Sunday, July 21, 2013

Scrapbooks give peek inside Hemingway's early life

BOSTON (AP) ? Long before Ernest Hemingway first wrote a story, his mother was busy writing about him.

Grace Hall Hemingway started a series of scrapbooks documenting the childhood of the future Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winner by describing how the sun shone and robins sang on the day in July 1899 when he was born.

Starting Sunday, the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston will make the content of five Hemingway scrapbooks available online for the first time, giving fans and scholars the chance to follow the life of one of the 20th century's literary greats from diapers to high school degree.

Hemingway Collection curator Susan Wrynn said much of the content hasn't been made available to the public before and only a few researchers have seen it in its entirety. The fragile leather-bound volumes have been kept in a dark vault for about four decades to keep them from falling apart.

The release of these records from the archive, home to 90 percent of existing Hemingway manuscript materials, will come on what would have been the scribe's 114th birthday.

"I think it will be a very rich resource for people interested in learning about this period of his life," Sean Hemingway, the author's grandson, said in an interview with The Associated Press. "He had tremendous talent. It must have been there from the beginning. So I'm sure there are clues in there to that."

Pennsylvania State University professor Sandra Spanier, who is general editor of a project that will publish Hemingway's letters in more than a dozen volumes, said the scrapbooks that the author's mother created offer details of his daily life up until age 18 that aren't anywhere else.

"She almost made their lives into a story ... and I think that carries over into his life and his fiction," she said.

There's a scribbling from when Hemingway wasn't quite 3 years old that the future war correspondent and novelist ? who later won a Pulitzer Prize for "The Old Man and the Sea" ? told his mother depicted the roaring sea. Other early passages also hinted at the writer Hemingway would become.

Before he was 4, Hemingway was trooping into the woods to go hunting with his father and "using long words" and making "sage remarks," according to his mother, who enclosed photos of her son trout fishing and holding his own rifle.

"Can cock my own gun," one of her captions read.

By the time Hemingway was 5, his mother noted that he was collecting war cartoons and had an appreciation for characters with courage.

"He loves stories about Great Americans," she wrote.

The scrapbooks have a plethora of family photos from the Hemingway family's home in Oak Park, Ill., and their vacation cottage on a lake in Northern Michigan, including shots of a bare-bottomed baby Hemingway playing in the water by a canoe.

They include letters to Hemingway and others he wrote as a child, including a note of contrition in which he confessed to bad behavior in church.

"My conduct tomorrow will be good," 13-year-old Hemingway promised.

The scrapbooks also contain childhood paintings and tell of Hemingway playing the cello, suiting up for a "lightweight" football squad and taking up boxing. During his junior year of high school, he was on his school's prom committee and, according to a report card note from his Latin teacher, showed "improvement both in attitude and work."

As Hemingway matured, the scrapbooks showcased his earliest attempts at the craft that would come to define his professional life. Among them were a short story from his high school's literary magazine, clippings from some of his first assignments as a high school newspaper reporter and a sonnet in which 16-year-old Hemingway seemed to poke fun at himself.

"Nobody likes Ernest, that, is straight stuff," he said, "and when he writes stories ? we all cry 'Enough.'"

The scrapbooks are part of the collection that Hemingway's widow, Mary, gifted to the JFK Library and Museum after the author's 1961 suicide. Sean Hemingway said he's excited by their public release and called them one of the ways he's become familiar with a grandfather he never met.

"He died before I was born," the 46-year-old said. "Looking at these kinds of things ... I feel like I have gotten a chance to know him a bit."

___

Online: www.jfklibrary.org

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scrapbooks-peek-inside-hemingways-early-life-040257592.html

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Kid Gives Up at Church Communion [Click to animate] "Oh well....

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Source: blog.collegehumor.com --- Friday, July 19, 2013
Kid Gives Up at Church Communion [Click to animate] "Oh well. Guess I?ll just go to hell then." ...

Source: http://blog.collegehumor.com/post/55940215301

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NON-LEAGUE FOOTBALL: College defeat Bassett

NON-LEAGUE FOOTBALL: College defeat Bassett

NEW College got their pre-season campaign off to a winning start with a 2-0 victory over Wootton Bassett last night.

