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davodd

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      Anderson Cooper: TULANE Commencement Speech!


      Thank you, does anyone else feel like you are at a Harry Potter convention? Either that or a Renaissance Fair?


      Members of the class of 2010, parents, President Cowen or Professor Dumbeldore, I had to get him back for the modeling comment, Trustees, honored guests, faculty, friends, and Who Dats, thank you very much for inviting me here to speak on this very special day.


      I must admit I was nervous about what I would say here today, and then I began to think back to my own graduation from college, 21 years ago. And I realized… I have absolutely no memory of actually graduating college. I mean, I know I did, because I’m constantly hounded by the alumni association, which starting tomorrow, you will be as well… but if you gave me free catfish poboys at domelices for the rest of my life, I couldn’t tell you what happened at my commencement. And it’s not just that I don’t remember what the speaker said, I don’t even remember who the speaker was. So I’m not nervous anymore.. cause you’re not going to remember a damn thing I say. you’re going to wake up tomorrow.. in your own bed, or someone else’s…if you’re lucky. Hey you’re not going to see most of these people ever again, so why not go for it? Your parents have to go to sleep at some point. Anyway, you’re going to wake up tomorrow, and today will be a blur. You’re parents will remember because lets face it, they’ve paid a lot of money to finally see this day, so they want to enjoy every second.


      I do hope at some point this weekend, if you haven’t already, you’ll look your parents in the eyes, hold them close, and thank them for their sacrifices. As hard as you’ve worked to get here, they have worked even harder. So parents if your kids haven’t said it, let me just say it for them, thank you.


      I must admit I always find it odd to hear myself introduced as a TV anchor.. I never set out to be one and am always suspicious when of anyone who tells me that’s what they want to be.. its like a kid who tells me they want to be a politician. I think you should be real person before you become a fake one.


      How many liberal arts majors are here? I feel your pain. All the engineers here are smiling. I too was a liberal arts major.. so like you I have no actual skill. I majored in political science, I graduated in 1989, and I’d focused almost entirely on the Soviet Union and communism.. so when the Berlin wall fell I was, well, I was screwed. I mean I know it wasn’t about me, and I was happy.. for them.. but personally it was a blow.


      I know many of you graduating today are worried about the economy, about your job prospects. I wish I could tell you not too, but of course you should be concerned. The one thing I can tell you however, is that this has happened before, and we have recovered. The currents of history only move in one direction- and that’s forward.


      When I graduated there were hiring freezes at most TV news networks. I tried for months to get an entry-level job at ABC news, answering phones, xeroxing, whatever, but I couldn’t get hired. At the time it was crushing. But in retrospect, not getting that entry-level job, was the best thing that could have happened to me.


      After months of waiting, I decided if no one would give me a chance as a reporter, I should take a chance. If no one would give me an opportunity, I would have to make my own opportunity.


      I wanted to be a war correspondent, so I decided to just start going to wars. As you can imagine, my mom was thrilled about the plan. I had a friend make a fake press pass for me on a mac, and I borrowed a home video camera… and I snuck into Burma and hooked up with some students fighting the burmese government… then I moved onto Somalia in the early days of the famine and fighting there.


      I figured if I went places that were dangerous, I wouldn’t have as much competition, and because I was willing to sleep on the roofs of buildings, and live on just a few dollars a day, I was able to charge very little for my stories. As ridiculous as it sounds, my plan worked, and after two years on my own shooting stories in war zones, I was hired by ABC news as a correspondent. I was the youngest correspondent they had hired in many years. Had I gotten the entry-level job I’d wanted, I would have never become a network correspondent so quickly, I probably would never have even become one at all. The things which seem like heartbreaking setbacks, sometimes turn out to be lucky breaks.


      While I don’t remember commencement, I do remember my senior year of college feeling paralyzed, because I thought I had to figure out my future all at once. Pick a career, start down a path I’d be on for the rest of my life. I now know it doesn’t work that way. Everyone I know who is successful, and by successful I mean happy in their professional or personal life, every successful person I know could never have predicted when they graduated from college where they’d actually end up.


