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The Top 10 Reasons to Reduce the Risk of Accidental Nuclear War

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What's the number one military threat to the U.S.?

2. Terrorism4. A deliberate nuclear attack6. Accidental nuclear war with RussiaBased on the recent political debates, you'd think it would be 1 or 2, but if you do the numbers, 3 wins hands down. Here's why. Let's compare the expected number of Americans killed during the year ahead, i.e., the number of Americans who'd get killed if the threat comes true times the probability of this happening during the coming year. For terrorism, one of the worst-case scenarios is a nuclear explosion in downtown New York killing millions of people. If we very pessimistically multiply this by a 10% chance of happening in 2016 (it's probably much less likely), the expected number of casualties is a few hundred thousand per year.

For an all-out nuclear war with Russia, there's a huge uncertainty in casualties. If nuclear winter is as severe as some modern forecasts and ruins global food production with freezing summers for years, then it's plausible that over 5 billion of the 7.4 people on Earth will perish. If for some poorly understood reason there's no nuclear winter at all, we can use a 1979 report by the U.S. Government from before nuclear winter was discovered, estimating that 28%-88% of Americans and 22%-50% of Soviets (150-450 million people with today's populations) would die.

What's the chance of this happening during the year ahead? Before answering, please check out this timeline of near-misses when it almost happened by mistake (highlights below). John F. Kennedy estimated the probability of the Cuban Missile Crisis escalating to nuclear war between 33% and 50%, and near-misses keep occurring regularly. Even if the risk of accidental nuclear war is as low at 1% per year, the expected deaths are 1.5-50 million people per year depending on your nuclear winter assumptions, way more than for terrorism. It's likely that the chance of a deliberate unprovoked all-out nuclear attack by the U.S. or Russia is much smaller than 1%, given that this entails national suicide with over 7,000 nuclear weapons on the opposing side, many on hair-trigger alert.

A robust defense against terrorism and belligerent adversaries is clearly crucial, but U.S. military strategy can't afford to be soft against the greatest threat of all: accidental nuclear war. When you hear about the U.S. plan to spend about $1 trillion modernizing and upgrading our nuclear arsenal, it at first sounds like a step in the right direction, reducing this risk. Unfortunately, looking at what the money is actually for reveals that it instead increases the risk. Please check out the disturbing incidents below: Which of these risks would be reduced by the planned more accurate missile targeting, improving first-strike incentive? By the new nuclear-tipped cruise missile? By the new gravity bomb? None! We're spending money to make ourselves less safe by fueling a destabilizing arms race. We'll be safer if those 1 trillion dollars were spent on non-nuclear parts of the U.S. military and on strengthening our society in other ways.
Top-10 list of near-misses(Sources and more incidents here.)

*10) January 1, 1961: H-bombs Dropped on North Carolina*
A bomber was flying over North Carolina, when it lost a wing, and two of its nuclear bombs fell to the ground in Goldsboro, NC. One of the bombs broke on impact after its parachute failed. The other landed unharmed, but five of its six safety devices also failed. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara had this to say: "by the slightest margin of chance, literally the failure of two wires to cross, a nuclear explosion was averted." (Center for Defense Information 1981; McNamara et al. 1963, p. 2). If this Hydrogen bomb would have detonated, could it have been misinterpreted as Soviet foul play?

*9) October 24, 1962: Soviet Satellite Explodes During Cuban Missile Crisis*
In the middle of the Cuban Missile Crisis, a Soviet satellite entered its orbit but exploded soon after. Not much is known about the event or U.S. reaction to it because the records are still classified. However, many years later, Sir Bernard Lovell of the Jodrell Bank Observatory noted that, "the explosion of a Russian spacecraft in orbit during the Cuban missile crisis... led the U.S. to believe that the USSR was launching a massive ICBM attack."

*8) January 25 1995: Norwegian Rocket Mistaken for ICBM*
After the Cold War had ended, a Russian early warning radar detected a missile launch off the coast of Norway with flight characteristics similar to those of a U.S. submarine-launched ballistic missile. Fearing that it could be the first move in a larger attack, Russian nuclear forces quickly went on full alert. Russian President Boris Yeltsin activated his "nuclear football" and retrieved launch codes, preparing for a retaliatory launch. Fortunately Russian satellites monitoring U.S. missile fields did not show any additional launches, and Russian leaders declared the incident a false alarm. The event detected was actually the launch of a Norwegian scientific rocket on a mission to study the aurora borealis. Norway had notified countries, including Russia, in advance of the launch, but the information had failed to reach the correct Russian personnel.

*7) October 26, 1962: US F102A Fighters vs. Soviet MIG interceptors*
On the evening of October 26, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, a U.S. U2 spy plane accidentally entered Soviet air space. Soviet MIG interceptors took flight, with orders to bring it down. The U.S. pilot was ordered by commanders to fly back to Alaska as quickly as possilble, but he ran out of fuel while still over Siberia. He sent out an SOS, and F-102A fighters were sent up to escort him on his glide back to U.S. ground. The F-102A jets were loaded with nuclear missiles and the pilots had been given orders to shoot at their own discretion.

