Communication Arts 2019 Illustration Shortlist
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A WORLD WITHOUT MEDS an RD ORIGINAL
JUNE 2014 DAVE BARRY ON TODAY’S MAN From YOU CAN DATE BOYS WHEN YOU’RE FORTY ... 15 WHAT DRIVES SUCCESS IN AMERICA From THE NEW YORK TIMES ... 110 A WORLD WITHOUT MEDS An RD ORIGINAL ... 64 THE LITTLE BOAT THAT SAILED THROUGH TIME An RD CLASSIC ... 44 CONFESSIONS OF A CHEESY TOURIST From THE HUFFINGTON POST ... 48 THE FIFTY CHILDREN THEY SAVED An RD ADAPTATION ... 92 YOU BE THE JUDGE .............................................. 25 LAUGHTER, THE BEST MEDICINE ...................... 76 PHOTO OF LASTING INTEREST ......................... 120 WORD POWER ..................................................... 145 QUOTABLE QUOTES ........................................... 152 Removable bookmark brought to you by What’s the Gecko’s favorite book? The Wonderful Lizard of Oz. For another joke, text GEICO to 51684. For more savings, contact GEICO today. geico.com | 1-800-947-AUTO (2886) | Local Offi ce You will receive 1 text message. Message and data rates may apply. Text HELP for help. Your information will not be sold or used for any other purpose. Some discounts, coverages, payment plans and features are not available in all states or all GEICO companies. GEICO is a registered service mark of Government Employees Insurance Company, Washington, D.C. 20076; a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. subsidiary. GEICO Gecko image © 1999-2013. © 2013 GEICO Contents JUNE 2014 Cover Story 64 A WORLD WITHOUT MEDS Imagine surgeons running out of anesthesia, cancer patients searching for drugs, and doctors scrambling for antibiotics. We’re already there. KATHERINE EBAN Strangers Who Changed My Life 78 THE FOLKS AT MOE’S DINER A roomful of people I didn’t know taught me about patriotism, gratitude, and love. -
2017 Abstracts
Abstracts for the Annual SECAC Meeting in Columbus, Ohio October 25th-28th, 2017 Conference Chair, Aaron Petten, Columbus College of Art & Design Emma Abercrombie, SCAD Savannah The Millennial and the Millennial Female: Amalia Ulman and ORLAN This paper focuses on Amalia Ulman’s digital performance Excellences and Perfections and places it within the theoretical framework of ORLAN’s surgical performance series The Reincarnation of Saint Orlan. Ulman’s performance occurred over a twenty-one week period on the artist’s Instagram page. She posted a total of 184 photographs over twenty-one weeks. When viewed in their entirety and in relation to one another, the photographs reveal a narrative that can be separated into three distinct episodes in which Ulman performs three different female Instagram archetypes through the use of selfies and common Instagram image tropes. This paper pushes beyond the casual connection that has been suggested, but not explored, by art historians between the two artists and takes the comparison to task. Issues of postmodern identity are explored as they relate to the Internet culture of the 1990s when ORLAN began her surgery series and within the digital landscape of the Web 2.0 age that Ulman works in, where Instagram is the site of her performance and the selfie is a medium of choice. Abercrombie situates Ulman’s “image-body” performance within the critical framework of feminist performance practice, using the postmodern performance of ORLAN as a point of departure. J. Bradley Adams, Berry College Controlled Nature Focused on gardens, Adams’s work takes a range of forms and operates on different scales. -
Get This Week's Gazette
