one Loneliness Group Intervention By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Sat, 26 Oct 2024 01:19:27 +0000 The post Loneliness Group Intervention was curated by information for practice. Full Article Clinical Trials
one The Effects of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) in Older Lonely Individuals By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Mon, 28 Oct 2024 01:24:18 +0000 The post The Effects of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) in Older Lonely Individuals was curated by information for practice. Full Article Clinical Trials
one Testing a Nature-based Social Intevention on Loneliness: the RECETAS-PRG Trial By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 01:20:15 +0000 The post Testing a Nature-based Social Intevention on Loneliness: the RECETAS-PRG Trial was curated by information for practice. Full Article Clinical Trials
one Modifiers and Mechanisms of Loneliness Interventions By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 01:21:07 +0000 The post Modifiers and Mechanisms of Loneliness Interventions was curated by information for practice. Full Article Clinical Trials
one Reduce Loneliness in Care Partners of Persons With AD/ADRD By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 02:23:31 +0000 The post Reduce Loneliness in Care Partners of Persons With AD/ADRD was curated by information for practice. Full Article Clinical Trials
one A Novel Conditioning Approach to Counter Loneliness in Adults By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:22:46 +0000 The post A Novel Conditioning Approach to Counter Loneliness in Adults was curated by information for practice. Full Article Clinical Trials
one The FOCX PIONEER Wallet Could Be the Sleekest Compact Wallet Out By design-milk.com Published On :: Wed, 04 Sep 2024 13:00:58 +0000 Looking for a high-end, compact wallet with modern tech features? The minimalist FOCX PIONEER wallet could be the new wallet for you. Full Article Main Style + Fashion FOCX kickstarter wallet wallets
one Analysis of Ohio Advanced Practice Registered Nurses’ Rate of Prescribing Naltrexone for Patients With Alcohol Use Disorder Since Elimination of the X-Waiver By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 21:29:54 +0000 Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association, Ahead of Print. Background:Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is common and deadly. Naltrexone is a treatment for AUD. Previous research examined factors that predict Ohio Advanced Practice Registered Nurses’ (APRNs) utilization of naltrexone to treat AUD. Inclusion criteria included APRNs’ endorsing receipt of the X-waiver, a designation indicating providers’ […] The post Analysis of Ohio Advanced Practice Registered Nurses’ Rate of Prescribing Naltrexone for Patients With Alcohol Use Disorder Since Elimination of the X-Waiver was curated by information for practice. Full Article Journal Article Abstracts
one Military Widows’ Experiences of Social Isolation, Loneliness and Unmet Social Needs By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 01:28:50 +0000 Volume 29, Issue 8, September 2024, Page 1047-1067. Read the full article › The post Military Widows’ Experiences of Social Isolation, Loneliness and Unmet Social Needs was curated by information for practice. Full Article Journal Article Abstracts
one One Size Does Not Fit All: Unraveling Item Response Process Heterogeneity Using the Mixture Dominance-Unfolding Model (MixDUM) By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 04:09:24 +0000 Organizational Research Methods, Ahead of Print. When modeling responses to items measuring non-cognitive constructs that require introspection (e.g., personality, attitude), most studies have assumed that respondents follow the same item response process—either a dominance or an unfolding one. Nevertheless, the results are not equivocal, as some preliminary evidence suggests that some people use an unfolding […] The post One Size Does Not Fit All: Unraveling Item Response Process Heterogeneity Using the Mixture Dominance-Unfolding Model (MixDUM) was curated by information for practice. Full Article Journal Article Abstracts
one Measurement invariance of the short form CES-D among old adults living alone in China By ifp.nyu.edu Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 04:44:02 +0000 Volume 17, Issue 1, April 2024, Page 21-34. Read the full article › The post Measurement invariance of the short form CES-D among old adults living alone in China was curated by information for practice. Full Article Journal Article Abstracts
one Trombone Choir – Brittany Lasch, director By indianapublicmedia.org Published On :: 14 Nov 2024 01:00:00 GMT Auer Hall, Simon Music Center Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 8 – 9pm Brittany Lasch is assistant professor of music in trombone at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. She is also on faculty at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute and serves as principal trombone of the Detroit Opera Orchestra. Full Article 2024/11/13 (Wed)
