Sourced from http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/may/30/fifa-president-sepp-blatter-crisis
FIFA is well and truly on the nose, just as the IOC was several years ago. The Football Federation of Australia wasted an enormous amount of Football funds pursuing an unwinnable quest - the right to hold the World Cup. A deep well of petro dollars courtesy of Qatar dwarfed our efforts - it must be true because FIFA's secretary general, Jérôme Valcke said so. The consultant / facilitator/ fixer or whatever he is called, who was employed by FFA to smooth the way ahead made it abundantly clear that unless the FFA did as others do we would not be successful and he was right. We played the game by the rules, well our rules and very commendable it was, but it only raise one question - Why did we get involved and waste a lot on money that was desperately needed to develop the game here in Australia. Talk about stupid!
Just how rotten is FIFA? Mr Blatter insists that we should not worry, its all under control and if it is wrong it will be fixed inside the "FIFA family". Sounds like something out of an episode of the Godfathers. Like leaving the rabbits in charge of the lettuce. Just unbelievable!
Mr Blatter has side stepped accusations against himself to enable him to sit for re-election as President of FIFA, which is itself a bit of a farce, as he is the only candidate, while his major competition is about to be examined by the "family". Groan.
Does our FFA have anything that approximates a voice in this matter?
Its just disgusting and puts a lot of pressure on our game all the way down to local region.
Here is the Guardian article, which I think sums up the situation to this day - tomorrow is another day:
Fifa president Sepp Blatter to football world: 'Crisis? What is a crisis?'
Blatter insists only 'Fifa family' can stop him winning re-election on day of high drama in the wake of corruption allegations
Matt Scott in Zurich The Guardian, Tuesday 31 May 2011
Fifa's president, Sepp Blatter, has faced down a barrage of criticism over corruption within football's governing body and vowed that only "the Fifa family" could prevent him being re-elected unopposed on Wednesday .
After a day of high drama in which Qatar threatened legal action against Fifa's secretary general, Jérôme Valcke, for implying it had bought the right to host the 2022 World Cup, Blatter defiantly insisted there was nothing for Fifa to investigate.
"Crisis? What is a crisis?" asked Blatter, the day after a presidential election candidate and a Fifa vice-president became the third and fourth of Fifa's 24 most senior politicians to have been suspended from football over corruption allegations in the past six months.
Blatter's stubbornness has been reinforced by the knowledge that he will be elected unopposed for another term on Wednesday. The same congress of national federations will now be his judge, he claimed. "They will decide if I am a valid or a non-valid candidate, or if I am a valid or non-valid president."
There were some references to reforms Blatter intends to take up. One is for Fifa's ethics committee to be strengthened. Blatter, alone on the press conference podium at Fifa headquarters, spoke of "all the devils who are in this game". It is not a criticism that is likely to shake the support of his member organisations. But the lack of support among football fans for his 13-year stewardship of the world game was clear as "Blatter out" became the second most popular international trend on Twitter .
Fans were responding to a day of extraordinary revelations at Fifa's $100m (£61m) Zurich headquarters. An email leaked by the suspended Fifa vice-president, Jack Warner, had earlier apparently raised the most damaging allegations of corruption surrounding Qatar's 2022 World Cup bid.
In it, Valcke, Blatter's closest aide as secretary general of Fifa, stated that Qatar had "bought the World Cup". Qatar quickly denied the allegations. Hours later, Valcke issued his own clarification. "When I refer to the 2022 World Cup in that email, what I wanted to say is that the winning bid used their financial strength to lobby for support," he said. "I have at no time made, or was intending to make, any reference to any purchase of votes or similar unethical behaviour."
Blatter, who as president has a statutory responsibility for the line management of Fifa's secretary general, refused to express any view about Valcke's explanation. "I don't answer that question and I ask for your understanding," he said. "You have received the Fifa general secretary statement. I am the president; I am only here to talk about the president."
Fifa's reputation suffered a further blow with the emergence of photographic evidence of neat bundles of cash allegedly paid to the Bahamas Football Association by the Qatari former Fifa presidential candidate and president of the Asian Football Confederation, Mohamed Bin Hammam, in an effort to garner support for his election campaign. In an almost satirical touch, the money had been delivered in a brown envelope.
Fred Lunn, the vice-president of the Bahamas FA said in an affidavit presented to Fifa's ethics committee that his association's president instructed him to return the $40,000 (£24,000).
Chuck Blazer, the American Fifa official who is the chief accuser of the two senior figures to have been suspended this week, stated when asked if he thought Fifa was corrupt: "I think individuals are."
Like Warner, however, Bin Hammam continues to attack the process that has led to his "temporary exclusion" from all football activity. Bin Hammam has stated his intention to appeal against the decision by the Fifa-appointed ethics committee to force him out of football as investigators carry out inquiries into the alleged activities of Warner and Bin Hammam.
Blatter's refusal to brook criticism of his oversight of Fifa was put in relief by comments from Coca-Cola, a major sponsor. "The current allegations being raised are distressing and bad for the sport," it said, adding weight to concerns raised by Adidas last week. "We have every expectation that Fifa will resolve this situation in an expedient and thorough manner."
Though those words may seem lightweight, they are a significant departure from the usual steadfast support Fifa sponsors demonstrate for it. Usually, they separate their partnership with the World Cup from any controversy at Fifa House.
Now, in a potentially strong coalition of interest forming against Fifa, world governments are joining the sponsors. In addition to the UK parliamentary inquiry into football governance, Australia – whose 2022 World Cup bid failed against Qatar's – has also begun to express concern. Middle East newspapers even likened Fifa's situation to the Arab spring that has unseated a number of governments there.
"If governments try to intervene in our organisation then something is wrong," Blatter conceded. Then he added: "I think Fifa is strong enough to deal with the problems inside Fifa. I am sure that the day after tomorrow at the congress we will prove we can solve the problems – if there are any – inside the congress."
Blatter made one apparently extraordinary admission. Under his presidency Fifa's annual revenues have grown to $1.3bn as it feasts on sponsors' and broadcasters' appetite for the World Cup. That presidency began in 1998, making his remark revelatory. "I have to say we had no problems until 1998; this was a modest Fifa – now we are a comfortable Fifa," he said.
Although ultimately he angrily left the press conference amid journalists' heckles, nothing appears set to discomfit Blatter.
Penalties and Penalty Shootouts - What Do You Really Know About It Anyway!
This program is broadcast on 2xxfm across the Australian Community Radio Network, Tuesday, 31 May 2011 at 7:00PM.
Picture of Terry's infamous effort in 2008 - its a little known fact that Terry is a proud graduate of the "Woden Valley FC Finishing School"! All enquiries to former WVFC President Alan Hinde or current PL Co-ordinator Mike Swan. Primary pre-requisite is an ability to demonstrate that you are able to consistently miss the goal at close range (shots which clear the cross bar by a considerable hieght are particularly well regarded by the school staff).
This program is about "penalties" and "penalty shootouts". Seems to be a lot of them lately. Do they really influence the game as a whole? They sure influence individual matches.
It was Men's Premier League match last week, which ended in a score draw courtesy of two penalties, which started this subject rolling with some pretty interesting discussion about all aspects of penalties.
None more interesting than "did penalties really make a difference to the game"? It is hard to take the big picture view when its your team on the receiving end of the penalty award for a foul inside the penalty box. But there were other questions "are there patterns to how a player will take a penalty kick and a goalkeeper make a save, and does it change depending on who is in which position"?
But there he was - a member of the opposing team walking up to place the ball while our goalkeeper was moving around the goal line like a demented giraffe. There was no shortage of advice from the sideline, though how the referee would comply defied analysis and gravity. It didn't look good.
This discussion caused one wag, who by now was trying to show a renewed interest in the discussion that had come to a crashing stop with the award of the penalty, to remark "did we do any homework on this bloke that's taking the kick"? Much laughter followed as another stalwart declared - "we are flat out getting the water bottles filled and the nets up". Another said "he'll kick to the left" - we looked at him with some surprise and renewed respect, after all he sounded like he had given it some thought - "do you know him?", "no, but he's a lefty and they always go to the left", followed by another who pointed out that this player was "right footed you goose and they always kick to their left". So that cleared up, we watched and waited.
As it happens, our GK went to the right and got a foot to the ball, while the penalty taker had the cheek to kick straight down the centre, only to see it deflect into the back of the net. The penalty taker had the hide to claim victory. After all, our GK had nearly kept it out. But there is no near enough in penalty shots.
And that started the discussion off again - penalty shots and penalty shoot outs - can you prepare for them? The final whistle went, a draw the result and everyone tried to make everyone else feel good by saying that we had taken a point away from the game and not really lost. Didn't feel like that though! Who would be a goalkeeper?
