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Daily Archives: July 26, 2017
Here’s what the Lime Street facade will look like – including Futurist memories – Liverpool Echo
Posted: July 26, 2017 at 3:40 pm
Heres what the artwork on the Lime Street development could look like and it includes memories of the famous Futurist cinema.
Developer Ion is building a hotel, student flats and a row of shops and restaurants on the land between The Crown and The Vines. The plan was controversial because the historic Futurist was demolished to make way for it.
But that cinemas history will form part of a striking quantum timeline, designed by Anthony Brown, that will stretch across the Lime Street facade.
Mr Brown has designed 11 panels based on Lime Streets history.
They cover topics from the Futurist and other long-lost cinemas to the famous Maggie May and the Guinness Clock that once stood opposite Lime Street station.
Theres even a panel about the old Yankee Bar, famed for its miniature Statue of Liberty. The Yankee was also cleared to make way for the Lime Street scheme.
Mr Brown is best known for the 100 portraits of famous Merseyside people that he created for Liverpools 800th birthday in 2007.
Speaking about his Lime Street work, he said: With this work, our intention is to capture and reflect the history while commemorating the development of a truly unique street and one of the most important areas in the city of Liverpool.
We have created an accessible Quantum Timeline using illustrative graphic images and archived text to immortalise the development, buildings, business, people and heritage of Lime Street which was formally known as Limekiln Lane.
It will serve to forever mark and display what was as we celebrate what comes next.
Ion, formerly known as Neptune Developments, was behind the Mann Island development. Mr Browns painting have previously been exhibited there.
Ion managing director Steve Parry, managing director of Ion, commented: "Lime Street has seen many transformations in its history yet it has always reflected Liverpool life.
As one of the most important gateways to the city, we have an opportunity to reflect the vibrancy and history of the street on the elevations of the building.
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Neo-Futurists’ new show serves up plenty of ‘Food’ for thought – Chicago Sun-Times
Posted: at 3:40 pm
When rehearsals began for The Food Show, one of the first things writer-director Dan Kerr-Hobert asked his five-member cast to do was demonstrate their favorite way to prepare eggs. These ranged from a perfect omelette and an elegant poached egg to the less ambitious half-scramble in a bowl in a microwave.
He says the way people cook eggs is a kind of handwriting, and felt the exercise would be a perfect starting point to introduce the actors to the ideas he was aiming to illustrate in this new Neo-Futurist show.
The Food Show When: To Sept. 2 Where: The Neo-Futurists at Metropolitan Brewing, 3057 N. Rockwell Tickets: $10-$25 Info: neofuturists.org
It was a good way to start the conversation about how our identities affect our relationship to food and visa versa, he says. After each egg was made we all talked about small ways in which the process revealed things about the person cooking. Some text came out of that which is now in the show, but it also gave us a baseline sense of each persons relationship to food.
With his new play, Kerr-Hobert wants to get people thinking and talking about food via a wide range of ideas from foods cultural connections and the significance of family recipes passed down to social issues and foods impact on the environment. And, yes, food will be cooked on stage as the actors ruminate about these ideas and more.
The Food Show was born out of an ongoing conversation Kerr-Hobert, a member of The Neo-Futurists, had with his cousin and Neo-Futurist alum Caitlin Stainken. Both were interested in ideas about the connections people have with food and identity and had talked about opening a restaurant but creating a show about food was the idea that won out. (However, Stainken has since moved to Montana, had a baby and wasnt available to continue with the shows creation.)
Kerr-Hobert says the show is not solely aimed at foodies: The goal is to look at the emotional relationship we all have with food.
Dan Kerr-Hobert | SUPPLIED PHOTO
He adds, one of the core themes in the show is the idea of food and inheritance: Where did we get our ideas about food? What ideas have we inherited? And why do we choose to keep them or give them up?
