July 2009 Archives

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I would also like to let everyone know that despite the fact there have not been a lot of updates, I have been keeping up and around on the world and architecture in particular on a tumblr at upyourarchitecture.tumblr.com.

Tumblr is a blogging platform that allows users to post text, images, video, links, quotes, and audio to their tumblelog, a short-form blog. Users are able to "follow" other users and see their posts together on their dashboard. You can like or reblog other blogs on the site and other users can do the same to your posts. As your blog becomes more popular your tumblarity will rise.

I'm going to try to more seamlessly blend the tumblr, twitter, and main blog to create a web of information about myself, the work I'm doing on the Coast and regurgitate the information I absorb from the net and beyond each day. Once the site is finished I will have my tumblr roll and twitter feed streaming on the right hand columns as well as useful links and a search function for UYA.com and other goodies. Thanks for all the patience and I'm looking forward to getting settled into my multi-media empire soon.

Dear Sarah Palin,

I don't know how that could have possibly been part of a speech. Did your writers already resign?

Ouch.
J

Chapter 550: Like Wildfire

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If you haven't seen this, hopefully it will warm your heart and forgive my delays as I continue to modify code to get the look of UYA back to something recognizable. Oh Minnesota...

I'm upgrading to Moveable Type 4.25 in anticipation of a major overhaul to the site, so we're at bare bones right now. Expect something good looking after the weekend.

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Give & Take - where happy hour meets show & tell

We're excited to introduce you to Give & Take, a new monthly event series produced by Solutions Twin Cities and co-presented with Intermedia Arts.

Give & Take subverts the traditional short-format presentation model that says information has to flow one way - from the presenter to the audience. We do this by asking everybody in attendance, presenters and audience, two questions:

1) What do you know about?
2) What do you want to know about?

This makes Give & Take a vehicle for spurring new connections, conversations, and relationships within a community under the guise of a single, simple event.

Our goal is to create a welcoming, participatory, and effervescent environment in which unexpected connections can happen between members of the audience/community, and people with hidden talents, fascinations, and expertise can be invited onto the stage; revealing matches and overlaps in what people know and what they want to know, and -in doing so- create stronger interstitial bonds within the community.

We believe that the more our audience connects with one another, the more it becomes a community in and of itself, and a community defined by sharing passion, energy, and creativity is a powerful thing.

We hope to see you there!


Give & Take
Wednesday, July 22nd

7pm doors / 7:30 - 9:30pm program / Social hour to follow

Intermedia Arts
2822 Lyndale Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55408

$3 - $5 Suggested donation


This month at Give & Take...

Andy Dayton & Lindsey Borgerson know about making short films

Robert Wallace knows about influenza

Ed Kohler knows about the art of toilet paper folding

Melissa Constantine knows about architecture

Paul Merrill know about Minnesota history

Arlene Birt knows about telling background stories

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A PORTRAIT OF MISSISSIPPI

LAUNCHED JANUARY 26, 2009

A Portrait of Mississippi: Mississippi Human Development Report 2009
Mississippi ranks last among U.S. states on the American Human Development Index. But some groups in the state enjoy well-being levels similar to those in top-ranked Connecticut, while others experience levels of human development of the average American nearly a half century ago. The Mississippi State Conference NAACP commissioned this analysis by county, gender, and race to stimulate dialogue and action about Mississippi's disparities.


Read the Full Report (PDF - 3.3MB)
Read the Executive Summary (PDF - 980KB)

MAIN FINDINGS ON MISSISSIPPI

BY COUNTY:

The top three county groups in the state, Rankin, Madison-Hinds, and DeSoto, are well ahead of the rest of the state in well-being with a human develop­ment level around the U.S. average.

A resident of top-ranked Rankin County lives, on average, 6 years longer than a resident of the bottom-ranked Panola-Coahoma area, is 3 times more likely to complete college, and earns over $12,000 more. Mississippians living in Panola-Coahoma have a human development level similar to that of the average American in 1975, more than thirty years ago.

BY RACE:

Whites who are worst off in the entire state in terms of income are still better off than the vast majority of African Americans. Earnings for white Mississippians in all county groups spans from $22,000 to $38,000. For African Americans, the range is $13,000 to $25,000.

An African American baby boy born today in Mississippi can expect a shorter lifespan than the average American in 1960.