As I drove home I recalled that excellent book "Why England Lose and Other Curious Phenomena Explained" by Simon Kuper and Stefan Szymanski. There was a section in it on "penalties" and its a good one, so I would conclude the day with a pseudo academic wander through the mysteries of penalties. Better than thinking about those lost two points. The book did not disappoint - its all there! If only I had recalled all this information at the game. I'd have won the debate, but alas, not the game!
So that's what we are going to concentrate on this week - all things around penalties - with an extract from the book read by Colin Mace. Its just amazing. I think you will like this program. So sit back, cup of tea to hand or a restorative drink, close the door, put up the do not disturb sign up and listen carefully. There is always a chance you will miss the ball!
The full Manchester United v Chelsea Penalty Shootout for the 2008 Champions League trophy, referred to in this program can be viewed at http://youtu.be/8Ab584AaQs8
Looks a bit different when you know a little more about what went on behind the scenes.
A review of this book is as follows:
At last, football has its answer to Freakonomics, The Tipping Point and The Undercover Economist. "Why do England lose?" "Why do Newcastle United always buy the wrong players?" "How could Nottingham Forest go from winning the European Cup to the depths of League One?" "Penalties - what are they good for?" These are questions every football fan has asked. Why England Lose answers them. It brings the techniques of bestselling books such as Freakonomics and The Undercover Economist to bear on our national sport. Written with an economist's brain and a football writer's skill, it applies high-powered analytical tools to everyday football topics. Why England Lose isn't in the first place about money. It's about looking at data in new ways. It's about revealing counterintuitive truths about football. It explains all manner of things about the game which newspapers just can't see. It all adds up to a new way of looking at football, beyond cliches about "The Magic of the FA Cup", "England's Shock Defeat" and "Newcastle's New South American Star". No training in economics is needed to read Why England Lose. But the reader will come out of it with a better understanding not just of football, but of how economists think and what they know.
Publisher: HarperSport (6 Aug 2009)
ISBN-10: 0007301111
ISBN-13: 978-0007301119
Download Podcast here:
Picture of Terry's infamous effort in 2008 - its a little known fact that Terry is a proud graduate of the "Woden Valley FC Finishing School"! All enquiries to former WVFC President Alan Hinde or current PL Co-ordinator Mike Swan. Primary pre-requisite is an ability to demonstrate that you are able to consistently miss the goal at close range (shots which clear the cross bar by a considerable hieght are particularly well regarded by the school staff).
And it looks like this when the ball is in the back of the net from a penalty shot. All three WVFC players (Lachie, Alex- the goalscorer and Simon) have been asked to attend the WV Finishing School Board of Studies before training today - Alex for failing to put the ball over the bar and the other two for looking like it was an acceptable outcome. Terry has gone ballistic on Twitter! They could loose their place, but Vice Chancellor Hind declared "so what we've got any number of suitable applicants" True!
This program is about "penalties" and "penalty shootouts". Seems to be a lot of them lately. Do they really influence the game as a whole? They sure influence individual matches.
It was Men's Premier League match last week, which ended in a score draw courtesy of two penalties, which started this subject rolling with some pretty interesting discussion about all aspects of penalties.
None more interesting than "did penalties really make a difference to the game"? It is hard to take the big picture view when its your team on the receiving end of the penalty award for a foul inside the penalty box. But there were other questions "are there patterns to how a player will take a penalty kick and a goalkeeper make a save, and does it change depending on who is in which position"?
But there he was - a member of the opposing team walking up to place the ball while our goalkeeper was moving around the goal line like a demented giraffe. There was no shortage of advice from the sideline, though how the referee would comply defied analysis and gravity. It didn't look good.
This discussion caused one wag, who by now was trying to show a renewed interest in the discussion that had come to a crashing stop with the award of the penalty, to remark "did we do any homework on this bloke that's taking the kick"? Much laughter followed as another stalwart declared - "we are flat out getting the water bottles filled and the nets up". Another said "he'll kick to the left" - we looked at him with some surprise and renewed respect, after all he sounded like he had given it some thought - "do you know him?", "no, but he's a lefty and they always go to the left", followed by another who pointed out that this player was "right footed you goose and they always kick to their left". So that cleared up, we watched and waited.
As it happens, our GK went to the right and got a foot to the ball, while the penalty taker had the cheek to kick straight down the centre, only to see it deflect into the back of the net. The penalty taker had the hide to claim victory. After all, our GK had nearly kept it out. But there is no near enough in penalty shots.
And that started the discussion off again - penalty shots and penalty shoot outs - can you prepare for them? The final whistle went, a draw the result and everyone tried to make everyone else feel good by saying that we had taken a point away from the game and not really lost. Didn't feel like that though! Who would be a goalkeeper?
As I drove home I recalled that excellent book "Why England Lose and Other Curious Phenomena Explained" by Simon Kuper and Stefan Szymanski. There was a section in it on "penalties" and its a good one, so I would conclude the day with a pseudo academic wander through the mysteries of penalties. Better than thinking about those lost two points. The book did not disappoint - its all there! If only I had recalled all this information at the game. I'd have won the debate, but alas, not the game!
So that's what we are going to concentrate on this week - all things around penalties - with an extract from the book read by Colin Mace. Its just amazing. I think you will like this program. So sit back, cup of tea to hand or a restorative drink, close the door, put up the do not disturb sign up and listen carefully. There is always a chance you will miss the ball!
The full Manchester United v Chelsea Penalty Shootout for the 2008 Champions League trophy, referred to in this program can be viewed at http://youtu.be/8Ab584AaQs8
Looks a bit different when you know a little more about what went on behind the scenes.
A review of this book is as follows:
At last, football has its answer to Freakonomics, The Tipping Point and The Undercover Economist. "Why do England lose?" "Why do Newcastle United always buy the wrong players?" "How could Nottingham Forest go from winning the European Cup to the depths of League One?" "Penalties - what are they good for?" These are questions every football fan has asked. Why England Lose answers them. It brings the techniques of bestselling books such as Freakonomics and The Undercover Economist to bear on our national sport. Written with an economist's brain and a football writer's skill, it applies high-powered analytical tools to everyday football topics. Why England Lose isn't in the first place about money. It's about looking at data in new ways. It's about revealing counterintuitive truths about football. It explains all manner of things about the game which newspapers just can't see. It all adds up to a new way of looking at football, beyond cliches about "The Magic of the FA Cup", "England's Shock Defeat" and "Newcastle's New South American Star". No training in economics is needed to read Why England Lose. But the reader will come out of it with a better understanding not just of football, but of how economists think and what they know.
Publisher: HarperSport (6 Aug 2009)
ISBN-10: 0007301111
ISBN-13: 978-0007301119
Download Podcast here:
Pagan Prompt: Wiccan Rede
When I was in high school, I was one of the few pagan students in the entired town I lived in as well as one of the most studied and experienced of the group (next to a young man who was raised in the Wiccan faith). There was a large push by the whole group for covenship and for me to take place as a sort of young High Priestess. I did not and, instead, removed myself from the group in many ways, though they were my friends. I was not ready for that sort of responsibility and now am glad that i made this decision.
My withdrawel from the pagan group at my school and in my town was viewed by many in two very different ways. One group saw this as an act of humility and modesty on my part, encouraged me and my work, and remained close friends to this day.
Another group felt I was being pompous, that my removal was in a way saying that I felt I was too good for them. One person in particular, though she acted as if she was my friend, began to perform certain spells, host certain rites and act in certain ways that were hurtful to myself and many of those around us.
In the end, I felt that if I did not do something to stop her someone was going to get hurt.
I did a simple, yet powerful bind spell on this person. I will not post the spell on here and it is listed in my BOS with words of precaution. After the binding I refused to speak to this young woman again. The binding was fairly thorough and this person found that not only could she not harm anyone but had a hard time performing any magical working. I heard from a mutal friend that her binding has lasted to this day and has caused her some problems in the magical and pagan community she has recently moved into (they will have nothing to do with her).
I did, however, set the spell so that she or someone of ability can break the binding if they do so in love, compassion and with the desire to not harm but help others (the opposite actions and emotions of why I performed the binding int he first place).
I tell this long story in order to say this.
ALL ACTIONS have an EQUAL REACTION! WHATEVER you send out WILL COME BACK! This can be viewed however you wish and be the basis of whatever lesson anyone would like to teach and set creed to: Golden Rule, 3-fold law, Wiccan Rede, Karma, etc. It is simply how the Universe works.
When I bound this person in high school, I did not consider that this act (which was done out of the desire to prevent harm, an it harm none) would eventually come back to me.
