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Will India get the
Indian mining magnate Anil Agarwal is having a tough time giving away a billion dollars. He's pledged $1 billion to start a university along the shores of the Bay of Bengal in eastern India's Orissa state. The grand plan for a 6,000 acre campus looks to Stanford University in California for inspiration.
Leading academics would be poached from every corner of the globe. Research centers in bio and nanotechnology, crop genetics and alternative energy would produce important work. His ultimate dream: When every building is completed and every classroom filled, 100,000 students will be enrolled, making it one of the largest universities in the world on a single campus. A more realistic goal is 10,000 students in the first eight years and double Hermes belt replica that in the next four. Ground breaking is expected this month.
No one doubts that India needs more universities. And this would be the country's most comprehensive, with medical, engineering and business schools all on one campus. But Agarwal's plan is under attack on all sides. Critics say there is too much secrecy surrounding the land purchases, and they don't understand why he needs so much land. They point to 18 villages that are in the way 7 will be displaced completely and water supplies that will be depleted.
In November a mob armed with sticks broke up a prayer service to start construction on a highway to the campus, attacked the attendees and damaged some of the construction equipment. The protests have set back the project by two and a half years. What's more, government approvals have either already expired or Hermes belts replica paris been held up.
At the same time Agarwal's company, Vedanta Resources, is under fire for its mining operation 250 miles away on the other side of Orissa. Its attempt to mine bauxite will destroy the ecology there and force out a tribal community, environmentalists claim. In January tribal members formed a 10 mile human chain in protest.
Given all this, even the four academics planning the university are wary of becoming too deeply involved in the project until a clear line is drawn between the university and the company. Agarwal is in complete agreement, but the legislation to formalise that is being held up.
Agarwal, 55, built his fortune through London listed Vedanta, which operates in India, Australia and Zambia, and mines copper, aluminum, zinc and iron ore. He owns 55 per centof the company and with the crash in commodity prices, he has seen his net worth plunge from $7.4 billion in November 2007 to $2.4 billion last November. He hasn't wavered in his philanthropic commitment, though. He still says he will donate 75 per centof his wealth to the Anil Agarwal Foundation, and the money for the university will come from this. He's already transferred $250 million to the foundation for the project, but won't say how much he's spent on the land and the other costs so far.
Agarwal's pet cause has always been education, though he didn't make it to college himself. He credits his father, Dwarka Prasad Agarwal, with the idea of building a university. "My father (who didn't go to college either) reads a lot," he says. "He told me that great higher education was fundamental to where the US is today. It had the vision, and it created a mass (higher) education system. Because of that it's produced the best politicians, huge liberal arts programs, best medical research. I always felt that India should have that."
In 2005 Agarwal hired consulting firm A T Kearney to scour India for the best site for the university. Around that time he heard of four academics, three Indian and one Indian American who believed that India was in serious need of boosting its higher education system and had shopped around a plan for a new university to several Indian billionaires. Getting no takers, they had shelved the plan and then got a call from Agarwal. The men have become integral in shaping the university and giving it credibility.
The key to the plan is to build a new town big enough to accommodate up to 10,000 faculty members and as many support staff. "The university has no chance of succeeding without a township," says one of the academics, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, head of the Center for Policy Research in New Delhi and a professor at New York University's law school. "A faculty member from the US goes to Delhi and he has 20 schools for his kids to choose from. In Puri (the nearby Hermes replica belt paris town) there's no such option. We need to create a township, and as a result land requirements have escalated and that makes the project more challenging but also more revolutionary."
Apart from housing, plans call for schools for the children of the faculty and residents, a handful of luxury hotels, shops, cafes, a big convention center, an Olympic size stadium, a football stadium, lakes for water sports (Agarwal has visions of crew teams similar to those at Harvard and Oxford) and its own power plant.
"That's the ambition," says Agarwal. "These things can happen only when somebody gets up and says, 'Look, I'm going to put my money (on this).' I believe that if you have to do a few things in life, this is the one thing I'm going to pursue." Parts of the plan, such as the hotels and the convention center, are not a priority, and Agarwal may bring in investors later on to pay for them. He may also form joint ventures with companies or fellow billionaires to fund some of the research centers as the university grows.
Crucial to the success of this venture is attracting faculty of international acclaim. Sitting in his villa in Mumbai, overlooking the Arabian Sea, Agarwal outlines his strategy: target Indian teachers overseas because they might be interested in helping out their native country, younger academics, who typically have a tough time getting tenure quickly and hermes men belt replica are eager to be part of something new, and veteran star professors who may be persuaded to offer their expertise to a startup.
He's undaunted by the task of attracting top people to an unheard of university with no track record. "Same thing happened 15 years back when no one had heard of Vedanta," he says. "Our sales were $1 million then and we had a profit last year of $3 billion. It will happen."
A T Kearney presented the plan to seven states to see which would provide the most help in acquiring contiguous plots of land. In the summer of 2006 it zeroed in on Orissa, specifically on Puri, situated along a scenic coastline with the Bay of Bengal on one side and two smaller rivers flowing through the prospective campus.
The four academics, who had become friends years earlier when their paths crossed at various universities, are using this opportunity to design their ideal university. Bringing together professors from the US and UK, "We're saying to them, if you had the opportunity to reinvent education in your field, what would you do?" says Anand Shah, who started a charter school in Boston and cofounded a nonprofit in India.
For the brainstorming session on an engineering school, for instance, he pulled in participants from the National Science Foundation, UCLA, Stanford, Princeton, the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign and other places. For the session on a business school, participants came from Oxford, Wharton, the Indian Institute of Management, Insead and Nanyang in Singapore. Most of them were of Indian origin.
Agarwal hired Ayers Saint Gross, a Baltimore, Maryland specialist in campus architecture, to design the university, and he wants to move ahead at full speed. But the Indian bureaucracy and the mass protests, sometimes violent, that appear whenever a big project is proposed such as recent plans to build a Tata car plant in West Bengal and a Posco (nyse: PKX news people ) steel plant in Orissa have slowed him down.
He wanted 10,000 acres, but he had to scale that down to 6,000 and has been able to purchase only 3,900 so far. The acquisition of so much land is a lightning rod for criticism in the region. Some 18 villages will be affected and at least 450 people must be relocated, says the foundation. Agarwal, on the other hand, cites Stanford, which is spread over 8,180 acres.
Meantime, an agreement for Vedanta to acquire contiguous plots of land lapsed last summer, and Agrawal hasn't been able to renew it because the post of the minister who handles that is vacant, casting doubt on the legality of the project. Also, the bill that would establish the university as a legal entity is stalled in the Orissa parliament, thanks to the opposition.
Sanjeev Zutshi, who heads the university project, says the legislation would give the university the right to confer degrees, and since the first batch of students won't be admitted until July 2011, there's plenty of time. Other critics, including a former state advocate general, go so far as to claim that Agarwal could instead end up mining the land, which is rich in ilmenite, rutile and zircon.
The company says this is ridiculous and asks why it would go to all the trouble of winning approval for a university if it didn't really want to build a university. It also dismisses the opposition, especially a handful of recent protest rallies led by former members of Orissa's parliament. "This is several people trying to jockey for tickets for upcoming elections," Zutshi says.
"We have acquired the land from 2,800 individual landholders. That's a sizable number and can't be achieved without support from the people." To help win that support, the foundation runs a mobile veterinary van, covers all the expenses for 275 village children it sends to a private school and is training workers for the construction jobs that will need to be filled.
The concerns are not limited to the political players. The four academics have qualms because of the tarnished image of Agarwal's mining business, the source of the philanthropy. Vedanta Resources wants to mine the Niyamgiri Hills in Lanjigarh, which are rich in bauxite but feature abundant flora and fauna and are being considered for a wildlife sanctuary. A tribal community native to the region prays to the hills and as a result doesn't farm on the top.
The company has been seeking permission since 2002 to mine the top of the hills and build a smelter and a refinery at the bottom. The government has approved the refinery and the smelter but hasn't given the go ahead to start mining. Environmentalists accuse the company of violating the law, hiding the extent of the environmental degradation that would occur, forcibly evicting the residents and depriving the tribal community of its place of worship and its home. Tribal members formed a 10 mile human chain in January in protest. The company's finance director, Tarun Jain, says only that "the Supreme Court has cleared the project with certain conditions after considering all objections."
Mehta and his academic colleagues are well aware of the controversies surrounding their benefactor. "It's crucial for the success of the university that there's a clear separation from the company," he says. "It's a project in its own right and not a commercial project, and it shouldn't be used to compensate for other activities of Vedanta. That's what makes this genuinely philanthropic: if he just hands over this grant and is not expecting any return on this."
Shah agrees. "You've got someone who's genuinely putting down his own resources," he says. "To not support that because I have ideological issues that are unrelated, to me seems to be hypocritical. The history of universities is such. Duke (in the US) was built with tobacco money; this university is as genuine a philanthropic project."