one IUJSOM Bass Trombone Studio Recital – Students of Denson Paul Pollard By indianapublicmedia.org Published On :: 13 Nov 2024 01:00:00 GMT Auer Hall, Simon Music Center Tuesday, November 12, 2024, 8 – 9:30pm More info: events.iu.edu… Full Article 2024/11/12 (Tue)
one IUJSOM Junior Recital – Noah Woerther, bass trombone By indianapublicmedia.org Published On :: 12 Nov 2024 01:30:00 GMT Ford-Crawford Hall, Simon Music Center Monday, November 11, 2024, 8:30 – 9:30pm More info: events.iu.edu… Full Article 2024/11/11 (Mon)
one IUJSOM Faculty Recital – Peter Ellefson, trombone By indianapublicmedia.org Published On :: 10 Nov 2024 19:00:00 GMT Auer Hall, Simon Music Center Sunday, November 10, 2024, 2 – 3:15pm Peter Ellefson is professor of music in trombone at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where he was previously chair of the Brass Department. More info: events.iu.edu… Full Article 2024/11/10 (Sun)
one UPDATE: City Commissioners Abandon Plans to Terminate Joint Homeless Response Agreement With Multnomah County By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 15:09:00 -0800 A Portland City Council discussion that could've ended a collaborative agreement, without a backup plan in place, has been scrapped a day after the election. The move would've cost the city more than $40M. by Courtney Vaughn Update: Nov. 6- This story has been updated to note that this week's Council discussion has been canceled. A day after an election showing Portland City Commissioners Mingus Mapps and Rene Gonzalez losing their bids for mayor, a plan to revisit an intergovernmental agreement on homelessness between the city and Multnomah County has been canceled. An agenda item scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 7 to consider terminating the homeless services agreement was pulled from the agenda Wednesday afternoon, just 26 hours before it was slated to be considered by Council. The proposal, which came from Commissioners Mapps, Gonzalez, and Dan Ryan, was a divisive move that could've upended the city's collaboration with the county on the most pressing issue impacting the region. In a joint statement Wednesday, Gonzalez, Ryan and Mapps said pulling the plug on their plans "will allow space for the new City Council, Mayor, and County Commissioners to renegotiate the Homelessness Response Services Intergovernmental Agreement if they choose." "The Commissioners remain steadfast in their conviction that the City of Portland, Multnomah County, and Metro can build a better system to address homeless services and pave a better path forward," the statement reads. Three weeks ago, while presiding over a Council meeting in Mayor Ted Wheeler’s absence, Commissioner Gonzalez directed the city attorney to draft up a contract termination ordinance that would dissolve the intergovernmental agreement (IGA) dictating homelessness response and collaboration. He got a nod of support from Mapps and Ryan. The trio then introduced a proposal to formally end the contract between the governing agencies, citing “insufficient progress” to meet key milestones and deadlines. A contract termination proposal on Thursday’s agenda suggests the current arrangement lacks the right framework and governance structures to tackle the homelessness crisis “with the urgency, collaboration, and effectiveness required.” Gonzalez, Ryan, and Mapps pitched the proposal as an orderly wind-down to make way for an improved agreement. But one day after an election showing Gonzalez and Mapps losing their bids for mayor, the proposal was abandoned. The proposal drew swift backlash from the mayor and Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pederson. Following Portland’s Oct. 16 Council meeting, Vega Pederson issued a statement admonishing Gonzalez, Ryan, and Mapps. The majority of City Council says they don't want to work with the County to end homelessness. Its clear these officials - candidates desperately vying for your vote this month - have their eyes on their own future and not our collective one. Disappointing. pic.twitter.com/sZwkoQBiF2 — Jessica Vega Pederson (@jvegapederson) October 17, 2024 Last Friday, when the item officially appeared on a Council agenda, she spoke out again. “The City Council deciding to end this agreement after just a few months is a short-sighted decision that will harm our community’s future,” Vega Pederson wrote November 1 in a lengthy explanatory statement released by the county. “We don’t need more talking–this community cannot afford it. That will not lead to better outcomes or fewer people on the street, and I do not believe it is a good use of taxpayer resources when we have a collaborative plan we are already putting into