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Monday, October 31, 2022

Fragile, Delicate, Free: Glimpses of Circus Life, at Sea - The New York Times

They arrive from the port with their colorful clothes and their well-worn musical instruments, parading through the village and performing at the various squares. Islanders view them with a mix of awe and wonder.

At times they look like superheroes, moving together to the rhythm of the music, conjuring tricks like magicians.

The crew of the Sea Clowns.

I first heard of the Sea Clown Sailing Circus when I was following the stories of refugees crossing Greece. Members of the circus were performing at a camp in Athens, trying to win smiles from children who had experienced too much pain.

Later, I joined the performers in the summer of 2020 on the storied island of Ithaca, in the Ionian Sea. Hoping to sail with the nomad crew, I happened to arrive the very day their engine broke down. Apparently it was a regular occurrence. A technician from the island mocked them: The engines were rusting from lack of use, he said.

It was true that Fred Normal and Alvaro Ramirez, the captains, never wanted to use the engines, aiming instead to sail with the wind as much as possible — even while docking at and departing from the port.

Twenty years earlier, in the United States, Fred, an Alaska-born circus performer, decided it was pointless to try to change the world while traveling with gas-guzzling trucks and caravans. Instead, he resolved to offer his form of utopia to people across the United States and Europe by bicycle. He rode around with his crew from one town to the next, staging pop-up shows and sleeping beside campfires.

Eventually, on the Southern coast of Italy, he met Nikoleta Giakumeli, a Greek acrobat, and Alvaro, a Uruguayan clown who had been traveling around Europe. Together, the trio dreamed up the idea of a seaborne circus, even though none of them had ever formally sailed.

Colorful scenery — at sea, and during various performances around Greece.

So they learned. For 13 years, Fred and Nikoleta lived on their boat, Surloulou, through summers and winters. After the birth of their daughter, Sirena, who at the age of 4 is already climbing ropes and trying her first tricks as an acrobat, their lives changed dramatically. They now spend less time with the circus, which, despite their absence, continues reinventing itself with new performers and new ideas.

Dozens of artists from all over the world are connected with the Sea Clown Sailing Circus. Some join the crew for only a few days; others join for the whole summer. But a core group of around seven or eight people are trying to bring the circus to a greater acclaim — not only by roaming freely from one Greek island to another, but also by producing more meaningful, and more philosophically engaging, shows.

In the summer of 2021, when I joined the Sea Clowns again for a month, they were producing a new show based on Plato’s allegory of the cave. I saw firsthand how dedicated the performers are to their craft. Though their performances often feel impromptu, the Sea Clowns are in fact immensely disciplined in their preparations. Every act — from acrobatic shows and fire juggling to aerial rope tricks and slacklining — requires a tremendous degree of skill and training. And they simply love to learn.

Being a part of the crew requires being good at sailing, music or circus acts, and ideally all three. But what’s most important is the ability to express enough humor, kindness and respect to live in proximity with a crew of curious artists every day without creating tensions.

It’s also a challenge, of course, to adapt to life on a shoestring budget. “We live or we die by the hat,” Fred would say at the end of every show, inviting the public to offer a donation for the Sea Clowns’ survival.

The life of a street (or water) artist is fragile, delicate — like a tightrope act, or juggling with knives, or sailing through a storm. Yet for most of the crew, nothing seems to offer them a greater sense of freedom. The Sea Clowns ride with their sails open to the wind, confronting both their dreams and an unpredictable future.

“Our work aims to show that nothing is impossible,” Alvaro said, “unless your mind convinces you to believe the opposite.”

Nicola Zolin is an Italian photojournalist, writer and filmmaker. You can follow his work on Instagram and Twitter.

Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. And sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to receive expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places list for 2022.

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Fragile, Delicate, Free: Glimpses of Circus Life, at Sea - The New York Times
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Fragile, Delicate, Free: Glimpses of Circus Life, at Sea - The New York Times

They arrive from the port with their colorful clothes and their well-worn musical instruments, parading through the village and performing at the various squares. Islanders view them with a mix of awe and wonder.

At times they look like superheroes, moving together to the rhythm of the music, conjuring tricks like magicians.

The crew of the Sea Clowns.

I first heard of the Sea Clown Sailing Circus when I was following the stories of refugees crossing Greece. Members of the circus were performing at a camp in Athens, trying to win smiles from children who had experienced too much pain.

Later, I joined the performers in the summer of 2020 on the storied island of Ithaca, in the Ionian Sea. Hoping to sail with the nomad crew, I happened to arrive the very day their engine broke down. Apparently it was a regular occurrence. A technician from the island mocked them: The engines were rusting from lack of use, he said.

It was true that Fred Normal and Alvaro Ramirez, the captains, never wanted to use the engines, aiming instead to sail with the wind as much as possible — even while docking at and departing from the port.

Twenty years earlier, in the United States, Fred, an Alaska-born circus performer, decided it was pointless to try to change the world while traveling with gas-guzzling trucks and caravans. Instead, he resolved to offer his form of utopia to people across the United States and Europe by bicycle. He rode around with his crew from one town to the next, staging pop-up shows and sleeping beside campfires.

Eventually, on the Southern coast of Italy, he met Nikoleta Giakumeli, a Greek acrobat, and Alvaro, a Uruguayan clown who had been traveling around Europe. Together, the trio dreamed up the idea of a seaborne circus, even though none of them had ever formally sailed.

Colorful scenery — at sea, and during various performances around Greece.

So they learned. For 13 years, Fred and Nikoleta lived on their boat, Surloulou, through summers and winters. After the birth of their daughter, Sirena, who at the age of 4 is already climbing ropes and trying her first tricks as an acrobat, their lives changed dramatically. They now spend less time with the circus, which, despite their absence, continues reinventing itself with new performers and new ideas.

Dozens of artists from all over the world are connected with the Sea Clown Sailing Circus. Some join the crew for only a few days; others join for the whole summer. But a core group of around seven or eight people are trying to bring the circus to a greater acclaim — not only by roaming freely from one Greek island to another, but also by producing more meaningful, and more philosophically engaging, shows.

