Sunday, March 15, 2015

Green with envy? Dublin celebrates St. Patrick's Day early



One after another the children ran to Chelle Konsts SUV, their outstretched hands signalingthey wanted more.

The mother of two young children, Konst was prepared.

She was among the first to claim a spot on Saturday morning along Frantz Road to watch theGreenest, Grandest Parade, the highlight of Dublins St. Patricks Day festivities.

In the back seat of her car was a treasure chest of green, an Irish dress-up box 10 years inthe making. Her children and five other youngsters couldnt get enough.

For 20 minutes, Konst, 38, of the West Side, giggled as she pulled out a seemingly endlesssupply of hats, oversized glasses, socks, necklaces, buttons, earrings and even green eye shadowand lipstick.

The glasses are supposed to be big, she told her 6-year-old son, Kyle, as he struggled tokeep them from falling off.

The loot, neatly organized in a large green tub marked "St. Patricks Day," included knithats with pompoms her mother made for this year.

I adore the parade. This is our 10th year, Konst said.

Im not Irish, but I try to be. Its our favorite holiday. I make green eggs and ham on theactual day, and we dye the milk green.

Rain poured down in the early morning hours but, with the luck of the Irish, stopped at11 a.m. as the parade kicked off with thousands of green-clad spectators lining the streets.

Brent Moffitt, 36, of Dublin, also was serious about his parade attire, turning many headswith his mid-70s green leisure suit.

Thats awesome, one woman said as she walked by.

Moffitt said he quickly laid claim to the suit, and another in brown, after his mother foundthem among his grandfathers belongings after he died.

I wear it on St. Patricks Day and sometimes on Halloween. It converts to a pimp suit. Iwear a large hat with it, he said, adding, Im still looking for one in scarlet and gray.

Vince Morvatz of Akron made for an impressive leprechaun with a red beard, green top hat andvelvet suit.

It real, he said of his beard. Go ahead, pull it.

The fun didnt end after the bagpipes, floats, marching bands and politicians made the finalturn off S. High Street after the hourlong parade.

The Dublin AM Rotary Club brought back the Blarney Bash -- an after-parade party tradition ofthe citys St. Patrick Day celebration until 2006.

The city used to sponsor the bash but stopped to focus on the parade and summer IrishFestival.

We had been hearing that people wanted it back. There was a big void after the parade, saidSue Burness, spokeswoman for the rotary.

The party, at 6540 Kilgour Place, was packed within an hour of the parades end. It includeslive entertainment, food trucks and green beer until 11 p.m.

This is awesome, said Dusty Lombardi of Powell, who worked at her dads pizza shop inDublins historic downtown until it closed.

Dublin really knows how to do it.

@ccandisky

Source: http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2015/03/14/early-st-patricks-day-parade.html



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Saturday, March 14, 2015

Metro Vancouver temperatures could hover near 20�C on Friday



Metro Vancouvers first dose of summer-like weather could arrive on Friday the 13th if forecasts are accurate.

According to Environment Canada, temperatures in the regions inland areas will soar to a high of 20C tomorrow. Temperatures at Vancouver International Airport could hit 14C while areas closer to the city centre might reach 16C.

In contrast, the average maximum high and average daily high for the month of March is 10C and 6C, respectively.

Forecasts call for more rain beginning Saturday into Monday, remaining atabove seasonal temperatures. However, sunny and milder weather will quickly return mid-week starting on Tuesday through the official start of spring.

Vancouver International Airport

Image: Environment Canada

Abbotsford

Image: Environment Canada

Squamish

Image: Environment Canada

Whistler

Image: Environment Canada

Source: http://www.vancitybuzz.com/2015/03/metro-vancouver-temperatures-hover-near-20c-friday/



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Revisiting Terry Pratchett's Discworld taught me why I love reading



Anyone who considers themselves a Terry Pratchett fan has known his end was coming ever since he revealed his embuggerance in 2007; that didnt stop the news of his death from being desperately sad. One solace for devotees like me was the multitude of people who came forward and said they loved his Discworld. Even though Pratchett was the bestselling author of the 1990s, it still came as a pleasant surprise that he meant so much to so many.

Pratchett has been on my mind for the past six months. I loved his Discworld series as a teenager, devouring each garish, Josh Kirby-designed paperback twice a year. I had been wondering recently how Pratchett had shaped my adult tastes, how he served as the bridge between my childhood spent reading Roald Dahl and Janet and Allan Alhberg, and the books I love now.

