সোমবার, ৩১ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

Vatican launches swipe-card security system

Vincenzo Pinto / AFP - Getty Images

Members of the Pontifical Swiss Guard have long given Vatican employees their permission to enter. Starting in January, electronic cards will handle some of that duty.

By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

ROME - The Vatican is the only fully fortified state in the world, protected by 40-foot-high walls.?The few porte, the arched access gates into Vatican City, are manned by Swiss Guards dressed in their colorful Renaissance uniforms and carrying swords.

Visitors are asked to sign in and are allowed only upon invitation. But for Vatican employees, usually a nod of recognition will do. The Vatican is the smallest state in the world, and pretty much everybody knows each other.

But things are quickly changing.

This month, the Vatican is introducing an electronic badge for some of its thousands of employees. Workers will be expected to swipe in and out when entering and exiting.

Some of the world's media have linked the step-up in security directly to the "Vatileaks" scandal, the unprecedented security breach in which Paolo Gabriele, the pope's former butler, photocopied and leaked confidential documents to the Italian media.

Ex-butler sentenced in Vatican leaks case

Pope pardons ex-butler

So is the Holy Father turning into Big Brother?

No, a Vatican employee,?who spoke on the condition of anonymity,?told NBC News: "I haven't received my card yet, but I have seen swiping machines being installed at Porta Sant'Anna," the main gate for Vatican employees. "This is not a case of Big Brother, more like the Vatican coming in line with the modern world and issuing a badge like any other big company."

The Vatican employs roughly 3,000 people and generates tens of millions of dollars in revenue, mainly from tourism and donations. If it were a company, it would be a midsize business with a healthy income and solid assets, despite having recorded a $19 million loss in 2011. But unlike most private companies, the Vatican has allowed some employees an unprecedented degree of flexibility in their working hours.

Robert Mickens, the Rome Correspondent for The Tablet newspaper and a former employee at Vatican Radio, says that this self-governance in some cases has been abused:?"When a journalist asked Pope John XXIII how many people work in the Vatican, he replied: 'About half'."

"The Vatican has tried hard to check that people stick to their working hours for years," Mickens said. "At Vatican Radio they introduced electronic badges years ago because people would go for their coffee break and return hours later. So I think that this is more of a case of the Vatican trying to check that its employees do their job than to prevent them from leaking information."

Whether the new system is aimed at preventing a new Vatileaks or merely keeping tabs on employee hours, the Vatican's ancient walls are about to receive a modern twist.

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/31/16266055-modern-keys-for-ancient-walls-vatican-launches-swipe-card-security-system?lite

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Soulja Boy and Lil? Scrappy Take Beef to Twitter

by Jake Crates

(AllHipHop News) Although Soulja Boy and Lil? Scrappy share a common bond of having dated former Crime Mobb rapper Diamond, there was nothing in common today (December 30th), when two took to Twitter to express their differences.

While some have already written off this disagreement as issues surrounding Diamond, Lil? Scrappy has tried to make it clear that this is not about Diamond, despite Soulja Boy?s claims via Twitter that suggest otherwise.

Over the past few years, Scrappy has gained a great deal of attention via VH1?s Television show ?Love & Hip Hop Atlanta,? where his life was highly publicized and documented as his girlfriend Erica Dixon and mother, a former hustler known as ?Momma Dee? were both featured on the show.

Soulja Boy, best known for his hit song?Crank That,? which was certified platinum four times by the RIAA, has recently stated that he is no longer dating Diamond.

Here are their respective Twitter threads below:

Soulja Boy Beef with Lil Scrappy Lil Scrappy Beef with Soulja Boy

Share this great AllHipHop.com content:

Source: http://allhiphop.com/2012/12/30/soulja-boy-and-lil-scrappy-take-beef-to-twitter/

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LeSports Launches Facebook and Twitter Campaigns

New Mills, United Kingdom, December 28, 2012 --( PR.com )-- LeSports, a leading golf specialist in the UK, announces the launch of two new social media campaigns. Customer satisfaction is a key focus at LeSports, as they are...

