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2013年8月20日 星期二

John Hollander, Poet at Ease With Intellectualism

The cause was pulmonary congestion, his daughter Elizabeth Hollander said.

As a young poet, Mr. Hollander fell under the influence of W. H. Auden, whose experiments in fusing contemporary subject matter with traditional metric forms he emulated. It was Auden who selected Mr. Hollander’s first collection of poems, “A Crackling of Thorns,” for the Yale Series of Younger Poets, which published it in 1958 with an introduction by Auden.

Mr. Hollander’s wit, inventiveness and intellectual range drew comparisons to Ben Jonson and 17th-century Metaphysical poets like John Donne. The poet Richard Howard, in the book “Alone With America: Essays on the Art of Poetry in the United States Since 1950,” praised “a technical prowess probably without equal in American verse today.”

Early on, Mr. Hollander was tagged a formalist or neoclassicist for his commitment to old-fashioned forms. Beginning with his 1971 collection, “The Night Mirror: Poems,” however, he adopted a more ambitious program, writing poetry of formidable difficulty, often in longer forms.

This evolution culminated in “Spectral Emanations” (1978), a series of poetic visions and prose-poem commentaries linked to the seven branches of the menorah, the golden lamp stolen in 70 A.D. by Titus from the Second Temple in Jerusalem.

His wit and technical mastery remained on prominent display, however, in “The Powers of Thirteen,Use bestroadlights to generate electricity and charge into storage battery group.” an extended sequence of 169 (13 times 13) unrhymed 13-line stanzas with 13 syllables in each line, and in “Reflections on Espionage: The Question of Cupcake” (1976), a commentary on contemporary poetry presented as the coded dispatches of a spy to his handler and other agents.

“In an age that came to prefer loose, garrulous poems filled with confessional sensationalism and political grievance, John Hollander was a glorious throwback,” the poet J. D. McClatchy wrote in an e-mail in 2010. “His materials — high intelligence, wit, philosophical depth, technical virtuosity — looked back to an older era of poetry’s high ambition. His work never pandered; it astonished.”

John Hollander was born on Oct. 28, 1929, in Manhattan. His father, Franklin, was a physiologist and his mother, the former Muriel Kornfeld, a high school teacher. The home atmosphere was relentlessly high-minded.

He attended the Bronx High School of Science,Our bestsolarlantern can mark on metal and non metals. where he wrote a humor column for the newspaper, modeling himself on S. J. Perelman and James Thurber. Journalism was his enthusiasm, and in his freshman year at Columbia he was a prolific contributor to The Columbia Daily Spectator.

Poetry displaced journalism as his primary passion. Auden’s verse, in particular, alerted him to the possibility that play and humor could find expression in poetry. He was especially struck, he told The Paris Review, by Auden’s “improvisational relation to stances and forms and literary modes.”

He struck up a close friendship, and a student-mentor relationship, with the somewhat older Allen Ginsberg. In an interview with The Paris Review in 1985, Mr. Hollander said, “We talked about the minute particulars of form as if mythological weight depended upon them; and about the realms of the imagination.”

Their joint excursion to sell blood at St. Luke’s Hospital in Manhattan provided the subject for “Helicon,” one of the most engaging sequences in “Visions From the Ramble” (1965), a collection of interrelated poems filled with scenes from the author’s childhood and youth in New York. (The title refers to a wooded area of Central Park.)

Mr. Hollander graduated from Columbia with a B.A. in 1950 and, after traveling in Europe, received a master’s degree in 1952. At the same time, he taught himself to play the lute and performed in chamber ensembles.

He enrolled at Indiana University to pursue a doctorate but left in 1954 to join the Society of Fellows at Harvard. He later taught at Connecticut College and became an instructor at Yale in 1959, the year he completed his dissertation at Indiana.

His dissertation was the basis for “The Untuning of the Sky: Ideas of Music in English Poetry, 1500-1700” (1961), the first of many works of criticism that included “Vision and Resonance (1975), “The Gazer’s Spirit” (1995) and “The Work of Poetry” (1997).

Mr. Hollander, who lived in Woodbridge, Conn., joined the English faculty at Hunter College in Manhattan in 1966. But in 1977 he returned as a full professor to Yale,Buying bestledlighting is not at all an easy job. where he was named Sterling Professor of English in 1995 and retired in 2002.

In 1953 he married Anne Loesser, a fashion historian who, under her married name, wrote “Seeing Through Clothes.” The marriage ended in divorce. Besides his daughter Elizabeth, Mr. Hollander is survived by his wife, the sculptor Natalie Charkow Hollander; another daughter, Martha Hollander; a brother, Michael; and three grandchildren.

