Monthly Archives: May 2017

Mets GM Alderson says injured Cespedes making progress – Asbury Park Press

Posted: May 7, 2017 at 11:45 pm

Mets manager Terry Collins talks about T.J. Rivera J.P. Pelzman

Mets general manager Sandy Alderson (file)(Photo: Brad Penner, Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports)

NEW YORK -Yoenis Cespedes will come to New York for some more tests Monday, general manager Sandy Alderson indicated Saturday.

But its not because the Mets injured slugger had a setback with his strained left hamstring. In fact, Alderson said Cespedes rehab is going well. Cespedes went on the 10-day disabled list on April 28 after pulling up lame on a double against atlanta the day before.

Yoenis is making good progress with his hamstring, Alderson said. However, were bringing him up here Monday to undergo an evaluation thats a little broader than just the hamstring to try and get to the question of why he may have recurring hamstring injuries.

Cespedes has had leg woes before this latest setback, so thats why the Mets want to take a closer look at him physically.

Alderson said the goal is to see if theres something preventative that we can do to address the possibility of these injuries recurring.

Syndergaard apologizes: During his session with reporters Saturday, injured pitcher Noah Syndergaard said he wanted to clarify an incident that occurred several days before he was injured at Washington. Syndergaard snapped at Mets long-time media relations maven Jay Horwitz when reporters approached him after a game.

I was a little confused about why the media was approaching me after the game, Syndergaard said. I didnt think anything had changed (in his injury situation). I didnt mean anything disrespectful toward Jay Horwitz or anyone in general.

MORE: Mets' Syndergaard won't throw a baseball for six weeks

Collins quips: Mets manager Terry Collins saw a photographer taking his picture Saturday afternoon during his pregamebriefing and said, "Is this going out with that other photo? Just wanted to make sure.

Collins was referring to an incident Friday night when the Mets official Twitter account inadvertently sent out a photo of T.J. Rivera which showed a sex toy in teammate Kevin Plaweckis locker. It became a sensation on social media. Plawecki said Saturday it was not his and that a teammate must have planted it as a prank.

Plawecki said he first heard about it while on his way home after the game.

Somebody said check the internet, and it just kind of blew up from there, he said Saturday. I've got nothing to do with it, I know that. I didn't know about it. It's not mine. Nothing to do with that thing.

There are some good pranksters on this team, he added. It's definitely awkward. It's weird, but at the same it is kind of funny, but by no means does it reflect who I am as a person.

Staff Writer J.P. Pelzman:jpelzman@gannett.com

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Dustin Johnson pleased with progress in return – StarNewsOnline.com

Posted: at 11:45 pm

World No. 1 battles from cut line to leader before Brian Harman's win

By many accounts, Dustin Johnson's work at the Wells Fargo Championship proved a successful PGA Tour return.

It was almost successful enough to win a fourth-straight tournament.

The world's No. 1 player went from reaching the 1-over cut line on the number to the lead after birdying No. 18 Sunday. Minutes later, a 28-foot beauty there by Brian Harman prevented Johnson from remaining unbeaten on the Tour since February.

"The first two days I didn't play that bad," said Johnson, who finished second at 9-under with Pat Perez. "I had a good practice session before my third round and hit it well the last two days. I'm pleased with where my game is going into next week."

He suffered a freak back injury after falling down stairs days before the Masters and had to withdraw. The Columbia, S.C. native hadn't played since the World Golf Championships in early March.

Johnson noted some rustiness, which showed on Friday when he went 3-over for the round and narrowly stayed alive for the weekend.

Maybe that practice session was all he needed to better understand windy Wilmington. Two 67s provide plenty of evidence.

He made his charge Sunday thanks to back-to-back birdies on Nos. 12-13. A 37-footer for another bird lipped out a hole later.

"Hey DJ, Calabash loves you," shouted one fan while Johnson made his way on 14.

Judging by the crowd swelling, the devotion went beyond the Brunswick County hamlet.

Perhaps the best way to tell Johnson was back in a groove was how he hit out of trouble on 12 and 16.

He avoided water at 12, and managed a birdie anyway.

"I didn't catch it quite like I wanted to, but it was still on a pretty good line," Johnson said. "I guess you could say I got lucky it didn't go into the water but a little bit unlucky that it lands where it did and doesn't land on the green. Either or I guess."

The 16th was also iffy thanks to a tee shot that landed deep in pine straw. Again he found a way out and managed par.

His short game was on Sunday -- not just on 18, but also an 18-foot putt on 2 -- and it appeared that put him in position for a fourth-straight trophy.No one has won four or more in a season since Jason Day and Jordan Spieth (five each) in 2015.

If Wells Fargo was any indication, Johnson is poised to break Day and Spieth's mark.

"Physically, I'm really good," Johnson said. "Everything's 100 percent, feeling great. I can swing at it, no problems. Still got a lot of practice to do to get ready for next week, but looking forward to it."

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Athletics’ reliever John Axford making progress with shoulder strain – The Mercury News

Posted: at 11:45 pm

OAKLAND John Axford is getting closer to helping shoulder the burden of being a contributing member of the Athletics bullpen.

I just warmed up like I would going into a game, a general warm-up routine, and then faced two simulated batters, Axford said. Someone stood in the box to get that kind of feel. It feels really good. I was season-ready (when injured) so I was already built up strong, ready to go. A few weeks off throwing is not the biggest thing.

