A German children’s book from 1845 by Heinrich Hoffman featured “Fidgety Philip,” a boy who was so restless he would writhe and tilt wildly in his chair at the dinner table. Once, using the tablecloth as an anchor, he dragged all the dishes onto the floor. Yet it was not until 1902 that a British pediatrician, George Frederic Still, described what we now recognize as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Since Still’s day, the disorder has gone by a host of names, including organic drivenness, hyperkinetic syndrome, attention-deficit disorder and now ADHD.Continue Reading… … Read More
Frank Lloyd Wright’s auto showroom is no more
It’s shocking that a building designed by one of the biggest architects of the past century could disappear so quickly and quietly, but last month Frank Lloyd Wright’s auto showroom on Park Avenue was demolished and the architectural world is just now feeling the reverberations.“It’s a national tragedy simply because there are not that many Frank Lloyd Wright design commissions left in America — and truly not that many in New York City,” Simeon Bankoff, the executive director of the Historic Districts Council in New York, explained over email. “There were three, now there are two. Frank Lloyd Wright is arguably America’s greatest architect — he’s definitely our country’s most famous one. Even given a question of the individual significance of the showroom within Wright’s extant oeuvre, it should not have been casually thrown away, but rather studied and discussed.”The modern version of the Hoffman Show Room (via Crain’s New York) Continue Reading… … Read More
Shawl male rule: Israeli police detain ten women over ‘improper attire’ at holy site
Shawl male rule: Israeli police detain ten women over ‘improper attire’ at holy siteGet short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint versionPublished: 11 February, 2013, 22:55
TAGS:Religion,
Israel,
Police
Israeli police arrest American Rabbi Susan Silverman (L), sister of comedian Sarah Silverman, and her teenage daughter Hallel Abramowitz (C), after performing Rosh Hodesh prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, on February 11, 2013 (AFP Photo / Janos Chiala
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) Ten female activists have been detained by police for trying to pray at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Authorities accused them of taking part in practices that Orthodox Judaism reserves for men.American Rabbi Susan Silverman (L), sister of comedian Sarah Silverman, hugs her teenage daughter Hallel Abramowitz, after being arrested by Israeli police for performing Rosh Hodesh prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, on February 11, 2013 (AFP Photo / Janos Chiala) “);
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The incident occurred at the Western Wall – a site that has welcomed prayers from Jews for centuries.The women belong to “Women of the Wall,” a liberal group which works for equal access for all Jewish denominations and practices at the sacred site. They conduct certain rituals, such as wearing prayer shawls and skullcaps and singing out loud.While their activities may seem normal enough to many, there was a problem in the eyes of the Israeli police – strict Orthodox Judaism reserves their practices and garb for men. It’s precisely that rule on attire that the group was protesting while they attempted to pray at the women’s section of the Wall – but Israeli police were anything but impressed with their efforts on Monday.”They (police) said ‘take off your prayer shawls’, and we said ‘no,” Susan Silverman, who was among the detained, told Reuters.Police Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the women acted against court-ordered regulations which bar women from wearing prayer shawls at the Western Wall so as not to offend Orthodox Jewish worshippers. The women were released after close to three hours of questioning.But members of the group aren’t so quick to accept the authorities’ explanation. “This is just attrition,” said Women of the Wall chairwoman Anat Hoffman, who was among the detained. “They want to the group to become frightened,” she said.Silverman said the Orthodox tradition barring women from wearing prayer shawls amounted to “spitting on Sinai,” referring to the site where the Bible says God handed the ancient Israelite leader Moses the Ten Commandments.”All Jews are in a covenant with God,” regardless of their gender, she said.It’s not the first time members of the group have been detained for similar reasons, although Hoffman says none of the members have ever been formally charged with a crime.The women had hundreds of supporters at the Wall, including dozens of male followers who joined them in prayer from the other side of the barrier that separates the sexes. But their fans don’t stop at the other side of the divide.Two of those detained were the sister and niece of American comedian Sarah Silverman. The comic wrote on her Facebook page that she was “SO proud” of her sister and niece for their “civil disobedience.” Two of the women held by police were American rabbis from the egalitarian Conservative Jewish movement, who missed a scheduled meeting with the Jewish Agency chief to discuss the very issue that landed them in police custody, according to Hoffman.Israeli police arrest American Rabbi Susan Silverman (L), sister of comedian Sarah Silverman, and her teenage daughter Hallel Abramowitz (C), after performing Rosh Hodesh prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, on February 11, 2013 (AFP Photo / Janos Chiala) American Rabbi Susan Silverman (L), sister of comedian Sarah Silverman, hugs her teenage daughter Hallel Abramowitz, after being arrested by Israeli police for performing Rosh Hodesh prayers at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, on February 11, 2013 (AFP Photo / Janos Chiala) … Read More
BAFTA Awards Winners 2013: Ben Affleck, ‘Argo,’ ‘Skyfall’ & More
The British Academy Film & Television Arts Awards — or BAFTAs — were announced on Sunday, and “Argo” and director Ben Affleck were big winners.