In the summer of 2021, when I joined the Sea Clowns again for a month, they were producing a new show based on Plato’s allegory of the cave. I saw firsthand how dedicated the performers are to their craft. Though their performances often feel impromptu, the Sea Clowns are in fact immensely disciplined in their preparations. Every act — from acrobatic shows and fire juggling to aerial rope tricks and slacklining — requires a tremendous degree of skill and training. And they simply love to learn.

Being a part of the crew requires being good at sailing, music or circus acts, and ideally all three. But what’s most important is the ability to express enough humor, kindness and respect to live in proximity with a crew of curious artists every day without creating tensions.

It’s also a challenge, of course, to adapt to life on a shoestring budget. “We live or we die by the hat,” Fred would say at the end of every show, inviting the public to offer a donation for the Sea Clowns’ survival.

The life of a street (or water) artist is fragile, delicate — like a tightrope act, or juggling with knives, or sailing through a storm. Yet for most of the crew, nothing seems to offer them a greater sense of freedom. The Sea Clowns ride with their sails open to the wind, confronting both their dreams and an unpredictable future.

“Our work aims to show that nothing is impossible,” Alvaro said, “unless your mind convinces you to believe the opposite.”

Nicola Zolin is an Italian photojournalist, writer and filmmaker. You can follow his work on Instagram and Twitter.

Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. And sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to receive expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places list for 2022.

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Fragile, Delicate, Free: Glimpses of Circus Life, at Sea - The New York Times
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Sunday, October 30, 2022

Katie Ledecky sets world record in 1,500-meter freestyle - ESPN

TORONTO -- Katie Ledecky is having a great time in her first competitive event of the season at this week's FINA Swimming World Cup.

Ledecky set a world record in the 1,500-meter freestyle on Saturday night at the Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre.

"I knew that record was within reach just based on some things I've done in training, especially my distance stuff [as it] has felt really good this fall," Ledecky said. "So I felt locked into the pace."

The 10-time Olympic medalist, who doesn't compete in short-course events very often, finished in 15:08.24, taking nearly 10 seconds off the previous record set by Germany's Sarah Wellbrock (15:18.01) in 2019.

Canada's Summer McIntosh, who also set a world junior mark when she edged Ledecky in the 400 free on Friday, finished first in the 400 medley in 4:21.49 to lead a Canadian sweep.

"Throughout the entire race I felt really in control and strong so I'm really happy," she said.

Sydney Pickrem was second in 4:28.45, and Bailey Andison was third in 4:29.36.

McIntosh, a 16-year-old from Toronto, trimmed nearly two seconds off the previous world junior mark set by China's Shiwen Ye (4:23.33) in 2012.

Ledecky took gold ahead of Beatriz Dizotti of Brazil (15:48.82) and Laila Oravsky of Canada, who was third in 16:16.86.

"It's just so unreal to be a part of something so amazing," Oravsky said. "That was the fastest 1,500 that was just swum and I was a part of that. It's crazy."

Maggie Mac Neil of Canada improved her national record in the women's 50-meter butterfly, finishing first in 24.75 seconds. American Beata Nelson won the women's 100 backstroke, and Shaine Casas of the U.S. finished first in the men's 200-meter medley.

One of the biggest roars from the near-capacity crowd came at Ledecky's finish. She splashed the water after looking up at the scoreboard to see her world-record time.

"Honestly, most of that emotion was just because it hurt a lot," she said. "When something hurts that much, you want to see a great result like that. It was just mostly happiness.

"I felt good and I was very pleased with the outcome."

She returned to the pool a short time later for the 200 free and took silver in 1:52.31 behind Hong Kong's Siobhan Bernadette Haughey.

"I didn't have any super type of preparation for this meet," Ledecky said. "I just wanted to come in and race some international swimmers. These meets [Toronto and next week in Indianapolis] are on North American soil so I just had fun with it."

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Katie Ledecky sets world record in 1,500-meter freestyle - ESPN
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Friday, October 28, 2022

Free Taco Bell! Kyle Schwarber's World Series steal wins tacos for all - USA TODAY

Biden Admin Probed Over ‘Illegal Efforts to Undermine Israeli Sovereignty Over Jerusalem’ - Washington Free Beacon

Legal group wants internal documents about U.S. funding for Palestinians

Joe Biden and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas in 2016 / AP
• October 28, 2022 3:30 pm

A legal advocacy group says the Biden administration is violating U.S. law by funneling more than half-a-billion dollars to the Palestinian government and is demanding the administration release a slew of internal documents that the group believes will reveal an illegal effort "to undermine Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem," according to a copy of the Freedom of Information Act request provided to the Washington Free Beacon.

America First Legal, a group of conservative lawyers and activists, hit the State Department this week with a FOIA request that instructs it to furnish a slew of internal documents about U.S. funding for the Palestinian Authority, which was frozen under former president Donald Trump but resumed when President Joe Biden took office.

The legal group suspects that a portion of this taxpayer aid is being used to support Palestinian-led projects in Jerusalem that could undermine Israel’s control of its capital city. The Trump administration recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s undivided capital, but the Biden administration, while formally upholding the policy, has moved to open a Palestinian Affairs unit in the city, fueling concerns that the consulate is working with the Palestinian government to erode Israel’s sovereignty over Jerusalem.

The Biden administration’s funding may also violate a bipartisan U.S. law that prevents taxpayer funds from reaching the Palestinian government until it ends a terrorist payment program known as "pay-to-slay," in which imprisoned militants and their families receive stipends. The Free Beacon reported earlier this month on a non-public State Department report to Congress that determined the Palestinian government is still paying terrorists, even as U.S. aid dollars flow.

"Make no mistake—the purpose here, contrary to U.S. law, is creating facts on the ground to undermine Israel’s borders and sovereignty and to reverse the United States’ recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital city," Reed D. Rubinstein, America First Legal’s senior counselor and director of oversight, said in a statement. "The Biden administration is pumping hundreds of millions in U.S. taxpayer dollars into ‘projects’ that directly benefit both the corrupt Palestinian Authority and the terrorist Hamas dictatorship."