Next up for Axford will be facing live hitters during a Wednesday batting practice session, then off to a rehab assignment at a site to be determined.

Axfords versatility makes him a valuable commodity, one manager Bob Melvin missed Sunday given the use of relievers Daniel Coulombe, Liam Hendricks, Ryan Dull, Ryan Madson and finally Frankie Montas in the previous nights epic 6-5 comeback win over the Tigers.

On days like today, well probably have a couple of guys not available, and thats where Axford really is a swing guy for us, Melvin said. He can close if we need him to close. He sets up. On a day like this more than any other day, you really miss him because there will be at least a couple of guys that wont be available.

Shoulders have been an issue for Athletics pitchers this season, as Sean Doolittle, Kendall Graveman, Sonny Gray and Sean Manaea have all spent time on the disabled list with similar injuries.

We have talked a little bit. I think its good for guys to be able get to know what someone else is feeling or what they felt along the way, Axford said. When I talk to Sonny, obviously hes a starter so he throws a little bit more, but it helps understand where his pain is of where he feels certain things.

Hes ahead of my schedule. Maybe Ill be able to do the same thing for Doolittle when my time comes. It provides good notes for us.

Chad Pinder received his first start in right field against the Tigers after playing as a designated hitter and infield. He has been working in the outfield since spring training.

Hes kind of embracing the role of being that utility guy, Melvin said. Hes been working in the outfield and today just seemed like the day to do it. We want to keep our infield intact, especially with Sonny on the mound. Usually when hes pitching there are a lot of ground balls. We wanted to get a right-handed bat in there.

Josh Phegley, on the concussion disabled list, will go to extended spring training in Mesa, Arizona, where hell catch and play designated hitter.

Manaea will start for Class AAA Nashville Tuesday, throw approximately 70 pitches, and be followed by Chris Bassitt, who is recovering from Tommy John surgery.

We just wanted to make sure hed pitched in a game based on him not feeling great (in his last start) and we want him to get past it, Melvin said. My guess is he probably could have pitched here, but we want him to get his pitch count up to normal and be secure in his mind.

Melvin on signing his own bobblehead doll, which was distributed to fans Saturday night: Its odd. especially when you have to sign the bill of the hat. Its a small little area to have to sign and my motor skills arent probably that great.

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Beloved steam locomotive comes home to Petersburg – News – The … – Progress Index

Posted: at 11:45 pm

58 years after last official run, Norfolk & Western 611 stops at Union Station en route to Lynchburg

PETERSBURG First the sound, straight from the movies, a single, stirring chord that seemed to have been struck from a colossal pipe organ. Then the steam, billowing clouds of it, the scent of coal and superheated water. Finally, the sight, a scrap of memory from days gone by.

The Norfolk & Western Class J 611 steam locomotive has pulled into Petersburgs Union Station.

Once a daily sight in Petersburg, today the 611 passes by the banks of the Appomattox only once a year when the Virginia Museum of Transportation mounts its annual excursion from Lynchburg to the Cockade City in partnership with Norfolk Southern railway. This year the mighty engine pulled into town May 6, almost an hour early thanks to an unexpected lack of freight traffic.

Its like a bullet, just like a bullet, said Jim Stump, chairman of the VMT steering committee that oversaw the $1.7 million restoration of the 611 and now is responsible for its maintenance and travels throughout the commonwealth.

360 PHOTOGRAPH: Click or tap on the image and drag to change the angle of view. Onlookers surround the Norfolk & Western 611 steam engine in Petersburg on Saturday, May 6, 2017. (Photograph by Scott P. Yates/The Progress-Index)

Released for its first run May 29, 1950, and operated until 1959, when the last of Virginias steam engines were taken out of commission, the 611 is coming up on its 67th birthday. But even in its grand old age, it has the sheen and glow of a brand new locomotive thanks to a complete restoration that was finished in 2015.

Most steam trains arent slick, said Jean Todd of Williamsburg, who with her husband Richard, a native of Petersburg, has turned out for the 611s Lynchburg-Petersburg run every year since its restoration.

The 611, however, is just that: jet black with a sleek burgundy and gold stripe, this mechanical "thoroughbred" has been a marvel of both engineering and design since its conception. Capable of going over 100 mph, it could be late at Petersburg and early at Norfolk, said Stump.

At the time of its construction, the technology had advanced to such a point that the Norfolk & Western was capable of carrying on with steam engines when everyone else had switched to diesel, said Brandon Martin, a locomotive aficionado and former train chaser. Part of the technologically sophisticated J class of engines, the 611 was named a National Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 1984.

Still, nothing could stop the flow of progress, and by the end of the 1950s, diesel had brought a decisive end to the age of steam locomotion. The shift was inevitable, even as it was met with widespread mourning.

No Diesel ever had a soul like a steam engine, The Progress-Index declared in an article published Oct. 21, 1959. The huge, evil smelling, growling, oil consuming Diesel will never have the appeal and the seeming life of the steam locomotive.

So prized was the 611 that at its retirement, the railroad donated it to the city of Roanoke instead of scrapping it. Alternately used as a display and an excursion vehicle for more than 50 years, the engine most recently returned to the rails in 2015 thanks to the dedicated efforts of the VMT and Norfolk Southerns 21st Century Steam program. Today it is the only large steam engine that remains on the East Coast.

Its so rare to be able to do something like this, said Chris Armes, a Norfolk Southern engineer.

