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Wikinews 2020: An ‘Original reporting’ year in review
Friday, January 1, 2021
After an active year of original content published on the English-language Wikinews, we take a look back at some of the two dozen-plus original reports from our contributors during 2020.
Miss Manners In Table Settings
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By Danielle Brooks
So, you are hosting your first formal or semi-formal dinner party complete with the table settings. In the days of yore, your parties may have just been casual in nature with the food and the eating utensils laid out in a buffet style while the guests find their own places on whatever table takes their fancy after filling their plates. Well, now the rules of the ballgame are different.
Two Rules
Well, don’t despair about finding your inner Miss Manners in time for the dinner party. There are only two basic rules to remember when setting the table while the other rules are often added just because you want to lend a more sophisticated feel to the party.
— The glassware for the beverages is placed on the right while the dinnerware for the solid and the semi-solids are placed on the right. This is true regardless if the guests are right or left-handed mainly because it is more convenient in this way.
— Use the flatware like the Oneida Easton pieces from the outside in. Thus, your outermost fork or spoon must be used first in such a manner that only one piece of flatware must be used for each course.
The second rule has an important bearing on your duties as a host. You should only place the right number of dinnerware, flatware and glassware on the table commensurate to the number of dishes that will be served. In this way, your guests will not have one too many or one too few spoon, fork or plate on their places and, thus, cause embarrassment for either of you.
For example, if you will not be serving steak, then don’t place the Oneida Juilliard steak knife on the table. Similarly, if you are not serving champagne, then don’t bring out the champagne flute. In short, don’t set expectations in the kinds of food that will be served if you cannot live up to it.
Two Types
Now, in dinner parties, you have two choices in the type of dinnerware laid out on the table depending on the level of formality – or the lack thereof. Keep in mind that the dinnerware is an important component of setting the mood for the meals, thus, it is essential to choose well and choose wisely.
For formal dinners, all of the dinnerware pieces must be placed about an inch from the table’s edge and all pieces must be spaced apart equally. You start setting the table with the charger, bread and butter plate and soup bowls. Flatware should be laid out from the outside in while the glassware can reach up to 5 pieces.
In a casual dinner, you will still apply the above mentioned two basic rules with a twist. For example, you can choose to lay out all of the dinnerware and the charger may not be used.
In conclusion, the rules of table setting are relatively easy to remember with practice. The choice of dinnerware, flatware and glassware is yours to make, which means that you can be as eclectic or as orthodox with the size, shape and patterns of the tableware. It is your dinner party, after all.
About the Author: Danielle Brooks is a freelance writer who loves to entertain. Some of her favorites for entertaining are the
Oneida Easton
and
Oneida Juilliard
flatware sets
Source:
isnare.com
Permanent Link:
isnare.com/?aid=618828&ca=Home+Management
Gay Talese on the state of journalism, Iraq and his life
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Gay Talese wants to go to Iraq. “It so happens there is someone that’s working on such a thing right now for me,” the 75-year-old legendary journalist and author told David Shankbone. “Even if I was on Al-Jazeera with a gun to my head, I wouldn’t be pleading with those bastards! I’d say, ‘Go ahead. Make my day.'”
Few reporters will ever reach the stature of Talese. His 1966 profile of Frank Sinatra, Frank Sinatra Has a Cold, was not only cited by The Economist as the greatest profile of Sinatra ever written, but is considered the greatest of any celebrity profile ever written. In the 70th anniversary issue of Esquire in October 2003, the editors declared the piece the “Best Story Esquire Ever Published.”
Talese helped create and define a new style of literary reporting called New Journalism. Talese himself told National Public Radio he rejects this label (“The term new journalism became very fashionable on college campuses in the 1970s and some of its practitioners tended to be a little loose with the facts. And that’s where I wanted to part company.”)
He is not bothered by the Bancrofts selling The Wall Street Journal—”It’s not like we should lament the passing of some noble dynasty!”—to Rupert Murdoch, but he is bothered by how the press supported and sold the Iraq War to the American people. “The press in Washington got us into this war as much as the people that are controlling it,” said Talese. “They took information that was second-hand information, and they went along with it.” He wants to see the Washington press corp disbanded and sent around the country to get back in touch with the people it covers; that the press should not be so focused on–and in bed with–the federal government.