Indian mining magnate Anil Agarwal is having a tough time giving away a billion dollars. He's pledged $1 billion to start a university along the shores of the Bay of Bengal in eastern India's Orissa state. The grand plan for a 6,000 acre campus looks to Stanford University in California for inspiration.
Leading academics would be poached from every corner of the globe. Research centers in bio and nanotechnology, crop genetics and alternative energy would produce important work. His ultimate dream: When every building is completed and every classroom filled, 100,000 students will be enrolled, making it one of the largest universities in the world on a single campus. A more realistic goal is 10,000 students in the first eight years and double Hermes belt replica that in the next four. Ground breaking is expected this month.
No one doubts that India needs more universities. And this would be the country's most comprehensive, with medical, engineering and business schools all on one campus. But Agarwal's plan is under attack on all sides. Critics say there is too much secrecy surrounding the land purchases, and they don't understand why he needs so much land. They point to 18 villages that are in the way 7 will be displaced completely and water supplies that will be depleted.
In November a mob armed with sticks broke up a prayer service to start construction on a highway to the campus, attacked the attendees and damaged some of the construction equipment. The protests have set back the project by two and a half years. What's more, government approvals have either already expired or Hermes belts replica paris been held up.
At the same time Agarwal's company, Vedanta Resources, is under fire for its mining operation 250 miles away on the other side of Orissa. Its attempt to mine bauxite will destroy the ecology there and force out a tribal community, environmentalists claim. In January tribal members formed a 10 mile human chain in protest.
Given all this, even the four academics planning the university are wary of becoming too deeply involved in the project until a clear line is drawn between the university and the company. Agarwal is in complete agreement, but the legislation to formalise that is being held up.
Agarwal, 55, built his fortune through London listed Vedanta, which operates in India, Australia and Zambia, and mines copper, aluminum, zinc and iron ore. He owns 55 per centof the company and with the crash in commodity prices, he has seen his net worth plunge from $7.4 billion in November 2007 to $2.4 billion last November. He hasn't wavered in his philanthropic commitment, though. He still says he will donate 75 per centof his wealth to the Anil Agarwal Foundation, and the money for the university will come from this. He's already transferred $250 million to the foundation for the project, but won't say how much he's spent on the land and the other costs so far.
Agarwal's pet cause has always been education, though he didn't make it to college himself. He credits his father, Dwarka Prasad Agarwal, with the idea of building a university. "My father (who didn't go to college either) reads a lot," he says. "He told me that great higher education was fundamental to where the US is today. It had the vision, and it created a mass (higher) education system. Because of that it's produced the best politicians, huge liberal arts programs, best medical research. I always felt that India should have that."
In 2005 Agarwal hired consulting firm A T Kearney to scour India for the best site for the university. Around that time he heard of four academics, three Indian and one Indian American who believed that India was in serious need of boosting its higher education system and had shopped around a plan for a new university to several Indian billionaires. Getting no takers, they had shelved the plan and then got a call from Agarwal. The men have become integral in shaping the university and giving it credibility.
The key to the plan is to build a new town big enough to accommodate up to 10,000 faculty members and as many support staff. "The university has no chance of succeeding without a township," says one of the academics, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, head of the Center for Policy Research in New Delhi and a professor at New York University's law school. "A faculty member from the US goes to Delhi and he has 20 schools for his kids to choose from. In Puri (the nearby Hermes replica belt paris town) there's no such option. We need to create a township, and as a result land requirements have escalated and that makes the project more challenging but also more revolutionary."
Apart from housing, plans call for schools for the children of the faculty and residents, a handful of luxury hotels, shops, cafes, a big convention center, an Olympic size stadium, a football stadium, lakes for water sports (Agarwal has visions of crew teams similar to those at Harvard and Oxford) and its own power plant.
"That's the ambition," says Agarwal. "These things can happen only when somebody gets up and says, 'Look, I'm going to put my money (on this).' I believe that if you have to do a few things in life, this is the one thing I'm going to pursue." Parts of the plan, such as the hotels and the convention center, are not a priority, and Agarwal may bring in investors later on to pay for them. He may also form joint ventures with companies or fellow billionaires to fund some of the research centers as the university grows.
Crucial to the success of this venture is attracting faculty of international acclaim. Sitting in his villa in Mumbai, overlooking the Arabian Sea, Agarwal outlines his strategy: target Indian teachers overseas because they might be interested in helping out their native country, younger academics, who typically have a tough time getting tenure quickly and hermes men belt replica are eager to be part of something new, and veteran star professors who may be persuaded to offer their expertise to a startup.
He's undaunted by the task of attracting top people to an unheard of university with no track record. "Same thing happened 15 years back when no one had heard of Vedanta," he says. "Our sales were $1 million then and we had a profit last year of $3 billion. It will happen."
A T Kearney presented the plan to seven states to see which would provide the most help in acquiring contiguous plots of land. In the summer of 2006 it zeroed in on Orissa, specifically on Puri, situated along a scenic coastline with the Bay of Bengal on one side and two smaller rivers flowing through the prospective campus.
The four academics, who had become friends years earlier when their paths crossed at various universities, are using this opportunity to design their ideal university. Bringing together professors from the US and UK, "We're saying to them, if you had the opportunity to reinvent education in your field, what would you do?" says Anand Shah, who started a charter school in Boston and cofounded a nonprofit in India.
For the brainstorming session on an engineering school, for instance, he pulled in participants from the National Science Foundation, UCLA, Stanford, Princeton, the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign and other places. For the session on a business school, participants came from Oxford, Wharton, the Indian Institute of Management, Insead and Nanyang in Singapore. Most of them were of Indian origin.
Agarwal hired Ayers Saint Gross, a Baltimore, Maryland specialist in campus architecture, to design the university, and he wants to move ahead at full speed. But the Indian bureaucracy and the mass protests, sometimes violent, that appear whenever a big project is proposed such as recent plans to build a Tata car plant in West Bengal and a Posco (nyse: PKX news people ) steel plant in Orissa have slowed him down.
He wanted 10,000 acres, but he had to scale that down to 6,000 and has been able to purchase only 3,900 so far. The acquisition of so much land is a lightning rod for criticism in the region. Some 18 villages will be affected and at least 450 people must be relocated, says the foundation. Agarwal, on the other hand, cites Stanford, which is spread over 8,180 acres.
Meantime, an agreement for Vedanta to acquire contiguous plots of land lapsed last summer, and Agrawal hasn't been able to renew it because the post of the minister who handles that is vacant, casting doubt on the legality of the project. Also, the bill that would establish the university as a legal entity is stalled in the Orissa parliament, thanks to the opposition.
Sanjeev Zutshi, who heads the university project, says the legislation would give the university the right to confer degrees, and since the first batch of students won't be admitted until July 2011, there's plenty of time. Other critics, including a former state advocate general, go so far as to claim that Agarwal could instead end up mining the land, which is rich in ilmenite, rutile and zircon.
The company says this is ridiculous and asks why it would go to all the trouble of winning approval for a university if it didn't really want to build a university. It also dismisses the opposition, especially a handful of recent protest rallies led by former members of Orissa's parliament. "This is several people trying to jockey for tickets for upcoming elections," Zutshi says.
"We have acquired the land from 2,800 individual landholders. That's a sizable number and can't be achieved without support from the people." To help win that support, the foundation runs a mobile veterinary van, covers all the expenses for 275 village children it sends to a private school and is training workers for the construction jobs that will need to be filled.
The concerns are not limited to the political players. The four academics have qualms because of the tarnished image of Agarwal's mining business, the source of the philanthropy. Vedanta Resources wants to mine the Niyamgiri Hills in Lanjigarh, which are rich in bauxite but feature abundant flora and fauna and are being considered for a wildlife sanctuary. A tribal community native to the region prays to the hills and as a result doesn't farm on the top.
The company has been seeking permission since 2002 to mine the top of the hills and build a smelter and a refinery at the bottom. The government has approved the refinery and the smelter but hasn't given the go ahead to start mining. Environmentalists accuse the company of violating the law, hiding the extent of the environmental degradation that would occur, forcibly evicting the residents and depriving the tribal community of its place of worship and its home. Tribal members formed a 10 mile human chain in January in protest. The company's finance director, Tarun Jain, says only that "the Supreme Court has cleared the project with certain conditions after considering all objections."
Mehta and his academic colleagues are well aware of the controversies surrounding their benefactor. "It's crucial for the success of the university that there's a clear separation from the company," he says. "It's a project in its own right and not a commercial project, and it shouldn't be used to compensate for other activities of Vedanta. That's what makes this genuinely philanthropic: if he just hands over this grant and is not expecting any return on this."
Shah agrees. "You've got someone who's genuinely putting down his own resources," he says. "To not support that because I have ideological issues that are unrelated, to me seems to be hypocritical. The history of universities is such. Duke (in the US) was built with tobacco money; this university is as genuine a philanthropic project."
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White Rock fire causes water fake hermes belt price problems
A massive fire that broke out in a condominium construction site in White Rock Sunday has led to a torrent of water problems for area residents.