Almost a year later exactly, I began to have disturbances in my ability to perform any magical act or even meditate. It felt like my mind was in a fog any time I even thought about doing magic and when I meditated I felt literally bound up. At first I thought I had somehow picked up a leeching energy in astral travel, that recent stress had worn me thin, that I was somehow ill.
Finally, it struck me after a phone call from our mutual friend (the girl I had bound was getting married to another mutual friend). I realized that my binding spell had come back to me.
I worked through this ricochet magic slowly and with as much patience as I could muster. When I mentioned it to a local magical practitioner, she repremanded me not for binding another but for thinking I would be punished in some way for protecting myself.
I do not feel that I am being punished for trying to prevent harm. I don't think the Universe works that way. I think this was merely the Law of reaction. I did this, it was done to me. It is simple.
My withdrawel from the pagan group at my school and in my town was viewed by many in two very different ways. One group saw this as an act of humility and modesty on my part, encouraged me and my work, and remained close friends to this day.
Another group felt I was being pompous, that my removal was in a way saying that I felt I was too good for them. One person in particular, though she acted as if she was my friend, began to perform certain spells, host certain rites and act in certain ways that were hurtful to myself and many of those around us.
In the end, I felt that if I did not do something to stop her someone was going to get hurt.
I did a simple, yet powerful bind spell on this person. I will not post the spell on here and it is listed in my BOS with words of precaution. After the binding I refused to speak to this young woman again. The binding was fairly thorough and this person found that not only could she not harm anyone but had a hard time performing any magical working. I heard from a mutal friend that her binding has lasted to this day and has caused her some problems in the magical and pagan community she has recently moved into (they will have nothing to do with her).
I did, however, set the spell so that she or someone of ability can break the binding if they do so in love, compassion and with the desire to not harm but help others (the opposite actions and emotions of why I performed the binding int he first place).
I tell this long story in order to say this.
ALL ACTIONS have an EQUAL REACTION! WHATEVER you send out WILL COME BACK! This can be viewed however you wish and be the basis of whatever lesson anyone would like to teach and set creed to: Golden Rule, 3-fold law, Wiccan Rede, Karma, etc. It is simply how the Universe works.
When I bound this person in high school, I did not consider that this act (which was done out of the desire to prevent harm, an it harm none) would eventually come back to me.
Almost a year later exactly, I began to have disturbances in my ability to perform any magical act or even meditate. It felt like my mind was in a fog any time I even thought about doing magic and when I meditated I felt literally bound up. At first I thought I had somehow picked up a leeching energy in astral travel, that recent stress had worn me thin, that I was somehow ill.
Finally, it struck me after a phone call from our mutual friend (the girl I had bound was getting married to another mutual friend). I realized that my binding spell had come back to me.
I worked through this ricochet magic slowly and with as much patience as I could muster. When I mentioned it to a local magical practitioner, she repremanded me not for binding another but for thinking I would be punished in some way for protecting myself.
I do not feel that I am being punished for trying to prevent harm. I don't think the Universe works that way. I think this was merely the Law of reaction. I did this, it was done to me. It is simple.
Stephen Laudermilch, DVM 2011 Joins a Rural Practice Steeped in History
Posted May 28, 2011
By Donald F. Smith, Cornell University
CAREERS FOR VETERINARIANS Series
Stephen Laudermilch entered veterinary college in 2007 with the singular goal of returning to his home town to join his father and brother in one of the oldest and most distinguished rural veterinary practices in Pennsylvania. Dating back to 1917, what is now called Rome Veterinary Center is located about 60 miles south of Ithaca, New York, just 15 miles over the Pennsylvania border.
Stephen Laudermilch entered veterinary college in 2007 with the singular goal of returning to his home town to join his father and brother in one of the oldest and most distinguished rural veterinary practices in Pennsylvania. Dating back to 1917, what is now called Rome Veterinary Center is located about 60 miles south of Ithaca, New York, just 15 miles over the Pennsylvania border.
Being from a closely-knit family, the proximity of Ithaca to Rome was one of the reasons why Stephen selected Cornell over the three other northeastern colleges that offered him a seat after only three years undergraduate study.
During his time at Cornell, Stephen would make over 300 trips between Ithaca and Rome to visit family and work in the practice where he will now be a full time associate. “Being able to go back home to practice is a huge asset for me, because the establishment is family-oriented and I know right from the beginning that the level of trust and involvement will be high”.
Stephen’s father, Donn Laudermilch (U Penn ’79) agrees. “Stephen has been doing veterinary calls with me since he was two-years-old. He would sometimes join me before school, and often ride with me on calls that extended way into the night, helping treat cows with calving problems or most metabolic conditions that occur just before or after parturition.”
Stephen was one of about twelve of the 87 students in his class with an interest in food animal programs. However, because he realized that there are no guarantees that the dairy industry in upstate Pennsylvania will remain stable in the future, he took full advantage of Cornell’s excellent small animal teaching program so that he could diversify his practice as appropriate to meet future needs in the community.
The practice is currently 85% dairy cattle, with the remainder being equine and small animal medicine. For the top-producing dairies in the practice area, Stephen his brother, Ben (Virginia-Maryland ’07) and their father, all agree that new techniques they are adopting, like in vitro fertilization, could add tremendous value to the dairy industry.
The veterinary profession faces shortages of well-educated food animal veterinarians seeking to work in rural areas. The Laudermilch family provides an excellent example of how committed veterinarians continue to advance animal health in farming communities and also support the public health needs of society by assuring a safe and abundant source of animal-based protein.
Stephen Laudermilch’s interest in serving people goes beyond rural veterinary practice. He desires to use his veterinary skills to establish relationships in foreign countries with the human medical profession--two of Stephen's siblings are medical doctors and a third is in training--to help people with both their physical health and their productivity in agriculture. With veterinary medicine as a step-stool, Stephen's goals are to reach people for Christ through veterinary medical missions.
Dr. Smith invites comments at dfs6@cornell.edu
Dr. Koji Yasuda: Connecting Veterinary Medicine in Japan and America
Donald F. Smith (Cornell University)
Posted May 30, 2011
CAREERS FOR VETERINARIANS Series
When Koji Yasuda received his DVM from Cornell last weekend, he joined his father and older brother, Junya, as a family committed to advancing veterinary medicine in both Asia and America.
Koji (L) and Junya Yasuda relax after Koji received his DVM from Cornell University May 29th, 2011. Photo by author. |
Koji’s father, Hidemi Yasuda, owns one of the most progressive small animal practices in Tokyo, and also manages a dermatology (IgE) diagnostic service (Spectrum Lab Japan) that employs four staff and receives over 10,000 samples per year from 4,500 veterinarians throughout the country.
Junya (L) and his parents, Dr. Hidemi and Mrs. Sanae Yasuda. Yasuda Veterinary Clinic, Tokyo, Japan (2010). Photo by author. |
Junya, who already has a college degree in history, is in the process of finishing his veterinary education in Tokyo. Though he has been to the United States multiple times, he has decided to remain in Japan and ultimately take over the family business.
Koji, on the other hand and with his family’s full support, decided to make his career in the United States. He left home at age 15, attended a boarding school in New Hampshire. After receiving his BS and MS from Cornell, he became one of the relatively few international students to receive a DVM from Cornell.
Koji recently received his green card (signifying permanent resident) from the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, and now embarks on a comparative pathology residency at the New England Primate Research Center at Harvard Medical School in June. With his commitment to the concept of the “One Health” advancing both human and animal medicine, he plans to establish a career in comparative pathology at either a veterinary or medical school setting.
Koji recently received his green card (signifying permanent resident) from the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, and now embarks on a comparative pathology residency at the New England Primate Research Center at Harvard Medical School in June. With his commitment to the concept of the “One Health” advancing both human and animal medicine, he plans to establish a career in comparative pathology at either a veterinary or medical school setting.
Dr. Smith invites comments at dfs6@cornell.edu.
The Pink Fig
"Everybody knows a little place like Kokomo. Now, if you want to go to get away from it all, go down to ....."
Twenty years after this popular Beach Boys song hit the charts, The Pink Fig, a renovated farm house on Heatherbank Rd. in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, opened its doors as a coffee shop / children's play area. Situated conveniently close to main thoroughfares, shopping centres, petrol stations, schools, and restaurants in town, The Pink Fig has retained a country atmosphere in both its decor and grounds. A short distance from the shop, horses and cows graze lazily in the African sunshine (well, on Thursday they had to graze in the rain because, you know, it always rains on crawl day!).
The Pink Fig is a great getaway spot right in PE for the young and young-at-heart. If you have children with you, they can play on the swings and other playground equipment or participate in craft activities at an adjacent shop while you sit outside and enjoy breakfast, a light lunch, or dessert and tea. When the lkids get hungry there is a special menu for them as well.