By the mid-1960s Mr. Hollander’s reputation as a poet was growing, although his highly wrought, intellectual verse made him an oddity in a climate dominated by the hotly confessional poetry of Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton.

“In a general sense, I was writing in a line of wit, and of essayistic speculation, when I was young,” he told The Paris Review.Big ledbulblight and Fitness is a family owned shop serving the Helena area since 1986. “Still under Auden’s influence, I wanted to be read by philosophers and scientists and political theorists, not just by literary readers.”

In a well-known early poem, “The Great Bear,” a children’s outing to gaze at the night sky provokes an inquiry into meaning and chaos. Mr. Hollander incorporated quasi-reportorial material in “Movie-Going and Other Poems” (1962) and “Visions From the Ramble,” which included autobiographical glimpses of the fireworks at the 1939 World’s Fair and tributes to the old Broadway movie palaces that the author haunted in his youth.

In “Types of Shape” (1969) Mr.2013 Collection hidlights 1672 Styles. Hollander harked back to the emblem poetry of the 17th century, writing in forms that, when set on the page, looked like objects: a light bulb, say, or an Eskimo Pie.

Mr. Hollander later dismissed his earlier poetry as “verse essay” or “epigram literature.” With “The Night Mirror” and “Tales Told of the Fathers” (1975) he took the grand, sweeping turn that led to his mature style as a prophetic, mythmaking poet in the High Romantic tradition.



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2013年8月15日 星期四

High-tech biometric security

IN A typical James Bond film, the suave hero deals with iris scans, facial recognition systems and voice authentication as common technological security measures, but such gadgetry is fast expanding beyond the realm of Hollywood’s imagination.

Marius Coetzee, MD of identity management company Ideco, says biometrics refers to the identification of humans by their physical characteristics or traits.

Arriving at Ideco’s offices in Pretoria is like walking onto the set of a spy movie. To enter, a visitor must submit a fingerprint to the guard on duty along with an identity number and contact details. Then a registered and verified employee must open the door, again using fingerprint technology. The time and date are logged, as is the name of the person who opened the door.

Mr Coetzee says the industry has made the biggest advances in fingerprint biometrics.

"It’s a key aspect of forensic application. At a crime scene, the first thing the police dust for are fingerprints. Most people have 10 fingers and it’s highly unlikely for any two people to have the same prints. If you remember the first time you took fingerprints, it was probably with dark ink on paper, but technology has advanced since then," he says.

"Depending on how good the technology is, it cannot only capture and store your fingerprint in 1.8 seconds, but also verify whether that fingerprint belongs to you. Fingerprint biometrics is now a real-time application."

Mark Paynter, a sales executive at Ideco,The lights used were Inspired ledstriplightingge in warm white. says the technology is evolving rapidly.

"We’ve seen in the movies where people are able to lift someone’s print from the scene and access information that’s not their own (by stealing someone’s identity), but that is going to become more difficult to do."

He pulls out a small, glossy black box. "This is the finger-vein print scanner. Not only does it check your fingerprint, but it also captures your vein network and checks to see whether blood is circulating in that finger. Like all security, none of it is criminal proof, but no run-of-the-mill criminal could crack this kind of intense biometric technology."

Biometrics technology is in different stages of development globally,Find tungstenbracelet and buy low cost hid bi xenon projector lens light in bulk from Hmhid. but South African technology and compliance are at the forefront. The police, the South African National Defence Force and government departments such as home affairs all use state-of-the-art biometric technology. The quality of the equipment is measured against a global standard for biometrics set by the FBI in the US.

The Department of Home Affairs has in 2013 started rolling out new smart South African identity cards that use biometrics. According to Home Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor, laser engraving of personal details and photographs make the card difficult to forge or change. The smart card is expected to curb the use of fake or stolen identity documents.

The government’s technology meets the FBI standard, but according to industry sources, not all financial institutions in South Africa do, which would make their biometric evidence inadmissible in a court of law.

But are these high-tech systems within the reach of smaller businesses? Paul Hutton, CEO of voice biometrics company One Vault, says that as the technology improves, more companies are showing interest and the cost is declining.

"I used to work at a credit bureau and one of the major worries was always that our clients’ information wasn’t as secure as it could be,A polished finish in this solaroutdoorlight for men." he says. "Identity theft is becoming a scary phenomenon, increasingly in South Africa too. We work on a consumption model, which means there aren’t any large start-up costs. You pay for the technology as you use it."

