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#Richard Salzman
altpick · 1 year
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Spring is in the Air!
The weather is warming up, the spring flowers are blooming and spirits are lifting. To celebrate, Altpick highlighted several members’ portfolios this past week including illustrators Joey Feldman, Davide Bonazzi, and Jameson Wilkins; in addition to photographer Brian Smale. Here’s a taste of their work, but for more, please visit their portfolios on Altpick.com. Illustrator Joey Feldman ©Joey…
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drrichardsalzmann · 4 months
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Dr. Richard Salzmann - Board Certified Periodontist in Cooper City
For all of your gum disease concerns, Board-Certified periodontist Dr. Salzman provides treatment of gum disease In Copper City. For more information call: 954-435-1102.
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hysterikas · 4 years
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At one of the only other comparable protests of a presidential inauguration, held at the height of the New Left, to protest the swearing-in of Richard Nixon in 1969, women in the movement had fought for space for two speakers, Marilyn Salzman Webb and Shulamith Firestone. As soon as Webb had begun to speak about abortion, childcare, and how men on the left treated women, the booing from the male crowd had drowned her out; Webb has recalled that “people were yelling ‘Take her off the stage and fuck her!’ and ‘Fuck her down a dark alley!’” She left the stage crying, and decades later she told the historian Annelise Orleck that that was when she knew that women “couldn’t build a coalition with the left; women’s liberation was going to be its own movement.” Firestone, who’d also been unable to give her speech in the face of booing from her ideological brethren, wrote more bluntly after the event: “Fuck off Left! We’re starting our own movement.”
Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger, Rebecca Traister
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foundingmoms · 4 years
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The Moving Sex Therapist
Moving during a pandemic? Who’d attempt such a thing??
This week, Jill talks to sex therapist Lisa Katona, LCSW, CST, who blazed a very hot trail moving across the country to relocate her business…and lived to tell the tale. Hear how she managed to do it, what she’s learned along the way, and tips she has for you to improve your sex life rn .
Get Jill's tip top tool of the week (spoiler alert, it’s Be My Eyes) and head here to rate this podcast.
Jill Salzman is currently growing her third entrepreneurial venture, The Founding Moms, the #1 platform for mom entrepreneurs to build better businesses. She’s the author of  The Best Business Book In The World and the best-seller, Found It: A Field Guide for Mom Entrepreneurs. Jill gave her own TED talk on 11/11/11, was dubbed a “mommy mogul” by CNNMoney, a “Cool Mom Entrepreneur We Love” by MSN Live, and was recently named one of the Top 50 Women to Watch In Tech as well as a Top 100 Champion Small Business Influencer after Forbes’ named The Founding Moms one of the Top 10 Websites For Entrepreneurs. She’s shared the speaker stage with Richard Branson, Sheryl Sandberg, Daymond John, Marilu Henner, and Desmond Tutu and she regularly appears on ABC7’s Windy City Live TV show. In her spare time, Jill enjoys kloofing, baking, and erasing her daughters’ crayon artwork from the kitchen walls.
Check out this episode!
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alexeivella · 7 years
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Taming Online Trolls © Alexei Vella. Client: Ryerson Review of Journalism
FIND ME INSTAGRAM: http://www.instagram.com/alexeivella/ DRIBBBLE: http://dribbble.com/alexeivella TWITTER: http://twitter.com/AlexeiVella FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/alexevellaart/ WEB: http://www.alexeivella.com BEHANCED: http://www.behance.net/alexeivella AGENT: http://www.salzmanart.com/alexei-vella.html
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workingclasshistory · 5 years
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On this day, 20 January 1969, at a New Left Richard Nixon counter-inaugural protest, the master of ceremonies incorrectly announced, “The women have asked all the men to leave the stage.” After that, Students for a Democratic Society activist Marilyn Salzman Webb attempted to speak about women's oppression, and SDS men heckled her, shouting, "Take her off the stage and fuck her!" and so forth until she was drowned out. We have a podcast episode coming soon about the movement against the Vietnam War at this time, with some prominent women who were involved. Subscribe today to make sure you catch it: http://bit.ly/2T6MZot Pictured: some people at this protest http://bit.ly/2DmGLeS
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transhumanitynet · 5 years
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113 - Sean Esbjörn-Hargens on Exostudies: Philosophical Explorations...