No kids? No problem. There is plenty of room inside to sit back and relax in this country home setting. The Pink Fig offers a pensioners' breakfast special Wednesday through Friday and also an All-You-Can-Eat Sunday breakfast buffet that, I hear, is to die for. Some other menu highlights include a South African Farmer Sandwich (Fran and Keith tell me this is a definite must-try), rooster brood (an SA favorite), the entire dessert and tea cake selection, and a special section of the menu titled, "Pimp Your Garden Salad!"
The Pink Fig uses Puro Fairtrade Brand for all of its delicious coffee beverages. All the waitrons on staff are also trained baristas. A few are registered in an upcoming barista competition in PE. Good luck to Orlane and Stanley.... we're rooting for you!!!
While giving permission to take pics on Thursday, Manager Brendon Albertze insisted on a whole staff picture because, he says, "We're a team here!" Well, that team feel was palpable when they all came out for the picture... you can always tell when people enjoy what they are doing...it makes for a very positive experience for the patrons. So, speaking of patrons, this week's crawlers included Fran and Keith de Beer, Stella and Beryl Dawson, June Nash (welcome back, June!), Beth Vieira, and my son, Jeff. (Yes, this is why I am late posting again this week...we've been out and about showing Jeff around. We've been beaching, hiking, canopy zip-lining, and jumping off bridges....well, Jeff and Lou jumped, I just watched!!).
Conversation at the table was all over the place, starting with the "end of the world" which I guess was supposed to happen last week!?! Better luck next time, Nostradamus!!! Next, we discussed bad photography which included some visual aids provided by Beth (sorry, those shots didn't make the cut for the blog!). We then went on to politics, democratic elections, and international affairs. Obama, Cameron, and the Bushes, Jr. and Sr. all were fair game. Regardless of our differing opinions, though, we all agreed on one thing...If You Don't Vote, You Can't Complain. I won't mention any names, but you know who you are........... : )
During the course of our attempt to fix the world's problem, Brendon offered the crawlers a round of coffees on the house! That was awesome!! Thank you, Brendon and staff!!! A big thank you also goes out to Mother Nature who, by the time our visit was over, decided to spread a little sunshine on PE's version of Kokomo.
Until next week,
Ellen
Twenty years after this popular Beach Boys song hit the charts, The Pink Fig, a renovated farm house on Heatherbank Rd. in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, opened its doors as a coffee shop / children's play area. Situated conveniently close to main thoroughfares, shopping centres, petrol stations, schools, and restaurants in town, The Pink Fig has retained a country atmosphere in both its decor and grounds. A short distance from the shop, horses and cows graze lazily in the African sunshine (well, on Thursday they had to graze in the rain because, you know, it always rains on crawl day!).
The Pink Fig is a great getaway spot right in PE for the young and young-at-heart. If you have children with you, they can play on the swings and other playground equipment or participate in craft activities at an adjacent shop while you sit outside and enjoy breakfast, a light lunch, or dessert and tea. When the lkids get hungry there is a special menu for them as well.
No kids? No problem. There is plenty of room inside to sit back and relax in this country home setting. The Pink Fig offers a pensioners' breakfast special Wednesday through Friday and also an All-You-Can-Eat Sunday breakfast buffet that, I hear, is to die for. Some other menu highlights include a South African Farmer Sandwich (Fran and Keith tell me this is a definite must-try), rooster brood (an SA favorite), the entire dessert and tea cake selection, and a special section of the menu titled, "Pimp Your Garden Salad!"
The Pink Fig uses Puro Fairtrade Brand for all of its delicious coffee beverages. All the waitrons on staff are also trained baristas. A few are registered in an upcoming barista competition in PE. Good luck to Orlane and Stanley.... we're rooting for you!!!
While giving permission to take pics on Thursday, Manager Brendon Albertze insisted on a whole staff picture because, he says, "We're a team here!" Well, that team feel was palpable when they all came out for the picture... you can always tell when people enjoy what they are doing...it makes for a very positive experience for the patrons. So, speaking of patrons, this week's crawlers included Fran and Keith de Beer, Stella and Beryl Dawson, June Nash (welcome back, June!), Beth Vieira, and my son, Jeff. (Yes, this is why I am late posting again this week...we've been out and about showing Jeff around. We've been beaching, hiking, canopy zip-lining, and jumping off bridges....well, Jeff and Lou jumped, I just watched!!).
Conversation at the table was all over the place, starting with the "end of the world" which I guess was supposed to happen last week!?! Better luck next time, Nostradamus!!! Next, we discussed bad photography which included some visual aids provided by Beth (sorry, those shots didn't make the cut for the blog!). We then went on to politics, democratic elections, and international affairs. Obama, Cameron, and the Bushes, Jr. and Sr. all were fair game. Regardless of our differing opinions, though, we all agreed on one thing...If You Don't Vote, You Can't Complain. I won't mention any names, but you know who you are........... : )
During the course of our attempt to fix the world's problem, Brendon offered the crawlers a round of coffees on the house! That was awesome!! Thank you, Brendon and staff!!! A big thank you also goes out to Mother Nature who, by the time our visit was over, decided to spread a little sunshine on PE's version of Kokomo.
Until next week,
Ellen
The Pink Fig Team |
Mett the Barista Orlane Chidiku |
This Week's Crawlers Jeff, Ellen, Keith, Beryl, Fran, June, Stella, Beth |
2 for 2 |
Library Closed for Memorial Day
The Albertsons Library and the rest of the Boise State campus will be closed on Monday, May 30 for Memorial Day. However, our online resources are available 24/7.
Library hours are posted at http://library.boisestate.edu/calendar/main.php
Veterinary Class of 2011 - Congratulations and Best Wishes
Posted by Donald Smith (Cornell University)
May 26, 2011
On this Cornell Commencement weekend our 87 DVM graduates will be among the 2,630 nationally to become the nation's newest Doctors of Veterinary Medicine. They enter the veterinary workforce at a time when the demands and opportunities to promote animal health and welfare, public health, and biomedical research have never been greater.
Commencement Hooding Ceremony, Cornell Class of 2011 |
· the protection of animal health and welfare
· the prevention and relief of animal suffering
· the conservation of animal resources
· the promotion of public health, and
· the advancement of medical knowledge”
As is traditional, most of our graduates will enter practice initially, either in general small or large animal practice, or through an internship. However, by their fifth-year reunion, many will broaden their career scope. Those in the Army may be deployed overseas or have entered into a PhD program in epidemiology. Others will be engaged in research or advanced training in a clinical specialty like surgery or oncology; or will be employed in the pet food industry or a pharmaceutical company.
By their tenth reunion in 2021, many of today's graduates will be owners or associates in general or specialty practices involving a broad array of companion, farm and sport animals. Others will be leaders in humane shelter medicine, homeland security, food quality assurance, in comparative biomedical research in a medical school, or in conservation medicine, perhaps internationally.
2011 is designated by U.S. Congress as World Veterinary Year in honor of the 250th anniversary of the veterinary profession. Logo by Vet2011 and the AVMA |
This year’s graduates enter the profession during the World Veterinary Year which has been designated by Congress to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the veterinary profession throughout the world. The congressional resolution cites many of the critical roles that veterinarians play in society beyond clinical practice, whether in public health, biosecurity, biomedical research, international development, disaster medicine, or in promoting the unique role that animals, especially pets, play in human health and welfare.
To the Class of 2011, congratulations on your remarkable achievements and best wishes as you assume the leadership of veterinary medicine for the next generation.
Dr. Smith invites comments at dfs6@cornell.edu
Soccer Talent Requires Three Key Ingredients – Ignition, Meaningful Practice and Excellent Coaching.
Sourced from http://www.footy4kids.co.uk/
Ignition
Ignition is the spark that makes a child want to excel at soccer. It could be a film (such as Bend It Like Beckham), the desire to please a parent, an internal drive to be the best or the realisation that becoming good at soccer might lead to a desirable lifestyle. It could also be the influence of a role model. Someone like you, perhaps.
Meaningful practice
Put simply, a child with myelin-wrapped soccer pathways plays the game "instinctively" and well. She's got broadband. On the other hand, a child without myelin-wrapped soccer pathways is still struggling to get by on dial up.
Myelin can be produced at any age but the prime age for myelin formation is between four and 12, an age range that can be properly be called The Golden Age for children who are learning to play soccer.
Technical skills learned during this period can be quickly and firmly embedded, i.e. wrapped with myelin.
The relevance of this to youth soccer coaching is clear: time spent teaching tactics to young players is not being spent wisely. At the youngest ages, all a coach's energy should be focused on proper technical training, or myelin building. [3]
Coaches should also note that it's much easier to wrap a soccer-specific pathway in myelin than unwrap it. That's why bad habits are so difficult to break and why you should teach correct technique from day one.