      I’m not saying you should take it easy and just see what happens. You need to outwork everyone around you. You need to arrive early, stay late, you need to make yourself indispensable - you should also probably get rid of those facebook photos of you passed out on bourbon street.


      But as you consider what to do now, you shouldn’t necessarily feel that your next step is the most important one you’ll ever take. It’s not. You will go down many paths that go nowhere. Especially you English majors. You will try things on and realize they don’t fit. And that’s how it should be. Learning what you don’t want to do, is the next best thing to figuring out what you do want to do.


      In commencement speeches it’s common to give advice. I know this because for days now I’ve been online reading other people’s speeches, basically looking to steal ideas. Back when I was in college by the way, we didn’t have the internets..with the googles and the yahoos.. we had to steal ideas the old fashioned way, at the library.


      Anyway, im not much for giving advice. Especially after reading some other people’s speeches. I’ve quoted this before, but I think it’s one worth repeating. This is what Goldie Hawn told graduates several years ago. “while you are continuing to walk down that sometimes-bumpy road of life, develop the art of laughter and joy. Keep in your backpack of treasures the whole you, the best you. The “you” that won’t fear failure, because lessons learned are the only way to grow.” I know, I just threw up in my mouth a little bit too.


      Yoko Ono reportedly screamed for ten seconds at the start of her address.. and then went on to declare. “I say you can’t stand if you’ve got too much muck in your head. Let it go and dance through life.” She is so on the money about the muck problem.

      Last night I ran into some undergraduates, and some medical students who are getting diplomas today, and after talking with them, and listening to them, I realized that I don’t need to give you advice, I don’t need to try to teach you a lesson… the truth is your class has taught me a lesson.


      You are the class that came after Katrina, and I’m sure you’ve heard this often, but that doesn’t make it any less true. You saw this city on its knees in those weeks and months after the storm, and yet you still applied to Tulane. You could have gone elsewhere. A lot of folks probably said you were nuts to commit to New Orleans - some of your parents probably said the same thing.

      But you came anyway. You took a chance. You made a tough choice, but look at you now, look at what you’ve accomplished, not just for yourselves, but for New Orleans. Your choice helped this city rebuild.. re-new…re-start.


      It’s extraordinary when you think about what’s happened here.. in this city… in this very building…nearly five years ago in these seats and these hallways sat thousands of people.. scared.. confused… their homes destroyed.. their lives forever changed. Nearly five years ago, just blocks from here at the convention center thousands more waited for days in the hot sun…lied to, let down.


      Anyone recognize the name ethel freeman? She was at the convention center..brought there by her son Herbert. She was 91 years old. She survived the storm, but she didn’t survive the convention center. She died quietly, sitting in her wheelchair, waiting. Waiting for help. Waiting for medical attention. Waiting for buses that finally came days too late. When she died, her son was told to put a blanket over her head and wheel her to the side of the building. And that’s what he did… that’s all he could do.


      When you applied here, you knew this, you had seen this, you’d heard these stories…and yet you came.


      In your time at Tulane in addition to studying, and working, and (all the other things you’ve done that I don’t need to mention in front of your parents), you’ve also built homes, you’ve worked in schools, manned clinics.. volunteered with church groups and charities…you’ve reached out to strangers, and you’ve helped change people’s lives.


      Nearly five years after Katrina and New Orleans is back…yes, there is still much work to be done, wrongs to right, families that need healing, neighborhoods that need revival, but this city has risen, and its done so because you, and many others like you, did not give up. Local, state, federal governments, politicians, often failed in the wake of Katrina, but you and the people of this city did not.


      In thinking about what I would say today, i wasn’t sure I was going to mention those dark days after Katrina. I didn’t want to do anything to dampen this extraordinary celebration, but then I realized this day is made all the more glorious, because all of us know what it took not just for you to get here, but for this city to get here. This day is made all the more beautiful… because we remember.


      My father died when I was ten, but he loved New Orleans. His family moved here from Mississippi during world war two because there were jobs here. He used to bring me here all the time, and I remember him saying to me that New Orleans is a city of memory. I didn’t understand it at the time, but I do now.