BY GENDER:

Mississippi's females have a higher Human Development Index than do males, despite the fact that they earn 33 percent less, because females live over 5 years longer and have far higher rates of school enrollment.

White men in Mississippi earn an average of $5,000 more per year than the typical American worker today, at $33,390. But white women have median personal earnings about equal to what typical Americans earned in 1980, $21,453.


Main Recommendations

Reduce infant mortality by improving health care for African American girls and women.
African American babies die in Mississippi at more than twice the rate of white babies. The death of a child is a loss like no other, and the burden of grief borne by the African American community is heavy. The solution lies in ensuring that women have access to quality medical care and that girls grow to adulthood in an environment that supports them to eat a nutritious diet, get adequate exercise, manage chronic conditions like diabetes and HIV, cope with stress, and enjoy overall mental health.

Improve the health of African American men. An African American baby boy born today in Mississippi can expect to live 68.2 years. This is a lifespan shorter than that of the average American in 1960. African American men in Mississippi die at higher rates than white men from the leading causes of death--heart disease, cancer, and stroke--as well as from other causes like homicide, accidents, diabe­tes, and HIV/AIDS. The premature loss of African American men is a source of both economic and emotional distress in African American communities.

Improve the quality of public education in Mississippi.
Mississippi has some of the worst scores in the nation on most measures of K-12 educational quality. It is difficult to imagine how the state can make economic progress when the future workforce is deprived of the opportunity to develop even basic skills, much less the higher-order skills needed to obtain better-paying jobs, such as independence of thought, communications skills, interpersonal skills, and technology literacy.

Connect at-risk boys to school. About a third of Mississippi's African American men over 25 do not have a high school diploma. And today, still greater numbers of African American boys are leaving high school without graduating. Without a high school diploma, prison becomes a far likelier destination than college. The high rate of juvenile detention in Mississippi, especially for nonviolent offenses, is a worri­some impediment to long-term ability of African American boys to become produc­tive members of society and to lead fulfilling lives of choice, freedom, and dignity.

Ensure that working families can make ends meet.
White men in Mississippi are, on average, earning about $5,000 more per year than the typical American worker today. But African American women today earn less than the typical American in 1960; African American men earn what typical Americans earned in 1970; and white women what typical Americans earned in 1980. More than one in five Mississippians lives below the poverty line; nearly seven in ten public school stu­dents qualifies for a subsidized lunch. Other states help working families meet a basic monthly budget with a state earned income tax credit, state minimum wages, affordable housing, affordable health care options, and subsidized childcare. Such policies help to create an infrastructure of opportunity for all.

The first ever Encierro (bull run) of San Fermin in Nueva Orleans took place on Saturday, July 7th 2007 at 8am in the French Quarter of New Orleans, the same day the original Spanish event took place in Pamplona. Close to 200 participants arrived on that fateful day, and were promptly chased and "gored" by 14 "bulls".

The second ever Encierro took place Saturday July 12, 2008, only this time we had 33 "bulls", over 600 runners, 30 Rolling Elvi, and hundreds of spectators!

The Encierro of 2009 is scheduled for Saturday July 11, 2009 at precisely 8am.

The event will replicate and pay homage to the world famous Encierro of Pamplona, Spain, aka The Running of the Bulls, only our bulls are members of New Orleans' all-female flat-track derby team the Big Easy Rollergirls!

The event will "officially" begin at 7am at the Three Legged Dog bar on the corner of Conti Street and Burgundy Street in the French Quarter section of New Orleans. Sangria, Spanish wines, and good cheer will be available.

There will be a special guest appearance by New Orleans' own Rolling Elvi!

At precisely 8am the run will begin.

The run will end at the Gazebo Cafe in Latrobe Park on the corner of Ursulines Street and Decatur Street, where more Sangria, Spanish wine, tapas and good cheer will be available.

That's when the party starts, probably right around 8:12am. DJ Dub Insurgent (former resident DJ in Buenos Aires, Argentina at La Cigale and recent opener for Manu Chao in New Orleans) will be holding down the turntables, and a general block-party will ensue.

RUNNERS ARE REQUIRED TO WEAR (ANY KIND OF) WHITE SHIRT, WHITE PANTS OR SHORTS, AND A PIECE OF RED CLOTH ABOUT THE WAIST AND NECK.

The Encierro is free and requires no registration -- just show up and RUN!

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from July 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

June 2009 is the previous archive.

August 2009 is the next archive.

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