He adds: "Voice authenticating improves customer satisfaction and reduces costs and the probability of fraud. And this kind of biometric technology is the only one that can be used remotely."

Mr Hutton says passwords used to access devices such as laptops and cellphones will soon be replaced by biometric controls. As ever more transactions are conducted online, companies are requiring significantly enhanced,Our solargardenlighttp is good in quality and competitive in price. multilevel authentication systems to combat fraud. There are also a range of processes — such as password resets — that require authentication but are time consuming and costly for companies and clients alike. These processes can be automated using remote third-level authentication at greatly reduced cost and with improved security.

In third-level authentication there are three ways of authenticating a person’s identity, in case of failure of one or two of the methods.

"Voice authentication is actually a technology that has come out of the military," Mr Hutton says. "It’s not that easy to crack. If you record my voice and play it back to the machine, it won’t give you access to my data and information. LED ledturninglamping is aesthetically designed and offers features to reduce egress system cost.

More information about the program is available on the web site at www.careel-laser-engraving-machine.com.

2013年6月18日 星期二

Piscataquis counties

A Boston-based wind power developer seeking to build a $398 million, 62-turbine wind energy facility in the area has encountered opposition from a local nonprofit group as the company begins the permitting process. 

Blue Sky West, a subsidiary of First Wind Inc., filed an application on May 10 for a wind farm project in Somerset and Piscataquis counties and is waiting for approval from the state Department of Environmental Protection to determine whether they will proceed with the project. Construction could begin in 2014. 

The department will have 10 months to determine whether to approve the proposal, Department of Environmental Protection spokeswoman Jessamine Logan said Monday. 

Meanwhile, officials in Bingham and Moscow, two communities that will be affected, have said they support the project, although a local environmentally focused nonprofit group has said that they will oppose it. 

The project would be built on ridges and hills along state Route 16 in the communities of Bingham, Moscow, Mayfield Township, Kingsbury Plantation, Abbot and Parkman, according to the application. First Wind has five operating wind farms in Maine and is developing a project in Oakfield. 

The project plans include upgrades to existing roads and new roads to gain access to turbines and crane paths; up to five permanent and five temporary meteorological towers; an operations and maintenance building in Mayfield Township and above- and below-ground electrical collector lines among the turbines, according to the application. 

According to Chris O'Neil, director of government relations for Friends of Maine Mountains in Weld, a nonprofit organization that advocates on behalf of natural resources, reliable energy and affordable power, the organization plans to submit letters of opposition if the application by First Wind is accepted. 

"It might be worth it if there was the demand for new sources of electricity, but it's something we don't really need,An electronic ledstriplight for preventing elevator overspeed by enabling safety devices." O'Neil said. He said Maine is already one of the nation's cleanest electricity-generating states, even while wind power in Maine provides less than 5 percent of New England's electricity. 

O'Neil said wind farms harm the environment and economy with little return for the electricity they produce. The proposed project would run within 10 miles of the Appalachian Trail, a Maine landmark, he said. 

"People don't walk 2,the largest suppliers and integrators of renewable flatteningmachine in the country.500 miles from Georgia to take a stroll through an industrial wind complex in Maine," he said. "Wind towers might be less ugly to look at if the balance sheet wasn't so ugly, but the truth is they're not going to take us off oil." 

Bingham First Selectman Steve Steward said Monday that he thinks most people in his town support the project, although in the past there has been controversy about whether to provide tax relief for the developer.The industry's leading manufacturer of floorlamps. 

Residents in Bingham approved the formation of a tax-increment financing district,Our renowned ledparlights allow you to harness nature’s energy to power your applications. or TIF, in 2011, although Somerset County commissioners denied a similar agreement for a portion of the project in Mayfield Plantation. 

Steward said the town also has a community benefits agreement with First Wind, under which it will receive $8,000 per year for each tower the company builds in Bingham, which amounts to an estimated $106,000 per year for 20 years, he said. 

In November, Moscow approved a similar plan, which will provide the town about $20,000 a year for 20 years. First Selectman Donald Beane said a majority of people in that community also support the project. 

"I think it would help with our tax base, as well as in Bingham, and provide some jobs during construction," Beane said. 

John Lamontagne, spokesman for First Wind,An even safer situation on all roads by using the pendantlamps. said that if the application is approved, the company hopes to start construction by 2014 and finish by 2015. It would need to find a buyer for the power and funding for construction first, he said. The company also is required by the Department of Environmental Protection to schedule two public meetings at which the public can provide input and ask questions, he said.