But it is not sufficient to simply put in lots of hours practising skills and techniques. Even 10,000 hours of practice is not enough.[4]
Rapid myelin growth occurs when children practise their soccer skills in a challenging – even uncomfortable – environment.
This is best achieved by playing a variety of small-sided games (SSGs) instead of using drills. Soccer-like games hone technique, expose faults and force children to find solutions to problems.
Futsal, 4v4 and five-a-side move young players outside their comfort zone, encourage risk taking, experimentation and are thus much better for skill acquisition than traditional drills or playing eleven-a-side on vast, uninspiring pitches.
Excellent coaching
The final – and most important prerequisite for producing talented young soccer players – is excellent coaching.
The good news is that excellent coaches are not necessarily the most qualified.
They don't even have to be particularly knowledgeable. Most talented players didn't have coaches with outstanding win/loss ratios or coaching degrees when they were five, six or even 12 years old.
But their coaches did possess a set of recognisable characteristics:
Excellent coaches are a source of ignition. They inspire their players, not just because they are kind and patient but also because they have high standards. One of the best youth coaches I ever met insisted his players turn up 10 minutes early for practice, always wore spotless boots [cleats] and they maintained eye contact with him when he was speaking. His players loved him.
Excellent coaches facilitate meaningful practice. They don't routinely give their players the answers, their players play a lot of SSGs and they know how to think for themselves.
Excellent coaches show their players how to perform a skill but they will leave it up to them to find out how to actually use it. And you will never, ever hear an excellent coach shouting "SHOOT!" or "PASS!" or anything like that during a match. They are more likely to be reading a newspaper.
Excellent coaches don't over-praise success. They know that doing that discourages young players from taking risks – in case they fail – and children who don't take risks learn very slowly, if at all.
Finally, excellent coaches understand why William Butler Yeats – an Irish poet and Nobel prize winner – said:
"Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire."
References
[1] [3] D Coyle, The Talent Code, Random House, 2009
[2] Z Jonker, Cracking the Code, q.v. CMYSA, April 15, 2011
[4] Malcolm Gladwell devotes a section of his book Outliers to the notion that to become world class at anything requires 10,000 hours of practice.
I'm sure you've often heard expressions like: "She's a natural striker" or "he's a great defender, just like his dad. It must be in his genes".
I'm not going to delve too deeply into the old and rather tired "nature v nurture" debate here, (if you want to check it out, a Google search will reveal hundreds of articles on the subject), I'm just going to say that children are NOT born with the ability to play soccer, any more than they are born with the ability to play the violin or run 100m in less than 10 seconds.
Genes can give a child red hair or blue eyes but to suggest children can be born with a "triple stepover" gene is a little silly, to say the least.
But while genetics are not the deciding factor in whether a child excels at soccer (or anything else) it is a fact that some boys and girls are born with certain advantages.
Children who are genetically predisposed to have a strong body, powerful lungs, etc., and have parents prepared to make the sacrifices necessary to regularly take their children to soccer practice have a head start in the race to be a soccer star. And you will see plenty of them at coaching sessions for pre-schoolers and kindergarten kids.
But genetic advantages and parenting style is not the end of the story. Far from it.
While good genes can help two and three year olds keep a step ahead of their peers, genetics plays a very minor role in producing talented young soccer players.
Instead, soccer talent requires three key ingredients – ignition, meaningful practice and excellent coaching. [1]
Ignition
Ignition is the spark that makes a child want to excel at soccer. It could be a film (such as Bend It Like Beckham), the desire to please a parent, an internal drive to be the best or the realisation that becoming good at soccer might lead to a desirable lifestyle. It could also be the influence of a role model. Someone like you, perhaps.
Meaningful practice
Understanding the importance of practice for young players requires an understanding of how children learn motor skills.
All motor skills – from walking to heading the ball into the back of the net – are generated by electrical impulses that originate in the neural pathways in the brain.
Over time, and with lots of meaningful practice, a substance called myelin insulates these pathways, stopping the electrical impulses from leaking and thereby allowing a young soccer player to perform the relevant skill or technique more quickly and accurately.[2]
Put simply, a child with myelin-wrapped soccer pathways plays the game "instinctively" and well. She's got broadband. On the other hand, a child without myelin-wrapped soccer pathways is still struggling to get by on dial up.
Myelin can be produced at any age but the prime age for myelin formation is between four and 12, an age range that can be properly be called The Golden Age for children who are learning to play soccer.
Technical skills learned during this period can be quickly and firmly embedded, i.e. wrapped with myelin.
The relevance of this to youth soccer coaching is clear: time spent teaching tactics to young players is not being spent wisely. At the youngest ages, all a coach's energy should be focused on proper technical training, or myelin building. [3]
Coaches should also note that it's much easier to wrap a soccer-specific pathway in myelin than unwrap it. That's why bad habits are so difficult to break and why you should teach correct technique from day one.
But it is not sufficient to simply put in lots of hours practising skills and techniques. Even 10,000 hours of practice is not enough.[4]
Rapid myelin growth occurs when children practise their soccer skills in a challenging – even uncomfortable – environment.
This is best achieved by playing a variety of small-sided games (SSGs) instead of using drills. Soccer-like games hone technique, expose faults and force children to find solutions to problems.
Futsal, 4v4 and five-a-side move young players outside their comfort zone, encourage risk taking, experimentation and are thus much better for skill acquisition than traditional drills or playing eleven-a-side on vast, uninspiring pitches.
Excellent coaching
The final – and most important prerequisite for producing talented young soccer players – is excellent coaching.
The good news is that excellent coaches are not necessarily the most qualified.
They don't even have to be particularly knowledgeable. Most talented players didn't have coaches with outstanding win/loss ratios or coaching degrees when they were five, six or even 12 years old.
But their coaches did possess a set of recognisable characteristics:
Excellent coaches are a source of ignition. They inspire their players, not just because they are kind and patient but also because they have high standards. One of the best youth coaches I ever met insisted his players turn up 10 minutes early for practice, always wore spotless boots [cleats] and they maintained eye contact with him when he was speaking. His players loved him.
Excellent coaches facilitate meaningful practice. They don't routinely give their players the answers, their players play a lot of SSGs and they know how to think for themselves.
Excellent coaches show their players how to perform a skill but they will leave it up to them to find out how to actually use it. And you will never, ever hear an excellent coach shouting "SHOOT!" or "PASS!" or anything like that during a match. They are more likely to be reading a newspaper.
Excellent coaches don't over-praise success. They know that doing that discourages young players from taking risks – in case they fail – and children who don't take risks learn very slowly, if at all.
Finally, excellent coaches understand why William Butler Yeats – an Irish poet and Nobel prize winner – said:
"Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire."
References
[1] [3] D Coyle, The Talent Code, Random House, 2009
[2] Z Jonker, Cracking the Code, q.v. CMYSA, April 15, 2011
[4] Malcolm Gladwell devotes a section of his book Outliers to the notion that to become world class at anything requires 10,000 hours of practice.
Covens and Cults
I want to take a moment to post about a problem come to my attention today.
I met a girl at a local ecclectic shop who explained that she was pagan and in a coven almost right after giving me her name. I have no issue with people who identify themselves predominately by their belief systems, don't get me wrong, and I do find this very common among younger pagans.
I asked, with interest, what path their coven followed. She seemed quite confused so I rephrased and asked what religious beliefs the coven followed. She replied matter-of-factly, Wicca. I paused then asked, well, which path of Wicca? She continued to seem confused and then said, mostly just wicca and pagans.
I gave up on this line of questioning but the girl continued. We plan on getting a temple eventually. Our High Priest wants to make us wide spread, at least through Tennessee. First we have to get a coven house.
I asked what a coven house entailed.
She explaiend that one of her coven members was getting a large farm house, out away from town with hardly a neighbor that was large enough for the whole coven to live in.
At this point Damon had grown interested in the conversation and asked the girl how long she had been practicing.
She said she had been in paganism for only 3 months and that her High Priest had brought her into it by helping her get in touch with her abilities as an empath.
Now, I'm trying not to be critical of any coven or their practices but it seems strange to me to
1. initiate a young girl
2. collect and seclude the whole of the coven
3. concentrate, at an early stage of coven-hood, on widespread outreach for the coven
4. have a coven member who seems confused on the coven's basic doctrine
This seems bordering on cult-ishness. Maybe I'm wrong and have a skewed view as a solitairy pagan but the whole situation seemed uncomfortable to me.
I met a girl at a local ecclectic shop who explained that she was pagan and in a coven almost right after giving me her name. I have no issue with people who identify themselves predominately by their belief systems, don't get me wrong, and I do find this very common among younger pagans.