The organization’s FOIA centers on a State Department fact sheet from March that outlined projects run by the United States’ Palestinian Affairs Unit, which was opened to increase diplomacy with the Palestinian government. The State Department says this office is responsible for partnering "with Palestinian and American organizations to support projects in Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza [Strip] that increase exchange between our two peoples and advance shared goals on topics such as education, entrepreneurship, environmental protection, English language learning, science and technology, art and culture, gender equality, human rights, and democracy, among others."

These programs also include "university linkage projects connecting American and Palestinian universities directly for exchange and collaboration for students and faculty," according to the State Department.

America First Legal wants to know the nature of these programs and whether they are benefiting groups that do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem. The FOIA request instructs the State Department to turn over "all records" identifying these "Palestinian and American organizations," as well as the specific projects they are working on.

The State Department fact sheet also references "American spaces in Jerusalem Ramallah and Hebron" that serve as "venues and hubs for many of these" unnamed programs. America First Legal is asking for "all records identifying, about, regarding, or referencing each such ‘American Space,’ including the street address and budget of each."

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Biden Admin Probed Over ‘Illegal Efforts to Undermine Israeli Sovereignty Over Jerusalem’ - Washington Free Beacon
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‘Moderate’ Matt Castelli Says He’s Serious About Crime and Inflation. He’s Endorsed by a Group That Calls Those Issues ‘Kinda Funny.’ - Washington Free Beacon

Congressional hopeful Matt Castelli (D., N.Y) says he’s a moderate who’s serious about crime, illegal immigration, and inflation. One of his biggest backers is a progressive group that says concerns about those issues are "actually kinda funny."

Rensselaer County Women for Change mocked Republicans for caring about those issues in an Oct. 21 email obtained by the Washington Free Beacon. "It’s actually kinda funny, like checking our 2022 bingo cards. Google your local Republican candidate and yup! There it is! Inflation, crime, and border security." Castelli prominently displays the group’s endorsement on his campaign website and relies heavily on their efforts to rally voters.

The group’s endorsement could cause trouble for Castelli, who is seeking to unseat Rep. Elise Stefanik. (R., N.Y.) in New York’s rural 21st Congressional District. Castelli, a former CIA officer who moved to the district from Washington, D.C., just one month prior to launching his campaign, has often been accused of hypocrisy. Castelli claims he supports the Second Amendment and will protect the rights of gun owners, but earlier in October, a Castelli campaign staffer told volunteers in a Zoom call that he is "for gun control" and bans on so-called assault rifles, the Free Beacon reported.

A spokesman for the Stefanik campaign said Castelli’s acceptance of the group’s endorsement is disqualifying.

"Our Far Left Downstate Democrat opponent is endorsed by a radical Far Left group that has advocated for gun bans, a disqualifying position in Upstate New York," Alex deGrasse, a senior adviser to Stefanik’s campaign, told the Free Beacon. "Now this same Far Left group is downplaying the inflation crisis, which is crushing Upstate New York families."

Rensselaer County Women for Change said the "actual issues" on the ballot in November are abortion, democracy, and protections for LGBTQ people. In the Oct. 21 email, the group mocks Republican policy priorities in explicit detail.

On crime, an issue that more than three-quarters of American voters say is a major problem, the group said: "Crime—oh ffs [for fuck’s sake] stop it. The very minute Republicans suggest a plan to get guns, especially assault weapons, off the streets, I will be very interested in hearing their take on how to reduce crime."

The group also claims that the only people who care about illegal immigration are "border hysteria peeps" that don’t like black and brown people. But recent polls show that more than half of all Americans, including 40 percent of Democrats, believe the United States is facing an invasion at the southern border.

Inflation, the email said, is a temporary phenomenon caused by a "mismanaged pandemic," Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and "corporate greed." Some 82 percent of Americans view inflation as an extremely or very important issue, an October poll found, compared to 56 percent who viewed abortion as a top issue. Concerns over the cost of living took center stage over threats to democracy among a majority of Americans, the poll also found.

Rensselaer County Women for Change and its two co-chairs, Sally Lauletta and Ginny O’Brien, did not return requests for comment.

A Republican strategist told the Free Beacon that Castelli is "dependent on very liberal groups" like Rensselaer County Women for Change because he "carpetbagged into the district" and "is not well-known or from here."

DeGrasse called on Castelli to address Rensselaer County Women for Change’s statement.

"Voters deserve to know if our Downstate Democrat opponent will denounce support from this group or if he will shamefully continue to accept the endorsement from this radical group," deGrasse said.

Castelli and his campaign did not return requests for comment.

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‘Moderate’ Matt Castelli Says He’s Serious About Crime and Inflation. He’s Endorsed by a Group That Calls Those Issues ‘Kinda Funny.’ - Washington Free Beacon
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Thursday, October 27, 2022

Compost it Sonoma! Free counter top pails now available to Sonoma residents. - City of Sonoma

Woman handing a man a free compost pail over a counter in a store.

Fight Climate Change – Compost Your Kitchen Scraps!

Organic material that is landfilled converts to methane. Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change. It is 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide. In California, food scraps account for 18 percent of all the material that goes to landfills. This means on average, every year each person in Sonoma sends about 300 pounds of food scraps to the landfill.

The good news is that methane from landfills is the easiest greenhouse gas to prevent. By placing all organic materials, which includes your food scraps, into the green organics cart, you can prevent the generation of methane. In addition to food scraps, because paper towels, napkins, and tissue cannot be recycled, but can be composted, they also should go into your green organics cart.

If you have felt a little powerless to help fight climate change, collecting and separating your food scraps is the easiest and no-cost action to make a difference. To make it even easier, the City of Sonoma is giving away free countertop kitchen pails to collect your scraps. So what are you waiting for? Compost It Sonoma!

Small countertop garbage pail to collect food scraps with the lid open.It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3….