Fighting the flames had put such a demand on the small local water system that the city reservoirs dropped to low levels, explained councillor David Chesney.
haven drained our reservoirs, but they gone down a tremendous amount in fighting this fire, Chesney said. He said the blaze was the biggest he could recall in his 35 years in the city. and neighbours were evacuated from the area. Firefighters remain at the scene Sunday evening.
Shortly after the blaze broke out, many White Rock residents noticed their water darken, drop in pressure, or stop running altogether. Eventually the city advised residents to conserve their water and boil what they need to use.
not had any indication that there is a major problem yet, but fake hermes mens belt we just want to err on the safe side that we don endanger anyone life, Chesney said. she immediately noticed the black smoke billowing from the fire. Shortly after, she realized the water to her building had either been turned off, or had lost all of its pressure.
Lewis and her husband Colin live about six blocks north of the blaze in a building with many other seniors who, like themselves, cannot get so much as a glass of water from their taps.
Meanwhile, Christine Kannegiesser, about four blocks from the fire, spotted her toilet filling with dark coloured water shortly before pressure dropped. Her taps were still pouring clean water, she said, but with little pressure.
When one area resident saw what they thought was soot coming out of their household taps they tried to notify the city about the problem but hermes men belt replica soon found that its number for water emergencies was only monitored during business hours. hours after water had blackened for some that the City of White Rock posted notice of a boil water advisory on its website.
are asking that you conserve water during this event, read the advisory, which was projected to be in effect for the next day or two. the city added: do not believe that the discoloured water is a health concern, however as a precaution a boil water advisory is still in effect. said that because the city water storage areas had not been drained as low as they had, ever, or certainly not in anyone memory, it was a matter of erring on the side of safety. Chesney, who lives a few blocks from the fire, noted his own water pressure had been halved.
Unlike most parts of the region, White Rock is not connected to Metro Vancouver's water system. Instead, its 20,000 residents get their water from six ground wells driven in the Sunnyside Uplands Aquifer, according to the municipality.
City councillors directed staff in January 2013 to look at what it would take to join Metro Vancouver system. A report from Metro put the infrastructure cost around $25 million, including $13 million in upstream improvements pay for the incremental impact of their additional demand. Among other things, White Rock would need to purchase land at South Surrey Athletic Park to build a pump station and construct distribution lines, according to the city, and the work was estimated by Metro to take at least three years to complete. White Rock would also need to pay Metro about $1.5 million a year for the water.
Rather than go that route, in 2015 the city agreed to purchase its privately run local water utility. The two parties have since gone to binding arbitration over the purchase price.
When asked if he thought the water problems caused by the fire would change the discussion around White Rock joining Metro water supply, Chesney said he did not think it would have any effect at all.
don think this is going to impact that in any way, shape or form, to be very truthful, Chesney said.
Downtown Vancouver has some fire hydrants that can be fed with sea water, but Chesney said he believed White Rock did not. He said officials will take a close look at whether anything more could be done to prepare for a future fire of this size, but noted mid afternoon Sunday that despite the loss in pressure, fire trucks were still pumping plenty of water on the blaze and the reservoirs would fill back up quickly after the firefighting was finished.
disaster that about the only way to describe it once we ensured that the community is safe and drinking water is back to normal, I think we sit down and look at this, Chesney said.
Water has been a major issue for the municipality in past months, with residents protesting a city plan to treat its well water with chloramine. epaper, Digital Access, Subscriber Rewards), please input your Print Newspaper subscription phone number and postal code.
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A massive fire that broke out in a condominium construction site in White Rock Sunday has led to a torrent of water problems for area residents.
Fighting the flames had put such a demand on the small local water system that the city reservoirs dropped to low levels, explained councillor David Chesney.
haven drained our reservoirs, but they gone down a tremendous amount in fighting this fire, Chesney said. He said the blaze was the biggest he could recall in his 35 years in the city. and neighbours were evacuated from the area. Firefighters remain at the scene Sunday evening.
Shortly after the blaze broke out, many White Rock residents noticed their water darken, drop in pressure, or stop running altogether. Eventually the city advised residents to conserve their water and boil what they need to use.
not had any indication that there is a major problem yet, but fake hermes mens belt we just want to err on the safe side that we don endanger anyone life, Chesney said. she immediately noticed the black smoke billowing from the fire. Shortly after, she realized the water to her building had either been turned off, or had lost all of its pressure.
Lewis and her husband Colin live about six blocks north of the blaze in a building with many other seniors who, like themselves, cannot get so much as a glass of water from their taps.
Meanwhile, Christine Kannegiesser, about four blocks from the fire, spotted her toilet filling with dark coloured water shortly before pressure dropped. Her taps were still pouring clean water, she said, but with little pressure.
When one area resident saw what they thought was soot coming out of their household taps they tried to notify the city about the problem but hermes men belt replica soon found that its number for water emergencies was only monitored during business hours. hours after water had blackened for some that the City of White Rock posted notice of a boil water advisory on its website.
are asking that you conserve water during this event, read the advisory, which was projected to be in effect for the next day or two. the city added: do not believe that the discoloured water is a health concern, however as a precaution a boil water advisory is still in effect. said that because the city water storage areas had not been drained as low as they had, ever, or certainly not in anyone memory, it was a matter of erring on the side of safety. Chesney, who lives a few blocks from the fire, noted his own water pressure had been halved.
Unlike most parts of the region, White Rock is not connected to Metro Vancouver's water system. Instead, its 20,000 residents get their water from six ground wells driven in the Sunnyside Uplands Aquifer, according to the municipality.
City councillors directed staff in January 2013 to look at what it would take to join Metro Vancouver system. A report from Metro put the infrastructure cost around $25 million, including $13 million in upstream improvements pay for the incremental impact of their additional demand. Among other things, White Rock would need to purchase land at South Surrey Athletic Park to build a pump station and construct distribution lines, according to the city, and the work was estimated by Metro to take at least three years to complete. White Rock would also need to pay Metro about $1.5 million a year for the water.
Rather than go that route, in 2015 the city agreed to purchase its privately run local water utility. The two parties have since gone to binding arbitration over the purchase price.
When asked if he thought the water problems caused by the fire would change the discussion around White Rock joining Metro water supply, Chesney said he did not think it would have any effect at all.
don think this is going to impact that in any way, shape or form, to be very truthful, Chesney said.
Downtown Vancouver has some fire hydrants that can be fed with sea water, but Chesney said he believed White Rock did not. He said officials will take a close look at whether anything more could be done to prepare for a future fire of this size, but noted mid afternoon Sunday that despite the loss in pressure, fire trucks were still pumping plenty of water on the blaze and the reservoirs would fill back up quickly after the firefighting was finished.
disaster that about the only way to describe it once we ensured that the community is safe and drinking water is back to normal, I think we sit down and look at this, Chesney said.
Water has been a major issue for the municipality in past months, with residents protesting a city plan to treat its well water with chloramine. epaper, Digital Access, Subscriber Rewards), please input your Print Newspaper subscription phone number and postal code.
{ phone }
{ addressPostalCode }
By clicking "Create Account", I hearby grant permission to Market to use my account Hermes belts replica paris information to create my account.
I also accept and agree to be bound by Postmedia's Terms and Conditions with respect to my use of the Site and I have read and understand Postmedia's Privacy Statement. epaper, Digital Access, Subscriber Rewards), please input your Print Newspaper subscription phone number and postal code.
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Whitney Cerak Marries In The Church Where Her Funeral Was Once Held
A young woman whose family mistakenly believed she had died in a car crash got married at the same church where 1400 people once mourned at her funeral, TODAY reports.
In 2006, Whitney Cerak was believed to have died in a car accident that killed five people in Indiana, the Associated Press reports. Her parents, Newell and Colleen, had a gravestone engraved with her name on it fashion cheap hermes handbags and a funeral, attended by over a thousand people, took place.
What no one realized at the time was that Whitney was alive fighting for her life in a hospital, with her fellow student Laura Van Ryn's parents by her side.
In the chaos of the crash and with the severity of their injuries, the two students both young and blonde had been misidentified, WISHTV 8 reports.
It took more than a month replica birkin handbags before the Van Ryns realized that the woman recovering slowly on the hospital bed was not their child. The revelation came as a terrible shock.
"Well, it was hard. but we knew where our daughter wasand we knew that Newell and Colleen needed to know where their daughter was," Laura's mother, Susie Van Ryn, told TODAY.
Whitney, now 25, has come a long way since her days of lying in a hospital bed injured beyond recognition. In 2010, Whitney got married to her soldier boyfriend, Matt Wheeler, in the same church where her funeral had been held.
"It fake hermes bag was such an unbelievable moment for us, because we were at a moment in our life when we thought this would never be a possibility," said Newell, Whitney's father.
In another milestone, Whitney recently gave birth to her first child, a baby boy named Zachary Thomas, Daily Mail reports. Zachary's birth came just weeks before her husband's deployment to Afghanistan and just days before the Hermes birkin bags fake sixth anniversary of the accident that killed Laura Van Ryn and four others.
