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Monthly Archives: June 2021
Pride Parties, Openings, And More FOMO-inducing Events From The Weekend! – Daily Front Row
Posted: June 28, 2021 at 9:36 pm
Phew, were still catching our breath after a non-stop events calendar over the last few days. Heres what people have been up to!
Crocs x Ron English party bus
In honor of the upcoming Foot Locker Inc. x Ron English Party Animals x Crocs collaboration, the trio came together to celebrate in New Yorks Union Square. Among those in attendance celebrating the collection (which incorporates three party-ready Crocs styles and 16 Party Animal Jibbitz) and snap pics on board the custom-wrapped party bus included Ron English, Venus X, Jerome LaMaar, Christina Paik, and Taylor Coward.
Re-opening of Ardor restaurant at The West Hollywood EDITION
Michelin-starred chef and restaurateur, John Fraser, celebrated the return of Ardor at The West Hollywood EDITION over the weekend. From Friday evening until Sunday evening the jungle-like restaurants drew a slew of VIP guests from the worlds of art, fashion and gastronomy including Leomie Anderson, Slick Woods, Lily Kwong & Nick Kroll, Alex Prager, Fanny Singer, Dani Miller, Melissa King, Brooke Wise, and more.
New York, New York with Susanne Bartsch Pride edition!
Susanne Bartsch hosted New York, New York at Sony Hall, with a special nod to Pride for the blowout weekend that was in it. Nightlife lovers in attendance included Zachary Quinto, Brandon Flynn, Dorinda Medley, Margaret Josephs, Amanda Lepore, and members of the Ru Pauls Drag Race All-Stars cast, Eureka OHara, Scarlett Envy, Rajah OHara, Serena Chacha, and Yara Sofia. Also in attendance was Ru Pauls Drag Race season 13 winner, Symone.
A busy bee this weekend, Susanne Bartsch also hosted a special edition of her On Top! party, with Pride On Top! at LE BAIN at The Standard, High Line. Many of the citys most well-known nightlife icons and emerging TikTok creators, including Ru Paus Drag Race alums GottMik, Sonique, Vanessa Vanjie, and Kandy Muse as well as Linux, Ryan Burke, Remy Duran, Ian Padget, Serena Shahidi, Emely Moreno, and the Coyle Twins flocked to the raucous party.
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Pride Parties, Openings, And More FOMO-inducing Events From The Weekend! - Daily Front Row
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Trump isnt the dictator: Wisconsin GOP inches away from Trump – POLITICO
Posted: at 9:36 pm
I just think its been going on for so long that people are kind of tired of it, said Tony Kurtz, a GOP assemblyman from rural Juneau County, which went for Trump last year by nearly 30 percentage points.
For more than seven months since he lost the election, Trump has engaged in a crusade against Republicans who crossed him, an effort he invigorated with a rally in Ohio on Saturday, where he traveled to campaign against Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, who voted to impeach him earlier this year. In most cases, the Republican base has responded zealously. But here, at a convention center attached to a water park, the lack of interest from the rank-and-file suggested some of the first, tentative signs of weariness of Trumps smash-mouth political act.
Even Sen. Ron Johnson, an unfailing Trump ally, broke with the former presidents criticism of Johnsons home-state lawmakers, dismissing Trumps suggestion that they could be primaried.
I dont think that represents much of a threat, quite honestly, Johnson said, describing Vos and his colleagues as doing a pretty good job.
Trump remains wildly popular among Wisconsin Republicans no less than in other states and the belief in his false claim that the election was rigged is widespread, underpinning a raft of elections-related legislation passed by Republican lawmakers in the state this month. At the state convention, activists cheered for Trump when organizers played a recorded message in which Trump repeated his falsehood that he carried the state in November. The convention included a panel on election law changes, the state party homepage prominently features an election integrity dashboard and delegates carried tote bags that read Defend secure elections.
Brian Jennings, chair of the GOP in Florence County, a sparsely populated Trump stronghold in northern Wisconsin, said Trump is the Republican Party right now, and on the sidelines of the convention, several delegates said Trump was right that Vos hadnt done enough to overturn the results of the election.
But unlike in states like Georgia and Arizona, there wasnt widespread interest in purging the states Assembly speaker for it a departure from Trumps dominion over the Republican Partys apparatus in the states.
Thats Wisconsin for you, said Helmut Fritz, a delegate from Milwaukee who sits on the state partys credentials committee. Trump isnt the dictator.
In part, Voss avoidance of punishment is the result of shrewd politics. Though he has frustrated Republicans who want Wisconsin to pursue an Arizona-style review of the election, Vos is neither a Trump critic nor a defender of the November elections integrity in the mold of Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp or Utah Sen. Mitt Romney. He has infuriated Democrats by hiring three retired police officers to investigate potential irregularities and/or illegalities in the November election. And at the convention, he announced that a conservative former state Supreme Court justice, Michael Gableman, will oversee the effort.
Following that news which an operative familiar with the arrangement said was in the works for weeks Trump said at his rally in Ohio that I hear now that Wisconsin is looking very, very seriously into the election and I respect Wisconsin so much.
But for the purposes of the Wisconsin state convention, he had all but invited attendees to engage in a pile-on. In his statement issued the night before Vos spoke, Trump, seeking to stoke grassroots outrage, accused Vos, LeMahieu and state Sen. Chris Kapenga of working hard to cover up election corruption actively trying to prevent a Forensic Audit.
Dont fall for their lies! Trump wrote. These REPUBLICAN leaders need to step up and support the people who elected them by providing them a full forensic investigation. If they dont, I have little doubt that they will be primaried and quickly run out of office.
On Sunday, a Trump adviser said the former president remains adamant about doing audits and is going to keep up pressure on Republicans to have the courage to do it.
