Sunday, September 29, 2013

UW film professor Lea Jacobs to oversee the university's arts and humanities initiatives

Lea Jacobs is a familiar face to film lovers on the UW campus. A communication arts professor, she's also afounding director of the UW Cinematheque, the campus organization that screens noteworthy films for free nearly every week, including silent films and 16mm and 35mm prints. Now she's adding another title to her resume: associate dean for the arts and humanities in the UW Graduate School, the role new School of Music director Susan C. Cook recently vacated.

Over the past 20 years, Jacobs has focused her career on the history of film, in particular silent cinema and the American studio system. She received the Graduate School's Kellett Mid-Career Award in 2009, and she teaches classes on contemporary animation as well as cinema's past.

One challenge she'll face in her new role is a decline in National Endowment for the Humanities funding. But this will not be her first time addressing funding shortfalls. As a member of the Graduate School Research Committee, she recruited researchers and helped allocate funds to projects such as an interdisciplinary grant the graduate school is currently working on.

Jacobs says arts and humanities programs shouldn't need to beg for funding since they are a vital part of all students' educational experience and benefit the community.

"I think people feel a little bit like they have to defend the arts and humanities," she says. "All these things that we do in the humanities are part of everyone's education, and the arts are part of everyone's education, so I kind of [wonder], 'Why should we have to defend them?' But we do right now, so I'm up for that."

Beyond the UW, Jacobs is perhaps best known for founding the Cinematheque with professor David Bordwell in 1997. In this role, she has partnered with the Chazen Museum of Art and the College of Letters and Science to bring Cinematheque programming to a broader set of viewers.

Cinematheque programming director Jim Healy says Jacobs' leadership skills are of particular importance as well.

"Lea has been the most effective arts leader and administrator I have ever worked with," he says. "I have met dozens of her students who admire her and are inspired by her."

But his highest praise might concern her film preferences.

"I was familiar with [her books on cinema] even before I came to the UW campus," he says. "Her tastes are excellent."

Source: http://www.thedailypage.com/daily/article.php?article=41039

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Monday, September 23, 2013

WATCH TV Idaho State vs Washington Live Stream Enjoy? Week 4

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Sunday, September 22, 2013

Kenya mall: Reporter outside, good friends inside

Lyndsay, centre right, embraces daughter Julia and husband Nick, partially seen, in a reunion that came after the couple had been separated for three hours inside a mall under attack by al-Shabab terrorists in Nairobi, Kenya on Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013. The couple, friends of an AP reporter, were texting and calling the AP reporter during the hostage crisis, blurring the lines between journalist and friend. (AP Photo/Georgina Goodwin)

Lyndsay, centre right, embraces daughter Julia and husband Nick, partially seen, in a reunion that came after the couple had been separated for three hours inside a mall under attack by al-Shabab terrorists in Nairobi, Kenya on Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013. The couple, friends of an AP reporter, were texting and calling the AP reporter during the hostage crisis, blurring the lines between journalist and friend. (AP Photo/Georgina Goodwin)

Lyndsay, centre, embraces daughter Julia and husband Nick, partially seen, in a reunion that came after the couple had been separated for three hours inside a mall under attack by al-Shabab terrorists in Nairobi, Kenya on Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013. The couple, friends of an AP reporter, were texting and calling the AP reporter during the hostage crisis, blurring the lines between journalist and friend. (AP Photo/Georgina Goodwin)

(AP) ? The frantic phone call came from a close friend staying the weekend with my family: She was inside Nairobi's most upscale mall and could hear gunshots. Her husband and 2-year-old daughter were inside too, but she didn't know where. Where should she go?

Over the next several hours my role as a reporter collided with my concern for close friends in mortal danger. Reporters everywhere must separate their emotions from scenes of horror, but that's a near-impossible task when your friends are facing attackers lobbing grenades and firing bullets.

Lyndsay called my wife two minutes after the first blast. It was 12:40 p.m. Saturday. Lyndsay, who was at a top-floor bookstore, initially thought it was a robbery. I rushed from home to the shopping center, a mile away. The scene was eerie: Gunmen had shot up cars at the mall's entrance. Bodies lay hanging from the vehicles.

Volleys of gunfire and small explosions rang in my ears as I and others ducked behind cars.

Lyndsay's husband, Nick, was with their daughter Julia in the downstairs cafe that appeared to be the initial attack point. He scooped up his toddler and ran. They ended up being pushed into a department store storage area and would stay there the next three hours.

Lyndsay was in a third-floor movie theater when she called me again. If gunmen found her and others, there was no escape, she said. A short while later the movie theater group ? about 20 strangers related by terror ? took an emergency exit up to the roof. Once there, they still had no escape.

"Jason, can you make sure the police know there are civilians on the roof?" she asked me. One person had stuck his head over the side and was greeted with a bullet, likely from police.

I told a police officer. He didn't seem to care. The trick is telling the RIGHT police officer. I asked an Associated Press colleague who is Kenyan to tell a high-ranking police official he knows. "This isn't strictly work-related," I told him. "But it could save lives."

I returned to my own work as a reporter, suppressing my fears that my friends could be killed. I snapped photos and took video. I interviewed a Dutch couple who had been close to the grenade blast. That night, Kenya's president put the death toll at 39.

Nick either texted or called me. He was in the back room with Julia but unsure what to do. Did I have any information? I texted or called him several times but I feared each time that his phone would ring when gunmen were nearby.

