“UT professor led Texas Memorial Museum for 21 years - Austin American-Statesman” plus 3 more |
- UT professor led Texas Memorial Museum for 21 years - Austin American-Statesman
- Crab boat captain who loved challenges dies at 53 - Denver Post
- Muslims split over Marseille's mega-mosque - CNN
- Begala: 'Republicans Want Insurance Companies to Have the Right to ... - Business Media Institute
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UT professor led Texas Memorial Museum for 21 years - Austin American-Statesman Posted: 10 Feb 2010 08:38 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. By Ralph K.M. Haurwitz AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF William W. Newcomb Jr., a professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Texas who was the director of the school's Texas Memorial Museum for 21 years, died Monday at Hospice Austin's Christopher House. He was 88. The cause was pneumonia, said his daughter, Mary Newcomb. Newcomb left a lasting stamp on the memorial museum, a rich storehouse and exhibit hall for all manner of fossils, minerals, wildlife and other objects of scientific interest. He oversaw publications ranging from newsletters to coloring books, all to further interest in intellectual inquiry, beginning in an era when copies had to be run off on mimeograph machines. "He brought an important sense of education at all levels," said Dee Ann Story , a retired director of UT's Texas Archeological Research Laboratory who worked for Newcomb as curator of anthropology. "He was able to take extremely modest resources and do a lot with them. The exhibits were enormously improved under his leadership." Newcomb's scholarly interests focused on American Indian culture, including the Delaware Indians and the rock art of Texas. His 1961 book, "The Indians of Texas: From Prehistoric to Modern Times," is considered a classic in the field, tracing in precise yet elegant language the evolution and extermination of aboriginal culture. Outside work, he was a man of many interests, said his son-in-law, Jeri Putnam. He was a gardener, woodworker, fly fisherman, piano player, swimmer and bridge player. Newcomb had a wry sense of humor, Putnam said, recalling the time he gave the name Nemesis to a frog that repeatedly invaded the skimmer of his swimming pool. Newcomb fought under Gen. George S. Patton Jr. during World War II, earning three battle stars. He received his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees at the University of Michigan. He joined the Texas Memorial Museum as curator of anthropology in 1953 and soon rose to director. Newcomb is survived by his wife, Dorothy; daughter, Mary, of Round Rock; son, William, of Austin; and three grandsons. A memorial service will be at 7 p.m. Friday at the Texas Memorial Museum, 2400 Trinity St. Contributions may be made to the museum, Hospice Austin or a favorite charity. rhaurwitz@statesman.com; 445-3604 Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
Crab boat captain who loved challenges dies at 53 - Denver Post Posted: 10 Feb 2010 06:29 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. ANCHORAGE, Alaska—A crab boat captain who dodged danger for decades in the Bering Sea succumbed to a more common American ailment. Phil Harris, 53, made famous on a Discovery Channel reality show, the "Deadliest Catch," died Tuesday. Harris suffered a stroke last month at a remote Alaska port and was flown to Anchorage for treatment. Family members had reported he was making progress. His sons, Josh and Jake Harris, who accompanied their father on fishing trips aboard the Cornelia Marie, released a statement that Harris had always been a fighter and continued to be until the end. Phil Harris acknowledged that steering a boat into some of the planet's most hostile waters was not for everyone. "You've got to be a little bit twisted to do this job," he said on the eve of one departure. The raspy-voiced skipper, often filmed with a cigarette in hand, suffered cracked or broken ribs in the show's fourth season when a storm tossed him out of bed and onto the sharp table corner. He left the Cornelia Marie for treatment and was recorded recuperating in Seattle, spitting up blood, the result of a blood clot that had passed through his heart. He wistfully noted he might have to find something else to do. "The bad part of it is, I don't know if my fishing career is over, and that's going to be a devastating thing for me if it is," he said on camera. Harris was back on the Cornelia Marie last month when he suffered a stroke Jan. 29 in port at St. Paul Island, the largest of the five islands in the Pribilofs, 300 miles off Alaska's west coast and 750 miles west of Anchorage. Commercial fishing statistically remains the most hazardous occupation in America, said Jerry Dzugan, director of the Alaska Marine Safety Education Association and a former halibut and salmon fisherman in Alaska's Panhandle. An average of 11 fishermen in Alaska waters have been lost annually the last five years, he said. However, that's a fraction of the 36 to 40 lost annually before passage of revised federal safety laws. "The safety culture has changed in commercial fishing the last 20 years to a profound degree as the result of losses and as a result of regulations and as a result of fishermen seeing that required safety equipment works," he said. About the same proportion of boats now sink, but most of the crew survive. Last year, nine fishermen died, said Jennifer Lincoln of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Heath. Eight were washed overboard and just one was a crabber, a crewman who got tangled in a line. In the 1990s, an average of eight lives were lost annually in the crab fleet, most when vessels sank. Just one crab boat has gone down since the Coast Guard, working with fishermen, instituted dockside safety and stability checks in 1999 to prevent overloading, which causes boats to be top heavy or unstable. "By the time the 'Deadliest Catch' TV show was aired, crab fishing in the Bering Sea was no longer the deadliest catch," Dzugan said, adding that the deadliest U.S. fishery now is crab fishing off Oregon and Washington. Dzugan did not minimize the danger faced by Harris and fellow crabbers who work through winter storms, often staying awake more than 24 hours straight, hoisting and emptying 850-pound crab "pots" and trying to stay upright on wet or icy decks without getting tangled in lines. "It's amazing that you don't have more fatalities," he said. ——— On The Net: Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
