Some cool Hope Special Education Center images:
West Park Centre
Image by West Park Centre
From the Yorkshire Post, Wednesday, December ?, 1952 :
Perhaps the most striking of the many up-to-date features of the school is the splendidly appointed assembly hall and stage. The body of the hall will seat 650 people and it is hoped to provide seats for about another 100 in the gallery which runs down one side of the building. The hall is so situated that it can be ?locked off? from the rest of the school buildings. This will be useful if the hall is required for evening functions or if it is hired to outside bodies for dramatic productions and the like.
Spacious windows on either side of the hall ensure maximum light by day. At night the hall is brilliantly lit by 70 lights in the roof. There is also a special emergency lighting system.
The roof has been specially designed for its acoustic properties. It is a chequer board pattern of absorbent wood wool and reflecting plywood which it is hoped will give the right blend of sound for drama and music. As in many other parts of the school, there is a distinctive colour scheme in the hall. Grey, blue and pink are blending here. These colours have been incorporated in the attractive design of the stage curtain.
Army Photography Contest ? 2007 ? FMWRC ? Arts and Crafts ? Preacher Man
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Lieutenant Col. Gregory VanHeukelom with the 110th Fighter Wing is pictured outside a tent chapel being used for religious services at the Alpena Combat Readiness Center.
Army Photography Contest ? 2007 ? FMWRC ? Arts and Crafts ? Preacher Man
Photo By: MSGT Dale Atkins
To learn more about the annual U.S. Army Photography Competition, visit us online at www.armymwr.com
U.S. Army Arts and Crafts History
After World War I the reductions to the Army left the United States with a small force. The War Department faced monumental challenges in preparing for World War II. One of those challenges was soldier morale. Recreational activities for off duty time would be important. The arts and crafts program informally evolved to augment the needs of the War Department.
On January 9, 1941, the Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson, appointed Frederick H. Osborn, a prominent U.S. businessman and philanthropist, Chairman of the War Department Committee on Education, Recreation and Community Service.
In 1940 and 1941, the United States involvement in World War II was more of sympathy and anticipation than of action. However, many different types of institutions were looking for ways to help the war effort. The Museum of Modern Art in New York was one of these institutions. In April, 1941, the Museum announced a poster competition, ?Posters for National Defense.? The directors stated ?The Museum feels that in a time of national emergency the artists of a country are as important an asset as men skilled in other fields, and that the nation?s first-rate talent should be utilized by the government for its official design work? Discussions have been held with officials of the Army and the Treasury who have expressed remarkable enthusiasm??
In May 1941, the Museum exhibited ?Britain at War?, a show selected by Sir Kenneth Clark, director of the National Gallery in London. The ??Prize-Winning Defense Posters? were exhibited in July through September concurrently with ?Britain at War.? The enormous overnight growth of the military force meant mobilization type construction at every camp. Construction was fast; facilities were not fancy; rather drab and depressing.
In 1941, the Fort Custer Army Illustrators, while on strenuous war games maneuvers in Tennessee, documented the exercise The Bulletin of the Museum of Modern Art, Vol. 9, No. 3 (Feb. 1942), described their work. ?Results were astonishingly good; they showed serious devotion ?to the purpose of depicting the Army scene with unvarnished realism and a remarkable ability to capture this scene from the soldier?s viewpoint. Civilian amateur and professional artists had been transformed into soldier-artists. Reality and straightforward documentation had supplanted (replaced) the old romantic glorification and false dramatization of war and the slick suavity (charm) of commercial drawing.?
?In August of last year, Fort Custer Army Illustrators held an exhibition, the first of its kind in the new Army, at the Camp Service Club. Soldiers who saw the exhibition, many of whom had never been inside an art gallery, enjoyed it thoroughly. Civilian visitors, too, came and admired. The work of the group showed them a new aspect of the Army; there were many phases of Army life they had never seen or heard of before. Newspapers made much of it and, most important, the Army approved. Army officials saw that it was not only authentic material, but that here was a source of enlivenment (vitalization) to the Army and a vivid medium for conveying the Army?s purposes and processes to civilians and soldiers.?
Brigadier General Frederick H. Osborn and War Department leaders were concerned because few soldiers were using the off duty recreation areas that were available. Army commanders recognized that efficiency is directly correlated with morale, and that morale is largely determined from the manner in which an individual spends his own free time. Army morale enhancement through positive off duty recreation programs is critical in combat staging areas.
To encourage soldier use of programs, the facilities drab and uninviting environment had to be improved. A program utilizing talented artists and craftsmen to decorate day rooms, mess halls, recreation halls and other places of general assembly was established by the Facilities Section of Special Services. The purpose was to provide an environment that would reflect the military tradition, accomplishments and the high standard of army life. The fact that this work was to be done by the men themselves had the added benefit of contributing to the esprit de corps (teamwork, or group spirit) of the unit.
The plan was first tested in October of 1941, at Camp Davis, North Carolina. A studio workshop was set up and a group of soldier artists were placed on special duty to design and decorate the facilities. Additionally, evening recreation art classes were scheduled three times a week. A second test was established at Fort Belvoir, Virginia a month later. The success of these programs lead to more installations requesting the program.
