Sunday, July 16, 2017

Climate Change Impacts Glass Panels @ MAC Extreme UV Radiation

For more than ten years on in the New Urban Downtown Mesa, the International Design Award-winning Mesa Arts Center has received outstanding recognition and attention for many of its outdoor features and architectural elements: one of which are the sequence of vertical glass panels running from behind the outdoor stage at the north campus on Main Street to an installation on the eastside of the south campus opening to First Avenue. In the past few months, your MesaZona blogger has noticed changes in the appearance of these glass panels that are exposed to sunlight for many hours, but why after ten years is this happening now? It could be the recent onslaught of days of excessive heat and increased exposure to higher-than-normal levels of ultraviolet radiation from corona mass ejections.
That might sound slightly crazy and far-fetched to some people, but there have been more than a few reports out there and posted on this blog site regarding holes created in the magnetosphere around our Planet Earth that usually acts as a shield to waves of radiation and photon flexes from cosmic disturbances impacting both the ionosphere interfering with satellite and radiation transmissions, creating unusual weather patterns and seismic earthquakes. The good news is there's been a crew of inspectors and engineers taking a look at the damage to remedy the problem.

The glass panels @ Encore On First at 25 W First Avenue don't appear to be affected, perhaps due to the abundant shade around the water pool and fountains at the front.









Solar CME Shockwave Hits Magnetosphere | S0 News July.16.2017




For your information there's a short video upload from YouTube about geomagnetic impacts
Published on Jul 16, 2017
July 16, 2017: CME STRIKE SPARKS GEOMAGNETIC STORMS: Geomagnetic storms are underway on July 16th following a CME strike at 0545 UT. Auroras have been sighted in New Zealand as well as US states such as Washington and Wyoming. The storms are intensifying as Earth moves into the CME's magnetized wake. They are currently category G2 (moderately strong). Arrived on schedule.
 

Today's Pie: All-Out Spunky for The Suggestion Box


Published on Jul 16, 2017
Views: 20,106
After May asks all parties for policy ideas Pie has a few suggestions of his own.

Saturday, July 15, 2017

EDUCATING ARIZONA: All-Inclusive Culture

CULTURAL COALITION PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEXICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
MÁS: The Banning of Mexican American Studies in Tucson. 
Contact: Carmen Guerrero
7/13/2017
480.221-9639 mobile
480.834-5731 office 
 
 
 
MÁS: The Banning of Mexican American Studies in Tucson.
A courageous struggle to share a hidden history.
The Banning of Mexican American studies in the Tucson School District was just one more of the many recent attacks on education in Arizona.  Highly regarded by the community that embraced the program, it was successful in keeping both students and families engaged in the relearning of ancient native knowledge and philosophy that otherwise is unknown by most Americans.  Data shows that the program was also successful in improving graduation rates, test scores and preparing students for higher education.
Following in the path of SB1070 this hostile act was one more way many see as a racist attack on the large demographic of our nation especially indigenous people.
Milta Ortiz’ theater production of MÁS, shares the emotional journey of the historical events surrounding the banning of the Mexican American Studies program in the Tucson Unified School District and the people in the movement to save it.
The director is Borderlands Theater producing director Marc David Pinate. 
THE PLAY
Based on a true story. A community struggles to hold onto their history, identity, and humanity as they fight to save Mexican American Studies in the Tucson Unified School District.
Based on over 400 pages of interview transcripts, Más is a streamlined word for word recount of the movement to save the Mexican American Studies program at TUSD.  The play takes an intimate look at the people at the center of the movement, and how mounting pressure from the State affected their relationships. 
ABOUT THE CONFLICT 
Más explores the complexities of the ethnic studies controversy through a wide range of perspectives:
  • the State’s efforts to ban the MAS program they saw as seditious;
  • Mexican American Studies advocates faith in the program’s success;
  • and as with many social movements, the issues of gender and ideological divides.
Although statistics demonstrated the program’s success, the Mexican American Studies program at TUSD was banned. The play depicts how a sound byte taken out of context led to fear and resentment towards a community, and the ensuing power of the state over one school district.
Más speaks to the need to stand up for what is right and the emotional toll of fighting a protracted battle against the state.
MEXICAN AMERICAN STUDIES STILL MAKING HEADLINE NEWS
The struggle continues. 
Currently in the courts in Tucson, a judge will decide whether Republicans discriminated against Hispanic students by banning classes that focused on Latino culture.  
As the battle continues over the Tucson classes, other districts around the country have adopted similar successful programs.
 