action. No single government can [solve] this issue alone. The County is taking action on homelessness every day and that work is best when we work in partnership.” Vega Pederson previously called the move a “political stunt” by Gonzalez, Ryan, and Mapps just before the election. If the Council voted to end the contract, it wouldn't take effect for 90 days, when a new City Council is in place. Margaux Weeke, communications director for Commissioner Ryan, says the commissioner isn't opposed to working with the county under a modified arrangement, but it needs to be substantially different. “Dan Ryan knows the players. He knows the game," Weeke says. "And he wants to expand the amount of seats at the table and pave a better path forward for homeless services." The current IGA, which was just renewed in July, essentially lays out a division of labor, funding, and responsibilities between the city and the county with regard to homeless services and shelters. It also identifies goals and milestones for reducing the number of unsheltered people in the county. Vega Pederson said the county now spends all of its homeless services funds, and more, while providing clear data and public dashboards. She also noted the homelessness response plan lays out 120 action items, each assigned to a responsible party. The county has issued data on spending and progress summaries. If city estimates are accurate, ending the agreement would place a significant financial burden on the city as it heads into a tight fiscal year. Portland and Multnomah County currently share financial responsibility for the region’s homelessness response. The city would no longer have to send $32 million in general fund money to Multnomah County, but it would take on more than $40 million in costs to permanently manage the Safe Rest Villages and Temporary Alternative Shelter Sites. The roughly $40 million expense doesn’t include costs for wraparound services that the county currently provides at the shelter sites. The city doesn’t know how much it would cost to provide those services, and there is no alternative plan in place for maintaining services and shelter beds if the contract goes away. Welcome Home Coalition, a nonprofit focused on affordable housing and universal access to housing, warned the termination proposal was dangerous. “They are presenting this action without a clearly articulated new plan of how the city will serve people experiencing homelessness,” an email sent from the coalition reads. “Backing out of the Intergovernmental Agreement without an understanding of how this would impact service provision will have rippling consequences that will no doubt result in more harm to those in the most need of services.” In a joint letter released last week, the three commissioners explained their decision to introduce the agenda item, saying the city needs to see a different way of managing services. “As Portland City Commissioners with years of experience with the Joint Office of Homeless Services, we are resolute that we can no longer afford to maintain the status quo,” the joint letter states. “We are also united in our repeated calls for accountability, efficiency, and improved governance to enhance our homeless services. …And despite our repeated requests for clear and useful data, operational alignment for short-term shelters, and a shared vision for the homeless services system, we have faced significant challenges in implementing these necessary changes.” Ending the IGA would further deteriorate an already strained relationship between the city and county. Mayor Wheeler previously said the working relationship between both governments had improved over the past year, but recent IGA renewals have been met with reluctance from Mapps, Ryan, and Gonzalez. Full Article News homelessness Politics
one City Council Urged to Postpone Vote on Controversial Downtown Service District Contract By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:00:00 -0800 Citing ethical issues and potential conflicts of interest, advocates want the city to halt a no-bid contract renewal that would funnel millions to the Portland Metro Chamber. by Courtney Vaughn For years, Portland has collected fees from property owners in enhanced service districts to pay for added cleaning and security services in designated areas. The districts are typically concentrated around businesses, offering private security, extra policing, janitorial services, and more recently, removal of homeless camps. Some stakeholders say the city has yet to confront the unique and outsized role of Portland’s most powerful business lobbying group at one enhanced service district (ESD) in particular—Downtown Portland Clean & Safe. This week, Portland City Council is scheduled to vote on a 116-acre expansion of the Downtown Portland Clean & Safe district, as well as a fee hike and a five-year management contract renewal for the