President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd as he arrives to speak at a campaign rally. | Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo
So far this year and in other states, Trumps broadsides against Republicans deemed insufficiently loyal to him have been met with enthusiasm from activists. Utah Republicans heckled Romney, an outspoken Trump critic, at their state convention in May. Republicans in Georgia booed Kemp. The GOP governor of Arizona, Doug Ducey, was censured by his party for his lack of fealty to Trump.
At the convention in Wisconsin, it was a different story. One delegate deleted Trumps statement from his phone, saying he wished Trump would shut up, and Im a big Trump supporter. Another delegate said he hadnt even bothered to read it.
David Blaska, a former Dane County supervisor who worked as a speechwriter for former GOP Gov. Tommy Thompson, said a lot of people still believe the election was stolen. But the fact they werent jeering Vos, he said, was a good sign.
Standing at the back of the convention hall, Blaska said the party is hopefully moving on.
Vos said he wasnt surprised by the reception, citing his relationship with activists dating back to before Act 10, the explosive legislation advanced by then-Gov. Scott Walker in 2011 that limited public employee collective bargaining rights. Trump, he said, was misinformed.
But in a sign that Trumps supremacy isnt absolute, Vos went further than many other Republican have been willing to, aligning himself with former House Speaker Paul Ryan, the Wisconsin Republican who in a speech last month clashed with Trump when he said, If the conservative cause depends on the populist appeal of one personality, or of second-rate imitations, then were not going anywhere.
The things that President Trump stands for a strong America, lower taxes, more freedom everybody agrees with that, Vos said in a brief interview off the convention floor. But I will say I agree with Paul Ryan saying that our movement should never be about one person.
Trump, Vos said, did a lot of good things. But so could [Florida Gov.] Ron DeSantis or [Florida Sen.] Marco Rubio or you name the candidate. They all could do good things, too.
One important distinction in Wisconsin is the state partys history it is more firmly rooted than most. Ten years ago, Wisconsin was the Republican Partys leading light. Ryan was ascendant, soon to become the GOPs vice presidential nominee in 2012, then House speaker. Walker was beginning his first term as governor, waging a war on unions that would serve as a model for conservatives across the country. The states former GOP chair, Reince Priebus, ran the national party.
Today, the state party has been set back. After cresting in 2016, with Trumps upset of Hillary Clinton, Republicans here lost the governorship in 2018, then saw the state flip to Joe Biden two years later. Johnson, the states top elected Republican, has not yet said if hell run for reelection (On Saturday, he told reporters he wont announce a decision for quite some time.)
Its still a place [people] look to, Walker said. But its usually for things that have happened in the past.
Yet a comeback for the GOP in Wisconsin could be just a year away. Trump lost the state by fewer than 21,000 votes in 2020. Republicans still control the state legislature, and the party has a credible chance of unseating Tony Evers, the Democratic governor, next year.
I think Wisconsin will be back in terms of being a focal point nationally, because you'll have one of the most competitive gubernatorial elections, and probably at least nationally more importantly, you're going to have a Senate race that could very well determine who holds the Senate for the next several years, Walker said.
He said the party has a tremendous opportunity not to be wed to any one individual, and I say that fully acknowledging that on policy what President Trump did was phenomenal.
On politics, however, his record was mixed. In November, Wisconsin served as a blaring example of Trumps difficulties in the suburbs, with the former president juicing turnout in rural areas but underperforming in metro areas. Convention-goers repeatedly mentioned how Republicans running in the states five Republican-held House seats outperformed Trump in their districts.
In a swing state with a recent history of highly competitive elections, convention delegates and strategists repeatedly cited an imperative to rally together, and also to avoid needlessly alienating large swathes of otherwise attainable voters. Other states, said a Republican strategist at the Wisconsin convention, arent used to a decade of battles where every yard matters and where f---ing with each other internally can cost the party an election.
The stuff thats going on nationally, weve experienced it longer, said Jennie Frederick, president of the Wisconsin Federation of Republican Women. I feel like we know who the enemy is, and its not us.
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Trump isnt the dictator: Wisconsin GOP inches away from Trump - POLITICO
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Lets run Selective Service up the flagpole and see if anyone salutes – The Boston Globe
Posted: at 9:36 pm
The bipartisan Selective Service Repeal Act of 2021 is pending in Congress, and this issue is likely to be taken up by the House Subcommittee on Military Personnel next month. Several previous proposals to end draft registration were cosponsored by then-representatives Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Ron Paul, Republican of Texas. Senator Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky, is one of the original sponsors of the current bill, along with Representative Peter DeFazio, Oregon Democrat and Massachusetts native.
New England has long been a center of draft resistance and antiwar activism, and there are many New England members on the House and Senate Armed Services Committees to which these bills have been referred. But no New England representative or senator has yet endorsed the current proposals to end draft registration.
As other anti-draft activists and I said in an open letter to the Armed Services Committee leadership this year, calling for a congressional hearing which has yet to be held on this issue, Expanding draft registration to women would bring about a semblance of equality in war (although women in the military would likely still be subject to disproportionate sexual harassment and abuse). Ending draft registration would bring about real equality in peace and freedom.
Edward Hasbrouck
Wellesley Hills
In face of coercion, he listened to his conscience instead
I appreciated Jeff Jacobys column Women dont register for the draft, and men shouldnt either, and my thoughts are not dissimilar to his. However, this is not about gender equality or the lack thereof. Coercion itself is wrong. No public good can come from the Selective Service, and for me the issue is personal.
In 1980, I was supposed to register. I did not do so, intentionally and with malice. As years passed, I got letters telling me to register or be punished (five years in prison and a potential $250,000 fine). The punishment is over the top. I was not moved by their threats until 1986, when, in a rare move, the FBI came to visit me in Tallahassee in the middle of grad school, where I was studying, funny enough, criminology.
The local American Civil Liberties Union negotiated a deal. I signed under protest, made a public event with the press and supporters, and stayed out of prison. At school, I faced harassment that I did not foresee. I didnt care. My voice was heard.
