Wednesday, July 18, 2007

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months adobe pagemaker fter birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have the pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused him to run his van up onto the lawn of a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring this former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, starkey hearing aids alif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

By John S. Foster, Esq., CHME Recent events and catastrophes around the world like terrorism attacks, hurricanes and earthquakes, a worldwide SARS epidemic, tsunamis, strikes and labor disputes by hotel workers, and power outages in major cities are a reality that planners and suppliers must consider when planning meetings. The controversy surrounding force majeure clauses and their wording stems from the different viewpoints that planners and suppliers approach the entire concept of what has to happen before the meeting sponsor is adult amateur llowed to terminate the contract without liability. From the suppliers perspective, the force majeure clause should only refer to acts or occurrences that totally prevent the meeting sponsor from holding the meeting. From the meeting sponsors perspective, holding the meeting is the second concern, not the first. The first concern for meeting sponsors is their ability to attract attendees to the meeting when certain acts or occurrences intervene after the contract is signed that materially affects its ability to do so. With the exception of certain corporate events where employees are commanded to attend, many meetings are planned and specific groups of people are invited to attend with no guarantee that anyone will show up. Additionally, meeting sponsors are required by law not to subject their attendees to unreasonable risks of harm.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. free conference call services he advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," dispute credit report oo, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents student travel deal e recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. disney vacation rental homes t was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. wow hits 2005 gain, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability mlm mailing list f our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must paris hilton video dmit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

Click Here

by Timothy Sandefur Eric de Place at the Sightline Institute has a blog post on various property rights matters that is typically Chicken Little about how respecting the rights of people who own property will lead to social ruin, or, in his words "a disaster flick in slow motion." For example, in the town of Avondale, government officials are having to come to grips with the awful fact that they're going to have to let Wal-Mart open a store on land that Wal-Mart fairly bought and paid for with money that it didn't steal from anybody. Some bureaucrats (and, evidently, Mr. de Place) would prefer to force consumers to pay more for products they need, or to travel farther for those goods, in order that society might look the way government planners would prefer it to look. Silly me, thinking that consumers , and not bureaucrats wielding the coercive power of the state, should decide what businesses prevail in a neighborhood and what don't. And, just to show how on top of things de Place is, he points out an astonsihing SHOCKA! new report.... Guess what? The "secretive" activist Howie Rich helped fund the Prop. 90 campaign. No! Really? indesign plugins free ow, we didn't hear that a billion times a day last year....

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start cb radio amps aughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might car rebate hink of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have the pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused him to run his van up onto the lawn of a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring adobe pagemaker his former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, Calif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. miracle ear hearing aids And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, adult amateur owever, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers free conference call service nd television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

Click Here

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would student travel deal ave more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we disney vacation rental homes re human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

Click Here

by Timothy Sandefur Eric de Place at the Sightline Institute has a blog post on various property rights matters that is typically Chicken Little about how respecting the rights of people who own property will lead to social ruin, or, in his words "a disaster flick in slow motion." For example, in the town of Avondale, government officials are having to come to grips with the awful fact that they're going to have to let Wal-Mart open a store on land that Wal-Mart fairly bought and paid for with money that it didn't steal from anybody. Some bureaucrats (and, evidently, Mr. de Place) would prefer to force consumers to pay more for products they need, or to travel farther for those goods, in order that society might look the way government planners would prefer it to look. Silly me, thinking that consumers , and not bureaucrats wielding the coercive power of the state, should decide what businesses prevail in a neighborhood and what don't. And, email list mlm ust to show how on top of things de Place is, he points out an astonsihing SHOCKA! new report.... Guess what? The "secretive" activist Howie Rich helped fund the Prop. 90 campaign. No! Really? Wow, we didn't hear that a billion times a day last year....