district. Ahead of Wednesday’s vote, more than 100 Portlanders and over a dozen community groups are urging City Council to postpone the contract renewal that would funnel a hefty portion of a $58 million, no-bid contract to the Portland Metro Chamber. An open letter to city commissioners outlines a number of transparency and ethics issues surrounding the Clean & Safe contract, asking the Council vote to be tabled until a new Council is sworn in this January. Currently, the Downtown Portland Clean & Safe district is overseen by an organization of the same name, whose management has significant overlap with the executive leadership of the Portland Metro Chamber (formerly the Portland Business Alliance). A large chunk of funding for the Metro Chamber’s leadership staff comes from a lucrative contract to oversee the Downtown Portland Clean & Safe ESD. That means a private group that lobbies the city on behalf of private business interests is being paid millions in public money to oversee a service district that includes a large swath of its own dues-paying members. The downtown district also includes several government agencies and properties that pay into the ESD—including Portland City Hall. Moreover, community groups say the contract and service delivery model are convoluted at best, with next to no oversight from the city. The letter’s signatories say the petition for district expansion, and the accompanying contract renewal “raises serious concerns related to affordability, efficient use of public resources, accountability, and transparency.” “The City contracts with Clean & Safe, which subcontracts with other organizations to carry out cleaning and safety services. Yet the executive director of Clean & Safe is simultaneously an employee of the Portland Business Alliance, which is also a subcontractor of Clean & Safe,” the open letter to Council states. “Unclear lines of oversight make it difficult for ratepayers or the public to hold anyone accountable. Even more concerning, the contract allocates significant overhead to the Portland Business Alliance, the city’s most active lobbying organization.” It's a contract that mystifies everyone from accountants, to ratepayers, and even auditors. A 2020 city audit of Portland's ESDs found "little oversight" of the privately funded public service districts and noted "complicated governance and management systems" that obfuscate public access to basic information such as budgets and subcontracts. Not long after the city audit, a local business executive spoke out about the questionable business arrangement baked into the Clean & Safe contract. When she did, she was allegedly threatened with a lawsuit from the Portland Business Alliance. Since then, other local government watchdogs have taken note, but gotten little traction with city leadership. “I think this council has an ethical responsibility to answer all these questions for the voters, or wait,” Diane Goodwin, a member of local political advocacy group Portland For All, says. Cleaning services praised; expenses questioned It's unclear what Clean & Safe's latest budget includes. A 2021 budget calculated total expenses at around $5 million, including about $858,000 in salaries. Exactly what portion of staff is covered in those salary expenses is murky. Both the Metro Chamber and Downtown Clean & Safe share staff. In fact, the Chamber's CEO and president, Andrew Hoan, is also the CEO and president of Downtown Clean & Safe. The 2021 budget shows $243,000 in "shared administration" salary costs. Tax documents from 2022 show Hoan drew a $333,000 salary from the Chamber that year. The two organizations also share an executive assistant and an advocacy coordinator. Clean & Safe's operations director and executive director are also listed as part of the Chamber's staff. The Clean & Safe executive director drew a $154,000 salary from the Chamber that same year. Businesses and commercial property owners in the district overwhelmingly support the expansion, saying the frequent cleaning and beefed up security have improved downtown Portland and made it safer for workers and visitors. “We want our associates to feel safe coming into work,” Kelly Mullen, president of Portland’s Safeway and Albertsons division, told the Council on October 31 during its initial consideration of the contract and ESD expansion. Mullen said recently, the Safeway location at 10th and Jefferson has had to reduce store hours and close off an entrance, to improve safety at the grocery store. “We want to be part of the solution and really make our community thrive,” Mullen said. The council also heard from the principal of a private school advocating for the district expansion so her students and staff could receive extra security and clean-up around the campus. One element of Downtown Clean & Safe that’s lauded by nearly every district member, even critics, is the Clean Start program, run