My graduate advisor Sean Esbjörn-Hargens is one of the most consistently inspiring and refreshingly different thinkers I’ve ever met. In our first Future Fossils conversation, we discussed his work to apply a profoundly “meta” and pluralistic philosophy to the everyday work of organizational development and social impact. In this discussion, we turn over the rock and examine his decades of inquiry into some of the world’s most puzzling and confounding phenomena – namely, those surrounding the UFO and its aura of science-challenging incursions into mundane reality.
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Might “Exostudies” be the locus of a transformation in how we understand reality? This is not your normal New Age conversation about aliens, but a rigorous look into the persistent weirdness and problematic implications of one of humankind’s greatest mysteries. As Phil Dick famously said, “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.” If UFOs are here to stay – with all of their attendant provocations to our oversimple categories (self and other, artificial and natural, hallucination and perception, physical and immaterial) – then we are overdue for a new definition of “reality.” In preparation for his Exostudies online course this fall, we look at how to make sense of the stubbornly ineffable – an evolutionary call to take up higher-dimensional logic and more nuanced understandings of What Is…
http://www.exostudies.org/
“When you go into the UFO field, at least with an open heart and mind, you come across some really crazy shit. It is a freakshow. There are so many bizarre claims being made by standup citizens who are quite believable in what they are saying, even though what they’re saying just does not map onto our general view of reality.”
“The truth is stranger than science fiction. Not just fiction, but science fiction.”
“The phenomenon is subjective and objective; it’s subjective and objective simultaneously; and it’s neither. So I think what it’s asking us is to re-examine the relationship between mind and matter, and how do we relate to subject and object, and how has our current scientific methodology failed us horribly in having a more sophisticated answer or framing or understanding of how these two aspects are related.”
“There are really good, legitimate photographs, and trace evidence, and all kinds of physical evidence for UFO craft and other otherworldly realities…and yet, there are so many fakes. And how do you sift through all that? You almost can’t.”
“We’re entering into an augmented and virtual space that’s going to be ontologically fragmented, and highly pluralistic, and solipsistic. So how do we navigate that culturally? I don’t know, but I think we’re largely unprepared.”
“We’re not that far from discovering some form of mini-life elsewhere. And as soon as that happens, then the floodgates are going to open in considering the implications of that.”
“So many UFO or ET enthusiasts often want to put everything in one box, like ‘they’re all bad,’ ‘they’re all good,’ ‘they’re all future versions of ourselves.’ I think it’s much messier than that.”
“I think one of the core strategies is hermeneutic generosity. A sense of critical thinking, but from a place of generosity, where we stay open. Postmodernism has been so jaded – the hermeneutics of suspicion – I think when we approach these phenomena, we need a different orientation.”
“To really bring any kind of justice to this inquiry, we need to draw on the best thinking from as many kinds of disciplines as we can – because the phenomenon is that big, and that mysterious, and that paradoxical. So anything short of a meta, integrative approach – and even that – is going to fail.”