That experience strengthened me. I went on to lecture about the Selective Service at high schools and colleges after returning to my native Bay State, all while working as a correctional counselor at the Department of Correction.
Jacoby writes, As a philosophical matter, it is far from clear how society can square the defense of individual liberty as a core value with a requirement that young people be made available for involuntary conscription. That point resonates with me. A persons conscience in not being willing to prepare for war should be more important to us as Americans, even in times of relative peace. This shouldnt be overlooked in putting an end to the Selective Service.
Stuart M. Wax
Watertown
Jeff Jacobys solution to ending the discriminatory practice of registering only men for the draft is short-sighted. Maybe compulsory military service isnt what the country needs, but a stint of required national service, whether in the Peace Corps, AmeriCorps, a modern-day Civilian Conservation Corps, or some other community service entity, for people in their late teens or early 20s, would be a great thing. Both young men and women should participate; registering for a draft would be a start.
No one should be exempt from working in some way for the good of the nation. The notion that we as a society have no obligation to the greater good of the country is a lesson we shouldnt teach. Im proud of my own service as a VISTA volunteer in the 1970s, and I know that others who have done the same feel it was a defining experience, something that has stayed with them throughout their lives.
A year or two of service is good for those who participate, the communities they serve, and the nation as a whole. Dont shrink the idea of national service expand it.
Richard Yospin
Newton
This could be a vital rite of passage
I am not in disagreement with Jeff Jacoby that the requirement that young people be made available for involuntary [military] conscription should be eliminated. That said, I would like to propose mandatory national service as a serious consideration.
Many, if not most, young people are uncertain about their future. Wouldnt it be helpful to give young people a timeout from the academic and vocational treadmills and allow them to express and explore their talents and inclinations in new and different ways? Who better to help paint bridges, assist professional staff in nursing homes, hospitals, and child care facilities, and yes, join the military, if so desired?
National service that offers choices would give young people travel and work opportunities that would otherwise be unavailable to them. Wealthy parents can subsidize so-called 13th-year experiences for their children. Why not make it a rite of passage for all?
Nancy Morrison
Beverly
Our liberty is at stake without the pull of a draft
Once again, the Selective Service System (mandatory registration for the draft) and the draft itself are being called into question, this time by Jeff Jacoby, on the basis that individual liberty cant be squared with involuntary conscription.
Let us discard the high moral posturing. In truth, the real reason for the drafts anathema is that most young men and women in the United States today dont feel like giving up two years to Uncle Sam to do the countrys work, especially since it might turn out to be dangerous.
In any event, Jacoby seems to have the sequence in reverse order. Without conscription to defend it, eventually there may be no individual liberty.
Channing Wagg
Boxborough
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Lets run Selective Service up the flagpole and see if anyone salutes - The Boston Globe
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The Life And Career Of Ron Johnson (Complete Story) – Browns Nation
Posted: at 9:36 pm
One position at which the Cleveland Browns have had many excellent players is running back.
In particular, Jim Brown, Leroy Kelly, and Marion Motley are Cleveland running backs who are inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Ron Johnson, for one season in 1969, was another outstanding running back who played for the Browns.
Traded to the New York Giants in 1970, Johnson then rushed for over 1,000 yards in two seasons, and earned first team NFL All-Pro honors and two Pro Bowl invitations, with New York.
Ron Johnson with the #Browns #RightPlayerWrongUniform pic.twitter.com/WXwRtEpOfF
Old Time Football (@Ol_TimeFootball) May 30, 2021
We take a look at the life of Ron Johnson before, during, and after his NFL playing career.
Ronald Adolphis Johnson was born on October 17, 1947 in Detroit, Michigan.
Arthur, Johnsons father, supported the family with his own trucking company, Johnson Trucking.
Johnson had two brothers and two sisters.
Alex, Johnsons brother, had a 13-year career in major league baseball, playing on eight teams from 1964 to 1976 and leading the American League in batting in 1970.
When he was growing up, Johnson idolized Jim Brown.
Johnson attended Northwestern High School in Detroit.
At Northwestern High School, Johnson starred in baseball (as a center fielder) and football.
Johnson likely could have pursued a career in baseball as well as in football.
However, he decided to play football.
He said:
I chose football because I liked it better and it was a better sport for my talents.
After graduating Northwestern High School in 1965, Johnson accepted a football scholarship from University of Michigan and headed to Ann Arbor, Michigan for college.
Johnson lettered in football at Michigan in 1966, 1967, and 1968.
In 1966, Johnson saw limited action, as he rushed for 95 yards on 23 rushing attempts.
Michigan had a 6-4 record in 1966.
Johnson became a full-time starter at running back in 1967, and he had an outstanding season.
In a 26-21 Michigan loss to Navy on October 7, 1967, Johnson rushed for 270 yards and two touchdowns on 26 rushing attempts.
He also caught three passes for 19 yards.
The following week, on October 14, 1967, Johnson rushed for 107 yards on 24 rushing attempts, in a 34-0 Michigan loss to Michigan State.
On October 28, 1967, Johnson rushed for 108 yards and two touchdowns on 17 rushing attempts, in a 20-15 Michigan loss to Minnesota.
The following week, on November 4, 1967, Johnson rushed for over 100 yards for the fourth time in 1967, when he rushed for 167 yards on 42 rushing attempts, as Michigan defeated Northwestern 7-3.
In 1967, Johnson rushed for 1,005 yards and six touchdowns on 220 rushing attempts and caught 13 passes for 179 yards and one touchdown.
He led the Big Ten in rushing yards in 1967.
Johnson was selected second team 1967 College Football All-American by the Central Press Association.
He also was named first team 1967 All-Big Ten Conference by both the Associated Press and United Press International.
He also was honored as the Most Valuable Player of the 1967 Michigan team.
In 1967, Michigan had a 4-6 record.
As good a junior year as Johnson had in 1967, he had an even better season as a senior in 1968.