Muslims split over Marseille's mega-mosque - CNN Posted: 10 Feb 2010 03:30 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. (CNN) -- Marseille, France's second largest city and the country's gateway to north Africa and the Mediterranean, is home to almost a quarter of a million Muslims. But for years, this ever-growing community has had to make do with a haphazard collection of makeshift mosques housed in shops, offices, basements, garages and rented rooms for their daily worship. Until now, that is. Several decades in the planning, the Grand Mosque of Marseille, at 92,500 square feet by far the largest mosque in the country, is due to break ground in April on the north side of the city's old port. Donors from Saudi Arabia and Algeria have contributed more than $60 million. Marseille's mayor has issued building permits. At least two lawsuits filed by groups attempting to block its construction have been scuttled. The mosque's vast prayer hall will hold up to 7,000 people, but in deference to local sensitivities, it will sport no blaring loudspeaker -- no muezzin, neither live nor recorded -- to summon the faithful to prayer throughout the day. Instead, it will have a powerful purple light, which will blink five times a day at prayer times. Perhaps it should've been green, since green is the traditional color of Islam. But in a port town, green is also the color used to communicate with ships at sea. And red is the color of the city's firefighters. This new purple beacon could become another symbol of the fabled, cosmopolitan French city by the sea. For many, the building of the mosque is a tangible sign of both the growing numbers of Muslims in France -- and all of western Europe -- and the groups' increasing desire to live in France but by its own cultural and religious mores. "In my opinion, this is much more of a political sign within the Muslim community to say 'finally we recognize the importance of Islam as a part of French culture, and not just as an imported religion," Abdessalem Souiki, a local imam, told CNN. The European Union is believed to be home to up to 20 million Muslims. France has the highest number, with as many as six million congregating in fewer than 2,500 prayer houses and mosques throughout the country. There has been a long-running national debate in France as to how far it is willing to accommodate its growing Muslim identity without undermining the separation of church and state. In a bid to defend secularism, the French government passed a law in 2004 banning head scarves or other "conspicuous" religious symbols in state schools. A French parliamentary inquiry is now holding hearings on whether to bar Muslim women from wearing the full Islamic veil, or burqa. Relations between Muslims and Europeans have generally been good. But attacks associated with Islamic terrorism in France in 1995, the United States in 2001, Spain in 2004 and Britain in 2005 have resonated both within the community and beyond. Marseille's Muslims are split over the construction of the mosque. According to a recent newspaper poll, only 57 percent support the building of the mega-mosque, due to be completed by 2011. Youcef Mammeri, a prominent member of the some 200,000-strong community and a writer on Islam in France, objects to its location, on a site known as the "abattoir," where an old slaughterhouse once stood in one of the port city's poorest neighborhoods. He told CNN the mega-mosque "will not have anything to do with spirituality anymore." He predicts it will "capture all the attention, but at the same time gather a lot of opposition and conflict." He says the local Muslim community would prefer more and smaller neighborhood mosques, rather than the city's first purpose-built place of worship. Mammeri, a member of the Joint Council of Muslims of Marseille, doubts the mosque will ever get built, saying there have been plans for a grand mosque in the city since 1937, when a monument to honor France's Muslim war veterans was constructed on the Marseille shore. "It's not Muslims that need a big mosque," Mammeri told CNN. "It's the government that needs a big mosque, so its reputation as a cosmopolitan, diverse and harmonious city lasts." CNN's Atika Shubert contributed to this report. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
Begala: 'Republicans Want Insurance Companies to Have the Right to ... - Business Media Institute Posted: 10 Feb 2010 04:13 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. |
Begala: 'Republicans Want Insurance Companies to Have the Right to Dump Your Ass Just for Getting Sick'
CNN commentator/former Clinton aide vilifies GOP for adhering to constituent wishes and not signing off on ObamaCare.
There's really little opportunity for the spirit of bipartisanship to exist when you have a part-time operative for the Obama administration/cable network political commentator throwing bombs about the GOP for not catering to the Obama administration's wishes on health care reform.
CNN political commentator and Democratic strategist Paul Begala bashed the opposition on Fox Business Channel's Feb. 10 broadcast of the "Imus in the Morning" program. He claimed the problem wasn't stubborn congressional Democrats wheeling and dealing behind closed doors on health care reform legislation but Republicans wanting to be obstructionists.
"Well, it is kind of preposterous," Begala said. "The Republicans bit is, 'Well, we'll work on health care if you stop and end and scrap all the progress we've made over the course of a year.' Well no, actually. The health care bill already has 213 Republican-sponsored amendments – 213. And for that they got zero Republican votes. I guess they got one in the House, David [sic – Joseph] Cao."
And according to Begala, the reason for the GOP's unwillingness to go along with the bill passed in the Senate and the House and its pending compromise and wanting to start all over – they want insurance companies to have the ability to take advantage of their customers.
"So the problem here is not that Republicans haven't been allowed to put their ideas in the bill," Begala said. "The problem is the Republicans like the status quo. The Republicans want insurance companies to have the right to dump your ass just for getting sick or to jack up your rates just for being a woman. You know what, the real life death panels are in the status quo where insurance companies dump you. There's been huge amounts of research and testimony on this."
That's not exactly the case. Certainly, movies like Michael Moore's "SiCKO" and other left-wing hardship stories have argued for health care reform. But despite Begala's claims, Republican legislators have said they were acting on behalf of their constituents. In fact, if the election of Scott Brown in
However, Begala did admit this was raising Republican favorability but failed to show that he understood why.
"The Republicans, by the way – they're doing very well with this profile," Begala said. "Why in the world does anybody think they're actually going to come and work responsibly with President Obama now for change? They're prospering."
And as the show's host Don Imus explained, despite Begala's shortcomings, he's done well in the political media culture.
"We're talking with former aide to President Clinton, a man who has been enormously successful in his life while being wrong about everything – Paul Begala," Imus said.
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