This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have the pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused him to run his van up onto the lawn of a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring this former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, Calif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted mall video o do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have handicap ramp he pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused him to run his van up onto the lawn of a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring this former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, Calif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought indesign plugins free bout it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have the pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused amplifier cb radio im to run his van up onto the lawn of a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring this former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, Calif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

by Timothy Sandefur Eric de Place at the Sightline Institute has a blog post on various property rights matters that is typically Chicken Little about how respecting the rights of people who own property will lead to social ruin, or, in his words "a disaster flick in slow motion." For example, in the town of Avondale, government officials are having to come to grips with the awful fact that they're going to have to let Wal-Mart open a store on land that Wal-Mart fairly bought and paid for with money that it didn't steal from anybody. Some bureaucrats (and, evidently, Mr. de Place) would prefer to force consumers to pay more for products they need, or to travel farther for those goods, in order that society might look the way government planners would prefer it to look. Silly me, thinking that consumers , and not bureaucrats wielding the coercive power of the state, should decide what businesses prevail in a neighborhood and what don't. And, just to show how on top of things de Place is, he points out an astonsihing SHOCKA! new report.... Guess what? The "secretive" activist car rebate owie Rich helped fund the Prop. 90 campaign. No! Really? Wow, we didn't hear that a billion times a day last year....

By John S. Foster, Esq., CHME Recent events and catastrophes around the world like terrorism attacks, hurricanes and earthquakes, a worldwide SARS epidemic, tsunamis, strikes and labor disputes by hotel workers, and power outages in major cities are a reality that planners and suppliers must consider when planning meetings. The controversy surrounding force majeure clauses and their wording stems from the different viewpoints that planners and suppliers approach the entire concept of what has to happen before the meeting sponsor is allowed to terminate the contract without liability. From the suppliers perspective, the force majeure clause should only refer to acts or occurrences that totally prevent the meeting sponsor from holding the meeting. From the meeting sponsors perspective, holding the meeting is the second concern, not the first. The first concern for meeting sponsors is their ability to attract attendees to the meeting when certain acts or occurrences intervene after the contract is signed that materially affects its ability to do so. With the exception of certain corporate events where employees are commanded to attend, many meetings are planned and specific groups of people are invited to attend with no guarantee that anyone will show up. Additionally, meeting sponsors are required by law adobe pagemaker ot to subject their attendees to unreasonable risks of harm.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," starkey hearing aids must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

By Robin R. At least adult amateur dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles free conference call hat undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can dispute credit report ee, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

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File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary disney vacation rental homes oral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I wow hits 2005 an see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have email list mlm iases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: mall video horoughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By John S. Foster, Esq., CHME Recent events and catastrophes around the world like terrorism attacks, hurricanes and earthquakes, a worldwide SARS epidemic, tsunamis, strikes and labor disputes by hotel workers, and power outages in major cities are a reality that planners and suppliers must consider when planning meetings. The controversy surrounding handicap ramp orce majeure clauses and their wording stems from the different viewpoints that planners and suppliers approach the entire concept of what has to happen before the meeting sponsor is allowed to terminate the contract without liability. From the suppliers perspective, the force majeure clause should only refer to acts or occurrences that totally prevent the meeting sponsor from holding the meeting. From the meeting sponsors perspective, holding the meeting is the second concern, not the first. The first concern for meeting sponsors is their ability to attract attendees to the meeting when certain acts or occurrences intervene after the contract is signed that materially affects its ability to do so. With the exception of certain corporate events where employees are commanded to attend, many meetings are planned and specific groups of people are invited to attend with no guarantee that anyone will show up. Additionally, meeting sponsors are required by law not to subject their attendees to unreasonable risks of harm.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts adobe photoshop plugins re self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates cb radio amplifiers n moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing car rebate hrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight adobe pagemaker s possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves. gn resound hearing aids

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off adult amateur he values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months free conference call fter birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the dispute credit report information irst time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

By John S. Foster, Esq., CHME Recent events and catastrophes around the world like terrorism attacks, hurricanes and earthquakes, a worldwide SARS epidemic, tsunamis, strikes and labor disputes by hotel workers, and power outages in major cities are a reality that planners and suppliers must consider when planning meetings. The controversy surrounding force majeure clauses and their wording stems from the different viewpoints that planners and suppliers approach the entire concept of what has to happen before the meeting sponsor is allowed to terminate the contract without liability. From the suppliers perspective, the force majeure student travel deal lause should only refer to acts or occurrences that totally prevent the meeting sponsor from holding the meeting. From the meeting sponsors perspective, holding the meeting is the second concern, not the first. The first concern for meeting sponsors is their ability to attract attendees to the meeting when certain acts or occurrences intervene after the contract is signed that materially affects its ability to do so. With the exception of certain corporate events where employees are commanded to attend, many meetings are planned and specific groups of people are invited to attend with no guarantee that anyone will show up. Additionally, meeting sponsors are required by law not to subject their attendees to unreasonable risks of harm.