Johnson rushed for 205 yards and two touchdowns on 31 rushing attempts, as Michigan defeated Duke 31-10 on September 28, 1968.
The following week, on October 5, 1968, in a 32-9 Michigan win over Navy, Johnson rushed for 121 yards and two touchdowns on 22 rushing attempts.
In the next game, on October 12, 1968, Johnson rushed for 152 yards and one touchdown on 19 rushing attempts, in a 28-14 Michigan victory over Michigan State.
He also caught two passes for 16 yards.
The following week, on October 19, 1968, Johnson rushed for 163 yards and one touchdown on 34 rushing attempts, as Michigan defeated Indiana 27-22.
In addition, Johnson caught three passes for 19 yards.
Johnson rushed for 129 yards and two touchdowns on 24 rushing attempts, in a 35-0 Michigan shutout of Northwestern on November 2, 1968.
For the sixth time in 1968, Johnson rushed for over 100 yards in a game, in a 34-9 Michigan victory over Wisconsin on November 16, 1968.
Johnson far exceeded 100 yards in the game, as he rushed for 347 yards (setting a Michigan single game record) and five touchdowns (also setting a Michigan single game record) on 31 rushing attempts.
He also caught two passes for 25 yards.
In 1968, Johnson rushed for 1,391 yards and 19 touchdowns on 255 rushing attempts and caught 15 passes for 177 yards.
Johnson led the Big Ten in all of rushing yards, yards from scrimmage, touchdowns, and points, in 1968.
He also was captain of the Michigan football team in 1968 the first African-American to do so.
Johnson was selected first team 1968 College Football All-American by the Football Writers Association of America and The Football News and second team 1968 College Football All-American by the Associated Press, the Central Press Association, the Newspaper Enterprise Association, and United Press International.
In addition, Johnson was named first team 1968 All-Big Ten Conference by both the Associated Press and United Press International.
He also won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football trophy as the most valuable player in the Big Ten in 1968 and was honored as the Most Valuable Player of the 1968 Michigan team.
Several reasons were cited for Johnsons skill as a running back when he was at Michigan.
Michigan head coach Bump Elliott said:
I just think its instinct. Hes a strong runner and has great instincts. And the men on the ball club like to block for him. Thats the kind of guy he is.
Ohio State assistant coach Esco Sarkinnen stated:
Johnson has good size, speed, agility and balance. But his extraordinary physique gives him the ability to shake off tacklers. He cuts well and picks up blockers impressively.
Michigan posted an 8-2 record and was ranked 12th in the nation in the final Associated Press poll in 1968.
Johnson graduated from Michigan with a business degree in 1969.
After his time at Michigan, Johnson continued his football career in the NFL.
1969-1970
Johnson was drafted by the Cleveland Browns in the first round of the 1969 NFL draft.
He was the 20th overall pick.
While Johnson was a halfback in college, he largely played fullback with Cleveland.
He started next to Leroy Kelly.
As a rookie, Johnson (at a height of six feet and one inch and at a weight of 205 pounds) played in all 14, and started 13, regular season games in 1969.
On September 21, 1969, in his first NFL regular season game, Johnson rushed for 118 yards and two touchdowns (on runs of one yard and 48 yards) on 17 rushing attempts, as Cleveland defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 27-20.
In addition, Johnson caught two passes for 21 yards, including an 18-yard pass reception.
On November 30, 1969, Johnson scored two touchdowns, on a one-yard run and (the game-winning touchdown in the fourth quarter) on a seven-yard run, as the Browns defeated the Chicago Bears 28-24.
OTD 1969: #Bears legend Gale Sayers logs the final 100-yard rushing game of his career, rushing for 126 yards against the heavily-favored #Browns at Wrigley.
Chicago leads for most of the game, but Cleveland rookie Ron Johnson's 7-yard TD with 5 minutes left wins it, 28-24. pic.twitter.com/YuyO6k7IAZ
Kevin Gallagher (@KevG163) November 30, 2020
For the 1969 regular season, Johnson rushed for 472 yards and the above-described seven touchdowns (tied for fifth in the NFL) on 138 rushing attempts, caught 24 passes for 164 yards, and returned one kickoff for 31 yards.
With a 10-3-1 record in 1969, Cleveland won the NFL Century Division title.
Johnson helped the Browns rank in the 1969 NFL regular season third in points scored (351), fifth in total passing and rushing yards (4,428), ninth in passing yards (2,640), tied for second in passing touchdowns (24), third in fewest sacks allowed (20), fifth in rushing yards (1,788), tied for first in rushing touchdowns (17), and tied for sixth in average yards per rushing attempt (4.0).
In the 1969 NFL playoffs, Cleveland first played the Dallas Cowboys on December 28, 1969.
Johnson played in, but did not start, the game, as the Browns defeated Dallas 38-14.
The following week, on January 4, 1969, Cleveland advanced to play the Minnesota Vikings in the 1969 NFL championship game.
Johnson again played in, but did not start, the game, as the Browns lost to Minnesota 27-7.
On January 26, 1970, Johnson, along with defensive tackle Jim Kanicki and linebacker Wayne Meylan, was traded by Cleveland to the New York Giants in exchange for wide receiver Homer Jones.
The last time Cleveland did a big trade with the New York Giants for a WR was in 1970, G-Men got Ron Johnson, while Browns got Homer Jones. Jones replaced Paul Warfield, who CLE traded to Miami for #1 draft pick Browns spent on QB Mike Phipps (instead of Terry Bradshaw).
AAAAGH! pic.twitter.com/L6bYYHSmKy
Jon Perr (@Perrspectives) March 13, 2019
Johnson was surprised by the trade.
He said:
I was shocked. They told me in Cleveland they had to make the deal to facilitate the trade of Paul Warfield to Miami for a No. 1 draft pick. They said they didnt want to give me up but had no other choice. After I thought it over, I realized it was a good deal for me. I am better suited to be a halfback than a fullback as I was used at Cleveland. New York offers me great opportunities.