After Pearl Harbor was bombed, the Museum of Modern Art appointed Mr. James Soby, to the position of Director of the Armed Service Program on January 15, 1942. The subsequent program became a combination of occupational therapy, exhibitions and morale-sustaining activities.
Through the efforts of Mr. Soby, the museum program included; a display of Fort Custer Army Illustrators work from February through April 5, 1942. The museum also included the work of soldier-photographers in this exhibit. On May 6, 1942, Mr. Soby opened an art sale of works donated by museum members. The sale was to raise funds for the Soldier Art Program of Special Services Division. The bulk of these proceeds were to be used to provide facilities and materials for soldier artists in Army camps throughout the country.
Members of the Museum had responded with paintings, sculptures, watercolors, gouaches, drawings, etchings and lithographs. Hundreds of works were received, including oils by Winslow Homer, Orozco, John Kane, Speicher, Eilshemius, de Chirico watercolors by Burchfield and Dufy; drawings by Augustus John, Forain and Berman, and prints by Cezanne, Lautrec, Matisse and Bellows. The War Department plan using soldier-artists to decorate and improve buildings and grounds worked. Many artists who had been drafted into the Army volunteered to paint murals in waiting rooms and clubs, to decorate dayrooms, and to landscape grounds. For each artist at work there were a thousand troops who watched. These bystanders clamored to participate, and classes in drawing, painting, sculpture and photography were offered. Larger working space and more instructors were required to meet the growing demand. Civilian art instructors and local communities helped to meet this cultural need, by providing volunteer instruction and facilities.
Some proceeds from the Modern Museum of Art sale were used to print 25,000 booklets called ?Interior Design and Soldier Art.? The booklet showed examples of soldier-artist murals that decorated places of general assembly. It was a guide to organizing, planning and executing the soldier-artist program. The balance of the art sale proceeds were used to purchase the initial arts and crafts furnishings for 350 Army installations in the USA.
In November, 1942, General Somervell directed that a group of artists be selected and dispatched to active theaters to paint war scenes with the stipulation that soldier artists would not paint in lieu of military duties.
Aileen Osborn Webb, sister of Brigadier General Frederick H. Osborn, launched the American Crafts Council in 1943. She was an early champion of the Army program.
While soldiers were participating in fixed facilities in the USA, many troops were being shipped overseas to Europe and the Pacific (1942-1945). They had long periods of idleness and waiting in staging areas. At that time the wounded were lying in hospitals, both on land and in ships at sea. The War Department and Red Cross responded by purchasing kits of arts and crafts tools and supplies to distribute to ?these restless personnel.? A variety of small ?Handicraft Kits? were distributed free of charge. Leathercraft, celluloid etching, knotting and braiding, metal tooling, drawing and clay modeling are examples of the types of kits sent.
In January, 1944, the Interior Design Soldier Artist program was more appropriately named the ?Arts and Crafts Section? of Special Services. The mission was ?to fulfill the natural human desire to create, provide opportunities for self-expression, serve old skills and develop new ones, and assist the entire recreation program through construction work, publicity, and decoration.?
The National Army Art Contest was planned for the late fall of?. In June of 1945, the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., for the first time in its history opened its facilities for the exhibition of the soldier art and photography submitted to this contest. The ?Infantry Journal, Inc.? printed a small paperback booklet containing 215 photographs of pictures exhibited in the National Gallery of Art.
In August of 1?, the Museum of Modern Art, Armed Forces Program, organized an art center for veterans. Abby Rockefeller, in particular, had a strong interest in this project. Soldiers were invited to sketch, paint, or model under the guidance of skilled artists and craftsmen. Victor d?Amico, who was in charge of the Museum?s Education Department, was quoted in Russell Lynes book, Good Old Modern: An Intimate Portrait of the Museum of Modern Art. ?I asked one fellow why he had taken up art and he said, Well, I just came back from destroying everything. I made up my mind that if I ever got out of the Army and out of the war I was never going to destroy another thing in my life, and I decided that art was the thing that I would do.? Another man said to d?Amico, ?Art is like a good night??s sleep. You come away refreshed and at peace.?
In late October, 1944, an Arts and Crafts Branch of Special Services Division, Headquarters, European Theater of Operations was established. A versatile program of handcrafts flourished among the Army occupation troops.
The increased interest in crafts, rather than fine arts, at this time lead to a new name for the program: The ?Handicrafts Branch.?
In 1945, the War Department published a new manual, ?Soldier Handicrafts?, to help implement this new emphasis. The manual contained instructions for setting up crafts facilities, selecting as well as improvising tools and equipment, and basic information on a variety of arts and crafts.
As the Army moved from a combat to a peacetime role, the majority of crafts shops in the United States were equipped with woodworking power machinery for construction of furnishings and objects for personal living. Based on this new trend, in 1946 the program was again renamed, this time as ?Manual Arts.?