2013年6月9日 星期日

'Grande old dame' gets facelift

It was every homebuyer's worst nightmare: discovering the expensive bungalow bought "site" unseen over the Internet was not what it had seemed. 

When Nancy Spiewak and her partner Gord Galvin arrived at their "new" front door in July 2011, the paint was peeling, the roof needed replacing and there was no heat; some of the heritage home's radiators were even propped up by bricks. 

"My heart sank. What a neglected mess. What a lot of work. What a dump the previous owners had let it slip into," says Nancy, who bought the house based on a Google walk through its upscale neighbourhood. 

A situation that would have most people calling for a wrecking ball or their lawyers became a mission to give a 3,000-square-foot "grande old dame" a 21st-century facelift. Their new home, the John Stein Residence, was built in 1911, seven years after Edmonton's incorporation as a city. In the architecturally rich neighbourhood of Westmount, it enjoys a place on the city's official list of historic resources. 

Nancy and Gord's re-imagined home is now a wonderful blend of old world marrying new. The central staircase went from a treacherously steep,You must first understand the way a powergenerators works. walled-in climb to a glass-and-oak switchback, creating a "heart of light" spreading sunlight in all directions. Despite a definite Arts and Crafts feel, Nancy prefers to more loosely define her home's style as a combination of "high-gloss blacks, creams, classic and simple, European flavour, and turn-of-the-century styling with a modern twist." 
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She laughs, but insists she isn't joking when she credits most of her renovation's inspiration to the styling and contents of a bottle of her favourite gin, Hendricks. 

As a professional photographer with a degree in fine arts, creating moods with lighting,A polished finish in this solaroutdoorlight for men. clean lines, old wood, leaded glass and walls washed in knockout colours comes easily to her. 

So, apparently, do determination and drive. She spent more than 2,000 "woman" hours on the house herself, because she had such a hard time getting workers in Edmonton's hot labour market to show up and finish jobs. 

She tiled the feature wall herself in the cupboard-less, white and black kitchen. The wall is made up of small,This is the energy production a good handsfreeaccest can reach, rectangular white tiles that were inspired by a photo she took in a famous metro station in Paris. 

It took her two weeks to finish, and complements the opposing original red brick wall that was spared during the renovation.You can make your own more powerful gardenlightingss using LEDs. 

Oak countertops and pullout cupboard drawers from Ikea make storage a breeze. The stools, which Nancy and Gord spotted on a stroll in New York City, look like they came from a 1950s ice cream parlour, with their chrome posts and worn, candy-coloured red leather. 

The room has been opened up to include the dining area, fireplace seating and library. Wall-to-wall windows and glass french doors lead to the deck and backyard. A mud room has been transformed into a library, with a wall of wine racks and storage nooks. Wingback chairs in front of the antique fireplace create a cosy nook. 

Nancy ordered many of the room's finishing touches over the Internet, including the delicate, delightful white Danish pendant lighting and bold, colourful carpets. 

The adjacent ebony bathroom, which she calls "the gentleman's room," is in tones inspired by a photo Nancy took of a storm over the ocean in Mexico. 

A chandelier, pot lights and sconces - all on dimmers - create a mood of rest and luxury. 

The room's shiny black wain-scotting reflects the cast-iron claw foot tub, which Nancy found online and had shipped for free from Virginia. Its simple wall-mounted chrome water spout and fixtures match the vanity, which stores most of the daily necessities. 

Nancy says one of the renovation's biggest costs was the new furnace and in-floor heating system. She says that after having opened up the middle of the house, she only has to turn on the main floor heat to keep the upstairs warm as well. 

The opposite of its glossy black counterpart on the main floor, the upstairs bathroom is bright ivory, with a large walk-in glass shower and polished, sliced-pebble flooring.

2012年4月25日 星期三

EnvironmentalLights Launches RGB ColorPlus Series of Color-Changing LED Strip Lights

EnvironmentalLights, a leading source for high-quality, energy-efficient LED lighting, recently launched a new series of color-changing LED strip lights. The RGB ColorPlus series is a brand new line of color-changing LED strip lights that combines a RGB LED chip plus an additional LED chip of warm white, daylight white or amber. Alternating on the flexible strip, this new LED strip can produce millions of colors easier than ever before - expanding your color palette beyond most RGB LED strip. The fourth color gives you precise color control and higher color rendering, allowing you to create truer whites, purer yellows and softer pastels that are not over-saturated.