*6) June 6, 1980: Faulty Chip Signals Soviet Attack*
Early in the morning of June, 3, the warning displays at command centers began showing varying number of missiles had been launched toward the United States, and nuclear retaliation immediately commenced. However, personnel were able to determine in time that this was a false alarm as the varying missile numbers weren't logical. Three days later, before the cause could be determined, the same thing happened again, and again B-52 crews and missiles were nearly sent out in retaliation. A faulty chip in the computers was finally found to be the cause of the display problems at the command posts.

*5) November 11, 1983: Soviets Misinterpret U.S. Nuclear War Games *
NATO conduced a massive command post exercise simulating a period of conflict escalation November 2-11 1983, culminating in a simulated DEFCON 1 coordinated nuclear attack against the Soviet Union. The exercise was highly realistic and debuted a new, unique format of coded communication, radio silences, and the participation of heads of government. Unbeknownst to NATO, this triggered extreme alarm on the Soviet side, where analysts feared that it was a cover for an actual nuclear attack, conveniently timed to coincide with their Revolution Holiday. Soviet nuclear missiles were placed on high alert, readied for launch. The climax came on the morning of November 11, when the Soviets intercepted a NATO message saying that U.S. nuclear missiles had been launched against them. Robert Gates, then deputy director of intelligence at the CIA, later said: "We may have been at the brink of nuclear war and not even known it."
This incident is the subject of the British 1988 documentary The Brink of Apocalypse. It's sobering to consider what might have happened if an independent incident such as the September 26, 1983 false alarm or the 1995 Norwegian Rocket Launch would have randomly occurred on November 11, 1983 instead.

*4) November 9, 1979: Simulated Soviet Attack Mistaken for Real*
Computers at NORAD headquarters indicated a large-scale Soviet attack on the United States. NORAD relayed the information to the Strategic Air Command (SAC) and other high-level command posts, and top leaders convened to assess the threat. Within minutes, U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) crews were put on highest alert, nuclear bombers prepared for takeoff, and the National Emergency Airborne Command Post--the plane designed to allow the U.S. president to maintain control in case of an attack--took off (but without President Jimmy Carter on board). After six minutes, satellite data had not confirmed the attack, leading officials to decide no immediate action was necessary. Investigations later discovered that the incident was caused by a technician who had mistakenly inserted a training tape containing a scenario for a large-scale nuclear attack into an operational computer. In a comment about this incident in a letter designated Top Secret (since declassified), senior U.S. State Department adviser Marshall Shulman said that "false alerts of this kind are not a rare occurrence. There is a complacency about handling them that disturbs me."*3) September 9, 1983: Soviet Union Detects Incoming Missiles*
A Soviet early warning satellite showed that the United States had launched five land-based missiles at the Soviet Union. The alert came at a time of high tension between the two countries, due in part to the U.S. military buildup in the early 1980s and President Ronald Reagan's anti-Soviet rhetoric. In addition, earlier in the month the Soviet Union shot down a Korean Airlines passenger plane that strayed into its airspace, killing almost 300 people. Stanislav Petrov, the Soviet officer on duty, had only minutes to decide whether or not the satellite data were a false alarm. Since the satellite was found to be operating properly, following procedures would have led him to report an incoming attack. Going partly on gut instinct and believing the United States was unlikely to fire only five missiles, he told his commanders that it was a false alarm before he knew that to be true. Later investigations revealed that reflection of the sun on the tops of clouds had fooled the satellite into thinking it was detecting missile launches. This event was turned into the movie The Man Who Saved the World, and Petrov was honored at the United Nations and given the World Citizen Award.

*2) October 27, 1962: Soviet Sub Captain Decides to Fire Nuclear Torpedo During Cuban Missile Crisis*
This may be the closest call of all - so far. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, eleven U.S. Navy destroyers and the aircraft carrier USS Randolph had cornered the Soviet submarine B-59 near Cuba, in International waters outside the U.S. "quarantine" area. What they didn't know was that the temperature onboard had risen past 45ºC (113ºF) as the submarine's batteries were running out and the air-conditioning had stopped. On the verge of carbon dioxide poisoning, many crew members fainted. The crew had had no contact with Moscow for days and didn't know whether World War III had already begun. Then the Americans started dropping small depth charges at them which, unbeknownst to the crew, they'd informed Moscow were merely meant to force them to surface and leave. "We thought - that's it - the end", crewmember V.P. Orlov recalled. "It felt like you were sitting in a metal barrel, which somebody is constantly blasting with a sledgehammer."

What the Americans also didn't know was that the B-59 crew had a nuclear torpedo that they were authorized to launch without clearing it with Moscow. Indeed, Captain Savitski decided to launch the nuclear torpedo. Valentin Grigorievich, the torpedo officer, exclaimed: "We will die, but we will sink them all - we will not disgrace our Navy!" Fortunately, the decision to launch had to be authorized by three officers on board, and one of them, Vasili Arkhipov, said no. It's sobering that very few have heard of Arkhipov, although his decision was perhaps the single most valuable contribution to humanity in modern history. PBS made the movie The Man Who Saved the World about this incident.