Rare it may be, but many of those who turned out to Union Station Saturday greeted the 611 with nostalgic glee, as if it were an old and beloved friend.

For us its like bringing back our childhood memories, said Petersburg resident Medha Udayakumar, who recalled her fathers work on the railroad back in India.

Jean and Richard Todd too could look back on a life closely intertwined with the rails.

Everywhere in my life you could always hear the trains, said Jean Todd.

For her husband, not only their sound was familiar but their sight and feel. Growing up only a block from the train station in Hampton, Richard Todd as a boy would ride his bike down to the platform in the afternoons. There he made the acquaintance of the engineers, who often invited him to climb into the cab and accompany them on the brief jaunt to Phoebus.

Nothing will ever replace the mystique of the steam, he said.

Martin, who has been as far north as Canada and as far south as Florida chasing trains, also encountered his first steam locomotive as a child. He still recalls the sound of its whistle as he stood in his house, preparing for church.

Its just the motion, the excitement, the people, the mechanical part of it, he said. Theres just something about it.

360 PHOTOGRAPH:Click or tap on the image and drag to change the angle of view. A team of volunteers helps passengers board the Norfolk & Western 611 steam engine in Petersburg on Saturday, May 6, 2017. (Photograph by Scott P. Yates/The Progress-Index)

Sarah Vogelsong may be reached at svogelsong@progress-index.com or 804-722-5154.

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Salzman Road extension project making progress – Hamilton Journal News

Posted: at 11:45 pm

MONROE

Construction is moving forward as a dead-end road that serving an industrial park in Monroe will soon become a major through route for heavy truck traffic to an industrial park in Middletown as well.

Everything is on schedule to be finished by the end of the year, said David Spinney, executive director of the Butler County Transportation Improvement District. He said utility relocations and site preparation work are underway for the Salzman Road extension.

Were almost done with the water line and the storm sewer should be completed in mid-May. he said. Weve done a good bit of grading work to build up the profile of the road, he said. We had to strip a lot of topsoil from the ground to wrap up the utility work.

Spinney said Duke Energy is scheduled later this month to raise the power transmission lines crossing the site.

The BCTID coordinated the design and funding for the $1.81 million project with the cities of Middletown and Monroe, Spinney said. He said the project is scheduled to be completed by Dec. 31, weather permitting and will be managed by the Butler County Engineers Office.

No road closures are anticipated with this project since it is a new roadway extension. However, there may be some lane closures or short-duration intersection closures at Todhunter and Yankee Roads for utility work and when tie-in of the new extension occurs.

Spinney said Salzman Road will be extended from its current terminus northward to Todhunter Road where it will tie in at the Yankee Road west intersection. Yankee Road currently doglegs east on Todhunter Road and then south to Ohio 63, crossing a railroad in the process and forcing large semi-trucks to negotiate two sharp 90-degree turns.

Once Salzman Road is connected and aligned with the north section of Yankee Road, motorists will have a straight route between Todhunter and Ohio 63. This will provide much easier access to the commercial and industrial portions of Monroe and Middletown, lending a positive impact on the local economy. It will also pull heavy truck traffic off of nearby Yankee Road where it passes the Monroe school campus.

Spinney said the road extension has been identified as a needed project in the BCEO long range Thoroughfare Plan since 1994. It is also included in Middletown and Monroes comprehensive plans.

A construction contract was awarded to Kelchner of Springboro, Ohio which submitted a low bid of nearly $1,82 million. Funding for the project consists of federal money from the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of Governments (OKI) and state money from the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT). The cities of Middletown and Monroe will provide local matching funds to the federal portion.

Monroes City Manager William Brock said the project represents an important piece of the citys overall infrastructure plan with the major goal of separating industrial and school traffic.

Middletown will see immediate benefits from the road extension as a $16 million distribution facility was recently announced for a 35-acre site near Yankee and Todhunter roads in the MADE Industrial Park.

Middletown officials are also excited to see this project becoming a reality.

Middletown Public Works Director Scott Tadych said the project is a critical piece of infrastructure to the South Middletown area that will benefit existing and future commercial and industrial development by providing direct access to Ohio 63.

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Russia and China progress to hypersonic weapon deployments – Next Big Future

Posted: at 11:45 pm

Russia and China progress to hypersonic weapon deployments

The Director of the Russian Academy of Sciences Siberian Branch Vasily Fomin sayd Russian scientists have surpassed their colleagues from the United States on hypersonic speed advances.

The Russian Defense Ministry said Russia is targeting initial hypersonic missile and other advanced weapons deployments by 2025 within the framework of the 2018-2025 State Armaments Program.

China has been performing successful mach 7 hypersonic scramjet tests since 2015.

China will test a prototype combined-cycle hypersonic engine later this year that they hope will pave the way for the first demonstration flight of a full-scale propulsion system by 2025. If successful, the engine could be the first of its type in the world to power a hypersonic vehicle or the first stage of a two-stage-to-orbit spaceplane. Combined-cycle systems have long been studied as a potential means to access to space and long-range hypersonic vehicles.

Zhang Yong, a CASTC engineer, claimed that China will master the spaceplanes technologies in the next three to five years, and a full-scale spaceplane would then enter service by 2030.

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Leicester progress overshadowed by tragic news about Tom Youngs’ wife – Telegraph.co.uk

Posted: at 11:45 pm

If it was all about individual records you would be a tennis player or a golfer, Dowson said.