A young woman whose family mistakenly believed she had died in a car crash got married at the same church where 1400 people once mourned at her funeral, TODAY reports.
In 2006, Whitney Cerak was believed to have died in a car accident that killed five people in Indiana, the Associated Press reports. Her parents, Newell and Colleen, had a gravestone engraved with her name on it fashion cheap hermes handbags and a funeral, attended by over a thousand people, took place.
What no one realized at the time was that Whitney was alive fighting for her life in a hospital, with her fellow student Laura Van Ryn's parents by her side.
In the chaos of the crash and with the severity of their injuries, the two students both young and blonde had been misidentified, WISHTV 8 reports.
It took more than a month replica birkin handbags before the Van Ryns realized that the woman recovering slowly on the hospital bed was not their child. The revelation came as a terrible shock.
"Well, it was hard. but we knew where our daughter wasand we knew that Newell and Colleen needed to know where their daughter was," Laura's mother, Susie Van Ryn, told TODAY.
Whitney, now 25, has come a long way since her days of lying in a hospital bed injured beyond recognition. In 2010, Whitney got married to her soldier boyfriend, Matt Wheeler, in the same church where her funeral had been held.
"It fake hermes bag was such an unbelievable moment for us, because we were at a moment in our life when we thought this would never be a possibility," said Newell, Whitney's father.
In another milestone, Whitney recently gave birth to her first child, a baby boy named Zachary Thomas, Daily Mail reports. Zachary's birth came just weeks before her husband's deployment to Afghanistan and just days before the Hermes birkin bags fake sixth anniversary of the accident that killed Laura Van Ryn and four others.
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Why Do Overweight People Lose Weight Faster
In a imitiaton hermes bag weight loss contest, the morbidly obese have an advantage over those who fashion cheap hermes handbags are less portly because they can shed fat more quickly. This is why contests, such as Biggest Loser, use weight loss percentage to track progress rather than simply counting the lost pounds. Biophysics and a history of poor choices, oddly enough, give overweight people a greater opportunity to lose more weight more quickly than their slimmer counterparts.
Weight Loss Principles
People lose weight by decreasing the number of calories they eat and by increasing how many calories they burn by exercising. For every 3,500 calories you burn through activity and don use for energy, you lose approximately 1 pound of fat. This means that creating a 1,000 calorie deficit each day results in a loss of 2 pounds per week.
More Sedentary Lifestyle
People who are obese tend to lead more sedentary lifestyles. A lack of physical activity seems to contribute to the risk of gaining weight, but it also contributes to a continued disinclination to be physically active. Generally, those who are obese tend to be inactive, so even a modest amount of exercise can represent a significant increase in activity and calorie burn.
More Mass
Overweight people have greater mass, so they have biophysics in their favor when they exercise. The more someone weighs, the more calories he burns in activity. They have greater mass to propel, so it requires more energy to move that mass. A 150 pound person burns about 236 calories walking at 3 mph for 60 minutes; it would take him more than Hermes birkin bags fake two weeks of daily hour long walks to burn off 1 pound. A 250 pound person burns 393 calories in 60 minutes of walking at 3 mph, so he would burn off 1.7 pounds in the same time period. Of course, he would have worked harder at it, because he had more weight to move around.
Higher Basal Metabolism
Your basal metabolic rate, or BMR, is the number of calories you burn maintaining the operations of your body over the course of the day while at rest. Even when you are inactive, your body burns calories running your brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and other organs, and it also uses energy repairing and replacing cells and tissues. Bigger bodies have higher maintenance costs. The more you weigh the more calories you burn, even when you do nothing. Her 250 pound counterpart has a BMR of 1,863 calories, a 430 calorie difference. If they were both placed on the same calorie restricted diet, the heavier woman would have a greater calorie deficit between what she ate and what she needed to maintain her weight. The heavier woman could lose as much as 1 pound more every eight days because of her greater metabolism.
Overweight people have been participating in an excess of calories, probably for years. In terms of bad eating habits and trying to identify high calorie foods to eliminate from their diets, overweight people have what can be thought of as a target rich environment. They likely have certain energy dense foods that contribute disproportionately to their calorie intake. For example, the overweight person who drinks a liter of soda a day can drop 400 to fake hermes bag 500 calories a day simply by replacing full sugar soda with tea, water or diet soda. Those who have leaner habits have to look more carefully to identify nutritionally light, high calorie foods to eliminate from their diets. In a similar vein, the obese person who is accustomed to eating 3,000 calories a day will drop weight a lot faster when he drops down to a more normal calorie intake of 2,000 calories per day than the thinner person who is already eating barely more than 2,000 calories a day.
In a imitiaton hermes bag weight loss contest, the morbidly obese have an advantage over those who fashion cheap hermes handbags are less portly because they can shed fat more quickly. This is why contests, such as Biggest Loser, use weight loss percentage to track progress rather than simply counting the lost pounds. Biophysics and a history of poor choices, oddly enough, give overweight people a greater opportunity to lose more weight more quickly than their slimmer counterparts.
Weight Loss Principles
People lose weight by decreasing the number of calories they eat and by increasing how many calories they burn by exercising. For every 3,500 calories you burn through activity and don use for energy, you lose approximately 1 pound of fat. This means that creating a 1,000 calorie deficit each day results in a loss of 2 pounds per week.
More Sedentary Lifestyle
People who are obese tend to lead more sedentary lifestyles. A lack of physical activity seems to contribute to the risk of gaining weight, but it also contributes to a continued disinclination to be physically active. Generally, those who are obese tend to be inactive, so even a modest amount of exercise can represent a significant increase in activity and calorie burn.
More Mass
Overweight people have greater mass, so they have biophysics in their favor when they exercise. The more someone weighs, the more calories he burns in activity. They have greater mass to propel, so it requires more energy to move that mass. A 150 pound person burns about 236 calories walking at 3 mph for 60 minutes; it would take him more than Hermes birkin bags fake two weeks of daily hour long walks to burn off 1 pound. A 250 pound person burns 393 calories in 60 minutes of walking at 3 mph, so he would burn off 1.7 pounds in the same time period. Of course, he would have worked harder at it, because he had more weight to move around.
Higher Basal Metabolism
Your basal metabolic rate, or BMR, is the number of calories you burn maintaining the operations of your body over the course of the day while at rest. Even when you are inactive, your body burns calories running your brain, lungs, heart, kidneys and other organs, and it also uses energy repairing and replacing cells and tissues. Bigger bodies have higher maintenance costs. The more you weigh the more calories you burn, even when you do nothing. Her 250 pound counterpart has a BMR of 1,863 calories, a 430 calorie difference. If they were both placed on the same calorie restricted diet, the heavier woman would have a greater calorie deficit between what she ate and what she needed to maintain her weight. The heavier woman could lose as much as 1 pound more every eight days because of her greater metabolism.
Overweight people have been participating in an excess of calories, probably for years. In terms of bad eating habits and trying to identify high calorie foods to eliminate from their diets, overweight people have what can be thought of as a target rich environment. They likely have certain energy dense foods that contribute disproportionately to their calorie intake. For example, the overweight person who drinks a liter of soda a day can drop 400 to fake hermes bag 500 calories a day simply by replacing full sugar soda with tea, water or diet soda. Those who have leaner habits have to look more carefully to identify nutritionally light, high calorie foods to eliminate from their diets. In a similar vein, the obese person who is accustomed to eating 3,000 calories a day will drop weight a lot faster when he drops down to a more normal calorie intake of 2,000 calories per day than the thinner person who is already eating barely more than 2,000 calories a day.
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Web Host Industry Review
Smith CEO of the company, effective April 2, 2007. As the company announced in October 2006, Peter Van Camp, Equinix chairman and hermes men belt replica CEO since 2000, is transitioning to the role of executive chairman and will remain actively involved with the company.
Smith is a 19 year industry veteran and most recently served as senior VP of HP Services, the $15 billion professional services segment of HP. Prior to joining HP, Smith served as VP of global professional and managed services at Lucent Technologies.
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Smith CEO of the company, effective April 2, 2007. As the company announced in October 2006, Peter Van Camp, Equinix chairman and hermes men belt replica CEO since 2000, is transitioning to the role of executive chairman and will remain actively involved with the company.
Smith is a 19 year industry veteran and most recently served as senior VP of HP Services, the $15 billion professional services segment of HP. Prior to joining HP, Smith served as VP of global professional and managed services at Lucent Technologies.
He has also held various management and sales positions at technology services provider Electronic Data Systems Corporation, including chief sales officer, president of EDS Asia Pacific and president of EDS Western region. Smith also served for replica Hermes belts france eight years with the US Army, where, among other roles, he was aide de camp to the office of the commander in chief of the US Armed Forces in the Pacific.
possesses exactly the broad leadership skills and experience needed to continue to expand our strong market leadership position: broad knowledge of the global technology industry, a total commitment to customer success and a deep appreciation for the importance of fake hermes belts whosale team and culture, says Van Camp. confident Steve will serve Equinix customers and shareholders well. In my new role, I expect to continue to spend 50 percent of my time at Equinix and I very much look forward to working closely with him at a strategic fake hermes mens belt level to take the company forward.
