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spookyfoxdreamer · 8 months
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cathnews · 2 years
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Swiss bishop resigns at age 59 due to ‘inner fatigue’
Swiss bishop resigns at age 59 due to ‘inner fatigue’
Pope Francis accepted the resignation of a 59-year-old Swiss bishop on Monday who said “inner fatigue” had made his office “unbearable” to him. Bishop Valerio Lazzeri was in charge of the Diocese of Lugano in Switzerland since 2013. During a press conference Monday afternoon, he said: “Sincerity and complete transparency compel me to tell you that, especially in the last two years, an inner…
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toadschooled · 1 year
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If someone wants to dig a little hole to sit in, that’s really none of our business, is it? Here we see a western toad [Anaxyrus boreas] that has done just that. This tenacious tunneler was found in San Benito County, California, by photographer Rachel Lazzeri-Aerts.
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girlactionfigure · 8 months
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The dark-haired girl on the right with the impish smile, her name was Eddie Lou, she was about 8 years old when this photo was taken in 1909. The picture was taken at the Tifton Cotton Mill, Tifton, Georgia. The girls worked there.
The photograph was taken by Lewis Hine, who visited factories such as this mill and took photographs of the children who worked there as evidence for the National Child Labor Committee (NCLC).
In another part of the country, Mary Harris Jones, also known as "Mother Jones", led a march of children from Philadelphia to New York in what would be known as the March of the Mill Children, a three-week trek by striking child and adult textile workers on July 7, 1903.
Children had been forced to work in coal mines and mills, when their fathers were killed or injured, unable to support the families. As a result, many children suffered stunted growth and were injured, maimed. Mother Jones described the children, "some with their hands off, some with the thumb missing, some with their fingers off at the knuckle. They were stooped things, round shouldered and skinny. Many of them were not over ten years of age, the state law prohibited their working before they were twelve years of age."
“Since 2000, for nearly two decades, the world had been making steady progress in reducing child labour,” according to the United Nations. “But over the past few years, conflicts, crises and the COVID-19 pandemic, have plunged more families into poverty – and forced millions more children into child labour. Economic growth has not been sufficient, nor inclusive enough, to relieve the pressure that too many families and communities feel and that makes them resort to child labour. Today, 160 million children are still engaged in child labour. That is almost one in ten children worldwide.”
This is an update of a series of stories that have been posted for Labor Day. You can find those stories in the Peace Page archive or Google the information on your own to find out more.
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“Over 100 years ago, the National Child Labor Committee used photos of children doing industrial work to demand change in America. Several states adopted child labor laws, and after much debate and several setbacks, the Fair Labor Standards Act became law in 1938. Its protections included the nation’s foundational child labor laws, including restrictions on the age of workers and hours they can toil,” wrote Michael Lazzeri, regional administrator of the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division in Chicago
Max McCoy of the the Kansas Reflector wrote today on September 3, 2023:
“After more than a century of progress, you might think child labor is a thing of the past, something we condemn other countries for but that we don’t need to worry about here. Tragically, that shadow army of workers is still with us, and many of those workers are children. These underage exploited are often immigrants . . .”
“In February of this year, a cleaning company was fined $1.5 million for employing children ages 13 to 17 at meatpacking plants in eight states. The firm, Packers Sanitations Services Inc., was the target of a federal Department of Labor investigation that found 102 children working illegally, including 26 at the Cargill meatpacking plant at Dodge City.
“Appallingly, many states are now racing to loosen — not tighten — child labor laws.
“Arkansas, for example, in March did away with the requirement that the state’s Division of Labor had to give permission or verify the age of children under 16 to be employed. Although those under 14 still cannot be employed, the ending of age verification requirements is an invitation to child labor abuses.
“Other states are making similar moves.
“Iowa, for example, has made it legal for teenagers to work in meatpacking plants and children as young as 16 to bartend. New Jersey and New Hampshire have also lowered ages for some types of work. The argument goes that work builds character and that overly restrictive laws prevent young people from fully developing their capacity to earn a living.
“But such arguments stink like the stuff you find on a slaughterhouse floor.”
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"In the early 1900s, Hine traveled across the United States to photograph preteen boys descending into dangerous mines, shoeless 7-year-olds selling newspapers on the street and 4-year-olds toiling on tobacco farms. Though the country had unions to protect laborers at that time — and Labor Day, a federal holiday to honor them — child labor was widespread and widely accepted. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that around the turn of the century, at least 18 percent of children between the ages of 10 and 15 were employed," according to the Washington Post.
Mother Jones would say after the march, "I held up their mutilated hands and showed them to the crowd and made the statement that Philadelphia's mansions were built on the broken bones, the quivering hearts and drooping heads of these children. That their little lives went out to make wealth for others. That neither state or city officials paid any attention to these wrongs. That they did not care that these children were to be the future citizens of the nation."