I asked, with interest, what path their coven followed. She seemed quite confused so I rephrased and asked what religious beliefs the coven followed. She replied matter-of-factly, Wicca. I paused then asked, well, which path of Wicca? She continued to seem confused and then said, mostly just wicca and pagans.
I gave up on this line of questioning but the girl continued. We plan on getting a temple eventually. Our High Priest wants to make us wide spread, at least through Tennessee. First we have to get a coven house.
I asked what a coven house entailed.
She explaiend that one of her coven members was getting a large farm house, out away from town with hardly a neighbor that was large enough for the whole coven to live in.
At this point Damon had grown interested in the conversation and asked the girl how long she had been practicing.
She said she had been in paganism for only 3 months and that her High Priest had brought her into it by helping her get in touch with her abilities as an empath.
Now, I'm trying not to be critical of any coven or their practices but it seems strange to me to
1. initiate a young girl
2. collect and seclude the whole of the coven
3. concentrate, at an early stage of coven-hood, on widespread outreach for the coven
4. have a coven member who seems confused on the coven's basic doctrine
This seems bordering on cult-ishness. Maybe I'm wrong and have a skewed view as a solitairy pagan but the whole situation seemed uncomfortable to me.
Altar
My altar is set up, finally!
When we were living at the apartment, I have a 3 tiered altar in the eastern part of the main room. Now that we're with my in-laws, I have a smaller altar in our bedroom, trying to face as eastward as possible.
The base of the altar is a little besdide table my grandmother gave me. Its abotu a foot square around and 2 feet tall. There's a flat surface on tope, an open shelf beneath that and then a cupboard. Perfect.
On the table I have Ganesh, who I need now that we're starting new journeys and I need help with my business and finances. With him I have a few homemade supplies I sell for my business (including 1 votive beeswax candle, 1 4oz bottle of homemade shampoo, 1 bar of soap, 1 tin of lip balm), a quartz crystal, and an offering of yerba mate tea.
Om Gum Gana Patie Namaha
The shelf holds my almanacs and a deck of faery oracle cards by Froud.
The cupboard has incense, my witchy kit (a chesk of salt, oils, bell, chalace, and everything else I feel I need on hand), and a stone incense burner.
I feel so much more at home with the altar set up.
When we were living at the apartment, I have a 3 tiered altar in the eastern part of the main room. Now that we're with my in-laws, I have a smaller altar in our bedroom, trying to face as eastward as possible.
The base of the altar is a little besdide table my grandmother gave me. Its abotu a foot square around and 2 feet tall. There's a flat surface on tope, an open shelf beneath that and then a cupboard. Perfect.
On the table I have Ganesh, who I need now that we're starting new journeys and I need help with my business and finances. With him I have a few homemade supplies I sell for my business (including 1 votive beeswax candle, 1 4oz bottle of homemade shampoo, 1 bar of soap, 1 tin of lip balm), a quartz crystal, and an offering of yerba mate tea.
Om Gum Gana Patie Namaha
The shelf holds my almanacs and a deck of faery oracle cards by Froud.
The cupboard has incense, my witchy kit (a chesk of salt, oils, bell, chalace, and everything else I feel I need on hand), and a stone incense burner.
I feel so much more at home with the altar set up.
Pagan Prompt: The Rapture
What a topic! Though understandable after the "event" of Saturday...I had so many invites to hedonistic End of the World parties it was crazy.
Having been raised from childhood mostly by my Southern Baptist grandmother and a mom and aunt who rarely said anything about religion (but did let me miss church if I wanted to) I have had what you could call an immersion course in the Rapture Riot (as I like to call it).
Hearing enough about it, the Book of Revelations was the first book I read thoroughly (at age 8). I also asked a lot of questions because what I was being told didn't go hand in hand with what I was reading (what a shocker). In the end, I decided if the rapture happened before "The Tribulations" I didn't want to be a part of it. I wanted to see many of the things detailed in Revelations such as the dragon, the Lady clothed in the sun and crowned in stars, the angels and horsemen, etc.
Of course my desire to stay behind horrified my grandmother and after a stern talking to from her and her pastor, I never mentioend a word of it again...
14 years later...
After 2 years at a Christian college, where I studied the bible academically (and the New Testament in Greek), I am more apt to believe the Old Testament is more Kabbalistic wiht 127 different meanings for each verse, and the New Testament needs to be taken with a grain of...well...I won't go into all that.
I will say that now, Revelations still hold interest in me and more and more I am reminded of Aleister Crowley's books and teachings when I read this book.
The mysticism of a man, John, who had a vision and saw God and his thrones and all these magical things.
Plus, theres a Goddess in the book! Who woulda thunk it? The Lady clothed in the Sun, crowned by Stars, standing on the Moon. The Bride of Heaven. Sounds goddess-like to me.
The dragon has always been a favorite of mine (it wasn't until I was 15 that I made contact with my Dragon Guide and Guardian). Which leads to a second goddess! The Harlot. Now she may not be a goddess in the eyes of many Christians but she's a figure of great darkeness and the companion of the Dragon.
The 4 horsemen(no, not Jim Jack Johnny and Jose) with Hades following (I love how in Greek it is actually Hades in many translations and never The Devil, but sometimes Death. Just more fun when explaining there is not Devil in the Bible). The use of 4 is all through Revelations, which has a very strong numerological connotation. 4 hosrement, 4 thrones, 4 creatures, etc.
The use of 7 is also very strong with the 7 seals.
Anyways...I digress from the prompt...
What about the Rapture?
Well the Bible says Jesus Christ will come back for his followers but he will be like a theif in the night and no one will know the Day nore the Hour of his return.
So why are so many Christians obsessed with "It'll be in my lifetime" or "It'll be May 21, 2011" or "October 21, 2011" or "December 21, 2012" (now I have my own beliefs on 2012 but that's for another post).
I read another post on this ask, why are Christians so ready to be done with this life and move on with eternity? I think that it is because, even though they claim no belief in reincarnation and enlightenment, all beings desire it. We all desire to reach enlightenment or "heaven" and this life on this plane of existence is the main area to change your karma and reach enlightenment. We all feel this on a basic level and seek for it through religion, magic, meditation, etc. Even Christians.
Do I believe Christ is coming for his followers? Sure, but I don't think its going to be like in the Left Behind series or how many Christians think. I think Christ bridges a span of planes so that Christians can reach a level of heaven when they die instead of condemning their souls to a personal hell in the next life (for even Buddhists believe in hell).
Do I believe I will be left behind? No. I believe that I will transcend due to my own personal beliefs and work. I doubt that my next stage is true enlightenment but I have met people who are at that stage and it is glorious.
I'm sorry if thise post rambles. There is so much to say on the subject (which is why there are so many books on the topic).
Having been raised from childhood mostly by my Southern Baptist grandmother and a mom and aunt who rarely said anything about religion (but did let me miss church if I wanted to) I have had what you could call an immersion course in the Rapture Riot (as I like to call it).
Hearing enough about it, the Book of Revelations was the first book I read thoroughly (at age 8). I also asked a lot of questions because what I was being told didn't go hand in hand with what I was reading (what a shocker). In the end, I decided if the rapture happened before "The Tribulations" I didn't want to be a part of it. I wanted to see many of the things detailed in Revelations such as the dragon, the Lady clothed in the sun and crowned in stars, the angels and horsemen, etc.
Of course my desire to stay behind horrified my grandmother and after a stern talking to from her and her pastor, I never mentioend a word of it again...
14 years later...
After 2 years at a Christian college, where I studied the bible academically (and the New Testament in Greek), I am more apt to believe the Old Testament is more Kabbalistic wiht 127 different meanings for each verse, and the New Testament needs to be taken with a grain of...well...I won't go into all that.
I will say that now, Revelations still hold interest in me and more and more I am reminded of Aleister Crowley's books and teachings when I read this book.
The mysticism of a man, John, who had a vision and saw God and his thrones and all these magical things.
Plus, theres a Goddess in the book! Who woulda thunk it? The Lady clothed in the Sun, crowned by Stars, standing on the Moon. The Bride of Heaven. Sounds goddess-like to me.
The dragon has always been a favorite of mine (it wasn't until I was 15 that I made contact with my Dragon Guide and Guardian). Which leads to a second goddess! The Harlot. Now she may not be a goddess in the eyes of many Christians but she's a figure of great darkeness and the companion of the Dragon.
The 4 horsemen(no, not Jim Jack Johnny and Jose) with Hades following (I love how in Greek it is actually Hades in many translations and never The Devil, but sometimes Death. Just more fun when explaining there is not Devil in the Bible). The use of 4 is all through Revelations, which has a very strong numerological connotation. 4 hosrement, 4 thrones, 4 creatures, etc.