At the same time, overseas programs were now employing local artists and craftsmen to operate the crafts facilities and instruct in a variety of arts and crafts. These highly skilled, indigenous instructors helped to stimulate the soldiers? interest in the respective native cultures and artifacts. Thousands of troops overseas were encouraged to record their experiences on film. These photographs provided an invaluable means of communication between troops and their families back home.
When the war ended, the Navy had a firm of architects and draftsmen on contract to design ships. Since there was no longer a need for more ships, they were given a new assignment: To develop a series of instructional guides for arts and crafts. These were called ?Hobby Manuals.? The Army was impressed with the quality of the Navy manuals and had them reprinted and adopted for use by Army troops. By 1948, the arts and crafts practiced throughout the Army were so varied and diverse that the program was renamed ?Hobby Shops.? The first ?Interservice Photography Contest? was held in 1948. Each service is eligible to send two years of their winning entries forward for the bi-annual interservice contest. In?9, the first All Army Crafts Contest was also held. Once again, it was clear that the program title, ??Hobby Shops? was misleading and overlapped into other forms of recreation.
In January, 1951, the program was designated as ?The Army Crafts Program.? The program was recognized as an essential Army recreation activity along with sports, libraries, service clubs, soldier shows and soldier music. In the official statement of mission, professional leadership was emphasized to insure a balanced, progressive schedule of arts and crafts would be conducted in well-equipped, attractive facilities on all Army installations.
The program was now defined in terms of a ?Basic Seven Program? which included: drawing and painting; ceramics and sculpture; metal work; leathercrafts; model building; photography and woodworking. These programs were to be conducted regularly in facilities known as the ?multiple-type crafts shop.? For functional reasons, these facilities were divided into three separate technical areas for woodworking, photography and the arts and crafts.
During the Korean Conflict, the Army Crafts program utilized the personnel and shops in Japan to train soldiers to instruct crafts in Korea.
The mid-1950s saw more soldiers with cars and the need to repair their vehicles was recognized at Fort Carson, Colorado, by the craft director. Soldiers familiar with crafts shops knew that they had tools and so automotive crafts were established. By 19?, the Engineers published an Official Design Guide on Crafts Shops and Auto Crafts Shops. In 1959, the first All Army Art Contest was held. Once more, the Army Crafts Program responded to the needs of soldiers.
In the 1960?s, the war in Vietnam was a new challenge for the Army Crafts Program. The program had three levels of support; fixed facilities, mobile trailers designed as portable photo labs, and once again a ?Kit Program.? The kit program originated at Headquarters, Department of Army, and it proved to be very popular with soldiers.
Tom Turner, today a well-known studio potter, was a soldier at Ft. Jackson, South Carolina in the 1960s. In the December 1990 / January 1991 ?American Crafts? magazine, Turner, who had been a graduate student in art school when he was drafted, said the program was ?a godsend.?
The Army Artist Program was re-initiated in cooperation with the Office of Military History to document the war in Vietnam. Soldier-artists were identified and teams were formed to draw and paint the events of this combat. Exhibitions of these soldier-artist works were produced and toured throughout the USA.
In 1970, the original name of the program, ?Arts and Crafts?, was restored. In 1971, the ?Arts and Crafts/Skills Development Program? was established for budget presentations and construction projects.
After the Vietnam demobilization, a new emphasis was placed on service to families and children of soldiers. To meet this new challenge in an environment of funding constraints the arts and crafts program began charging fees for classes. More part-time personnel were used to teach formal classes. Additionally, a need for more technical-vocational skills training for military personnel was met by close coordination with Army Education Programs. Army arts and crafts directors worked with soldiers during ?Project Transition? to develop soldier skills for new careers in the public sector.
The main challenge in the 1980s and 90s was, and is, to become ?self-sustaining.? Directors have been forced to find more ways to generate increased revenue to help defray the loss of appropriated funds and to cover the non-appropriated funds expenses of the program. Programs have added and increased emphasis on services such as, picture framing, gallery sales, engraving and trophy sales, etc? New programs such as multi-media computer graphics appeal to customers of the 1990?s.
The Gulf War presented the Army with some familiar challenges such as personnel off duty time in staging areas. Department of Army volunteer civilian recreation specialists were sent to Saudi Arabia in January, 1991, to organize recreation programs. Arts and crafts supplies were sent to the theater. An Army Humor Cartoon Contest was conducted for the soldiers in the Gulf, and arts and crafts programs were set up to meet soldier interests.
The increased operations tempo of the ?90?s Army has once again placed emphasis on meeting the ?recreation needs of deployed soldiers.? Arts and crafts activities and a variety of programs are assets commanders must have to meet the deployment challenges of these very different scenarios.
The Army arts and crafts program, no matter what it has been titled, has made some unique contributions for the military and our society in general. Army arts and crafts does not fit the narrow definition of drawing and painting or making ceramics, but the much larger sense of arts and crafts. It is painting and drawing. It also encompasses:
* all forms of design. (fabric, clothes, household appliances, dishes, vases, houses, automobiles, landscapes, computers, copy machines, desks, industrial machines, weapon systems, air crafts, roads, etc?)