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Volume 14, No. 30 A Weekly Newspaper for the Library Staff September 5, 2003 Librarian Names Louise Glück 12th Poet Laureate ouise Glück, an award-winning laureate’s offi ce during the next year.” author of nine books of poetry, is Glück succeeds Poets Laureate Billy Lthe 12th poet to be named to the Collins, Robert Pinsky, Robert Hass, Stan- Library’s offi ce of Poet Laureate Consul- ley Kunitz, Rita Dove, Mona Van Duyn, tant in Poetry. She will open the Library’s Joseph Brodsky, Mark Strand, Howard annual literary series on Tuesday, Oct. Nemerov, Richard Wilbur and Robert 21, with a reading of her work. Penn Warren. On Wednesday, Oct. 22, she will host Her nine books of poetry include a Favorite Poem reading with Frank “The Seven Ages” (Ecco Press, 2001); Bidart and former Poet Laureate Robert “Vita Nova” (1999), which was awarded Pinsky. In addition to programming a The New Yorker magazine’s Book Award new reading series for younger poets, in Poetry; “Meadowlands” (1996); “The Glück will participate in Library events Wild Iris” (1992), which received the in February and again in May. Pulitzer Prize and the Poetry Society Louise Glück In announcing the appointment, of America’s William Carlos Williams Librarian of Congress James H. Bill- Award; “Ararat” (1990), which received ington said, “Louise Glück will bring to series of book-length poetic cycles. Her the Library’s Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt the Library of Congress a strong, vivid, prize-winning poetry and her great inter- National Prize for Poetry; and “The Tri- deep poetic voice, accomplished in a est in young poets will enliven the poet GLÜCK, Continues on page 12 Surgeon General Opens Hispanic Month Events ice Admiral Richard H. -
The Washington Spectator (ISSN Level of Importance We Were Attributing to It
The WA S H I N G T O N washingtonspectator.org SEPTEMBER 2020 vol. 46, no. 9 issn 0887-428x © 2020 The Public Concern Foundation SPECTATOR washingtonspectator.org continued to get traction. On August 10, Pat Robertson’s show Anatomy of Deceit: on the Christian Broadcasting Network carried an interview with Simone Gold and an endorsement of her hydroxychloroquine Team Trump Deploys cure. On August 21, Alex Jones’s NewsWars carried an interview with another member of America’s Frontline Doctors, Mark Doctors With Dubious McDonald. McDonald—a child psychiatrist—maintained, “If all Americans had access to hydroxychloroquine, the pandemic Qualifications to Push would essentially end in about 30 days.” Science has shown otherwise. Despite early hopes last spring, Fake Cure for Covid-19 there is mounting evidence that hydroxychloroquine is a prob- lematic—and even dangerous—treatment for Covid-19. One By Anne Nelson expert with firsthand knowledge is Nick Sawyer, an academic emergency physician in Sacramento, Calif. In July he wrote an n July 27, a dozen physicians posed in front article for Lifeline, the publication of the California chapter of of the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., dressed the American College of Emergency Physicians, describing his O in white lab coats with “America’s Frontline Doctors” harrowing two weeks of service in the Covid wards of Elmhurst stitched over the pocket. The group’s chief Hospital in Queens. Sawyer was part of a spokesperson was Dr. Simone Gold, an team of California doctors dispatched by emergency physician from Los Angeles. Governor Gavin Newsom to offer emer- They were introduced by Jenny Beth Mar- gency assistance at the epicenter of the tin, the founding CEO of Tea Party Patriots, epidemic, at the height of the New York as participants in the “White Coat Summit.” City outbreak. -
The Washington Spectator Is Being the Fact Is, This Message Has Them Based on the Color of Published Bi-Monthly During Covid Presumably Convinced Some Their Skin
The WA S H I N G T O N washingtonspectator.org JULY/AUGUST 2021 vol. 47, no. 4 issn 0887-428x SPECTATOR © 2021 The Public Concern Foundation washingtonspectator.org delivered the largest and most reliable slice of the Trump elector- What’s Missing From ate. Dozens of featured speakers this year included Mike Pence, Ted Cruz, Marsha Blackburn, Ron DeSantis, Lindsey Graham, Popular Discussions and Madison Cawthorn. I came away from my listening experience in Kissimmee with of Today’s Christian a few surprises—or at least a few takeaways that may challenge some of the narratives that prevail in the center and on the left Nationalism about America’s Christian nationalist movement. The first is By Katherine