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VW dealership reborn with style
It was billed as Volkswagen Victoria's grand reopening, but Thursday night's shindig at the dealership's new state of the art facility at its existing location was more than a celebration.
"This is a new beginning for Volkswagen Victoria," said Peter Trzewik, pulling himself away from the action in the 20,000 square foot corporate identity facility's bright, immaculate new showroom long enough to breathe a sigh of relief.
The German Auto Import Network partner was elated staff no longer has to serve customers out of trailers as they've had to do for the past year during the final phase of the dealer group's two year, $20 million construction project. It culminated with Volkswagen Victoria's debut as a standalone facility, following in the tire treads of sister dealerships Porsche Centre Victoria and Audi Autohaus.
"This building used to be one big showroom selling Volkswagen, Porsche and Audi," recalled Trzewik, who hosted the event at 3329 Douglas St. with partner Sylvester Chuang. "Now it gives not just the sales team but the customers a place to be proud of the brand."
Trzewik compares the labour intensive transformation of the dealership GAIN purchased in January of 2012 to surviving a home renovation.
"This makes the dealership come together with its customers and fake hermes belt price say 'now we have a home again,'" he said.
An estimated 300 customers enjoyed gourmet treats dished up by chef Castro Boeteng's culinary crew as the band played on. The menu included ice cream made on the spot with local milk flash frozen with hermes black belt knockoff liquid nitrogen, creating fumes of white smoke one wag noted looked like what might come out of a tailpipe, but not a Volkswagen's.
They were greeted by GAIN staffers dressed in "Volkswagen blue," as Weis Associates design team leader Sandy Behrend described Volkswagen's signature colour paired with dominant whites.
The spiffy new showroom is a spacious, eye catching blast of sleek minimalism highlighted by banks hermes mens belt replica of white cabinets separating high tech workstations but with a stylish nod to Volkswagen history.
The retro flavour included a cream coloured 1971 Volkswagen Beetle in mint condition, and a 1974 white Karmann Ghia convertible in a pristine garage.
"It's like a language," says Behrend, explaining the Canada wide White Frame Modular Concept design. "You can speak the language in different ways and different sentences in different locations."
Volkswagen Canada's network development manager Paul Gommerman said it was a perfect fit for the 36th store the company has built.
With anticipated motor vehicle sales of $1.8 million across Canada this year, consumers have developed "an appetite for nicer, bigger Hermes belts replica paris and better stores," he said.
"It's designed to be modular so it can expand outwards and inwards in the facility," Gommerman said, adding its stylistic nods to Volkswagen's past dealerships was by design.
"It's a bit of an homage to those while modernizing it significantly and bringing a cool palette where the cars really are the stars of the show," he said. "Everything is designed around an ambience that keeps the customer engaged and comfortable, and really a place they want to be in."
Cor and Barbara Knoop, intrigued by the new look of the dealership where they bought a Volkswagen van and a Jetta wagon in the past, certainly wanted to be there.
"It's the European engineering. It's designed with the driver in mind," said Cor, explaining his brand allegiance.
"We love Volkswagens. They're so well made and easy to drive," added Barbara, jokingly noting her husband has been dropping hints he'd love a turbo charged Tiguan SUV for his birthday.
National retail sales manager Jason Legere says the Volkswagen being asked about most is the seventh generation 2015 Golf.
"That car has just been on fire," he said, noting it was named Motor Trend car of the year. "We're absolutely excited about its potential going forward."
It was billed as Volkswagen Victoria's grand reopening, but Thursday night's shindig at the dealership's new state of the art facility at its existing location was more than a celebration.
"This is a new beginning for Volkswagen Victoria," said Peter Trzewik, pulling himself away from the action in the 20,000 square foot corporate identity facility's bright, immaculate new showroom long enough to breathe a sigh of relief.
The German Auto Import Network partner was elated staff no longer has to serve customers out of trailers as they've had to do for the past year during the final phase of the dealer group's two year, $20 million construction project. It culminated with Volkswagen Victoria's debut as a standalone facility, following in the tire treads of sister dealerships Porsche Centre Victoria and Audi Autohaus.
"This building used to be one big showroom selling Volkswagen, Porsche and Audi," recalled Trzewik, who hosted the event at 3329 Douglas St. with partner Sylvester Chuang. "Now it gives not just the sales team but the customers a place to be proud of the brand."
Trzewik compares the labour intensive transformation of the dealership GAIN purchased in January of 2012 to surviving a home renovation.
"This makes the dealership come together with its customers and fake hermes belt price say 'now we have a home again,'" he said.
An estimated 300 customers enjoyed gourmet treats dished up by chef Castro Boeteng's culinary crew as the band played on. The menu included ice cream made on the spot with local milk flash frozen with hermes black belt knockoff liquid nitrogen, creating fumes of white smoke one wag noted looked like what might come out of a tailpipe, but not a Volkswagen's.
They were greeted by GAIN staffers dressed in "Volkswagen blue," as Weis Associates design team leader Sandy Behrend described Volkswagen's signature colour paired with dominant whites.
The spiffy new showroom is a spacious, eye catching blast of sleek minimalism highlighted by banks hermes mens belt replica of white cabinets separating high tech workstations but with a stylish nod to Volkswagen history.
The retro flavour included a cream coloured 1971 Volkswagen Beetle in mint condition, and a 1974 white Karmann Ghia convertible in a pristine garage.
"It's like a language," says Behrend, explaining the Canada wide White Frame Modular Concept design. "You can speak the language in different ways and different sentences in different locations."
Volkswagen Canada's network development manager Paul Gommerman said it was a perfect fit for the 36th store the company has built.
With anticipated motor vehicle sales of $1.8 million across Canada this year, consumers have developed "an appetite for nicer, bigger Hermes belts replica paris and better stores," he said.
"It's designed to be modular so it can expand outwards and inwards in the facility," Gommerman said, adding its stylistic nods to Volkswagen's past dealerships was by design.
"It's a bit of an homage to those while modernizing it significantly and bringing a cool palette where the cars really are the stars of the show," he said. "Everything is designed around an ambience that keeps the customer engaged and comfortable, and really a place they want to be in."
Cor and Barbara Knoop, intrigued by the new look of the dealership where they bought a Volkswagen van and a Jetta wagon in the past, certainly wanted to be there.
"It's the European engineering. It's designed with the driver in mind," said Cor, explaining his brand allegiance.
"We love Volkswagens. They're so well made and easy to drive," added Barbara, jokingly noting her husband has been dropping hints he'd love a turbo charged Tiguan SUV for his birthday.
National retail sales manager Jason Legere says the Volkswagen being asked about most is the seventh generation 2015 Golf.
"That car has just been on fire," he said, noting it was named Motor Trend car of the year. "We're absolutely excited about its potential going forward."
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Watson Denied Parole
SACRAMENTO, Calif. California parole officials recommended Thursday that Charles "Tex" Watson, the self described right hand man of murderous cult leader Charles Manson, should remain in prison 47 years after he helped plan and carry out the slayings of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six other people.
Watson's 17th parole hearing was held at Mule Creek State Prison, near Sacramento. He can seek parole again in five years.
Watson, 70, is serving a life sentence for the murders of Tate and four others at her Beverly Hills, California, home on Aug. 9, 1969. The next night, he helped kill grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary.
"These were some of the most horrific crimes in California history, and we believe he continues to exhibit a lack of remorse and remains a public safety risk," Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey said in a statement after the decision.
Watson was initially sentenced to death in the stabbing and shooting rampage, but the sentence was later commuted to life when the California Supreme Court ruled in 1972 that the death penalty was unconstitutional. replica hermes handbags outlet He currently is in Mule Creek State Prison, near Sacramento.
Sharon Tate's sister, Debra Tate the last surviving member of her immediate family urged the panel of parole commissioners to reject freedom for the man she called "the most active, the most prolific killer in the Manson family."
"He's a sociopath, and sociopaths are incapable having insight or empathy for anything. It's all about him. He didn't have it then, and he doesn't have it now," she said after the hearing. She said Watson still blames the murders on his drug use and lack of a clear goal in life rather than accepting full responsibility.
Oct. 12, 1971 file photo, Charles "Tex" Watson, left, is led back to jail from a courtroom after he was convicted of seven counts of first degree murder and one of conspiracy to commit murder in the Tate LaBianca slayings, in Los Angeles. California officials have denied parole for Watson, the self described "right hand man" of murderous cult leader Charles Manson. The decision came Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016, at the 17th parole hearing for Watson and 47 years after he helped plan and participated in the slayings of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others in 1969. (AP Photo/George Brich)
In July, Gov. Jerry Brown reversed a Board of Parole Hearings recommendation that the state release Manson follower Leslie Van Houten, 67, who is serving a life sentence for the La Bianca killings.