*1) The incidents that keep happening*
These are only a sample of over two dozen close calls that we've catalogued in this timeline, and there are almost certainly more, since some have been revealed only decades later. Also, although most nuclear incidents were reported by U.S. sources, there's no reason to believe that the opposing superpower had fewer incidents, or that there have been zero incidents in China, the UK, France, Israel, India, Pakistan or North Korea. Moreover, near-misses keep happening. Although some argue that the superpowers should keep their current nuclear arsenals forever, simple mathematics shows that nuclear deterrence isn't a viable long-term strategy unless the risk of accidental nuclear war can be reduced to zero: Even if the annual risk of global nuclear war is as low as 1%, we'll probably have one within a century and almost certainly within a few hundred years. This future nuclear war would almost certainly take more lives than nuclear deterrence ever saved. If you want to reduce the risk of accidental nuclear war, please help raise awareness by sharing this timeline.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 13 hours ago.

MOAA Helps to Honor Outstanding Military Family Readiness Groups

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The Military Officers Association of America (MOAA) joined the Office of the Secretary of Defense (Reserve Affairs) and chiefs of the National Guard and Reserve in honoring seven outstanding military family readiness organizations during the DoD Reserve Family Readiness Award ceremony Friday in the Hall of Heroes at the Pentagon.

(PRWEB) February 26, 2016

Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Dana Atkins, president and CEO of the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA), joined the Office of the Secretary of Defense (Reserve Affairs) and chiefs of the National Guard and Reserve in honoring seven outstanding military family readiness organizations during the DoD Reserve Family Readiness Award ceremony Friday in the Hall of Heroes at the Pentagon.

The DoD Reserve Family Readiness Award, established in 2000, annually recognizes the top unit in each reserve component for its outstanding programs that support unit missions and family readiness.

The ceremony began with opening remarks from Stephanie Barna, the principal deputy assistant secretary of defense (manpower and reserve affairs) and a retired U.S. Army Reserve colonel, whose remarks centered on the significant impact family readiness has on mission readiness. She recognized special guests Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Ill., and Gen. Frank J. Grass, chief, National Guard Bureau, and his wife, Patricia.

Atkins addressed the audience by thanking Barna for the privilege to recognize on behalf of MOAA the outstanding contributions of the family readiness groups. “We are here today to recognize that group of superstars who give so much to the families of our American heroes — the men and women of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, National Guard, Coast Guard and Reserve,” said Atkins “With your unselfish contributions, you’ve made the lives of those you serve with a little less daunting, allowed our heroes to truly focus on the mission and made America better.”

Each organization received an engraved commemorative plaque presented by Barna and a signed certificate of appreciation and a cash reward from Atkins. This is the 11th year MOAA has given a monetary award intended to assist with enhancement of family support programs.

The units recognized this year for outstanding efforts to build support networks for Guard and Reserve families are·     Army National Guard — Headquarters Company, 404th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, Normal, Ill.

Unit Commander: Capt. Jera Muder

·     U.S. Army Reserve — Forward Support Company, 980th Engineer Battalion, Austin, Texas

Unit Commander: Capt. Michael Davis

·     U.S. Marine Corps Reserve — Combat Logistics Battalion 453, Aurora, Colo.

Unit Commander: Lt. Col. Michael Wendler

·     U.S. Navy Reserve — Navy Operational Support Center North Island, San Diego

Unit Commander: Capt. Michael Joyner

·     Air National Guard — 157th Air Refueling Wing, Pease ANGB, N.H.

Unit Commander: Col. Peter Sullivan

·     U.S. Air Force Reserve — 934th Airlift Wing Airman and Family Readiness Center, Minneapolis

Unit Commander: Lt. Col. Kristiana Gerdes

·     U.S. Coast Guard Reserve — Port Security Unit 308, Kiln, Miss.

Unit Commander: Cmdr. Ronzelle Green

Improved family readiness programs and command emphasis help prepare Guard and Reserve families to support their service members in the performance of their duties.

-End-

About MOAA:
Military Officers Association of America (MOAA) is the nation’s largest officers association with more than 390,000 members from every branch of service, including active duty, retired, National Guard, Reserve, and former officers and their families and survivors. MOAA is a nonprofit and politically nonpartisan organization and an influential force in promoting a strong national defense. MOAA represents the interests of service members and their families in every stage of their lives and careers, and for those who are not eligible to join MOAA, Voices for America’s Troops is a nonprofit MOAA affiliate that supports a strong national defense. For more information, visit http://www.moaa.org or http://www.voicesfortroops.org/. Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

Ship that ran aground off Antarctica freed, researchers safe

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CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — An icebreaker carrying researchers that ran aground off the coast of Antarctica was freed by crew Saturday and was afloat again, the Australian government said. Some 37 researchers on board the Aurora Australis were taken safely ashore on Friday via a barge. The ship’s crew stayed behind and used a combination […] Reported by Seattle Times 6 hours ago.