Many industries hid the fact that they employed children. They took advantage of poor families, such as Eddie Lou's family. Eddie Lou's father had died and left her mother with 11 children and no income. Her mother was forced to work at the cotton mill for $4.50 a week. Eddie Lou and four siblings also worked there and they were all together paid $4.50 as well. Eddie Lou and her youngest siblings would eventually be sent to an orphanage because her mother wasn't able to provide for them.
“If we don’t hold the line on child labor, we risk losing one of the things the has sets us apart as a nation founded not only on laws, but of morals,” wrote McCoy. “Of course children provide cheap labor, but business profits should not be the gauge of our society. In addition to the mental and physical tolls that children suffer in jobs that are inappropriate — and can you really imagine a 16-year-old wiping down the bar and asking what’s your poison? — there’s also a danger these children will become primary breadwinners for their families, with their educations coming a distant second.”
The children at the march carried banners that said, "We want more schools and less hospitals" and "We want time to play."
~ jsr
The Jon S. Randal Peace Page
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baseballbybsmile · 1 year
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Today In 1936: Joe DiMaggio is ready to leave for his first New York Yankees training camp, but who's driving? Tony Lazzeri & Frank Crosetti did - all the way from San Francisco to St. Petersburg because Joe didn't know how to drive! (edit/color by BSmile)
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baseballsisco · 2 years
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On This Day in Baseball History July 4, 1939: The Independence Day fireworks came to Philadelphia in the form of the bats of the Boston Red Sox led by 3B Jim Tabor. Over the course of a twin bill, Tabor went 6-for-9 with four homers and 11-RBI. He had three dingers in game two of which two were grand slams and one solo shot.)
In doing so he joined Tony Lazzeri who on May 24, 1936 was the first player to hit two grand slams in the same game.
As I mentioned in my post yesterday on Tony Cloninger who hit two grand slams in the same on July 3, 1966, the current the record now stands at 13-players with two grand slams in one game including Fernando Tatis Sr. who hit two grand slams against Chan Ho Park in the SAME INNING!!!!
Talk about the rockets red glare!!!
#JimTabor #TwoGrandSlamsInTheSameGame #BostonRedSox #PhiladelphiaAthletics #PhiladelphiaAs #BaseballHistory #HistoriaDelBeisbol #YakyūNoRekishi #Baseball #Beisbol #ProYakyū #BaseballSisco
https://www.instagram.com/p/Cfm-hYLOF0g/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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rich4you · 1 month
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Mark Koenig Autographed Black & White Photo JSA Certificate # I 98982.
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secondskin007 · 5 months
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"Giro 2013 - VIII tappa (Gabicce Mare - Saltara)" by Marco Lazzeri is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.
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brookstonalmanac · 5 months
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Birthdays 12.6
Beer Birthdays
Henry Liebmann (1836)
Henry Rahr (1856)
Rich Link (1956)
Natalie Cilurzo (1968)
Dave Gull (1974)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Dave Brubeck; jazz pianist, composer (1920)
Peter Buck; rock guitarist (1956)
Tom Hulce; actor (1953)
Nick Park; British animator (1958)
Steven Wright; comedian (1955)
Famous Birthdays
Judd Apatow; film director, screenwriter (1967)
Johann Christoph Bach; German composer (1642)
Larry Bowa; Philadelphia Phillies SS (1945)
Rick Buckler; English drummer (1955)
Wally Cox; actor (1924)
Gabriel Duvall; U.S. Supreme Court justice (1752)
Alfred Eisenstaedt; German photographer (1898)
Ira Gershwin; lyricist (1896)
Otto Graham; Cleveland Browns QB (1921)
Charles Martin Hall; chemist (1863)
Jean Eugene Robert Houdin; French magician (1805)
Joyce Kilmer; poet (1886)
Don King; boxing promoter (1932)
Joseph Lamb; ragtime composer (1887)
Tony Lazzeri; New York Yankess SS (1903)
Christina Lindberg; Swedish actress (1950)
Agnes Moorehead; actor (1906)
John S. "Gray Ghost" Mosby; confederate calvary commander (1833)
James Naughton; actor (1945)
David Ossman; comedian, writer, actor (1936)
George Porter; British chemist (1920)
Randy Rhoads; rock guitarist (1956)
Will Shriner; comedian (1953)
Frank Springer; comic book artist (1929)
Janine Turner; actor (1962)
Bobby Van; actor, dancer (1928)
JoBeth Williams; actor (1948)
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jacopocioni · 6 months