In January, he blocked the release of Bruce Davis, 74, another Manson devotee who was convicted in the killings of musician Gary Hinman and stuntman Donald "Shorty" Shea.
In prison, Watson wrote a book, "Manson's Right Hand Man Speaks Out," saying the charismatic Manson offered utopia, then persuaded his followers to act out his "destructive worldview." Watson has apologized Hermes birkin bags fake for the killings.
Watson says he converted to Christianity in 1975, founded Abounding Love Ministries in 1980, and ministers to other inmates. He also obtained his college degree behind bars.
Watson wrote that he was raised in Texas and headed to California at 21 against his parents' wishes in 1967 in search of "drugs, sex and rock 'n' roll."
Prosecutors said Manson ordered the murders in hopes of triggering a race war that he dubbed "Helter Skelter," after a Beatles song. The words "Death to Pigs" were written in blood on the wall of the LaBianca residence; "Helter Skelter" was scrawled on the refrigerator; and "rise" was written in blood on the front door.
"Part of what torments me all these years and today is the severity of Charles Watson's crimes and how horribly the victims suffered," Anthony DiMaria, a nephew of Jay Sebring, who was killed with Tate, wrote in remarks to parole commissioners.
He cited seven gunshots all fired by Watson along with 170 stab wounds and 13 blows to the victims with blunt objects.
After the board's decision Thursday night, DiMaria said "the 5 year denial (of parole) was a fair decision."
"With crimes of this magnitude, I felt profound sorrow for what the victims suffered, for fashion cheap hermes handbags the family members and representatives who spoke in the room . and for what Charles Watson brought upon himself," he said.
Watson wrote in his book that there was no concern for the victims during the rampage.
"There was a total disregard for life. I was concerned with destroying everyone and not getting discovered," he wrote. "In some ways, punishment escaped my mind replica birkin handbags since Helter Skelter was coming down and society, as we knew it, was coming to an end."
Watson's attorney, Kendrick Jan, did not respond to repeated requests for comment. A message left for supporters running Watson's Abounding Love Ministries website also was not returned.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. California parole officials recommended Thursday that Charles "Tex" Watson, the self described right hand man of murderous cult leader Charles Manson, should remain in prison 47 years after he helped plan and carry out the slayings of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six other people.
Watson's 17th parole hearing was held at Mule Creek State Prison, near Sacramento. He can seek parole again in five years.
Watson, 70, is serving a life sentence for the murders of Tate and four others at her Beverly Hills, California, home on Aug. 9, 1969. The next night, he helped kill grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary.
"These were some of the most horrific crimes in California history, and we believe he continues to exhibit a lack of remorse and remains a public safety risk," Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey said in a statement after the decision.
Watson was initially sentenced to death in the stabbing and shooting rampage, but the sentence was later commuted to life when the California Supreme Court ruled in 1972 that the death penalty was unconstitutional. replica hermes handbags outlet He currently is in Mule Creek State Prison, near Sacramento.
Sharon Tate's sister, Debra Tate the last surviving member of her immediate family urged the panel of parole commissioners to reject freedom for the man she called "the most active, the most prolific killer in the Manson family."
"He's a sociopath, and sociopaths are incapable having insight or empathy for anything. It's all about him. He didn't have it then, and he doesn't have it now," she said after the hearing. She said Watson still blames the murders on his drug use and lack of a clear goal in life rather than accepting full responsibility.
Oct. 12, 1971 file photo, Charles "Tex" Watson, left, is led back to jail from a courtroom after he was convicted of seven counts of first degree murder and one of conspiracy to commit murder in the Tate LaBianca slayings, in Los Angeles. California officials have denied parole for Watson, the self described "right hand man" of murderous cult leader Charles Manson. The decision came Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016, at the 17th parole hearing for Watson and 47 years after he helped plan and participated in the slayings of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others in 1969. (AP Photo/George Brich)
In July, Gov. Jerry Brown reversed a Board of Parole Hearings recommendation that the state release Manson follower Leslie Van Houten, 67, who is serving a life sentence for the La Bianca killings.
In January, he blocked the release of Bruce Davis, 74, another Manson devotee who was convicted in the killings of musician Gary Hinman and stuntman Donald "Shorty" Shea.
In prison, Watson wrote a book, "Manson's Right Hand Man Speaks Out," saying the charismatic Manson offered utopia, then persuaded his followers to act out his "destructive worldview." Watson has apologized Hermes birkin bags fake for the killings.
Watson says he converted to Christianity in 1975, founded Abounding Love Ministries in 1980, and ministers to other inmates. He also obtained his college degree behind bars.
Watson wrote that he was raised in Texas and headed to California at 21 against his parents' wishes in 1967 in search of "drugs, sex and rock 'n' roll."
Prosecutors said Manson ordered the murders in hopes of triggering a race war that he dubbed "Helter Skelter," after a Beatles song. The words "Death to Pigs" were written in blood on the wall of the LaBianca residence; "Helter Skelter" was scrawled on the refrigerator; and "rise" was written in blood on the front door.
"Part of what torments me all these years and today is the severity of Charles Watson's crimes and how horribly the victims suffered," Anthony DiMaria, a nephew of Jay Sebring, who was killed with Tate, wrote in remarks to parole commissioners.
He cited seven gunshots all fired by Watson along with 170 stab wounds and 13 blows to the victims with blunt objects.
After the board's decision Thursday night, DiMaria said "the 5 year denial (of parole) was a fair decision."
"With crimes of this magnitude, I felt profound sorrow for what the victims suffered, for fashion cheap hermes handbags the family members and representatives who spoke in the room . and for what Charles Watson brought upon himself," he said.
Watson wrote in his book that there was no concern for the victims during the rampage.
"There was a total disregard for life. I was concerned with destroying everyone and not getting discovered," he wrote. "In some ways, punishment escaped my mind replica birkin handbags since Helter Skelter was coming down and society, as we knew it, was coming to an end."
Watson's attorney, Kendrick Jan, did not respond to repeated requests for comment. A message left for supporters running Watson's Abounding Love Ministries website also was not returned.
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Weekly Papers Battle for Ad Dollars
Not so long ago, weekly community newspapers and all advertising shoppers were the starving strays of the print media world, surviving on the scraps of local retail and classified advertising that were not fit for the palate of the large daily newspapers.
But today, while some older metropolitan dailies such as the newly deceased Herald Examiner wither for lack of advertising, many suburban oriented local weeklies and shoppers are thriving. That segment of the industry alone accounts for more than $3 billion annually in ad revenues, according to the Newspaper Advertising Bureau.
Moreover, the community newspapers, which contain highly local news coverage and local retail and classified advertising, and shoppers such as the Pennysaver which carry only ads are no longer the province of undercapitalized entrepreneurs. Many, in fact, have been gobbled up by large media companies, who have shuffled and merged stand alone local titles into powerful chains.
"Twenty years ago, a weekly was like a flea attacking an elephant, but not anymore," said James Dunaway, director of information at the Newspaper Advertising Bureau in New York.
He noted that the ability of community weeklies and shoppers to target circulation in a very specific market area had enabled them to provide advertising services at a price that daily newspapers are hard pressed to match.
Nowhere is this trend more evident than in Orange County, where towns, sprouting full blown from one time citrus groves, provide a tempting market for community publications. Publishing sources said about 15 serious buyers are interested in Golden West Publications, the chain of 31 weekly newspapers 22 of them in Orange County that Richmond, Va. based Media General put up for sale last month.
The Golden West papers have a combined circulation of 487,000 and reflect the rapid growth of the weekly newspaper market, especially in South County.
Howard Publishing Group, which owns the daily San Clemente Sun Post and several small dailies outside the county, is moving to stave off inroads by South County weeklies with a new weekly title to be launched later this month. To be called the Orange County Preview, the new tabloid will focus its editorial coverage on entertainment and life style subjects in order to distinguish itself from the Golden West papers such as the Saddleback Valley News and the San Clemente News.
Howard and other publishers, including The Times and the Orange County Register, also have to defend their advertising base against the ubiquitous shoppers, which are mailed free to every household in a market area and are "zoned" to provide advertisers with exactly the geographic coverage they want. Van Ausdeln and is now a major institution employing several thousand people in Orange County.
In imitiaton hermes bag South County, the Pennysaver has been run by Capital Cities/ABC Inc. since the New York media firm bought out Sutton in 1984. In North County, the proprietor is Harte Hanks Communications Inc., a San Antonio based media conglomerate that purchased Demarco's Pennysaver in 1973.
Van Ausdeln still runs the Pennysaver in the Newport Beach Costa Mesa area. He declined to discuss the operation.
After many years of rapid growth, however, even the shoppers are facing renewed pressures from the myriad competitors they face. Not only must they fight one another and the two big local dailies, but they are also under attack from national direct mail houses, such as Advo System Inc., which have grown increasingly sophisticated in their ability to reach narrowly targeted markets.