  1. Get your free countertop kitchen pail by emailing CounterTopPails@gmail.com for free delivery (city of Sonoma residents only) OR pick one up at one of these locations, limit one per household, while supplies last:
  2. Collect your food scraps in the kitchen pail.
    • You can line your pail with newspaper, paper bag, or paper egg cartons. Residents of Sonoma can use certified, green compostable plastic bags.
  3. Transfer the food scraps to the green organics cart and place it at the curb on garbage day.
    • Sonoma Garbage Collectors will collect and haul your food scraps and green organic waste to a composting facility to recycle these materials into valuable compost.

Sort it Sonoma! Is a partnership between the City of Sonoma, Sonoma Garbage Collectors and Zero Waste Sonoma. For more information about proper waste sorting, please visit our Sort It Sonoma! webpage.

Photo: Sonoma Mayor Jack Ding picks up a free kitchen compost pail and biodegradable pail liners from Jana Wang at her store, Refill Madness in the Sonoma Valley Shopping Center.

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Compost it Sonoma! Free counter top pails now available to Sonoma residents. - City of Sonoma
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Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Free Smoke Alarms Available for Nassau Residents through Senator Kaplan & Red Cross - The New York State Senate

Free Smoke Alarms

Keeping our community and our families safe is my top priority. That’s why I’m helping the American Red Cross Sound the Alarm about home fires.  

Home fires happen more frequently than we'd care to think about, but there's a lot we can do to protect our families in the event of an emergency. Smoke detectors are a key tool to help families escape a home fire safely, and thanks to my partnership with the Red Cross, any family in our community can get smoke detectors installed in their home free of charge.

If you don’t have a working smoke alarm in your home, please click on this link, or call my office at 516-746-5924 to set up an appointment to get a free smoke alarm installed in your home. 

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Free Smoke Alarms Available for Nassau Residents through Senator Kaplan & Red Cross - The New York State Senate
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Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Fall Harvest Fun! Free & low-cost activities across Seattle - Parkways - Parkways Seattle Parks and Recreation

Fall is here! And with it, comes fall festivities hosted by Seattle Parks and Recreation. Whether it’s pumpkin carving, a glow party, or a pumpkin swim, we have something for everyone!

  • Wednesday, October 26, South Park Toddler Halloween Fest
    Ages 0-5. Come join us as we get into the Halloween spirit! We will have a costume contest, pumpkin painting, mask decorating, arts & crafts, cookie decorating, and more! 10/26; 10am-1pm; FREE
  • Friday, October 28, Pumpkin Carving at Northgate Community Center
    Ages 5 and Older. Kick off Halloween weekend with a family pumpkin carving and decorating night! We’ll have pumpkins of all sizes with safe carving tools and paints to create your spooky or funky jack-o-lantern. Enjoy cookies, candies, and hot cider. Stick around for the jack-o-lantern contest to win prizes! All ages welcome. 10/28; 9-11 a.m.; FREE
  • Friday, October 28, Halloween Fest at Montlake Community Center
    All Ages. Bring the whole family down to our Halloween Carnival for a beWITCHing night of fun. Enjoy carnival games, face painting, arts and crafts, and collect some candy! We will also have a toiletry drive if you would like to donate! 10/28; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; FREE
  • Friday, October 28, Glow Party at Delridge Community Center
    Ages 5 and Older. Join the Delridge Community Center for our famous glow in the dark party! Enjoy our themed games, snacks, and music. Wear your costume, face paint, or anything that will illuminate the party. 10/28; 6-8 p.m.; FREE
  • Friday, October 28, Fright Night Trick-or-Treat Walk at Lake City Mini Park and Lake City Community Center
    –5:15-6:15pm: Trick or Treat Walk. Location: Lake City Mini-Park, at the corner of Lake City Way and NE 125th St. Route maps and treat bags available at the park. Trick-or-Treat Walk to local businesses ends at Friday Night Party.
    –6:30-8:00pm: Friday Night Party. Location: Lake City Community Center. Fun for the whole family, especially kids 2-12!
  • Friday, October 28, Loyal Heights Community Center Halloween Carnival
    Join us for a fright fest of activities, games, and challenges. Dress in costume and remember to bring a bag for your goodies. Festivities include carnival games, crafts, cookie decorating, cake walks, and more! Hot Dogs, popcorn, and water will be on sale for $1 each. Volunteers are needed to help set-up, clean-up, and run carnival games (call 206-684-4052 to volunteer). Proceeds from tickets and food sales support the LHCC Scholarship Fund. Bracelets are $12 for unlimited activities, and individual tickets are .50 cents each. 10/28; 6-8:30pm.
  • Friday, October 28, Creepy Carnival for Kids at Garfield Community Center
    All ages. You do not want to miss this popular event. We will have music, carnival games, face painting and lots of treats. Wear your costume to participate in the costume contest! Donations are welcome. Volunteers needed! Contact us at 206-684-4788 for more information. 10/28; 6-8pm; FREE.
  • Friday, October 28, Meadowbrook Monster Bash
    Meadowbrook Pool is planning a free, fun party on October 28th from 4:30-7:30pm. We will have several stations with games and excitement for all ages. At 6pm we plan to have everyone climb out of the water briefly so we can roll out the never-before-seen pool inflatable! Half the pool will remain open for swimming, but space will be limited. Bring your camera’s because this will be a swim to remember! 10/28; 4:30-7:30pm; FREE.
  • Friday, October 28, Magnolia Community Center
    Ages 5 and under. Halloween activities and fun await. Don’t forget to wear your costume. 10/28; 11am-1pm; FREE
  • Saturday, October 29, Evans Pool Pumpkin Swim
    Come play and bob around with floating pumpkins at Evans Pool! 10/29; 3:30-4:30pm; FREE public swim.
  • Saturday, Oct. 29, Thrill the World at Magnolia Community Center
    Dance groups around the world will peform to “Thriller” at the same time. Join us on Saturday, October 29 at Magnolia Community Center. The fun begins at 2:30pm and the performance starts at 3pm. Costume contest and dance tutorial following the performance. seattlethrillers.com