Augusten Burroughs once said that writers are experience junkies, and Talese fits the bill. Talese–who has been married to Nan Talese (she edited James Frey‘s Million Little Piece) for fifty years–can be found at baseball games in Cuba or the gay bars of Beijing, wanting to see humanity in all its experience.
Below is Wikinews reporter David Shankbone’s interview with Gay Talese.
2008 Taiwan Designers’ Week shows potential of innovations
Monday, June 30, 2008
Vastly different from the YODEX, mainly focused on students’ designs, the 2008 2nd Taiwan Designers’ Week, a collective show organized by Taiwan Designers’ Web for industrial designs and individual design studios, took place at the Xinyi Public Assembly Hall, formally known as “Si-Si Nan Cun (in Chinese: ????)” and entitled the theme of “Design & Beyond”.
This professional exhibition featured topical designs including “Play with the Eating Culture”, “Wall”, “The Story of Paper-Cutting”, “Basket”, “Between On and Off”, “50 Pleasures in the Study – Dian Shin Refreshment 2008”, “Reincarnation”, and “NoName Design”, at Xinyi Public Assembly Hall; “City Yeast 2008?Balcony Project” at Xue Xue Institute from June 26th to July 8th; “Having A Perfect Life Is Easy” at Taipei Artist Village from June 27th to July 7th. In addition, The XRANGE Studio also created a giant floating cloud at Central Square of Xinyi Public Assembly Hall.
Innovative designs in this exhibition showcased different topical elements on environment, modern lifestyle, current incident, and subculture. Those reflect the achievements by professional designers in Taiwan as Taiwan’s designs were affirmed in several international design competitions including G-mark, Red Dot, and iF.
After this exhibition, Taiwan Design Center, the show co-organizer, scheduled several upcoming competitions and shows from this August to October including “Taiwan Design Expo”, “Taiwan Design Award”, “Taiwan International Design Competition”, and “Creative Taiwan”.
Travel In Comfort On A Bus In York, Pa
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byAlma Abell
Travel is one of the joys of the recreational experience. The ability to get away from the routine of our daily lives and see another part of the country can be both enjoyable and highly educational. There is no need to drive when traveling when you can take a guided tour from a bus in York, PA, as part of Conestoga Tours.
With trips staged from a luxurious Bus in York PA, tourists can forget the hassles of driving themselves to their destination. Social groups or school gatherings can be taken with a professional driver at the wheel and the comfort of a luxury chartered bus taking you to your intended destination.
If you have always wanted to see the best of the autumn foliage or one of the state’s many historical landmarks, there can be no easier method of travel. Visit the website ConestogaTours.com to see the variety of tours that can be taken throughout the year from their headquarters or a location near your home.
Groups that want to travel together will find that taking a guided bus tour makes a lot of sense. It is far more sociable to have everyone on the same bus that organize a myriad of private cars along the same route. Each of these charter buses feature plush comfortable seating and an on-board restroom. Video screens and refreshments can be enjoyed, along with the unobstructed view of the landscape as it passes by.
For those individuals who wish to travel, taking a bus tour may be far preferable to traveling by train or plane. In particular, the stress and chaos of the airport is completely avoided. Passengers can pack and relax on their way, with their guide providing commentary on the sights they will see along the route.
With a full selection of destinations to choose from, passengers can choose exactly where they wish to travel and how they wish to spend their overnight stay. Couples and individuals of all ages can enjoy travel within the beautiful mid-Atlantic region at all times of the year without ever having to fill their own gas tank or look at a map.
Scottish artist Alan Davie dies at age 93
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
The death of Scottish artist Alan Davie was announced on Sunday. Davie, 93, was known for his colourful abstract paintings.
Davie’s career also saw turns as a jeweler, a jazz musician, a lecturer, and a poet. Born in Grangemouth, near Falkirk, in 1920, he studied painting from 1938 to 40 at Edinburgh College of Art.
| It’s an urge, an intensity, a kind of sexual need | ||
His father was a teacher who dabbled in art and his mother’s family was musically inclined. Upon seeing Coleman Hawkins performing in a music shop in Edinburgh, Davie borrowed £600 from his father to buy himself a saxophone. After serving in the Second World War, at which time he wrote much poetry later transcribed by his father, Davie toured with Scottish jazz bands.