Two injured in Aurora traffic crash, SUV slams through brick wall

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Two people were injured in a single-vehicle crash Friday night in Aurora. The crash happened near the intersection of East Hampden Avenue and South Parker Road, according to a 9:26 p.m. Twitter post by the Aurora Fire Department. Reported by Denver Post 6 hours ago.

HSN shoots products for Joy Mangano in Neal Signature Homes’ model

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HSN, the multibillion-dollar interactive multichannel retailer, recently shot products inside the Dominica II model at The Concession created by Lakewood Ranch-based luxury homebuilder, Neal Signature Homes.

LAKEWOOD RANCH, Fla. (PRWEB) March 09, 2016

HSN, the multibillion-dollar interactive multichannel retailer, recently shot products inside the Dominica II model at The Concession created by Lakewood Ranch-based luxury homebuilder, Neal Signature Homes.

This month, the HSN crew captured videos of products by inventor and entrepreneur Joy Mangano, the real-life inspiration for the major motion picture JOY including 10 of her Forever Fragrant Odor-Eliminating home fragrances. Some smell-worthy scents include Oceanside Breeze, Vanilla Bean Cupcake, Tranquil Lavender Chamomile, Pumpkin Spice and Afternoon White Tea.

“This home’s furnishings and open space really help make the product pop,” said David Berggren, the photo shoot director for HSN. “The floor plan gives us a lot of room for lighting and general shooting. We could get a pretty shot even without lights. There are beautiful shots at any angle.”

The crew shot in almost every room of the house, including the laundry room, bedrooms, bathroom, entry and others. The 12-person team aimed to replicate HSN’s on-set look but with a real-world feel. For Mangano, the team emulates a style similar to the classic look of their customers’ homes.

“The decorating style in addition to the overall home really attracted us to this model,” said Berggren, complimenting Charlene Neal PureStyle, the full-service interior design service that styled the home. “I’d love to shoot in all of the homebuilder’s models.”

The HSN crew shot additional products for Mangano’s line, including her Huggable Hangers, reading glasses and luggage line, in the model last month.

Mangano’s entire line of products is designed to organize and simplify life – from linens and handbags to vacuums and closet systems. Her first invention was the Miracle Mop, which launched 25 years ago.

The major motion picture JOY is the story of how Mangano, played by Jennifer Lawrence, rose to become founder and matriarch of a powerful family business dynasty. The movie also stars Bradley Cooper and Robert De Niro.

HSN plans to return to another Neal Signature Homes’ model soon.

About Neal Signature Homes
Neal Signature Homes is a semi-custom, luxury homebuilder currently building in South Hillsborough, Sarasota and Manatee counties. The company is completely integrated to benefit its customers, with its engineering and building team, plus Charlene Neal PureStyle design services and Waterscapes Pools & Spas, the fifth largest pool company in the state.

Parent organization Neal Communities is the area's largest and most established locally owned and operated, private builder. Neal Signature Homes’ honors and accolades include Aurora Awards for models in The Country Club at Lakewood Ranch and Country Club East and many Parade of Homes awards from the Manatee-Sarasota Building Industry Association. For more information, visit http://www.NealSignatureHomes.com. Reported by PRWeb 4 days ago.

Viewpoint: Earthquake bill sets dangerous precedent and should be defeated

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A new bill proposed by Rep. Joe Salazar, D-Thornton and Sen. Morgan Carroll, D-Aurora, House Bill 16-1310, would hold the oil and natural gas industry liable for earthquakes near energy development sites. This bill is unwise and unsound. The premise of the bill, that energy development triggers earthquakes, has not been scientifically proven. Even more alarming, the bill only targets one industry – oil and natural gas, one of the most important industries in the state. In Colorado, the oil and… Reported by bizjournals 4 days ago.

​Koch’s Georgia-Pacific buys display and packaging company

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Georgia-Pacific, a subsidiary of Wichita-based Koch Industries Inc., has acquired Excel Displays & Packaging. The company said in a press release that the purchase includes a converting plant in Aurora, Ill. and a sales and design office in Bentonville, Ark. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The purchase adds about 120 new employees to Georgia-Pacific. GP makes a variety of household paper products, such as Angel Soft toilet paper, Brawny paper towels and Dixie brand cups, napkins and plates. Koch… Reported by bizjournals 4 days ago.

Driver With THC in System in Fatal Crash Resentenced to Probation

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Driver With THC in System in Fatal Crash Resentenced to Probation Patch Batavia, IL -- Alia Bernard of Aurora has been serving a seven-year prison sentence for a 2009 crash that killed a St. Charles couple. Reported by Patch 4 days ago.

2 men wounded in shooting outside North Seattle motel

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Two men were wounded in an early morning shooting at an Aurora Avenue North motel/.a Reported by Seattle Times 4 days ago.