One of Josh Kirbys cover designs

How much of my enthusiasm for the giddy intelligence of Donna Tartt and David Foster Wallace, or Nick Harkaway and Margaret Atwoods exuberant reimagining of what the fantastic can be, is traceable to my early immersion in Pratchetts world, which is famously carried on the shoulders of four elephants, stood on the back of a space turtle?

So I did what anyone suffering from a bout of literary nostalgia would do, and impulse-bought Pratchetts entire Discworld back catalogue, all 40 novels, last autumn on eBay. I have been charting my reread on my blog Pratchett Job, a site named with the best punning tribute to Terry that I could muster. It was launched to justify buying the huge box of books that now sits under my bed. But there was an element of fear to it: what if I went back to something I had truly loved and found it to be lacking?

Since October, I have been reading Pratchett almost exclusively, and I have found out that my younger self had decent taste in books. When I first picked them up in the early 90s, I was attracted by the humour, the inspired puns, the fantastical and apocalyptic nature of the books (four of Pratchetts first five Discworld novels have a world-ending threat), and the sense that I was reading something a bit adult.

It turns out I missed a lot first time around: the literary allusions, the Macbeth homage that underpins Wyrd Sisters, or his sustained attack across several novels on a ridiculous figure known as b****y Stupid Johnson (I still dont know what he had against the author of The Unfortunates). I was unaware, too, of his love of craftsmanship and his pride in a job well done not a surprise for a man who churned out two excellent Discworld books a year until only about 10 years ago.

Related: Terry Pratchett, Discworld series author, dies aged 66

The development of his writing style is similarly fascinating. His debut, The Colour of Magic, was a collection of vaguely related comic set pieces rather than a novel, but he quickly dropped the farce of early books and discovered the delight of a good plot. This gave us books such as Pyramids, Small Gods, Night Watch and The Fifth Elephant, novels that juggle thoughtful ideas with a compelling structure.

The novels also became creepier in the wake of his collaboration with Neil Gaiman on Good Omens. The threat of the evil multidimensional elves in Lords and Ladies, for example, is delightfully spinechilling. Pratchett was much darker than the cuddly, floppy-hatted gent his image suggested (as Gaiman has pointed out).

His books are fuelled by a deep-seated moral anger about the stupid things humans do: Pratchett was so furious because he was adamant we are all capable of so much more. His Watch novels deployed trolls and trans dwarves to rail against racism and social constraints, but did so by showing how we all have some degree of prejudice. By placing the tyrannical genius Havelock Vetinari, one part Steve Jobs to two parts Lex Luthor, as head of the city of Ankh-Morpork, Pratchett challenged us to embrace a dictator. And we do, because he makes the city work. Vetinari is my favourite Discworld character. I worry what this says about me.

Related: Sir Terry Pratchett obituary

As the Discworld series evolved, its fantastical aspects faded into the background, with technology replacing magic. To Pratchett, there was little difference between the two. If a piece of paper with some ink can change the world and free a wrongly accused murderer (as in the plot of The Truth, his riotous examination of the newspaper industry), how is that any different from a rabbit being pulled from a hat?

Above all, what Pratchett gave us is a 40-book love letter to reading. Stories are what the Discworld were built on, with his characters using them to explain the chaos of the world. While embracing storytelling, he also showed us its limitations. He was critical of characters who dont live in the real world, but also showed how stories help us get one step closer to understanding.

The warmth of tributes to Pratchett makes me hopeful that he has finally been taken seriously as an author. The recent spat over fantasy tropes in Kazuo Ishiguros The Buried Giant shows how snobbery towards this genre still exists. Pratchett used, and had a blast subverting, fantasy tropes, from orphaned future kings (the wonderful Carrot from the Night Watch) to cynical anti-heroes who cant help doing good (step forward Granny Weatherwax). His Discworld series forces us to think differently, whether about religion, attitudes towards gender roles, the role of law and leaders, or why we tell stories at all.

Rereading Pratchett taught me that there is a lot to gain from going back to your old favourites. His humour, warmth and constant need to challenge the reader mean he is one of the very best authors the UK has produced.

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/mar/14/revisting-terry-pratchett-discworld-taught-me-love-of-reading



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Friday 13th: The accidental superstition?



13 February 2015 Last updated at 00:05 ET By Trevor TimpsonBBC News

There are three Friday the Thirteenths this year, and if that worries us, we might have to blame a group who were the sworn enemies of all superstition.

Whatever the reason, since time immemorial many have feared Fridays and thirteens.

But why did the two fears come together to create a superstition with a life of its own, marked throughout the English-speaking world?

Not for any mystical reasons, it seems. "From the astrological point of view there is no need to be concerned about Friday 13th ," says Robert Currey of Equinox Astrology.

