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2011 Hyundai Equus Ultimate, May 2011 [w video]

The long-term 2011 Hyundai Equus Ultimate made its way into my driveway a few weeks ago, and since being handed the keys, I’ve added 1 Buy Missoni Dresses,900 miles to the odometer, putting our total distance traveled at just over 5,400 miles since the car’s March arrival at Autoblog Towers.

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Like both editor-in-chief John Neff and editor/test fleet manager Steven J. Ewing, I’ve been bombarded with compliments and curious questions about the Equus – and that’s before I tell them that they’re looking at a $65,000 Hyundai. It helps that the Equus looks like almost nothing else on the road, with its alien grille, massive proportions and over-the-top headlamps.

So far, I’m really enjoying my time with the Equus, and I’ll have a full rundown of specific pros and cons next month. Over the course of my 1,900-mile stint Buy DKNY Clothes, I’ve averaged 20 miles per gallon flat – besting the 19.1 mpg that Ewing and Neff saw last month. But while the month of May has been mostly all stars, there was one service hiccup that reared its ugly head…

Remembering Revolution A Few Thoughts on the 20th

On April 29th of 1992, the world turned its focus on South Central, Los Angeles, as the acquittal of four L.A.P.D. officers who were charged with violently beating Rodney King helped to spark the six-day racial melee that some call a riot and others an uprising. As we reflect on the 20th anniversary of one of the most significant human events in recent history, politicians Windows 7 activation key, journalists, academics, community leaders, and concerned citizens alike are all pondering on whether or not we are better off now than just two decades before. While I understand the impetus for this kind of thinking, that is — the way in which we seemingly need to chart human growth in linear terms, the question of “better off now” is, much like the discourse that immediately followed the 1992 uprising, far too simplistic.

As a young Black boy who was born and raised in South Central, Los Angeles I witnessed first hand the kaleidoscopic chaos that was the 1992 uprising, as well as the cultural and political turmoil that preceded the event and the conflicting aftermath. I know friends and family who looted stores and burned buildings, and even more who did not. I knew one young man, Gregory Davis Jr., a promising young football player who played for my stepfather, who was shot in the forehead amidst the cultural disarray. With militarized streets, burned out buildings, curfews in place, the declaration of Martial Law, fear, panic, and the simultaneous feeling of anarchy and heavy-handed government, I have come as close possible to living in a warzone without living in an actual warzone (though I know some who argue it was a warzone). And, still, this does nothing to explain the complex cultural, political, and legal happenings that led to the 1992 uprising.

Those who reduce the uprising to the Rodney King trial not only fail to see how the acquittal was simply the legal straw the broke the camel’s back, but they also rhetorically figure Black people as completely irrational beings who are incapable of operating within the law and our legal system. In other words, that kind of contextually absent rendering, which refuses to recognize the robust history of racial injustice Blacks had/have to incur, constructs Black people as violent without talking about the violence enacted on Blacks on an everyday basis. Even those who color up the conversation, so to speak, by adding an analysis of the troubled race relations between Blacks and Asians do so by focusing on incidents like the shooting of then high school student Latasha Harlins by Korean storeowner Soon Ja Du, but those conversations are also ahistorical, lack context, and conflate complex race relations into over glorified moments of violence. Given our complete failure in talking about the past, how do we expect the sufficiently talk about the present and/or the future?

Are we better off now does very little to address Los Angeles’ ever changing race and class demographics, and how South Los Angeles (dare I still call it South Central) is a very different city now than just two decades before. It is ill equipped to deal with the ways in which resource reallocation, urban development, and gentrification sparked a whole new set of racial and class-based anxieties (see the development of Downtown, L.A. and the recent Black and Brown conflicts as examples). Perhaps even more troubling than the first two, it is unwilling to have the kinds of conversations needed to be, well, better.

If we learned anything from R.J. Smith’s The Great Black Way: L.A. in the 1940s and the Lost African-American Renaissance, it is that Los Angeles is not “the capital of forgetting,” but a city with a unique way of remembering its own past (ix). The city with three major race riots/revolts in the 20th century alone has a way of masking its issues under the veil of progressive politics, which infuriates the many Angelinos who are regularly told we are imagining the segregation, the ways in which patrolling police forces create racialized gated communities, and the incredible economic disparities still at play. And, asking are we better off now, especially if we dismiss the everyday police harassment and at times cultural unease by focusing solely on the sensational and dramatic events, provides an easy opportunity to turn a blind eye to the racial and class based turmoil that led to the 1992 uprising Office 2010 Key, much of which still exists today. In this way, I urge an entirely different set of questions: Where have we grown and where have we regressed? Why are refusing to have the kinds of race, class, and legal conversations that forces us to get at the cultural politics that preceded the 1992 uprising and allowed the Rodney King beating? How has the changing of Los Angeles hindered our ability to address our race and class troubles?