Johnson took advantage of the opportunity in New York and had an excellent season in 1970.
1970 #NYGiants preseason at Steelers: RB Ron Johnson nearly scored on this quick hitter up the middle. Johnson was acquired from the Browns and became the NYG first 1000 yard rusher in 1970 with 1027 yards where he also earned All Pro and Pro Bowl honors. #GiantsPride pic.twitter.com/hLu36eor6S
BigBlueVCR (@BigBlueVCR) August 24, 2020
He started all 14 regular season games for the Giants in 1970.
Old DaysRon Johnson looks for an opening during an early 1970s Washington-Giants game at Yankee Stadium #NYG #NYGiants #WashingtonFootball #1970s #NFL pic.twitter.com/BRc2FJ5pBw
Tom's Old Days (@sigg20) November 2, 2020
Fran Tarkenton said:
Johnson is the best halfback in football today . . . period! Hes just a devastating football player.
Giants head coach Alex Webster added:
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The Life And Career Of Ron Johnson (Complete Story) - Browns Nation
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Rease and Keshequa made winning a habit – pickinsplinters.com
Posted: at 9:36 pm
Riley Rease was named the Section V Baseball Class D1 Player of the Year. (Photo provided)
By PAUL GOTHAM
When Abijah Gath considers the turning point to the 2021 season, the Keshequa head baseball coach recalls his squads game at Le Roy on May 17th. Trailing 5-1 heading into the sixth inning, the Indians then undefeated record (5-0) looked in jeopardy.
We had done everything we could to mess it up, Gath said referring to an interference call and a handful of fielding miscues.
Riley Rease changed the games course with one swing of the bat. The senior connected on a two-run home run in the sixth, and Keshequa rallied for a 9-5 win.
He put it into the trees, Gath said. He put that ball over the fence, and the whole thing shifted.
The Indians went on to win 11 of their next 12 games and claimed the programs first sectional title in more than a decade.
Rease earned Section V Class D1 Player of the Year.
Hes a gamer, said Gath the 2021 Class D1 Ed LaRock Coach of the Year. When big games happen, he always seems to show up.
Rease hit .444 on the season and went 5-0 on the mound with an ERA of 0.76.
Hes an all-around great athlete, Gath stated. Hes mindful of the game, but he also worked so hard on being physically fit. His athleticism along with his dedication inside and out of the season has really set him apart.
Rease was one of four Keshequa players named to the 2021 Section V Class D1 team, and he understands the connection.
This isnt an individual award for me. I dont get any of these awards without my team. My team comes to practice every day. We push each other. When Im on the mound or in center field I know every position one through nine is making play. My stats this year are a reflection of what my team did to help me.
Trey Learn, Jordon Luther and Aidan Wood joined Rease in receiving post-season honors.
All four of those seniors played on the schools soccer team which claimed a second straight sectional title last fall. The 2019 soccer team advanced to the NYS semi-finals for the first time in program history. This years baseball crown ended a 14-year drought.
Weve played our whole lives together, Rease said. Game by game, we always know one through nine is hitting. If the top of the lineup struggled, the bottom always came through. I never thought there was a dull spot. It was automatic because weve been playing together for so long. We know what each other is going to do.
Luther led the team with 22 stolen bases and 25 runs scored. He collected 19 hits and 14 walks for an on-base percentage of .466 while posting a 4-1 record on the mound. Wood hit .435 with six doubles and three triples. He drove in 15 runs while scoring 22. On the mound, he struck out 41 in 25.2 innings of work and registered an ERA of 0.82. Learn scored 21 runs and drove in another 13. He stole 10 bases while finishing with a batting average of .345 and on-base percentage of .426.
Rease credited Gath, also the schools JV soccer coach, and Ron Macomber, Jr., the varsity soccer coach, with instilling a winning mindset.
Once we won sectionals, Coach Macomber sat us down and told us Every team (from Keshequa) thats got this far thought this was enough. They were happy with it. We all looked at each other and we knew we wanted more. We wanted to make history.
Rease scored 31 goals and added 17 assists for the schools soccer team last fall. This after collecting 14 goals and nine assists in 2019.
Rease scored 23 runs and drove in 21 this past season. He collected eight extra-base hits and finished with an on-base percentage of .476 and OPS of 1.254. In 27.2 innings of work, he struck out 38 while issuing 18 walks.
Its just the way he plays the game, Caledonia-Mumford head coach Andy Leyden said. He plays it hard. He plays fast. Hes aggressive. Hes a tough out when hes up to bat. Hes a terror on the base paths and he puts his team in position to compete every time hes out there.
Cam Allison (Honeoye), David Crandall (C.G. Finney), Charlie Farrell (Honeoye), Ty Kenney (Alfred-Almond), Wyatt Owens (Arkport/Canaseraga) and Brent Zubikowki (Fillmore) rounded out the 2021 Class D1 team.
Allison hit .593 with 32 runs scored and 15 RBI. The senior finished with an on-base percentage of .683 and OPS of 1.205. Crandall had a .421 batting average with 11 RBI and 14 runs scored. The junior collected seven extra-base hits and committed just one error while playing full-time at shortstop.
Farrell worked 34.2 innings on the mound and registered a 3-1 record. He hit .467 on the season with 10 extra-base hits and finished with an on-base percentage of .522, slugging of .683 and OPS of 1.205. In 11 games, Kenney collected 12 hits and 12 walks for a .500 batting average and .744 on-base percentage. He scored 17 runs.
Owens finished 3-2 with one save and an ERA of 2.50. In 30 innings of work, he struck out 46 and walked 15. Opposing batters hit .150 against Owens. Zubikowski made 72 plate appearances and hit .462 with an on-base percentage of .611 and OPS of 1.419. Of his 24 hits, he had four doubles, four home runs and a triple for a slugging percentage of .808. He drove in 32 runs and scored 28.