by Central City Concern. The program offers janitorial jobs cleaning city streets to people transitioning out of homelessness. For many, it offers a fresh start and a path toward self-sufficiency. City staff and Clean & Safe reps say the expanded district and new proposed rate structures will offer more transparency, reasonable fee calculations, inflation adjustments, and a cap on rates for condo owners. Several residential ratepayers say the whole Clean & Safe arrangement leaves them with more questions than services received. John Pumphrey owns a condominium in the downtown district. He and other condo owners say the services they pay for are often duplicative of private security and janitorial services they already pay for through their homeowners association. They also say the services serve mainly to benefit businesses, not residents. “I’m a condo owner in downtown Portland and our building pays $24,000 a year to Clean & Safe and for this, [we] receive next to nothing,” Pumphrey told the Council, asking them to vote against the contract renewal. “What’s really irritating to some of us about Clean & Safe is that 50 percent of what we contribute … is skimmed off the top by the Portland Metro Chamber.” Pumphrey isn’t the only one critical of the unusually high compensation provided to Portland Metro Chamber staff from the Downtown Clean & Safe contract. The open letter to City Council also makes mention of the compensation arrangement, asserting the Clean & Safe contract “pays nearly 50 percent of Business Alliance executive salaries in addition to up to 30% in administrative overhead.” “Many of these executives appear in City lobbying records and in state filings for PACs that advocate for private business interests, often directly in conflict with the will of the voting public,” the letter reads. “It is inappropriate to use public resources to offset the cost of business lobbying.” Devin Reynolds, the city's ESD coordinator, said the arrangement between the Metro Chamber and Dowtown Clean & Safe isn't an anomaly. “Having an ESD contract with a third party to fulfill some, or all their service areas is indeed common across business improvement districts, business improvement areas, and enhanced services districts,” Reynolds told the Mercury earlier this year. Commonplace or not, some downtown ESD ratepayers say they’ve been cut off from any meaningful participation in their district’s oversight or decisions. Anita Davidson, a condo owner in the downtown district, told the Mercury that for years, condo owners have had no representation in district leadership, and there is little to no transparency around operational decisions. “As residential people, we don’t feel we belong there. We don't have a vote in who runs Clean & Safe,” she said. “We can’t even join Portland Metro Chamber, because it's for businesses. I’d like to see Clean & Safe become a public nonprofit. That would solve a lot of things. I still have to make a public records request [just] to see their budget.” In an effort to appease homeowners, the new contract includes a fee cap on residential units. It’s a nice accommodation, but homeowners in the industry-dominated district say what they really want is a way to opt out. There currently is no mechanism to do that, and the process for annexing additional property into an ESD doesn’t require a vote from affected property owners. It’s left up to City Council to approve. Current standards only require the city to notify affected property owners by mail and hold public hearings where they can chime in. “Unfortunately for ratepayers, the city has not yet, after 30 years, adopted standards for formation, renewal, or expansion of the ESDs,” Davidson told Council. “At some point, we hope and expect that this will happen, although listening tonight, it sounds like it's an all-in-one thing.” Other district members say they disagree with their tax revenue being used to initiate homeless sweeps, and pay for increased police presence. That’s especially true in the case of Sisters of the Road, a homeless services nonprofit and member of the Downtown Portland Clean & Safe district. “From 2016-2020, unhoused residents accounted for over half of arrests made in Portland. Their charges were primarily nonviolent, survival crimes. That same data showed that people are 20 times more likely to experience criminalization in Downtown Clean & Safe versus other areas of the city,” Lauren Armony, program director at Sisters of the Road, told the city in written testimony earlier this year. “Hyper-surveillance has not made our neighborhood any healthier or safer, but further entrenched vulnerable individuals in the cycle of incarceration and poverty.” Organizations like Sisters of the Road say they're irked that the ESD funnels its members’ taxes into the Metro Chamber, which has powerful influence over city politics and often advocates against the city’s vulnerable, unhoused residents–the same population Sisters of the Road is trying to help. The Clean & Safe contract and district expansion are currently scheduled for a second reading and vote by Portland City Council on Wednesday. Full Article News Politics
