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Thursday, May 26, 2016

New Nudes

From The Huffington Post -

The concept of “nude” has long referred only to pale tones when it comes to cosmetics and clothing. Thanks to efforts by both small and large brands, the term has started to become more inclusive of what’s nude for everyone.

But the desire for diverse options when it comes to skin tones is not limited to shoes, outwear and makeup: There’s a need for nude underneath, too.

Enter Naja, a lingerie brand from creative director Catalina Girald and actress Gina Rodriguez. Thanks to a new range of nude underwear modeled by 10 diverse women, the company has turned the “typical nude” on its head.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nude-lingerie-skin-tones-diverse_us_5745bf1ce4b0dacf7ad38833

Donovan Livingston's Harvard Graduate School of Education Student Speech

You Can Help With Cancer Research

From Upworthy -

I spent a few minutes digging in my yard all in the name of cancer research.
By Erin Canty

There is rainwater seeping into my jeans, and my instructions are about to blow away. But my front yard could hold the cure to cancer, so I keep digging.

I am outside my home in Portland, Oregon, digging in the soil with a small plastic scoop I requested from the Natural Products Discovery Group at the University of Oklahoma. An interdisciplinary team of researchers are hard at work there, looking for fungi and natural products found in soil that may be used for a host of drugs and cures for cancer, infectious diseases, and even heart disease.

So the least I can do is get my knees wet.

http://www.upworthy.com/i-spent-a-few-minutes-digging-in-my-yard-all-in-the-name-of-cancer-research?c=upw1

http://npdg.ou.edu/citizenscience


Bosch Parade 2016 // Bosch leeft!




History Lesson

From BlackAmericaWeb.com

Little Known Black History Fact: Tallahassee Bus Boycott

On this day in 1956, FAMU students Wilhelmina Jakes and Carrie Patterson sat on a city bus in Tallahassee, Florida. and began what would become a seven-month boycott of the transit system. Through the efforts of a local church leader and civic groups, protesters were able to get Black drivers hired and integrate the bus lines.

http://blackamericaweb.com/2016/05/26/little-known-black-history-fact-tallahassee-bus-boycott/?omcamp=es-baw-nl&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=New%20Campaign&utm_term=BAW%20Subscribers%20%28Weekly%29

Fruity Bus Stops

From Atlas Obsura - 

Strawberry Bus Stop

http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/konagai-japan-fruit-shaped-bus-stops?utm_source=Boomtrain&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20160526&bt_email=fayesharpe@gmail.com&bt_ts=1464275422442

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Authors Say NO!

From Rolling Stone -

Stephen King, Cheryl Strayed Sign Open Letter Condemning Donald Trump

"The rise of a political candidate who deliberately appeals to the basest and most violent elements in society ... demands ... an immediate and forceful response," over 400 authors write in letter

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/news/stephen-king-cheryl-strayed-sign-open-letter-condemning-donald-trump-20160525#ixzz49jJFlAeY
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook


The Best

From The New Yorker -

A FULL REVOLUTION
In the run-up to the Olympics, Simone Biles is transforming gymnastics.
By Reeves Wiedeman



http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/05/30/simone-biles-is-the-best-gymnast-in-the-world?mbid=nl_160525_Daily&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8970946&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=922460323&spReportId=OTIyNDYwMzIzS0

Meet this year’s youngest Spelling Bee competitor

Monday, May 23, 2016

What a Sad Man

Excerpts from 2 Paragraphs -

The Supreme Court of the United States found in favor of Timothy Tyrone Foster, a black man on death row in Georgia. Convicted of killing a white woman in 1987, Foster's case before the nation's highest court claimed that he was a victim of racial discrimination at his original trial. SCOTUS agreed in a rare 7-1 decision, with Chief Justice John Roberts writing: "The focus on race in the prosecution's file plainly demonstrates a concerted effort to keep black prospective jurors off the jury."

~~~~~~~~~~

Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court's only African American Justice, was the lone dissenting vote.

~~~~~~~~~~

Of course he was (my comment).


A Deep Dive

This is long, but worth the read.