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THE OPEN DOOR: Living in a web of connections – newportri.com
Posted: June 27, 2021 at 4:36 am
Sandra Matuschka| Newport Daily News
The play Six Degrees of Separation by John Guare popularized the notion that everyone on the planet is separated at most by only six other people; the trick is knowing who they are in reaching out to them.
The concept began in the early 20th century as a game in a short story by a Hungarian author, and gradually spread into algorithms, video games, films, psychology, mathematics, research projects, and many other areas. My interest in this concept, however, is more one of a metaphysical synchronicity. I have experienced, and heard about from others, so many synchronicities of connection that I start to wonder if the substratum of the phenomenon is not in fact both a physical and a spiritual one albeit one that we have yet the ability to understand.
I wont live long enough to read all the books that would be relevant to such a concept. Such books would include not just spiritual concepts, but quantum physics, psychology, chaos theory mathematics and the new physics.
Although logic and science easily can be used to explain such synchronicities as my Philadelphia (Penn.) father meeting a relative, and another time a neighbor, in trenches in Germany in WWII, so too might psychology and metaphysics. Analytical psychologist Carl C. Jung, who first introduced the concept, said it described circumstances that appear meaningfully related, yet lack a causal connection. I suspect we all have our own criteria for what is meaningfully related, not to mention differences in what constitutes causal connection.
Someone I knew once said that experiencing synchronicity meant nothing more nor less than that you were on the right path, kind of like a cosmic pat on the shoulder and a wink as you made your way through life. It certainly could be at least that. But, in so many instances it seems to presage so much more. Inspirational speaker Iyanla Vanzant has a mantra that fits with the concept of connectedness that I particularly lean toward. She makes a note that although she uses the word God as her particular understanding of the Divine, any word that signifies your concept of oneness/omnipresence/the all, is fine: Where I am now, God is. You can emphasize a different word in the phrase each time and enrich the meaning. It kind of goes back to the God is everywhere phrase you might have heard or learned in younger years.
Many decades ago, when I was young and nave (now Im just old and nave!), I travelled alone to Greece for my first trip abroad. I was working in a hospital in Philadelphia as a medical technician at the time, and a new doctor arrived just before I left on my trip. He was Greek. On an impulse, I asked him for the address of his father/family, and I offered to stop by with greetings. He was hesitant, as his relationship with his father was not good, but reluctantly gave me the address. The ensuing misadventure is too long to write (it became a book/memoir), but the salient point is that because I had that address and got to connect with the family, I was saved from a truly disastrous mistake. All because I had a hunch to acquire an address from the new doctor.
We live in a web of connections to one another, mostly unknown; all we have to do is communicate and be aware. If nothing else, being aware of the web of connections we have to one another should help to humanize our actions and reactions, to make us realize the need to be thoughtful of and kind to our fellow humans. When we speak of the human family, its not just an expression. We truly are joined in many real and mysterious ways to one another. Communication is one of the keys to finding those connections. I think curiosity plays a part as well.
Basically, we could be moving through life in a non-three-dimensional medium about which we have little-to-no idea, but that somehow helps to shape the direction of our lives when we are moving toward our good. I like a quote from Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, a pioneer in near-death studies, which embodies this concept: There are no mistakes, no coincidences; all events are blessings given to us to learn from.
Sandra Matuschka of Tiverton is a freelance writer and columnist. Send feedback and suggestions to smatuschka@cox.net or C/O The Newport Daily News, P.O. Box 420, Newport, RI 02840.
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Carlo Rovelli: My work in physics is endlessly creative – The Guardian
Posted: at 4:36 am
Verona was a beautiful place to grow up, but the town was close-minded and provincial. Dad, a gentle and hard-working man, ran a business. Mum was intelligent and bored a lethal combination. They encouraged my independence from a young age, which I took too far. At 14, I ran away from home and headed to France, to find like-minded, free-thinking young people.
I took my first acid in Paris aged 16, then hitchhiked across Europe. One night I slept in a small boat I found moored by a pier on the Danube. Lying down to rest underneath the immense, starry sky was the first time I felt true happiness.
Curiosity led me to the study of physics. People like to distinguish between the arts and science, but my work is endlessly creative. I read and read, converse for hours, and then sit scribbling away in my notebooks. Its just that my goal is understanding some of natures greatest secrets.
Sex was about giving, not taking, when I came of age. It was the time of hippies making love not war, and I made plenty. We did it with everyone, unperturbed by age or gender. Our utopian ideas were beautiful and gentle, although free loves reality included tears and jealousy. I believed making love as much as possible, with the largest possible number of people, was the best thing in life. I have only changed my mind about the latter.
A Canadian bear nearly ate me alive. I was 20 and hiking through the Rocky Mountains after dropping out of university. Ignoring advice, I set up camp where I shouldnt have. From inside my tent at dusk I saw a great grizzlys terrifying shadow. I thought I was done for, but thankfully the beast was content to eat the food Id hung in a tree and left me alone. I ran down to the closest village immediately.
I cried last night watching the movie The Life Ahead. Tears streamed down my face when Momo, a young boy, kidnaps Sofia Lorens character from hospital just as she wanted. Seeing that on screen moved me deeply: I did the same for a young woman, many years ago.
Ive devoted much of my life to the study of quantum gravity: the search for answers about the properties of space and time. A calculation showing that physical space is formed by finite grains is my greatest achievement so far; today my research is focused on black holes. Fascinating as all this is, most people struggle to connect it with their lives: that is why I started to write books about science.
My political outlook is as radical as it always has been. Even if I behave more respectably as I get older, tThe views I formed in adolescence remain the same. Most of the ideals paraded as noble in our society are hypocritical. The rich are only rich through plundering the poor thats true both for countries and people. One day soon those whove gone without will make the privileged pay.