Partner Events:

  • Friday, October 28, Freeway Park “Park Pups” canine costume contest
    Celebrate the spookiest season at Freeway Park with a canine costume contest! There will be prizes for: best overall, most creative, and spookiest costumes. Free treats, live music, and a photo booth. No prior registration is required to join the costume contest. All Freeway Park Association events are free, and open to the public. October 28th, 5-7pm in Upper Lawns at Freeway Park. Park Pups Spooktacular | Freeway Park Association
  • Fall Fun Days at Westlake Park and Occidental Square, now through November 11
    Wednesdays and Fridays in Occidental Square
    –Thursdays and Saturdays in Westlake Park
    Get into the autumn spirit with the Downtown Seattle Association’s latest family-friendly parks activation, Fall Fun Days! We’ll host weekly free themed events in Westlake Park and Occidental Square celebrating everything you love about the season — football games, Halloween sweets, seasonal treats and more. Details here: Fall Fun Days at Westlake Park and Occidental Square (downtownseattle.org)

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10-25-22 Free Application Period - SUNY - The State University of New York

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10-25-22 Free Application Period  SUNY - The State University of New York
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Some Stanford professors oppose closed event on free speech - Inside Higher Ed

There’s mounting faculty opposition to an invitation-only, no-media-allowed academic freedom conference scheduled for next week at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business. The conference, headlined by libertarian tech billionaire Peter Thiel and organized by the business school’s Classical Liberalism Initiative, has been criticized as pre-emptively limiting dissent in the name of open discourse.

Critics also fault the conference for platforming such speakers as Amy Wax, Robert Mundheim Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania, who is known for making racist remarks—including to and about students.

“While we respect the rights of free speech and academic freedom, both are meant to encourage debate and discussion that can test those assertions,” more than 30 Stanford professors from a variety of fields said in a statement asking Stanford to distance itself from the conference. “The organizers have in fact gone out of their way to create a hermetically-sealed event, safe from any and all meaningful debate, filled with self-affirmation and self-congratulation, an event where racism is given shelter and immunity." 

A conference on academic freedom "would indeed be a timely and urgent one, given today’s context where we find the passage of laws (e.g. in Florida) banning faculty from teaching about selected issues, the banning of books from public libraries, the banning of even particular forms of language, and the harassment of scholars working in certain fields of study, like Michael Mann working on climate change, or Jo Boaler on working on math curricula," the faculty statement also says. "But the organizers of this conference have something else in mind."

Event organizers appear to be responding to some criticism of the conference, adding a livestream option and at least one new speaker. But these steps haven’t relieved opponents’ concerns.

Stanford did not immediately provide comment on the event. Both Jonathan Levin, dean of the business school, and Persis Drell, provost, faced questions about it last week while addressing the Faculty Senate. Drell said university funds are being used for the conference, consistent with university policy, and that faculty members may generally decide how to run conferences. Levin told the Senate that universities “strive to be places where we are fostering engagement and discussion and debate about a broad set of issues from a broad range of perspectives” but that not “every discussion on campus, or every colloquium, or every conference is going to have a balanced range of perspectives and views.” That’s “a by-product of the freedom that we give to faculty and to students,” he added.

‘Ideological Monocultures’

Faculty organizers of the conference, from Stanford and several other institutions, promote it as follows: “Academic freedom, open inquiry, and freedom of speech are under threat as they have not been for decades. Visibly, academics are ‘canceled,’ fired, or subject to lengthy disciplinary proceedings in response to academic writing or public engagement. Less visibly, funding agencies, university bureaucracies, hiring procedures, promotion committees, professional organizations, and journals censor some kinds of research or demand adherence to political causes. Many parts of universities have become politicized or have turned into ideological monocultures, excluding people, ideas, or kinds of work that challenge their orthodoxy. Younger researchers are afraid to speak and write and don’t investigate promising ideas that they fear will endanger their careers.”

The two-day gathering “aims to identify ways to restore academic freedom, open inquiry, and freedom of speech and expression on campus and in the larger culture and restore the open debate required for new knowledge to flourish. The conference will focus on the organizational structures leading to censorship and stifling debate and how to repair them.”

Beyond Thiel and Wax, speakers include Dorian Abbot, associate professor of geophysical sciences at the University of Chicago; Scott Atlas, Robert Wesson Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution and former senior adviser to former president Trump; Tyler Cowen, professor of economics at George Mason University; Jerry Coyne, professor emeritus of biology at the University of Chicago; Niall Ferguson, Milbank Family Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution; Jonathan Haidt, professor of ethical leadership at New York University and Heterodox Academy co-founder; Lee Jussim, distinguished professor of psychology at Rutgers University; Joshua Katz, former professor of classics at Princeton University; Richard Lowery, associate professor of finance at the University of Texas at Austin; Greg Lukianoff, president and CEO of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression; Steven Pinker, Johnstone Family Professor in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University; Ilya Shapiro, senior fellow and director of constitutional studies at the Manhattan Institute; Nadine Strossen, John Marshall Harlan II Professor of Law Emerita at New York Law School and former president of the American Civil Liberties Union; and Elizabeth Weiss, professor of anthropology at San José State University.

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Some of these speakers have long had reputations as free speech advocates. But many recently have been involved in their own academic freedom or academic freedom–adjacent disputes. Abbot saw a planned public lecture canceled over his criticism of diversity initiatives. Atlas was slammed by Stanford colleagues for downplaying the threat of the coronavirus. Lowery is suing Texas A&M University, arguing that a new faculty fellowship program designed to increase diversity at the university discriminates against white and Asian male candidates. Shapiro was suspended and then resigned from Georgetown University Law Center over his tweet about President Biden picking a “lesser” Black woman for the U.S. Supreme Court. Weiss has accused her university of retaliating against her for her stance against repatriating skeletal remains for reburial. And Wax, whose racist statements were for many years begrudgingly accepted by Penn, is currently facing serious disciplinary action.