Additional background report:
“How one law banning Ethnic Studies led to its rise”
by J. Weston Phippen The Atlantic on July 19, 2015https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/07/how-one-law-banning-ethnic-studies-led-to-rise/398885/
 
 
PLAY’S FRAMEWORK ROOTED IN TUCSON
The MAS program was steeped in Indigenous epistemology. Several of the teachers and students in the MAS program regularly attended sweat lodge ceremonies as a cleansing ritual. In Más, the actors and audience are part of a Redemptive Remembrance, a collective reflection. The play is set as if inside a sweat lodge and the events unfold in a space of reflection. The play invokes ritual, with audience members having the option to be smudged with sage as they enter the theater.
Pinate’s direction employs dancers in masks (exquisitely sculpted by master mask maker, Zarco Guerrero) that coincide with the four Tezcatlipocas, deities that according to Mayan cosmology represent the four elemental energies that keep earthly existence in balance. 
COLLABORATORS
Cultural Coalition, Inc. is partnering with ASU’s Performance in the Borderlands to present this daring piece of theater on  Saturday Sept 23rd at 2 and 7:30 pm at the Phoenix Center for the Arts.  
Other community partners include the Center for Neighborhood Leadership, Xico, Inc., CALA Alliance, Palabra Bookstore and the Frontera Fund.  
 
MORE ON THE PLAYWRIGHT:
Milta Ortiz is a Bay Area transplant to Tucson by way of Chicago. She relocated to Tucson for a National New Play Network (NNPN) playwright residency at Borderlands Theater to write Más. The ongoing headline news surrounding the MAS program prompted her to take up the docudrama format. A departure only in form, as this play speaks to her fascination with relationships and the effects of gender/class/race on these relationships. At the time, she had just finished working on the Chicago Chronicle docudrama playwriting team under the guidance of PJ Paparelli, author of Columbinus. “The last push came when my husband and I saw the documentary, Precious Knowledge. We knew we had to move to write this play. Little did I know about the conflict surrounding the impulse to move here.”
Milta Ortiz is a playwright with an MFA from Northwestern University’s Writing for the Screen and Stage program. As an NNPN playwright in residence at Borderlands Theater for the 2013/14 season, she wrote and developed Más, featured at the Latino Theater Commons Carnaval play festival 2015, and the 18th Annual Tucson Pastorela. Plays include Disengaged (TYA) commissioned by Rising Youth Theater, premiered at the Phoenix Center for the Arts ‘2014; You, Me and Tuno, a finalist in NYC’s Downtown Urban Theater Festival 2013; Fleeing Blue won the 2012 Wichita State playwriting contest and a university production in 2012; Last of the Lilac Roses was a runner up finalists at NYC's Repertorio Español’s, Nuestra’s Voces play contest 2011.
MORE ON THE DIRECTOR:
Marc David Pinate is a theatre artist/performer and educator. Companies he is proud to have worked with include Teatro Visión, Shadowlight Productions, Campo Santo, The Magic, and El Teatro Campesino in the Bay Area; Steppenwolf, Victory Gardens, and American Theatre Company in Chicago; Denver's Su Teatro, and Arizona Theatre Company and Borderlands Theater locally. Marc was the recipient of a three-year directing residency funded by the Doris Duke Foundation at La Peña Cultural Center in Berkeley, California. During his residency he founded the Hybrid Performance Experiment (The HyPE) known for their site specific theatre performances on Bay Area Rapid Transit trains and mall food courts. He has an MFA in Directing from The Theatre School at DePaul University in Chicago. His artist interests lie in merging elements of ritual and ceremony with professional theatre aesthetics. 
PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE AND TICKET INFORMATION
Theater:
Phoenix Center for the Arts, 
1204 N. Third Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004. 
Tickets:
$15 with ASU students discounts. 
Director’s Talk:   Thursday, September 21 6:30 pm at Xico, Inc.
Workshop:          Saturday, September 23 10am  at Palabras Bookstor, Phoenix.
Saturday Sept 23rd, 2017
2:00 pm    "Más" Matinée
3:30 pm    Youth Panel
7:00 pm    Pre Show:  Movement Speaks Performance
7:30 pm       "Más" Evening Performance
9:00 pm    Producers Talk & Reception