SPD: 2 hurt in Aurora motel shooting

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Reported by SeattlePI.com 4 days ago.

First Place Industry Honor to Graebel Relocation

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Clients Rate Graebel First in Prestigious 'HRO Today Magazine' Relocation Baker’s Dozen

Aurora COLO USA (PRWEB) March 09, 2016

Saturday, March 5th, the 'HRO Today Magazine' announced the results of its annual Relocation Baker’s Dozen. In its online announcement, Graebel Relocation was honored with first-place. This marks the fourth time in eight consecutive years that the global mobility management company, Graebel, has achieved the first-place ranking.

Fortune 500 and Global 100 corporate human resource and talent management professionals elect to participate in a confidential survey for which they must identify their relocation management company (RMC) then, complete a questionnaire. Responses are based on their human resource and talent management teams’ experiences with the RMC for the prior twelve-months. Breadth of services offered by the RMC and the scope and volume of the mobility services administered by the RMC for the client are also queried. A research team validates participants and independently analyzes data to ascertain unbiased first to thirteenth rankings.

According to Bill Graebel SGMS chief executive officer, “Worldwide, our people are passionate about delivering exceptional service, market intelligence and predictive data to our clients and their assignees. Our continuous collaboration with clients ensures that their global mobility programs and policies reflect their companies’ culture, are contemporary, and competitive in their industries. As a result, these programs have successfully contributed to our clients’ goals to recruit and retain top performers, as their organizations expand or acquire businesses throughout the world. This teamwork between our customers and our people, I believe, is among the core reasons why Graebel Relocation clients choose to participate and rate our performance in the 'HRO Today Magazine' survey year after year. It is both gratifying and humbling that our efforts have led to the first-place honor for the fourth time in eight years.”

About Graebel Companies, Inc.
Founded in 1950, Graebel Companies is a privately-held global organization that administers employee and commercial office relocation, mobility management, workplace and consultative services for the Global 100, Fortune 500 and mid-sized companies located around the globe. On-the-ground services are managed on six continents by in-region staff members. The world headquarters is located in Aurora, Colorado USA, with centers throughout the Americas, the Asia-Pacific and EMEA regions. Known for its industry-first innovations, Graebel holds numerous quality and security credentials, and has earned accolades from clients and from within in its industry for best-in-practice performance, market intelligence research and corporate social responsibility initiatives across the globe. To learn more visit: http://www.graebel.com

# # # Reported by PRWeb 4 days ago.

Gaylord Rockies lands another equity partner

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Ryman Hospitality Properties (NYSE: RHP) will invest $86 million for a 35 percent equity stake in the Gaylord Rockies resort and convention center in Aurora, a project it had conceived five years ago when it was known as Gaylord Entertainment Co. The investment by the company that originally proposed the Gaylord Rockies project won’t change the size of the massive development, which began construction earlier this year. The project is expected to open in late 2018. “We have always been strong… Reported by bizjournals 4 days ago.

Aurora Central teachers, staff approve overhaul plan

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Aurora Central High, one of the state's most academically troubled schools, is one step closer to a dramatic overhaul after teachers there Wednesday approved a plan that calls for new teaching methods, annual contracts for teachers and longer school days. Reported by Denver Post 4 days ago.

Land moves made to secure future of Buckley Air Force Base

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AURORA — Buckley Air Force Base is the city's biggest asset, bringing nearly a billion dollars annually into local coffers. Reported by Denver Post 4 days ago.

Theater profile: The invincible Joy Carlin

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Theater profile: The invincible Joy Carlin Joy Carlin, the Yale-trained actress and director, whose latest project is 'Talley's Folly' at Berkeley's Aurora Theatre, has been an institution on the Bay Area theater scene since the 1960s with relationships with ACT, Berkeley Rep, San Jose Rep, not to mention a lively film career. Reported by San Jose Mercury News 3 days ago.

Lazydays RV Partners With Runaway Country Music Festival as Exclusive RV Dealership Sponsor

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The RV Authority joins thousands of RVers in Kissimmee for Florida’s largest gathering of country music stars

TAMPA, Fla. (PRWEB) March 10, 2016

Lazydays, The RV Authority and world’s largest RV dealership, has partnered with the Runaway Country Music Festival for their 6th annual multi-day concert event. Billed as the largest gathering of country music stars in Florida, the three-day festival will take place March 18-20, 2016, at the Osceola Heritage Park in Kissimmee. An estimated 60,000 attendees will enjoy live performances by Kenny Chesney, Jake Owen, Eric Church and Old Dominion among many other popular country music acts.

Beyond the main open-air stage and viewing areas, the Runaway Country Music Festival will feature indoor and outdoor entertainment areas plus dozens of bars, food choices, shops and vendors. In addition, Runaway Country Camping offers 1,200 RV campsites and more than 400 tent sites located on and adjacent to the festival grounds.

