Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Puerto Rico's justice secretary under fire over alleged ethics violation Tuesday December 10th, 2013 at 3:46 PM Puerto Rico Newswire 1 Share SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Puerto Rico's justice secretary is under fire for going to a police station to visit a former law firm partner who had been arrested for alleged drunk driving

Puerto Rico's justice secretary under fire over alleged ethics violation

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Puerto Rico's justice secretary is under fire for going to a police station to visit a former law firm partner who had been arrested for alleged drunk driving.

STUDY: At Least 5% Of American Men Are Gay, Millions Closeted, Many Married To Women Tuesday December 10th, 2013 at 3:08 PM

STUDY: At Least 5% Of American Men Are Gay, Millions Closeted, Many Married To Women

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Using the national census, Gallup polls, Facebook, dating sites and porno searches, a study from The New York Times estimates that at least 5% of American men are gay, while many are in the closet or quietly suffering in heterosexual marriages - particularly in traditionally conservative states.

Military Fights HIV Infection & Discrimination

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Despite what opponents thought would happen, the repeal two years ago of "Don't Ask Don't Tell," the law that kept gay men and lesbians from openly serving in the military, has not resulted in HIV infection increasing.


World Marks Human Rights Day - by webdesk@voanews.com (VOA News) Tuesday December 10th, 2013 at 2:45 PM

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World Marks Human Rights Day

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Countries around the world are marking International Human Rights Day. U.N. Human Rights Chief Navi Pillay said the fundamentals for protecting and promoting human rights are largely in place, but the key now is in implementing these standards when the political will and financial resources often are lacking on the ground. She also noted the past 20 years have seen a number of failures to prevent atrocities and safeguard human rights. The United Nations honors five rights defenders...

Théâtre du Monde – review 

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Indigenous artists shine as more Australian art goes on show at La Maison Rouge in Paris
Australia, which has just closed at the Royal Academy of Arts, was the first major exhibition in London to feature art from this continent, reaching from the arrival of the first settlers in about 1800 to the present day. It brought together 200 works by 146 artists. Meanwhile the Maison Rouge in Paris is presenting the collection of David Walsh, founder of the Museum of Old and New Art, alongside works from the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.
Not all the artists selected by the Paris show are Australian. Walsh, a Tasmanian mathematician who made his fortune gambling, is just as interested in Wim Delvoye, Jan Fabre, Damien Hirst and the surrealists as he is in his compatriots.
But the curator, Jean-Hubert Martin, has added tapas – barkcloth paintings – from the Solomon islands, Fiji and Samoa, and various objects from New Guinea and Queensland. So the two shows share a fair amount of common ground, in particular the fact that they both feature indigenous and non-indigenous artists.
The Royal Academy exhibition began with a tedious succession of rooms devoted to the 19th century, with mainly landscapes. The accompanying text panels assert that such and such a painting demonstrates the artist's sympathy with the indigenous peoples. I was not convinced. The latter are simply picturesque, much as the emus and kangaroos. They are painted at a distance, appearing as dark silhouettes. One of the Australian paintings most frequently reproduced – Evening Shadows by H J Johnstone, painted in London in 1880 – shows two women and a man near a bark hut. But most of the picture is taken up by trees and the sky reflected in a pond.
The next generation, corresponding to Australian impressionism, was only interested in towns, seaside pleasures and atmospheric effects. Only Sidney Nolan (1917-1992) stands from the crowd. He devoted a series of paintings to the bushranger Ned Kelly, but unfortunately some of them were on show in London. Nolan dared to come to grips with the reality of his country, its violence and inequality, and its indigenous peoples, at last. The Maison Rouge show confirms his importance as an artist. Walsh owns about 10 of his works, almost all of which are stunning. Just as in London works hanging alongside can hardly compete.
The only ones that do not suffer, because they possess comparable psychic force, despite being completely different, are the work of indigenous artists. The contrast is particularly striking in Paris, when you move from the room containing superb tapas with their geometrical designs to the next one, in the middle of which stands a horrific sculpture by international art celebrities Jake and Dinos Chapman. With its gory, mutilated corpses it is designed to shock. But it fails to do so, being no more than the fruit of facile precepts.
In London the indigenous artists were in separate rooms and they only rate one chapter in the catalogue. Apart from Nolan, the non-indigenous artists' perception of nature is visual: it is a beautiful spectacle to be looked at.
The Aboriginal artists experience nature by walking through their surroundings, smelling, hearing and touching nature, just as much as by seeing it. They do not look at it, they are in it; they do not represent it, they feel it. The difference is all too apparent because, feeling it so intimately, they make you feel it too.
Using mineral or plant pigments, and organic media, the pictograms are organised like maps or music. The areas covered are vast, like real space and just as empty and monochrome. These qualities persist even in the most recent works: the immense black and white composition by Emily Kane Kngwarreye, and those by Doreen Reid Nakamarra and Dorothy NapangardiDead Man, by Bardayal Nadjamerrek hangs in a small room devoted to artists from Arnhem Land, at the northeast tip of the Northern Territory. It was painted in 1968. The work of his non-indigenous contemporaries pales in comparison. Australia's great art is here.
Théâtre du Monde is at La Maison Rouge, Paris, France until 12 January
This article appeared in Guardian Weeklywhich incorporates material from Le Monde

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Italy's Economy Stops Contracting

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Italy finally pulled out of a painful, two-year contraction as companies tentatively began spending again, although poor consumer confidence is likely to make for anemic growth in the near future.

US east coast receives winter weather warning as snowstorm hits major cities

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Washington DC, New York and Philadelphia are among the major cities expected to see several inches accumulate today










Japan's Flagship Economic Zones Lose Luster

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Just when Japan's prime minister wanted to see one of his most closely watched strategies for growth take shape--special economic zones--a key tax panel within his party is set to shelve the inclusion of lower rates for businesses operating there.

S. Korea: North Korea Engaged in 'Reign of Terror'

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South Korea has called the recently announced political purges at the top of North Korea's leadership a “reign of terror” that could further destabilize their already shaky relations. Meanwhile, North Korean media continue to attack the uncle of leader Kim Jong Un who was very publicly removed from power. South Korea's President Park Geun-hye at a Tuesday Cabinet meeting said North Korea's massive purges appear aimed at consolidating leader Kim Jong Un's...

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Winter Storms Hit the U.S.

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Winter storms hit a vast region of the United States, bringing snow, wind and ice.