      In New York, where I live, they tear down the old, and build gleaming, gaudy monuments to the new. But New Orleans doesn’t try to erase its past. The ritz carlton hotel, used to be a department store, and the old name is still carved in the building’s façade. My grandmother used to sell ladies hats there. If you drive down Rampart you’ll pass a school, the Frederick Douglas academy.. but if you look closely you’ll see carved above the front door, the old name of the school: Frances T. Nicholls. That’s where my dad went to high school. It was segregated in those days, and Francis T. Nicholls was a confederate soldier, a governor of the state, a staunch defender of the old order. Any other city, would have chiseled his name off the building, but New Orleans does not rewrite history. Even that which is painful is not erased. A new layer is simply added upon the old. Walking the streets it’s like reading the rings on a tree.


      New Orleans remembers and so should you members of the class of 2010. As you leave this school.. this city….as you face new choices… new challenges…new successes and setbacks you don’t need to remember my speech, but remember what you have learned in the streets of this city. The triumph … and the tragedy.. the richness.. and the poverty…and remember how you have made it better.. you chose to do that.. you chose to be here. I cannot wait to see what  you choose to do next. Thank you, and congratulations class of 2010.

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      The 42-year-old CNN anchor spoke about economic worries, what he felt as a college graduate at Yale and watching the city regroup after Hurricane Katrina. The Silver Fox also threw in a few funnies!
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      Scientists say the discovery of a vast hole in space may provide a new glimpse at the end of the star-forming process. In this photo, an image obtained from the Herschel Space Observatory shows most the cloud associated with the Rosette nebula, a stellar nursery about 5,000 light-years from Earth in the Monoceros, or Unicorn, constellation.

      NEWSCOM

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      The Herschel telescope has spotted a vast hole in space. Scientists say it could provide clues to how newborn stars shake off their birth clouds.
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      By Space.com staff / May 11, 2010

      A vast hole in space has been unexpectedly discovered in a part of the universe thought to be packed with a cloud of dense gas and dust – the latest in a string of cosmic finds by the EuropeanHerschel infrared space telescope.

    • read more on www.csmonitor.com

      The surprising hole in space has provided astronomers with a new glimpse at the end of the star-forming process.

      "No one has ever seen a hole like this," said study team member Tom Megeath of the University of Toledo in Ohio. "It's as surprising as knowing you have worms tunneling under your lawn, but finding one morning that they have created a huge, yawning pit."

      IN PICTURES: Spectacular Supernovas

      Stars are born in dense clouds of dust and gas, and while jets of gas have been spotted coming from young stars, the process of how a star uses this gas to disperse surrounding debris and emerge from its birth cloud has not been understood.

      This latest discovery byHerschel, an infrared space telescope built by the European Space Agency, may be an unexpected step in the star-forming process.

      A cloud of bright, reflective gas, known to astronomers as NGC 1999, is located next to a black patch of sky. For most of the 20th century, these black patches were understood to be dense clouds of dust and gas that block light that would normally pass through.

      As Herschel's infrared eye looked in the direction of NGC 1999 to study nearby young stars, the cloud continued to look black, even though the telescope's infrared technology is designed to penetrate through such dense cloud material. This meant that either the cloud was immensely dense, or Herschel had happened upon a previously unexplained phenomenon.

      Astronomers continued their investigation using ground-based telescopes and found the same results when looking at the patch of gas. This led to the conclusion that the patch looks black not because it is an extremely dense pocket of gas, but because it is truly empty – something had blown a hole through the cloud.

      The astronomers think the hole must have been opened when the narrow jets of gas from some of the young stars in the region punctured the sheet of dust and gas that forms NGC 1999. The powerful radiation from a nearby mature star may have also helped to create the hole, researchers said.

      Whatever the exact cause of the hole may be, the discovery may be an important glimpse into the way newborn stars shake off their birth clouds that helps astronomers develop a better understanding of the entire star-forming process, researchers said.