* applied technology (photography, graphics, woodworking, sculpture, metal smithing, weaving and textiles, sewing, advertising, enameling, stained glass, pottery, charts, graphs, visual aides and even formats for correspondence?)
* a way of making learning fun, practical and meaningful (through the process of designing and making an object the creator must decide which materials and techniques to use, thereby engaging in creative problem solving and discovery) skills taught have military applications.
* a way to acquire quality items and save money by doing-it-yourself (making furniture, gifts, repairing things ?).
* a way to pursue college credit, through on post classes.
* a universal and non-verbal language (a picture is worth a thousand words).
* food for the human psyche, an element of morale that allows for individual expression (freedom).
* the celebration of human spirit and excellence (our highest form of public recognition is through a dedicated monument).
* physical and mental therapy (motor skill development, stress reduction, etc?).
* an activity that promotes self-reliance and self-esteem.
* the record of mankind, and in this case, of the Army.
What would the world be like today if this generally unknown program had not existed? To quantitatively state the overall impact of this program on the world is impossible. Millions of soldier citizens have been directly and indirectly exposed to arts and crafts because this program existed. One activity, photography can provide a clue to its impact. Soldiers encouraged to take pictures, beginning with WW II, have shared those images with family and friends. Classes in “How to Use a Camera? to ?How to Develop Film and Print Pictures? were instrumental in soldiers seeing the results of using quality equipment. A good camera and lens could make a big difference in the quality of the print. They bought the top of the line equipment. When they were discharged from the Army or home on leave this new equipment was showed to the family and friends. Without this encouragement and exposure to photography many would not have recorded their personal experiences or known the difference quality equipment could make. Families and friends would not have had the opportunity to ?see? the environment their soldier was living in without these photos. Germany, Italy, Korea, Japan, Panama, etc? were far away places that most had not visited.
As the twenty first century approaches, the predictions for an arts renaissance by Megatrends 2000 seem realistic based on the Army Arts and Crafts Program practical experience. In the April ? issue of ?American Demographics? magazine, an article titled ?Generation X? fully supports that this is indeed the case today. Television and computers have greatly contributed to ?Generation X?? being more interested in the visual arts and crafts.
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peace & ecommerce, a global system view
Image by Wonderlane
China is a likely winner of the information age supply chain through ecommerce
Peace and Ecommerce, A Global Systems View
By Linda Lane, MSIM, 2008
Policy, Law, and Ethics in Information Management, University of Washington
The Research Diary
Education justifies everything.
Attending a required Masters class ?Policy, Law, and Ethics in Information Management? it was only ethical to admit that I worked three months drafting and publishing policy documents for Microsoft, which was now our current class assignment, to research Web based privacy policies and other related documents such as terms of use, conditions of use, code of conduct and learn more about them, with a diary of examples in the wild, and related materials. The educational idea is that we would then be able to contribute meaningfully to creating policy statements, and understand their underlying implications to end users and companies. But I had already done this work professionally, so it would be of questionable value for me to do the coursework on the same topic as if I had never done it before.
The instructor of the class, Glenn Von Tersch is that valuable-to-me teacher because he is a rare working professional in the field in which he instructs, he?s an intellectual property lawyer working in California, teaching in person in Seattle, and in my lingo, a local boy made good. Von Tersch assigned me to present information on freedom of speech, a topic I fell in love with, and wanted to research more. But for my final research I needed something else.
One of my favorite things to discuss in job interviews, or with anyone in earshot, is that I believe that the networked spread of ecommerce over the Web, filtering into even the poorest nations will aid in understanding through communication; that ecommerce leads to peace. In effect I believed that ecommerce contributes in a direct way to peace because it provides the fuel to grow and maintain the Internet. Also it seemed obvious that people and countries that are invested in and perform transactions with each other are less likely to go war against their own interests. Von Tersch said, ??These topics you are interested in have more research value than freedom of speech, because 1st amendment rights have been heavily legislated, written about, and researched.? He mentioned something called ?The McDonald?s Effect?, how having a McDonald?s outlet or franchise appears to contribute to peace between countries. So peace and ecommerce became my topic.
What I did not expect to discover is in human society war is considered the norm and peace the exception. I did not expect to learn about how ugly the 3rd world poverty creating monster of WTO became according to one economist, even though I live in Seattle where the initial protests were. I was surprised to know how Reganomics theory hangs on, like an old B-grade movie on late night TV, because someone somewhere in the supply chain makes money. I did not expect to find that privacy and intellectual rights are so tightly interwoven, or how they relate to conflict, security, potential world dominance and growth.
I had no way to guess that I would enjoy the study of economics ?? statistical, yes, nicely so, but dull no; as a global topic it is juicy-rotten, full of international spies , botched security , with rogue pirate computer chips , and unintended consequences.
Who can accurately predict how patterns of global economics relate to peace, privacy, property rights, policies and their outcome in the one breath away from today, the next 20-40 years? Who would think that China ? the nation, McDonalds ? the corporation, and Chicago crack dealers and their foot soldiers share so much in common when you view their information through these fascinating multi-dimensional facets?