As the exclusive RV dealership sponsor of the music fest, Lazydays will have on-site signage throughout the event, and several new units from the Tampa RV dealership will be displayed on the festival grounds. Attendees can visit the Lazydays exhibitor booth to speak with sales consultants and learn more about RVs for sale, accessories, RV service and repairs, or the Lazydays RV Resort, which is located less than 1.5 hours from the festival grounds.

“We are thrilled to welcome Lazydays as the official RV sponsor of Runaway Country,” said Gary McCann, Executive Producer of the music fest. “Camping is a huge part of the festival experience. Whether arriving in a mini towable or the largest luxury motor home, there is no better way to enjoy country music’s biggest stars and the festival event. Lazydays is an amazing partner, providing music fans with the largest selection of RVs in the nation.”

“All of us at Lazydays are excited to be part of Runaway Country Music Festival’s annual gathering of country music fans and RVers; it’s a perfect fit for our brand,” said John Lebbad, Chief Marketing Officer for Lazydays. “Not only do attendees get to enjoy an outstanding lineup of country music stars, but they have the opportunity to connect with fellow RVers.”

About Lazydays
Lazydays®, founded in 1976, is the world’s largest RV dealership. Based on 126 acres outside Tampa, FL since 1996, Lazydays also has dealerships located in Tucson, AZ as well as three dealerships located in Loveland, Aurora and Longmont, CO.

Lazydays RV Accessories & More offers more than 20,000 accessories online for your shopping convenience. Shop us online or visit one of our store locations in Florida, Arizona and Colorado. Lazydays has the largest selection of RV brands in the nation featuring more than 2,500 new and pre-owned RVs, over 300 service bays and two on-site campgrounds with over 700 RV campsites.

Lazydays has built its reputation on providing an outstanding customer experience with exceptional service and product expertise, and as a place to rest and recharge with other RVers. More than a quarter million RVers and their families visit Lazydays every year, making it their “home away from home.” Lazydays has been recognized as a “Top 50 RV Dealer” by RV Business and as one of Tampa Bay’s “Top Work Places.” The Lazydays Employee Foundation, supported by payroll contributions from more than 60% of Lazydays’ employees, has contributed more than one million dollars to make many historic changes for at-risk children in the Tampa Bay and Tucson communities.

For most people, Lazydays isn't just the beginning of their journey; it's very much a part of their ride. To learn more, visit http://www.lazydays.com.

### Reported by PRWeb 3 days ago.

Caterpillar Engineer Andrea Brazzale-Anderson Honored with SAE International’s Rodica Baranescu Award for Technical & Leadership Excellence

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SAE International announces that Andrea Brazzale-Anderson, Technical Manager and Chief Engineer of the Caterpillar Industrial & Waste Group, is the winner of the Rodica Baranescu Award for Technical & Leadership Excellence.

WARRENDALE, Pa. (PRWEB) March 10, 2016

SAE International announces that Andrea Brazzale-Anderson, Technical Manager and Chief Engineer of the Caterpillar Industrial & Waste Group, is the winner of the Rodica Baranescu Award for Technical & Leadership Excellence.

In her current role, Brazzale-Anderson leads all product development of Caterpillar’s Soil and Landfill Compactor and Material Handler machines. She has worked at Caterpillar for 17 years in a variety of roles, including quality and reliability, new product introduction, operations, intellectual property protection, sourcing strategy, cost management, and product development. Her top accomplishments include: leading a sourcing team to save more than $500M in unnecessary investment while rationalizing $1.5B in approved capital; reducing $150M in annual material cost by improving processes, tools, portfolio balance, and execution velocity; and embedding a culture of world-class decision making by training and mentoring more than 100 green belts and 25 black belts in Six Sigma tools and methodology.

Brazzale-Anderson also has a passion for lifelong education, in particular, helping young students overcome biases to embrace and leverage their unlimited capabilities. Her consistent desire to foster individual growth and success is evidenced in her involvement with FIRST Robotics. In 2007, she co-founded the Oswego High School (Illinois) FIRST Team 2338, “Gear it Forward”, which serves more than 100 high school students and continues to grow, establishing and mentoring more than 16 junior high FIRST Lego League teams. More than 1000 high school and junior high school students have been impacted through the Caterpillar Aurora-Joliet facilities support that she has coordinated since 2007. She also brought Baja SAE to Illinois in 2008, 2011 and 2014. Brazzale-Anderson has served in many SAE International functions, at the local level as Section Chair and Baja SAE Illinois Committee Chair, and at the national level on the Sections Board, Executive Nominating Committee, and Fellows Committee. She was awarded the 2004 SAE Distinguished Younger Member Award and the 2005 SAE/AEM Outstanding Young Engineer Award. She has a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Established in 2011, the Rodica Baranescu Award celebrates the successes of women in the engineering profession and recognizes their leadership and technical contributions. The award serves to broaden the awareness of the reach and impact of women working in the mobility engineering profession. Its goals are to stimulate the involvement of women in engineering as well as open doors for young girls interested in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) activities who wish to pursue engineering careers. Dr. Rodica Baranescu is an SAE Fellow, Past President of SAE International, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering. She is a mechanical engineer who started her professional and academic career in her native country, Romania, before immigrating to the United States in 1980. In 2000, she was the first and only woman elected President of SAE International.