one Opinion: Remembering James Earl Jones By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 14 Sep 2024 07:52:44 -0400 NPR's Scott Simon remembers actor James Earl Jones, whose deep, resonant voice animated some of cinema's most iconic characters. Full Article
one Trópico Macbeth: An Epic Quest for Money and Power By feeds.playshakespeare.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Sep 2024 16:24:56 +0000 Attending a production of Macbeth may require one to have mental preparation—to face multiple murders with dark schemes guided... Full Article Theatre Reviews
one Nature Has Done Her Part By beta.prx.org Published On :: Thu, 06 Feb 2020 21:35:50 -0000 In New England, the Waterman name is like mountain royalty. But beyond a tight circle of outdoors-people, they're not a household name. Today, we tell the story of one of the most influential voices in American wilderness philosophy, Laura Waterman, and how she has changed following the death of her husband. Full Article
one How One Woman’s Fight to Save Her Family Helped Lead to a Mass Exoneration By www.newyorker.com Published On :: Mon, 21 May 2018 11:04 -0500 Lect. Joshua Tepfer explains his work helping wrongfully arrested people Full Article
one Ed Sheeran brings his one man band to U.S. Bank Stadium By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Fri, 19 Oct 2018 09:51:18 -0500 Ed Sheeran will be performing Saturday night at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. Sheeran is a one-man band, creating his music using only his voice, guitar and loop machines. Full Article
one Mac Miller died from overdose involving fentanyl, coroner finds By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Mon, 05 Nov 2018 14:44:43 -0600 The Los Angeles medical examiner said cocaine and ethanol were also present at the time of death. Full Article
one Ensemble 'gives a voice' to Nazi death camp prisoners through unearthed music By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Sun, 02 Dec 2018 10:30:00 -0600 While conducting research at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, a music theory professor discovered manuscripts of music that haven't been heard since World War II. Full Article
one Glen Campbell's "Wichita Lineman" reached number one 50 years ago By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Fri, 28 Dec 2018 09:04:02 -0600 Glen Campbell's "Wichita Lineman" reached number one on the Billboard Country chart 50 years ago today. Jimmy Webb, who wrote the song, told Songfacts that the inspiration was an image he witnessed while driving one day. Full Article
one Connie Evingson performs tonight at Crooners Lounge By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Mon, 31 Dec 2018 09:07:53 -0600 Hibbing native Connie Evingson will be performing tonight at Crooners Lounge in Fridley. That's one of your many musical options this New Year's Eve. Full Article
one Twin Cities hip-hop pioneers I.R.M Crew to reunite By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Fri, 04 Jan 2019 10:39:42 -0600 The I-R-M Crew -- the first Twin Cities hip-hop group to release an album in the mid-1980s -- reunites for a performance Friday night at the 7th Street Entry in Minneapolis. Full Article
one Nat King Cole remains 'one of the great gifts of nature' By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Sun, 17 Mar 2019 09:50:00 -0500 Born 100 years ago today, Nat King Cole topped the charts year after year, sold more than 50 million records, pushed jazz piano in a new direction and paved the way for later generations of performers. Full Article
one Rolling Stones postpone tour as Jagger receives medical treatment By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Sat, 30 Mar 2019 15:10:00 -0500 The Rolling Stones are postponing their latest tour so Mick Jagger can receive medical treatment. Full Article
one Prince memoir 'The Beautiful Ones' coming out in the fall By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Mon, 22 Apr 2019 05:38:02 -0500 "'The Beautiful Ones' is the deeply personal account of how Prince Rogers Nelson became the Prince we know: the real-time story of a kid absorbing the world around him and creating a persona, an artistic vision, and a life, before the hits and the fame that would come to define him," Random House announced. Full Article
one Alone together: Robyn's 'Dancing On My Own' opens the corners of community By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Mon, 10 Jun 2019 14:40:24 -0500 The magic of Robyn's millennial anthem is its bait and switch: It's a fun, energetic dance song about being lonely and heartbroken. And yet, the minute you hear it, you instantly feel less alone. Full Article