Dates and days of the week used to be closely related to planetary movements and phases of the moon in a system dating back to the Babylonians, he says, but that's not the case any more.

Sonia Ducie is a numerology consultant who believes strongly in the innate energy of numbers - 13 is "all to do with transformation and change" she says, and she counts Friday as the fifth day, associated with movement.

"You can see how with those two numbers together, it could be very restless," she says, but adds: "It's down to us; the energy's neutral."

Why did the combined superstition arise, then?

In 1907 a book called Friday, the Thirteenth was published, by a stock promoter called Thomas Lawson. It was the inspiration for the Friday 13th mythology which culminated in the lurid film and TV franchises starting in the 1980s.

Lawson's book is a dark fable of Wall Street whose central character ruthlessly engineers booms and busts in the market to work revenge on his enemies, leaving misery and ruin in his wake.

In it he takes advantage of the jitters which the date Friday 13th could be relied on to produce in the market traders.

"Every man on the floor and in the Street as well has his eye on it. Friday, the 13th, would break the best bull market ever under way," one character says.

So in 1907 fear of that date was already an established superstition. A quarter century before, it was not.

The Thirteen Club, a gathering of jolly gents determined to defy all superstitions, first met on 13 September 1881 (a Wednesday) though it was formally organised on Friday, 13 January 1882.

They met on the 13th of the month, sat 13 to a table, broke mirrors and spilled salt with exuberance and walked in to dinner under crossed ladders. The club's annual reports carefully noted how many of its members had died, and how many of these passed away within a year of attending a club dinner.

It was founded by Captain William Fowler - of whom it was said that everyone associated him with "good fellowship, a big heart, and simple, unostentatious charity" - at his Knickerbocker Cottage restaurant on Manhattan's Sixth Avenue.

As club marshal he "always gallantly and fearlessly led to the banqueting hall," reported the club's "chief ruler" Daniel Wolff.

The New York Times reported that at the first meeting the 13th diner was late, and Fowler dragooned one of the waiters to make up the unlucky number: "Despite his howls he was just being shoved through the ladders when the missing guest arrived."

The first target of the club was the fear that if 13 people dined together one would soon die. But a second superstition soon followed.

In April 1882 it adopted a resolution deploring the fact that Friday had "for many centuries past, been considered an unlucky day... on unreasonable grounds" and the club sent a call to the President, state governors and judges to stop picking on Friday as "hanging day" and hold executions on other days too.

But of a joint Friday 13th superstition there is no sign at the club's foundation. It appeared some time between 1882 and the publication of Lawson's book in 1907.

Could that be the club's own fault?

It took every opportunity of bringing its two prime targets together to ridicule them, the Los Angeles Herald reported in 1895: "Whenever, during the past 13 years Friday has fallen on the 13th of the month this peculiar organisation has never failed to hold a special meeting for rejoicing."

The club prided itself that it had put superstition in the spotlight. Its fame was great: the original 13 members had grown to hundreds by the turn of the century and similar clubs were founded in cities across the States. London's Thirteen Club had been founded by 1894, when a music hall song about it appeared.

"Two of these vulgar superstitions you have combated resolutely and without flinching," club scribe Charles Sotheran wrote to the New York members in 1883, "namely the belief in 13 being an unlucky number, and Friday an unlucky day. You have created a popular sentiment in favour of them both."

Sotheran must have meant "made Fridays and 13 less unpopular", but his sentence is ambiguous and it could just as well have meant "made the superstitions popular". So was it this interpretation which established the superstition in public opinion?

The Thirteen Club's doctrine was "that superstition should be assailed and combated and driven off the earth".

If instead it generated one of the most widespread and persistent superstitions of all, that was an unlucky accident indeed.

Friday the Thirteenth
  • Each year has at least one; every normal year starting on a Thursday and every leap year which begins on a Sunday have three
  • The composer Rossini died on Friday 13 November 1868; a biography published the following year remarked that he had considered both the number 13 and Fridays as unlucky.
  • A British Medical Journal article in December 1993 found an increase in certain A&E admissions on five out of six Friday 13ths studied, compared with the preceding Friday; one author later explained the article was "a bit of fun" as is customary in the BMJ's Xmas edition.
  • King Philip of France ordered the arrest of Knight Templar leaders on Friday 13 October 1307. This led to the torture and execution of Templars in a number of European countries. Freemasons' affection for the Templars means the date may have been familiar to Masons such as Fowler, Sotheran and Wolff.
  • The Friday the 13th film series, starting in 1980, and various spin-offs have made hundreds of millions of dollars.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-30912415



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Vanuatu embraces landmark reforms



Author: Siobhan McDonnell, ANU

Land is life is a common catchphrase throughout the Pacific. Given the vital importance of land to the subsistence livelihoods of Pacific populations, undertaking land reform requires a long, consultative process, careful piloting programs and thoughtful evaluation. Recent land reforms in Vanuatu may provide key lessons for other countries in the region.