SAE International is a global association committed to being the ultimate knowledge source for the engineering profession. By uniting over 127,000 engineers and technical experts, we drive knowledge and expertise across a broad spectrum of industries. We act on two priorities: encouraging a lifetime of learning for mobility engineering professionals and setting the standards for industry engineering. We strive for a better world through the work of our philanthropic SAE Foundation, including programs like A World in Motion® and the Collegiate Design Series™.

--http://www.sae.org-- Reported by PRWeb 3 days ago.

What Ballerinas Can Teach You About Navigating An Office Romance

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In this series, The Huffington Post profiles some of the best ballet dancers in the world, working in some of the rarest and most unusual work environments imaginable, to try to understand how they deal with the same workplace issues that confront the rest of us mere mortals.

Most of us don’t get literal standing ovations from hundreds of people when we do good work. And most of us don’t have to visit the physical therapist at the beginning and end of every workday. But no matter what sector we’re in, the big questions are the same: What does it mean to have your body under scrutiny on the job? How does it feel to be asked to represent your entire race in a company meeting? How do you find the right people to mentor and guide you?

Read the first installment, about being the kind of partner people fight to work with, and the second, about changing careers. *If* *you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to fall hard for a colleague*, or work alongside your significant other, Gillian Murphy can tell you. She can also tell you what it’s like to stand in the background and work your ass off while your partner kisses someone who is not you in front of a large crowd and gets paid for the privilege.

Murphy is a Principal dancer at American Ballet Theatre, where she’s spent almost 20 years honing her craft and becoming one of the nation’s greatest working ballerinas. She’s also spent much of that time falling in love and building a life with a co-worker. 
Murphy joined ABT at 17, entering the company’s lowest rung, the corps de ballet. Two years later, she started dating Ethan Stiefel, a principal dancer and company star who was six years her senior. While she was dancing in the corps, he had already been a principal at New York City Ballet and toured the world as a guest artist at other prestigious companies. They had their first kiss on her 19^th birthday. 

“We connected on a human level outside of work,” she told The Huffington Post, munching spinach salad and sipping on juice as she recovered from hours of rehearsal. Stiefel, who some readers might recognize from his turn as ballet bad boy Cooper Nielson in the "Center Stage" movies, retired from dancing five years ago and would go on to become Artistic Director of the Royal New Zealand Ballet. But for years, they worked together, taking daily morning class and often rehearsing and performing romantic ballets like "Swan Lake" and "Don Quixote" together.


When #bae falls asleep on your shoulder #tbt @dancemagazine with #EthanStiefel, my #partner in #dance & #life

A photo posted by Gillian Murphy (@gillianemurphy) on Feb 25, 2016 at 6:41am PST



It’s not uncommon for dancers to date and marry each other. A dancer’s work life is so consuming that it can make it hard to find the time to meet people outside of the dance world. Murphy’s fellow principal dancer, Stella Abrera, is also married to a dancer who was in "Center Stage" -- Sascha Radetsky, aka Charlie, and who, like Stiefel, now teaches in ABT's master’s dance pedagogy program.

The company doesn’t frown on dancers dating, or advise them against inter-rank dating -- principal dancers don’t have any influence over casting or promotions the way ballet masters/mistresses, choreographers and directors do. Murphy says that, in the early days, dating Stiefel came with challenges, though. There was the age difference, and the fact that he was much further along in his career. And then there was the jealousy she felt when she had to watch him play at falling in love with other women night after night -- to say nothing of the intimacy and trust required for him to lift and throw those women around in pas de deux.

“He was doing 'Romeo and Juliet' with gorgeous leading ballerinas in the company, and other romantic ballets that involve a lot of chemistry and kissing and love portrayed on the stage,” she says. “So as a 19- and 20-year-old that made me a little uncomfortable. Because he was playing Romeo alongside some of my idols.”As she advanced in her career, though, and started dancing solo roles, Murphy saw for herself that, while what happens on stage is real, it’s not true. It's just acting. She learned first hand that creating the illusion of earth-shattering love “is part of the job, you have to create chemistry on stage and it doesn’t need to be anything to be worried about in real life ... you can fully connect with someone on stage, but that doesn’t even compare to who you want to spend your life with, your evenings.” She learned, she says, to support Stiefel in his dancing and to stop being intimidated when he was on stage pretend-making out with the Black Swan.

Murphy was promoted to soloist a year after she and Stiefel started dating, and to principal three years after that. At 36, she’s been a principal for 13 years and is the most senior dancer in the entire company. Now that Stiefel’s retired, he teaches company class once a week, so their working relationship has changed yet again. Is it weird being a student in her husband’s class? “No, it’s great,” she laughs. “He teaches a great class. I love him, and I love his artistry, and what he’s passing on.”