This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have the pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused him to run his van up onto the lawn disney vacation rental homes f a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring this former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, Calif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication wow hits 2005 ould say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves. email list mlm

by Timothy Sandefur Eric de Place at the Sightline Institute has a blog post on various property rights matters that is typically Chicken Little about how respecting the rights of people who own property will lead to social ruin, or, in his words "a disaster flick in slow motion." For example, in the town of Avondale, government officials are having to come to grips with the awful fact that they're going to have to let Wal-Mart open a store on land that Wal-Mart fairly bought and paid for with money that it didn't steal from anybody. Some bureaucrats (and, evidently, Mr. de Place) would prefer to force consumers to pay more for mall video roducts they need, or to travel farther for those goods, in order that society might look the way government planners would prefer it to look. Silly me, thinking that consumers , and not bureaucrats wielding the coercive power of the state, should decide what businesses prevail in a neighborhood and what don't. And, just to show how on top of things de Place is, he points out an astonsihing SHOCKA! new report.... Guess what? The "secretive" activist Howie Rich helped fund the Prop. 90 campaign. No! Really? Wow, we didn't hear that a billion times a day last year....

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill handicap ramp design urrently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird the idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were indesign plugins free ood business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

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This was submitted by Guest Blogger, Randy, for this week's Carnival of Courage. I've known Randy many years and will tell you he is yet ANOTHER miracle I have the pleasure to know. A few years back we both thought he had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel. Little clues like his passing out due to severe pain and many pain medications which caused him to run his van car rebate p onto the lawn of a fire department, the loss of his mobility requiring this former runner to use a motorized cart to get around and that crazy gray tone his skin had developed helped us draw this conclusion. Years later he's still here and has regained parts of his life we thought were gone for good. Here is his story: I was born the youngest of three children in Sacramento, Calif, and grew up there. Sacramento is a wonderful place to grow up, with the rivers, lakes, mountains, ocean, valley, etc. all within 100 miles of home. Plus living and growing in the late 60’s and early 70’s was quite an experience. But more on those experiences another time. I entered the Air Force when I was 18 and had one semester of college under my belt. My Dad was ready to retire, but would continue working if I wanted to go thru the University of California. I really didn’t know what I wanted to do, so I figured a few years in the Air Force wouldn’t hurt me and I would get the GI bill when I got out to go back to school.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. adobe pagemaker 6.5 And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really starkey hearing aids re non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, adult amateur video ickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

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By John S. Foster, Esq., CHME Recent events and catastrophes around dispute credit report he world like terrorism attacks, hurricanes and earthquakes, a worldwide SARS epidemic, tsunamis, strikes and labor disputes by hotel workers, and power outages in major cities are a reality that planners and suppliers must consider when planning meetings. The controversy surrounding force majeure clauses and their wording stems from the different viewpoints that planners and suppliers approach the entire concept of what has to happen before the meeting sponsor is allowed to terminate the contract without liability. From the suppliers perspective, the force majeure clause should only refer to acts or occurrences that totally prevent the meeting sponsor from holding the meeting. From the meeting sponsors perspective, holding the meeting is the second concern, not the first. The first concern for meeting sponsors is their ability to attract attendees to the meeting when certain acts or occurrences intervene after the contract is signed that materially affects its ability to do so. With the exception of certain corporate events where employees are commanded to attend, many meetings are planned and specific groups of people are invited to attend with no guarantee that anyone will show up. Additionally, meeting sponsors are required by law not to subject their attendees to unreasonable risks of harm.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain student travel deal ebates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