Mentioned:
Diana Slattery, John Mack, Avi Loeb, Ken Wilber, Jeff Kripal, Whitley Strieber, Arthur Brock, George Knapp, John C. Wright, Olaf Stapledon, Stuart Davis, Jeff Salzman, Richard Doyle, Carl Jung, Terence McKenna, William Irwin Thompson, DW Pasulka, Eric Wargo, Jacques Vallee
Sean’s appearance on the Daily Evolver Podcast:
https://www.dailyevolver.com/2019/02/taking-aliens-seriously/
If you liked this episode, check out Episodes 60 & Episode 91:
https://shows.pippa.io/futurefossils/episodes/60
https://shows.pippa.io/futurefossils/episodes/91
113 – Sean Esbjörn-Hargens on Exostudies: Philosophical Explorations… was originally published on transhumanity.net
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Latin American Ilustración 7 Winner Benedetto Cristofani @benedettocristofani #representative Richard Salzman @salzmanart @RichardSalzman Publication : Die Zeit Grill party. At the beginning of the #barbecue season Amazonian ecosystem is endangered by economic #coalproduction. #artdirector #freelanceillustrator #ilustrador #ilustracion #artistavisual #arte #LAI7  #dibujo #drawing #drawingoftheday #illustration #illustrationart #artist #visualartist #artofinstagram #artistsoninnstagram #awards #illustrationawards #awardwinningcreative El concurso Latin American Ilustración 8 abrirá pronto. Prepárate! https://www.instagram.com/p/Bw5JD6wJxqD/?igshid=4bem5hg7n1m
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U.S. Executes Corey Johnson for 7 Murders in 1992
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WASHINGTON — The Trump administration executed Corey Johnson on Thursday for a series of seven murders in 1992. He was the 12th federal inmate put to death under President Trump.
Mr. Johnson committed the murders in the Richmond, Va., area to further a drug enterprise that trafficked large quantities of cocaine. Among his crimes were the shooting with a semiautomatic weapon of a rival drug dealer, the killing of a woman who had not paid for some crack cocaine and the shooting of a man at close range whom Mr. Johnson suspected of cooperating with the police.
Mr. Johnson, 52, was pronounced dead by lethal injection at 11:34 p.m. at the federal correctional complex in Terre Haute, Ind., the Bureau of Prisons said.
When asked by an executioner if he had any last words, Mr. Johnson responded, “No, I’m OK,” according to a report from a journalist in attendance. Several seconds later, he said softly, “Love you,” gazing at a room designated for members of his family.
In a statement released by a spokesperson for his defense team, Mr. Johnson apologized to the families that were victimized by his actions and listed the names of the seven murder victims, requesting that they be remembered.
“On the streets, I was looking for shortcuts, I had some good role models, I was side tracking, I was blind and stupid,” he said. “I am not the same man that I was.”
Mr. Johnson thanked the chaplain, his minister, his legal team and the staff in the special confinement unit. He noted that “the pizza and strawberry shake were wonderful,” but that he never received the jelly-filled doughnuts that he ordered, a reference to his final meal request. “What’s with that?” he added. “This should be fixed.”
Mr. Johnson tested positive for the coronavirus last month, shortly after the government scheduled his execution, during an outbreak on federal death row at the prison in Terre Haute. At least 22 of the men housed on death row there tested positive, lawyers for the prisoners and others with knowledge of their cases said. Madeline Cohen, who represents two of the men, said she knew of 33 cases.
In a request to delay Mr. Johnson’s execution, his lawyers said the virus had caused significant lung damage. They argued his execution would violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment because he could experience a sensation of suffocating or drowning if put to death with the federal government’s method, which uses a single drug, pentobarbital. Instead, his lawyers suggested, Mr. Johnson could be executed by firing squad or the Bureau of Prisons could administer a pain-relieving anesthetic drug before the injection of pentobarbital.
Specifically, Mr. Johnson’s lawyers argued that the combination of the coronavirus and the government’s lethal injection protocol would place him “especially at risk of experiencing flash pulmonary edema while still sensate.” Flash pulmonary edema, a condition in which fluid rapidly accumulates in the lungs, has been at the center of some challenges to the federal government’s execution protocol. The courts have been largely unreceptive to those claims.
But briefly, it seemed as if the coronavirus would provide Mr. Johnson a reprieve. A judge on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia suspended Mr. Johnson’s execution and another execution scheduled for Friday until at least March. Shortly after, a panel of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit overturned that order.
Joined by another judge on the panel, Judge Gregory G. Katsas of the Appeals Court cited Supreme Court precedent that states that the Eighth Amendment “‘does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death — something that, of course, isn’t guaranteed to many people.’”