Davie’s work was admired by the likes of Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and David Hockney. Davie himself collected non-Western art and liked tattoos, graffiti, and ‘outsider art’. His final interview before death, with The Telegraph, gave an insight into how he viewed art: “It’s an urge, an intensity, a kind of sexual need[…] something I do from an inner compulsion, that has to come out.”
He initially avoided painting as a career at all, then spent several years earning money by other means whilst his paintings failed to sell. His exhibitions in the late 1950s, however, were highly successful and launched his career. He was in the habit of choosing titles for his art only after completion.
Despite a strong presence owing to his lengthy red beard and off-beat humour, he was shy; his international fame waned. Recent years have seen a revival of interest with price increases for his early art. London alone is host to three exhibitions this month including at the Tate.
Tate Britain calls Davie “one of the first British artists after the war to develop an expressive form of abstraction” producing “kaleidoscopic canvases[…] that the artist relates to his love of jazz”.
New HIV drug could stop virus from spreading
Friday, June 9, 2006
In a small-scale trial on humans, American scientists say they may have developed a new drug that could stop the spread of HIV and “rapidly clears” the blood of the virus.
“There is a lot of interest in this product,” said editor Keith Alcorn of the National Aids Manual.
The drug called PA-457, which is derived from betulinic acid and comes from by-products from paper manufacturers, is being manufactured and developed by Maryland drug manufacturer Panacos Pharmaceuticals. The drug is known as a maturation inhibitor, which is a new group of drugs. Its purpose is to break down the protective protein coating of HIV. The drug exposes the inner genetic material by making holes in the coating of the virus essentially causing it to break down and disabling its ability to be passed from one human to the next. The drug also shows that it works on strains of HIV that are resistant to other medications. The drug is also compatible with other HIV drugs.
“It’s a truly novel new class of drugs, and I really support their development. If PA-457 turns out to be non-toxic, easy to use and not to select for resistance, it will find good use,” said Charles Boucher who researches HIV at Utrecht university medical center in the Netherlands.
“It stops the virus by interfering in one of the final stages in its assembly and stops it from ‘budding out’ from the wall of a cell,” said Alcorn.
Scientists are expected to begin a larger scale test on 48 people in one month, whose drugs are no longer working; however, the drug itself is not likely to be available for wide-scale use for at least 3 years. Test subjects will be administered either a placebo or PA-457 that will be taken in combination with the medication they already take.
“This provides the basis for future studies that will be designed to provide a detailed understanding of the interaction between PA-457 and its target as well as insights into the design of new generations of maturation inhibitors,” said CEO of Panacos Pharmaceuticals, Graham Allaway.
At least 80% of those suffering from the disease have shown resistance to other medications.
Public disclosure made of final report on deaths of nine in Finnish school shooting
Friday, April 18, 2008
The Finnish National Bureau of Investigation yesterday released 600 pages of the 2,000 page final report into the Jokela school shooting. 18-year-old Pekka-Eric Auvinen opened fire at Jokela High School, killing eight before turning his gun on himself, receiving fatal wounds.
The remaining 1,400 pages of the report are to remain confidential. The public section reveals a number of problems that may have impacted on Auvinen’s decision to conduct the attack, but says that police failed to find any conclusive motive. Also released was an animation depicting events at the school.
The report says Auvinen had been bullied since the age of ten and concludes the extent of this problem was greater than previously thought. Auvinen suffered from anxiety and blushing, especially in lessons, and had been diagnosed with a panic disorder, for which he had been prescribed medication. Auvinen also suffered from sleep disorders and loneliness, and had few friends, although one former bully did go on to become a good friend of Auvinen’s. His mother said inability to settle on a suitable ideology contributed to Auvinen’s depression.
His parents had noticed and reacted to the bullying problem, but their intervention only served to worsen the situation. According to entries in Auvinen’s diary, he first began planning the shooting – which he gave the English name “Operation Main Strike” – about eight months prior to actually conducting the shooting.
Auvinen had told his mother that under certain circumstances he could approve of violence. He had often viewed web sites promoting violence and had a number of online contacts whom he discussed his ideas with. One of these was a United States teen arrested for planning a similar attack, and two others discussed the Columbine High School Massacre with him and traded videos they found online. However, there is no evidence he informed anyone of his plans until immediately prior to the attack.