Spaces, however Office 2011 MAC Key, have histories we cannot deny, and our bodies confront those histories the moment in which we enter the given space. Newly constructed buildings, the reurbanization of certain parts of Los Angeles, over patrolling police officers, and constant police harassment are but a few reminders of the 1992 uprising and the cultural anxieties that preceded the racial commotion. As we remember the two decades old uprising, we must take note that we are doing just that, we are re-membering it, that is – we are putting the event back together in the most comfortable way possible. And, until we are willing to step out of our comfort zones to have complex race and class conversations we will always re-member it as one chaotic riot, and not the culmination of a series of racial and class based injustices. Thinking in these terms mean we are not, and perhaps cannot, get “better.”

Portland developer threatens lawsuit against Berwi

BERWICK, Maine — The Board of Selectmen, Town Manager Keith Trefethen and Attorney Bruce Reid met for almost two hours in an approved executive session on Wednesday night to discuss the pending lawsuit to be filed against the town by Bateman Partners LLC over the construction project at the former Sullivan Street school.

New selectmen and Board Chair Bart Haley suggested the board not go into executive session to discuss the suit for several reasons. Haley didn’t think “possible litigation,” as described on the agenda, needed or required an executive session, and he thought it wasn’t good practice or transparent to hold an executive session during the first couple minutes of the board’s first meeting in almost two months.

Attorney Reid assured the board and the public that litigation was definite, not just “possible”. Reid said he had been told in very clear and strong language that Bateman would be suing the town. Reid said attorneys for the Portland developer would be reviewing town documents tomorrow at Town Hall.

While the rest of the board agreed with Haley that keeping the public informed and involved was important replica watches, they all also felt the need for the new board members to get caught up on the project and for the board as a whole to become versed on the future suit.

After almost two hours replica watches, the board emerged from their executive session and continued the meeting. The exact reasons for the suit were not made public.

Controversy arose when the town allegedly discovered Bateman Partners was building three-bedroom apartments and constructing a larger addition than was originally approved by the town’s Planning Board. The board voted for Bateman to build efficiencies and one- and two-bedroom apartments. The town said they were made aware after seeing an advertisement in Foster’s Daily Democrat advertising for one- replica watches, two- and three-bedroom apartments.

© 2012 the Foster’s Daily Democrat

Distributed by MCT Information Services

New York – AP Apologizes For Firing Reporter Over

In this March 1, 1944 file photo, Ed Kennedy, Chief of the Associated Press staff in North Africa, wears a metal helmet at the Anzio beachhead in Italy. Kennedy was dismissed by The AP after he became the first journalist to file a firsthand account of German officials surrendering unconditionally to Allied commanders at a former schoolhouse in Reims, France. Sixty-seven years later, AP President and Chief Executive Officer Tom Curley said that Kennedy was right to stand up to the censors, and should have been commended, not fired. (AP Photo, Pool)

New York – In World War II’s final moments in Europe, Associated Press correspondent Edward Kennedy gave his news agency perhaps the biggest scoop in its history. He reported, a full day ahead of the competition, that the Germans had surrendered unconditionally at a former schoolhouse in Reims, France.

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For this, he was publicly rebuked by the AP, and then quietly fired.

The problem: Kennedy had defied military censors to get the story out. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Harry Truman had agreed to suppress news of the capitulation for a day, in order to allow Russian dictator Josef Stalin to stage a second surrender ceremony in Berlin. Kennedy was also accused of breaking a pledge that he and 16 other journalists had made to keep the surrender a secret for a time, as a condition of being allowed to witness it firsthand.

Sixty-seven years later, the AP’s top executive is apologizing for the way the company treated Kennedy.

“It was a terrible day for the AP. It was handled in the worst possible way,” said president and CEO Tom Curley.

Kennedy, he said, “did everything just right.” Curley rejected the notion that the AP had a duty to obey the order to hold the story once it was clear the embargo was for political reasons, rather than to protect the troops.

“Once the war is over, you can’t hold back information like that. The world needed to know,” he said in an interview.