In 2009, the Neo-Futurists partnered with Metropolitan Brewery to stage Sean Benjamin and Steve Mosquedas Beer, which was directed by Kerr-Hobert at the brewerys Ravenswood location. The partnership continues with The Food Show, which debuts at Metropolitans new Avondale location. The cast features Oliver Camacho, Bilal Dardai, Tif Harrison, Spencer Meeks and Kyra Simms, with music composed by Mucca Pazza artistic director Ronnie Kuller.
As the 70-minute show unfolds, the cast is busy with tasks from making butter and pasta to searing salmon and baking cookies while also pondering the current issues related to food.
This is the first time Kerr-Hobert has created a Neo-Futurist show that he isnt performing in. It was a new and interesting challenge, he says. Instead of simply using the stories from his own life, he says he had to discover new ways to bring his ideas into the script.
He began by interviewing the cast, each of whom had a drastically different history with food. These personal narratives are woven into the piece.
Ensemble member Bilal Dardai (the creator of that aforementioned half scramble in a bowl) grew up eating a mix of ethnic Indian dishes and American cuisine (my mom was open to trying different things). His role in the show evolved around his ethnic background but also around the fact hes the only parent in the cast.
We discussed ideas about not only my background but also about what you feed a small child with a food allergy and how you handle that, Dardai says referring to his own experience with his son.
Kerr-Hobert hopes the show provides a space where people can have a fulfilling and entertaining meditation on food and the issues surrounding it. Do we keep our inherited ways or do we make changes, he asks. For me, the show is about mindfulness and a chance to think about questioning inheritance and whether or not we need to change.
I try and eat ethically but I definitely dont think enough about where all the food is coming from. I know those things have an impact on the world. There are a lot of questions about why we do what we do when it comes to food. We want to get people thinking about these issues.
Mary Houlihan is a local freelance writer
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Neo-Futurists' new show serves up plenty of 'Food' for thought - Chicago Sun-Times
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‘Irate passenger’ situation Sunday at Charleston International Airport reflects ‘golden rule’ intervention training – Charleston Post Courier
Posted: at 1:47 am
When a disruptive, apparently intoxicated passenger refused to leave an American Airlines plane set to fly from Charleston International Airport to Philadelphia, it could have spiraled into a mire of reshuffled schedules and negative publicity.
The pilot was ready to cancel the flight. He called Charleston County Aviation Authority police officers to board the plane.
But unlike the incidentin April aboard a United Airlines flight in Chicago that went viral and caused an uproar, Sunday's tense moment ended calmly.
"We talked to him," CCAA Police Capt. Chris Helms said. "We de-escalated the situation, and rightly so."
The officer who spoke to the passenger explained the consequences, Helms said. The flight would be canceled if he didn't leave, and the incident would be reported to the FBI.
"Sometimes people can't think straight," Helms said. "We see people sometimes confused. They think flying is a right, not a privilege."
At that point, the man agreed to leave with law enforcement, Helms said. He wasn't arrested. They helped him book a later flight, and when he wanted to leave the airport in the meantime, they sent him off in an Uber.
The handling of the situation reflected the training and methodology of CCAA officers, Helms said.
"When it comes to these interventions, whether it's with the general public or it be a suspect or subject, there are a few things we keep in mind," he said. "One of those is the golden rule."
The incident was the first time this year officers had to board a plane at any of the three airports the CCAA operates, Helms said. That happened twice all of last year and resulted in no arrests.
Arrests are overall rare, Helms said. In 125,600 calls for service last year, CCAA officers arrested only 28 people.
The type of call they responded to Sunday, classified as an "irate passenger" call, sometimes comes from a plane itself but could be as simple as a passenger losing his or her temper while trying to find their gate.
"Sometimes they're having a tough day," Helms said. "Sometimes there's alcohol involved."
Reach Jack Evans at (843) 937-5491. Follow him on Twitter @JackHEvans.
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Golden Rule manager remembered for her commitment – Muskogee Daily Phoenix
Posted: at 1:46 am
Brenda Clark, who died Saturday at the age of 58, is being remembered for her commitment to and love for the workers she supervised at Golden Rule of Muskogee.