2017 Arizona Open: Body-Building @ Mesa Arts Center

2017 NPC ARIZONA OPEN FINALS
SCHEDULE WITH TIMES / ORDER OF EVENTS
MESA ARTS CENTER
Saturday, July 15, 2017

http://npcmilesproductions.com/

2017 ARIZONA OPEN
GREAT Prejudging last night at the AZ Open! 
 Tonight's FINALS will be over the top!
Here are the stage times for each group:
Live-streaming tonight > hit this link at 7:00 pm 
On Facebook > https://www.facebook.com/NpcMilesProductions/
Order Of Events                                                          
FINALS TIME ARE +/- 15 MINS. Time Est.
MEN'S BODYBUILDING TEEN 6:10 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING MASTERS 40+ 6:16 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING MASTERS 50+ 6:22 PM
WOMEN'S FIGURE MASTERS 35+  6:26 PM
WOMEN'S FIGURE MASTERS 47+  6:29 PM
WOMEN'S FIGURE NOVICE Class A  6:32 PM
WOMEN'S FIGURE NOVICE Class B 6:36 PM
WOMEN'S FIGURE OPEN Class A 6:40 PM
WOMEN'S FIGURE OPEN Class B 6:45 PM
OVERALL WOMEN'S FIGURE OPEN 6:50 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING NOVICE  6:54 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING OPEN Light Weight 7:02 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING OPEN Middle Weight 7:03 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING OPEN Light Heavy Weight 7:07 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING OPEN Heavy Weight  7:14 PM
MEN'S BODYBUILDING OPEN Super Heavy Weight 7:18 PM
OVERALL BODYBUILDING 7:19 PM
WOMEN'S PHYSIQUE OPEN 7:24 PM
MEN'S CLASSIC PHYSIQUE MASTERS 35+ 7:31 PM
MEN'S CLASSIC PHYSIQUE MASTERS 47+  7:38 PM
MEN'S CLASSIC PHYSIQUE NOVICE Class A  7:41 PM
MEN'S CLASSIC PHYSIQUE NOVICE Class B 7:48 PM
MEN'S CLASSIC PHYSIQUE OPEN Class A 7:56 PM
MEN'S CLASSIC PHYSIQUE OPEN Class B 8:04 PM
OVERALL CLASSIC PHYSIQUE 8:12 PM
CARLOTTI SURGICAL CENTER AD and SPECIAL PRESENTATION 8:17 PM
INTERMISSION 8:24 PM
BIKINI TEEN 8:34 PM
MEN'S PHYSIQUE MASTERS - 35+ 8:37 PM
PEAK NUTRITION AD 8:41 PM
WOMEN'S BIKINI MASTERS 35+ Class A 8:44 PM

WOMEN'S BIKINI MASTERS 35+ Class B 8:48 PM
MEN'S PHYSIQUE MASTERS 47+  8:52 PM
WOMEN'S BIKINI MASTERS 47+  8:55 PM
MENS PHYSIQUE NOVICE Class A 8:57 PM
MENS PHYSIQUE NOVICE Class B 9:02 PM
MENS PHYSIQUE NOVICE Class C 9:07 PM
WOMEN'S BIKINI NOVICE Class A 9:11 PM
WOMEN'S BIKINI NOVICE Class B 9:16 PM
WOMEN'S BIKINI NOVICE Class C 9:21 PM
WOMEN'S BIKINI NOVICE Class D 9:26 PM
MEN'S PHYSIQUE OPEN Class A 9:30 PM
BIKINI Class A 9:34 PM
MEN'S PHYSIQUE Class B 9:39 PM
BIKINI Class B 9:43 PM
MEN'S PHYSIQUE Class C 9:47 PM
BIKINI Class C 9:51 PM
MEN'S PHYSIQUE Class D 9:55 PM
BIKINI Class D 10:00 PM
BIKINI Class E 10:04 PM
OVERALL MENS PHYSIQUE 10:08 PM
OVERALL BIKINI 10:11 PM
END OF SHOW

Friday, July 14, 2017

War for the Planet of the Apes | Final Trailer | 20th Century FOX


Published on May 16, 2017
Views: 7,969,806
In War for the Planet of the Apes, the third chapter of the critically acclaimed blockbuster franchise, Caesar and his apes are forced into a deadly conflict with an army of humans led by a ruthless Colonel. After the apes suffer unimaginable losses, Caesar wrestles with his darker instincts and begins his own mythic quest to avenge his kind. As the journey finally brings them face to face, Caesar and the Colonel are pitted against each other in an epic battle that will determine the fate of both their species and the future of the planet.