New Mills, United Kingdom, December 28, 2012 --(PR.com)-- LeSports, a leading golf specialist in the UK, announces the launch of two new social media campaigns.

Customer satisfaction is a key focus at LeSports, as they are dedicated to providing an unrivalled level of service on top of their high quality golf products. Therefore, they have launched two new social media campaigns in a bid to provide their customers with a forum to discuss their products, receive discount codes and to read more about their latest products or company news.

Customers can now follow LeSports on Facebook and Twitter to talk more about their experiences, contact the company directly or enter an online community to discuss golf and more. LeSports is also encouraging their customers to post what they?d like to see featured on their website in the future. The social media websites can also improve the brand?s online reputation and help them reach a wider consumer demographic.

A spokesperson for LeSports commented: ?We want to hear what our customers love and want to see more of on our website, and Facebook and Twitter will allow us to do this. The social media websites will allow us to get a little closer to our customers, as well as allowing them to communicate with each other to discuss our products and more. We?ll also be offering fantastic promotional codes through Facebook and Twitter from time to time.?

For more information on LeSports and their women?s golf clothing, visit their website http://www.lesports.co.uk

About:
LeSports is a leading provider of ladies? golf clothing in the UK and have been supplying their high quality products since 2009. Customers can choose from an array of competitively priced golfing products, including golf sweaters, women?s golf shoes, golf trousers and more.

Contact:
James Mclivenny
Lesports Ltd,
The Factory Unit,
1 Woodside Street,
New Mills,
High Peak,
SK22 3HF
Tel: 01663 746654
Email: James@lesports.co.uk

Contact Information:
LeSports
James Mclivenny
01663 746 654
Contact via Email
www.lesports.co.uk/
LeSports Ltd, The Factory Unit
1 Woodside Street, New Mills
High Peak, Derbyshire, UK
Zip: SK22 3HF

Click here to read the full story: LeSports Launches Facebook and Twitter Campaigns

Press Release Distributed by PR.com

Source: http://news.brothersoft.com/lesports-launches-facebook-and-twitter-campaigns-62848.html

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Syrian troops press Homs offensive, 23 children die

Coordinates40?45?0?N73?52?0?N
Official nameHoms
Other name
Native name???
TypeCity
NicknameThe city of Ibn al-Walid
Settlement type
Leader title1President of City Council
Leader name1Nadia Kseibi
Established titleSettled
Established date2000?BCE
Established title2
Established title3
Established date3
Unit prefMetric
Area total km248
Area urban km276
Area metro km2104
Area blank1 sq mi
Population as of2004 census
Population total652,609
Population metro750,501
Population blank1 titleEthnicities
Population blank2 titleReligions
Population density blank1 sq mi
TimezoneEET
Utc offset+3
Timezone dstEEST
Utc offset dst+2
Elevation m501
Elevation ft
Postal code type
Area code31|31
Websitehttp://www.homscitycouncil.org.sy
Footnotes}}

Homs ( / ALA-LC: ?im?), previously known as Emesa (Greek: ?????, Emesa), is a city in western Syria and the capital of the Homs Governorate. It is above sea level and is located north of Damascus. Located on the Orontes River, Homs is also the central link between the interior cities and the Mediterranean coast.

Homs is a major industrial center, and with a population of at least 652,609 people, it is the third largest city in Syria after Aleppo to the north and the capital Damascus to the south. Its population reflects Syria's general religious diversity, composed mostly of Arabic-speaking Sunni Muslims and Alawite and Christian minorities. The city boasts a number of historic mosques and churches and is close to the Krak des Chevaliers, a world heritage site.