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Tutti gli UFO sopra Firenze dalla guerra ad oggi: 1980
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Ci credete? Non ci credete? Poco importa. Il fenomeno ufologico è vecchio quanto il mondo. Gli avvistamenti, reali, finti, "costruiti" nel mondo sono innumerevoli e su Firenze e provincia non mancano. Questa è un piccola rubrica per citare gli avvistamenti registrati su Firenze e provincia dal 1946 al 1980, se poi qualcuno ha a disposizione anche quelli successivi, e ce li fornisce, potremmo pubblicare anche quelli dal 1980 in poi. Questo l'articolo precedente: Tutti gli UFO sopra Firenze dalla guerra ad oggi: 1979 Il 30 ottobre 1980 su Scandicci alle 17:30 fu visto un oggetto volante verde, lo riporta Notiziario UFO n. 99; Scheda segnaletica della SUF - doc. 2962; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 118, p. 19, doc. 2962; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 165, p. 14, doc. 2962 Lo studente tredicenne Claudio Lastrucci, abitante a Lastra a Signa in via Carchedi 327, da S. Martino alla Palma - Scandicci, vide un oggetto volante di colore verde, seguito da una scia dello stesso colore, attraversare il cielo sereno velocemente e molto alto. Aveva una forma apparentemente sferica e si dirigeva verso sud-est. Il ragazzo non provò alcuna emozione. L'avvistamento durò 5/6 secondi. L'11 novembre 1980 nel cielo di Firenze alle 18:30 fu vista una palla di fuoco, lo riporta La Nazione del 12-11-1980; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 118, p. 19; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 129, p. 8; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 165, p. 15 Avvistata una grande palla di fuoco proveniente da nord-ovest e diretta a sud-est. Il prof. Angelo Gianni, della casa editrice D'Anna, che in quel momento stava tornando a casa nella zona nord-est della città assieme a sua moglie, è stato uno dei testimoni del fenomeno. Il prof. riferì che si trattava di una enorme palla luminosa e bianca, che filava via silenziosa, bassa e veloce verso sud-ovest lasciandosi dietro una scia luminosa. Sempre in quella strada, cioè in via Masaccio, un giovane che stava pulendo i vetri di casa, vide la stessa cosa (una fiammata incredibile, ha detto). Anche da Piazza Signoria, un signore è rimasto abbagliato dalla palla di fuoco per 15 secondi; secondo lui la palla era di forma ovale, bianca, con un alone bluastro ed una scia di almeno 3 chilometri. Inoltre doveva viaggiare a 4000 km/h e ad un migliaio di metri di quota, spostandosi in linea retta e silenziosa. Dall'osservatorio di Arcetri non riuscirono a vedere niente, mentre la torre di controllo dell'aeroporto di Pisa, che seguì il fenomeno, avrebbe escluso che si trattasse di un meteorite perchè volava parallelo al terreno. Comunque, altre testimonianze furono raccolte sul fenomeno. Da via Baldovinetti, la prof. Marta Biliotti Lazzeri di anni 35 (via di Soffiano 4) e Giampiero Ciofi Baffoni di anni 41, erborista (via di Soffiano 166), mentre si trovavano all'uscita della scuola media statale "G. Ungaretti", osservarono per circa 30 secondi, in cielo, un corpo luminoso, rosso al centro e circondato da un alone verde brillante e da un chiarore bianco. Aveva una velocità lenta come quella di un aereo a reazione; si allontanò in direzione ovest, senza provocare nessun rumore. Alle 18:45 (quasi sicuramente si tratta dello stesso oggetto dei precedenti), nella zona dell'Isolotto, la studentessa Elisabetta Vozza  (via Torcicoda 48) in compagnia di Ursula Maestrini e di Mirella Marchese, tutte di anni 12 e tutte residenti nella solita strada, videro per cinque secondi una specie di "stella cadente" luminosa, che presentava varie colorazioni, sul giallo e l'arancione. Era di forma circolare ed aveva traiettoria obliqua; si dirigeva a notevole velocità verso ovest. Sempre l'11 novembre 1980 a S. Michele alle 19:30 fu vista una luce tonda rosea, lo riporta Notiziario UFO n. 99; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 118, p. 19; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 129, p. 8; Il Giornale dei Misteri n. 168, p. 16 Dal centro sportivo di S. Michele, la signora Romana Rossi di anni 34, domiciliata in via Pisana 160, osservò una luce rosea di forma rotonda assai grande che, ascendendo in cielo, scomparve lasciando una scia luminosa dietro di s‚. Andava a grande velocitàe le condizioni meteorologiche erano buone. Il fenomeno durò 30 secondi. L'osservatrice provò meraviglia. Si concludono cosi gli avvistamenti di UFO su Firenze dal dopo guerra al 1980. Se qualcuno possiede o sa dove trovare gli avvistamenti dal1980 ad oggi e ce lo comunica la rubrica potrà continuare. Read the full article
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alemicheli76 · 6 months
