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Saturday, December 16, 2023

FLYING ETIQUETTE - AN ESSENTIAL READ!

An excerpt from the Washington Post - 

The 52 Definitive Rules of Flying 

The Handbook of Behaving Like a Civilized Person, From Airport Arrival to Landing

By Natalie Compton and Andrea Sachs

Etiquette is more important than ever these days. For most of this year, more than 2 million people have been streaming through security checkpoints each day, according to the Transportation Security Administration. One ill-placed limb on the arm rest or acrid hard-boiled egg can sour the air travel experience for many.

To help you become a model passenger, we compiled 52 rules that cover every step in the flying process, from arriving at the airport to exiting the aircraft. To reinforce these tenets, we inserted several pop quizzes. Ace these tests and adopt these behaviors and you will earn your wings — angel’s, not pilot’s.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/interactive/2023/flying-airport-etiquette/

This is Faye - PLEASE READ AND SHARE FAR AND WIDE.

Monday, December 4, 2023

How Deep Is Your Love Cover By Bee Gees



That’s What Friends Are For Cover By @DionneWarwickOfficial


Inmates Can Now Make Free Phone Calls in Five States

An excerpt from CNN.com 

Making phone calls from prison is now free in Massachusetts

By Zoe Sottile, CNN

Inmates at Massachusetts correctional facilities can now
make an unlimited number of calls cost-free.
WichienTep/iStockphoto/Getty Images


Massachusetts has now become the fifth state in the US to allow inmates to make phone calls for free, thanks to a new bill signed into law by Governor Maura Healey.

The new law went into effect on Friday and includes all 14 correctional facilities in the state, according to a news release from the Massachusetts Department of Correction.

The change will “provide equitable access to sustained communication between incarcerated individuals and their loved ones,” says the news release.

There is no limit to the number of calls each inmate can make, according to the release.

“The Massachusetts Department of Correction recognizes the importance of incarcerated individuals maintaining bonds with their loved ones,” said the Department of Correction commissioner Carol Mici in the release. “No cost calls will alleviate the financial burden and remove barriers for an individual in MA DOC custody to stay connected with their outside support system. Strong family support helps to advance the rehabilitative process, reduces recidivism, and contributes to successful reentry upon release.”

https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/03/us/massachusetts-prison-call-free-trnd/index.html

Whoever invented this game should be given a Nobel


Sunday, December 3, 2023

TSA Canine Calendar

An excerpt from the Washington Post - 

Meet the hard-working dogs of TSA’s 2024 canine calendar

You can get your paws on one this second because it’s free to download

By Natalie B. Compton

Zita, a German shorthaired pointer,
works at Minneapolis St. Paul International Airport. (TSA photo)

The Transportation Security Administration has just released the perfect antidote to this week’s capitalistic overload of holiday sale mania: a 2024 calendar of very good dogs with airport jobs. And it’s free.

Travel better with news, tips and guides that make you feel like a local wherever you go. In your inbox, Thursdays.

The TSA Canine Calendar is an annual tradition celebrating the work of America’s explosives-detection dogs. More than 1,000 patrol our airports and 300 more are trained every year to sniff out explosive materials.

“We screen passengers, baggage, we do terminal searches, we even screen cargo,” said TSA canine handler Caitlyn Winn, who’s been working with her dog, Puk (featured in this year’s calendar for October), at the Boston Logan International Airport since 2019. Like all the dazzlers in the calendar, Puk lives at home with her handler and leads a pretty normal life. But at the office (or, airport) she goes from pet to professional.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2023/11/29/tsa-dog-calendar-2024/

The Billionaire Myth

An excerpt from the Washington Post - 

Opinion:  The billionaire myth takes a beating

By Jennifer Rubin 

New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin, left, and Elon Musk
at an event in New York on Wednesday. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Long before Donald Trump rode down the golden escalator or Elon Musk purchased Twitter (now X) or Sam Bankman-Fried built a crypto empire, Americans lionized billionaires.

“The idea of a self-made American billionaire is the super-sized version of all other self-made myths, and outlandish to the point of being at least mildly insulting,” BSchools.org, a blog about business schools, explained. “Individual achievement still deserves recognition. But these things don’t operate in a vacuum — and massive wealth is never solely attributable to the actions of a single person.”

But, as we have learned again and again this year, sometimes the self-appointed “genius” billionaire is simply a crank, a con man or a beneficiary of familial wealth and luck.