by Timothy Sandefur Eric de Place at the Sightline Institute has a blog post on various property rights matters that is typically Chicken Little about how respecting the rights of people who own property will lead to social ruin, or, in his words "a disaster flick in slow motion." For example, in the town of Avondale, government officials are having to come to grips with the awful fact that they're going to have to let Wal-Mart open a store on land that Wal-Mart fairly bought and paid for with money that it didn't steal from anybody. Some bureaucrats (and, evidently, Mr. de Place) would prefer to force consumers to pay more for products they need, or to travel farther for those goods, in order that society might look the way government planners would prefer it to look. Silly me, thinking that consumers , and not bureaucrats wielding the coercive power of the state, should decide what businesses prevail in a neighborhood and what don't. And, just to show how on top of things de Place is, he points out an astonsihing SHOCKA! new report.... Guess what? The "secretive" activist Howie Rich helped fund the Prop. 90 campaign. No! Really? Wow, disney vacation rental homes e didn't hear that a billion times a day last year....

By John S. Foster, Esq., CHME Recent events and catastrophes around the world like terrorism attacks, hurricanes and earthquakes, a worldwide SARS epidemic, tsunamis, strikes and labor disputes by hotel workers, and power outages in major cities are a reality that planners and suppliers must consider when planning meetings. The controversy surrounding force majeure clauses and their wording stems from the different viewpoints that planners and suppliers approach the entire concept of what has to happen before the meeting sponsor is allowed to terminate the contract without liability. From the suppliers perspective, the force majeure clause should only refer to acts or occurrences that totally prevent the meeting sponsor from holding the meeting. From the meeting sponsors perspective, holding the meeting is the second concern, not wow hits 2005 he first. The first concern for meeting sponsors is their ability to attract attendees to the meeting when certain acts or occurrences intervene after the contract is signed that materially affects its ability to do so. With the exception of certain corporate events where employees are commanded to attend, many meetings are planned and specific groups of people are invited to attend with no guarantee that anyone will show up. Additionally, meeting sponsors are required by law not to subject their attendees to unreasonable risks of harm.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them web based email ere.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains mall video oth cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there really are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

UPDATED (This is a draft. Over time I hope, with your help, to revise this into a better document. Let me know what you think.) Maybe it's time to say a fond farewell to an old canon of journalism: objectivity. But it will never be time to kiss off the values and principles that undergird handicap ramp he idea. Objectivity is a construct of recent times. One reason for its rise in the journalism sphere has been the consolidation of newspapers and television into monopolies and oligopolies in the past half-century. If one voice overwhelms all the others, there is a public interest in playing stories as straight as possible -- not favoring one side over the other (or others, to be more precise, as there are rarely just two sides to any issue). There were good business reasons to be "objective," too, not least that a newspaper didn't want to make large parts of its community angry. And, no doubt, libel law has played a role, too. If a publication could say it "got both sides," perhaps a libel plaintiff would have more trouble winning. Again, the idea of objectivity is a worthy one. But we are human. We have biases and backgrounds and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs every day. I'd like to toss out objectivity as a goal, however, and replace it with four other notions that may add up to the same thing. They are pillars of good journalism: thoroughness, accuracy, fairness and transparency. The lines separating them are not always clear.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, indesign plug in he would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I was shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

By Robin R. At least a dozen years before our daughter Pearl was born, I read a psychoanalytical essay about tickling by Adam Phillips. It was fascinating then, and now that I am a mother, I've thought about it many times. In our family, tickling was one of the earliest interactions to develop beyond the nearly constant duties of feeding, bathing, and changing diapers in the first few months after birth. What a remarkable thing it was to make her laugh with delight for the first time! Once the ritual of tickling became familiar to our girl, the anticipation of getting tickled was just as pleasurable as the tickling itself. We used a special hand motion, moving a thumb toward then away from the palm, imitating a bird moving its beak, and she would start laughing her raspy laugh as soon as she saw the hand advancing. In other words, she would laugh before she'd felt any contact at all. Often, descriptions of children getting tickled echo the notion of "helpless with pleasure." As ticklers, we are -- without really thinking about it -- constantly negotiating the effects of our art. If we go too far, pleasure crosses a line into pain, and as parents we recognize when to stop. Even though I grew up hearing phrases such as "helpless as a babe in the woods," I must admit that I amplifier cb radio as shocked and deeply moved by the vulnerability of our infant child. As parents, we are constantly called on to respect our children's inability to take care of themselves.