#latergram from the other day working in the studio with my love #EthanStiefel. Can't wait to marry Ethan later this week!! & thanks so much for the pic Rosalie O'Connor :)

A photo posted by Gillian Murphy (@gillianemurphy) on Sep 13, 2015 at 11:08am PDT



In the ballet world, there are real upsides to dating a co-worker. For one thing, they truly understand what your work life is like; they literally speak the language, the French-English hybrid that so many ballet dancers rely on to talk about their work. For another, Murphy points out, touring with the company has meant that she and her now-husband were able to travel the world together and be paid for the pleasure.

On the other hand, when you live together and work together, it can be hard to find time apart.

And not all dance couples work quite so well. It’s easy to imagine that the higher-ranked dancer in a romantic relationship might want to keep that power dynamic intact, and would begrudge or belittle their partner’s advance through the ranks. Murphy says that’s never been the case for her. “I couldn’t be in a relationship like that. That would be awful. Ethan was always genuinely rooting for me, and I think he was genuinely aware to not influence me in terms of my career choices, and to let me learn on my own. But if I needed help he was there.”

They’ve managed to keep competition out of their relationship, and, it seems -- somewhat paradoxically -- they manage to keep ballet out of it, too. “In some dance-life partnerships people like to give each other corrections all the time and constantly give each other that technical ballet feedback about what worked and what didn’t,” she says, frowning. “And we’ve just never done that.”

If it’s common for dancers to date and marry, it’s common for them to break up, too, and just as in other workplaces, they’ve still got jobs to do. This is, it’s worth noting, exactly what happens to Ethan Stiefel’s character in "Center Stage."

Much of Murphy’s life at ABT has been lived as part of a ballet duo-turned-power couple. But on the day she speaks to HuffPost, she’s dancing on her own. Her regular work day starts with a morning company class, and then she moves from one rehearsal to the next, learning or perfecting the choreography she’ll be performing in the next few months. At a half-hour private rehearsal in the mid-afternoon, it’s just her, a ballet master -- Keith Roberts, himself a former ABT soloist -- and an accompanist. She arrives wearing a black mesh-back leotard and black-and-white patterned tights. Roberts helps fasten the back of her rehearsal tutu, so that she can know how the steps will feel once she’s got a large and obtrusive skirt bouncing around her hips. In this rehearsal, she’s calling the shots. There’s no set agenda, but she tells the men she wants to rehearse her solos for "Sleeping Beauty."


I'll be taking over @gaynorminden's IG the first week of March while I'm in Orange County, CA performing Aurora with ABT. I would love to post an answer each day to questions on dance, pointe shoes, the life of a ballerina, etc! Please post a question to my facebook page gillian.abt (& include your IG/twitter name) so I can try to thoughtfully answer seven fave questions :) Photo by Eduardo Patino, courtesy of Gaynor Minden.

A photo posted by Gillian Murphy (@gillianemurphy) on Feb 22, 2015 at 10:15am PST



She starts with the third act solo, which begins with a series of 11 huge développés -- big left lifts with her supporting leg on pointe -- that bring her from the back of the stage right down to the front and then moves on to a series of enormously difficult pirouettes that she has to land in a perfectly still arabesque. After a couple of run-throughs, Roberts tells her it’s looking good and she nods, wide-eyed, like she’s not so sure. She moves on to the next solo, which includes a long sequence of delicate footwork done entirely on pointe.

Part way through, the pianist struggles with a sticky key, and the music slows. Murphy, who’s spent three decades listening to music and arranging her body accordingly, slows down while he catches up, and laughingly asks, mid-arabesque, “You OK, Ben?” The variation ends with a series of terrifyingly fast turns that take her from one side of the studio to the other. Then she launches into yet another solo, her pointe shoes squeaking on the rubbery floor in a way that audiences will never hear over the sound of the orchestra. That one ends with her leaping around the stage in a huge circle, her legs splitting to 180 degrees in each of the eight or so jumps. “This kills my calves,” she says when the music stops. “I’m sure it’s impossible, but it looks great,” Roberts replies.

Soon, she’ll start rehearsing with a partner. She’ll perform this ballet with fellow principal Cory Stearns, and "Sylvia" with Marcelo Gomes. But at the end of the day, she’ll go home to Stiefel. After almost two decades in the company, the partnerships Murphy has built with the men she dances with are crucial -- you can’t dance together without trust and chemistry -- but what she has with her dance partners is distinct from what she has with her life partner. “When I’m on stage portraying Juliet, I’m very much in the moment, and I feel that chemistry with my partner and I can have that moment, but when the curtain comes down, I’m fully myself again.”


#tbt to Ethan's #proposal behind the @metopera curtain a few years ago (right after I finished dancing Tchaikovsky pas de deux with @davidhallberger for @abtofficial's Spring Gala) #love #EthanStiefel #forever

A photo posted by Gillian Murphy (@gillianemurphy) on Aug 27, 2015 at 3:45pm PDT



American Ballet Theater will perform at the Detroit Opera House starting March 31 and at the Metropolitan Opera Theater in New York City starting May 9.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.

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