Golden Rule Executive Director Taylor Foster said Clark was a "true hero" to the nonprofit's developmentally disabled workers. He said Clark worked at Golden Rule for 38 years, serving as assembly contract manager in her latest role.
"She was the most selfless person I ever knew," Foster said. "Until two weeks ago, she never took a full week off work."
That week off came when Clark went to the hospital, he said.
"For her, it was work first," Foster said.
The State Use Program presented Clark with its Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015. The State Use Program promotes employment opportunities for people with severe disabilities.
Foster recalled having to trick Clark into going to the awards presentation.
"I told her she had to come with me for training," Foster said, recalling the time he told Clark to buy a dress because she was "representing Golden Rule."
He said Clark never sought accolades for herself. She preferred to make a difference with Golden Rule's workers. Foster recalled the various degrees of emotion they expressed after being told Clark had died.
"A lot of people here felt they had lost a mother, a sister, a mentor and a good friend I know I had," Foster said. "She had impacted their lives for a lot of years her reward was watching people grow, she took pride in helping to raise her 'kids,' as she called them."
Area resident Belva Cothern said Clark was an awesome sister.
"If you needed her help, she would help to the best of her ability," Cothern said. "If she could not help, she would find someone to help you."
She recalled times when family would gather at Clark's house or at their parent's house.
"She made sure we had plenty to eat she liked helping people when they needed something," Cothern said. "I loved her very deeply, and she'll be forever missed."
Services for Clark will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at Greenwood Cemetery, Porter, under the direction of Cornerstone Funeral Home and Crematory.
Reach Cathy Spaulding at (918) 684-2928 or cspaulding@muskogeephoenix.com
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"The Progressive Liberal" turns politics into a contact sport – CBS News
Posted: at 1:46 am
BOYD COUNTY, Ky. -- If the name of the game for an aspiring professional wrestling villain is that fan anger fills the seats, then Dan Richards has it all figured out in the wrestling hotbeds of Appalachia.
Richards is "The Progressive Liberal," reports CBS News correspondent Jim Axelrod.
"You feel this character," Axelrod said.
"I mean, I am this character," Richards replied.
CBS News
"When I go drive through the hills of West Virginia or Kentucky or Tennessee, I wasn't seeing a bunch of Hillary Clinton campaign banners," he said. "I was seeing Trump, 'Make America Great Again.'"
Which is why Richards, actually a 37-year-old real estate agent named Daniel Harnsberger, decided to don some "dump Trump" trunks and a Hillary collage T-shirt, and call out the fans.
"I know you use government assistance and then talk bad about the government that provides it for you," he taunted the crowd with at a recent event.
"You have a signature move, don't you?" Axelrod asked.
Richards heads to the ring in a shirt covered with images of Hillary Clinton
CBS News
"The Liberal Agenda," Richards said. "It's just a variation of a neck breaker, but I like for the announcer to say, 'He hit 'em with his liberal agenda.'"
"Dan and I are complete opposites," said Beau James, Richards' manager. "I'm a Bible-believing -- gun owner -- tobacco-chewing hillbilly."
James has been around the pro wrestling game for nearly three decades, long enough to know he's got a winner on his hands.
Play Video
CBS News was in Boyd County, Kentucky, as the professional wrestler known as Dan Richards took to the ring.
"I've got at least four years out of him," he said.
"You think The Progressive Liberal's got some staying power?" Axelrod asked.
"For at least four years. After that, who knows? Maybe four more," he replied.
"I'm saying my piece. I think other liberals could take a page from that," Richards said. "You know, have a clear message and speak it boldly and be unapologetic about it."
Who knows if Dan Richards' approach would be good for his party. But from the looks of things, it's certainly good for his bank account.
2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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When shrieking liberal protesters went low, John McCain went high – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 1:46 am
It took a little more than a year for Glioblastoma to kill Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass. Beau Biden, the son of the last vice president, held it off for about three years. More than likely, the cancer will soon claim the life of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.