Curley, who is retiring this year, has also co-written an introduction to Kennedy’s newly published memoir, “Ed Kennedy’s War: V-E Day, Censorship & The Associated Press.”

Kennedy, who died in a traffic accident in 1963, had long sought such public vindication from his old employer. His daughter, Julia Kennedy Cochran, of Bend, Ore., said she was “overjoyed” by the apology.

“I think it would have meant a lot to him Tattoo Steel Machines,” she said.

The German surrender happened at 2:41 a.m. French time on May 7, 1945.

Kennedy was one of 17 reporters taken to witness the ceremony. He and the others were hastily assembled by military commanders, then pledged to secrecy by a U.S. general while the group flew over France. As a condition of being allowed to see the surrender in person, the correspondents were barred from reporting what they had witnessed until authorized by Allied headquarters.

Initially, the journalists were told the news would be held up for only a few hours. But after the surrender was complete, the embargo was extended for 36 hours — until 3 p.m. the following day.

Kennedy was astounded.

This Wednesday, May 2, 2012 photo shows a copy of the New York Times published on May 8, 1945, at the home of Julia Kennedy Cochran, daughter of former AP Paris bureau chief Ed Kennedy, in Bend, Ore. Kennedy was dismissed by The AP after he became the first journalist to file a firsthand account of German officials surrendering unconditionally to Allied commanders at a former schoolhouse in Reims, France. Sixty-seven years later, AP President and Chief Executive Officer Tom Curley said that Kennedy was right to stand up to the censors, and should have been commended, not fired. Cochran said she was “overjoyed,” that the AP had taken an interest in exonerating him. “I think it would have meant a lot to him,” she said. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

“The absurdity of attempting to bottle up news of such magnitude was too apparent,” he would later write.

Nevertheless, he initially stayed quiet. Then, at 2:03 p.m., the surrender was announced by German officials, via a radio broadcast from Flensburg, a city already in Allied hands. That meant, Kennedy knew, that the transmission had been authorized by the same military censors gagging the press.

Furious, Kennedy went to see the chief American censor and told him there was no way he could continue to hold the story. Word was out. The military had broken its side of the pact by allowing the Germans to announce the surrender. And there were no military secrets at stake.

The censor waved him off. Kennedy thought about it for 15 minutes, and then acted.

He used a military phone, not subject to monitoring by censors, to dispatch his account to the AP’s London bureau. Notably, he didn’t brief his own editors about the embargo or his decision to dodge the censors. The AP put the story on the wire within minutes of his call.

To some of Kennedy’s competitors, the scoop was a betrayal on the scale of Pearl Harbor. Compounding their anger, military censors continued to refuse to allow any other news organization to send their own stories, meaning the AP would continue to have an exclusive for a day.

“I am browned off, fed up, burnt up and put out,” wrote Drew Middleton, a New York Times correspondent. He called the suppression of the story “the most colossal ‘snafu’ in the history of the war.” His newspaper followed with an editorial chastising the AP for initially boasting of a historic “news beat.”

“If it was a ‘beat,’” the paper wrote, “it was one only because Mr. Kennedy’s sixteen colleagues chose to stand by their commitments.”

Retribution was swift. The military briefly suspended the AP’s ability to dispatch any news from the European theater. When that ban was lifted, more than 50 of Kennedy’s fellow war correspondents signed a protest letter asking that it be reinstated. The military expelled Kennedy from France.

Condemnation also came from the AP’s president at the time, Robert McLean.

“The Associated Press profoundly regrets the distribution on Monday of the report of the total surrender in Europe which investigation now clearly discloses was distributed in advance of authorization by Supreme Allied Headquarters,” he said in a public statement on May 10.

The AP’s general manager, Kent Cooper, said Kennedy should have conferred with his editors about the decision to publish. Later, he addressed a letter to the reporter saying that he had violated a “cardinal principle” of journalism by breaking a pledge to keep the surrender confidential.

“No employee of the Associated Press has the right to disregard what is defined by the source as a pledge of confidence, when he knows that those who meant to impose it still hold it to be in force,” he said.

Other journalists defended Kennedy. In an essay in The New Yorker, published May 19, 1945, under the subhead “The AP Surrender,” A.J. Liebling absolved Kennedy of breaking the “pledge” he had supposedly made aboard the aircraft flying to Reims.

“Whether a promise extorted as this one was, in an airplane several thousand feet up, has any moral force is a question for the theologians,” Liebling wrote. “I suppose that Kennedy should have refused to promise anything and thus made sure of missing an event that no newspaperman in the world would want to miss, but I can’t imagine any correspondent’s doing it.”