      Herschel is the largest and most powerful infrared telescope in space today. The European Space Agency launched the observatory into orbit in May 2009.

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      The man found dead in a Huntertown neighborhood early Sunday was apparently beaten to death because of the killer's hatred of gays, according to the man's best friend and court documents.

      Hours after the killing, police arrested Brian P. Brothers, 35, in connection with the deadly assault, preliminarily charging him with felony aggravated battery. He is being held in Allen County Lockup in lieu of a $20,000 bond.

      The Allen County Coroner's Office on Monday ruled the death of Paul J. Michalik, 36, of Fort Wayne, was caused by blunt force trauma to the head.

      That's spot-on with the take Sylvia Tyszler, the victim's friend, received from Michalik's partner of 17 years, Jerry Chambers, who Tyszler said was also victimized in the alleged assault that occurred as the couple was trying to leave a home in the 1300 block of Monte Carlo Drive around 4:30 a.m.

      Tyszler, speaking from her home in Chicago, said Chambers and Michalik were both at a party Saturday night thrown by one of Chambers' coworkers, and Michalik had fallen asleep on a couch. Tyszler said Chambers told her that when Michalik was found sleeping, a man ordered him to leave because he was gay.

      Chambers was helping Michalik from the home when an argument ensued, Tyszler said.

      Tyszler said the man began beating Michalik and Chambers both, eventually throwing Michalik down a flight of stairs inside the home.

      Chambers reportedly suffered injuries to both legs and is under heavy medication, Tyszler said. Michalik was found by passers-by lying in the Monte Carlo Drive roadway, dead.

      Allen County Police spokesman Jeremy Tinkle would not confirm nor deny Tyszler's assertion that the incident was in deed a hate crime, but Allen County Sheriff's Det. John Zagelmeier learned through his investigation that Chambers reported the assault was hate-fueled.

      “The defendant has beaten him and Michalik up because they were gay,” wrote Zagelmeier in Brothers' probable-cause affidavit.

      Zagelmeier reported that Brothers' inflicted punches and kicks to the face and upper body of Michalik, the affidavit said. Chambers told Zagelmeier that at one point, as he “played dead,” Brothers kicked Michalik in the ribs and Michalik exhaled with each blow, the affidavit said.

      Brothers told police that he began fighting with Michalik only after Michalik pushed him, the affidavit said, and that he helped Chambers carry Michalik from the home before leaving him in the grass.

      Zagelmeier reported Brothers had bruising and swelling on his hands, and no visible marks anywhere else on his body, the affidavit said.

      While the motive seems clear in the affidavit, Tinkle would also not release any motive police are looking into, reiterating the case is under investigation by the Allen County Sheriff's Department and the Allen County coroner's and prosecutor's offices.

      To Tyszler, though, her friend's death is a cut-and-dried case of hate.

      “He was my best friend and I don't know what to do,” said Tyszler. “This is a big thing. It's a hate crime – the guy was killed because he was gay.”

      Tyszler said Michalik, a hairdresser at A Day Away salon, was the friend who would give a complete stranger the shirt off his back if they needed. He was as loving and selfless as he was flamboyant, and the combination made him easy to befriend, Tyszler said.

      “Anybody that met him fell in love with him. He has more friends than I can imagine; just a really, really wonderful person. The world has lost a great man.”

      Tyszler loved days beside the local swimming pool, his dogs and animals in general, Tyszler said, but more than anything, he loved pop icon Madonna.

      He will be “missed by thousands,” Tyszler said.

      “This is a hate crime,” said Tyszler. “This is a hate crime. This is not just some drunk, stupid guy at a party. This guy was just completely macerated.

      “Just because somebody is gay doesn't mean that they deserve to be beaten to death.”

      Michalik's death marks the county's 14th homicide of 2010. All but two – Michalik's being one of the two – occurred in city limits.