Katz, the former Princeton professor, has become something of a martyr among the antiwoke, with his supporters arguing that he was really fired for publicly comparing Black student activists to terrorists. Princeton says he was terminated because the university learned new information about Katz’s affair with an undergraduate under his supervision. Katz previously had been punished for the inappropriate relationship. But Princeton said that the woman did not cooperate with its initial investigation in 2018 and that when she finally came forward in 2021, it was determined that Katz had actively discouraged her from participating in Princeton’s first inquiry and from seeking mental health care, even though she was in distress.

Katz, who has denied engaging in any misconduct beyond that for which he was first punished, is now married to another former student of his, Solveig Lucia Gold. Gold has written and spoken about their relationship, saying she and Katz did not start dating until after she graduated from Princeton. She, too, is scheduled to speak at the conference. Her panel is called “Are the Humanities Liberal?/How to Liberate Them?” Gold earned her Ph.D. in classics this year and is currently a postdoctoral research associate at Princeton.

‘Proof That the Conference Is Necessary’

Abbot, who is helping organize the event, said Monday that the “vituperative reaction of some academics to a conference promoting academic freedom is proof that the conference is necessary. The conference will be a good opportunity for those interested in academic freedom to brainstorm strategies and coordinate across universities.”

African American literature scholar Hollis Robbins, dean of the College of Humanities at the University of Utah, who was just added to the lineup, doesn’t quite fit the academic freedom purist mold or the canceled-scholar one. She said she reached out to another conference organizer, Iván Marinovic, associate professor of accounting at Stanford, about the participation of administrators on Lukianoff's and Strossen's panel, and that Marinovic “generously invited me to participate. As a dean I am of course interested in supporting the academic freedom of faculty, particularly at this moment in time.”

Strossen, who has previously said that she was not aware the conference was a closed event, said Monday that the new livestreaming option addresses any concerns she had.

Asked where FIRE stands on whether academic freedom events should be open by default, Nico Perrino, executive vice president of the organization, said that Lukianoff (FIRE’s CEO) agreed to participate without being told whether the event was open or closed, and that he supports media access. But as a Stanford graduate, Lukianoff says that it’s “not uncommon” for campus events to be invite-only, Perrino added.

Conference organizers told FIRE that they’d invited numerous progressives to participate, Perrino also said, but over time “more conservatives said yes, and very few of the big-name progressives said yes. The political polarization and tribalism is dispiriting.”

Abbot said that organizers invited several dozen progressives who’d previously expressed a “negative view” of academic freedom, who ultimately declined.

Marinovic said that "we invited many academics who have argued for some kind of restrictions on academic speech to present and debate their views, and all of them declined."

David Palumbo-Liu, Louise Hewlett Nixon Professor at Stanford and professor of comparative literature, who’s publicly opposed the conference, said he wasn’t asked to participate, but that a few of his colleagues had been asked and “objected to the lopsidedness of the program. The organizers placed them on panels where it was clear they were there only as tokens.”

Livestreaming the conference doesn’t change much at all, Palumbo-Liu added.

“This in no way solves the problem of the inability of those not present being able to substantially question or interact with speakers. That is, it does not reflect a change of thinking whatsoever, nor does it cover up the original intent of the conference.”

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Monday, October 24, 2022

Stanford Offering Free Tickets for Final Two Home Games - Sports Illustrated

It’s no secret that Stanford football games are not well attended. Screenshots of the stands during broadcasts are often tweeted out in mocking tones, and the routine 7:30 p.m. local time kickoffs don’t help either.

But fear not, Cardinal fans, for the school has found a potential remedy: Free tickets.

Officially, the school’s latest idea to boost attendance is being labeled a “free trial” for fans to try and see if they want to opt in and actually buy tickets for the 2023 season. The promotion will cover Stanford’s final two home games of the season—Nov. 5 against Washington State and Nov. 26 against BYU.

“Starting today, you can test drive seats for the 2023 season, for FREE,” the release said, per Stewart Mandel of The Athletic. “That’s right … get free tickets to our final two home games of this season, and lock in those same seats for the entire 2023 home schedule.”

The idea behind the promotion is, ostensibly, to try and generate momentum for fans to purchase season tickets for next year. But fans will be allowed to take full advantage of the promotion this season and cancel before ever having to pony up any actual money toward 2023 games.

“Decide that next year’s plan isn’t right for you. No sweat; you can cancel anytime this year. It’s truly a free trial for the 2022 season.”

With its bookish reputation and lack of an exciting game-day atmosphere, Stanford football often gets a bad rap. But prior to its downturn in recent years, the program had become one of the most consistently successful in college football. The Cardinal averaged over 10 wins per year from 2010 to ’17, with a Rose Bowl win, three conference titles and four top-15 finishes in the AP Poll. Things haven’t gone so well lately, which hasn’t helped garner interest in an already-apathetic fan base, so perhaps this can at least get a few more eyeballs on the team for the home stretch.

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Convicted Murderer Freed by Philly DA Larry Krasner in Custody After Deadly Shooting - Washington Free Beacon

Last year, Philadelphia district attorney Larry Krasner (D.) made the controversial decision to free a murderer serving a life sentence. On Friday, that man turned himself in to the police and is expected to be charged in connection with a second murder.

Police announced on Friday that 32-year-old Jahmir Harris was in custody following the fatal September shooting of Charles Gossett. Security footage shows Harris acting as a getaway driver approaching the victim and two gunmen shooting Gossett in the back of the head.

Harris was convicted in 2012 of shooting 45-year-old Louis Porter to death and was sentenced to life in prison without parole. But in 2021, Krasner’s office vacated Harris’s sentence, claiming that his "constitutional rights had been violated at the time of his prosecution."

Common Pleas Court judge Rose Marie DeFino-Nastasi slammed the move, saying she did not believe Harris had been proven innocent and questioning how Krasner "felt confident in releasing a murder suspect from prison when [his office] said one page earlier that the criminal investigation in this matter was still ongoing."