In Theaters - July 14, 2017

How's Your Fiscal Condition?

Hey! Thanks to Nolan Gray for bringing attention to this
Ranking the States by Fiscal Condition 2017 Edition
Research Paper / Study July 11, 2017
The fiscal health of America’s states affects all its citizens. Indicators of fiscal health come in a variety of forms—from a state’s ability to attract businesses and how much it taxes - to what services it provides and how well it keeps its promises to public-sector employees.
BLOGGER NOTE: Image insert shows CAFR for Mesa AZ 
 
To get a sense of a particular state’s fiscal outlook requires consulting a state’s comprehensive annual financial report (CAFR), which, at hundreds of pages, is unwieldy for even the most dedicated analyst.
PLEASE NOTE: The lessons from this year’s study demonstrate that policymakers should take stock of both their short- and longtermfiscal health before making public policy decisions.
The quality of financial reporting also plays a large role in what is known about the states’ fiscal health. This report attempts to make available financial information more accessible while also stressing the importance of improved reporting. These metrics, when used alongside other information, are intended to help policymakers identify trends in state finances and respond with policies to ensure short-run solvency and long-run fiscal stability.
 
But in the Mercatus Center at George Mason University’s “Ranking the States by Fiscal Condition,” now in its fourth year, Eileen Norcross and Olivia Gonzalez calculate indicators of fiscal health for all 50 states. Based on states’ 2015 financial statements, Florida ranks first as the most fiscally healthy state, while New Jersey ranks the lowest.
The study ranks each US state’s financial health based on short- and long-term debt and other key fiscal obligations, such as unfunded pensions and healthcare benefits. With refinements in its methodology, the 2017 edition updates the version that the Mercatus Center published in 2016. It presents information from each state’s audited financial report in an easily accessible format and is the most comprehensive snapshot of state financial health to date.
Growing long-term obligations for pensions and healthcare benefits continue to strain the finances of many state governments, and revenue drawn from volatile sources . . . continues to threaten the fiscal health of top-performing states. Both trends highlight the fact that state policymakers must be vigilant to consider both the short-term and the long-term consequences of their decisions.
ARIZONA IS #33
The study also highlights how recent changes in accounting standards affect what states reveal on their financial statements and what we know about the states’ financial health as a result. Due to the implementation of new government accounting standards, states are now reporting more of their pension liabilities on the balance sheet, which increases the average long-term liability metrics for the states. States have not applied these standards consistently, however, revealing that there is still room for improvement in the reporting of state financial information.
Summary and Key Findings 
The financial health of each state can be analyzed through the states’ own audited financial reports. By looking at states’ basic financial statistics on revenues, expenditures, cash, assets, liabilities, and debt, states may be ranked according to how easily they will be able to cover short-term and long-term bills, including pension obligations.
This ranking of the 50 states, reproduced from page 29 of the study, is based on their fiscal solvency in five separate categories:
  • Cash solvency.  Does a state have enough cash on hand to cover its short-term bills?
  • Budget solvency. Can a state cover its fiscal year spending with current revenues, or does it have a budget shortfall?
  • Long-run solvency. Can a state meet its long-term spending commitments? Will there be enough money to cushion it from economic shocks or other long-term fiscal risks?
  • Service-level solvency. How much “fiscal slack” does a state have to increase spending if citizens demand more services?
  • Trust fund solvency. How large are each state’s unfunded pension and healthcare liabilities?

Sears: Open For The Community? HUH??? | Retail Archaeology

WTF? does "open for the community" mean?
Published on Jul 14, 2017
Views: 692

In this episode of Retail Archaeology we take a look at how Sears is doing since my last video on them from December of 2016. What the hell does "open for the community" mean?
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Retail Archaeology is the history channel for malls and retail. We also explore dead and dying malls and retail stores
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Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...