In a filing with the Supreme Court, the government contrasted its lethal injection protocol with death by hanging, claiming that hanging could cause suffocation that lasts several minutes. Even if coronavirus infections would make the prisoners’ executions more painful, the government argued, the “brief duration of pain,” most likely measured in seconds or at most two minutes, would be far less than that of inmates executed by hanging.
Mr. Johnson “is a convicted serial killer who murdered and maimed multiple people on different occasions, and whose victims included innocent bystanders,” the government said in a separate filing with the Supreme Court. “Their families have waited decades for the sentence to be enforced and are currently in Terre Haute, Ind., for the execution.”
A majority of the Supreme Court sided with the government in declining Mr. Johnson’s requests for reprieve.
Mr. Johnson’s lawyers also sought to challenge his execution by arguing he was intellectually disabled, rendering it unlawful.
His claims of intellectual disability were rejected on the basis that an I.Q. score of 77 was believed to be too high to merit the diagnosis, his lawyers said. But they argued that results from other I.Q. tests and an adjusted version of the same score indicated that he qualified as intellectually disabled.
But rebutting those claims, the Justice Department contended that the murders were planned, and not impulsive acts by someone incapable of calculated judgments. For example, when the drug organization operated in Trenton, N.J., Mr. Johnson beat people with a metal bat to protect the enterprise, the government said.
Lawyers for another man executed by the Trump administration — Alfred Bourgeois in December — also argued that their client was intellectually disabled. In both cases, a majority on the Supreme Court rejected the prisoners’ claims.
Two of Mr. Johnson’s lawyers still maintained that their client lacked the capacity to be a drug kingpin, as he was portrayed by the government. In a statement, they said he could barely read or write, struggled with basic tasks of daily living and was “a follower, desperate for approval, support and guidance.”
“No court ever held a hearing to consider the overwhelming evidence of Mr. Johnson’s intellectual disability,” said the lawyers, Donald P. Salzman and Ronald J. Tabak. “And the clemency process failed to play its historic role as a safeguard against violations of due process and the rule of law.”
Mr. Johnson was convicted in 1993 of seven capital murders, among a host of other charges related to drug trafficking and acts of violence. His lawyers unsuccessfully argued that he should be granted some reprieve under the First Step Act, a bill signed into law by Mr. Trump that among other things allowed for shortened sentences for certain drug offenders.
Two others involved in the conspiracy — Richard Tipton and James Roane — who together trafficked large quantities of cocaine in the Richmond area in the early 1990s, were also sentenced to death.
Mr. Tipton and Mr. Roane remain at the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute. The Justice Department has not scheduled their executions.
President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr., whose term begins Wednesday, has signaled his opposition to the federal death penalty, so their executions are unlikely to occur anytime soon. Mr. Biden has pledged to work to pass legislation to end the federal death penalty as part of his criminal justice platform.
The Trump administration intends to execute its final inmate, Dustin J. Higgs, on Friday. Mr. Higgs was sentenced to death for the 1996 murders of three women in Maryland. If his lawyers are unsuccessful in their appeals and Mr. Trump does not grant clemency, Mr. Higgs’s death will be 13th federal execution in a little over six months and the third this week. Lisa M. Montgomery, the only woman on federal death row, was put to death on Wednesday.
Since July, the number of prisoners under a federal death sentence dropped by about 20 percent as a result of the spate of executions carried out by the Trump administration, according to data from the Death Penalty Information Center. That month, the administration resumed the use of federal capital punishment after a 17-year hiatus.
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drrichardsalzmann · 1 year
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Dr. Salzmann, a Cooper City periodontist, urges his patients to take an active role in their overall health. Periodontal disease symptoms should be recognized by patients. Gums that are red, swollen, and sore, as well as bleeding when brushing or flossing, are some of the most typical symptoms. If surgery is necessary, our experts will always be able to thoroughly explain the procedure and what to expect throughout treatment. Periodontal care, gingival and bone grafting, aesthetic and pocket elimination surgery, scaling/root planning, crown lengthening, laser periodontal therapy, and dental implant implantation are among Dr. Salzman's many services. For more information call: 954-435-1102.