News of Harris’s repeat offense could spell trouble for Krasner, who has come under fire for his soft-on-crime policies. The Pennsylvania House’s Select Committee on Restoring Law and Order is weighing impeachment articles for Krasner, which the self-described progressive prosecutor has dismissed as a "political stunt." Krasner’s campaign received nearly $1.7 million from the left-wing megadonor George Soros’s Justice and Public Safety PAC in 2017.

Porter’s brother, Walter, recognized Harris in surveillance footage showing Gossett’s murder and notified police.

"I’m like, ‘Wow, this dude again,’" he told the Philadelphia Inquirer. "It’s the same exact pattern." The other shooters have not been identified.

Harris was convicted of murdering Porter following a disagreement over fake Percocet pills. An eyewitness identified Harris at the scene of the shooting. Porter’s five-year-old son was also present in the backseat of a parked car.

Krasner defended Harris’s exoneration last week, saying "wrongful convictions" undermine public trust in the justice system. His office maintains Harris’s "constitutional rights had been violated" in the 2012 case since information on another suspect was not submitted to defense attorneys.

Krasner’s Conviction Integrity Unit, which handles cases like Harris’s, has exonerated nearly 30 convicts during his tenure. Prosecutors for the office say Harris is the first that has gone on to kill.

But the Porter family told the Inquirer it never doubted Harris’s conviction. Walter Porter said Gossett’s murder "reopens the wounds" of their family’s grief over the killing.

"I want to see justice," Porter said. "Not only for my family. But I really want to see justice for this other family that’s out there suffering."

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Aaron Judge free agency primer: What will shape his next contract, and where Yankees star could land - CBS Sports

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After the funeral dirges for the New Yankees 2022 season have all played, the thoughts of the team's fans and observers will turn from yet another playoff defeat by the Houston Astros and toward the dominant storyline of the coming winter – Aaron Judge's looming free agency. 

Judge, coming off a 2022 campaign in which he clouted an American League-record 62 home runs, will be the most coveted of the 2022-23 class of free agents. Given his skills, the dominance of his walk year, and the prominence of the team for whom he may have played his last game, Judge without question will also be the most talked-about free agent of the coming offseason. So we're here to do just that – talk about Aaron Judge and his forthcoming free agency. 

Given that the offseason has not yet begun, there's a lot of guesswork in what follows, but there are also some basic facts that will be germane to Judge's market journey regardless of where he signs and for how much. Now let's commence setting the scene for all of that with a quick look at each of the six factors that will shape Judge's future. 

Judge's legendary walk year

As noted, Judge this season swatted 62 home runs, but that's not the extent of his excellence in 2022. In 157 regular-season games, he slashed .311/.425/.686, which comes to a ridiculously lofty OPS+ of 211. Judge made a run at the Triple Crown, and he led the AL in walks. As has been the case throughout his entire career, he also boasted top-of-the-scale batted-ball metrics, which project continued elite production moving forward. 

As well, Judge, seemingly despite his hulking physical dimensions, is no one-dimensional slugger. He stole 16 bases this season and took the extra base 50 percent of the time versus a league-average figure of 43 percent. Judge also spent the majority of his defensive innings in center field, and in the ALCS he reminded us that he's capable of ranging snares like this one: 

That athleticism bodes very well for Judge when it comes to his future aging curve and suggests that he's going to retain his skills for a long time. That's key for a free agent who in 2023 will be going into his age-31 season. 

The Yankees' attempts to sign him

Yankees brass has repeatedly expressed a desire to keep Judge in the fold by signing him to a long-term extension, and there were repeated negotiations to that end leading up to the 2022 regular season. Yankees GM Brian Cashman, in a departure from established norms, said publicly that the Yankees offered Judge a seven-year, $213.5 million contract extension late in spring training, which Judge refused. That wasn't a competitive offer even before Judge's legendary 2022 season, and the fact that Cashman crowed about it to the media suggests that he failed to realize or at least refused to accept that it wasn't a competitive offer. Like so many other pending free agents, Judge had no desire to negotiate in-season, and as far as we know that was the last offer the Yankees made. If they had upped their proposal, then, well, they probably would've quite loudly said so. 

The Qualifying Offer

Here's a bit of a lesser consideration in this entire affair, but it's one you'll hear about soon enough. The Qualifying Offer (QO) is in essence a one-year offer that teams may tender to their pending free agents under most circumstances (players who have received a QO before or who were traded during their walk year are ineligible for the QO). The QO's worth is an average of the top 125 salaries in MLB and will be worth $19.65 million for the 2023 season. If a player accepts the QO that's offered, then he's under contract for the following season at that year's QO dollar figure and thus his free agency is tabled for another year. A player accepting the QO is also free to work out a multi-year extension with the team. 

A team who extends a QO to a pending free agent is entitled to draft-pick compensation should that player turn down the QO and sign a major-league free-agent contract with another team. Depending on multiple factors – the value of the contract he signs, and the revenue-sharing and luxury-tax status of the player's former team – that compensatory draft pick will fall at the end of the first round or at the end of competitive balance round B. On the other side, the team signing a free agent who turned down a QO must forfeit at least one draft pick and under some circumstances lose money from its international bonus pool, which is used to sign international amateur free agents. 

In the case of Judge, the Yankees will without question tender him a QO, and Judge will almost certainly turn it down. Non-superstar free agents can see their free-agent markets tamped down a bit by the burdens of a QO and the loss of draft picks, but free agents of Judge's caliber are basically immune to such effects. 

When Judge becomes a free agent

Eligible players become free agents on Nov. 6. Following that, however, is a five-day Quiet Period in which free agents can negotiate only with the team they played for in 2022. On Nov. 10, players who haven't re-signed during the Quiet Period become eligible to negotiate with any team. Nov. 10 is also the deadline for teams to make Qualifying Offers. After a player receives a QO, he has 10 days to decide whether to accept it, but he can negotiate with other teams during that time provided the Quiet Period has concluded. In Judge's case, he'll likely refuse the QO immediately and be a part of the fray of free agents eligible to do business with any team starting on Nov. 10. 