In conditions more suited to beach volleyball than football, Rob Hopkins' troops edged out their rivals at Rylands Way.

Goals from Christy Millar and Calum Courtney saw the students take victory.

A number of non-league friendlies are set to take place today and a full round-up will appear in Monday's Swindon Advertiser.

Chippenham are at home to Bristol Manor Farm, while Highworth entertain Marlborough and Shrivenham face Calne at Barrington Park.

Cricklade clash with Reading Town at Stones Lane and Purton play visitors Wroughton.

Malmesbury's friendly against Blyskawica, originally scheduled for this afternoon, will now take place on Monday.

The Wiltshire League side were unable to raise a side today.

Source: http://www.thisiswiltshire.co.uk/sport/10561761.NON_LEAGUE_FOOTBALL__College_defeat_Bassett/?ref=rss

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Suicide bomber kills 20 in Iraqi Sunni mosque

BAQUBA, Iraq (Reuters) - A suicide bomber blew himself up inside a Sunni mosque in central Iraq, killing at least 20 people in the middle of a sermon on Friday.

The explosion took place in the town of Wajihiya in the ethnically and religiously diverse province of Diyala, which has seen an increasing number of attacks in recent weeks.

It was unclear who was behind the blast, the latest in a campaign of attacks that has raised fears of a return to full-blown sectarian conflict in a country where Kurds, Shi'ite and Sunni Muslims have yet to find a stable way of sharing power.

"I was in the first row of people praying. We were listening to the preacher give his sermon. Suddenly, a huge explosion shook the place," 22-year-old student Salman Ubaid told Reuters.

"I fainted and later found myself lying on the floor in Wajihiyia hospital with some shrapnel in the head," he added.

Sectarian tensions have been inflamed by the civil war in neighboring Syria, which has drawn in Shi'ite and Sunni fighters from Iraq and beyond to fight on opposite sides of the conflict.

Sunni insurgents, including the al Qaeda-affiliated Islamic State of Iraq, have been recruiting from Iraq's Sunni minority, which resents Shi'ite domination since the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

They have regained strength in recent months and strike on a regular basis.

More than 460 people have been killed in militant attacks in July so far, according to violence monitoring group Iraq Body Count.

That is still well below the height of sectarian bloodletting of 2006-07, when the number of people killed in militant attacks sometimes exceeded 3,000 in one month.

At that time, sectarian violence took longer to wind down in Diyala than almost any other province in Iraq. The province is often described as a microcosm of the country, with Shi'ite Muslims, Sunnis, Kurds and Arabs living close together.

"The situation in Diyala is very dangerous," said lawmaker Mohammed Othman, who is from the province.

Asked who he thought was behind the violence, Othman said it could be Shi'ite militias or members Sunni al-Qaeda, attacking members of their own sect to provoke a reaction. "The goal is to widen the gap between people and return Iraq to civil conflict," he added.

Separately, a suicide bomber tried to enter a Shi'ite mosque in Jbeila, north of Hilla, 100 km (60 miles) south of Baghdad. He failed and blew himself up, killing a policeman who had blocked his way.

Another policeman was killed in an almost identical incident on Thursday night in the town of Iskandariya, also north of Hilla, police said.

(Reporting by a Reuters reporter in Diyala and Raheem Salman in Baghdad; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bomb-blast-inside-iraq-sunni-mosque-kills-20-112331099.html

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Biden: 'We don't know' if White House can help Detroit

By Roberta Rampton

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House is looking for ways to help the city of Detroit after the city filed for bankruptcy protection on Thursday, but Vice President Joe Biden said it was unclear what the administration could do.

"Can we help Detroit?" Biden said on Friday in a response to a question from a reporter. "We don't know."

Detroit, a former manufacturing powerhouse and cradle of the U.S. automotive industry, filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection on Thursday, making it the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

White House spokesman Jay Carey dismissed a question of whether there could be a government bailout for the city, but shed little light on other "policy options" under consideration.

"I would point you to what we have said and what leaders in Michigan and Detroit have said, which is that on the matter of their insolvency, that's something for the city and the creditors to resolve," he told reporters.