In February 2015, the Department of Lands and Customary Land Management Office staff erected a large billboard in Emau village on Efate Island to mark the beginning of a nakamal process to identify the custom owners of land for a quarry. Nakamals are local chief-based customary governance structures that exist across the archipelago. The use of the first nakamal process to identify customary land ownership marks a milestone in the roll out of historic land reforms, a process that began almost 10 years ago.

Momentum for land reform in Vanuatu began in 2005 the Year of the Customary Economy. In 2006, the National Land Summit (funded by AusAid) passed 20 resolutions around the changes needed to land laws and administration in Vanuatu.

The movement for land reform mobilised as a response to rapacious land leasing in Vanuatu. Since 2000, there has been a marked increase in speculative land dealings. In these deals large parcels of customary land were purchased cheaply by investors, and then subdivided and resold for significant profits. In 2010, almost 10 per cent of all land in Vanuatu was under lease.

Leasing of coastal areas of Efate Island has led to land shortages and negatively impacted local indigenous peoples access to coastal estates and gardening land. Patterns of leasing suggest successive ministers of lands have been involved in a series of customary land grabs.

Ministers of lands have also been involved in the leasing of state land, with the worst offender being the former minister of land Steven Kalsakau. In 2011, Kalsakau leased heavily discounted urban state land to staff located within the Department of Lands, family, friends, and business and political associates. Kalsakaus largess extended to leases of state land to cleaners within the Department of Lands and to his driver. In some instances nothing was paid for these leases. Together Kalsakaus leases of state land represent a loss of around US$7.8 million in revenue to the Vanuatu government.

In 2012, Ralph Regenvanu, the leader of the Land and Justice Party, became the Minister for Lands. He was elected on a commitment to reforming land law in line with the resolutions of the National Land Summit. His team immediately began work on a new set of amendments to the Constitution and land laws in Vanuatu.

The land reforms were drafted through a process of national consultations across all provinces, which culminated in the National Land Law Summit in 2012.

The new laws, formally promulgated in February 2014, consist of constitutional amendments, amendments to the Land Reform Act and Land Leases Act, and a new Customary Land Management Act.

The new laws remove the power of the Minister of Lands to deal in customary and state land. This will have significant implications for the political economy of land dealings in Vanuatu, which operates as a web of relationships between key politicians and mainly foreign-born investors with links to Vanuatus offshore financial sector.

Leases for development on customary land will now need free, prior, informed consent of the custom owner group. The laws have also halted land grabs of customary and state land by successive ministers.

The laws also represent a significant commitment to legal pluralism. Constitutional amendments change the jurisdiction for identifying custom owner groups away from the formal state courts and into nakamals.

The laws further provide a new model for the recognition of womens rights to be heard in nakamals. The laws also established an appeal mechanism in case this doesnt occur, allowing nakamal decisions to be reviewed by the newly created position of Land Ombudsman.

The new land laws are fully operational with respect to existing customary land leases and for all dealings in state land. The new identification and consultation processes are now being carefully piloted for new customary land leases. The meeting of the Emau nakamal to determine custom ownership over the quarry area marks the first of these pilots.

The Vanuatu experience suggests that substantive, innovative land reform needs long-term public consultation, careful policy piloting and evaluation. It also needs the ongoing support of donors interested in innovative approaches to land reform. Donors must keep in mind that in the Pacific appropriate processes for decision-making over land are often the precursor to sustainable development, addressing climate change and effective disaster management.

Siobhan McDonnell is the Legal Advisor to the Minister of Lands, Ralph Regenvanu, and was the principal drafter of the land reform package described in this article. She is currently completing a PhD at the Australian National University.

