoming Shows & Meet Ed Begley, Jr..Envirolet is sponsoring and will be on display at the Mother Earth News Fairs this year. Spokesperson Ed Begley, Jr.. will be at both shows on the Saturday of both events for a meet & greet in the Envirolet booth and will be speaking on the main stage show and signing books. More event info.

Dick Clark, America's enduring teenager, dies at age 82, leaving a legacy as a pioneer of music and entertainment

Dick Clark, Whose "American Bandstand" made him rich, famous, Influential and controversial by marrying Sometimes rock 'n' roll with television, Died Wednesday morning at the age of 82.
His agent, Paul Shefrin, said he suffered a massive heart attack. He had struggled with health issues since aa Suffering serious stroke in 2004.
Before then he was Often called "America's oldest living teenager" because of his perpetual and almost eerily youthful look.
"I can not imagine our world without Dick Clark," said Bruce "Cousin Brucie" Morrow, the long-time radio host now on SiriusXM. "You'd just look at him - that face. I never thought we'd lose him. "
But behind Clark's boyish, all-American look, he was one of the canniest music and media moguls of the late 20th century - starting with the way he cross-marketed the two biggest pop culture phenomena of the past 60 years, rock 'n' roll and television.
"The passing of Dick Clark Removes one of the largest foundation stones of the entire pop music industry for the latter half of the 20th century," said longtime friend Kal Rudman, publisher of "Friday Morning Quarterback."
A Mount Vernon, NY, native got his start as WHO as a radio deejay and TV weatherman, Clark Inherited a local show called "Bandstand" from the popular Bob Horn on Philadelphia's WFIL in 1955.
While other local TV shows featured teenagers dancing to popular music, Clark took when it national ABC starting airing up "American Bandstand" on May. 5, 1957.
"That move is what put rock 'n' roll into America's living room," said Morrow. "Dick Clark was the key to everything That Followed."
Clark was an Unlikely standard-bearer for early rock 'n' roll, the which built much of its reputation on the online Rebellious attitude and style of artists like Elvis Presley and Little Richard.
Clark was white bread, a totally unthreatening guy WHO could have been barbecuing hamburgers on the grill next door.
His Critics have charged he also Promoted blandness on his show, pushing "teen idols" like Fabian and Bobby Rydell, WHO were Widely viewed by fans as a safe substitute for the harder-edged music of Jerry Lee Lewis or Chuck Berry.
Clark always denied he favored watered-down music. His defenders note he gave early exposure to artists like James Brown and his tours were Among the first to integrate venues in the South.
But unquestionably his wholesome image served him well when he was questioned in the payola Scandals of 1959-1960.
He survived Those Scandals, the which ruined Deejays like Alan Freed and many radio stations scared into putting a tighter leash on Their Music and Their hosts.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

RHOC go Glamping

I'm not a camper. This week at my mother's in the country is as close as I want to come, but I'm embarrassed for the Real Housewives of the OC as they attempt to camp. Meaning, they're without a corkscrew or proper red wine glasses while they sit outside their luxurious cabins -- which don't have room for all your makeup on the counter.
Maybe that's because you're supposed to give the makeup a rest when you're camping. And listen, I'm no hair experts, but those extensions look ridiculous on those women. Do you notice how often they're itching their heads? Or wearing caps or scarfs so they look like Janice from The Electric Mayhem?

Janice

So in glamping, the little kitchen prepares your meat by marinating it and bringing it to you to cook. In recyclable cloth bags. All one has to do is start the fire and put the meat on the grill. This proves difficult for all except for the new girl who has listened to the directions. I'm sure the small staff was ready to throw Alexis' iPhone into the outhouse.
You're telling me ALL those women, who may or may not be housewives, don't know how to throw meat on a grill? How do you get half-way towards death and not know how to throw meat on a grill? Or start a fire with firestarter and wood?
I'm no girl scout, but come on!! Today I watched a special on the people of Madagascar, and they have SIX year olds with more common sense. See, that's the problem with this show. These women have no idea how to survive. If you're hungry, you don't pick up your iPhone, you learn how to function. It's not cute to be that stupid.
Then, you have poor Gretchen, who is still blaming the fact that she can't sing on her fight with Vicki. When her poor singing coach knows -- the singing coach's dog knows -- it's not that Gretchen has lost her voice. It's that she never had one to begin with -- but I'll give her this. She's a survivor. And while that six-year old in Madagascar may have to salt and hang fish, or wait tables for tourists, Gretchen knows she has to support her and Slade. She has the survival instinct.
When they glam Gretchen up next week for Vegas, you almost expect the magic of the movies and a beautiful voice to come to life! But we know poor Vicki is never going to hear the end of the fact that people paid for the Pussy Cat dolls and got Gretchen in sparkles making "Fever" sound like a bad case of the flu.