Stewart that any Democrats who take comfort from the thought that demography is destiny are probably deluding themselves. The received wisdom on the center-left is that America’s homegrown f you want to know where the Republican authoritarian faction is an affair largely concentrated on an older, Party is headed, you need to set aside your assumptions whiter base that is just now exiting the stage of history with loud I and simply listen to grievances in hand. But what its leaders and activ- that’s not how the lead- ists say—especially when ers of the movement see they’re talking amongst things—and the broader themselves. As a reporter picture may indeed be a and author on the reli- bit more complex. gious right beat over the Of the many reli- past dozen years, I’ve gious-right strategy made a point of attending gatherings I’ve attended such meetings, especially over the years, this was those that focus on the among the most ethni- religious right leadership cally and racially diverse. -
FINAL Scholastic July AI
Publication Date 1st July 2021 SONG OF THE FAR ISLES Nicholas Bowling When the Duchess arrives on the isle of Little Drum, she brings orders of silence, threatening the very soul of Oran’s musical community. But then Oran hears of a mythical instrument with the power to manipulate hearts; she must find it and play it to change the Duchess’s mind … • From Costa-shortlisted Nicholas Bowling comes a middle-grade fable of adventure, myth and music to make your heart sing. • The adventure and magic of Neil Gaiman’s Stardust with a Hebridean-inspired fantasy setting and lovable characters reminiscent of Pixar’s Brave. • A story about how music has the power to reveal, to inspire, and to bind people together. ‘Nicholas Bowling is a thrilling writer’ THE TELEGRAPH Price: £6.99 ISBN: 978-1-912626-67-0 Pub Date: 1st July 2021 eBook ISBN: 978-1-913696-02-3 CBMC code: D3N79 Age: 9+ Dimensions: 198x129 mm Illustrations: N/a Word count: 65,000 (words approx.) Export: Yes Binding: Paperback Rights: World CHICKEN HOUSE 01373 454488 www.chickenhousebooks.com DESCRIPTION An extract from easily the music came to her. She heard the Oran lives on Little Drum, where men’s tears and echoed them delicately, brought order and beauty to their sadness. They hunched music is everything. Every islander SONG OF THE over and began to sob all the more. has a birth instrument and a life ‘I said stop!’ song – and the ancestors, called FAR ISLES Lord Magmalley marched towards Oran. She Nicholas Bowling was aware of him only as a vague presence on ghasts, linger to hear the music. -
ARTICLES of INTEREST May 8, 2020 QUOTE(S)
ARTICLES OF INTEREST May 8, 2020 QUOTE(S) OF THE WEEK “I would rather live in a world where my life is surrounded by mystery than live in a world so small that my mind could comprehend it.” − Harry Emerson Fosdick “Realists are, as a rule, only men in the rut of routine who are incapable of transcending a narrow circle of antiquated notions. But their adverse opinion does carry some weight and can do great harm to a new project — at least until the innovation is strong enough to push the "realists" and their moldy notions aside.” − Theodore Herzl “It is ... through the world of the imagination which takes us beyond the restrictions of provable fact, that we touch the hem of truth.” − Madeleine L'Engle “The possible's slow fuse is lit by the Imagination.” − Emily Dickinson “You cannot rely upon what you have been taught. All you have learned from history is old ways of making mistakes. There is nothing that history can tell you about what we must do tomorrow. Only what we must not do.” − Edwin H. Land “Imagination is the eye of the soul.” − Joseph Joubert “It isn't all over; everything has not been invented; the human adventure is just beginning.” − Gene Roddenberry VIDEO(S) OF THE WEEK Watch: Quibi's Meg Whitman on launching a streaming service in a pandemic AdAge.com Make Your Own Paper Prawn Using This Pattern Designed by Artist Lisa Lloyd Colossal Pixar Shares Recipe Videos On How To Recreate Dishes From Well-Loved Films DesignTaxi.com Fast Comedy presents: a master class for videoconferencing Fast Company Breaking Down Barriers for -