Realistically then, McCain is a dead-man walking and that's what makes his speech on the Senate floor Tuesday so remarkable -- and some of his critics so despicable.
Listening to McCain speak, one would doubt his dangerous medical prognosis. Shortly after confronting his own mortality, he decided to try tackling some of the Senate's most enduring problems like blind faction, a broken deliberative process, and brutally-raw political power.
It was the kind of speech only Jimmy Stewart, or for that matter John McCain, could deliver. And it had the qualities we want from our politicians: bipartisanship, intelligence, and, most of all, bravery.
Listening to the opposition, though, it's easy to wonder if honest deliberation is even possible anymore.
"Are you ashamed of the legacy you're going to be leaving the Republican Party with, one hell-bent on the destruction of the poor and the disabled?" one woman shrieked, summarizing the liberal position.
"Are you going to die and leave us with this legacy?" she taunted as McCain walked to the Senate floor.
While that was the verbal assault on Capitol Hill, plenty of liberals didn't hold back on Twitter either. For example:
To be fair, not every liberal was on board with trashing McCain.
In a particularly classy bipartisan gesture, Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., walked over and actually embraced the senator after the speech.
A class act through it all, McCain didn't flinch. Most likely at the end of his career and possibly his life, the elder statesman offered instead the picture of dignity. One wonders if that calm will succeed McCain in the great deliberative body or if it will be drowned out by the contempt we witnessed today by protesters.
Philip Wegmann is a commentary writer for the Washington Examiner.
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American Muslims growing more liberal, survey shows – WENY-TV
Posted: at 1:46 am
By Daniel Burke CNN Religion Editor
(CNN) -- American Muslims are growing more religiously and socially liberal, with the number who say society should accept homosexuality nearly doubling during the past decade, according to a major new survey.
American Muslims are also more likely to identify as political liberals and believe there are multiple ways to interpret the teachings of Islam, the survey found.
Conducted by the Pew Research Center, the survey of 1,001 American Muslims depicts a community in tumult, with the vast majority disapproving of President Donald Trump and worrying about the direction of the country. Even so, many remain hopeful about their future in the United States, the survey found, despite persistent anxiety about Islamic extremism and religious discrimination.
The wide-ranging survey, which was released on Wednesday, uncovers a range of opinions on everything from religious practices and politics to terrorism and social values. In addition, Pew found that the American Muslim population has been rising steadily for a decade, adding about 100,000 people per year. An estimated 3.35 million Muslims now live in the United States, just 1% of the overall population.
The survey interviews were conducted in English, as well as Arabic, Farsi and Urdu, between January 23 and May 2, 2017. The average margin of error is plus or minus 5.8 percentage points.
Some of the study's findings won't surprise people paying attention during the acrimonious 2016 presidential election, in which Trump repeatedly cast suspicion on American Muslims. Of the 44% of American Muslims who voted in the election, nearly 8 in 10 voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton. Just 8% voted for Trump.
The survey, conducted in the days and months following Trump's inauguration, potrays a Muslim community still largely wary of the President. Nearly 7 in 10 say Trump makes them feel worried, and 45% say he makes them angry. Nearly three in four Muslims say Trump is "unfriendly" toward members of their faith, and nearly two-thirds are dissatisfied with the direction of the country.
That's a stark contrast from 2011, when Barack Obama was President. Then, 64% of Muslim-Americans told Pew researchers that Obama was friendly toward Muslims and more than half were satisfied with the direction of the country.
Attitudes toward homosexuality
But the study's most significant findings may be religious and social, not political.
In 2007, just 27% of American Muslims said society should approve of homosexuality. This year, more than half (52%) said the same, a leap that surprised even scholars who study Islam in America. Likewise, 10 years ago, 57% of American Muslims said there is more than one way to interpret Islamic teachings. In 2017, 64% agreed.
American Muslims were also slightly more likely to identify as politically liberal (30% now vs. 24% in 2007). Nearly two-thirds identify as Democrats and a similar number believe in a bigger government that provides a host of services.
