ESPN UFC 117: Anderson Silva stuns Chael Sonnen, steals fight ESPN For the better part of five rounds, Chael Sonnen did exactly what he said he was going to do to Anderson Silva, but in a split second, the middleweight king turned the tables. Stuck underneath the gritty Sonnen, Silva secured a textbook … Anderson Silva survives strong challenge from Sonnen to retain UFC belt USA Today Silva rallies to beat Sonnen at UFC 117 for the middleweight title CBSSports.com UFC 117 Recap: Anderson Silva Survives to Submit Chael Sonnen MMAFrenzy.com MMAWeekly
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UFC 117: Anderson Silva stuns Chael Sonnen, steals fight – ESPN
Saturday, August 7th, 2010Jim Gibbons: Facing Challenges through Drive and Determination
Tuesday, July 20th, 2010At the start of 2009, older Americans faced the highest unemployment rate in 31 years. It became apparent that they no longer benefitted from the same job security as did younger generations due to the poor economic climate. Older workers have found it more difficult to find work than their younger counterparts. In the face of these challenges, Goodwill is able to help out-of-work seniors through the Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP). Julie Stewart is one amazing Goodwill employee who was able to find work through this program. Julie was a hairdresser for 28 years before back problems made it impossible for her to stay on her feet for long periods of time. She turned to driving around the country in a motor home and selling items in flea markets, but she longed to work in a position and for an organization that she believed in. “I felt that I didn’t have a life, and that I would like to work,” she says. In 2008, she visited Goodwill Industries of New Mexico (Albuquerque) and enrolled in SCSEP. With her determination and drive, Julie was able to find work soon after at Ser de New Mexico. Not long after that, she had the opportunity to apply for a data entry job at Goodwill. She got the job and has been there ever since. “I love everything — the data entry is just an adventure to keep everything clean in the system,” she says. “Doing pre-enrollment assessment is wonderful because I can share my experience with the people. A lot of people have given up hope, feel that life is over as a senior, and are in such dire situations. It’s so hopeful for them to get into this program and for their lives to change.” It always makes me feel good to hear stories like Julie’s and proud that we are able to help many different types of folks out there. It was Julie’s desire to find meaningful, fulfilling work that got her looking in the first place, and I am glad she found SCSEP and Goodwill.
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Jim Gibbons: Facing Challenges through Drive and Determination
Michael Sigman: Bald Pols: To Pay or Not Toupee
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010“Although the constitution makes no mention of it, it would appear that fat people are now effectively excluded from running for high political office. Probably bald people as well.” – Neil Postman, 1985 It’s tough to be a politician and a member of what Larry David calls “the bald community” in America, particularly when your shoulders also carry the burden of taking our country back. On last week’s Real Time with Bill Maher , one of the host’s New Rules was, “If Rand Paul is a true libertarian, he has to free his toupee.” Since Samson went limp when his hair was cut off , men have associated baldness with weakness and tried to, well, cover it up. Goat’s urine failed a follicle-challenged Aristotle 2500 years ago. A couple of millennia later, cow saliva didn’t do the trick for Renaissance men, nor did a combination of meditation and head stands work for guys in India. Before TV dominated image-making, it was okay, even cool, to be a bald politician, like Churchill and Ike (who twice beat Adlai Stevenson, another bald chap.) But once the public began gazing at JFK’s shock of blow-dried (every day!) chestnut brown locks — a single strand of which now goes for upwards of $500 — in the 1960 presidential campaign, bald pols have suffered. The infamous $400 John Edwards haircut ? That was expressly meant to give the pretty boy a JFK look. It’s one thing for movie stars like John Wayne, Frank Sinatra and Burt Reynolds to burnish their machismo by wearing toupees — after all, their very mission is to fool us into thinking they’re someone else. On the other hand, deep hipness is ascribed to such hirsuteless celebs as Telly Savalas, Yul Brynner, Patrick Stewart, Samuel Jackson, Bruce Willis and Michael Jordan — some of whom are bald by choice. And the clean-headed grime-fighter Mr. Clean has for decades been an admired ad pitchman and pop culture icon. Does it undermine our trust if an office-seeker doesn’t come clean about not having too much on his pate? Rudy Giuliani finally let his unfreak flag fly — and then got only one delegate in the 2008 Republican primaries despite having spent $50 million. But perhaps he was just a terrible candidate. Bad combovers (Senator John McCain), weird hair plugs (Vice President Joe Biden) and clamped-on toupees (Senator Ben Nelson) have