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foundingmoms · 2 years
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Marci’s Picture Problem
What’s In This Episode:
Have you ever updated your customers too soon?
You know the ones. The folks that have hired you to do a job for them and well before you’ve finished it, you give them an update that gets you into hot water? Marci Brennan certainly knows. She shares her big business blunder that taught her, and will teach you, what not to do the next time you wanna update your clients on your progress.
Jill Salzman turns the mundane into inspiration and transforms the impossible into the achievable. Through defying expectations and breaking the rules, she succeeds in inspiring entrepreneurs to figure out what works for them by using meaningful action to create positive results. Jill is the author of The Best Business Book In The World* (according to my mom) and the Amazon best-seller, Found It: A Field Guide for Mom Entrepreneurs. She’s shared the speaker stage with Richard Branson, Sheryl Sandberg, Daymond John, Marilu Henner, and Desmond Tutu among others, and professed her love of Eddie Vedder in her TEDx talk on 11/11/11. She hosts the top-rated entertaining business podcast, Why Are We Shouting?, a question she asks herself daily. CNNMoney calls her a “mommy mogul.” MSN Live says she’s a “Cool Mom Entrepreneur We Love.” Forbes rated her a Top 100 Champion Small Business Influencer and voted The Founding Moms one of the Top 10 Websites For Entrepreneurs. When she's not speaking to audiences in patterned leggings or podcasting from her basement, she fruitlessly tries to convince her daughters that cassette tapes actually existed.
Check out this episode!
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insidious-whispers · 6 years
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On June 10, 2014, 16-year-old Rylan Salzman called 911 in Tacoma, Washington to report a murder. Rylan confessed to the dispatcher that he had beaten his father, Richard Salzman, to death and concealed his body in a backyard compost box. Rylan only made the call after his mother told him she would be filing a missing persons report and gathering a search party to look for his father. According to Rylan, his mother, and his sister, Richard was an alcoholic who had physically and verbally abused the family for years. Rylan says on the night of the murder, Richard was mistreating his wife during a phone call. When Rylan stuck up for his mother, Richard pushed him to the ground causing Rylan to snap and beat him to death with a cane. Rylan pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 7 years, a juvenile facility until he is 21 and then a psychiatric facility for the remainder of his sentence.
The above video is the recording of Rylan Salzman speaking with the dispatcher in an eerily calm tone.
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compneuropapers · 7 years
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Interesting Papers for Week 39, 2017
Changes in ventromedial prefrontal and insular cortex support the development of metamemory from childhood into adolescence. Fandakova, Y., Selmeczy, D., Leckey, S., Grimm, K. J., Wendelken, C., Bunge, S. A., & Ghetti, S. (2017). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(29), 7582–7587.
Computational Theory Underlying Acute Vestibulo-ocular Reflex Motor Learning with Cerebellar Long-Term Depression and Long-Term Potentiation. Inagaki, K., & Hirata, Y. (2017). The Cerebellum, 16(4), 827–839.
Distinct Feedforward and Feedback Effects of Microstimulation in Visual Cortex Reveal Neural Mechanisms of Texture Segregation. Klink, P. C., Dagnino, B., Gariel-Mathis, M.-A., & Roelfsema, P. R. (2017). Neuron, 95(1), 209–220.e3.
Reward Draws the Eye, Uncertainty Holds the Eye: Associative Learning Modulates Distractor Interference in Visual Search. Koenig, S., Kadel, H., Uengoer, M., Schubö, A., & Lachnit, H. (2017). Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 11, 128.
Oxytocin and Serotonin Brain Mechanisms in the Nonhuman Primate. Lefevre, A., Richard, N., Jazayeri, M., Beuriat, P.-A., Fieux, S., Zimmer, L., … Sirigu, A. (2017). Journal of Neuroscience, 37(28), 6741–6750.
Coherent alpha oscillations link current and future receptive fields during saccades. Neupane, S., Guitton, D., & Pack, C. C. (2017). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(29), E5979–E5985.