Asked about the essentials of the faith, an overwhelming percentage of Muslims, like Christians, said believing in God was most important. But issues like working for social justice (69%) and protecting the environment (62%) also scored high in the list of essentials for American Muslims.
There's some debate among scholars about whether American Muslims' increasing liberalism on issues like homosexuality is the result of recent immigrants' assimilation to mainstream American values or the rise of native-born millennials, who, like their non-Muslim peers, are more tolerant of the LGBT community.
But while millennial Muslims are more likely than foreign-born Muslims to say homosexuality should be accepted (60% vs. 49%), both groups saw an increase of more than 20 percentage points in the last decade, Pew found.
After a Muslim-American shot and killed 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando last year, American Muslims were forced to come to terms with gays and lesbians in their mosques and families, prompting conversations about homosexuality and Islamic teachings, said Zareena Grewal, who studies the American Muslim experience at Yale University.
"After the Pulse shooting, Muslims were coming out of the closet across the United States, and the Muslim community, in public and private, was grappling with the issue in a much more honest way," Grewal said.
But Ihsan Bagby, a professor of Islamic history at the University of Kentucky, cautioned about over-interpreting Muslim attitudes on homosexuality, saying many Muslims may be simply signaling support for another group often maligned in America.
"The struggle of the LGBT community has been very similar to the struggle of Muslims, and in fact the LGBT community has been very supportive of Muslims," Bagby said. But even while aligning politically, many Muslim organizations would not accept homosexualtity as an "acceptable lifestyle for Muslims," the scholar said.
A gender gap
The study uncovered a significant gender gap in the way Muslim-American men and women perceive discrimination and the country's direction.
Muslim women are more likely than men to say it is harder to be a Muslim in the United States today (57% vs. 43%); much more likely to say Trump angers them (54% to 37%); and significantly less likely to believe that Americans are friendly towards Muslims (44% vs. 65%).
That's probably because American Muslim women, particularly those who wear a hijab, are more readily recognized as Muslims and thus potentially subject to discrimination, experts said.
According to the Pew study, two-thirds of Muslim-Americans whose appearance is identifiably Muslim report experiences of discrimination, from a generalized sense of being treated with suspicion to being singled out by airport security to being attacked and called offensive names.
More likely to condemn extremism
Since the 9/11 attacks, a number of conservative commentators have condemned American Muslims for not denouncing terrorism strongly enough. In fact, Pew found that not only are Muslim-Americans increasingly anxious about Islamic extremism, they are also more likely than other Americans to say that violence can never be justified.
More than 8 in 10 American Muslims said they were at least somewhat concerned about global extremism in the name of Islam, a 10 percentage point increase from 2011, when Pew conducted a similar study.
Nearly 3 in 4 said there is little if any support for extremism among American Muslims. Just 6% said there is a great deal of support for it, and 11% said there is a "fair amount."
Likewise, more than 75% of American Muslims say violence can never be justified to further a religious, social or political cause. That's compared to 59% of Americans overall who said the same.
Silver linings
Despite the widespread belief that their community faces widespread discrimination, nearly half of American Muslims (49%) said someone had expressed support for them because of their religion during the past year. And more than half said Americans in general are friendly toward Muslims, even if many Americans, according to surveys, consider Islam outside of the American mainstream.
Nearly 9 in 10 said they were proud to be both American and Muslim, and a large percentage believe that if they work hard they can succeed in the United States, the study found.
The vast majority said they were satisfied with the way their life is going, and 82% are American citizens, including 4 in 10 who were born abroad.
"Muslim Americans express a persistent streak of optimism and positive feelings," the study's authors said. "Overwhelmingly, they say they are proud to be Americans, believe that hard work generally brings success in this country and are satisfied with the way things are going in their own lives -- even if they are not satisfied with the direction of the country as a whole."
TM & 2017 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.