I would swap a fair number of those Premiership appearances for international caps and trophies.

I dont how many I would swap for a Heineken Cup win over Leinster with Northampton when we were winning at half-time.

Dowson was given a rousing ovation when he left the pitch for the last time when he was substituted in the second half at the end of an emotional week.

Donncha OCallaghan spoke very well before the game, as he always does, and I really appreciated that, he said.

The messages I got from boys at my previous clubs, Newcastle and Northampton, as well as here, it was emotional. Its been a great weekend. Its a shame we didnt get the result here.

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Meet the modern-day Pagans who celebrate the ancient gods – Salon

Posted: at 11:40 pm

The priest raises his arms, palms upturned. Lord Taranis, hear our prayer! he bellows, voice bouncing off the stone pillars and into the darkening fields beyond. The fires crackle fills the stone circle. We stare through the flames, past the boundary of our sacred space, to the patina of white looming over the white sky Mount Adams, close and huge.

It is high summer, and we are at White Mountain Druid Sanctuary in southern Washington State. Under the immensity of the mountain, a couple of ramshackle barns stick up from the hayfields. Our priest, a straight-backed, snow-haired man, is delivering a homily on the attributes of the thunder god. Taranis, a powerful thunderbolt-tossing deity, is being honored at todays solstice celebration because of his association with light, weather and sky.

Read more Narratively:These Blind New Yorkers Are Biking Across New York City

Arms raised, the priest pauses. We lean forward, breathless. The fire cracks again. The teenage girls on the edge of the circle, who might be high on mushrooms, giggle quietly to themselves. Finally the priest grins and lowers his arms.

Well, I forgot that part, darn it. With a shrug, he reaches into his white robes and pulls out a small piece of paper. His voice is wry, sing-songy, full of mirth. I should have practiced more!

Everyone laughs as the priest consults his paper. Sorry, Ive got it now, he says, resuming the formal diction few contractions, quick and clear consonant sounds that he uses for his rituals. Throwing his arms into the air, he intones, Lord Taranis. . . and completes the rest of the homily uninterrupted.

Read more Narratively:We Were Raped and Tortured. We Refuse to Hide Our Faces.

To get to the Sanctuary in the foothills of Mount Adams, I rattled down a gravel road and parked beneath some prayer flags tacked to a barn. A sign on the building read DRUIDS HERE. There is a large wooden lodge with bed-and-breakfast facilities, meditation huts, and a stone circle straight out of Stonehenge, where, upon my arrival, about fifty people were pouring whiskey into deep wells and speaking Gaelic. They were blowing horns and beating drums and generally having a hell of a good time.

As this is my first Druid ritual, I have no idea how much of this to take seriously. Its hard to tell how much the participants themselves take seriously; theres a lot of laughter and self-deprecation. But when Kirk Thomas, the Arch-Druid of r nDraocht Fin, asks the gates of the spirit world to open, creating a thin, traversable bridge across the red-gold evening breeze, we all grow tense.

Read more Narratively:Chasing Londons Mysterious Flock of Feral Birds

I dont know who Taranis is, let alone believe that hes going to visit our circle, but I strain, listening for signs. Birds wheel in the sky. Somewhere on the other side of the property, a bell trickles into the wind.

The gates are open, Thomas says finally, and we begin.

* * *

Loosely overseen by a central office set in a back room in Thomas old house in Santa Fe, New Mexico r nDraocht Fin (ADF) is a polytheistic neo-pagan religion that draws its inspiration from ancient Indo-European traditions. Its organized into local groups, called groves, and was founded in 1983 by a charismatic man named Isaac Bonewits, who, after completing a self-study program at UC Berkeley, earned a bachelors degree in yes, really Magic and Thaumaturgy. Bonewits had dabbled in Satanism and witchcraft before founding r nDraocht Fin, which in Gaelic means our own fellowship or our own magic.

Although nearly seventy groves worldwide are affiliated with ADF, each organizes its own tailored rituals. At annual pan-pagan festivals, camping trips, and ADF training workshops, as well as over the internet, ADFs 1,500 members exchange ideas on what rituals should look like. Rather than including official liturgical script, the rituals they perform feature a netting of ideas and ideals, created and debated by poets, Roman legionnaires, mystics, nature lovers, proto-European language nerds, and all kinds of wanderers in search of a connection.

* * *

Long before he became a neo-pagan reverend, when Kirk Thomas was seven years old and visiting his aunt in Utah, he was left mostly to his own devices. During the day he wandered the acres behind her house, picking through the scrub brush, the rocky terrain, the bristling white fir. One day while he was out, the hair on the back of his neck began to stand up. Something was watching; he was sure of it.

He dashed back to the house and rummaged through the fridge, emerging with a bunch of grapes. The boy cautiously returned to the place where he had felt the presence and laid the grapes on the rock. He knew what was being asked of him. The next day, the grapes were gone, and so was the feeling of being watched. The boy thought, an animal took them. But some part of him wondered.

As a kid, Thomas read all about the Old Kingdom dynasties of ancient Egypt; the names of pharaohs like Akhenaten and Nefertiti rolled off his tongue. In middle school he got into supernatural stuff, reading Diary of a Witch Sybil Leeks popular 1969 memoir of growing up pagan, which inspired a generation of witches and drawing pentacles on the garage floor. He studied theater in London and became a hot air balloonist, taking to the skies over the English countryside.