One must be educated to search effectively for information. My knowing about the nature of search is not just intellectual knowledge; this is conditionalized through my own experience of failure to produce relevant search results within massive library databases.
My education began with a simple query on the Web ?peace + ecommerce? which returned from Google ?Theses on the Balkan War,? by Mike Haynes, from the International Socialism Journal, ?Capitalism is inherently a competitively expansionist and therefore conflict ridden system? , effectively laying the blame for war on the US and Western capitalist nations and on any one claiming to be fighting a war with good intentions. I read it, thinking I would not see this relate to my project ?? also surprising very similar material was presented in the global economic books I read later .
As mentioned the pursuit of ?education justifies anything??, like looking at any results, so I also clicked on an article entitled ?Dinosaur Extinction linked to change in Dinosaur Culture? I read it, and it made sense that something like author Daniel Quinn?s theory of ?The Law of Limited Competition? is an operant factor in global markets today, with war being genocide, and countries struggling to win economically laying waste to the very place they live. A notable example is Beijing, the air pollution capital of the world struggling to host the Olympic Games this year. I stored that URL for future reference. The theory and the reality imply that in the race to catch up and compete in global economics, the Chinese are killing themselves off before they arrive at their desired goal.
Then I queried in several of the University of Washington interconnected and extensive library databases on the same thing ?peace + ecommerce? and found in all of them, zero returns, ?0 Results?. My teacher was surprised and advised me to extrapolate and offer conjecture on what was likely, if few sources were available. I notified a friend studying economics who emailed related articles. Very frustrated I tried related queries and turned up articles on the economies of war . How perverse, I thought. I contacted a librarian through the online tool and chatted with her, explaining my quest. She suggested I query on “economics and public policy?. ?How is public policy related to peace and ecommerce?? I asked. ?Try Conflict Resolution? she replied.
Thus the reason I couldn?t find ?peace? is because the term used, in educated facet writers? metadata which is designed to expose information to search, is ?conflict resolution? or ?conflict prevention. Oddly the social implication is that war is the norm. Maybe peace doesn?t exist anywhere. A reason I used ?ecommerce? instead of ?global economics? is due to consulting in that field for technology firms. Searching again returned few meaningful results ? the user interface was strange, very slow, and clunky. I longed for Google .
Then I remembered the ?McDonald?s Effect? our teacher mentioned, and quickly I located a reference on the Web, but it was deeply nested in a staggering number of oddly worded articles. I stopped without uncovering where the concept originated. The next night I searched again, and found the author Thomas Friedman and his related books. I briefly scanned all the related Wikipedia articles. I realized quickly that to become educated enough on my two topics, I had to some understanding of economics. This is because even to scrape by enough to search among the many interrelated topics one needs to know the central facet . Very esoteric topics require specialized language and deep knowledge of the subject.
More searches turned up substantial evidence that China lags behind other nations in ecommerce.
For years I worked in ecommerce designing interfaces (for Microsoft 2003 and Amazon 2007-2008), and working with supply chain software (as a director of an ecommerce company). But because I didn?t realize that one could understand it better, and that it is not as dull as computer science and its requisite cash register receipts , I never tried.
The "McDonald?s Effect" is named after "The Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention" created by the author Thomas Friedman?s slightly in cheek comments and his book, ?The Lexus and the Olive Tree? (the update now titled "The Lexus and the Olive Tree: Understanding Globalization").
Those books lead me to order Amazon ecommerce overnight book delivery, and I read, ?The World Is Flat?: A Critical Analysis of New York Times Bestseller by Thomas Friedman?, ?Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything? , ?Making Globalization Work? which reports that there is hope in the world for peace. The Nobel Prize winning author helps the reader extrapolate based on significant knowledge of statistics and global economic analysis through his personal, professional, and academic connections.
Common Name Academic Name Book Title
McDonalds Effect Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention,
aka democratic peace theory Lexus and the Olive Tree
Dell Theory The Dell Theory of Conflict Prevention The World is Flat, A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century
peace conflict prevention
ecommerce global economics
"In his book, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Thomas L. Friedman proposed The Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention, observing that no two countries with a McDonald?s franchise had ever gone to war with one another, a version of the democratic peace theory."
"The Dell Theory stipulates: No two countries that are both part of a major global supply chain, like Dell?s, will ever fight a war against each other as long as they are both part of the same global supply chain."
???????????????????????
Readings
The World Is Flat 3.0: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century by Thomas Friedman
Larry Page, Google Co-Founder quoted by Thomas Friedman, p. 179, entire paragraph. ?The more global Google?s user base becomes, the more powerful a flattener it becomes??
From Friedman?s conversation with Google?s director of operations in China, Kai-Fu Lee, p.? entire paragraph ?In time individuals will have the power to find anything in the world at any time on all kinds of devices ? and that will be enormously empowering.?
The Quiet Crisis, entire pages 368, 369, chapter on research in China, beating out American innovation in research. ?The Chinese government gave Microsoft the right to grant post-docs.? ??They work through their holidays because their dream is to get to Microsoft.?