The use of 7 is also very strong with the 7 seals.
Anyways...I digress from the prompt...
What about the Rapture?
Well the Bible says Jesus Christ will come back for his followers but he will be like a theif in the night and no one will know the Day nore the Hour of his return.
So why are so many Christians obsessed with "It'll be in my lifetime" or "It'll be May 21, 2011" or "October 21, 2011" or "December 21, 2012" (now I have my own beliefs on 2012 but that's for another post).
I read another post on this ask, why are Christians so ready to be done with this life and move on with eternity? I think that it is because, even though they claim no belief in reincarnation and enlightenment, all beings desire it. We all desire to reach enlightenment or "heaven" and this life on this plane of existence is the main area to change your karma and reach enlightenment. We all feel this on a basic level and seek for it through religion, magic, meditation, etc. Even Christians.
Do I believe Christ is coming for his followers? Sure, but I don't think its going to be like in the Left Behind series or how many Christians think. I think Christ bridges a span of planes so that Christians can reach a level of heaven when they die instead of condemning their souls to a personal hell in the next life (for even Buddhists believe in hell).
Do I believe I will be left behind? No. I believe that I will transcend due to my own personal beliefs and work. I doubt that my next stage is true enlightenment but I have met people who are at that stage and it is glorious.
I'm sorry if thise post rambles. There is so much to say on the subject (which is why there are so many books on the topic).
Joanna Asmus Sutorius, DVM (1929), Cornell's Fourth Woman Veterinary Graduate
Guest Blog by Michelle Pesce, Cornell Class of 2012
Posted May 25, 2011
This historical blog is in recognition of the 150th anniversary
of the American Veterinary Medical Association (1863-2013).
Careers for Veterinarians Series
Like many young girls, Johanna Asmus took delight in the company of animals. She was a member of the Science Club at Ithaca High School and the idea of becoming a veterinarian had great appeal to her. Her proximity to Cornell, where her father was a professor, likely influenced her decision to pursue an education there. Being granted admission to Cornell is no simple task for prospective veterinary students today, but Johanna faced an even greater challenge. The year was 1925, and Johanna was to become only the fourth female graduate of the New York State Veterinary College (now the College of Veterinary Medicine).
Joanna Asmus Sutorius, DVM, graduation photograph 1929 (Cornell University photo) |
Johanna’s father, Henry Asmus, was no ordinary professor. In 1913, he took a position as a farriery instructor at the veterinary college. A building had been newly constructed for his students, and was “the very finest place of its kind to be found in the country;” a country where horses were still the dominant form of transportation. A preeminent farrier until his death in 1939, Henry Asmus’ horseshoes still hang on display in Cornell’s current farrier shop.
Cornell's DVM Class of 1929 with photo (bottom center) of Joanna Asmus, the college's fourth woman graduate. Cornell University photo. |
Johanna began veterinary college immediately after completing high school, as was the norm for students in 1925. Johanna’s daughter, Barbara Sutorius, explains her focus on small animal medicine. “The farmers who provided the large animals for the student vets to practice on wouldn’t let her treat their animals, so she only worked with small animals.” When her daughters inquired as to whether she faced discrimination, Dr. Sutorius denied it was ever a significant issue. “She was determined to ‘show the fellows’ that she could do it,” said her niece, Marianne Leavitt. In a 1960 interview by The Post-Standard, a Syracuse newspaper, Dr. Sutorius admitted she encountered disbelievers early on, but “after they found out I meant to stay and get my degree, the boys made things pleasant for me.” Johanna spent the summer of 1928 at the Westminster Dog Hospital on West 54th Street in New York City. Drs. Frank Miller and Trelford Miller welcomed her help that summer, with the latter making reference to the fact he was a student of Henry Asmus.
Dr. Sutorius considered continuing her studies in Vienna following completion of the DVM program in 1929, but it was not to be. She moved to Sayville, NY that summer with her husband, where he remained employed in spite of the stock market crash and ensuing Great Depression. “It was her aspiration to start her own small animal practice there,” her daughter Nancy Holland explains. “However, she was a product of her times. Because my Dad could provide very well for us, it would have been considered a mark against him to have his wife go off to work.” Dr. Sutorius instead worked as a relief veterinarian in various small animal practices for two years, and resumed this role in full when her three children reached school age.
Thirty years after her graduation, Dr. Sutorius reflected on her experience as one of the first to break ground for women in the veterinary profession. “I enjoy this work, so it doesn’t seem like any effort at all,” she told the Post-Standard interviewer. She had remained active in organized veterinary medicine, taking the position of Secretary-Treasurer of the Long Island Veterinary Medical Association in 1947.
Since Dr. Sutorius began her schooling, much had changed for women in the profession. “There are about 200 women veterinarians in the country,” she stated in the 1960 article. “Some are in general practice, others teach and work in research. One woman works in a zoo. Most people are pleased that a woman is going to treat their pet; however, I have had people turn around and walk right out of the office!”
Since Dr. Sutorius began her schooling, much had changed for women in the profession. “There are about 200 women veterinarians in the country,” she stated in the 1960 article. “Some are in general practice, others teach and work in research. One woman works in a zoo. Most people are pleased that a woman is going to treat their pet; however, I have had people turn around and walk right out of the office!”
By the conclusion of Dr. Sutorius’ career, veterinary medicine had seen a sharp increase in the proportion of female students. At the time of her death in 1989, roughly half of all graduating veterinarians in the United States and Canada were women.
In recent years, Dr. Sutorius’ family took a renewed interest in her experiences in the veterinary profession. A visit to Cornell revealed Henry Asmus’ influence on the college, as evidenced by display cases featuring his work. While no physical monument exists to commemorate Dr. Sutorius and other early female veterinarians, the conspicuous abundance of women in the college is a compelling testament to their efforts as pioneers.
In recent years, Dr. Sutorius’ family took a renewed interest in her experiences in the veterinary profession. A visit to Cornell revealed Henry Asmus’ influence on the college, as evidenced by display cases featuring his work. While no physical monument exists to commemorate Dr. Sutorius and other early female veterinarians, the conspicuous abundance of women in the college is a compelling testament to their efforts as pioneers.
Author Michelle Pesce, Cornell's DVM Class of 2012, is from Massapequa on the southern shore of Long Island. Dr. Asmus Sutorius also lived and practiced on Long Island.
Michelle expresses appreciation to Dr. Sutorius' family -- her daughters, Mrs. Nancy Holland and Sister Barbara Sutorius, and her niece, Mrs. Marianne Leavitt -- for their contributions to this article.
Poor Behaviour Around Junior Football by Parents is a World Wide Problem For the World Game
This program will be broadcast on 2xxfm (98.3mhz) across the Australian Community Radio Network, Tuesday, 24 May 2011 at 7:00pm.
In this program we continue with the problem of unacceptable behaviour by parents and coaches toward junior players and referees.
We have previously listend to the English FA's "Respect" campaign media on this subject. They take it very seriously and so they should.
In Australia, the FFA has made no real effort to confront these issues on a National and federation member level. That is not to say each State / Territory is not concerned for these matters, they are, but we have no unified national approach. It is a serious ommission on the part of the FFA.
In this program, we listen to media produced by that innovative US State football orgainsation Georgia Soccer, titled "Attitudes". Its first rate.
Here is the Georgia Soccer Mission:
“Georgia Soccer provides ethical leadership and fair standards to support development and growth of soccer as a life-long sport for all who love the Game.”
Georgia Soccer describes itself this way:
Georgia Soccer is the authorized state youth and adult association for Georgia within the United States Adult Soccer Association, United States Youth Soccer Association, and through them is part of the United States Soccer Federation (USSF). Also, Georgia Soccer serves as the official National State Association of USSF making it responsible to act on behalf of USSF and provide licensing courses for coaches and certification courses for referees.
In turn, the United States Soccer Federation is the recognized national soccer association within the Federation International de Football Association (FIFA), the worldwide governing body for soccer. Essentially, we serve affiliated member organizations throughout Georgia in both program and administrative support activities.
All of our affiliates organize and operate their own programs. Our assistance primarily helps strengthen their ability to provide good, well-rounded soccer experience for their membership. Most importantly, our youth & adult soccer affiliates benefit most by sharing their experiences and knowledge with each other.
If want to know more about Georgia Soccer go to http://www.georgiasoccer.org/default.aspx
Download Podcast here:
In this program we continue with the problem of unacceptable behaviour by parents and coaches toward junior players and referees.
We have previously listend to the English FA's "Respect" campaign media on this subject. They take it very seriously and so they should.
In Australia, the FFA has made no real effort to confront these issues on a National and federation member level. That is not to say each State / Territory is not concerned for these matters, they are, but we have no unified national approach. It is a serious ommission on the part of the FFA.