People tend not to impress me much. I think Ive read too many biographies. Once youve heard the stories of Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan, ordinary people like you or me have a tough time when it comes to comparison.
I always assumed getting older would be miserable, but to my surprise life gets better and better. Once the pressure to prove yourself in youth slowly melts away, the shining sun and tweeting birds suddenly become so much more enjoyable.
Carlo Rovellis latest book, Helgoland, is published by Allen Lane at 20. Buy it for 17.40 at guardianbookshop.com
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Exotic Superconductors: The Secret That Was Never There – SciTechDaily
Posted: at 4:36 am
Experiments in the lab at TU Wien. Credit: TU Wien
How reproducible are measurements in solid-state physics? New measurements show: An allegedly sensational effect does not exist at all.
A single measurement result is not a proof this has been shown again and again in science. We can only really rely on a research result when it has been measured several times, preferably by different research teams, in slightly different ways. In this way, errors can usually be detected sooner or later.
However, a new study by Prof. Andrej Pustogow from the Institute of Solid State Physics at TU Wien together with other international research teams shows that this can sometimes take quite a long time. The investigation of strontium ruthenate, a material that plays an important role in unconventional superconductivity, has now disproved an experiment that gained fame in the 1990s: it was believed that a novel form of superconductivity had been discovered. As it now turns out, however, the material behaves very similarly to other well-known high-temperature superconductors. Nevertheless, this is an important step forward for research.
Superconductivity is one of the great mysteries of solid-state physics: certain materials lose their electrical resistance completely at low temperatures. This effect is still not fully understood. What is certain, however, is that so-called Cooper pairs play a central role in superconductivity.
Pyramid shaped crystal in a coil. Credit: TU Wien
In a normal metal, electric current consists of individual electrons that collide with each other and with the metal atoms. In a superconductor, the electrons move in pairs. This changes the situation dramatically, explains Andrej Pustogow. Its similar to the difference between a crowd in a busy shopping street and the seemingly effortless motion of a dancing couple on the dance floor. When electrons are bound in Cooper pairs, they do not lose energy through scattering and move through the material without any disturbance. The crucial question is: Which conditions lead to this formation of Cooper pairs?
From a quantum physics point of view, the important thing is the spin of these two electrons, says Andrej Pustogow. The spin is the magnetic moment of an electron and can point either up or down. In Cooper pairs, however, a coupling occurs: in a singlet state, the spin of one electron points upwards and that of the other electron points downwards. The magnetic moments cancel each other out and the total spin of the pair is always zero.
However, this rule, which almost all superconductors follow, seemed to be broken by the Cooper pairs in strontium ruthenate (Sr2RuO4). In 1998, results were published that indicated Cooper pairs in which the spins of both electrons point in the same direction (then it is a so-called spin triplet). This would enable completely new applications, explains Andrej Pustogow. Such triplet Cooper pairs would then no longer have a total spin of zero. This would allow them to be manipulated with magnetic fields and used to transport information without loss, which would be interesting for spintronics and possible quantum computers.
This caused quite a stir, not least because strontium ruthenate was also considered a particularly important material for superconductivity research for other reasons: its crystal structure is identical to that of cuprates, which exhibit high-temperature superconductivity. While the latter are deliberately doped with impurities to make superconductivity possible, Sr2RuO4is already superconducting in its pure form.
Actually, we studied this material for a completely different reason, says Andrej Pustogow. But in the process, we realized that these old measurements could not be correct. In 2019, the international team was able to show that the supposedly exotic spin effect was just a measurement artefact: the measured temperature did not match the actual temperature of the sample studied; in fact, the sample studied at the time was not superconducting at all. With this realization in mind, the superconductivity of the material was now re-examined with great precision. The new results clearly show that strontium ruthenate is not a triplet superconductor. Rather, the properties correspond to what is already known from cuprates.
However, Andrej Pustogow does not find this disappointing: It is a result that brings our understanding of high-temperature superconductivity in these materials another step forward. The finding that strontium ruthenate shows similar behavior to cuprates means two things: On the one hand, it shows that we are not dealing with an exotic, new phenomenon, and on the other hand it also means that we have a new material at our disposal, in which we can investigate already known phenomena. Ultra-pure strontium ruthenate is better suited for this than previously known materials. It offers a much cleaner test field than cuprates.
In addition, one also learns something about the reliability of old, generally accepted publications: Actually, one might think that results in solid-state physics can hardly be wrong, says Pustogow. While in medicine you might have to be satisfied with a few laboratory mice or a sample of a thousand test subjects, we examine billions of billions (about 10 to the power of 19) electrons in a single crystal. This increases the reliability of our results. But that does not mean that every result is completely correct. As everywhere in science, reproducing previous results is indispensable in our field and so is falsifying them.
References:
Evidence for even parity unconventional superconductivity in Sr2RuO4 by Aaron Chronister, Andrej Pustogow, Naoki Kikugawa, Dmitry A. Sokolov, Fabian Jerzembeck, Clifford W. Hicks, Andrew P. Mackenzie, Eric D. Bauer, and Stuart E. Brown, 22 June 2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2025313118
Constraints on the superconducting order parameter in Sr2RuO4 from oxygen-17 nuclear magnetic resonance by A. Pustogow, Yongkang Luo, A. Chronister, Y.-S. Su, D. A. Sokolov, F. Jerzembeck, A. P. Mackenzie, C. W. Hicks, N. Kikugawa, S. Raghu, E. D. Bauer and S. E. Brown, 23 September 2019, Nature.DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1596-2
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TNIAAM recommends: Which books are you reading right now? – Troy Nunes Is An Absolute Magician
Posted: at 4:36 am
Welcome back to a space where we dont necessarily talk about Syracuse Orange sports, but instead, discuss what were doing without Syracuse sports on at all. Perhaps with the extra time on your hands lately, youve been spending more time with your family and/or spending more time outside. But if not, were here with recommendations.