?What are those?? She said the researchers get them from Microsoft every time they invent something that gets patented. How do you say Ferrari in Chinese.?
p. 370 ?? whether we are going to implement or China is going to beat us to our own plan.? Council on Creativeness, regarding the Innovate America report, comment to Friedman by Deborah Wince-Smith.
Introduction p. X, Thomas Friedman, ?Of course the world is not flat. But it isn??t round anymore either. I have been using the simple notion of flatness to describe how more people can plug, play, compete, connect, and collaborate with more equal power than ever before ? which is what is happening in the world. ? the essencial impact of all the technological changes coming together in the world today. ? My use of the word flat doesn?t mean equal (as in ?equal incomes?) and never did. It means equalizing.?
The Lexus and the Olive Tree: Understanding Globalization by Thomas Friedman
Forward to the Anchor Edition, Thomas Friedman, ?? my Golden Arches Theory ? that no two countries that both have McDonald?s have ever fought a war again each other since the each got their McDonald?s.?
p. 7 ?When I say that globalization has replaced the Cold War as the defining international system, what exactly do I mean?
p. 8 ?The cold war system was symbolized by a single word, the wall ? ?You can??t handle the truth,? Says Nickleson. ?Son we live in a world that has walls??
p. 8 ?This Globalization system is also characterized by a single word: the Web. ? we have gone from a system built around divisions and walls to a system built around integration and webs.?
p. 19 ?What is information arbitrage? Arbitrage is a market terms. Technically speaking, it refers to the simultaneous buying and selling of the same securities, commodities or foreign exchange in different markets to predict from unequal prices and unequal information. The successful arbitrageur is a trader that knows??
Chapter 3, p. 29. The Lexus and the Olive Tree
Photo: Jerusalem, December 29,?: Simon Biton places his cellular phone up to the Western Wall so a relative in France can say a prayer at the holy site. (Photo: Menahem Kahana, Agence France-Presse) [caused my spontaneous tears]
p. 47 ??advertising jingle ?Let us put a bank in your home?? ? office ? newspaper ? bookstore ? brokerage firm ? factory ? investment firm ? school in our homes.?
The World Is Flat?: A Critical Analysis of New York Times Bestseller by Thomas Friedman by Ronald Aronica and Mtetwa Ramdoo
Freakonomics [Revised and Expanded]: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
Chapter 5 ?Why do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms?? p. 89 ?So how did the gang work? An awful lot like most American businesses, actually, though perhaps none more so than McDonald?s. In fact, if you were to hold a McDonald?s organizational chart and a Black Disciples org chart side by side, you could hardly tell the difference.?
p. 46 ??There is a tale, ?The ring of Gygnes,? ? could any man resist the temptation of evil if he knew his acts could not be witnessed?
p. 58 ?Attendance at Klan meetings began to fall ? of all the ideas Kennedy thought up to fight bigotry, this campaign was clearly the cleverest. ? He turned the Klan?s secrecy against itself by making its private information public: he converted heretofore precious knowledge into ammunition for mockery.?
Making Globalization Work by Joseph E. Stiglitz
My favorite ? the entire book was used to write this paper.
Web Resources
Please view attached Appendix www.crito.uci.edu/pubs/2004/ChinaGECIII.pdf regarding the reasons one study concludes that hold China back in ecommerce.
[1] Waiting until the time is right, one is good at something, or has collected all the facts, without making any attempts isn?t effective. I had to begin someplace even if it is incomplete so I started with the World Wide Web. ?If something is worth doing well, at all, it is also worth doing poorly.? I am not sure where that quote came from but I read it in an article where someone presented their reasoning.
[2] You never know where something will come from in free rights actions or what it will mean later. For example the person at the center of the Alaskan ?Bong hits For Jesus?? case, Frederick Morse, now teaches English to Chinese students in China. As an adult it appears he has his head on straight in his wish to help others communicate, more so that those he fought in court.
From the CNN news article, published June 26, 2007, ?In dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens said, "This case began with a silly nonsensical banner, (and) ends with the court inventing out of whole cloth a special First Amendment rule permitting the censorship of any student speech that mentions drugs, so long as someone could perceive that speech to contain a latent pro-drug message." He was backed by Justices David Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.? www.cnn.com/2007/LAW/06/25/free.speech/index.html/ downloaded March 13, 2008
[3] Pentagon attack last June stole an "amazing amount" of data? Joel Hruska Published: March 06, 2008 ? 07:13PM CT arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080306-pentagon-attack-la? from ?blueton tips us to a brief story about recent revelations from the Pentagon which indicate that the attack on their computer network in June 2007 was more serious than they originally claimed. A DoD official recently remarked that the hackers were able to obtain an "amazing amount" of data.