become practically de rigueur for pols. Donald Trump isn’t a politician, but his hair, which defies categorization — except that he appears to be the evil offspring of Al Sharpton and Ted Koppel — cannot be ignored. The exception that proves the rule is former President Wayne Palmer, whose brother, the great President David Palmer, had earlier been felled by an assassin’s bullet. Wayne is a handsome bald man who looked fabulous on TV before he slipped into a coma from which he’s still not awakened. (Alas, both Palmers were fictional characters on a certain TV series whose climactic episode aired last month.) You might say to all of this, “So what’s the big deal? Who cares if someone’s bald? Just what is the meaning of ‘bald,’ anyway, on the deepest level?” The late scholar Ruth Manor Ph.D. — perhaps best known for the Rescher-Manor Mechanism in logic — grappled with this question in the weighty tome The Philosophy of Language Metaphysics . With the help of complex mathematical equations, she baldly, er, boldly conclulded that ” only the bald are bald .” In Rand Paul’s toupee considerations, I wonder if he consulted this argument against health care reform from aynrand.org , a repository of wisdom from his namesake Ayn Rand and her followers: “You are born with a moral right to hair care, let us say, provided by a loving government free of charge to all who want or need it. Haircuts are free, like the air we breathe, so some people show up every day for an expensive new styling, the government pays out more and more, barbers revel in their huge new incomes, and the profession starts to grow ravenously, bald men start to come in droves for free hair implantations, a school of fancy, specialized eyebrow pluckers develops-it’s all free, the government pays. The dishonest barbers are having a field-day, of course-but so are the honest ones; they are working and spending like mad, trying to give every customer his heart’s desire, which is a millionaire’s worth of special hair care and services…the budget is out of control.” Of course, not all libertarians are Randians, who love to shock by going to the illogical extreme. Health care and hair care are about as similar as Rachel Maddow and Glenn Beck. If I thought my argument were that thin, I’d don Biden’s plugs and cover them with Paul’s rug. If Rand does reconsider, he might use this as a campaign theme song , by substituting “Bald” for “Tall.” More on Rudy Giuliani

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Michael Sigman: Bald Pols: To Pay or Not Toupee
Jeff Biggers: Declaration of Clean Energy Independence: We Need a Road Map to a Coal Free Future
Thursday, May 6th, 2010Note: This is a guest post by Stephanie Pistello, Ben Evans, and Jeff Biggers, co-founders of the Coal Free Future Project . In the wake of the worst coal mining disaster in 40 years, compromise and political machinations this spring have resulted in a regulatory crisis of failure; workplace safety in the mines, including the black lung scandal, has emerged as a national tragedy; toxic coal ash remains uncategorized as hazardous waste; mountaintop removal operations and devastating strip mining in 24 states continue under regulatory plunder, not abolishment; billions of taxpayers’ dollars pour down the black hole of carbon capture and storage boondoggles, increasing coal production; climate legislation hangs in the balance of political games. In 1776, Thomas Paine challenged our country to embrace the cause of independence over compromise. In a moment of crisis, he declared: “We have it in our power to make the world over again.” Our modern-day Paine, James Hansen at the NASA Goddard Center, has issued a similar clarion call: “Coal is the single greatest threat to civilization and all life on our planet. Our global climate is nearing tipping points.” It’s time to envision a coal-free future. It’s time for clean energy independence. We need a road map for a coal-free future. Not a hodge-podge collection of new regulations. Coal mining, which provides 45 percent of our electricity, will not end tomorrow. Every coal miner deserves a right to a sustainable livelihood; given the legacy of our coal miners, we also believe no coal miner should be displaced from his or her job until we develop clean energy alternatives. This means that coalfield residents, like all Americans, deserve a road map for a feasible transition to clean-energy jobs — including a Coal Miner’s GI Bill for retraining and a massive reinvestment in sustainable economic development in coalfield communities — before we reach a point of no return. The coalfields should be ground zero for President Obama’s clean energy initiatives, Al Gore’s Repower America, and all green jobs projects. All coal mining communities know that the first time in 25 years, utilities coal stockpiles have increased during the summer; absentee coal companies are cutting jobs and idling higher-cost mines to keep their stock holders happy in a period of slumping demand; recent U.S. Geological Survey estimates place “peak coal” production as early as 2020. As grandchildren of black-lung-afflicted coal miners from Kentucky, Illinois, and southwestern Virginia, we honor our families’ sacrifices in recognizing, not denying, the true cost of coal. Our grandfathers benefited from a transition to mechanization to improve mine safety. The time has come for a transition to clean-energy jobs. Coal is not cheap nor clean; coal has been killing us — for over 200 years. Over 104,000 Americans have died in coal-mining accidents; three coal miners die daily from black-lung disease. Millions of acres of forests and farmlands have been strip-mined into oblivion; pioneering communities have been plundered. Half of Americans live within an hour of a toxic coal ash dump. The Physicians for Social Responsibility recently found that coal “contributes to four of the top five causes of mortality in the U.S. and is responsible for increasing the incidence of major diseases.” The National Academy of Scientists totaled costs of coal at more than $62 billion in “external damages” to our health and lives. A West Virginia University report noted the coal industry “costs the Appalachian region five times more in early deaths than it provides in economic benefits.” In Kentucky, according to a Mountain Association of Community Economic Development study, coal may provide $528 million in state revenue, but costs $643 million in state expenditures. Nothing has motivated our commitment for clean energy more than the tragedy of mountaintop-removal and nationwide strip mining in 24 states. We have seen the devastation of clear-cutting our nation’s great forests and carbon sink of Appalachia and blowing up its oldest mountain range. We have met the casualties of absentee commerce; grieving parents who have lost loved ones to coal slurry-contaminated water; veterans and elderly who endure blasting, fly rock and silica dust; families who have seen their homes washed away in floods caused by erosion; streams poisoned with mining waste; boarded-up communities, strangled by a boom-and-bust single economy. The plunder of Appalachia and all coalfield communities must end. More so, with coal-fired plants contributing over 30 percent of our CO2 emissions, everyone’s fate is connected to the coalfields now. “Clean coal” carbon capture and storage plans are not only chimeras for Big Coal profit, but will ultimately increase coal production by 20-30 percent. In the end, our fiduciary responsibility to our children demands a new way of generating our electricity in Kentucky and the country. It also affords us a great opportunity for economic and social revitalization Clean energy independence, not coal, will bring more sustainable jobs. Wind, solar, hydropower and turbine manufacturing, along with weatherization, retrofitting appliances and homes, could create jobs. The Appalachian Regional Commission found that “energy-efficiency investments could result in an increase of 77,378 net jobs by 2030″ in the region. For us, such a clean energy revolution began with the proposed Smith # 1 coal-fired plant in eastern Kentucky, which was recently set aside. Instead of a costly coal-fired dinosaur, a recent study found that a combination of “energy efficiency, weatherization, hydropower and wind power initiatives in the East Kentucky Power Cooperative region would generate more than 8,750 new jobs for Kentucky residents, with a total impact of more than $1.7 billon on the region’s economy over the next three years.” Ultimately, this clean energy independence would meet the energy needs of EKPC customers and cost less than the proposed coal plant. A coal-free future began in Kentucky, in the heartland of our nation’s coalfields. Now it’s time to imagine a coal-free future for the rest of the country. The writers are co-founders of the Coal Free Future Project . More on Green Energy
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Jeff Biggers: Declaration of Clean Energy Independence: We Need a Road Map to a Coal Free Future
Obama links auto industry woes, financial overhaul – The Associated Press
Saturday, April 24th, 2010CBS News Obama links auto industry woes, financial overhaul The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Saturday cited encouraging signs of an auto industry rebound as he promoted stronger financial rules that he said would help prevent a repeat of the crisis that pushed carmakers to the brink. … Obama says auto bailouts have paid off Reuters Obama: Wall Street Reforms Still Urgently Needed Voice of America Obama hails auto industry turnaround in radio address Detroit Free Press Wall Street Journal
Dorothy Height, rights pioneer, dies at age 98 – Philadelphia Inquirer
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010New York Daily News Dorothy Height, rights pioneer, dies at age 98 Philadelphia Inquirer IT WAS crazy-hot the first time I saw the iconic Dorothy Height in person. Height, though, appeared cool in her trademark hat as she surveyed the sweltering masses at a Black Family Reunion Celebration. Given her advanced age and … Dorothy Height: Leading woman in civil rights movement, marched with MLK Dallas Morning News Dorothy Height dies at 98; civil rights leader fought for women's, children's … Los Angeles Times Dorothy Height, Largely Unsung Giant of the Civil Rights Era, Dies at 98 Pittsburgh Post Gazette Washington Post