Later, around the year 2000, he read The Mists of Avalon, an Arthurian fantasy epic that he calls a gateway drug to Druidry. What it did was remind me of how I had felt as a teenager, with all that wonder and magic and joy, he says. He began to look for other neo-pagans online, in chat rooms and early internet sites. When he discovered ADF, he thought it wasnt quite as wacky as other neo-pagan belief structures, and was more scholarly and organized than Wiccan covens.

He attended his first ADF ritual at a public park in Tucson, Arizona, during an electrical storm. A few people gathered at a concrete pavilion, stood in a circle and read a ritual one of them had pulled off the web. Lighting was flashing in the desert sky. The thunder god was pretty obviously saying hello to me, he says.

But he felt the ritual was amateurish. He wanted to rewrite it and, lucky for him, hed found a religion that embraced rewriting, remaking, revising. He had become a Druid.

* * *

More and more in America, religion is something people choose (or dont), rather than inherit. According to a 2015 study by the Pew Research Center, As the Millennial generation enters adulthood, its members display much lower levels of religious affiliation, including less connection with Christian churches, than older generations. However, the report also finds that many millennials remain spiritual in a broad sense, expressing wonder at the universe and an overall feeling of gratitude and well-being. About 1.5% of the American population identifies as other faiths, including Unitarians, those who identify with Native American religions, Pagans, Wiccans, New Agers, deists, Scientologists, pantheists, polytheists, Satanists and Druids, to name just a few. Druids will appreciate being listed separately from Wiccans (self-described benevolent witches), but both fall under the umbrella of neo-paganism. Almost half of New Agers a larger category that includes shamans, goddess-worshippers, and possibly your moms psychic are of the millennial generation.

Many druid practitioners are reacting to a childhood religion they found inadequate or oppressive. They speak of their practice as inclusive and pluralistic, but also self-define as rejects, misfits and seekers, drawing a protective boundary around their own otherness. In one sense, Druidry is very old school traditional and nostalgic for a way of relating to nature that most modern humans have lost. However, it is also willfully new. Druid rituals enact something not handed down or inherited, but deliberately created. There just isnt enough preserved out there to actually recreate Irish paganism, Thomas explains. One can do a nice superficial gloss, but we have no idea what any rituals actually looked like.

Perhaps that sense of freshness and invention is why, after accidentally stumbling into the solstice celebration, I began to see them as a perfect example of Americas tangled, 21st-century relationship with faith.

* * *

Iam holding a Dixie cup of wine. The woman who passed it to me called it The Water of Life, and she has lots of them on a tray, walking around our circle and handing them out to the motley group girls with braided hair and brightly-colored leggings, women in long skirts and hand-knit sweaters, men with handmade leather fanny packs and KEEN sandals. The sun has set, and the sky is a blur of hazy bluish-black behind Mount Adams. Just outside the stone circle, theres a cob shelter, on which is painted on one side with a triptych of ancient myths deities Taranis and the Morrigan, the Celtic goddess of death, first engaged in a devastating war, and then having sort of graphic make-up sex. The woman smiles and moves on, and I hold the cup but do not raise it to my lips.

A Druid ritual can take place anywhere, although outdoors is preferable, because a hearth must burn at the center of the assembly. Stoking the fire is Reverend Thomas, who earlier shook our hands and asked us all to write an intention on a small piece of paper. We stuffed them into a straw man made of twigs and later burned him in the fire.

We are fire priests if nothing else, Thomas says. The fire transmutes and transforms. It turns something into something else. It does it quickly. Also present are a well or water the epitome of the powers of the earth and the underworld, as Thomas explains and a tree or pillar the pipeline of communication that allows you to communicate between this world and other worlds.

After an opening potluck, with plenty of mac salad and mead and smiling folks who wore runes around their necks, we walked the gravel path to the stone circle. We asked for blessings; we burned our straw man. Now we are supposed to toast and drink the Water of Life.

It hits me that I am standing with a bunch of people I dont know in the middle of a dark and remote farm being asked to drink unmarked liquid by a dude in a long white robe. The Water of Life shakes between my fingers.

I have little context for this rite. My own religious upbringing was hybrid and scattered. I wasnt baptized, but I come from a long line of Irish Catholics, who attended schools taught by nuns and have names like John Michael Patrick and Mary Colleen and who drink their guilt from bottles of California chardonnay. From my mothers side, I got a consciously a-religious Judaism. My grandfathers first language was Yiddish, but his family eschewed things like temple and bat mitzvah, so when Jewish friends explain holidays to me, I usually just nod along, playing the more familiar role of the Irish girl. I am equally uncomfortable at Shabbat services and Sunday Mass, unsure of what to do with my hands, what to say, when to sing.

My family never offered me real entry into either of my birth religions, so instead, growing up I found faith in literature, storytelling, myth and nature a budding neo-pagan if there ever was one.

At some level, I wanted to belong to organized religion. During sophomore year of high school, I tried to join a Christian youth group. Several of my friends attended, and they always got older boys from the group to go to school dances with them (I, on the other hand, took a blow-up doll to junior prom). I joined them in the basement of a neighborhood church where they sat on straight-backed chairs and did trust exercises and ate snacks and prayed.

