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ellisonz

ellisonz's Journal
ellisonz's Journal
January 5, 2012

Toons: A Mad Lib Odyssey, Iowa Provocations, World-Class Manure Spreader and More. - 1/4/12


By Sorensen, Slowpoke - 1/4/2012


By RJ Matson, The St. Louis Post Dispatch - 1/4/2012


By Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune - 1/4/2012


By Rick McKee, The Augusta Chronicle - 1/4/2012


By Randall Enos, Cagle Cartoons - 1/4/2012


By Adam Zyglis, The Buffalo News - 1/4/2012


By Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette - 1/4/2012


By David Fitzsimmons, The Arizona Star - 1/4/2012


By John Darkow, Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri - 1/4/2012


By Bill Day, Cagle Cartoons - 1/4/2012


By John Cole, The Scranton Times-Tribune - 1/4/2012


By Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com - 1/3/2012


By Cardow, The Ottawa Citizen - 1/3/2012


By Tony Auth, January 04, 2012


By Chan Lowe, January 04, 2012


By Mike Luckovich, January 04, 2012


By Ted Rall, January 04, 2012


By Steve Sack, January 04, 2012


By Drew Sheneman, January 04, 2012


By Tom Toles, January 04, 2012


By Dan Wasserman, January 03, 2012


By Signe Wilkinson, January 04, 2012


By Jeff Danziger, January 04, 2012


By Jim Morin, January 05, 2012

Note: Previous editions can be found in my journal.
January 4, 2012

Tucson Shooting: Couple who escaped the bullets can't escape the horrible memories of that day


The year following the Tucson-area shooting hasn't been easy for the Salzgebers, for whom the nightmare is all too fresh. Tom Tingle/The Arizona Republic

By Dennis Wagner - Jan. 3, 2012 09:52 PM
The Republic | azcentral.com

Roger Salzgeber was not hit by bullets in the mass murder near Tucson a year ago, but he was wounded nevertheless.

"Some days are better than others," says the 63-year-old retiree, who was among those who held down the shooter until police arrived. "I decided to just move on as best I can. But it's not going well. This is just really, really emotional for me."

Salzgeber says he is haunted by anxiety, anger and cynicism since he and his wife, Faith, survived the Jan. 8 attack outside a supermarket. Six people were killed and 13 wounded at a meet-and-greet gathering for U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., who is still recovering from brain injuries caused by a 9mm slug.

-----------

When the shooting started that Saturday morning, the Salzgebers were fourth and fifth in line. They dove to the ground and somehow avoided being shot. Twelve months later, they cannot escape memories of the mayhem or a sense of survivor incredulity.

Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/12news/news/articles/2011/12/14/20111214tucson-shootings-couple-who-escaped-bullets-cant-escape-horrible-memories.html#ixzz1iXAk0jS0

(Note to Mods: I think the upcoming 1 year mark from the shooting qualifies as "really big news." )

There are some pretty bad accounts of several Republican Senators behavior in regards to listening to them on gun control.
January 4, 2012

Island Trails' 2011 Video Summary

1/3/12
Island Trails' 2011 Video Summary
By Kaleo Lancaster,

2011 was good fun! Within our crew, there weren't any major injury(s) like last year. Our crew had a couple close calls, but nobody wen make. (Excuse my pidgin.)

There were a bunch of trails discovered, and lots cleared. And there was certainly a big and obvious surge of new people around the island setting aside their "rubbah slippahs" for some good 'ole hiking shoes. Not that it's a bad thing. Getting sweaty and dirty in the mountains is a hell of a good time when you're with your buddies. But with more people on the trails, mountain rescues were noticeably frequent and all over the news. At one point I remember there being over forty rescues in one month, all hiking related: poor HFD.

With all drama aside, 2011 was definitely the year of exploration for us. From our backpack trek on an outer island, to a gluch with not a single human footprint, to a ridge that only goats trample on, to a spot on a local TV show, and to some pictures featured in Hawaii Magazine, I'd say we covered a lot ground, literally and figuratively speaking.

http://vimeo.com/34144177

http://kaleolancaster.blogspot.com/2012/01/island-trails-2011-video-summary.html

More Videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/islandtrails

Kaleo Lancaster and company do some really amazing "hiking" - start on the easy trails and don't look down.

January 4, 2012

Toons: Mullahs, Clowns, Trolls, and More. - 1/3/11


By Nate Beeler, The Washington Examiner - 1/3/2012


By J.D. Crowe, Mobile Register - 1/3/2012


By Jimmy Margulies, The Record of Hackensack, NJ - 1/3/2012


By Bob Englehart, The Hartford Courant - 1/3/2012


By Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune - 1/3/2012


By Dave Granlund, Politicalcartoons.com - 1/3/2012


By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 1/3/2012


By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 1/3/2012


By John Darkow, Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri - 1/3/2012


By Randy Bish, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review - 1/3/2012


By Bill Day, Cagle Cartoons - 1/3/2012 - "Headed for Extinction"