one It's been 50 years since Rolling Stones founder Brian Jones died By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Wed, 03 Jul 2019 10:21:24 -0500 July 3, 2019 is the 50th anniversary of the day that Brian Jones was pronounced dead. Jones founded the Rolling Stones, gave them their name and was their first business manager. Full Article
one Brazilian bossa nova pioneer Joao Gilberto dies at 88 By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Sat, 06 Jul 2019 17:35:00 -0500 Joao Gilberto, a Brazilian singer, guitarist and songwriter considered one of the fathers of the bossa nova genre that gained global popularity in the 1960s and became an iconic sound of the South American nation, died Saturday, his son said. He was 88. Full Article
one Something Wild: Where Have All the Birds Gone? By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Fri, 20 Nov 2020 16:00:33 +0000 As we hunker down for the winter weather, we’re frequently too preoccupied with what is in our front yards that we tend not to notice what isn’t there. And short of finding a postcard in your mailbox from a warm exotic location, signed by your friendly neighborhood phoebe, you probably haven’t thought much about the birds that flitted through your yard just months ago. We love to admire the birds when they’re here with us, but we’ve accepted that school-age aphorism that birds fly south for the winter. As if there was some avian Sandals resort, at which birds congregate, sipping margaritas and playing beach volleyball until it’s time to come home. But these birds are not on vacation. New Hampshire is too cold and offers too little food, so most have moved to more hospitable places in order to survive. However, migration is not one-size-fits-all. Different species practice different forms of migration. Ospreys are large raptors that feed almost exclusively on fish. Since the ice that Full Article
one Something Wild: One Year Later By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Fri, 12 Mar 2021 11:15:00 +0000 About this time one year ago life in New Hampshire and across the world changed drastically. In this week's Something Wild, we re-visit musings from Dave Anderson in how to find solace in nature-- even during the most stressful of times. Full Article
one Why Trump’s immigration rhetoric appeals to one first-time Latino voter in Minnesota By www.mprnews.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 10:00:00 +0000 President-elect Donald Trump made notable inroads with Latino voters this year, particularly among young men. One voter’s family history provides a window into Trump’s appeal. Full Article
one Infowars auction could determine whether Alex Jones is kicked off its platforms By www.mprnews.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:44:34 +0000 It's auction day for Alex Jones' Infowars. The Infowars studio and most other assets of the conspiracy theorist's company are expected to be sold off Wednesday. Full Article
one Rebroadcast: What's The Story Behind New Hampshire's Stone Walls? By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Sun, 20 Jun 2021 12:56:00 -0400 Robert Frost famously said “good fences make good neighbors” and if you’re out for a walk in the woods in New Hampshire, you will likely find a stone wall. We talk with Kevin Gardner, a master stone builder and author of several books on the subject, about the on-going appeal of stone walls and how to build them. He explains the philosophy behind the craft of placing stone and examines the mythology of the stone wall and its place in the New England imagination. Full Article
one Lebanon Landfill's 11-Family Compost Pilot Diverts One Ton Of Food Scraps By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Fri, 17 Jul 2020 18:57:59 +0000 Earlier this year, the city of Lebanon gave a small group of residents the chance to bring not their trash and recyclables to the local landfill, but their compost too. It makes Lebanon one of a few cities in the state helping residents reduce food waste, which is a major contributor to climate change. Full Article
one Woman exonerated after spending over 15 years in prison worried God wasn't with her By www.christianpost.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 17:35:00 -0500 An Ohio woman who was wrongfully charged and convicted in 1994 of physical and sexual abuse against children in a Head Start program and then spent more than 15 years in prison before she was exonerated said she sometimes felt God wasn't with her as she waited for her redemption. Full Article