We previously discussed rumors that the Chinese People?s Liberation Army was behind the attack. ?CNN has an article about Chinese hackers who claim to have successfully stolen information from the Pentagon.? Quoting Ars Technica: "The intrusion was first detected during an IT restructuring that was underway at the time. By the time it was detected, malicious code had been in the system for at least two months, and was propagating via a known Windows exploit. The bug spread itself by e-mailing malicious payloads from one system on the network to another." Via email from Jeremy Hansen on slashdot.org/
[4] ?Chinese backdoors "hidden in router firmware" Matthew Sparkes, News [Security], Tuesday 4th March 2008 3:17PM, Tuesday 4th March 2008 www.pcpro.co.uk/news/173883/chinese-backdoors-hidden-in-r? The UK?s communication networks could be at risk from Chinese backdoors hidden in firmware, according to a security company.
SecureTest believes spyware could be easily built into Asian-manufactured devices such as switches and routers, providing a simple backdoor for companies or governments in the Far East to listen in on communications.
"Organisations should change their security policies and procedures immediately," says Ken Munro, managing director of SecureTest. "This is a very real loophole that needs closing. The government needs to act fast."
"Would they buy a missile from China, then deploy it untested into a Western missile silo and expect it to function when directed at the Far East? That?s essentially what they?re doing by installing network infrastructure produced in the Far East, such as switches and routers, untested into government and corporate networks."
Late last year MI5 sent a letter to 300 UK companies warning of the threat from Chinese hackers attempting to steal sensitive data. Reports at the time suggested that both Rolls Royce and Royal Dutch Shell had been subjected to "sustained spying assaults".
The issue has been debated by government for some time. In 2?, the then foreign secretary Robin Cook, warned that international computer espionage could pose a bigger threat to the UK than terrorism.
[5] Chip Piracy Might End With Public Key Cryptography. A Web Exclusive from Windows IT Pro Mark Joseph Edwards, Security News, InstantDoc #98491, Windows IT Pro ?A group of researchers from two universities have proposed a way to prevent chip piracy. The technique uses public key cryptography to lock down circuitry.
In a whitepaper published this month, Jarrod A. Roy and Igor L. Markov (of the University of Michigan) and Farinaz Koushanfar (of Rice University) outline the problem and details of how their proposed technology will help solve it.
Chip designers sometimes outsource manufacturing and that opens the door to piracy, should someone copy the design plans. The copied plans are then used to created ?clone? chips for a wide range of devices, including computers, MP3 players, and more.
"Pirated chips are sometimes being sold for pennies, but they are exactly the same as normal chips," said Igor Markov, associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the University of Michigan. "They were designed in the United States and usually manufactured overseas, where intellectual property law is more lax. Someone copies the blueprints or manufactures the chips without authorization."
The groups propose the use of public key cryptography, which would be embedded into circuitry designs. Each chip would produce its own random identification number, which would be generated during an activation phase. Chips would not function until activated, and activation would take place in a manner somewhat similar to that seen with many applications in use today. Via email from Jeremy Hansen.Original source ? EPIC: Ending Piracy of Integrated Circuits Jarrod A. Roy, Farinaz Koushanfar? and Igor L. Markov, The University of Michigan, Department of EECS, 2260 Hayward Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2121, Rice University, ECE and CS Departments, 6100 South Main, Houston, TX ? www.eecs.umich.edu/~imarkov/pubs/conf/date08-epic.pdf March 06, 2008
[6] Chapter 5 ?Why do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms?? p. 89 ?So how did the gang work? An awful lot like most American businesses, actually, though perhaps none more so than McDonald?s. In fact, if you were to hold a McDonald?s organizational chart and a Black Disciples org chart side by side, you could hardly tell the difference.?
[7] Mike Haynes, Theses on the Balkan War, ??Capitalism is inherently a competitively expansionist and therefore conflict ridden system? Issue 83 of INTERNATIONAL SOCIALISM JOURNAL Published Summer 1999 Copyright ? International Socialism, pubs.socialistreviewindex.org.uk/isj83/haynes.htm/ accessed March 3, 2008.
[8] Readings p.7 ?When I say that globalization has replaced the Cold War as the defining international system, what exactly do I mean?? p. 8 ?The cold war system was symbolized by a single word, the wall ? ?You can?t handle the truth,? Says Nicholson. ?Son we live in a world that has walls???p. 8 ?This Globalization system is also characterized by a single word: the Web. ? we have gone from a system built around divisions and walls to a system built around integration and webs.?
?What is information arbitrage? Arbitrage is a market term. Technically speaking, it refers to the simultaneous buying and selling of the same securities, commodities or foreign exchange in different markets to predict from unequal prices and unequal information. The successful arbitrageur is a trader that knows??
[9] Shared by miles on Feb 13, 2006 3:39 pm that I located through a mail.google.com/mail/?ui=1&realattid=f_fdn935gd&a?
[10] ?As it gears up to host the 2008 Olympic Games Beijing has been awarded an unwelcome new accolade: the air pollution capital of the world.Satellite data has revealed that the city is one of the worst environmental victims of China?s spectacular economic growth, which has brought with it air pollution levels that are blamed for more than 400,000 premature deaths a year? www.guardian.co.uk/news/2005/oct/31/china.pollution
[11] ?What we call ?war? is not all bad,? according to Virginia Johnson a former governmental planning consultant, who reminded me, ?Without conflict there is no life. You don?t want ?perfect peace? there is no movement. The human standard is actually what we broadly call ?war?; because without conflict, change, motion, growth we would learn nothing, we would have nothing, we would be dead.? Personal conversation, March 14, 2008, Seattle, Washington
[12] Readings Larry Page, Google Co-Founder quoted by Thomas Friedman, p. 179, entire paragraph. ?The more global Google?s user base becomes, the more powerful a flattener it becomes??