Bob Beckel drops major F-bomb on FOX News but he's only kind of sorry

A pundit can say a lot of Things on FOX News, but "You do not know what the f *** you're talking about!" is not one of them. "The Five" host Bob Beckel says he did not know that he was on the water when he Shouted at the Exclamation Jennifer Stefano panelist during a heated debate as the show CAME back from a commercial break during an appearance on Sean Hannity's "Hannity. "

What Followed was a very confused exchange in the which Hannity, shocked, apologized to viewers while Beckel ranted, "I just can not stand right-Wingers Their mouths running all the time ... I'm not going to apologize. We're not on the water. "

It took a few moments to even convince Beckel That yes, he was live on the air when he said the F-word, and was still on the water. Apparently, the discussion with Stefano during the commercial was so intense That he missed every possible cue. When he finally figured it out, just Beckel said, "Oh, okay, good. Why did not we know we were on the water?"

He then apologized, but we loosely use the word apology, Because he did not Appear to be very sorry at all. "That I'm sorry about using foul word, yes, but the intent is still there about it. The intent is there, but the use of the word, I did not Realize we were on the water, and you should run your show a little better instead of having to get caught like that. "

"No personal responsibility," Stefano said. "He's a liberal."

Over the remaining minutes of the show, Beckel remained preoccupied by the incident, insisting he'd be fired and suggesting Hannity That let him get "caught" because he's a liberal.

Adults, ladies and gentlemen.

Levon Helm, singer and drummer for The Band, in final stages of cancer

The Band singer and drummer Levon Helm is in the final stages of cancer, According to a note posted on his website Tuesday by his wife, Sandy, and daughter, Amy.
"Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way through this part of his journey," the note said. "Thank you fans and music lovers have made his life WHO so filled with joy and celebration. . . he has loved nothing more than to play, to fill the room up with music, lay down the back beat, and the make the people dance! He did it every time he took the stage. "
At Saturday's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Cleveland, former Band guitarist and songwriter Robbie Robertson prefaced his induction speech for recording engineers Cosimo Matassa, Tom Dowd and Glyn Johns saying "We all need to send out love and prayers to my band mate Levon Helm, "but he did not elaborate.
Arkansas-born Helm was the only non-Canadian member of the Hawks, a group backed That first early rocker Ronnie Hawkins, and then gained fame in the mid-1960s when accompanying Bob Dylan the singer and songwriter "went electric" to the consternation of many hardcore fans of folk music Who 'd Previously supported him.
The band worked closely with Dylan after he went into seclusion Following a near-fatal motorcycle accident in 1966, recording a batch of songs Influential That were Widely bootlegged and only surfaced in official form in 1975 as "The Basement Tapes." The band released its first album on its own in 1968, "Music from Big Pink," to broad critical acclaim. It included one of the group's signature songs "The Weight." Followed it with the even more highly lauded sophomore album "The Band," which included "Up On Cripple Creek," "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" and "Rag Mama Rag."
As one of three lead singers for the band, along with Richard Manuel and Rick Danko, Helm was the dominant voice on Such signature songs as "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "Rag Mama Rag," "Ophelia," "Don 't Do It "and" Daniel and the Sacred Harp. "Manuel committed suicide in 1986 and Danko Died of drug-related heart failure in 1999.
Members of the Band Decided in 1976 to quit touring, and threw a final gala concert They called "The Last Waltz," which was captured on the film by director Martin Scorsese. Here's a clip of Helm singing "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" at that concert:


After "The Last Waltz," Robertson began pursuing a series of solo projects, while Helm, Danko and multi-instrumentalist Garth Hudson engaged in Various projects, Including Helm's acting role as Loretta Lynn's father in the Academy Award-winning 1979 movie "Coal Miner's Daughter. "
The group reconvened and recorded a new studio album, "Jericho," in 1993, without Robertson, and continued to tour Periodically until Helm's health deteriorated Because of the throat cancer diagnosed in 1998.
Following radiation treatment, his voice was little more than a whisper, but he hosted a series of loose performances at The Barn, his home and studio in upstate New York, where he SLOWLY regained much of the quality That distinguished his work in the Band.
In his 1993 autobiography, Helm of toll of his falling out with Robertson over songwriting credits and publishing royalties related to the group's highly regarded catalog, the which was singularly credited to Robertson. The Band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.
Helmet mounted a comeback and subsequently released three albums, all of the which garnered Grammy Awards. He received the 2007 Grammy for traditional folk album for "Dirt Farmer," the 2009 Americana album award for its follow-up, "Electric Dirt," and again for 2011's "Ramble at the Ryman" live album recorded at Nashville's historic Ryman Auditorium.
He was the subject of a 2010 documentary, "Is not In It For My Health: A Film About Levon Helm."
[Update at 5:27 pm: An Earlier version of this post said Helm had won two Grammy Awards for his albums post-treatment cancer. All three won Grammys. Also it said he had undergone a laryngectomy. He Refused the laryngectomy and underwent radiation treatment instead.]

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

GSA Scandal Underscores Need for Government Contracting Oversight, According to the American Small Business League

Petaluma, Calif., April 17, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) - The Following is a statement by the American Small Business League:
The American Small Business League (ASBL) is calling on Congress and federal watchdogs to Investigate government contracting officers and federal agencies repeatedly fail to follow That procurement regulations. This follows a report from the General Services Administration Office of Inspector General found That the GSA awarded a contract earmarked for a small business to a large business.
The GSA awarded the contract to Royal Productions for "Audio Visual Services" at the GSA's now infamous Las Vegas team building conference, the 2010 Western Regions Conference (WRC). A GSA OIG report, Followed by the release of a series of videos of GSA employees at the WRC, has Brought national attention to the unacceptable way the U.S. government spends Taxpayer dollars.
The ASBL is requesting That the House Small Business Committee, the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, the Department of Justice and the Government Accountability Office Investigate why contracting officers and federal agencies continue to award contracts earmarked for small businesses to large companies.
During the past decade federal agencies have awarded federal small business contracts to companies Such as Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, British Aerospace, Apple, Home Depot, Motorola, Xerox, Dell Computers and Thousands of other large companies.
Since 2003, more than a dozen federal investigations have found billions of dollars That in federal small business contracts have been awarded to large companies. In October 2011, the Small Business Administration Office Inspector General released a report naming the issue of government agencies awarding small business contracts to large companies as the SBA's # 1 management challenge.
The U.S. government is the world's largest buyer of goods and services, and small businesses are the nation's engine of economic growth; According to U.S. Census Bureau data, small businesses create more than 90 percent of net new jobs. By failing to comply with procurement policies aimed at Helping small businesses, federal agencies are doing severe damage to the U.S. economy.
"Federal spending is obviously out of control," said ASBL President Lloyd Chapman. "And the diversion of federal small business contracts to large companies is a major problem for the economy. It is time for these abuses to end."
SOURCE: American Small Business League

Prizes 2012: The Year With No Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

A curious statement was made by this year's Pulitzer Prize committee as, for the first time since A River Runs Through It failed to win in 1977, no award was given in the fiction category. Instead, Denis Johnson's Train Dreams, Karen Russell's Swamplandia!, And David Foster Wallace's The Pale King will get to split the "tie" on Their records. In the history of the Prize, there have only been nine other years without a fiction winner.
coverMeanwhile in the General Nonfiction category, Stephen Greenblatt's The Swerve: How the World Became Modern took home the top prize.
Here are this year's Pulitzer winners and finalists with Excerpts where available:
Fiction:

    
* Train Dreams by Denis Johnson - (excerpt)
    
* Swamplandia! by Karen Russell (excerpt, The Millions interview)
    
* The Pale King by David Foster Wallace (excerpt, Previously unpublished scene)
covercovercover
General Nonfiction:

    
* Winner: The Swerve: How the World Became Modern by Stephen Greenblatt (excerpt)
    
* One Hundred Names For Love: A Stroke, a Marriage, and the Language of Healing by Diane Ackerman (excerpt)
    