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

VICTORY SETS STAGE FOR DISTRICT CUP FINAL VERSUS PENINSULA The Bays United Rebels dressed in unfamiliar red uniforms played with continued heart and determination this Saturday as they overcame an inspired performance by the Bays United Stompers for a solid 3-0 District Cup Semi-Final victory at the spacious Lansdowne Middle School fields. The Stompers, Bronze League Champions came into the match having gone undefeated in league play. They upset the Silver girls from Sooke two weeks earlier to host the semi-final match versus the Rebels. Grit and courage have become trademarks for the Rebels in recent spells and all was called upon again in this match. With Annie, Cam & Daniella away, the Rebels were a squad of 12 and even then, Taylor & affiliate web sites osa were 60% at best and Allison was challenged with some difficulties. Resilient were the Rebels, but tenacious were the Stompers and they forced their will upon all who would witness. Early and often in the opening half, the Stompers made their way into the attacking zone looking for clear attempts on Carley. Abbey made many 1v1 takeaways while Lauryn and Allison looked after other business along the defensive back line. Carley to her credit stole some balls off the feet of the strikers and made well struck punts to the attacking duo of Rachel and Rebecca. Sally was brought back to the stoper position to shore up the defensive unit and once this occured, the momentun and tactical style of the Rebels began to take over the match.

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VICTORY SETS STAGE FOR DISTRICT CUP FINAL VERSUS PENINSULA The Bays United Rebels dressed in unfamiliar red uniforms played with continued heart and determination this Saturday as they overcame an inspired performance by the Bays United Stompers for a solid 3-0 District Cup Semi-Final victory at the spacious Lansdowne Middle School fields. The Stompers, Bronze League Champions came into the match having gone undefeated in league play. They upset the Silver girls from Sooke two weeks earlier to host the semi-final match versus the Rebels. Grit and courage have become trademarks for the Rebels in recent spells and all was called upon again in this match. With Annie, Cam & Daniella away, the Rebels were a squad of 12 and even then, Taylor & Rosa were 60% at best and Allison was challenged with some difficulties. Resilient were the Rebels, but tenacious were the Stompers and they forced their will upon all who would witness. Early and often in the opening half, the Stompers made their way into the attacking zone looking for clear attempts on Carley. Abbey made many 1v1 takeaways while Lauryn and Allison looked after other business along the defensive back line. Carley to her credit stole some balls off the feet of the strikers and made well struck punts to the attacking duo of Rachel and Rebecca. Sally was brought back to the stoper position to shore up the defensive unit and once this occured, the momentun and tactical style of the Rebels began to take over the match. dwg files

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One of the fun things we get to do as Superior students is a visit to the Rungis Market , the world's largest fresh food market . Located a little outside of Paris, this place was more like a little contained city. Drove through the entrance booths (quite like a toll station!), and sped past multiple warehouses with trucks and trucks of food backed up against the doors. How big was Rungis? Big enough to house a hair cutting salon, multiple restaurants, a gift shop, and a branch of every bank located in Paris. And you know that a place is big when you see a Chinese restaurant on site (at least that's how I judge these things, ha). I'll leave you to peruse the statistics located on the website on your own, but yes, it's impressive. It's also corporate identity logo design ig enough that you can sign up for tours in multiple languages on a separate website . We started our visit in the fruit and produce warehouses. My first thought was, "This is like Costco !" Boxes and boxes of produce stacked up with flattering fluorescent lighting. How I miss the warehouse shopping experience! Baby Vegetables Green Garlic Smiling Lemons Mini Fennel Tomatoes Then it was off to the meat locker . We all had to don attractive disposable hair nets and lab coats. Nothing like the ill-flattering baggy look. We were in the building where veal, pigs, and cows were processed. Apparently all the negotiating for prices are still done verbally, as nothing was labeled with prices.