“Argo” won Best Film from the BAFTAs, beating “Les Miserables,” “Life of Pi,” “Zero Dark Thirty,” and — once again — “Lincoln.” Since the Oscar nominations were announced on Jan. 10, “Argo” has bested “Lincoln” at the Critics’ Choice Awards, Golden Globes, Producers Guild of America Awards and Screen Actors Guild Awards. Affleck, who was famously snubbed in the Best Director category by the Academy Awards, also defeated “Lincoln” director Steven Spielberg at the Directors Guild Awards. As has been par for the awards-season course, Affleck won Best Director at the BAFTAs as well, though he didn’t top Spielberg for the honor; Spielberg was not nominated in the category. (Michael Haneke, Quentin Tarantino, Ang lee and Kathryn Bigelow were.)
Beyond Affleck and “Argo,” the BAFTAs also honored Oscar favorites Daniel Day-Lewis (for “Lincoln”) and Anne Hathaway (for “Les Miserables”) in, respectively, the Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress categories. Christoph Waltz won the BAFTA award for Best Supporting Actor. Waltz, who also won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor, is nominated for an Oscar alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman, Tommy Lee Jones, Alan Arkin and Robert De Niro. (“Skyfall” star Javier Bardem replaced De Niro on the BAFTA list of supporting actor nominees.)
Kate Gosselin Expose: Reworked Ebook Manuscript To Be Released
Kate Gosselin might have won the first battle in her effort to halt the sale of a nasty ebook being written about her — but she hasn’t yet won the war.
In October 2012, Kate successfully halted the sale of the ebook, in which writer Robert Hoffman (a friend of Kate’s ex-husband Jon) alleged that the reality TV star and mom of eight “fooled the world.” Now, Robert has come back with a re-edited version of the story, he says, and he warns it’s still full of bombshells.
“The book is almost finished going through the re-editing process and will be released in hardcover as well as ebook format,” Robert tells The Huffington Post. “I’m actually enjoying the fact that Kate has been staying out of the news. Perhaps it’s the calm before the storm.”
Tens of thousands march in Washington anti-abortion rally (PHOTOS)
Tens of thousands march in Washington anti-abortion rally (PHOTOS)
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Get short URLLink copied to clipboardemail story to a friendprint versionPublished: 26 January, 2013, 08:35
TAGS:Health,
Protest,
Law,
USA
Anti-abortion protesters attend the March for Life on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Brendan Hoffman)A massive anti-abortion march hit Washington, DC, on Friday as tens of thousands opposed to the right to choose descended on the National Mall to protest Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1971 decision that legalized the termination of pregnancies.Anti-abortion protesters attend the March for Life on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Brendan Hoffman)nti-abortion activists march past the US Capitol during the annual “March for Life” on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)Anti-abortion activists march during the annual “March for Life” rally on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)A masked anti-abortion activist holds a placard during the annual “March for Life” rally on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)An anti-abortion protester holds a crucifix at the March for Life on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Brendan Hoffman)”);
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Participants in the annual March for Life walked to the steps of the US Supreme Court carrying signs reading “Defend Life,” “I regret My Abortion,” “1973-
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2013 Forty Years of Legal Fetal Homicide,” and many others.The event comes on the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the US Supreme Court decision that made it a constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy under some circumstances.Despite freezing temperatures the turnout was huge, highlighting the sensitivity of the issue for the nation. But despite President Barack Obama’s commitment to women’s “reproductive freedom,” state legislatures continue to mull various restrictions to women’s rights to terminate a pregnancy.Earlier this week, abortion opponents marked the anniversary with workshops, prayers and calls for more limits on the right to choose.Members of numerous religious organizations attended the march, and even Pope Benedict XVI voiced his support to the demonstrators, tweeting, “I join all those marching for life from afar, and pray that political leaders will protect the unborn and promote a culture of life.”Among the speakers at the event was former Pennsylvania governor and former Republican presidential nominee Rick Santorum – a staunch opponent of the constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy. He said the cause was made up of people who every day advocate for their position outside women’s health clinics and at crisis pregnancy centers.”This movement is not a bunch of moralizers standing on their mountaintop preaching what is right,” Santorum said.Anti-abortion protesters attend the March for Life on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Brendan Hoffman)Anti-abortion protesters attend the March for Life on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Brendan Hoffman)nti-abortion activists march past the US Capitol during the annual “March for Life” on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)Anti-abortion activists march during the annual “March for Life” rally on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)A masked anti-abortion activist holds a placard during the annual “Mar
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ch for Life” rally on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)An anti-abortion protester holds a crucifix at the March for Life on January 25, 2013 in Washington.(AFP Photo / Brendan Hoffman) … Read More
Dustin Hoffman’s Directing Debut: ‘Quartet’
TORONTO — At least Dustin Hoffman is honest when asked why it took him so long to make his directing debut.”I don’t know,” Hoffman said.Read More…
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