Judge's next contract

According to Jon Heyman, Judge countered that Yankees offer with a proposal of nine or 10 years at $36 million per, and, again, that was before he went out and authored a 10.2 WAR that will probably lead to his winning the AL MVP award for 2022. Pitching a deal worth up to $360 million doesn't necessarily mean you'll get that, but it's a guidepost of sorts. 

As for the contract Judge eventually signs as a free agent, whether it be with the Yankees or another suitor, our own Mike Axisa undertook a (very) deep dive into the matter in late September, when the historic breadth of Judge's 2022 season was obvious. He landed on a possible deal of $342 million over nine years. 

To expand this particular mind into hive territory, we added that figure to best guesses made by the remaining five members of the CBS Sports MLB writing and editorial staff and arrived at a crowd-sourced average figure, rounded off, of $358 million over nine years. Stated another way, our estimation is that Judge is going to sign a contract that runs through his age-38 season or so and pays him in excess of $350 million. Market conditions are fluid, of course, but that's probably close to his price tag this winter. 

Possible Judge landing spots

A return to the Yankees remains the most likely outcome. They've not been spending in line with their near-limitless revenues of late, but losing Judge would be a blow to an organization that already seems drained of energy. If Judge decides to ink elsewhere, then high-revenue clubs like the New York Mets, Chicago Cubs, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, and San Francisco Giants will be in the running. Potential dark horses include the St. Louis Cardinals, Texas Rangers, and – why not – the Houston Astros. This of course isn't an exhaustive list, and every marquee free agency seems to yield one or more surprise suitors. That will probably be the case with Judge once the madness begins very soon. 

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Bono memoir reveals the story behind the free U2 album debacle (and U2 iPod) - 9to5Mac

A memoir by Irish singer-songwriter Bono reveals the story behind the free U2 album debacle, which saw both Apple and the band become the butt of jokes on social media, as well as the subject of considerable anger toward both parties …

Free U2 album fiasco

If you don’t recall the story, back in 2014 some 500 million iTunes users found the U2 album Songs of Innocence had been added to their iTunes library. U2 and Apple viewed it as a free gift, but many were so unhappy about it that the Cupertino company was forced to create a special tool to remove it.

In an excerpt from his memoir published in The Guardian, Bono says that the idea was all his, and Apple had taken some persuasion.

“Free music?” asked Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple, with a look of mild incredulity. “Are you talking about free music?”

Ten years had gone by since the Vertigo ads; we were in his office in Cupertino, California – Guy Oseary, our new manager, me, Eddy Cue and Phil Schiller – and we’d just played the team some of our new Songs of Innocence album.

“You want to give this music away free? But the whole point of what we’re trying to do at Apple is to not give away music free. The point is to make sure musicians get paid.”

“No,” I said, “I don’t think we give it away free. I think you pay us for it, and then you give it away free, as a gift to people. Wouldn’t that be wonderful?”

Tim Cook raised an eyebrow. “You mean we pay for the album and then just distribute it?”

I said, “Yeah, like when Netflix buys the movie and gives it away to subscribers.”

Tim looked at me as if I was explaining the alphabet to an English professor. “But we’re not a subscription organisation.”

“Not yet,” I said. “Let ours be the first.”

Tim was not convinced. “There’s something not right about giving your art away for free,” he said. “And this is just to people who like U2?”

“Well,” I replied, “I think we should give it away to everybody. I mean, it’s their choice whether they want to listen to it.”

“Woke up to find Bono in my kitchen”

Bono said he did expect some pushback from people who weren’t fans, but underestimated the strength of feeling.

But what was the worst that could happen? It would be like junk mail. Wouldn’t it? Like taking our bottle of milk and leaving it on the doorstep of every house in the neighbourhood.

Not. Quite. True.

On 9 September 2014, we didn’t just put our bottle of milk at the door but in every fridge in every house in town. In some cases we poured it on to the good people’s cornflakes. And some people like to pour their own milk. And others are lactose intolerant […]

As one social media wisecracker put it, “Woke up this morning to find Bono in my kitchen, drinking my coffee, wearing my dressing gown, reading my paper.” Or, less kind, “The free U2 album is overpriced.” Mea culpa.

The artist says that they quickly realized that the reaction wasn’t about the music, but about the power of Big Tech to insert itself into our lives whether we want it or not.

Bono says he admired the reaction of Apple CEO Tim Cook.

Cook never blinked. “You talked us into an experiment,” he said. “We ran with it. It may not have worked, but we have to experiment, because the music business in its present form is not working for everyone.”

If you need any more clues as to why Steve Jobs picked Tim Cook to take on the leadership of Apple, this is one. Probably instinctively conservative, he was ready to try something different to solve a problem. When it went wrong, he was ready to take responsibility.

U2 iPod

Bono also tells the story of how the U2 iPod came about, after they persuaded Steve Jobs to feature them in one of the iconic silhouette iPod ads.

“There’s one other thing,” added Paul McGuinness. “Although the band are not looking for cash, some Apple stock, even a symbolic amount, might be a courtesy.”

“Sorry,” said Steve. “That’s a dealbreaker.”

Silence.

“Well,” I tentatively suggested. “How about our own iPod? A customised U2 iPod in black and red?”

Steve looked nonplussed. Apple, he said, is about white hardware. “You wouldn’t want a black one.” He thought for a moment. “I can show you what it would look like, but you will not like it.”

When, later, he showed the design to us, we loved it. So much that he’d ask Jony Ive, the company’s design genius, to look at it again, and OK, maybe even experiment with a red component on the device, too. To reflect our Atomic Bomb album cover.

The special edition later led to Apple’s support for Product(RED).

The book is currently available for pre-order in hardback, on Kindle, and in Apple Books.

Photo: Daniel Hazard/CC4.0

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Blue Jays manager John Schneider saves woman choking at lunch, given free beer by restaurant - Fox News

Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider sprung to action when he saw a woman choking on food while at a lunch with his wife near the team’...