Homs did not emerge into the historical record until the 1st century BCE at the time of the Seleucids. It later became the capital of a kingdom ruled by the Emesani dynasty who gave the city its name. Originally a center of worship for the sun god El-Gabal, it later gained importance in Christianity under the Byzantines. Homs was conquered by the Muslims in the 7th-century and made capital of a district that bore its current name. Throughout the Islamic era, Muslim dynasties contending for control of Syria sought after Homs due to the city's strategic position in the area. Homs began to decline under the Ottomans and only in the 19th century did the city regain its economic importance when its cotton industry boomed. During French Mandate rule, the city became a center of insurrection and, after independence in 1946, a center of Baathist resistance to the first Syrian governments. Homs has played a central role in the ongoing Syrian civil war against the Baathist government and since May 2011 has been under siege by the Syrian Army.

Etymology

"Emesa" is a compound of "Ham-Es", with the Es representing an assemblage of the locally revered sun god in (El-Gabal) in ancient times. The name "Emesa" or "Hemesa" is also attributed to "Emesenoi", the name of the Arab tribe that ruled the area before its incorporation into the Roman Empire. When the name of the tribe became attached to the city is indiscernible, but is generally thought to have been used under the Romans.

"Emesa" was shortened to "Homs" or "Hims" by its Arab inhabitants, many of whom settled there prior to the Muslim conquest of Syria. This name has been preserved throughout the period of Islamic rule continuing to the present day. It was known as "la Chamelle" by the Crusaders, although they never ruled the city. A second possibility about the origin of the city's modern name is that it is an Arabic form of the city's Latin name "Emesus", derived from the Greek "Emesa" or "Emesos".

History

For roughly 2,000 years, Homs has served as a key agricultural market, production site, and trade center for the villages of northern Syria. It has also provided security services to the hinterland of Syria, protecting it from invading forces. Excavations at the Citadel of Homs indicate that the earliest settlement at the site dates back to around 2300?BCE. Biblical scholars have identified the city with Zobah mentioned in the Bible. In 1274?BCE, a battle took place between the forces of the Egyptian Empire under Ramesses II and the Hittite Empire under Muwatalli II at the city of Kadesh on the Orontes River near Homs. It was possibly the largest chariot battle ever fought, involving perhaps 5,000?6,000 chariots.

Emesani dynasty and Roman rule

Homs itself may have been founded by Seleucus I Nicator who established the Seleucid Empire upon the death of Alexander the Great, although the city did not emerge in the light of history until the 1st-century BCE. At this time, Greek philosopher Strabo spoke of a tent-dwelling tribe called the "Emesani" living in the area around the Orontes and south of the Apamea region. They were a Syriac tribe in the area and settled in Emesa?which derived its name from them. Upon Pompey's incorporation of the Seleucid state of Syria into the Roman Empire in 64?BCE, the Emesani dynasty were confirmed in their rule as client kings of the Romans for aiding their troops in various wars. Their chief at the time, Sampsiceramus I, gained the status as King of Emesa, but their capital was at Arethusa, a city north of Emesa, also along the Orontes River. At its greatest extent, the kingdom's boundaries extended from the Bekaa Valley in the west to the border with Palmyra in the east, and from Yabrud in the south to al-Rastan (Arethusa) in the north. The kingdom of Sampsiceramus I, was the first of Rome's Arab clients on the desert fringes.

The city of Emesa grew to prominence after the new-found wealth of the Emesani dynasty, governed first by one of the sons of Sampsiceramus I, Iamblichus I who made it the kingdom's capital. The Emesani proved their loyalty to Rome once more when they aided Gaius Julius Caesar in his siege of Alexandria in 48?BCE, by sending him army detachments. Subsequently, they became embroiled in the Roman Civil War between the rebelling Mark Antony and the pro-Caesar Octavian. Iamblichus I took the side of Octavian, and so upon encouragement from Antony, Iamblichus's brother Alexio I usurped the throne and put Iamblichus I to death in 31 BCE. Octavian's forces prevailed in the war, however, and as a result the kingdom's throne was reverted to Iamblichus II (the son of Iamblichus I) after Alexio I was executed for treason. Under the stable rule of Iamblichus II, emerged a new era of peace from 20 to 14 BCE, known as Emesa's "Golden Age." In 32, Heliopolis and the Bekaa Valley came under the kingdom's control.