Never has the billionaire myth looked shakier. Trump, the four-times-indicted former president, is facing civil liability for exaggerating his wealth (built on inheritance) and property values. Bankman-Fried is facing a lengthy prison sentence for fraud. And Musk, who lost more than half of Twitter’s value, self-incinerated in a now-viral interview in which he crassly told off advertisers.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/12/03/billionaire-myth-musk-trump/

Looking at 2023 in the Rearview Mirror

From CNN - 

2023: The Year in Pictures

https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2023/specials/year-in-pictures/ 

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Outstanding Travel Hacks

An excerpt from Travel Noire - 

103 Travel Hacks to Make Jet-Setting a Little Easier

Travel Hacks

By Leah Jones

           Photo Credit: Atikh and Khayriyyah/Unsplash

Hitting the road can be exhilarating, but traveling also comes with its fair share of hassles. Between crowded airports, cramped flights, and language barriers in foreign destinations, getting from point A to point B can involve plenty of headaches. Luckily, there are all sorts of ingenious tips and tricks that can make travel less stressful and more enjoyable. Whether it’s your first time backpacking abroad or you’re a seasoned jet-setter, a few simple travel hacks can go a long way in making your trips simpler and smoother.

We’ve put together 103 of these hacks to help upgrade your next trip. From packing pointers to tech tools, these hacks cover all aspects of travel from start to finish. With these tips at your disposal, you can breeze through annoying logistics and focus on creating memorable experiences. 

https://travelnoire.com/travel-hacks


Sunday, November 26, 2023

10 SHOCKING Things I Learned Driving Around Texas for 4 Months

When I moved back to Texas from California and the small town of China, Texas (population 1100) where I was raised to the big city of Houston, the biggest surprise was the Texas Turnaround (number 2).  Every city should have these.  They're the best.


Saturday, November 25, 2023

Ten Commandments Bill - Best Rebuttal EVER!

 

@jamestalarico Texas Republicans are trying to force public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom. I told the bill author: “This bill is not only un-constitutional and un-American, it’s deeply in-Christian.” #txlege ♬ original sound - James Talarico

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Jenga Genius - Guinness World Records

An excerpt from Upworthy - 

Teen with autism makes record-breaking Jenga block tower, inspiring Hallmark holiday movie

15-year-old Auldin Maxwell, who stacked an astonishing 1,840 Jenga pieces all on one single block, says using them helps tap into his creativity.

By Heather Wake


                     

At the ripe old age of fifteen, Auldin Maxwell is already breaking world records and inspiring Hallmark movies.

Maxwell landed his first spot in the Guinness World Records in November 2020, when he successfully balanced 693 Jenga blocks all on top of one vertical facing Jenga block.

Only four months later, he broke his own record by stacking 1,400 Jenga blocks onto one vertical block, more than doubling the original amount. He then broke the record for most Jenga GIANT blocks (500) stacked on top of a single vertical Jenga GIANT block.

Monday, November 20, 2023

Rosalynn Carter: A Testament to Her Character (May She RIP)

An excerpt from Time.com

Rosalynn Carter Hired a Wrongfully Convicted Murderer to Serve as White House Nanny. They Remained Lifelong Friends

BY KATHY EHRICH DOWD

Amy Carter playing on the White House grounds with Mary Prince.
National Archives and Records Administration/Wiki Commons

Mary Prince, a Black woman who had been convicted of murder, was already a controversial figure at Jimmy Carter’s 1977 Presidential Inauguration.

Although she was incarcerated, Prince was given permission to travel to Washington, D.C. for the event and arrived in a dress made of material given to her by her fellow inmates at the Fulton County Jail and the Atlanta Work Release Center. At the end of the celebration, Prince remembers newly minted First Lady Rosalynn Carter pulling her aside. "Before I left, Mrs. Carter said, 'How would you like to work in this big old place?'" Prince told People that year.

Rosalynn Carter and Prince had known each other for years at that point, and had developed a close bond. Prince had been young Amy Carter's nanny when the family lived at the Georgia governor's mansion, not long after Prince was accused of—and subsequently sentenced to life for—murder. When the Carters arrived at the White House, most political operatives would have advised the family to keep their distance from Prince. But the first couple did the opposite.

After the inauguration, Prince told Rosalynn that she would indeed be interested in working at the White House. And Rosalynn pulled out all the stops: She secured a reprieve for Prince, helped make President Carter her parole officer and officially hired her to serve as Amy Carter's nanny at the White House.

