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A story from syracuse.com:
Census data: Half of US poor or low income
Download the syracuse.com app for your iPhone from the App Store today!
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"The Republican nominating contest resembles nothing so much as a Christie's wine auction, as candidates accept, and toss about, dollar figures beyond the comprehension of the people they would serve."
See Dana Milbank's full article: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/opinion/views/os-ed-dana-milbank-121411-20111214,0,2528125.column
We received the following and can't attribute the writer of the announcement, alas, but we're sharing the story as it's central to our moment when so many wounded warriors are returning home.
SK
ACCESS & GOOD DESIGN
Like many of today’s wounded warriors Returning from World War II with a spinal cord injury provided Kenneth Laurent with many new challenges he had not expected. In 1949 he challenged an architect to design an accessible home. Completed in 1952 Mr. Laurent’s house was fully accessible some 20 years before the first ANSI standards for access and nearly 40 years before the Americans with Disabilities Act. Mr. Laurent credits his home with giving him the will and motivation to live – and to do so fully. He noted that the home has allowed him to focus on his ability rather than his disability. The architect that rose to the challenge, Frank Lloyd Wright and the Rockville Illinois home is currently for sale. For more information read the article below or follow this link http://blog.preservationnation.org/2011/12/06/interview-frank-lloyd-wrights-little-gem-up-for-auction/
Laurent House: A Frank Lloyd Wright-Designed Home in Rockford, Illinois USA
In August of 1948, Kenneth Laurent, a wheel-chair using World War II veteran, wrote to the world-famous architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, requesting that he design a house suitable for unobstructed living by a wheelchair-bound person and that it be modestly priced by the standards of the time. Wright responded, as he always did when confronted with a unique building problem, “We are interested but don’t guarantee costs.”
The formal drawings were finished and a contract for the services of Frank Lloyd Wright was signed in July of 1949. The house, in total, was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, complete with furnishings, lighting and coloration. It was finished in May of 1952, and its authenticity has been maintained by Ken and Phyllis Laurent since.
The Laurent house was the first and only home Wright ever designed for a disabled person’s use and comfort; this was executed 40 years in advance of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Wright designed a house that shows its true beauty only when the observer looks at it from Ken’s eye level. All switches and fixtures are at a suitable, accessible level. There are no drawers in the built-ins, but hinged, horizontal doors suitable for unobstructed
access from a wheelchair. All built-in desks and tables for the homeowner’s use are cantilevered so that his wheelchair fits beneath. The built-in benches and ottomans that nestle beneath the tables are all designed to keep clutter and obstructions to a minimum. All doorways are a minimum of 36” wide, and all hallways are wide enough to turn a wheelchair.
The house met all of the needs of a wheelchair-bound client before design for disabilities was even considered by architects, builders or the government. It can be argued that this home is the first house ever designed for a disabled client. It allowed Ken to realize his full potential as a human being by giving him unrestricted access to everyday living. Wright gave him the level playing field we all take for granted.
In his design of the home, Wright was experimenting with what he called the “hemicycle” house based upon intersecting arcs and circles. The Laurent House is the second of only eight hemicycles he designed and the only one in Illinois. The culmination of this “arc and circle” experiment was the Guggenheim Museum in New York City.
Wright developed an uncharacteristic friendship with the Laurents. He visited the site during construction and visited the Laurents personally after the house was completed. They were invited to “drop in anytime” at Taliesin, Wright’s Wisconsin home, and participated in his birthday party celebrated there each year.
More information and pictures at http://blog.preservationnation.org/2011/12/06/interview-frank-lloyd-wrights-little-gem-up-for-auction/#more-22094
“What is human reason?” asked Uncle Theory. He was, as usual, challenging the children. One little boy said he thought it had something to do with waking up alone.
It was just another morning amid the bruised hearts and Uncle was having none of it. “What on earth does your tiny heart, beating like a bird trapped in a barn, have to do with reason?” he shouted.
Baby Deleuze climbed on his desk and spoke up. “Suppose we imagine the subordination of difference to identity.” he said. “In ordinary terms difference is just an empirical relation between two terms each of which have an a priori identity– (“x is different from y”). But this notion of primacy can be inverted: identity persists, but it is now a secondary principle created by a prior relation between differentials (dx rather than not-x). Difference is no longer an empirical relation but becomes a transcendental principle that constitutes the sufficient reason of empirical diversity.”
(Thanks are due to: Smith, Daniel and Protevi, John, "Gilles Deleuze", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2011 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2011/entries/deleuze/
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Begin forwarded message:
Subject: Trans*Studies Conference 2012: CFP Deadline Extended!
Reply-To: Roger Hallas <rhallas@SYR.EDU>
Greetings!
Please share this CFP with groups, departments, communities, organizations,
friends and others! (please email to get a copy of the flyer or visit our
website!)
trans*studies 2012
University of La Verne College of Law
Ontario, California
March 2nd-4th 2012
NEW EXTENDED DEADLINE
Sunday, January 15 2012
Submit 300 word panel or paper abstracts to:
elijah.edelman@american.edu and
dklein@laverne.edu
For submission and additional conference information please see
Current speakers include:
Dr. Trystan Cotton
Hon. Phyllis Frye
Dr. Sel Hwahng
Hon. Victoria Kolakowski
Prof. Dean Spade
Prof. Susan Stryker
Willy Wilkinson, Mph
And moreŠ
This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference seeks to examine
and explore trans* spectrum studies and activisms of all kinds.
We seek a variety of projects which critically* explore: trans* identity,
practice, communities and embodiment, etc in contexts of race, class,
(in)accessibility, health, citizenship, higher education, and rights within:
legal, activist, medical, anthropological, sociological, psychological,
artistic, cinematic, literary, linguistic, moral, social, (geo)political,
philosophical, and religious dimensions, among othersŠ
*WE PARTICULARLY INVITE THE SUBMISSION OF WORK FROM PERSONS and COMMUNITIES
OF COLOR, TRANS FEMININE EXPERIENCES and PRACTICES, ACTIVIST STRUGGLES AND
ACADEMIC PROJECTS INVESTED IN ACCOUNTABILITY TO TRANS COMMUNITIES
Where they say they can’t look at my broken tooth because I’m scheduled for a cleaning. Really? What the $@:(@ is wrong with this damned country?
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Tim Tebow: Higgs Boson’s Quarterback
News Flash: Scientists at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva have discovered a data "spike" at the mass of 125 Gigaelectronvolts, a phenomenon which profoundly resembles the bone density of NFL player Tim Tebow. “It’s too early to say we’ve found the Tebow particle,” said team leader Magnus Kraper, who added: “we think we will find it late in the fourth quarter.”