      [@From : http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100511/NEWS02/5110308/1001/NEWS on Tue May 11 2010 00:21:37 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)]

      Blow to head kills man in Huntertown

      He may have been beaten because he was gay

      Updated: Monday, 10 May 2010, 11:31 PM EDT
      Published : Monday, 10 May 2010, 11:50 AM EDT

      HUNTERTOWN, Ind. (WANE) - A man was found beaten to death on Monte Carlo Drive in Huntertown early Sunday morning. He was identified Monday as Paul Michalik, 36, of Fort Wayne. A man with Michalik at the time, said he and Michalik were beaten because they were gay.  As a result, Brian Paul Brothers, 34, has been charged with Aggravated Battery.

      According to the Allen County Sheriff's Department, around 4:00 a.m. Sunday, deputies were called to the 1300 Block of Monte Carlo Drive in Huntertown for a disturbance.  When police arrived they found Michalik dead.

      The Allen County Coroner determined Monday the cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head.

      According to court documents filed in Allen Superior Court Monday, Michalik and Jerry Lee Chambers, were at a party at Brian Paul Brothers' house Sunday morning when the two were beaten up by Brothers. 

      Chambers told police they were beaten because they were gay. He said Brothers had punched and kicked Michalik in the face, head and body multiple times as he tried to get Michalik out of his home.  Chambers said, "At one point I played dead" and could hear Brothers kicking Michalik in the ribs.  He said while this was going on, he could hear the air coming out of Michalik.  

      In the probable cause affidavit, Brothers admitted that he did punch and kick both Chambers and Michalik multiple times with his hands and feet. He said he started hitting them after Michalik pushed him.  Brothers stated, "It was an all out altercation." 

      Brothers also said he ended up helping Chambers carry Michalik, who was unresponsive at the time, out of his house and to the grass in the front.  He said that's when he left the two men and went back into the house without calling for help from police or medical personnel.

      "That's an enormous amount of rage behind that. That's pretty incredible," says Dr. Jeannie DeClementi, an assistant professor of psychology at IPFW. She's also an advocate for the gay and lesbian community on campus. She believes Michalik's death could be a hate crime.

      "When you put it together with the amount of rage and with the violence of the crime. And you add that up with the fact that the victim is gay. I think you have to consider that," said DeClementi.

      Court documents said Brothers had swelling and bruising to the top of his right hand and possible swelling to the top of his left hand. He is the Allen County lockup, without bond for an unrelated probation violation. He could face more charges this week.





      [@From : http://www.facebook.com/Davodd?v=app_2392950137&ref=profile on Tue May 11 2010 00:27:32 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)]

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    iPad mounted in a car. Want.

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      April 3rd, The day of the iPad launch, Doug Bernards installs an iPad in his car alongside an Audison Bit One processor. Planned install will include a McIntosh 6 channel amplifier MCC406M, and a special iPod dock which allows the digital signal to be pulled from the iPad and distributed to the BitOne via optical output. Toyota Tacoma.
      Stay tuned for the rest of the build.



      [@From : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSnIXfoSU6I&feature=player_embedded on Mon May 10 2010 10:59:39 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)]



      Part two of the iPad Tacoma install. in this video Doug Bernards hows you the completed dash panel for the removable iPad. The install is planned for the 3g iPad which is on pre-order, the amp to be used is the McIntosh mcc406m. Doug goes over the difficulties of integrating into the iPad's dock connector. Stay tunned for part 3.
      [@From : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jsvog8tb8dc&annotation_id=annotation_776382&feature=iv on Mon May 10 2010 11:00:18 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)]




      [@From : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-k2_N5XPaU&annotation_id=annotation_661773&feature=iv on Mon May 10 2010 11:02:58 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)]
      Part 3 of Doug Bernards' iPad Tacoma build. In this video Doug's amp gets sold and he decides to use an Audison LRX 5.1K which is a great match for the set-up. A Pair of Hybrid Audio Legatia 6's are installed in the door panels along with plenty of Accumat (a very nice Dynamat alternative). A Quick look at the Bit One is seen, as Doug sets up the new amp. A simple curved amp rack is built and wrapped in vinyl. The iPad Tacoma was featured on KTLA 5, Kurt the CyberGuy, and one of CNN's tech shows. stay tuned for part 4, final episode.
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