My little boy has hit on what could be the perfect Gastrokid and Gastrodult snack: mango chilli potato chips with a natural Greek yoghurt dip. Where he conjured this competing but complementary taste combo from I have no idea. But it works so well that it's become my new fav aperitivo companion. We snack on Kettle Mango Chilli crisp/chips and our local organic Greek yoghurt or natural yoghurt. Half healthy and half indulgent, Chips n' Yoghurt are banishing the hunger pains in our household. mlm lead generation echnorati Tags : gastrokid , kettle mango chilli , snacks

Last week, I talked about the long road to publication for THE MAN WITH THE IRON-ON BADGE ,which came out this month to some terrific reviews examples of thank you notes including a starred review from Kirkus and a rave from Publishers Weekly). Here are s0me of the rejections the book got over the years. I've edited out the names of the companies and editors. "The manuscript was a lot of fun -- definitely a good read and a fresh angle. We seriously considered it since it is so unique, but ultimately we have to pass since we are moving away from mysteries and thrillers..." "I am going to have to pass on an offer at this time. We must be extremely selective with the titles we bring on." "Thanks so much for the extended look at THE MAN WITH THE IRON-ON BADGE. You know I hold Lee in the highest regard and I thought he treated this mystery with great humor and enthusiasm. Though I think the conception is novel, in the end I just thought that the plot development moved a little too slowly for us to be really able to break this out commercially. Furthermore, though I think Harvey Mapes is a great protagonist, I just didn't think the 'fish out of water' conception would play out successfully in a very crowded and competitive market." "This story is well-written and entertaining; however, the tone is not quite right for our list and overall it would be very difficult to publish." "This is going to be a pass for me.

My little boy has hit on what could be the perfect Gastrokid and Gastrodult snack: mango chilli potato chips with a natural Greek yoghurt dip. Where he conjured this competing but complementary taste combo from I have no idea. But it works so well that it's become my new fav aperitivo companion. We snack on Kettle Mango Chilli crisp/chips and our local organic Greek yoghurt or natural yoghurt. accredited online degree program alf healthy and half indulgent, Chips n' Yoghurt are banishing the hunger pains in our household. Technorati Tags : gastrokid , kettle mango chilli , snacks

One of the fun things we get to do as Superior students is a visit to the Rungis Market , the world's largest fresh food market . Located a little outside of Paris, this place was more like a little contained city. Drove through the entrance booths (quite like a toll station!), and sped past multiple warehouses with trucks and trucks of food backed up against the doors. How big was Rungis? Big enough to house a hair cutting salon, multiple restaurants, a gift shop, and a branch of every bank located in Paris. And you know that a place is big when you see a Chinese online bsn programs estaurant on site (at least that's how I judge these things, ha). I'll leave you to peruse the statistics located on the website on your own, but yes, it's impressive. It's also big enough that you can sign up for tours in multiple languages on a separate website . We started our visit in the fruit and produce warehouses. My first thought was, "This is like Costco !" Boxes and boxes of produce stacked up with flattering fluorescent lighting. How I miss the warehouse shopping experience! Baby Vegetables Green Garlic Smiling Lemons Mini Fennel Tomatoes Then it was off to the meat locker . We all had to don attractive disposable hair nets and lab coats. Nothing like the ill-flattering baggy look. We were in the building where veal, pigs, and cows were processed. Apparently all the negotiating for prices are still done verbally, as nothing was labeled with prices.

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Last week, I talked about the long road to publication for THE MAN WITH THE IRON-ON BADGE ,which came out this month to some terrific reviews (including a starred review from Kirkus and a rave from Publishers Weekly). Here are s0me of the rejections the book got over the years. I've edited out the names of the companies and editors. "The manuscript was a lot of fun -- definitely a good read and a fresh angle. We seriously considered it since it is so unique, but ultimately we have to pass since we are moving away from mysteries and thrillers..." "I am going to have to pass on an offer at this time. We must be extremely selective with the titles we bring on." "Thanks so much for cell phone number search he extended look at THE MAN WITH THE IRON-ON BADGE. You know I hold Lee in the highest regard and I thought he treated this mystery with great humor and enthusiasm. Though I think the conception is novel, in the end I just thought that the plot development moved a little too slowly for us to be really able to break this out commercially. Furthermore, though I think Harvey Mapes is a great protagonist, I just didn't think the 'fish out of water' conception would play out successfully in a very crowded and competitive market." "This story is well-written and entertaining; however, the tone is not quite right for our list and overall it would be very difficult to publish." "This is going to be a pass for me.