Wes Gallagher Good Tattoo Machines, the AP reporter who succeeded Kennedy in Europe and became the general manager in 1962, strongly supported his colleague and believed he had done the right thing.

Upon replacing Kennedy in Paris, Gallagher told the supreme commander of Allied forces, future president Dwight D. Eisenhower, that “If I’d been Kennedy, I’d have done the same thing — except that I’d have telephoned you first,” according to an account by the late AP correspondent John Hightower.

After being fired by the AP, Kennedy took a job as managing editor of the Santa Barbara News-Press in California, and then went on to become publisher of the Monterey Peninsula Herald. He died at age 58 after being struck by an automobile.

Kennedy’s family had held on to the manuscript for decades before his daughter, Cochran, began looking for a publisher.

She said that even though she was only 16 when her father died, she got the impression he still took great joy in his career, despite the episode.

“Some people said after the war, ‘Oh, Ed Kennedy is a broken man. He’s out there editing some little newspaper in California.’ I think people had this idea that he was feeling sorry for himself. But he wasn’t. He wasn’t the kind of person who sat around and felt sorry.”

Curley said Kennedy’s daughter approached him around the same time he had become interested in the matter while helping with work on the book “Breaking News: How The Associated Press Has Covered War, Peace, and Everything Else.” The publication of Kennedy’s memoir prompted the AP’s apology Tools Tattoo, Curley said.

He called Kennedy’s dismissal “a great, great tragedy” and hailed him and the desk editors who put the surrender story on the wire for upholding the highest principles of journalism.

“They did the right thing,” Curley said. “They stood up to power.”

Video Yahoo’s Levinsohn We Are Investing Heavily

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Yahoo! is investing heavily in original, premium video for the Web, says Ross Levinsohn, Yahoo Glitter Tattoo Kits! EVP for the America’s in this intview with Beet.TV at yesterday’s Digital New Front event where the company unveiled a slate of new shows.

The new programming includes entertainment, scripted Dragonhawk Tattoo Ink, lifestyle and news programming created with ABC News, he says.

Among the shows announced is a new Web-only news show with Katie Couric, produced with ABC.

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Nupur Talwar to spend Tonight in Jail

Breaking News Replica Christian Audigier Clothes! Giving no relief to Nupur Talwar in Aarushi-Hemraj double murder case, the Sessions court on Monday reserved its order on her bail application soon after the special CBI court rejected her bail plea.

Nupur had moved the sessions court after her bail plea was rejected by the special CBi court on Monday. The hearing on her bail application in the sessions court would take place on Tuesday, which suggests that she has to spend tonight in judical custody.

The CBI opposed Nupur bail plea in Aarushi-Helraj double murder case stating she should not be granted the bail as the crime is heinous.

The agency said that Nupur has been evading the court and investigation since the beginning of the case. As the Allahabad High Court and the Supreme Court have already heard Nupur’s plea Replica DKNY Clothes, the Magistrate’s Court cannot grant bail to her, argued the CBI.

Nupur argued that sending her to judicial custody will not serve any purpose. She said that her passport is already with the court and she has to take permission from the Magistrate before leaving Delhi.

Nupur had been taken into custody soon after she surrendered in the court on Monday. She arrived in the court along with her mother and husband Rajesh Talwar.

 

Not FairParis Hilton receives Lexus LFA for 30th b

2011 Lexus LFA – Click above for high-res image gallery

Jealousy is an unbecoming trait… but sometimes it’s hard to ignore. You’re going to have to work extra hard to bury those feelings after we tell you what Paris Hilton has apparently received for her 30th birthday.

A 2011 Lexus LFA.

Okay Tattoo Supplies, just tilt your head back and breathe. Hilton’s LFA still wears its factory yellow paint, though we wouldn’t be surprised to see (and hear) it roaming the streets of LA in a shade of pink very soon. According to the Daily Mail Tattoo Supplies, Hilton’s 29-year-old boyfriend, entrepreneur Cy Waits, picked up the V10-powered Lexus two-door and surprised the heiress ahead of her birthday celebration.