During some Fridays this summer, the TNIAAM crew will come together to recommend things for you to enjoy and you can choose to ignore those if you wish. First up this year: Which books are you reading right now?
John: Hit Makers by Derek Thompson
This is far from the first Ive got the secret to this book, but Id argue its a far more interesting read than the sort of anecdotal preponderances that figurehead of that genre, Malcolm Gladwell, has put out. In Hit Makers, Thompson looks at what drives popularity, viral moments and buying decisions and relates it to a lot of things youre well familiar with. You may even find some clues as to why you continue to root for the Orange in there. Admittedly, I may be more predisposed to enjoying this sort of book because of my line of work(s). But I dont think you need a communications background to be intrigued.
Kevin: Off-Mike by Doc Emrick and Kevin Allen
Im wrapped up in Stanley Cup Playoffs fever right now as my Habs make their longest run in forever and I do miss that Mike Doc Emricks not on the call. This book takes you through his journey to becoming the voice of the NHL and its a nice look at the relationships he built with on-air partners Bill Clement and Eddie Olczyk. Above all though its the story of Doc and his wife Joyce and the challenge of chasing a career in sports without losing out on relationships and what truly matters.
Steve: Breakfast with Einstein by Chad Orzel and Priest by Matthew Colville
Two diametrically opposed offerings. A book on translating theoretical physics into the every day occurrences around you and the start of a fantasy series. Thats what Ive been reading. Orzel, who happens to also be my old physics professor at Union, has a way with taking concepts of quantum physics that start past where you are thinking and explains how they apply to things you do on the daily. Priest is just a really good world building novel that Ive been reading and seemed like a good plug.
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Emmy Noether | Mathematician who proved Noether’s theorem – New Scientist
Posted: at 4:36 am
By Richard Webb
Emmy Noether was a mathematician who discovered perhaps the most profound idea in contemporary physics. Noethers theorem, which she formulated in 1915, says that symmetries in the universe give rise to mathematical conservation laws. This statement is a crucial underpinning of physical laws, from those that govern the rotation of a wheel or the orbits of planets around stars, to the intricate mathematical frameworks ofgeneral relativity, quantum physics andparticle physics.
Noether was born in the small German town of Erlangen, near Nuremberg, in 1882. Despite the fact that her father, Max Noether, was a professor at the University of Erlangen, she was initially forbidden from enrolling there because of her gender.
Such discrimination dogged Noethers career. Although she eventually gained both an undergraduate degree and a PhD, no university would hire her for a permanent faculty position. She eventually became one of the worlds foremost experts in the fields of abstract algebra, algebraic topology and the mathematics of symmetry, working at the University of Erlangen and subsequently the University of Gttingen.
But for over a decade, she was without appointment, pay or formal title, despite the championing of her work by many of the most prominent mathematicians of the age, chief among them David Hilbert and Felix Klein. That only changed in 1919, when the end of the first world war and the replacement of the German Reich by the liberal Weimar Republic brought a sea change in attitudes towards womens education.
Noethers eponymous theorem was inspired by Albert Einsteins work on relativity in the early years of the 20th century,culminating in his general theory of relativity in 1915. It formalised an idea that was implicit but unstated in the general theory of relativity and many other theories of physics: that symmetries hold the key to new theories that describe the workings of nature.
Mathematician Hermann Weyl, a contemporary of Noether who was greatly influenced by her work, once described a very simple way of thinking about symmetry. A thing is symmetrical if there is something you can do to it so that after you have finished doing it, it looks the same as before, he wrote. Noethers central insight was that every symmetry you can observe is connected with a mathematical conservation law.
Translational symmetry, for example the idea that physics remains broadly the same if you move a little to the left or right, or backwards or forwards is nothing other than the law of conservation of momentum. The symmetry of moving around in a circle amounts to the law of conservation of angular momentum. Symmetry in time that is, physics remaining the same when translated forwards or backwards in time amounts to the conservation of energy.
Noethers theorem adds up to a practical prescription for making progress in physics: identify a symmetry in the worlds workings, and the associated conservation law will allow you to start making a meaningful calculation.Much of physics since its discovery has been a search for these symmetries or, in the case of the development of thestandard model of particle physics, broken symmetries in how quantum fields work that point to where symmetries existed at higher energies when the universe was young.
A broken symmetry in the first split second of the universe, for example, allowed matter to win out against its symmetrical twin,antimatter, creating thematter-dominated universe we live in today. Another broken symmetry, associated with the existence of the Higgs boson, caused theelectromagnetic andweak nuclear forces to have the very different strengths that they now possess.
So, as ideas in physics go, they dont come any more fundamental than Noethers theorem. Sadly, Noethers life after discovering the theorem wasnt a happy one. She came from a Jewish family, and on the accession of the Nazis to power in Germany in 1933, her hard-won right to teach at the University of Gttingen was revoked. She emigrated to the US and taught at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, but died of complications from cancer surgery two years later.
The reverence that many of Noethers colleagues felt for her was only increased by her calm spirit and support for others in the face of the Nazis oppression. Weyl, whose wife was Jewish and who also emigrated to the US, later wrote that Emmy Noether her courage, her frankness, her unconcern about her own fate, her conciliatory spirit was in the midst of all the hatred and meanness, despair and sorrow surrounding us, a moral solace.
But it is her seminal work that is most celebrated, although perhaps not as much as it should be as is the case with manypioneering female mathematicians and scientists. AsAlbert Einstein wrote in The New York Times, Frulein Noether was the most significant creative mathematical genius thus far produced since the higher education of women began. Others might suggest that the last seven words of that sentence are superfluous.
Full name: Amalie Emmy Noether
Born: 23 March 1882, Erlangen, Germany
Died: 14 April 1935 (aged 53), Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States
Emmy Noether is famous for her work in mathematical physics, especially Noethers theorem, which says that symmetries in the universe give rise to mathematical conservation laws.
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