* Unnatural Selection: Choosing Boys over Girls, and the Consequences of a World Full of Men by Mara Hvistendahl (excerpt)
covercovercover
History:

    
* Winner: Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention by Manning Marable (excerpt, The Millions review)
    
* Empires, Nations & Families: A History of the North American West, 1800-1860 by Anne F. Hyde (excerpt - PDF)
    
* The Eleventh Day: The Full Story of 9/11 and Osama Bin Laden by Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan (excerpt)
    
* Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America by Richard White (excerpt)
covercovercovercover
Biography:

    
* Winner: George F. Kennan: An American Life by John Lewis Gaddis (excerpt)
    
* Love and Capital: Karl and Jenny Marx and the Birth of a Revolution by Mary Gabriel (excerpt)
    
* Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention by Manning Marable (excerpt, The Millions review)
covercovercover
Winners and finalists in other categories are available at the Pulitzer Web site.

Wesley Korir, of Kenya via Louisville, wins hot Boston Marathon; ‘11 champ Mutai drops out


BOSTON - Making the final turn of the Boston Marathon, with almost 26 miles behind them and just a few blocks to go, the runners abandoned convention and swung wide to the far side of Boylston Street.
Forget the shortest distance to the finish, that's where the shade was.

Personal Post

    
* (Charles Krupa / Associated Press) - Kenya's Wesley Korir, top, and compatriot Sharon Cherop, bottom, are shown winning the men's and women's divisions of the 116th Boston Marathon in Boston, Monday, April 16, 2012. Korir finished in 2 hours, 12 minutes, 40 seconds. Cherop finished in 2 hours, 31 minutes, 50 seconds.
    
* (Charles Krupa / Associated Press) - Wesley Korir, of Kenya, Celebrates after winning the 116th Boston Marathon in Boston, Monday, April 16, 2012.
    
* (Charles Krupa / Associated Press) - Wesley Korir, left, and Sharon Cherop, both of Kenya, kiss the winner's trophy after winning the men's and women's divisions of the 116th Boston Marathon in Boston, Monday, April 16, 2012.
    
* (Charles Krupa / Associated Press) - Sharon Cherop, of Kenya, top, reacts after she edged out compatriot Jemima Jelagat Sumgong, bottom, after breaking the tape to win the women's division of the 116th Boston Marathon in Boston, Monday, April 16 , 2012.

    
*
    
*
(Charles Krupa / Associated Press) - Kenya's Wesley Korir, top, and compatriot Sharon Cherop, bottom, are shown winning the men's and women's divisions of the 116th Boston Marathon in Boston, Monday, April 16, 2012. Korir finished in 2 hours, 12 minutes, 40 seconds. Cherop finished in 2 hours, 31 minutes, 50 seconds.
"It's hot out there, in case you did not know," said Kenyan Wesley Korir after enduring record high temperatures to win the 116th Boston Marathon on Monday. "I Knew I had to hydrate to survive. I was more concerned about my hydration than my positioning. "
A permanent resident of the United States, Korir of the religious songs as he trudged along the scorching pavement to cross the finish line in 84.8-degree temperatures with a time of 2 hours, 12 minutes, 40 seconds. Sharon Cherop won the women's race in a sprint to the finish to complete the Kenyan sweep.
Korir, a graduate of Louisville, finished 26 seconds ahead of fellow Kenyan Matebo Levy in the second-slowest Boston race since 1985. It was almost 10 minutes behind the world best established here a year ago by Geoffrey Mutai, WHO dropped out this year with stomach cramps after 18 miles.
Hoping Mutai was a repeat victory would Clinch a spot on the Kenyan Olympic team. But it was Korir, a two-time Los Angeles Marathon winner, WHO may have won a ticket to the London Games.
"To me, I think running the Boston Marathon is an Olympic event," he said. "I do not care what comes up after this, but I'm really, really happy to win Boston."
Temperatures of around 70 degrees at the start in Hopkinton rose to 85 by the time the top runners reached the finish line and continued to rise to a record 89 before the field of more than 22.000 finished its 2.26-mile track to Boston's Back Bay.
Organizers said as of Monday evening That, fewer than 2.000 of participants had received some level of medical attention, and about 120 were taken to Hospitals in ambulances. One person was taken from the course in serious condition in Wellesley, though the details of his or her condition were unavailable.
Crowds at the Copley Square medical tent were bigger than in previous years, with the smell of sunscreen and the sound of ambulance Sirens in the water.
"It is a very busy day, but it was the day for the which people planned," Boston Athletic Association executive director Tom Grilk said. "The god of marathoning, she smiled on us."
The heat slowed the leaders and led to warnings convinced That may have as many as 4.300 no-shows to sit this one out. Race organizers Those Offered Their WHO picked up registration packets, but did not start the opportunity to save a place in next year's race.
A total of 22.426 runners started the race in Hopkinton - about 84 percent of the registered field of 26.716 entrants. Several hundred WHO picked up Their starting bibs did not show up at the start will be Offered a chance to run in 2013 instead.
The heat did not seem to be a problem for Canadian Joshua Cassidy, WHO won the men's wheelchair race in 1:18:25 to beat the previous world best by 2 seconds. American Shirley Reilly's Wakako Tsuchida edged Japan during a sprint to the finish in the women's wheelchair division.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Va. Tech marking 5 years since campus massacre