Lyndsay called back. What should she do if the terrorists came onto the roof? There was nowhere to go. The drop to the next level down was perhaps 20 feet. Lyndsay is nearly eight months pregnant; jumping off the roof could have tragic consequences. Grab a cable and rappel off a satellite base, I said. She later told me that might not have worked.

"My honest thought was I was afraid I would be too scared to do it," Lyndsay said. At the same time, she later said, it was good just to have someone to talk to.

Plainclothes cops helped Lyndsay and the roof hostages escape, but husband Nick and daughter Julia were still inside. Despite all the tension, Julia was mostly well behaved.

"She was amazing," Nick said later. But during the short sprints "I think she could sense something was going on and was getting a bit upset. When we were hiding, she was really scared when we first got there, but she wasn't crying or acting out. She was just kind of snuggling with me."

Three hours after that first grenade exploded, Nick sprinted with Julia to safety. A news photographer snapped a photo of that sprint that appeared on dozens of news sites.

By then I had taken a break from my journalist's role and was with Lyndsay. I saw Nick and Julia approach. I motioned to Lyndsay, whose eyes filled with tears. The three embraced.

As a reporter, I knew that not everyone's day ended so well.

At nightfall, a distressed Kenyan man asked me for an update. He and his friends had been eating at an upstairs restaurant where heavy casualties were reported and he couldn't reach them by phone. Maybe his friends were at the hospital, I suggested. No, he said. He had just visited all the hospitals. He had left the restaurant to wash his hands when the attack started.

"My friends texted me and said 'Pray for us bro,'" the man told me, nearly in tears. It was the last time he had heard from them.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-09-21-AF-Kenya-Mall-Attack-Friends-Inside/id-f100067a541f4659a839962e09f48dee

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Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Stocks, bonds rally after Summers exits Fed race

Wall Street was happy to see Larry Summers go.

Stocks rose on Monday after Summers, who had been the leading candidate to replace Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, withdrew his name from consideration.

Summers, a former Treasury secretary, was viewed as being more likely to rein in the government's massive stimulus program. The president is expected to nominate Ben Bernanke's successor as early as this month. The new front-runner is Janet Yellen, the Fed's vice chair.

Stocks were also helped by news that U.S. factory output rose 0.7 percent in August, the most in eight months.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 121 points, or 0.8 percent, to 15,497 in afternoon trading. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 10 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,698. The Nasdaq composite fell two points, a fraction of a percent, to 3,720, pulled down by a loss in Apple.

Nine of 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 rose. Only technology stocks declined. The biggest gains were for materials stocks ? metal miners, fertilizer makers, and industrial gas companies.

At its highest point in late morning trading, the S&P 500 was within five points of its previous record close of 1,709.67, set on Aug. 2.

That worried Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial.

McMillan said there are risks that investors don't seem to be accounting for in the prices they're paying. The Syria situation might not be resolved as easily as some are assuming. Europe's debt crisis isn't over. Investors seem to believe corporate profits will keep growing as fast as they have been, even though cheap debt refinancing has driven much of that growth. And there's another debate upcoming in Washington about the U.S. debt ceiling. "The last time we had a real problem with it, it did result in a significant market correction," McMillan said.

Linda Duessel, market strategist at Federated Investors in Pittsburgh, said it's just as likely that some of those issues will turn out in ways that don't hurt stocks. And even if one of those issues causes stocks to decline, "that could be the correction that any us of who have cash on the sidelines are waiting for," she said.

Bond prices rose, pushing yields lower. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.87 percent from 2.88 percent late Friday. The dollar fell against the yen and the euro.

Among companies making big moves:

? Homebuilders rose as investors were encouraged by a decline in long-term interest rates. The biggest gainer in percentage terms was PulteGroup, up 74 cents, or 4.5 percent, to $17.27.

? Boise rose $2.59, or 26 percent, to $12.55 after news that Packaging Corp. of America is buying it for $1.27 billion. Packaging Corp. rose $4.69, or 8.6 percent, to $59.24.

? Apple continued to slide after investors were disappointed with the company's latest iPhone models introduced last week. Apple lost $15.20, or 3.3 percent, to $449.45.

Trading in stock options was halted for less than an hour Monday afternoon because of a problem with their price-reporting system.

Summers' withdrawal helped stocks overseas, too. The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was up 0.6 percent. Germany's DAX rose 1.2 percent, and the CAC-40 in France was 0.9 percent higher.

Oil traders were monitoring Syria developments. The recent diplomatic drive, which has seen the prospect decrease of a U.S.-led attack on Syria dissipate, has pushed oil prices back down. The benchmark New York price of crude fell $1.62 to $106.59 a barrel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stocks-bonds-rally-summers-exits-fed-race-134609172--finance.html

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Sunday, September 15, 2013

Requiem for a Dream: Drugs Are Bad, Mmmkay?

Requiem for a Dream: Drugs Are Bad, Mmmkay?

When I saw Black Swan, I thought to myself "welp, I guess I'm a Darren Aronofsky fan now." And when I saw The Wrestler, I was sure. So when Requiem for a Dream finally came to Netflix Instant earlier this month, I completely was out of excuses to not watch it. Man this movie is good. Man it makes me feel bad.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/DVKeJ6qzR7E/requiem-for-a-dream-drugs-are-bad-mmmkay-1316389710

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