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Democrats please progressives with left-leaning policy agenda – McClatchy Washington Bureau
Posted: at 1:46 am
McClatchy Washington Bureau | Democrats please progressives with left-leaning policy agenda McClatchy Washington Bureau But the most important audience for their Better Deal program was the party's increasingly vocal liberal wing, which has blamed the party's electoral wipeout in recent elections on the establishment's perceived political timidity and fealty to ... |
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The real liberal critique: Republicans aren’t liberals – The State
Posted: at 1:46 am
The State | The real liberal critique: Republicans aren't liberals The State James Fallows, in The Atlantic, describes their behavior as the most discouraging weakness our governing system has shown since Trump took office. He singles out Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse for scorn because he leads all senators in his thoughtful, ... |
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Free-Market Thinking Is Key for States to Avoid Financial Disaster – InsideSources
Posted: at 1:46 am
Its shocking to see the budget horror stories coming out of two of the nations leading states. Illinois and Connecticut are in fiscal freefall, and their leaders are taking the exact wrong approach in their misguided efforts to turn things around. If they were smart, they would look to the example of states like Florida to discover how to weather fiscal storms.
Illinois faces a staggering budget gap of close to $10 billion, a crisis worsened by a state pension program funded at just 37 percent and credit downgrades that leave the once-proud state just one step above junk status. Saddled with their blue-state mentality, Illinois lawmakers are doing what they do best, trying to solve the problem by raising taxes somehow thinking they can dig their way out of the hole theyve created.
Connecticut, meanwhile, must cope with a roughly $2 billion budget hole and the departure of key employers like General Electric and Aetna. Applying the same erroneous approach as their brethren in the Land of Lincoln, politicians in Connecticut are considering bringing back toll roads in hopes of raising enough revenue to get their budget in balance. They seem to think that if only they extract a little more from their taxpayers, they can make their financial problems magically disappear. They clearly are forgetting the well-known definition of insanity: Doing the same things over and over, but expecting different results.
Largely overlooked amid the medias unrelenting focus on the Trump White House was the publication this month of an invaluable comprehensive research study by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. Mercatus annual Ranking of the States by Fiscal Condition points directly to a conclusion that Illinois, Connecticut, and so many other struggling states should begin to embrace that conservative fiscal principles lead to prosperity.
As the President and CEO of Floridas oldest and largest policy think tank, this reality is no surprise to me. For 30 years, The James Madison Institute has worked alongside our policymakers, elected leaders, and citizens to embrace the principles of limited government, free markets, rule of law, and the protection of private property. This approach unmistakably is working. The Mercatus research team, among the most comprehensive and professional in the nation, spent several months dissecting the finances of each state in five separate categories and across dozens of specific financial indicators, and ranked Floridas fiscal condition Number 1 in the nation.
To be sure, this type of success does not happen overnight. Florida has been blessed with tremendous, conservative leadership over the past 20 years, championed by the likes of Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Rick Scott, among others. Over those two decades, we have seen Florida succeed and thrive despite unrelenting challenges. The housing crisis and the Great Recession hit Florida harder than just about every other state, and it was the conservative free-market principles embraced by the states leaders that helped us rebound faster than anyone.
Moreover, from 1994 to 2014, more than $125 billion in annual adjusted gross income migrated to Florida from high-tax states like Illinois and Connecticut. That economic benefit is coming here not in spite of the policies of the states government, but because of them. In just the seven years under Governor Rick Scott, Florida has added well more than 1 million private sector jobs. State legislators have enacted sound and practical tax policies designed to keep government overreach at a minimum and prosperity at a maximum.
The numbers tell a compelling story. Floridas annual state budget of roughly $83 billion pales in comparison to that of New Yorks $150 billion. So what has the Empire State gotten for all those billions? A ride swerving around the potholes of the New York Turnpike suggests the answer is: not much.
Mercatus new report should hit politicians in Illinois, Connecticut, New York, and other liberal states like a punch in the gut. Whether they pay heed is yet to be seen, but I would be surprised if they do. However, no one should be surprised by the rankings from the report and Floridas premier standing. Freedom works every time its tried.
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