By Cardow, The Ottawa Citizen - 1/3/2012


By Osama Hajjaj, Abu Mahjoob Creative Productions - 1/3/2012


By Stuart Carlson, January 03, 2012


By Drew Sheneman, January 03, 2012 - "I'm glad the caucuses are almost, keep getting campaign operatives stuck in my grain chute"


By Tom Toles, January 03, 2012



By Jeff Danziger, January 02, 2012


By Jim Morin, January 04, 2012

Note: All previous editions can be found in my journal.
January 3, 2012

Toons: Corn Maze, Citizens United, Stop at Nothing and More. - 1/2/12


By Daryl Cagle, MSNBC.com - 1/2/2012


By Dave Granlund, Politicalcartoons.com - 1/2/2012


By Steve Greenberg, VCReporter, Ventura. CA - 1/2/2012


By Daryl Cagle, MSNBC.com - 1/2/2012


By Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com - 1/2/2012


By Wolverton, Cagle Cartoons - 1/1/2012


By Brian Fairrington, Cagle Cartoons - 12/31/2011


By Pat Oliphant, December 30, 2011


By Tom Toles, January 02, 2012


By Tom Toles, January 01, 2012


By Matt Wuerker, January 02, 2012


By Ted Rall, January 02, 2012


By Jim Morin, January 01, 2012



By Jeff Danziger, January 01, 2012

Note: All previous editions can be found in my journal.
January 2, 2012

Obamas and friends dine in Waikiki on eve of departure


President Barack Obama, left, walks with his daughter Malia as his daughter Sasha carries a family member while leaving the East-West Center after visiting an exhibit about the President's mother's anthropological work in Honolulu Sunday, Dec. 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

By Star-Advertiser staff

POSTED: 12:12 p.m. HST, Jan 01, 2012
LAST UPDATED: 10:01 p.m. HST, Jan 01, 2012

President Barack Obama and his wife and friends dined at Nobu's Waikiki tonight on the eve of the first family's departure.

-----------

Earlier, Obama spent New Year’s Day remembering his family’s history.

In the late morning, Obama took his wife and daughters to visit the grave of his grandfather, Stanley Dunham, at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl.

The Obamas then headed to the East-West Center, which is featuring a display on the anthropological work of the president’s mother, Stanley Ann Dunham. The exhibition includes photographs taken during Dunham’s years of field research in Indonesia, as well as her personal art and artifact collection.

http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/breaking/136507903.html?id=136507903

The little girl is his niece Savita Ng (4?), her sister Suhaila Ng is 7 now I think.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_Soetoro-Ng



She's grown
December 31, 2011

Francesco Petrarca: The Ascent of Mount Ventoux



Francesco Petrarch: "The Ascent of Mount Ventoux," The Renaissance Philosophy of Man, eds. E. Cassirer et al. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948), pp. 36-46.

To Dionigi da Borgo San Sepolcro, of the Order of Saint Augustine, Professor of Theology, about his own troubles.

Today I ascended the highest mountain in this region, which, not without cause, they call the Windy Peak. Nothing but the desire to see its conspicuous height was the reason for this undertaking. For many years I have been intending to make this expedition. You know that since my early childhood, as fate tossed around human affairs, I have been tossed around in these parts, and this mountain, visible far and wide from everywhere, is always in your view. So I was at last seized by the impulse to accomplish what I had always wanted to do. It happened while I was reading Roman history again in Livy that I hit upon the passage where Philip, the king of Macedon - the Philip who waged war against the Roman people - "ascends Mount Haemus in Thessaly, since he believed the rumor that you can see two seas from its top: the Adriatic and the Black Sea." Whether he was right or wrong I cannot make out because the mountain is far from our region, and the disagreement among authors renders the matter uncertain. I do not intend to consult all of them: the cosmographer Pomponius Mela does not hesitate to report the fact as true; Livy supposes the rumor to be false. I would not leave it long in doubt if that mountain were as easy to explore as the one here. At any rate, I had better let it go, in order to come back to the mountain I mentioned at first. It seemed to me that a young man who holds no public office might be excused for doing what an old king is not blamed for.

I now began to think over whom to choose as a companion. It will sound strange to you that hardly a single one of all my friends seemed to me suitable in every respect, so rare a thing is absolute congeniality in every attitude and habit even among dear friends. One was too sluggish, the other too vivacious; one too slow, the other too quick; this one too gloomy of temper, that one too gay. One was duller, the other brighter than I should have liked. This man's taciturnity, that man's flippancy; the heavy weight and obesity of the next, the thinness and weakness of still another were reasons to deter me. The cool lack of curiosity of one, like another's too eager interest, dissuaded me from choosing either. All such qualities, however difficult they are to bear, can be borne at home: loving friendship is able to endure everything; it refuses no burden. But on a journey they become intolerable. Thus my delicate mind, craving honest entertainment, looked about carefully, weighing every detail with no offense to friendship. Tacitly it rejected whatever it could foresee would become troublesome on the projected excursion. What do you think I did? At last I applied for help at home and revealed my plan to my only brother, who is younger than I and whom you know well enough. He could hear of nothing he would have liked better and was happy to fill the place of friend as well as brother.