The group leader was a pleasant guy with a fleece vest and a patient smile. He asked me if I believed in God, if I believed Jesus was the Son of God. Although he wasnt unkind, he was looking for a specific answer to each question, and my answers were like fumbling through a giant keychain, jangling it awkwardly, trying to find the key that unlocked a kind of belonging I desperately wanted. I considered lying I mean, the boys and realized that I could perform being a good Christian. I searched for words that I thought would please him, like grace and grateful and community, placatory words that could take the place of certainty. I filled our conversation with placeholders, language itself becoming a kind of tenuous substitute for faith, because the truth was I had never really been drawn to a specific religion, but merely to the idea of religion. I could enter into this group and learn about Jesus and smile and hold hands with boys during prayers, and maybe no one would ever know that I didnt believe what I was supposed to. But it was pretty clear that I didnt have the right key, and I felt so ashamed that I never went back.

I look around at the Druid rite, and everyone else has already drained their cups. With a sigh, I take a deep breath, close my eyes, and chug my wine. Its cheap stuff, and the smell of cedar smoke from the fire mingles with the sweetness on my tongue. I get a brief, heady rush, and then Reverend Thomas begins passing out musical instruments tambourines and rattles, drums and shakers. People are grinning. We are alive on the base of a mountain, and we are going to dance.

* * *

To me, Druidry is an experiential religion, says Jonathan Levy, one of the founders of the Columbia Grove in Oregon. Simply talking about it doesnt do it justice. Levy has a trimmed beard and a skittish, enthusiastic manner. He was a hardcore atheist when he came across some neo-pagan websites at the age of eighteen. He couldnt have cared less about King Arthur legends, but he did love Roman history: Virgil and triremes and Mars. When he discovered an ADF ritual based on the Roman rite of Hilaria, it delighted him.

Levy realized that Druidry wasnt asking him to believe; it was asking him to show up and be in community, to make offerings and to light fires. He moved to Oregon and started a meetup called Druid Drinks, a monthly gathering at a local pub, where he could chat socially with other curious-and-questioning Druids. Finally convinced, he traded in his atheism for an enthusiastic polytheism. In ADF, he says, It comes down to doing something together. That part is appealing.

Levy says many of the Columbia Groves members are ex-Catholics and are used to elaborate rituals. However, ADF avoids churchy language as much as possible because it can be a very big turnoff for people . . .who were angry at their past religious affiliation.

Its that rejection that defines Druidry, explains Dr. Sarah Pike, a religious scholar at Cal-State Chico. Many Druids have found a place where they belonged. Pike adds that, for Druids, creating an identity out of what theyre rejecting is essential: it leads them to embrace otherness, and find meaning in being their own tribe.

* * *

Tall fir trees shade the lot; autumn sunlight drifts down. After almost a year away from the Druids, I have come back to visit them again, this time with Jonathan Levys Columbia Grove in Portland, Oregon. This is a celebration of Dionysos, the Greek deity of wine, held in a courtyard outside a Unitarian church. Around me, people drift in a loose, undulating circle on the stone. All of them are masked in foam cutouts and sequins and glitter glue: a chance to slip into a new face, and therefore avoid the madness that close contact with Dionysos can inspire.

Garbed in a toga and rust-and-orange fall garlands, Levy welcomes the crowd to autumn equinox. His pale legs are bound in high Roman sandals; his liturgy is broad-stroked and mythological, with syntax that deliberately invokes Christian liturgy: Let us pray with a good fire. Let us offer with a full heart. He and his fellow group leaders read from note cards. At one point they start to sing and realize they are doing different songs. They take a moment to shuffle through their papers, like actors who need to review the scripts.

The idea of reciprocity of giving something in trade holds particular importance in Druidic rite, according to Reverend Thomas: Human relations are set up this way, and we in ADF do the same thing with the spirit world. We make offerings and hope for and ask for blessings in return. So when Levy invites the audience to make offerings, one woman breaks apart a chocolate bar for Isis, an Egyptian goddess, and asks for good health in trade. The chocolate bubbles as it melts in the fire. Another pours out wine for Dionysos, making the flames hiss. A gender-nonconforming member burns a poem written to Thor. A young white man in a purple cape and Phantom-like half-mask invokes Hermes, the Greek messenger god, stalking the inside of our circle. The diverse pantheon doesnt phase anyone.

After the offerings are burnt, a young woman with dyed red hair tells us to close our eyes and leads us through a visual meditation, into deep woods, into worlds of nymphs, toward Dionysos. Then, tipsy on the presence of the divine, we stand and begin to circulate, holding hands, and dance to a chant: Come on thy Bulls Foot. I scratch my nose where the mask is slipping down. Hypnotic and repetitive, the chant pounds forward; people wriggle and writhe, close enough to each other that skin brushes skin. Come on thy Panthers Paw. I feel a rush beneath me, like standing on ice and watching a current flowing and shifting beneath the frozen layer. Although I dont have much invested in this rite emotionally, I am still doing it, moving my body among other bodies. Come on thy Snakes Belly. It feels like when youre upset and people tell you to smile. How just the action of faking it, of smiling through your pain, starts the flow of good hormones in your brain and makes you really feel better. Playing along is one way to access something real and physical. Dionysos come. Theater is not just a show; the act of the thing unlocks the reality of thing itself. I dont really believe in what I am doing, but it is sort of working just the same.

* * *

When people come to Druid rites for the first time, they expect to see us wearing all white, talking in thou and thy, Jonathan Levy says. Were modern people. Our Druidry is modern. Our rituals are modern. Sometimes we dress in stuff just for the fun of it, but its not supposed to be the centerpiece. We use modern language; we use very little foreign language. People are not expecting that.