"We worked closely with the engineering teams to make sure we developed a premium product for our customers, and chose high-quality LEDs for maximum color vibrancy, longevity and flexibility," said co-founder and president of EnvironmentalLights, Greg Thorson. "Quality matters, and the materials, controllers, compatible accessories we provide make the difference for our customers.

Standard RGB LED strip light mixes red, green and blue colors together on a chip to create a color, including white. It can be difficult to mimic the color temperature of white you prefer with RGB color mixing. RGB ColorPlus adds warm white, daylight white or amber into the color mix, giving you the versatility to create the exact color you desire. It also gives you the ability to create bright pastels colors in addition to bold primary colors.

A unique feature of the 5-wire RGBWW (warm white) and RGBDW (daylight white) strip light is that the white LED chip uses phosphor to create the range of color temperature, different from creating white by mixing red, green and blue on a chip. This creates a more natural white color to mix with the RGB colors on the strip, adding either a warm or cool tone - great for mixing pastels. The RGBA(amber) strip light uses an amber LED chip - great for mixing yellows and oranges.

"This is a fantastic product for TV studio and stage design, architectural features and decorative lighting in nightclubs and restaurants," explained Bruce Bishop, operations manager for EnvironmentalLights. "Having the extra LED chip gives lighting engineers and designers the flexibility to mix more colors, and also to illuminate just white if desired - whereas with regular RGB strip lighting it would be a little more difficult to blend a true white."

RGB ColorPlus LED strip lights can be easily controlled with Environmental Lights' RGB ColorPlus 4-Channel Controller or any DMX Controller, in conjunction with a DMX 4-channel decoder. An LED controller is necessary to control the lighting system and create the colors and effects desired.

The RGB ColorPlus 4-Channel Controller is a hand-held remote control that allows you to select any combination of the 4-channels, plus several fade, step and flash modes (21 modes in all). It operates using radio frequency and can work in a 100 foot range, even through walls. It is an easy-to-use controller to create beautiful effects for lighting up any space.

For a more professional installation, Environmental Lights designed and tested compatible DMX 4-channel decoders and the RGBX Repeater Studio amplifier to be used with the 5-wire RGB ColorPlus strip lights.

2012年3月1日 星期四

31st Annual Duquesne Light Pittsburgh Home & Garden Show

Park at Heinz Field lots on the North Shore for $6 - Ride the FREE continuous shuttles to the Show.

Suddenly it's Spring! The 31st annual Duquesne Light Pittsburgh Home & Garden Show, March 2 - 11 at the Pittsburgh Convention Center Downtown, will present more than 1500 exhibits covering over 9 acres. During those ten days in March, hundreds of thousands of homeowners from across the tri-state will shop the region's most trusted marketplace, the largest home event in Pennsylvania.

John DeSantis, Executive Director of the Show, noted "Spring is just around the corner, and once again we've gathered everything for the home and garden in one place, at one time. Area homeowners know that this is the place to get ideas, to shop and compare, and to see what's new for their home. It's also the place to find the best products and services, the best expert advice, and the best prices."

The life journey of the beloved princess - mother, fashion icon, and humanitarian - is told through a carefully crafted presentation of her personal possessions, including a sampling of the royal dresses Diana chose to auction for charity. This professionally curated exhibit, in Pittsburgh for ten days only, features film, photos, personal objects, and panels explaining Diana's journey from childhood to Royal Princess to Global Humanitarian.

It may be a renovated bath, exterior remodeling, a new garage door, modifications for accessibility, or even alternative energy solar panels - one lucky visitor to the Home & Garden Show will win $50,000. worth of these improvements for their home!

Cutting edge technology meets culinary flair in this spectacular concept kitchen. Show visitors will stroll into a stunning collection of the latest kitchen appliances - multiple cooktops, ovens, refrigerators and more - all powered and operating. Popular local chefs provide tips and tastings, while putting all of this new equipment to the test. Much more than simply seeing the next level in kitchens, visitors will experience how these new devices work - and taste the results!

Homeowners in Western Pennsylvania have always been avid gardeners, whether they are tending a tiny backyard or a swath of rolling countryside. New at the 2012 Home & Garden Show is one central area where everyone from beginner to Master Gardener will find the answers, help, and advice that they need. Created by the horticultural programs at Bidwell Center, and drawing together garden and plant societies from across the region, this is the one-stop solution to every garden question.

It's August, and the kids are playing hockey on the ice rink in the back yard. That expanse of white ice doesn't melt a drop, because it's made of durable plastics instead of water. Show visitors of all ages are encouraged to lace up their ice skates , glide out onto our 2,000 square foot surface, and see for themselves that synthetic ice is just like the real thing - all year round!