BLACKSBURG, Va.—Students were headed to class Monday at Virginia Tech, the first year the school hasn't suspended instruction to mark the anniversary of a 2007 rampage that left 32 people and the gunman dead.
The massacre was the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Provost Mark McNamee, who chaired a committee that planned memorial events in the years after the shooting, said the return to classes reflects the lives of those slain.
"Their passion for education, their desire to do good in the world, their commitment to their disciplines come through so strongly that we felt being in classes was one special way of remembering them onward," McNamee said. "This is what they did, this is what we do, and it's important to us.
"My sense is that our students and our faculty are ready for it," he said.
The day will be remembered in other ways on the Blacksburg campus, in Washington, and by alumni across the country.
Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell was scheduled to address a campus-wide candlelight vigil on the Drillfield, the heart of the campus. McDonnell has issued a proclamation recognizing April 16 as Virginia Tech Remembrance Day.
The proclamation honors the 32 lives that were "hastily taken, leaving absences that will never be filled and a profound sense of sorrow in the lives of those impacted," the proclamation reads in part.
At 9:43 a.m. Monday -- the time when gunman Seung-Hui Cho began killing 30 students and professors at Norris Hall -- McDonnell was calling for a moment of silence in Virginia. The Capitol Square Bell Tower in Richmond will then toll for each victim.
On campus, events will also include a community picnic on the Drillfield, a display of memorial items sent to Virginia Tech from other colleges and universities and performances. Several locations have been set aside on campus as "quiet places for reflection."
At Norris Hall, where Cho also killed himself, an open house was scheduled. The former classroom building is now home to the Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention.
The center was established after the killings at Norris Hall in 2009 "to transform a place of pain, suffering and violence that can prevent future violence," director James Hawdon said. The center promotes student volunteerism and "nonviolent compassionate communication" techniques, he said.
Hawdon, a sociology professor who was on campus during the 2007 carnage, said initially some people were hesitant to visit a peace center located in a place that had seen so much death. Once people overcome that, he said, "I think it's cathartic for them."
Hawdon said April 16 anniversaries have evolved from profoundly somber days to "a strong sense of community and a desire to work towards making the world a better place. We hope we can make a difference."
McNamee said survivors and parents of students slain five years ago have been part of the planning committee on anniversaries. They were fearful the events of April 16, 2007, would dim with time, so the university has stuck to symbolic remembrances of the day such as the candlelight vigil and a 3.2-mile run over the weekend that attracted 6,800 participants.
While the vast majority of students who were on campus in 2007 are gone, many current faculty members were there. He said he has heard no complaints about the decision to hold classes Monday.
Still, he said, memories of that day "can catch you by surprise."
"It's not too deeply buried," McNamee said. "A faculty member may be teaching and remember that day."
In Washington, Virginia Tech survivor Colin Goddard and other gun control advocates would begin two days of lobbying Congress on Monday. Goddard's documentary, "Living for 32," will also be screened on college campuses and communities across the country.
Alumni groups have been sponsoring service-based events leading to and on the anniversary. In Delaware, for instance, the First State Chapter participated in a Habitat for Humanity project Saturday, while members of the Portland, Ore., chapter volunteered for a tree planting.
The Denver chapter sponsored a 3.2-mile "Remembrance Walk/Run" on Sunday, and the National Capital Region Chapter sponsored a blood drive in the Washington suburbs.
In Blacksburg, the Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets was to conclude the day by standing guard for 32 minutes prior to the 11:59 p.m. snuffing of a ceremonial candle.
BLACKSBURG, Va.—Students were headed to class Monday at Virginia Tech, the first year the school hasn't suspended instruction to mark the anniversary of a 2007 rampage that left 32 people and the gunman dead.
The massacre was the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Provost Mark McNamee, who chaired a committee that planned memorial events in the years after the shooting, said the return to classes reflects the lives of those slain.