In this program, we listen to media produced by that innovative US State football orgainsation Georgia Soccer, titled "Attitudes". Its first rate.
Here is the Georgia Soccer Mission:
“Georgia Soccer provides ethical leadership and fair standards to support development and growth of soccer as a life-long sport for all who love the Game.”
Georgia Soccer describes itself this way:
Georgia Soccer is the authorized state youth and adult association for Georgia within the United States Adult Soccer Association, United States Youth Soccer Association, and through them is part of the United States Soccer Federation (USSF). Also, Georgia Soccer serves as the official National State Association of USSF making it responsible to act on behalf of USSF and provide licensing courses for coaches and certification courses for referees.
In turn, the United States Soccer Federation is the recognized national soccer association within the Federation International de Football Association (FIFA), the worldwide governing body for soccer. Essentially, we serve affiliated member organizations throughout Georgia in both program and administrative support activities.
All of our affiliates organize and operate their own programs. Our assistance primarily helps strengthen their ability to provide good, well-rounded soccer experience for their membership. Most importantly, our youth & adult soccer affiliates benefit most by sharing their experiences and knowledge with each other.
If want to know more about Georgia Soccer go to http://www.georgiasoccer.org/default.aspx
Download Podcast here:
Park Lane Cafe
Did you ever have one of those days when a nice surprise catches you off guard? Well, this past Sunday, while driving around exploring the Addo Elephant National Park area, Lou and I stumbled upon the Zuurberg section of the park. We stopped, had a bite to eat, then set out for what we thought would be a quick jaunt around the vicinity. We ended up on a four hour hike which included river crossings, beautiful scenery, and game sightings (some of which were too close for comfort!). The nice surprise came, however, toward the end of the hike when Lou's cell phone signaled that he had a new text message. The message was from our son, Jeff (the "retired barista" Jeff) informing us that he had a few weeks to kill and wanted to come visit us in South Africa! This adds "spontaneous" to my list of adjectives to describe Jeff. So, that was Sunday evening....we picked Jeff up at the airport here in PE on Wednesday evening. Jeff's first order of business, after getting settled in at our house, was to join me Thursday morning for the coffee crawl (despite feeling somewhat jet-lagged after a 30 hour trip...you're the man, Jeff!).
This week's crawl took us to Park Lane Cafe at 7 Park Lane in Central. I decided to visit this shop because Heather, a PE Coffee Crawl blog reader, suggested it in her comment on Foong's (see comments for April 7 crawl). I figured Heather must be Park Lane's owner, barista, or a staff member, but it turns out she is just a real fan of the cafe. That's good news for Grant Houzet. Obviously, Grant has a loyal fan base after owning the shop for only five months. He and finacee, Edelweiss van Rensburg, who happens to be Park Lane's chief cook, have done a major renovation of what was previously a curry house. The place is now a tastefully decorated, three room cafe. One of the rooms is the perfect setting for small conferences. I just love the high back leather chairs and very cool coffee pics adorning the walls. Edelweiss tells me that Park Lane has become a favorite of the staff of nearby St. George's Hospital as well as some of the local book clubs.
This week's crawlers, Beth Vieira, Fran and Keith de Beer, Nomusa Nkomo, my son, Jeff, and I enjoyed the Park Lane Cafe so much on Thursday that we all ordered a second round. Our waitress, Mantho, served us a secret Park Lane Blend coffee, the recipe of which is known only to Grant. He did, however, divulge that the blend includes 40% of an Ethiopian coffee. I must say, Grant, that whatever your secret is, you nailed it!!! Joining us also this week via text messages was June Nash. She was enjoying a cappuccino in Cape Town at the same time. She made sure to mention to us that the weather there was beautiful knowing that it was probably raining in PE. Of course it was, June...thanks for rubbing it in!
With this being Jeff's first visit to the African continent, the conversation around the table was a crash course in South African culture...languages, rugby, and biltong. After learning some inappropriate words in Afrikaans, Jeff tried to learn some words in Xhosa. The Xhosa clicks still elude me, but after a quick lesson form the Park Lane staff, Jeff was catching on to it. Nomusa also gave him a lesson in her native Zimbabwean language as well. Jeff''s already somewhat familiar with rugby so that leaves biltong...what?!?
For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term, biltong is like jerky in the U.S. (btw, Jeff tried some kudu biltong today-Saturday the 21st, and loved it!) At the table Jeff and I also toasted to my grandson/Jeff's nephew, Alexander, who turned two years old on Thursday. Happy Birthday, Alexander!!!!!!!
The "No Food On The Crawl" rule was broken again on Thursday. Jeff ordered an egg on toast breakfast. Well, I couldn't have him eating all alone, so I ordered a raisin / coconut muffin. What a mother will do for her son! The muffin was excellent... my compliments to the chef. To top off the morning, Jeff and I stopped by Sweet Somethings, a cupcakery that shares the same address with Park Lane Cafe. We bought one each of Thursday's cupcake specials. It's a good thing that Jeff and I went to the gym later in the day.
Lots of thank you's this week-
*Thank you to Park Lane's hospitable owner, Grant, and his fiancee, Edelweiss... you have a great coffee shop! Best wishes on your new business venture.
*Thank you to Heather for suggesting Park Lane to me
*Thank you to this week's crawlers for making my son feel so welcome
*Thank you to my blog readers for being patient.....
Until next week,
Ellen
This week's crawl took us to Park Lane Cafe at 7 Park Lane in Central. I decided to visit this shop because Heather, a PE Coffee Crawl blog reader, suggested it in her comment on Foong's (see comments for April 7 crawl). I figured Heather must be Park Lane's owner, barista, or a staff member, but it turns out she is just a real fan of the cafe. That's good news for Grant Houzet. Obviously, Grant has a loyal fan base after owning the shop for only five months. He and finacee, Edelweiss van Rensburg, who happens to be Park Lane's chief cook, have done a major renovation of what was previously a curry house. The place is now a tastefully decorated, three room cafe. One of the rooms is the perfect setting for small conferences. I just love the high back leather chairs and very cool coffee pics adorning the walls. Edelweiss tells me that Park Lane has become a favorite of the staff of nearby St. George's Hospital as well as some of the local book clubs.
This week's crawlers, Beth Vieira, Fran and Keith de Beer, Nomusa Nkomo, my son, Jeff, and I enjoyed the Park Lane Cafe so much on Thursday that we all ordered a second round. Our waitress, Mantho, served us a secret Park Lane Blend coffee, the recipe of which is known only to Grant. He did, however, divulge that the blend includes 40% of an Ethiopian coffee. I must say, Grant, that whatever your secret is, you nailed it!!! Joining us also this week via text messages was June Nash. She was enjoying a cappuccino in Cape Town at the same time. She made sure to mention to us that the weather there was beautiful knowing that it was probably raining in PE. Of course it was, June...thanks for rubbing it in!
With this being Jeff's first visit to the African continent, the conversation around the table was a crash course in South African culture...languages, rugby, and biltong. After learning some inappropriate words in Afrikaans, Jeff tried to learn some words in Xhosa. The Xhosa clicks still elude me, but after a quick lesson form the Park Lane staff, Jeff was catching on to it. Nomusa also gave him a lesson in her native Zimbabwean language as well. Jeff''s already somewhat familiar with rugby so that leaves biltong...what?!?
For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term, biltong is like jerky in the U.S. (btw, Jeff tried some kudu biltong today-Saturday the 21st, and loved it!) At the table Jeff and I also toasted to my grandson/Jeff's nephew, Alexander, who turned two years old on Thursday. Happy Birthday, Alexander!!!!!!!
The "No Food On The Crawl" rule was broken again on Thursday. Jeff ordered an egg on toast breakfast. Well, I couldn't have him eating all alone, so I ordered a raisin / coconut muffin. What a mother will do for her son! The muffin was excellent... my compliments to the chef. To top off the morning, Jeff and I stopped by Sweet Somethings, a cupcakery that shares the same address with Park Lane Cafe. We bought one each of Thursday's cupcake specials. It's a good thing that Jeff and I went to the gym later in the day.
Lots of thank you's this week-
*Thank you to Park Lane's hospitable owner, Grant, and his fiancee, Edelweiss... you have a great coffee shop! Best wishes on your new business venture.
*Thank you to Heather for suggesting Park Lane to me
*Thank you to this week's crawlers for making my son feel so welcome
*Thank you to my blog readers for being patient.....
Until next week,
Ellen
Meet the Owner/Barista and the Chef Grant Houzet and Edelweiss van Rensburg |
Our waitress Mantho |
Meet my Son Jeff |
This Week's Crawlers Keith, Fran, Beth, Jeff, Ellen, Nomusa |
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