Send Your Name to Space in a Bottle

An excerpt from the Washington Post - 

Send your name to space via NASA’s ‘Message in a Bottle’

The space agency is inviting people to submit their names by the end of the year for inclusion on a mission to one of Jupiter’s moons

By Erin Blakemore

In 2024, a new spacecraft will hurtle toward Jupiter in a bid to learn whether its moon Europa is capable of supporting life. The craft will carry more than high-tech sensors: It also will bear a poem and hundreds of thousands of human names.

Yours could be one of them.

NASA is asking people to submit their names ahead of the mission’s October 2024 launch. Those submitted by the end of 2023 will go into space on the Europa Clipper spacecraft, which should enter Jupiter’s orbit in 2030.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2023/11/19/nasa-name-in-space-europa/

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Righting a Wrong From So Long Ago

An excerpt from the Washington Post - 

At last, a diploma for Black deaf students who set historic precedent

A court victory in 1952 allowed them to attend school in Washington. On Saturday, Gallaudet University finally gave them a diploma and an apology.

Perspective by Theresa Vargas


Janice Boyd Ruffin tears up after accepting a diploma on Saturday during a ceremony at
 Gallaudet University honoring students who attended a segregated school
on the university's campus in the 1950s. (Minh Connors/The Washington Post)

Robbie D. Cheatham knew her worth. She also knew other people didn’t always see it.

“She had a lot of things that happened to her in life, really hard, hard stuff, because of being deaf, because of being Black, because of being a woman,” Cheatham’s daughter Krissi Spence told me. “She was so strong mentally and emotionally because she had to be. She had to fight.”

She had to fight in ways that Spence only fully realized after her mom’s death in December at the age of 86.

It was then that she learned Cheatham was part of a group of Black deaf students who weren’t allowed to attend the only school for deaf children in Washington, the city where they lived, until their families filed a class-action lawsuit in 1952. Then, despite a court victory, they weren’t treated the same as the White students who attended kindergarten through 12th grade at the Kendall School on Gallaudet’s campus. Black students were enrolled in the Kendall School Division II for Negroes. They were placed in a separate classroom with separate teachers, and when it came time for them to graduate, unlike their White peers, they weren’t given diplomas.

On Saturday, Gallaudet University held a poignant ceremony aimed at righting that wrong. Officials handed out diplomas for 24 Black deaf students who should have received them more than six decades earlier. Five of the six students who are still alive made it to the ceremony.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2023/07/22/deaf-black-gallaudet-diploma/

Etta James, Gladys Knight and Chaka Khan - Ain't Nobody Business (live B...


Luciano Pavarotti & Barry White


Soul Corporation - 'You To Me Are Everything'


Pasquale Grasso - Solitude (Official Video) ft. Samara Joy


Jon Batiste - I NEED YOU


When I fall in Love Natalie Cole & Ruben Studdard


Lalah Hathaway - Both Sides Now (The Kennedy Center 2022)


Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Southern Green Beans


Kinetic Sculpture Twinkle Stars, 3D Wooden Unique Wall Decor Art, Specia...


I'm Ready to Head to Chicago Now!

An excerpt from The New York Times - 

A Pie Shop on Chicago’s South Side Serves More Than Dessert

With her first brick-and-mortar bakery, Justice of the Pies, the pastry chef Maya-Camille Broussard focuses on creativity — and inclusivity for people with disabilities.

By Kayla Stewart - Reporting From Chicago

The pastry chef Maya-Camille Broussard has opened a new bakery
in Avalon Park on the South Side of Chicago.
Credit...Taylor Glascock for The New York Times

The South Side of Chicago brims with inimitable African American culture and history, and the pastry chef Maya-Camille Broussard is adding her brand of sweetness to the place where she was born and raised. In June, Ms. Broussard opened the first brick-and-mortar store of her longtime delivery and wholesale pie business, Justice of the Pies.

The shop, in a former dentist’s office in Avalon Park, one of the South Side’s many historic, predominantly African American neighborhoods, serves Ms. Broussard’s inventive pies and pastries, such as her calling cards — a blue cheese praline pear pie and a strawberry basil Key lime pie — along with unorthodox items like her salted caramel peach pie and a deep-dish chilaquiles quiche.

One of her signature desserts, strawberry basil Key lime pie,
is available at the bakery. Credit...Taylor Glascock for The New York Times

Ms. Broussard, who lost 75 percent of her hearing in a childhood accident, may be the industry’s most prominent hard-of-hearing Black pastry chef. She has gained a following for her pies through social media, pop-ups and appearances on the Netflix competition show “Bake Squad.” “I realized that being a member of the deaf and hard-of-hearing community actually gave me a superpower,” she said, “and that superpower includes a heightened sense of smell and taste.”