We left home on the appointed day and arrived at Malaucène at night. This is a place at the northern foot of the mountain.

We spent a day there and began our ascent this morning, each of us accompanied by a single servant. From the start we encountered a good deal of trouble, for the mountain is a steep and almost inaccessible pile of rocky material. However, what the Poet says is appropriate: "Ruthless striving overcomes everything." [Vergil: Georgica i. 145-46; Macrobius, Saturnalia v. 6.]

http://www.idehist.uu.se/distans/ilmh/Ren/ren-pet-ventoux.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascent_of_Mont_Ventoux
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francesco_Petrarca
December 31, 2011

Woody Guthrie: Bound for Local Glory at Last

By PATRICIA COHEN
Published: December 27, 2011

TULSA, Okla. — Oklahoma has always had a troubled relationship with her native son Woody Guthrie. The communist sympathies of America’s balladeer infuriated local detractors. In 1999 a wealthy donor’s objections forced the Cowboy Museum in Oklahoma City to cancel a planned exhibition on Guthrie organized by the Smithsonian Institution. It wasn’t until 2006, nearly four decades after his death, that the Oklahoma Hall of Fame got around to adding him to its ranks.

But as places from California to the New York island get ready to celebrate the centennial of Guthrie’s birth, in 2012, Oklahoma is finally ready to welcome him home. The George Kaiser Family Foundation in Tulsa plans to announce this week that it is buying the Guthrie archives from his children and building an exhibition and study center to honor his legacy.

“Oklahoma was like his mother,” said his daughter Nora Guthrie, throwing back her tangle of gray curls as she reached out in an embrace. “Now he’s back in his mother’s arms.”

The archive includes the astonishing creative output of Guthrie during his 55 years. There are scores of notebooks and diaries written in his precise handwriting and illustrated with cartoons, watercolors, stickers and clippings; hundreds of letters; 581 artworks; a half-dozen scrapbooks; unpublished short stories, novels and essays; as well as the lyrics to the 3,000 or more songs he scribbled on scraps of paper, gift wrap, napkins, paper bags and place mats. Much of the material has rarely or never been seen in public, including the lyrics to most of the songs. Guthrie could not write musical notation, so the melodies have been lost.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/28/arts/music/woody-guthrie-gets-a-belated-honor-in-oklahoma.html?_r=1

December 31, 2011

Eff Ron Paul

&context=C3db0865ADOEgsToPDskKkaQz1FP9zfD7qClMSAvzp

Warning: The ending is crude.
Thanks MineralMan for introducing to me to: http://www.xtranormal.com/
December 31, 2011

Toons: New Years 2012, Political Succession, Political Resolution and More. 12/30/11


By Nate Beeler, The Washington Examiner - 12/30/2011


By Jimmy Margulies, The Record of Hackensack, NJ - 12/30/2011


By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 12/30/2011


By Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune - 12/30/2011 - "Goodbye 2011"


By John Cole, The Scranton Times-Tribune - 12/30/2011 - I learned something new, Father Time has a scythe.


By Dave Granlund, Politicalcartoons.com - 12/30/2011


By Rob Tornoe, The Press of Atlantic City - 12/30/2011


By Bill Day, Cagle Cartoons - 12/30/2011


By Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com - 12/29/2011


By Olle Johansson, Sweden - 12/30/2011


By Jeremy Nell, The New Age, South Africa - 12/30/2011


By Chan Lowe, December 30, 2011


By Jim Morin, 12/28/11


By Jim Morin, 12/30/11




By Jeff Danziger, December 26, 2011 - His cartoons are lagging in availability.


By Ted Rall, December 30, 2011


By Drew Sheneman, December 29, 2011


By Tom Toles, December 30, 2011

If you missed any days, all previous posts can be found in my journal. Party safe, party hard, try to laugh, it's been a long year. -Happy New Year!

Profile Information

Name: Zachary Ellison
Gender: Male
Hometown: Los Angeles
Home country: United States of America
Current location: Los Angeles
Member since: Tue Oct 4, 2005, 03:58 AM
Number of posts: 27,711

About ellisonz

Zachary Ellison is an Independent Journalist and Whistleblower in the Los Angeles area. Zach was most recently employed by the University of Southern California, Office of the Provost from October 2015 to August 2022 as an Executive Secretary and Administrative Assistant supporting the Vice Provost for Academic Operations and the Vice Provost and Senior Advisor to the Provost among others. Zach holds a Master’s in Public Administration and a Graduate Certificate in Sustainable Policy and Planning from the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy. While a student at USC, he worked for the USC Good Neighbors Campaign including on their newsletter distributed university wide. Zach completed his B.A. in History at Reed College, in Portland, Oregon and was a writer, editor, and photographer for the Pasadena High School Chronicle. He was Barack Obama’s one-millionth online campaign contributor in 2008. Zach is a former AmeriCorps intern for Hawaii State Parks and worked for the City of Manhattan Beach Parks and Recreation. He is a trained civil process server, and enjoys weekends in the great outdoors. Find me on: https://zacharyellison.substack.com/
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