The report called Auvinen a moderately good student, but noted his mental problems had impacted his performance at school. He had been interested in politics from an early age, being involved with the Centre Party, the Social Democratic Party, the Left Alliance, and the Finnish Communist Party.
“In the best case, this (attack) would create massive destruction and chaos, or even a revolution,” read one diary entry. “In any case, I want this to be remembered forever. Maybe I’ll even have a follower; after all, I am a super-person, almost God.” Another revealed he intended to “kill as many of you bastards as possible”. His diary also reveals he was aware he would be dead by the end of the attack.
He obtained a .22 calliber handgun which he named Catherine, having been denied a license for a 9mm gun, and submitted his plans online – including to YouTube – just 14 minutes prior to firing his first shots, having cycled to school. It was determined that, given the time-frame, there was little that could have been done by anyone who saw the material to prevent the attack. He fired 75 shots, 50 of which struck his eight fatally wounded victims, who were apparently chosen at random. Thirteen others were injured in the event.
The deceased were six students, the school headmistress and the school nurse. Auvinen shot at each several times in the region of the head and upper torso. He ultimately shot himself in the school toilet, and died in hospital from head wounds ten hours later, having never regained consciousness.
Police could not determine why he chose the date he did, although it was noted his online relationship with a foreign girl had ended just days before. It was also determined little could be done to predict and prevent future incidents, although one measure being sought is to require medical checks for gun licences and parental consent for prospective owners under 18.
The confidential section of the report discusses causes of death and police operations.
Your Child Is A Late Talker It May Be Too Much Technology…
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By ShariHarpaz, CCC-SLP, Speech-Language Pathologist, Ebeanstalk.comIveseen it more now than ever…children are talking much later thanthey used to. And I have a pretty good idea of why they are talkinglate. Go up to the mirror, and take a look…its our fault.Becarefull…the kids see what we do and often imitate it. And whetherparents like it or not, early language development is chieflyinfluenced by interaction with their children. Infants develop earlylanguage skills through engaging in vocal play. They learn thesatisfaction of communicating by going back-and-forth with a parentmaking sounds. Interacting with babytoys in a mutual way also contributes tolanguage development. As toddlers they develop vocabulary and learngrammar through language stimulation from their environment andinteraction with their family and peers.Here is the problem;in our busy world our dependence on technology and the need forinstant gratification has constrained these important interactionswith our children.Does this sound familiar? Well, this is theproblem… We text message our friends quickly when in a car.We check email on our phones and PDAs during family dinner.Children play portable video games or watch DVD more frequently. Allof these changes have changed the way families and friendscommunicate and this has negatively impacted early languagedevelopment for many young children. As a result, there has been asignificant increase in children who are late-talkers. Thinkback to when you were young. you probably played games and sang songsin the car to help pass the time. BUT…today technology is fillingour spare time. Cars have DVDs. Our kids have portable video gamesthat they play with for hours. And dont get me started on theyoung-ones having cell phones. Great inventsions absolutely – buttheir presence means there is less time for parents to take part inlanguagestimulation withtheir young children. This doesnt have to be the case. Thegood news is that in many cases all these children need to catch upis more one-to-one language stimulation with their family. Here aremy thoughts about making sure technology doesnt get in the way offamily time.1. Make up a story together Your child willhave to really listen and be creative to help create a cohesivestory. Decide as a family what the title of the story will be first.Then each person takes a turn telling the next sentence. 2.Play I Spy . Increase the difficulty of the game bydescribing the object rather than saying the label (i.e. I spysomething you ride with 2 wheels and handlebars). Hint: Make a rulethat you cant repeat the same object that someone has previouslysaid so that your child really has to pay close attention3.What did you do today? at the end of an active day, everyone cantell what their favorite and least favorite things they did were. Bysharing the good and bad moments it teaches children to vocalizetheir emotions. You, as parents, share your feelings too whichprovides your children with a great model.THIS REALLY WORKS:Take advantage of car rides when distractions can be kept out and youcan gain your childs undivided attention. Be creative and createan open environment for your children to communicate with you and forthem to learn. JUST HAVE FUN! Plain and simple fun.