Dr. Sabina Magliocco, a folklorist at Cal-State Northridge, says that ADF founder Isaac Bonewits was looking for a tradition that was rooted in history, but soon realized that resurrecting an ancient religion was impossible. Reverend Michael Dangler, a senior ADF priest in Ohio, agrees. We have rejected the fantasy of ancient lineages, he says. They are just not important from our personal practice perspective. We come out of a skeptical time.

For the average American, whose understanding of religion is synonymous with faith, Druidry can seem a bit artificial. But Dr. Sarah Pike says that Druids have a different type of commitment to their religion. Focusing on ritual action rather than creed can be a relief for people who have fled the constraints of orthodoxy, she says. When belief becomes so important, you have sharper boundaries between insiders and outsiders.

Still, there is tribalism in Druidry. Many of the practitioners I spoke with had the awkward, sharp, smart humor of the nerdy kids in middle school, which they wielded at me like little pikes, prodding and jabbing to see if I would laugh. Dr. Magliocco says this is partially constructed as a part of pagan identity. Humor is a way that we mark insiders and outsiders, she says. A joke is a spell. Jokes clearly mark the boundaries. We can all laugh because were unusual, but we also draw a firm circle of who we are.

* * *

Not everyone at the summer solstice ritual is a practicing Druid. The girls who are maybe on mushrooms are clearly not familiar with the rite. When Reverend Thomas hands out drums and rattles and shakers, so that we can all make a joyful noise together, parading around the fire and making music for the gods, one of them accidentally drops her tambourine. It shatters the silence with a flustered, lengthy banging. The girls sputter with silent laughter, their bodies shaking, as Thomas tries unsuccessfully to maintain a straight face.

On the other hand, we are all practicing Druids. Weve shown up at the ritual, after all, and if being a Druid means making offerings of whiskey and beer, reciting a prayer to honor your ancestors, and drinking mead from a horn, then I, too, am a Druid.

Get out there and do the stuff; thats what counts, Reverend Thomas says. What you believe is kind of your business. You step onto the stage, say the lines, block the actions. You do the work. Through recitation, the piece of yourself played that night has a chance, perhaps, to reconnect to something deep and missing within the modern psyche nature, the changing of seasons, the deepening shadow behind a white mountain. There is a real American optimism buried in this: that if we show up ready to try, something in the universe will respond positively to us. That we can deal with it, negotiate our futures: a bit of chocolate for your blessings, a dram of rye for your luck.

When it doesnt work, it looks like cheap theater. But when it does, something inside turns like a combination lock until it clicks, and then slides open. After all, there is nothing like watching the world respond to you. If it is a performance of the modern self to dress up in robes and ask your ancestors for blessings as bats snip and chatter in the summer dusk, then it is also deeply satisfying. Pouring good rye down the dark throat of a well, watching it drop fathoms deep: that act has its own, deeply human magic.

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Meet the modern-day Pagans who celebrate the ancient gods - Salon

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The MTV Movie & TV Awards: A New Gender Revolution? – Variety

Posted: at 11:38 pm

For muchof its 35-year history, MTV has lit the way. You may not have always liked where it led, but whats undeniable is how much ithas danced onthe cutting edge of youth culture, folding the future into the present. In the early 80s, it turned music video into an aestheticand marketing revolution by making it into the new pop normal; it also took the Jell-O-shot bacchanalia of spring break and transformed it into a new (lowdown) ideal for everyone heading off to college. In the 90s, with The Real World, MTV invented reality TV as we know it. It also gave us the divine idiocy of Beavis and Butt-Head, the divine meathead hedonism of Jersey Shore, and no small thing ironic detachment as a way of being.

It also gave us the MTV Movie Awards, a snark-drenched put-on of an awards show that when it first started, back in 1992 (and for a few years afterward), I used to find refreshing. Not just because it seemed an antidote to the self-seriousness of the Academy Awards, or because such only-on-MTV categories asBest Kiss hadan irresistible legitimacy in terms of how we watch movies, but because the shows shameless embrace of youth culture sometimes led it to choose better winners. (In 1995, Forrest Gump was nominated, but MTV went for Pulp Fiction.) The shows way of mocking movies as a form of flattery was also ahead of the curve.

Yet for too long now, the popcorn charm of the MTV Movie Awards has been fraying, as the show devolved more and more into a boilerplate two-hour promotional reel. When the producers decided, for the first time this year, to convert the show into the MTV Movie & TV Awards, it didnt exactly feel like one of those MTV revolutionary ripples, maybe because the Golden Globes fused the two mediums long ago. I assumed the format would change, but that the promo would go on as usual.

And it did. Here was Tom Holland, the unabashedly boyish star of Spider-Man: Homecoming (hes just 20, much younger than Tobey Maguire or Andrew Garfield when they took on the role), introducing a big fat clip as if he were at Comic-Con. Here were Amy Schumer and Goldie Hawn, introducing the Movie of the Year award by saying, See Snatched!

But here as well, even in the midst of host Adam DeVine offering some welcome tweakingof identity politics (Adam gets it!), was a changethat seemed right in line with the tradition of MTVdoing revolutionary things becausewell, they feel like it. That change was the introduction of acting categories that, for the first time in history (as the show preeningly but accurately put it), didnt separate actors based on their sex. Men competing with women: No distinction. Exactly the sort of thing that would make a lot of people (including myself) say, Oh, come on, thats not going to work! As if the standard way of doing it Best Actor, Best Actress has been some endlessly perpetuated sexist mistake that was only now, at long last, being corrected.