Related GalleryFirst Drive: 2011 Lexus LFA
Photos copyright ©2011 Damon Lavrinc/AOL

[Source: Daily Mail]

Toyota Subaru FR sports car code-named 086A, will

Over the past few months, rumors have circulated that the joint venture between Toyota and Subaru to develop an affordable Buy Marc Jacobs Dresses, front-engine Missoni Dresses sale, rear-wheel-drive coupe has been delayed. ToMoCo president, Akio Toyoda Cheap Emilio Pucci Dresses, sought to address those concerns at last month’s Tokyo Auto Salon, and according to Toyota’s new overlord Cheap Chloe Dresses, development is still underway.

Toyoda told the assembled masses that the new FR sports car is an essential part of the automaker’s “rejuvenation” efforts to bring younger people into the fold, and a large part of that is price. The coupe is still expected to cost around 2,000 Replica DKNY Dresses,000 yen (a little over $21,000 US) and is set to go on sale in 2012. According to Toyoda Cheap DKNY Clothing, the production postponement has nothing to do with the delay in construction of the Toyota/Subaru factory, where the two-door was due to be built next year. Instead, Toyoda claims that the hold up is due to the adaption of Toyota’s new D-4S direct injection system for the flat-four engine. Currently, the FR sports car is codenamed “086A,” and for those of you schooled in the world of Hachirokus, that spells good things to come.

[Source: 7Tune | Image: Holiday Auto (colored by AB)]

Ad alert! Chrysler Sebring is not the same as a Me

Actual images of a contemporary Chrysler Sebring convertible would likely scare off more potential buyers than draw them in Christian Audigier Clothes sale, but this is ridiculous. Yes Replica Emilio Pucci Dresses, they both have four wheels and retractable hard tops, but a Mercedes-Benz SL in no way passes for a Sebring. Ever. Erin Dodge near Toronto is offering up two brand “practically new” Sebrings for the not-so-bargain price of $34,888 (Canadian dollars) Chanel Dresses sale, dangling photos of the SL as bait. The 2009 Sebring Limited starts at $32 Cheap Karen Millen Dresses,695, so it’s not clear how much has even been knocked off here. As always, when it comes to dealer ads Cheap Chloe Dresses, buyer beware. Thanks to jagdesh for the tip Replica BCBG Dresses!

[Source: Erin Dodge]

RumormillPorsche Panamera Turbo S in the works

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Porsche is reportedly working on a new range-topping Turbo S version of its four-door Panamera. Much like the Turbo S versions of the 911 and Cayenne Cheap Marc Jacobs Dresses, this would likely mean a bump in power is in order DKNY Dresses sale, as well as tweaked design elements and some additional standard equipment.

Autoblog.it reports that the Panamera Turbo S is expected to produce around 550 horsepower – 50 hp more than the ‘base’ Turbo. Torque output is also pegged to increase from 516 pound-feet (or 568 lb-ft with the Sport Chrono Turbo pack) to around 590 lb-ft. Thus Replica Herve Leger gown, the Panamera Turbo S should sprint to 62 miles per hour in around 3.8 seconds.

Rumors suggest that Porsche could debut its Panamera Turbo S as early as April at either the New York Auto Show or the Shanghai Motor Show. Based on the price premium the 911 Turbo S commands over the 911 Turbo Discount Herve Leger v neck, we expect the mooted Panamera Turbo S to be priced somewhere around the $160 Christian Audigier Clothing sale,000 mark.

Related GalleryFirst Drive: 2010 Porsche Panamera
Photos copyright ©2011 Michael Harley / AOL

[Source: Autoblog.it (translated)]

GM is be-Holden to Australian unit for global Mali

While GM’s once-vast array of worldwide brands operated as separate units in the past Fake Raymond Weil Watches, in today’s global economy they’ve all got intertwining roles. Case in point: the new Chevy Malibu.

The new mid-sized sedan is being prepared for its global rollout Breguet Replica Watches, but before it is, GM needs to prepare it for the wide variety of different road surfaces encountered in overseas markets. So it’s turned to its Australian subsidiary Where to buy Replica Technomarine Watches, Holden, to help fine-tune the chassis.

The work is being undertaken at Holden’s Lang Land Proving Ground in Victoria Replica BMW Watches for sale, Australia Replica B R M Watches, and along public roads in places like the coastal resort town of Phillip Island, where the car is pictured above.

Of course this won’t be the first time Holden has been called upon to help with global products; its chassis have been exported on such products as the Pontiac G8 and GTO, Vauxhall VXR8 and Chevrolet Camaro. But lest you think it’s all give and no take for the Australian marque, the Malibu will be sold Down Under as a Holden Montblanc Replica Watches, as opposed to the Chevrolet bow-tie it will wear in North America and other markets. The press release is posted after the jump.