"Their passion for education, their desire to do good in the world, their commitment to their disciplines come through so strongly that we felt being in classes was one special way of remembering them onward," McNamee said. "This is what they did, this is what we do, and it's important to us.
"My sense is that our students and our faculty are ready for it," he said.
The day will be remembered in other ways on the Blacksburg campus, in Washington, and by alumni across the country.
Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell was scheduled to address a campus-wide candlelight vigil on the Drillfield, the heart of the campus. McDonnell has issued a proclamation recognizing April 16 as Virginia Tech Remembrance Day.
The proclamation honors the 32 lives that were "hastily taken, leaving absences that will never be filled and a profound sense of sorrow in the lives of those impacted," the proclamation reads in part.
At 9:43 a.m. Monday -- the time when gunman Seung-Hui Cho began killing 30 students and professors at Norris Hall -- McDonnell was calling for a moment of silence in Virginia. The Capitol Square Bell Tower in Richmond will then toll for each victim.
On campus, events will also include a community picnic on the Drillfield, a display of memorial items sent to Virginia Tech from other colleges and universities and performances. Several locations have been set aside on campus as "quiet places for reflection."
At Norris Hall, where Cho also killed himself, an open house was scheduled. The former classroom building is now home to the Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention.
The center was established after the killings at Norris Hall in 2009 "to transform a place of pain, suffering and violence that can prevent future violence," director James Hawdon said. The center promotes student volunteerism and "nonviolent compassionate communication" techniques, he said.
Hawdon, a sociology professor who was on campus during the 2007 carnage, said initially some people were hesitant to visit a peace center located in a place that had seen so much death. Once people overcome that, he said, "I think it's cathartic for them."
Hawdon said April 16 anniversaries have evolved from profoundly somber days to "a strong sense of community and a desire to work towards making the world a better place. We hope we can make a difference."
McNamee said survivors and parents of students slain five years ago have been part of the planning committee on anniversaries. They were fearful the events of April 16, 2007, would dim with time, so the university has stuck to symbolic remembrances of the day such as the candlelight vigil and a 3.2-mile run over the weekend that attracted 6,800 participants.
While the vast majority of students who were on campus in 2007 are gone, many current faculty members were there. He said he has heard no complaints about the decision to hold classes Monday.
Still, he said, memories of that day "can catch you by surprise."
"It's not too deeply buried," McNamee said. "A faculty member may be teaching and remember that day."
In Washington, Virginia Tech survivor Colin Goddard and other gun control advocates would begin two days of lobbying Congress on Monday. Goddard's documentary, "Living for 32," will also be screened on college campuses and communities across the country.
Alumni groups have been sponsoring service-based events leading to and on the anniversary. In Delaware, for instance, the First State Chapter participated in a Habitat for Humanity project Saturday, while members of the Portland, Ore., chapter volunteered for a tree planting.
The Denver chapter sponsored a 3.2-mile "Remembrance Walk/Run" on Sunday, and the National Capital Region Chapter sponsored a blood drive in the Washington suburbs.
In Blacksburg, the Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets was to conclude the day by standing guard for 32 minutes prior to the 11:59 p.m. snuffing of a ceremonial candle.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

New Kendall Jenner Bikini Pics

Kendall Jenner is rocking a bikini yet again.

The 16-year old half-sister of Khloe, Kourtney and Kim KardashianCAME under a bit of fire for going too risque in one of these bathingsuits back in 2010.

But it's two years later and Kendall is proud of the photos displayedin the latest issue of Flavor, the which is apparently a fashionmagazine.

"It is Such an amazing honor to be featured," Jenner wrote of thespread in her official blog, adding Sinisha Nisevic That snapped thepics and They were taken on James Goldstein's property.
Kendall Jenner Bikini PictureKendall Jenner for Flavor

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