"We have 435 print competitors in Southern California," said Harry Buckel, president of the Brea based Harte Hanks Pennysaver Group. "On one end, we compete with The Times, the Register, and Advo; and on the other end with local shoppers that have one or two cities." Orange County, Buckel added, is "marginally more competitive" than other areas.
Traditionally, Pennysavers and other shoppers, such as the fashion cheap hermes handbags South Coast Shopper (also owned by Harte Hanks) have relied heavily on so called "private party" advertising individuals attempting to sell items to other individuals in addition to display advertising from local retailers.
But in recent years, replica birkin handbags they have moved increasingly into the distribution of pre printed advertising material. That's where the big money is but it's also where the daily newspapers are (especially on Sundays) and where the direct mail houses focus their energies. One former Pennysaver executive said the emphasis on the pre print business has been replica hermes handbags outlet a strategic error that has cost many shoppers a big part of the private party franchise.
But Wesley Turner, president of Capital Cities/Sutton Industries Pennysavers, disputes this view: "We have seen greater growth in the pre print area over the past four or five years, but all categories have continued to grow."
Not so long ago, weekly community newspapers and all advertising shoppers were the starving strays of the print media world, surviving on the scraps of local retail and classified advertising that were not fit for the palate of the large daily newspapers.
But today, while some older metropolitan dailies such as the newly deceased Herald Examiner wither for lack of advertising, many suburban oriented local weeklies and shoppers are thriving. That segment of the industry alone accounts for more than $3 billion annually in ad revenues, according to the Newspaper Advertising Bureau.
Moreover, the community newspapers, which contain highly local news coverage and local retail and classified advertising, and shoppers such as the Pennysaver which carry only ads are no longer the province of undercapitalized entrepreneurs. Many, in fact, have been gobbled up by large media companies, who have shuffled and merged stand alone local titles into powerful chains.
"Twenty years ago, a weekly was like a flea attacking an elephant, but not anymore," said James Dunaway, director of information at the Newspaper Advertising Bureau in New York.
He noted that the ability of community weeklies and shoppers to target circulation in a very specific market area had enabled them to provide advertising services at a price that daily newspapers are hard pressed to match.
Nowhere is this trend more evident than in Orange County, where towns, sprouting full blown from one time citrus groves, provide a tempting market for community publications. Publishing sources said about 15 serious buyers are interested in Golden West Publications, the chain of 31 weekly newspapers 22 of them in Orange County that Richmond, Va. based Media General put up for sale last month.
The Golden West papers have a combined circulation of 487,000 and reflect the rapid growth of the weekly newspaper market, especially in South County.
Howard Publishing Group, which owns the daily San Clemente Sun Post and several small dailies outside the county, is moving to stave off inroads by South County weeklies with a new weekly title to be launched later this month. To be called the Orange County Preview, the new tabloid will focus its editorial coverage on entertainment and life style subjects in order to distinguish itself from the Golden West papers such as the Saddleback Valley News and the San Clemente News.
Howard and other publishers, including The Times and the Orange County Register, also have to defend their advertising base against the ubiquitous shoppers, which are mailed free to every household in a market area and are "zoned" to provide advertisers with exactly the geographic coverage they want. Van Ausdeln and is now a major institution employing several thousand people in Orange County.
In imitiaton hermes bag South County, the Pennysaver has been run by Capital Cities/ABC Inc. since the New York media firm bought out Sutton in 1984. In North County, the proprietor is Harte Hanks Communications Inc., a San Antonio based media conglomerate that purchased Demarco's Pennysaver in 1973.
Van Ausdeln still runs the Pennysaver in the Newport Beach Costa Mesa area. He declined to discuss the operation.
After many years of rapid growth, however, even the shoppers are facing renewed pressures from the myriad competitors they face. Not only must they fight one another and the two big local dailies, but they are also under attack from national direct mail houses, such as Advo System Inc., which have grown increasingly sophisticated in their ability to reach narrowly targeted markets.
"We have 435 print competitors in Southern California," said Harry Buckel, president of the Brea based Harte Hanks Pennysaver Group. "On one end, we compete with The Times, the Register, and Advo; and on the other end with local shoppers that have one or two cities." Orange County, Buckel added, is "marginally more competitive" than other areas.
Traditionally, Pennysavers and other shoppers, such as the fashion cheap hermes handbags South Coast Shopper (also owned by Harte Hanks) have relied heavily on so called "private party" advertising individuals attempting to sell items to other individuals in addition to display advertising from local retailers.
But in recent years, replica birkin handbags they have moved increasingly into the distribution of pre printed advertising material. That's where the big money is but it's also where the daily newspapers are (especially on Sundays) and where the direct mail houses focus their energies. One former Pennysaver executive said the emphasis on the pre print business has been replica hermes handbags outlet a strategic error that has cost many shoppers a big part of the private party franchise.
But Wesley Turner, president of Capital Cities/Sutton Industries Pennysavers, disputes this view: "We have seen greater growth in the pre print area over the past four or five years, but all categories have continued to grow."
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why Putin won't fire sports minister over doping scandal
MOSCOW (Reuters) President Vladimir Putin risks personal humiliation if all Russian competitors are banned from the Rio Olympics over doping, as now seems possible; yet the man on whose watch this may happen, Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, is not being fired.
The reason: Mutko has delivered victories on the sports field for the past decade and a half to match Putin's ambition of restoring national pride, and the Russian leader stands by the people who give him loyal service.
"Putin trusts him. Putin knows you can work with Mutko," said Mikhail Amosov, who had dealings with both men when they worked in the mayor's office in St Petersburg in the 1990s.
Putin's patience with his subordinate is undergoing its hermes black belt knockoff severest test this week after an independent report alleged that Mutko's own deputy was a lynchpin in a programme to facilitate doping by covering up athletes' positive test results.
The International Olympic Committee, reacting to the report, said on Tuesday it would consider barring Russia from taking part fake hermes mens belt in the Rio games in any disciplines; a step that would be unprecedented in international sport.
The fake hermes black belt Court of Arbitration in Sport cleared the path for a blanket ban on Russian competitors going to Rio when it rejected an appeal on Thursday against the earlier exclusion of Russian track and field athletes from the games.
Nevertheless, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Mutko was not among sports officials set to lose their jobs because he was "not mentioned in the . report as a direct perpetrator".
Putin's decision to stand by his minister suggests he values trust and loyalty above narrow definitions of managerial competence.
In the early 1990s Putin worked as a deputy mayor in his native St Petersburg, Russia's second city. Mutko was another deputy mayor, responsible for social spending.
Another colleague from the mayor's office said that at the time Mutko did little to distinguish himself from other mid level bureaucrats.
"He was a hard worker, but did not particularly take initiative," said the former colleague, who did not want to be identified discussing people who are now in positions of power.
While in the mayor's office, Mutko started a project that would define his career. He took under his wing St Petersburg TMs Zenit football club. It had fallen on hard times; it had little money and results on the pitch were poor.
Mutko was club president from 1997 until 2003, and in that period he found money, attracted star players and returned Zenit to the top flight of Russian football.
Alexei Igonin, Zenit's captain in the early 2000s, said Mutko was a hands on president. Players did not use agents because they would negotiate their deals directly with Mutko.
"He has charisma and speaks well, while he mixes in the right circles and gets the contacts he needs," said Igonin.
Mutko's success at Zenit caught the eye of Putin, who had become Russian president in 1999.
"To make Zenit a good soccer club was Mutko's project," said Amosov, who was a member of the St Petersburg legislature in the 1990s and has since became an outspoken Putin critic. "Putin appreciated his performance and took him to Moscow, a move Mutko never desired. It seems to me Putin decided that Mutko can do a lot for Russian sport in general, after doing a lot for Zenit."
In 2005, Mutko became head of the Russian Football Union, and fake hermes belt price set about making changes in the same energetic way he had in St Petersburg.
Vyacheslav Koloskov, the man he replaced, recalled how Mutko took away the company car, the office and pension that he was still enjoying at the union's expense.
Afterwards, said Koloskov, "I met him at different committees and conferences, but he never needed my help and advice, as he always believed he knew everything".
Government auditors queried how he was able to spend 4,800 Canadian dollars (2,786.3) on breakfasts at his hotel during the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. He said he was assigned the hotel by organisers, so had no control over the costs.
In the same year, Mutko was mocked by many Russians on social media for a speech to FIFA, world football's governing body, in thickly accented and halting English.
For Mutko's 57th birthday last year, Putin ribbed him about his language skills by publicly presenting him with an English phrase book.
MOSCOW (Reuters) President Vladimir Putin risks personal humiliation if all Russian competitors are banned from the Rio Olympics over doping, as now seems possible; yet the man on whose watch this may happen, Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, is not being fired.
The reason: Mutko has delivered victories on the sports field for the past decade and a half to match Putin's ambition of restoring national pride, and the Russian leader stands by the people who give him loyal service.
"Putin trusts him. Putin knows you can work with Mutko," said Mikhail Amosov, who had dealings with both men when they worked in the mayor's office in St Petersburg in the 1990s.