Wrongly convicted man has message for Trump years after his full-page ad


Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Denée Benton calls R0n DeS*ntis the "current grand wizard" of Florida at...



LeBron + FAMU = Nice Kicks!

An excerpt from hbcusports - 

Nike unveils official images of latest FAMU x LeBron collaboration. See the heat

By Brandon King

Since the inception of the branding partnership between NBA legend LeBron James and Florida A&M, the Rattlers have some of the most visually appealing team-exclusive footwear in recent memory.

The FAMU men’s and women’s hoops teams have taken to the hardwood in team-exclusive iterations of LeBron XVIIIs, XIXs, and XXs.


Photo Lebron-FAMU XX

https://hbcusports.com/2023/06/13/nike-unveils-official-images-of-latest-famu-x-lebron-collabration-see-the-heat/#google_vignette

Florence Price Violin Concerto No. 2 (A Lost Voice, Found At Last)

The following is a sampling of work by Florence Price, a brilliant African-American classical composer who would have been completely lost to history if not for an accidental find of some of her compositions in a rundown home she once owned.  Read her fascinating story in STEADY by Dan Rather and then enjoy one of her compositions.





Words of Wisdom From Bill Gates

Excerpts from Inc.

Bill Gates Says the Path to Lifelong Success and Happiness Comes Down to 4 Simple Choices

Four memorable lessons about achieving success from Bill Gates.


Bill Gates on embracing your uniqueness

Don't compare yourself with anyone in this world ... if you do so, you are insulting yourself.

~~~~~

On failure and learning from mistakes

Gates once said:

It's fine to celebrate success, but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure.


~~~~~

On taking personal responsibility for your life

Gates said:

If you are born poor, it's not your mistake. But if you die poor, it's your mistake. 

~~~~~

On avoiding the trap of complacency

Gates said:

Success is a lousy teacher. It seduces smart people into thinking they can't lose.


8 simple Japanese habits that will make your life so much better!!


Saturday, July 1, 2023

These Guys Made Passengers Almost Miss Their Train! (Watch What Happens ...


Know Your Why | Michael Jr.



Stand By Me - Music Travel Love (At Al Ain)


Tamia Potter: Black Woman Neurosurgeon

From TeenVogue - 

Tamia Potter Is One of the Only Black Women Neurosurgeons in the U.S.

Only 0.6% of neurosurgeons in the country are Black women.

BY ADAIRA LANDRY

Tamia in the operating room STEPHONX PHOTOGRAPHY

Tamia Potter will soon become the first Black woman neurosurgery resident at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, an institution founded nearly 150 years ago. This achievement is even more remarkable given that, as of 2019, only 0.6% of neurosurgeons in the United States were Black women. Potter is on the brink of breaking a barrier, yet her origin story provides insight into just how much distance a Black woman must travel to succeed.

Potter was born and raised in Crawfordville, Florida, a small town where front doors are rarely locked and neighbors feel like family. And as a child — when she wasn’t outside mud bogging on an ATV or eating fresh food from her grandparent’s farm — she studied the human body. Inspired by her mother, a nurse, Potter developed an early, insatiable curiosity for anatomy and science. During high school, Potter became a nursing assistant and cared for patients in nursing homes suffering from dementia. While in college she was able to observe neurosurgery in the operating room, a moment that truly inspired her path. Potter would go on to complete medical school at Case Western Reserve University with plans to become a neurosurgeon herself.

Teen Vogue explored her journey — full of sacrifice, insecurity, and mentorship — into one of the most competitive and time intensive specialties in medicine.

https://www.teenvogue.com/story/tamia-potter-black-women-neurosurgeon

Hello Again!

Hello Folks,

It's been so long since I've posted; I forgot my address, login, and everything!  

So much has happened.

I retired as a K-8 principal after 24 years in education.  Returning after COVID was exhausting.  

I moved from Sacramento to Houston.  The cost of living is so much cheaper in Texas.

I purchased a home sight unseen that I absolutely love and have had so much fun making into a home.  

I discovered I needed back surgery.  Had it.  Thank God it was successful, and I'm recovering from that nicely.  

I've missed you.

But I've had mixed emotions being in my office.  This is where I lived when I worked remotely and I hated it.  If I never have to Zoom again, I'm OK with that.  

I know it's silly, but I still avoid this room.  

Anyway, I'm back.

If anyone is interested in continuing to FollowFaye, I'll be posting more than once a year from now on.  Promise.