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Review party "“Caravaggio Assassino” di Roberto Ciai con Marco Lazzeri, Newton Compton Editori. A cura di Jessica Dichiara
Ranuccio Tomassoni era un omuncolo di malaffare, uno di quelli di cui la storia non ricorderebbe neanche il nome se non fosse per la vicenda legata alla sua morte avvenuta sembra per mano del celebre pittore Michelangelo Merisi e per il fatto che appartenesse a una famiglia in vista tra la nobiltà romana dell’epoca. Si racconta che i due stessero giocando alla pallacorda e che ebbero un banale…
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zsofimayer · 8 months
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https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Foot-deformities-in-Renaissance-paintings.-A-of-and-Lazzeri-Castello/6c6f387718bd92f11a411babace5c71da33af89e
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amazoniaonline · 1 year
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jalonsoarevalo · 1 year
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Un estudio del Consejo Europeo de Investigación (CEI) identifica los repositorios que permiten a los investigadores cumplir las normas de ciencia abierta de la UE
Jahn, N., Laakso, M., Lazzeri, E., & McQuilton, P. (2023). Study on the readiness of research data and literature repositories to facilitate compliance with the Open Science Horizon Europe MGA requirements. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7728016 Un nuevo estudio identifica repositorios de datos y publicaciones que podrían ayudar a los beneficiarios de subvenciones del CEI, así como a los…
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lamilanomagazine · 1 year
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Trieste, al Teatro Carlo Schmidl va in scena il ciclo “Le Stanze della Musica”.
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Trieste, al Teatro Carlo Schmidl va in scena il ciclo “Le Stanze della Musica”.   Nel segno della rinnovata collaborazione tra il Civico Museo Teatrale “Carlo Schmidl” e il Conservatorio “Giuseppe Tartini”, mercoledì 8 marzo va in scena il secondo appuntamento dell'edizione Primavera 2023 del ciclo LE STANZE DELLA MUSICA. La formula è quella, già sperimentata con successo, di una speciale visita guidata dedicata di volta in volta ad uno o più strumenti delle collezioni dello “Schmidl”, nella sua sede di Palazzo Gopcevich (Via Rossini, 4), presentati dai giovani musicisti del “Tartini” e dai loro insegnanti. Gli appuntamenti sono in calendario tutti i mercoledì di marzo e di aprile, e vengono proposti in un doppio turno: il mattino alle ore 11.00 per gli studenti delle scuole, con particolare attenzione a quelle ad indirizzo musicale (con biglietto scolastico di 1 euro) e il pomeriggio alle ore 17.30 (con il normale biglietto di accesso al Museo). Per le scuole interessate al turno del mattino è prevista la prenotazione obbligatoria all'indirizzo di posta elettronica [email protected] A svelare tutto quello che avreste voluto sapere sul clarinetto e non avete mai osato chiedere, mercoledì 8 marzo saranno il docente Davide Teodoro e i suoi allievi Biagio Coretto, Matteo Parogni, Laura Banic, Ivana Glavina, Ana Starc, Igor Sandorov e Stoyan Petrouchev, che proporranno pagine di Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Franz Schubert, Johannes Brahms, Camille Saint-Saëns, Johann Strauss e Isaac Albéniz. I successivi appuntamenti saranno dedicati a oboe e fagotto, con gli allievi dei docenti Pietro Milella e Sergio Lazzeri (mercoledì 15 marzo); al saxofono, con gli allievi del professor Massimiliano Donninelli (mercoledì 22 marzo); al flauto, con gli allievi delle docenti Giuseppina Mascheretti e Roberta Zorino (mercoledì 29 marzo); all'antico canto accompagnato, con gli allievi dei docenti Romina Basso e Paolo Delisanti Prevedello (mercoledì 5 aprile); al pianoforte, con gli allievi della professoressa Teresa Trevisan (mercoledì 12 aprile); al flauto traversiere, con gli allievi del professor Manuel Staropoli (mercoledì 19 aprile) e al contrabbasso, con gli allievi del professor Stefano Sciascia (mercoledì 26 aprile). La partecipazione è compresa nel normale biglietto di ingresso al Museo: intero euro 4,00; ridotto euro 3,00; ridotto studenti euro 1,00; gratuito per i bambini fino a sei anni non compiuti. Info: www.museoschmidl.it - [email protected]... #notizie #news #breakingnews #cronaca #politica #eventi #sport #moda Read the full article
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baseballbybsmile · 3 months
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Today In 1936: Joe DiMaggio is ready to leave for his first New York Yankees training camp, but who's driving? Tony Lazzeri & Frank Crosetti did - all the way from San Francisco to St. Petersburg because Joe didn't know how to drive!
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