Source: http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2015/03/14/vanuatu-embraces-landmark-reforms/



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Friday, March 13, 2015

Volaris launches its first international service from Tijuana



The new twice-weekly Volaris service to Oakland was celebrated at Tijuana Airport with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and an on-board selfie. The scary-looking dog mascot is from Tijuanas top football team, Xolos. I bet you really wanted to know that

  • Volaris has added twice-weekly (Wednesdays and Saturdays) flights from its Tijuana (TIJ) base to Oakland (OAK) in California. The Mexican LCCs inaugural flight between the two airports was on 4 March. The 747-kilometre route is not served by any other carrier. Volaris now serves 29 destinations non-stop from Tijuana, but this is the airlines first international service from the airport, and will be operated by its A319s. However, Volaris already serves Oakland from four other Mexican airports; Guadalajara, Mexico City, Morelia and Leon/Guanajuato. Volaris continuing expansion at Oakland International Airport brings another international destination to the San Francisco Bay Area, offering travellers and businesses even more access to key cities in Mexico, said Deborah Ale Flint, Director of Aviation for Port of Oakland. OAK is the fourth largest airport in California and this new Tijuana service will make it the states second largest gateway for nonstop flight destinations in Mexico. Volaris CCO Holger Blankenstein added, This flight represents better connectivity for the San Francisco (Oakland) area, through Tijuana, the most connected city in Mexico thanks to the airline. This route seeks to provide the Bay Area with greater connectivity, with the 16 connecting flights we operate from Tijuana to the rest of Mexico. This is how we continue to unite family and friends who live on both sides of the border at the best fares.

Source: http://www.anna.aero/2015/03/10/volaris-launches-its-first-international-service-from-tijuana/



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Big Ten Tournament: Indiana Vs. Maryland Preview



(JACK CASSIDY/AP) Marylands stellar first season in the Big Ten afforded it a short rest before it opens play in the conference tournament.

Itll kick off for the eighth-ranked Terrapins on Friday night in the quarterfinals in Chicago against Indiana, which is desperate to improve its resume for the NCAA Tournament.

Maryland (26-5, 14-4) finished second in the conference behind No. 6 Wisconsin and enters the tournament on a seven-game winning streak.

The Terrapins capped that run with road victories over Rutgers on March 3 and Nebraska on Sunday, clinching the programs best season since they won 32 games and the national championship in 2001-02.

In his fourth season at Maryland, Mark Turgeon will be trying to secure a career-best 27th win. Turgeon, who earned Big Ten Coach of the Year honors, also won 26 games in 2005-06 while leading Wichita State to the regional semifinals.

Coach Turgeon taught me how to lead and be patient, senior Dez Wells said. He stood by me. We stood by each other. I am really excited for him. He is an outstanding coach and very deserving of the award. Coach is such a hard worker who is committed to making Maryland basketball the very best.

Wells recorded two of his six career double-doubles in the last two games, recording 20 points and 10 rebounds against Rutgers before scoring 18 with 12 boards Sunday.

Freshman star Melo Trimble also enters the conference tournament with momentum after having 21 points, seven rebounds and four assists against Nebraska. He has scored at least 20 a team-high nine times.

The Terrapins are 2-0 in neutral-site games, beating Arizona State and No. 13 Iowa State in November to win the CBE Classic title.

They didnt manage a spotless record against the Hoosiers (20-12). Maryland lost 89-70 at then-No. 23 Indiana on Feb. 22 before winning the next matchup 68-66 on Feb. 11.

Indianas Yogi Ferrell hit seven of eight 3-pointers and scored 24 in the win before shooting 6 of 9 from beyond the arc with 23 points last month. Wells and Trimble scored 18 apiece in the last meeting.

Indiana has beaten four ranked opponents, but bad losses to Eastern Washington and Northwestern, as well as a three-game skid to end the regular season, has the Hoosiers bid to the NCAA Tournament anything but secure.

I really dont know, coach Tom Crean said of his teams at-large chances. No one knows, and thats the beauty of it all.

Indiana matched its second-highest total this season with 32 3-point attempts Thursday in a 71-56 win over Northwestern in the second round, and it leads the Big Ten with 23.1 attempted 3s per game.

Maryland allows opponents to shoot 31.4 percent from behind the arc, which ranks second in the conference, but the Hoosiers shot 68.2 percent (15 for 22) on Jan. 22. It was the Terrapins worst mark since allowing George Washington to shoot 71.4 percent Dec. 5, 2004.

Indiana could be without Hanner Mosquera-Perea after he suffered a right knee injury Thursday. He scored four points in 11 minutes against Maryland on Feb. 11 but missed the first meeting due to an injury to the same knee.

Hanner plays a big part in this group, but whoever needs to step up, I know they will, forward Emmitt Holt said. Were all in this together, so whatever happens happens.

Freshman James Blackmon Jr. had 25 points Thursday. He scored 22 in Januarys meeting before shooting 2 for 14 last month.

Listen to the game on 105.7 The Fan. Pregame starts at 6pm

Source: http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2015/03/13/big-ten-tournament-indiana-vs-maryland-preview/



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