Hippocampal electrical stimulation disrupts associative learning when targeted at dentate spikes. Nokia, M. S., Gureviciene, I., Waselius, T., Tanila, H., & Penttonen, M. (2017). Journal of Physiology, 595(14), 4961–4971.
Population Vectors Can Provide Near Optimal Integration of Information. Orellana, J., Rodu, J., & Kass, R. E. (2017). Neural Computation, 29(8), 2021–2029.
A neural model of hierarchical reinforcement learning. Rasmussen, D., Voelker, A., & Eliasmith, C. (2017). PLOS ONE, 12(7), e0180234.
Top-Down Beta Enhances Bottom-Up Gamma. Richter, C. G., Thompson, W. H., Bosman, C. A., & Fries, P. (2017). Journal of Neuroscience, 37(28), 6698–6711.
Beyond differences in means: robust graphical methods to compare two groups in neuroscience. Rousselet, G. A., Pernet, C. R., & Wilcox, R. R. (2017). European Journal of Neuroscience, 46(2), 1738–1748.
Endogenous orienting in the archer fish. Saban, W., Sekely, L., Klein, R. M., & Gabay, S. (2017). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(29), 7577–7581.
Distinct Roles for the Amygdala and Orbitofrontal Cortex in Representing the Relative Amount of Expected Reward. Saez, R. A., Saez, A., Paton, J. J., Lau, B., & Salzman, C. D. (2017). Neuron, 95(1), 70–77.e3.
Constrained sampling experiments reveal principles of detection in natural scenes. Sebastian, S., Abrams, J., & Geisler, W. S. (2017). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(28), E5731–E5740.
GP-Select: Accelerating EM Using Adaptive Subspace Preselection. Shelton, J. A., Gasthaus, J., Dai, Z., Lücke, J., & Gretton, A. (2017). Neural Computation, 29(8), 2177–2202.
Running promotes spatial bias independently of adult neurogenesis. Snyder, J. S., Cahill, S. P., & Frankland, P. W. (2017). Hippocampus, 27(8), 871–882.
Unraveling the Role of the Hippocampus in Reversal Learning. Vilà-Balló, A., Mas-Herrero, E., Ripollés, P., Simó, M., Miró, J., Cucurell, D., … Rodríguez-Fornells, A. (2017). Journal of Neuroscience, 37(28), 6686–6697.
Brain network dynamics in high-functioning individuals with autism. Watanabe, T., & Rees, G. (2017). Nature Communications, 8, 16048.
The normal environment delays the development of multisensory integration. Xu, J., Yu, L., Rowland, B. A., & Stein, B. E. (2017). Scientific Reports, 7(1), 4772.
History of winning remodels thalamo-PFC circuit to reinforce social dominance. Zhou, T., Zhu, H., Fan, Z., Wang, F., Chen, Y., Liang, H., … Hu, H. (2017). Science, 357(6347), 162–168.
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dcfairwi · 5 years
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2019 Junior Fair Cultural Arts Judging Results
2019 Junior Fair Cultural Arts Judging Results #dcfairwi
Cultural Arts – Drawing & Painting – Drawing-charc/chalk/color penc
1st – Veronica Richards, Achievers
1st – Joanna M Schmidt, Achievers
1st – Jeffrey J Schmidt, Achievers
1st – Benjamin M Cameron, Juneau Victorians
1st – Timothy Cameron, Juneau Victorians
1st – Jordan Salzman, Astico Perseverance
1st – Lydia R Meyer, A-OK
1st – Kelsie J Bos, Achievers
1st – Rebecca…
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American Illustration 37 Winner MARK SMITH @marksmithillustration #representative Richard Salzman @SalzmanArt #designdirector David Sleight @stuntbox #publication ProPublica  @ProPublica Who Holds the #DEA Accountable When Its Missions Cost Lives?  The inside story of a cartel’s deadly assault on a Mexican town near the #Texas border — and the U.S. #drugoperation that sparked it. #illustration #illustrator #illustration #illustratorsoninstagram #artistoninstagram #illustrationart #ilovethiswork #awardwinningillustrator #ai37 #art #competition #illustrationartist #creative #Ilustrações #drawer #drawing #artwork #americanillustration #ilustracion #ilustrador #arte #artista https://www.instagram.com/p/B1tqRKXgwvL/?igshid=41xd506f2sbf
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todayclassical · 7 years
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September 08 in Music History