Retha Swanepoel, Gensler
I S S ( THE ART AND SCIENCE OF) U E 03 THE POSSIBLE ISSUE 03 ( THE ART AND SCIENCE OF ) THE POSSIBLE 4 (THE ART AND SCIENCE OF) THE POSSIBLE If work is a thing we do rather than a place we go, why do we still spend so much time at the office? In a world where computers and their algorithmic minds can far outstrip us in crunching data, humans are valued P54 more than ever for our idiosyncrasies, our creativity and the connections we make. And the magic really happens when we’re together. P18 So today’s offices have to be better: not just a functional backdrop, they must actively draw us in, and out of ourselves, nurture our wellbeing, inspire us, help us to flourish in environments that are ever more saturated with technology. P28 That technology doesn’t need to overwhelm us if we apply it intelligently and sensitively. Data is what we make of it. The funny thing is, the more we use our robot assistants, THE ART AND SCIENCE OF the more we can refocus on what makes us human. Tom Smith, WSP “Great design will always be about human creativity. The computer doesn’t take that away, it just augments it. It’s like having a very geeky designer on the team” Arjun Kaicker, Zaha Hadid Architects / page 52 Editor-in-chief Julie Guppy Editorial consultants Mark Bessoudo, Cover illustration by Noma Bar Published by Wordmule © WSP Editor Katie Puckett Fredrik Bergström, David Cooper, Bridget wordmule.co.uk 1600 René-Lévesque Blvd. -
ADC 97Th ANNUAL AWARDS – FINALISTS Includes Gold, Silver, Bronze Cubes and Merit Winners
ADC 97TH ANNUAL AWARDS – FINALISTS Includes Gold, Silver, Bronze Cubes and Merit winners. Cube details will be announced during Creative Week, May 7–11. ADVERTISING ART DIRECTION DDB Paris + Eddy + Digital - Single Hasbro Emerging Species Studio5 / Paris R/GA / Sao Paulo Mobile - Single Banco Bradesco next Bank BBDO New York + Motion - Single Downtown Records Live Looper BBDO Studios / New York McCann New York + Motion - Single Microsoft Space Holiday Blk-Ops / Los Angeles R/GA / Tokyo Motion - Single MUJI Tokyo Pen Pixel AlmapBBDO / Sao Paulo Poster Advertising - Campaign Getty Images Nosferatu SLOW TRAIN, SLOW LIFE. DENTSU / Tokyo Poster Advertising - Campaign EAST JAPAN RAILWAY COMPANY Get Back, Tohoku. DENTSU / Tokyo Poster Advertising - Campaign OLFA Corporation The Art of Cutouts ...And That's the Smell of FCB Chicago Poster Advertising - Campaign Archer+Wolf Archer FCB Chicago Poster Advertising - Campaign Radio Flyer Travel Posters Juniper Park\TBWA Communications / Toronto Poster Advertising - Campaign Miller Lite Lite Originals SHISEIDO / Tokyo Poster Advertising - Campaign SHISEIDO Makeup Tools TBWA INDIA / Mumbai Poster Advertising - Campaign TBWA\INDIA Zoobar Pet Friendly Bar Dentsu + SUMOGIRLS 82 Amana + Press / Print Advertising - Single Hokkoku Shimbun TECHNIQUES Taki Corporation / Tokyo AlmapBBDO / Sao Paulo Press / Print Advertising - Campaign Alpargatas Made of Brazilian Summer Amber China / Shanghai + ASD Ammeloo Chef's Edition Knife Press / Print Advertising - Campaign ChopChop 2.0 Campaign Illusion Bangkok series -
Sustainable California Ucla Luskin School of Public Affairs Part 2: Water Editor’S Ote
ISSUE #4 / FALL 2016 DESIGNS FOR A NEW CALIFORNIA IN PARTNERSHIP WITH SUSTAINABLE CALIFORNIA UCLA LUSKIN SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS PART 2: WATER EDITOR’S OTE BLUEPRINT A magazine of research, policy, Los Angeles and California THIS ISSUE OF BLUEPRINT IS SEVERAL THINGS AT ONCE: It’s Part 2 of our The theft, fair or not, also established Los Angeles as a city dependent sustainability series, following up on the spring look at power with a fall take upon imports. For most of our history, water has come from the Sierras (and on water. It’s also an opportunity to examine two of Los Angeles’ most im- from the Colorado River and Sacramento Bay Delta), while power has been portant political figures — the city’s mayor and council president. Finally, it’s