Description: Hair raising: Ullman today
By Ned Hamson
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Category Archives: Viva!
NYPD: 5 Rape Suspects Forced Victim’s Father To Leave Before Assault
The authorities released surveillance video of the five suspects accused of raping an 18-year-old woman in a Brooklyn park last week. And it turns out that the teen had been with her father when the group approached them. [ more › ]
Video: Good Samaritan Gives Stranger Shirt Off His Back On Subway
In this post-Zardulu world, it’s increasingly difficult to tell what is real and what is a beautiful dream in a drab waking universe. But putting aside the nature of reality, it’s still always nice to see New Yorkers extending acts of kindness to one another. One man says he spotted just such an exchange on Friday, when he captured video of an alleged good Samaritan taking off his shirt and giving it to a shirtless straphanger. [ more › ]
Sunday Open Thread
Portrait of an Arab woman wearing a traditional face mask in Muscat, Oman, 1905
Typical Fashion Style of Edwardian Era – Vintage Photos of Ladies in Trailing Dresses with Peach Basket Hats
60 of The Most Iconic Moments of the 1960s
Sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll defined the 1960s. But the decade was also a time of pivotal change — politically, socially and technologically. Check out 60 of the most iconic moments of the decade.
1. The ‘Greensboro Four.’ On February 1, 1960, four African-American college students made history just by sitting down at a whites-only lunch counter at a Woolworth’s in Greensboro, North Carolina. Service never came for the “Greensboro Four,” as they came to be known, and their peaceful demonstration drew national attention and sparked more “sit-ins” in Southern cities.
| African Americans stage sit down at Woolworth Store’s lunch counter, in which service was refused to them. (Photo by Donald Uhrbrock//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images) |
2. Elvis discharged from the military. Elvis Presley’s musical heyday was in the 1950s, but he remained a major star in the 1960s. Here, Presley, 25, is pictured with his future wife, Priscilla, shortly before his discharge from the U.S. Army in 1960. Presley served two years in the Army.
| Elvis and Priscilla leave the house he and his family occupied in Bad Nauheim, Germany, March 1960. |
3. Sharpeville massacre in South Africa. Wounded people in South Africa’s Sharpeville township lie in the street on March 21, 1960, after police opened fire on black demonstrators marching against the country’s segregation system known as apartheid. At least 180 black Africans, most of them women and children, were injured and 69 were killed in the Sharpeville massacre that signaled the start of armed resistance against apartheid.
4. The laser is born. Theodore Maiman pours liquid nitrogen into a cooling unit around one of the first experimental lasers in his laboratory in Santa Monica, California. Maiman’s ruby laser, created on May 16, 1960, is considered to be one of the top technological achievements of the 20th century. It paved the way for fiber-optic communications, CDs, DVDs and sight-restoring surgery.
5. FDA approves birth-control pill. On June 23, 1960, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Enovid, the first birth-control pill for women.
| Controversial `enovid bith control’ pills recently investigated by the FDA. (Photo by Art Rickerby//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images) |
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Diné woman Qualifies for Upcoming Olympic Trials
Linnabah-Snyder
Published January 10, 2016
WINDOW ROCK, ARIZONA—Navajo marathon runner Linnabah Snyder took the first step toward her running pedigree not on a track, not on a course, not even on a team.
She first unlocked her running potential at the ranch of her grandfather Juan Yazzie Jr. as the family rounded up cattle.
“My responsibility in going after the cattle was to go after the calves,” she said.
She said she preferred to do the work on foot and one day ran about 15 miles chasing calves.
“As a 10-year-old that’s kind of a lot,” she said.
When she walked into the hogan at the end of the day, her grandpa let her eat first from the meal prepared for the family, cleared the bed for her to take a nap, and gave her words of encouragement.
“He said, you should be a runner, you’re a runner,” she recalled. “I think that gave me the confidence to run.”
Today, the 35-year-old is preparing for the Olympic Trials, to be held in February, after she qualified with her performance at the California International Marathon on Dec. 4.
Snyder is Yucca-Fruit-Strung-Out-On-a-Line Clan and born for Zuni Clan. Her maternal grandfather is Towering House Clan and her paternal grandfather is Water Flows Together Clan. Raised in Chinle, she now lives in Colorado with her husband.
Snyder said her mother recognized her potential at a young age and encouraged her to run each morning to greet the day and later as she took it up as a sport and a hobby.
“My mom always says that I completely skipped the walking phase during my toddler years, and I went straight from crawling to running,” Snyder said. “She’s really serious, I asked her about that.”
Editor’s Note: This article was first published in the Navajo Times. Used with persmission. All rights reserved.
The post Diné woman Qualifies for Upcoming Olympic Trials appeared first on Native News Online.
Suppression of Expression..coming soon home
There is an ultimate state of Freedom in Writing.
It is a real gift that liberates ones mind, soul and hence, being.
I have been feeling like this lately …
I always say that I am a woman who tried to be free. To taste freedom in anything that surrounds me living in state that doesn’t have any freedom. Being under occupation is no luxury when it comes to such feelings.
You are always surrounded with that ceiling that is not the sky. Like walking and living in an open jail. Like animals within a wired safari.
I just closed a novel under the name Guantanamo for the Egyptian novelist Youssef Zeedan, and I couldn’t but think, of the state of being indulged in the inner mess of yourself when you live in the worse situation that can possibly be. Jailed in the unknown hollows of Guantanamo. Surviving or not…
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