1588 Birth of French music theorist Marin Mersenne in La Soultiere. 
1613 Death of Italian lutenist and composer Don Carlo Gesualdo in Naples. 
1672 Baptism of French composer Nicolas de Grigny in Reims. 
1706 Death of composer Romanus Weichlein.
1736 Birth of composer Bernardo Ottani.
1767 Birth of composer Karl August von Lichtenstein.
1779 Birth of composer Johann Philipp Samuel Schmidt.
1792 Birth of composer Joseph Netherclift.
1800 Death of French composer and violinist Pierre Gavinies in Paris. 
1815 Birth of Italian soprano Giuseppina Strepponi.
1824 Birth of Spanish composer Jaime Nuno Roca in San Juan, Spain.
1826 Birth of composer Disma Fumagalli.
1827 Birth of composer Emil Naumann.
1841 Birth of Czech composer Antonin Dvorak.
1852 FP of Mendelssohn's Christus unfinished oratorio, in Birmingham, England.
1862 Founding of St. Petersburg Conservatory.
1863 Birth of composer Gustavo Emilio Campa.
1870 Birth of German composer and conductor Hermann Hans Wetzler.
1883 FP of Graffigna: "Il matrimonio segreto" Florence.
1886 Birth of French soprano Ninon Vallin.
1893 Birth of German conductor Fritz Zweig in Moravia.
1894 Birth of Dutch pianist and conductor Willem Pijpe in Zeist. 
1904 Birth of composer Carlos Sanchez Malaga.
1914 Birth of English keyboard player, conductor and writer Lionel Salter.
1919 Birth of composer David Johan Kvandal.
1921 Birth of German composer Hans Engelmann in Darmstadt. 
1925 Birth of composer Magnus Blondal Johansson.
1925 Birth of composer Alexander Nikolayevich Kholminov.
1928 Birth of Italian bass-baritone Fabio Giongo, in Milan.
1929 Birth of German conductor Christoph Von Dohnanyi in Berlin. 
1930 Birth of French baritone Peter Gottlieb, in Brno.
1933 Birth of musicologist and composer Eric Salzman in New York City.
1934 Birth of English composer Peter Maxwell Davies in Manchester.
1934 Birth of Canadian composer Srul Irving Glick in Toronto.
1937 Birth of composer Thomas Schudel Defiance, OH.
1938 Birth of Dutch composer and pianist Reinbert de Leeuw in Amsterdam.
1949 Death of German composer and conductor Richard Strauss.
1951 Birth of American composer Louis Karchin Philadelphia, PA.
1951 Birth of Hungarian pianist Deszo Ranki.
1955 Birth of American composer Daniel Palkowski in Oak Ridge, TN.
1956 Birth of American composer Phillip Schroeder.
1961 FP of Earle Brown's Available Forms I for 18 players, in Darmstadt.
1970 Birth of German pianist Lars Vogt.
1971 FP of Leonard Bernstein's Mass, A Theater Piece, choreographed by Alvin Ainley, directed by Gordon Davidson, and conducted by Maurice Peress at the inauguration of the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.
1973 Birth of American composer Dennis DeSantis in Warren, MI.
1975 FP of Paul Chihara's Ceremony V Symphony in Celebration in Houston.
1991 Death of American composer Alex North.
1995 FP of Lou Harrison's New First Suite for Strings. Stuttgart Symphony, Dennis Russell Davies conducting in Majorca.
2000 FP of Tan Dun's Water Passion after St. Matthew with vocal soloists Elizabeth Keusch and Stephen Bryant, violinist Mark O'Connor, cellist Maya Beiser, and percussionist David Cossin, and the orchestra of the Bach Academy conducted by the composer in Stuttgart. One of four passion settings commissioned by the International Bach Academy to honor the 250th anniversary of Bach's death in the year 2000.
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