One of the fun things we get to do as Superior students is a visit to the Rungis Market , the world's largest fresh food market . Located a little outside of Paris, this place was more like a little contained city. Drove through the entrance booths (quite like a toll station!), and sped past multiple warehouses with trucks and trucks of food backed up against the doors. How big was Rungis? Big enough to house a hair cutting salon, multiple restaurants, a gift shop, and a branch of every bank located in Paris. And you know that a place is big when you see a Chinese foreclosure seminars estaurant on site (at least that's how I judge these things, ha). I'll leave you to peruse the statistics located on the website on your own, but yes, it's impressive. It's also big enough that you can sign up for tours in multiple languages on a separate website . We started our visit in the fruit and produce warehouses. My first thought was, "This is like Costco !" Boxes and boxes of produce stacked up with flattering fluorescent lighting. How I miss the warehouse shopping experience! Baby Vegetables Green Garlic Smiling Lemons Mini Fennel Tomatoes Then it was off to the meat locker . We all had to don attractive disposable hair nets and lab coats. Nothing like the ill-flattering baggy look. We were in the building where veal, pigs, and cows were processed. Apparently all the negotiating for prices are still done verbally, as nothing was labeled with prices.

One of the fun things we get to do as Superior students is a visit to the Rungis Market , the world's largest fresh food market . Located a little outside of Paris, this place was more like a little contained city. Drove through the entrance booths (quite like a toll station!), and sped past multiple warehouses with trucks and trucks of food backed up against the doors. How big was Rungis? Big enough to house a hair cutting salon, multiple restaurants, a gift shop, and a branch of every bank located in Paris. And you know that a place is big when you see a Chinese restaurant on site (at least that's how I judge these things, ha). I'll leave you to peruse the statistics located on the website on your own, but yes, it's impressive. It's also big enough that you can sign up for tours in multiple languages on a separate website . We started our visit in the fruit and produce warehouses. My first thought was, "This is like Costco !" Boxes and boxes of produce stacked up with flattering fluorescent lighting. How I miss the warehouse shopping experience! Baby Vegetables Green Garlic Smiling Lemons Mini Fennel Tomatoes Then it was off to the meat locker . We all had to don attractive disposable hair nets and lab coats. Nothing like the ill-flattering baggy look. We were in the building where veal, pigs, and cows were processed. Apparently all the negotiating for prices are still done verbally, as nothing was labeled with prices. sleep and slim

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During our day, many of us, by choice or by employer requirement, document our activities, calls, meetings, and customer visits in some form. For some, it is an employer generated form. For others, the Palm’s notes component fills the bill. Outlook also provides a place for notes but, not being exchange spam filter ortable, they are useless away from the office. EssentialPIM has one of the best note components that I’ve seen in PIM software, with text formatting being available, capability to insert graphics files, and an ability to attach supporting documents. Yet, I choose to go low-tech when I take my notes. Fast, quick, very portable, my Moleskine fills my needs perfectly. Reg , over at Elemental Truths , posted about his RAM Text system today, so I know I’m not alone desiring a low-tech answer. In fact, he added some commentary on how he set up his system, how he uses color pens and highlighters, and how he uses different sections of the notebook to document his day. I use very similar tools and techniques as Reg, and can vouch for its usefulness and efficacy. I would add, however, that to really make the low-tech answer truly work, one has to set it up to make information retrieval easy. The work for this starts when the book almost full. Leave the last page blank: Scan the pages, transferring all contact information to your contacts lists and highlight any important information that you deem would be useful in the future. Use colored paper clips to flag the most important information.

My little boy has hit on what could be the perfect Gastrokid and Gastrodult snack: mango chilli potato chips with a natural Greek yoghurt dip. Where he conjured this competing but complementary taste combo from I have no idea. But it works so well that it's become my new fav aperitivo companion. We snack on Kettle Mango american troops iraq hilli crisp/chips and our local organic Greek yoghurt or natural yoghurt. Half healthy and half indulgent, Chips n' Yoghurt are banishing the hunger pains in our household. Technorati Tags : gastrokid , kettle mango chilli , snacks

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