Top White House officials talking to the city and state have included Valerie Jarrett, Obama's senior adviser, Gene Sperling, the head of the National Economic Council, and Shaun Donovan, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Carney said.

President Barack Obama made saving the automotive industry in Detroit a priority of his first term.

"We're concerned, obviously, about the citizens of Detroit and of the state, and continuing to assist Detroit in moving forward," Carney said.

(Reporting by Roberta Rampton and Steve Holland; editing by Christopher Wilson and Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biden-dont-know-white-house-help-detroit-171808752.html

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Lakers hire Mark Madsen as player development coach

The Los Angeles Lakers have hired Mark Madsen and Larry Lewis of the Los Angeles D-Fenders as player development coaches, it was announced today by Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak.

?Both Mark and Larry bring a high level of credibility to our staff,? said Lakers Head Coach Mike D?Antoni. ?Mark has endless energy and is a workaholic. He?s developed players at the college level and I think he?ll do a great job making the jump to the NBA.? Larry has proven to be a natural at helping develop players for the D-Fenders since transitioning from nearly two decades of playing abroad and in the CBA. We expect that he will make a great player development coach at the NBA level as well.?

?While we were looking forward to having Mark as our head coach for the upcoming season, we?re thrilled that he now has the opportunity to help further develop players on the Lakers roster,? said D-Fenders President & CEO Joey Buss.? ?Both he and Larry, who has done a tremendous job working with our players over the past two seasons, are perfect examples of what the D-Fenders are all about; namely developing talent.? Having sent eight players to the NBA over the past two seasons, we?re excited to now see the synergy of the Lakers and D-Fenders pay off in the coaching ranks as well.?

Roughly ten years after his final game with the Lakers, fan favorite Mark Madsen returns to the franchise for his first season as player development coach. Selected by the Lakers in the first round (29th overall) of the 2000 NBA Draft, Madsen played three seasons in Los Angeles (2000-03) and was a member of back-to-back NBA championship teams in 2001 and 2002. He then signed with the Minnesota Timberwolves as a free agent prior to the 2003-04 campaign and played six seasons (2004-09) with the Timberwolves. In 453 games over nine seasons, Madsen averaged 2.2 points and 2.6 rebounds in 11.8 minutes.

Following his playing career, Madsen served as an assistant coach during the 2009-10 seasons with the Utah Flash of the NBA Developmental League before returning to his alma mater, Stanford University, to complete coursework for his MBA at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. In 2012, he was named as an assistant coach on Stanford head coach Johnny Dawkins? staff and spent the 2012-13 season working primarily with the team?s post players.

Lewis joins the Lakers after spending the last two seasons with the Los Angeles D-Fenders. Most recently, Lewis spent the 2012-13 season as an assistant coach with the D-Fenders. Prior to his stint as an assistant coach, Lewis was head of player development, a role in which he helped develop eight NBA Call-Ups along with six players on assignment from the Lakers. Additionally, Lewis played a central role in helping the team post the best regular season record (38-12) in NBA D-League history, earn the Regular Season Champion award, reach first NBA D-League Finals in team history, and capture the Development Champion award. Lewis also earned a spot as an assistant on the NBA D-League Select Team in 2012.

An alumnus of Morehouse College, Lewis turned pro when he was selected by the Albany Patroons of the CBA in 1992. The 6?7? forward played internationally in Argentina (2011), Spain (2001-2011), Japan (1996- 2001), Cyprus (1996), Great Britain (1993) and the Dominican Republic (1992). Lewis also played a season in the USBL with Sarasota (1996), in the CBA with the Harrisburg Hammerheads and Rapid City Thrillers (1994-95), and for Team USA (1995) in the Pan American Games where he won a silver medal.

Source: http://www.insidehoops.com/blog/?p=13834

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Gut Microbes Can Split a Species

[unable to retrieve full-text content]sciencehabit writes "The community of microbes in an animal's gut may be enough to turn the creature into a different species. Species usually split when their members become so genetically distinct — usually by living in separate environments that cause them to evolve different adaptations (think finches on different islands) — that they can no longer successfully breed with each other. Now researchers have shown that a couple groups of wasps have become new species not because their DNA has changed, but because the bacteria in their guts have changed — the first example of this type of speciation."

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