Yet when Emma Watson won the very first award for Best Actor in a Movie, which she did for her performance in Beauty and the Beast, competing against such performers as Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out, Hailee Steinfeld in The Edge of Seventeen, and Hugh Jackman in Logan, and accepted the award from the non-binary Billions star Asia Kate Dillon, Watsons speech hit a note of sparklingand literate graciousness that had a meaning far beyond the context. The win itself came off as inevitable to the point of being pro forma, folding in the usual MTV factor of what a monster hit the movie was. Yet Watson, like most of the people nominated, represents a new generation of star. She was more than comfortable treating the traditional acting gender wall not as a separate-but-equal distinction but as a sideways glass ceiling. For a few moments, she made you seeit in a new way.

Where will all this lead? I dont even want to predict. Maybe nowhere. Maybe somewhere. But what it could depend on is exactly the feelings of actors like Watson, who represent evolving ways of looking at things. Wherever it leads (or doesnt), I have to give the MTV Movie & TV Awards credit for having the audacity to shake up the cultural DNA, to show us what a new kind of post-gender consciousness feelslike. For kicking open a door by simplydoing it. Maybe its just a sexually correct tempest in a teapot. A decade from now, on the other hand, we could be saying: It all started here. The way so many things do at MTV.

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The MTV Movie & TV Awards: A New Gender Revolution? - Variety

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Ickler: Lowering the bar on ignorance – Milford Daily News

Posted: at 11:38 pm

By Glenn Ickler/Local Columnist

I usually ignore those little boxed teasers that show up on the Internet, but I was intrigued by one headlined Only 1 in 10 Americans can pass this history quiz, so I opened it. The test consisted of multiple choice questions (four choices per question), and each was accompanied by a pictorial clue.

Some samples of the level of difficulty: What year was the Declaration of Independence signed? Who was president during most the 1950s (with a photo of the man)? Who was the commanding general at the end of the Civil War who later became president (again with a photo)? Who is buried in Grants tomb? (No, not really; this was a Groucho Marx favorite many years ago on a quiz show called You Bet Your Life.)

The claim that only one in 10 Americans can answer such Mickey Mouse questions about our history started me on a quest for more information about the state of scholarship in this country. Are we really at this abysmal level of ignorance? What I found is not encouraging.

For example, in a Washington Post column, Susan Jacoby, author of The Age of American Unreason, says, Dumbness has been steadily defined downward for several decades, by a combination of heretofore irresistible forces. These include the triumph of video culture over print culture, a disjunction between Americans rising level of formal education and their shaky grasp of basic geography, science and history, and the fusion of anti-rationalism with anti-intellectualism.

According to Mark Bauerlein, in his book The Dumbest Generation, a whole generation of youth is being dumbed down by their aversion to reading anything of substance and their addiction to digital crap via social media.

Also in the Washington Post, Catherine Liu, University of California film and media studies professor, lists a plethora of dismal facts:

n After leading the world for decades in 25-34-year-olds with university degrees, the U.S. is now in 12th place.

n In a poll of Oklahoma public school students, 77 percent didnt know that George Washington was the first president (his picture was on my classroom walls) and couldnt identify Thomas Jefferson as the author of the Declaration of Independence.

n A Gallup poll showed that 18 percent of Americans still believe the sun revolves around the earth. (God only knows how many still think the earth is flat.)

n According to a National Endowment for the Arts report, more than 40 percent of Americans under age 44 did not read a single bookfiction or nonfictionover the course of a year.

n In the U.S. Senate, 74 percent of Republicans deny the validity of climate change despite the findings of scientific organizations all over the world. (She could add that our president says its a Chinese hoax.)

n A University of Texas study found that 25 percent of public school biology teachers believe that humans and dinosaurs inhabited the earth simultaneously.

Atlantic magazine recently carried an article by two education scholars, Richard D. Kahlenberg and Clifford Janey, who believe that schools are failing at what the nations founders saw as educations most basic purpose: preparing young people to be reflective citizens who would value liberty and democracy and resist the appeals of demagogues.

They say that todays schools strive to prepare college-and-career ready students but do not prepare them for American democracy. They point out that in 2013 the National Assessment for Educational Progress dropped fourth- and 12th-grade civics and American history as a tested subject in order to save money.

Its okay to test kids crazy in math and reading, they say. Civic education? Fuhgeddaboutit.

This combination of dumbing down American citizens, combined with a failure to teach students the value of our Constitution, explains the election of a president who has a warped sense of history and shows disdain for the checks and balances inherent in the three branches of our federal government.

Acting as Ignoramus in Chief this past week, the president told an audience that Andrew Jackson, who died 16 years before the Civil War began, could see no reason for the war. (Limited vision in that coffin, I suppose.)

Next Trump said, People dont realize, you know, the Civil War, if you think about it, why? People dont ask that question, but why was there the Civil War?

People I know dont ask that question because they were taught in grade school that the Civil War had something to do with abolishing slavery. Perhaps todays fourth-graders couldnt answer that question, but schools were still teaching American history when the 70-year-old president was a pup. Maybe he was one of those who didnt read a book that year.

Glenn Ickler of Hopedale is a retired newspaper editor.

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Ickler: Lowering the bar on ignorance - Milford Daily News

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