[13] Ranganathan, faceted classification, Five Laws of Library Science, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S._R._Ranganathan, www.boxesandarrows.com/view/ranganathan_for_ias Personality, Matter, Energy, Space, and Time. (PMEST)
Personality?what the object is primarily ?about.? This is considered the ?main facet.?
Matter?the material of the object
Energy?the processes or activities that take place in relation to the object
Space?where the object happens or exists
Time?when the object occurs
[14] www.crito.uci.edu/pubs/2004/ChinaGECIII.pdf
[15] I learned about supply chain management mainly from the supply chain wizard Marc Lamonica, Regional Chief Financial Officer at Sutter Connect, www.sutterconnect.org/, and our mutual friend Web entrepreneur and ecommerce product engineer Adam Kalsey, and Sacramento State University teacher Stuart Williams, of Blitzkeigsoftware.net, blitzkriegsoftware.net/StuartWilliams/default.asp
[16] Introduction to Computer software classes in the 1970s consisted of FORTRAN cash register receipt programming, which is by implication is what ecommerce actually does.
[17] Freakonomics is a must read book of comedy and connections.
[18] Golden Arches, definition on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Arches, accessed March 13, 2?
[19] Readings ?The World Is Flat 3.0: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century? by Thomas Friedman, p. 421
[20] Readings p. 19 ?What is information arbitrage? Arbitrage is a market term. Technically speaking, it refers to the simultaneous buying and selling of the same securities, commodities or foreign exchange in different markets to predict from unequal prices and unequal information. The successful arbitrageur is a trader that knows??
[21] ?Conservation groups say acid rain falls on a third of China?s territory and ?% of rivers and lakes are so full of toxins they can no longer be used for drinking water.? Satellite data reveals Beijing as air pollution capital of world, Jonathan Watts in Beijing The Guardian, Monday October 31 2005, www.guardian.co.uk/news/2005/oct/31/china.pollution
[22] ??After watching Jobs unveil the iPhone, Alan Kay, a personal computer pioneer who has worked with him, put it this way who has worked with him, put it this way: "Steve understands desire." ? Fortune CNN Magazine March 5, 2008, money.cnn.com/2008/03/02/news/companies/elkind_jobs.fortu?
accessed March?, 2008
[23] Mac Margolis, ?How Brazil Reversed the Curse, Latin America used to suffer the deepest gap between rich and poor. Now it is the only region narrowing the divide. Upwardly Mobile: Middle-class Brazilians? www.newsweek.com/id/67850 NEWSWEEK Nov 12, ? Issue
[24] Mike Haynes, Theses on the Balkan War, ?Capitalism is inherently a competitively expansionist and therefore conflict ridden system? Issue 83 of INTERNATIONAL SOCIALISM JOURNAL Published Summer? Copyright ? International Socialism, pubs.socialistreviewindex.org.uk/isj83/haynes.htm/ accessed March 3, 2008. ?The optimism that the end of the Cold War might lead to a new world order has been shown to be false. The hope that it would release a peace dividend that would enable a new generosity in international relations has been belied by experience, as some of us sadly predicted it would.3 Though the arms burden has declined, there has been no outpouring of aid to Eastern Europe, no new ?Marshall Plan?. The result has been that the burden of change has fallen on the broad masses of the population, wrecking lives across the old Soviet bloc in general and in one of its poorest components in south eastern Europe in particular. According to the World Bank, the number of people living in poverty (defined as having less than a day) in the former Soviet bloc has risen from 14 million in 1990 to 147 million in?.4 Worse still, the advanced countries have continued to reduce further the miserly sums they devote to aid to the even poorer areas of the world. The OECD countries are rhetorically committed to an aid target of 0.7 percent of their output. In 1990 they gave 0.35 percent, and by 1997 the figure had fallen to 0.? percent, with the United States under this heading giving 0.09 percent of its output, a figure in startling contrast to the expenditure devoted to destruction.?5
[25] Readings p. 46 ?There is a tale, ?The ring of Gygnes,? ? could any man resist the temptation of evil if he knew his acts could not be witnessed??
[26] Readings p. 58 ?Attendance at Klan meetings began to fall ? of all the ideas Kennedy thought up to fight bigotry, this campaign was clearly the cleverest. ? He turned the Klan?s secrecy against itself by making its private information public: he converted heretofore precious knowledge into ammunition for mockery.?
Some of the research in this paper on piracy, was provided by Jeremy Hansen of Seattle, Washington, USA. Mr. Hansen?s email regarding economics served to inform me on this topic. Teacher: Glenn Von Tersch.
Source: http://www.ushighschoolguide.com/cool-hope-special-education-center-images-2/
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