generated by coal plants in Utah and Arizona. As Mayor Eric Garcetti notes a look at how power works, and doesn’t work, in Los Angeles — whether in this issue, the city has long been in the strange position of flushing out it’s the region’s infamous fragmentation and the problems that creates in rain that falls here while importing water from far away. water prices or the subtleties of political leadership in and around city hall. That’s changing. As these stories and interviews remind us, Los Angeles is a complicat- Guided in part by research featured in this issue, as well as directives ed place to solve big problems, and none is bigger than L.A.’s historic from the mayor, Los Angeles is committing itself to a water future very quest for water. -
Asian American Pacific Islander Booklist
Bank Street College of Education Educate The Center for Children's Literature 5-2021 Asian American Pacific Islander Booklist Children's Book Committee. Bank Street College of Education Follow this and additional works at: https://educate.bankstreet.edu/ccl Part of the Children's and Young Adult Literature Commons Recommended Citation Children's Book Committee. Bank Street College of Education (2021). Asian American Pacific Islander Booklist. Bank Street College of Education. Retrieved from https://educate.bankstreet.edu/ccl/14 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by Educate. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Center for Children's Literature by an authorized administrator of Educate. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recently-Published Recommended Books by and/or about the AAPI Community Arranged by Age Published from 2015 to early 2021 May 2021 Background A month ago, we formed a subcommittee to produce a short list of recommended books, from our Best Books List archives, centered on AAPI characters, authors, and illustrators. This was in direct response to spikes in unprovoked anti-Asian violence in the past year. That process sparked many debates over which ones to include. After that experience, the subcommittee returned to our archives for a closer inspection. We wanted to create a larger resource for readers from infancy to age 18.We also wanted to be able to deliver it within a reasonable timeframe, so here is how we created the list you see below. Methodology 1. First, we combed our recent Best Books list (BBL) archives for books that we have recommended, from our most recently published list (2020) back to the 2016 edition (meaning, books published from 2015 to 2019). -
NEW Messenger
N O R T H W E S T N A Z A R E N E U N I V E R S I T Y G REAT MINDS • GREAT HEARTS • GREAT FUTURES VOL. 93, NUM. 3 theMMESSENGERESSENGERFALL 2005 Fusing art & literature — NNU students tackle Hollywood! president’s letter contents Dear Alumni and Friends: I remember thinking at the time of my father’s features death in 1975, that this man, born in 1897 in President: Dr. Richard A. Hagood Texas, had seen remarkable changes in 4 NNU Senior Gwen Miller Goes transportation during his lifetime. During his Vice President for Enrollment Services Hollywood on NBC’s Fear Factor! early life in rural Oklahoma, his family had & Marketing: Dr. Eric Forseth What do you get when you take a friendly girl from Boise and either walked or taken horse and buggy to Vice President for University Advancement: plunk her down in the middle of Los Angeles? Pure magic! their intended destination—and they didn’t Gary Skaggs travel very far. By the time he died, humans Director, Alumni Relations: 8 Remembering Helen Wilson, 1914 - 2005 had traveled to the moon and back. Darl Bruner Amazing changes requiring amazing For nearly forty years, Miss Helen Wilson graced the campus of adaptation. Director, Marketing & Public Relations / Northwest Nazarene University. Here she is remembered for her Managing Editor: humor, love and joie de vivre by a former student and friend. Just one generation later, here in 2005, as I write this Angela Klein letter to you, I have access to instant communi- Designer: cation with many parts of the world.