From The New Yorker -

THE BANK ROBBER
The computer technician who exposed a Swiss bank’s darkest secrets.
 By Patrick Radden Keefe

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/05/30/herve-falcianis-great-swiss-bank-heist?mbid=nl_TNY%20Template%20-%20With%20Photo%20(41)&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8959693&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=922244030&spReportId=OTIyMjQ0MDMwS0

Just Let Him RIP

From Consequence of Sound -

BET Awards mock Madonna and Stevie Wonder’s Prince tribute at the Billboard Music Awards

"Yeah, we saw that. Don't Worry. We Got You."


http://consequenceofsound.net/2016/05/bet-awards-mocks-madonna-and-stevie-wonders-prince-tribute-at-the-billboard-music-awards/

Wealth Distribution

From Vox -

Something massive and important has happened in the United States over the past 50 years: Economic wealth has become increasingly concentrated among a small group of ultra-wealthy Americans.

http://www.vox.com/2016/5/23/11704246/wealth-inequality-cartoon

Why Obama is one of the most consequential presidents in American history

Sunday, May 22, 2016

I Met a Girl and . . .

Laughing til it Hurt!

Every Mom can relate to this scenario.  Read the entire message.  I dare you not to laugh out loud.

From StumbleUpon -

Guy panic-texts his wife after their son pukes everywhere, internet cannot get enough



http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1JhMev/:1GHP2NVT2:h154ZrzH/hellogiggles.com/guy-panic-texts-wife-son-pukes

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Redemption

Excerpts from The Huffington Post Highline -

Meet the Ungers

Merle Unger escaped from jail for the first time in 1967, when he was an 18-year-old dropout with an interest in petty crime. People in his native Greencastle, Pennsylvania, saw him as a harmless character—a scrawny kid who figured out how to tie his bedsheets together and climb out of the nearby jail at night so he could see his girlfriend and play bingo at the Catholic church before climbing back into his cell in time for roll call. He did this until a sheriff’s deputy went to play bingo, saw Unger sitting there and was like, wait a minute.

Whenever jail officials increased security, Unger found another route out. A local radio station started a Merle Unger Fan Club. His public defender made T-shirts that said, “Merle, baby, where are you?”

In 1975, after more escapes and arrests, he found himself locked up in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, fixating on a skylight in the lunchroom, 45 feet up. Early one morning he tied a piece of rope to a 5- or 10-pound dumbbell and wrapped the other end of the rope around his neck. He piled up some tables, put a small step ladder on top of the pile, climbed atop a beam, pulled up the ladder, set it up again, reached higher, hurled the dumbbell through the skylight’s glass, and climbed through the broken window into the December cold, wearing a short-sleeved shirt. “I mean, I’m not proud of that,” Unger told me last month. “I just wanted my freedom.”

~~~~~~~~~~

In the middle of all this, in the ’80s, Unger happened to meet a woman. A fellow inmate in Florida had put a personal ad in Mother Earth magazine, and he got so many responses that he sold the extras to other prisoners for a dollar apiece. Unger bought a few, sent letters and a woman from Illinois came to visit. They ended up getting married in 1988 and had two children, both conceived in prison. He says his life changed when he held his infant son for the first time: “I didn’t want to commit no crimes anymore.”

In Unger’s telling, this is the moment he developed an obsessive interest in the American legal system. Another friend worked in the prison’s law library and told him about a case in which a federal inmate earned his freedom by challenging the constitutionality of the jury instructions in his trial. Unger spent hours studying the case. It was all he could talk about. And the more he read, the more he thought he might have a shot at winning a new trial on the murder charge if he came back to Maryland to fight it.

~~~~~~~~~~

Unger v. State doesn’t say that these prisoners should be freed, only that they can ask to be retried. In practice, though, there’s a strong incentive to settle cases where the defendant has a clean prison record. Re-trying a case that’s 30 or 40 years old can be tricky: the witnesses have moved away, the detectives are dead and the case file is skeletal, or missing, or destroyed. Since the decision came down, 142 of 231 prisoners have negotiated their freedom, almost all of them getting probation. One was acquitted at a new trial. Another eight have died behind bars before they could get a hearing. There are still about 70 prisoners with open cases, which means that even more may yet go free.

http://highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/meet-the-ungers/