Putin's patience with his subordinate is undergoing its hermes black belt knockoff severest test this week after an independent report alleged that Mutko's own deputy was a lynchpin in a programme to facilitate doping by covering up athletes' positive test results.
The International Olympic Committee, reacting to the report, said on Tuesday it would consider barring Russia from taking part fake hermes mens belt in the Rio games in any disciplines; a step that would be unprecedented in international sport.
The fake hermes black belt Court of Arbitration in Sport cleared the path for a blanket ban on Russian competitors going to Rio when it rejected an appeal on Thursday against the earlier exclusion of Russian track and field athletes from the games.
Nevertheless, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Mutko was not among sports officials set to lose their jobs because he was "not mentioned in the . report as a direct perpetrator".
Putin's decision to stand by his minister suggests he values trust and loyalty above narrow definitions of managerial competence.
In the early 1990s Putin worked as a deputy mayor in his native St Petersburg, Russia's second city. Mutko was another deputy mayor, responsible for social spending.
Another colleague from the mayor's office said that at the time Mutko did little to distinguish himself from other mid level bureaucrats.
"He was a hard worker, but did not particularly take initiative," said the former colleague, who did not want to be identified discussing people who are now in positions of power.
While in the mayor's office, Mutko started a project that would define his career. He took under his wing St Petersburg TMs Zenit football club. It had fallen on hard times; it had little money and results on the pitch were poor.
Mutko was club president from 1997 until 2003, and in that period he found money, attracted star players and returned Zenit to the top flight of Russian football.
Alexei Igonin, Zenit's captain in the early 2000s, said Mutko was a hands on president. Players did not use agents because they would negotiate their deals directly with Mutko.
"He has charisma and speaks well, while he mixes in the right circles and gets the contacts he needs," said Igonin.
Mutko's success at Zenit caught the eye of Putin, who had become Russian president in 1999.
"To make Zenit a good soccer club was Mutko's project," said Amosov, who was a member of the St Petersburg legislature in the 1990s and has since became an outspoken Putin critic. "Putin appreciated his performance and took him to Moscow, a move Mutko never desired. It seems to me Putin decided that Mutko can do a lot for Russian sport in general, after doing a lot for Zenit."
In 2005, Mutko became head of the Russian Football Union, and fake hermes belt price set about making changes in the same energetic way he had in St Petersburg.
Vyacheslav Koloskov, the man he replaced, recalled how Mutko took away the company car, the office and pension that he was still enjoying at the union's expense.
Afterwards, said Koloskov, "I met him at different committees and conferences, but he never needed my help and advice, as he always believed he knew everything".
Government auditors queried how he was able to spend 4,800 Canadian dollars (2,786.3) on breakfasts at his hotel during the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. He said he was assigned the hotel by organisers, so had no control over the costs.
In the same year, Mutko was mocked by many Russians on social media for a speech to FIFA, world football's governing body, in thickly accented and halting English.
For Mutko's 57th birthday last year, Putin ribbed him about his language skills by publicly presenting him with an English phrase book.
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What happened to Judith Yorke
When Deb Webber spoke with Judith Yorke about her disappearance 14 years ago, her sister Tira Yorke, son Joseph Yorke and senior reporter Katherine Hoby sat in on the reading.
Judith Yorke was constantly looking over her shoulder. She had been warned by a man from her past that someone was going to come and get her.
Immediately, Judith was scared and did not like the look of the pair, one of whom was from Te Puke, while the other was from outside the town. The men had a lot of associates and may have had gang connections.
One, a big, dark man, she did not know. The other was known to her and her family.
Judith was told there was an emergency and that she must go with them.
She resisted, repeatedly saying no. But she was bundled into the van and the vehicle was hermes brown belt imitation seen by a witness.
The van driver took roads leading out of the town, with Judith falling side to side as the vehicle swerved along windy roads at some speed. It eventually went off the bitumen road on to dirt, with bush brushing by either side of the vehicle.
It passed an area which featured many lakes _ large and small _ up to seven.
By the time it reached its intended destination _ Lake Rerewhakaaitu, near Rotorua _ Judith was dead.
She was alive in the van for 30 or 45 minutes. She was then replica Hermes belts france told to be quiet, her mouth covered with a cloth and everything went black.
Smothered most likely, or strangled. She did not suffer, she simply went to sleep and could not wake up.
Her grave is close to the lake's edge, just six or seven metres from the water.
Her body is buried in sandy soil not far from the bank in a patch of sand.
It is near where rivers or streams flow into the lake and there Hermes replica belt paris may be warm water nearby.
The body might have shifted in the sandy soil over the years.
Judith, described by her family as a petite woman, tried to fight her abductors. The slender 25 year old solo mum barely had a chance when she met her end in the back of the white van, Deb says.
She hermes mens belt replica feels physically sick when she talks about the man in Judith's past who was indirectly involved in her disappearance.
Several times during the reading she emphasised she felt "sick, really sick" over him and his involvement.
Deb also identified specific detail about who was responsible for Judith's disappearance, that confirmed what her family have always thought.
For legal reasons, we cannot reveal that detail. Deb also mentioned a "shivery sort of feeling" in relation to the two men on the driveway.
She is almost certain of the method of Judith's death. When Tira Yorke asks what actually happened to her elder sister, Deb pauses then says baldly "she was smothered". Later she elaborates, apologising if the detail is upsetting.
"Yeah, there's something over my mouth . they're putting something on my mouth . she was smothered and everything went dark . to make her be quiet."
She says Judith couldn't breathe or wake up and "it's all to do with her mouth or throat", mentioning strangulation as another possibility.
Once Judith has been murdered, Deb has trouble talking to her and repeatedly has to wake her.
Her black leather handbag, never located despite extensive searches, is either buried with her or was thrown into nearby shrubs, Deb says. The contents _ including a red wallet, her PostBank savings book, birth certificate and that of her daughter _ was burnt or trashed.
Interestingly, Deb cannot connect Judith to a party, or sees her there only very briefly. The police have always maintained she disappeared from a Matapihi orchard party and was seen by partygoers there singing and talking.
When Deb Webber spoke with Judith Yorke about her disappearance 14 years ago, her sister Tira Yorke, son Joseph Yorke and senior reporter Katherine Hoby sat in on the reading.
Judith Yorke was constantly looking over her shoulder. She had been warned by a man from her past that someone was going to come and get her.
Immediately, Judith was scared and did not like the look of the pair, one of whom was from Te Puke, while the other was from outside the town. The men had a lot of associates and may have had gang connections.
One, a big, dark man, she did not know. The other was known to her and her family.
Judith was told there was an emergency and that she must go with them.
She resisted, repeatedly saying no. But she was bundled into the van and the vehicle was hermes brown belt imitation seen by a witness.
The van driver took roads leading out of the town, with Judith falling side to side as the vehicle swerved along windy roads at some speed. It eventually went off the bitumen road on to dirt, with bush brushing by either side of the vehicle.
It passed an area which featured many lakes _ large and small _ up to seven.
By the time it reached its intended destination _ Lake Rerewhakaaitu, near Rotorua _ Judith was dead.
She was alive in the van for 30 or 45 minutes. She was then replica Hermes belts france told to be quiet, her mouth covered with a cloth and everything went black.
Smothered most likely, or strangled. She did not suffer, she simply went to sleep and could not wake up.
Her grave is close to the lake's edge, just six or seven metres from the water.
Her body is buried in sandy soil not far from the bank in a patch of sand.
It is near where rivers or streams flow into the lake and there Hermes replica belt paris may be warm water nearby.
The body might have shifted in the sandy soil over the years.
Judith, described by her family as a petite woman, tried to fight her abductors. The slender 25 year old solo mum barely had a chance when she met her end in the back of the white van, Deb says.
She hermes mens belt replica feels physically sick when she talks about the man in Judith's past who was indirectly involved in her disappearance.
Several times during the reading she emphasised she felt "sick, really sick" over him and his involvement.
Deb also identified specific detail about who was responsible for Judith's disappearance, that confirmed what her family have always thought.
For legal reasons, we cannot reveal that detail. Deb also mentioned a "shivery sort of feeling" in relation to the two men on the driveway.
She is almost certain of the method of Judith's death. When Tira Yorke asks what actually happened to her elder sister, Deb pauses then says baldly "she was smothered". Later she elaborates, apologising if the detail is upsetting.
"Yeah, there's something over my mouth . they're putting something on my mouth . she was smothered and everything went dark . to make her be quiet."
She says Judith couldn't breathe or wake up and "it's all to do with her mouth or throat", mentioning strangulation as another possibility.
Once Judith has been murdered, Deb has trouble talking to her and repeatedly has to wake her.
Her black leather handbag, never located despite extensive searches, is either buried with her or was thrown into nearby shrubs, Deb says. The contents _ including a red wallet, her PostBank savings book, birth certificate and that of her daughter _ was burnt or trashed.
Interestingly, Deb cannot connect Judith to a party, or sees her there only very briefly. The police have always maintained she disappeared from a Matapihi orchard party and was seen by partygoers there singing and talking.
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