one Stupor: Russia's new counter-drone device for Ukrainian drones By english.pravda.ru Published On :: Mon, 25 Jul 2022 22:29:00 +0300 Reconnaissance and strike-reconnaissance unmanned aerial vehicles pose one of the biggest problems for fighters in the 21st century is. There were more than 12 million of them on the planet in 2020. Drones can be dangerous in civilian life as well. They can be used for massive attacks on government facilities and infrastructure. Traditional air defense systems are unable to handle this challenge. A large number of flying mechanisms may overload computers of any air defense system, making it easier for attack drones to break through to the target. Full Article Science
one Can anyone blow up your phone, laptop or any other device? By english.pravda.ru Published On :: Thu, 19 Sep 2024 14:38:00 +0300 About 4,500 people have been injured as a result of explosions of communication devices that took place in Lebanon. It was Hezbollah members' pager devices that started blowing up first on September 17. The following day, explosions continued, although it was not just pagers, but walkie-talkies, laptops, radios, smartphones, fingerprinting devices and solar-powered units that started exploding. Israel was not the first state to have used remote detonation of communication devices. In fact, a description of such a technology can be found in Pentagon documents from 50 years ago. Israel previously used remotely detonated communication devices in its military operations. For example, one of the leaders of Hamas movement, Yahya Ayyash, received a phone with an explosive planted in it. The devices that exploded in Lebanon were from a new batch These and other cases have one thing in common: the devices that exploded in Lebanon on September 17 and 18 had explosives installed in them in advance. Full Article Science
one El Departamento de Seguros de Texas anuncia la nueva división de Relaciones Externas y al nuevo Comisionado Adjunto By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Fri, 9 Sep 2022 00:00:00 CDT El Departamento de Seguros de Texas (TDI, por su nombre y siglas en inglés) anunció a Dan Paschal como el Comisionado Adjunto de la recién creada división de Relaciones Externas. Esta división incluirá Comunicaciones (actualmente Asuntos Públicos) y Relaciones Gubernamentales (actualmente Asuntos de la Agencia). Full Article
one Exjugador de la NFL se declara culpable por reclamaciones médicas fraudulentas de más de $29,000 By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 00:00:00 CDT El caso fue dirigido por los investigadores del Departamento de Seguros de Texas (TDI por su nombre y siglas en inglés) y los fiscales trabajando con la Oficina del Fiscal del condado Harris. Full Article
one Exjugador de la NFL acusado por reclamaciones médicas fraudulentas By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Tue, 21 Feb 2023 00:00:00 CST El exjugador de la NFL Corey Bradford se declaró culpable por presentar reclamaciones fraudulentas para reembolso de salud después de una investigación realizada por la Unidad de Fraude del Departamento de Seguros de Texas (TDI por su nombre y siglas en inglés). Full Article
one Exjugador de la NFL sentenciado por reclamaciones médicas fraudulentas de más de $33,000 By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Wed, 26 Apr 2023 00:00:00 CDT James Adkisson, el exjugador de la NFL se declaró culpable por presentar reclamaciones fraudulentas de más de $33,000 para reembolso de salud después de una investigación realizada por la Unidad de Fraude del Departamento de Seguros de Texas (Texas Department of Insurance, TDI, por su nombre y siglas en inglés). Full Article
one DWC's new deputy commissioner for Compliance and Investigations By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Fri, 3 Nov 2023 00:00:00 CDT Texas Workers' Compensation Commissioner Jeff Nelson has announced the appointment of Dan LaBruyere as DWC's new Deputy Commissioner for Compliance and Investigations, which includes Audits and Investigations, Enforcement, the Fraud Unit, and the Fraud Prosecution Unit. Full Article
one DWC's New Deputy Commissioner for Operations and External Relations By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Thu, 14 Dec 2023 00:00:00 CST Texas Workers' Compensation Commissioner Jeff Nelson has announced the appointment of Matthew Posey as DWC's new Deputy Commissioner of Operations and External Relations. Full Article
one Consejos para las reclamaciones al seguro por los incendios forestales de Texas By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Mon, 4 Mar 2024 00:05:00 CST Los residentes cuyas propiedades hayan sufrido daños por los incendios forestales de Texas deben llamar a su compañía de seguros para presentar una reclamación lo antes posible. Full Article
one Consejos de reclamaciones de seguros para los Texanos con daños por inundación By www.tdi.texas.gov Published On :: Tue, 7 May 2024 00:00:00 CDT El Departamento de Seguros de Texas (Texas Department of Insurance, TDI, por su nombre y siglas en inglés) les recuerda a las víctimas de las inundaciones que deben documentar los daños y presentar las reclamaciones al seguro de inmediato. Full Article