Relations with the Roman government grew closer when King Sohaemus inherited the kingship. Under him, Emesa sent the Roman military a regular levy of archers and assisted them in their siege of Jerusalem in 70. Sohaemus had died in 73 and was succeeded by his son, Alexio II. Despite the fact that the Emesani dynasty were loyal allies to Rome, for unknown reasons the Roman state reduced the autonomous rule of the Emesani dynasty. Alexio II and his priest king successors had only ceremonial authority. It remains unclear why this occurred to the Emesani dynasty. Alexio II died in 78 and he was succeeded by his son Sampsiceramus III. The generations after Alexio II, are not recorded sufficiently to accurately present a pedigree.

Under the Romans, Emesa began to show attributes of a Greek city-state and traces of Roman town planning still remain. Its transformation into a major city was completed under the reign of Emperor Antoninus Pius (138?161) when Emesa began to mint coins. By the 3rd-century, it grew prosperous and well integrated into the Roman Orient. This was partly due to the marriage of Emperor Lucius Septimius Severus to a woman from a family of notables based in Emesa. It attained the coveted status as a Roman colonia by Severus, and two other emperors of Severan Dynasty were raised in Emesa. One of them was Elagabalus who served as the high priest at the Temple of El-Gebal, the local sun god. He brought the image of this god, a conical black stone, to the Elagabalium in Rome.

Emesa also grew wealthy because it formed a link in the eastern trade funneled through Palmyra, however, this dependence also caused the city's downfall when Palmyra sank to insignificance in the 4th-century. Nonetheless, Emesa at this time had grown to rank with the important cities of Tyre, Sidon, Beirut, and Damascus. It also continued to retain local significance, because it was the market center for the surrounding villages. The city remained a strong center of paganism, because of the Temple of El-Gabal. After one of his victories over Zenobia, Emperor Aurelian visited the city to pay thanks to the deity.

Due to the strength of the pagan sun cult in Emesa, Christians initially did not settle in the city. Eusebius writes that Silvanus, the city's first bishop, had no jurisdiction over the city, but the surrounding villages. He was executed by Emperor Julian and succeeded by Bishop Antonius?the first bishop to settle Emesa. By the 5th-century, Christianity was well established under the Byzantine Empire; however, few ancient Christian inscriptions exist in Homs today. Under the Byzantines, the city became an important center for Eastern Christianity. Initially a diocese, Homs was given the status of ecclesiastical metropolis after the discovery John the Baptist's head in a nearby area in 452.

Arab Caliphate

Prior to the Muslim conquest of Syria, Arab tribes, particularly the Banu Kalb settled around Emesa, ensuring its position as an important Yemeni center. The Byzantine emperor Heraclius abandoned the city?which served as his headquarters?after the defeat of his army to that of the Rashidun Muslims under Umar ibn al-Khattab during the Battle of Yarmouk in southern Syria. In 637 CE, the Rashidun army led by Khalid ibn al-Walid captured Emesa peacefully as the city agreed to pay a substantial ransom of 71,000 to 170,000 dinars. The caliph Umar established Homs as the capital of Jund Hims, a district within the province of Bilad ash-Sham, encompassing the towns of Latakia, Jableh, and Tartus along the coast, Palmyra in the Syrian Desert and the territory in between, including the town of Hama. Homs was likely the first city in Syria to have a substantial Muslim population.

The Muslims transformed half of St. John's Church into the city's Friday Mosque (Great Mosque of al-Nuri) and Homs soon became a center of Islamic piety since some 500 companions of Muhammad settled there after its conquest. The tombs of Khalid ibn al-Walid, his son Abd al-Rahman, and Ubaid Allah, the son of Caliph Umar are located in the city. During the conflict between the Umayyads and Ali, the inhabitants of Homs allied themselves with Ali and when the latter was defeated, the Umayyad caliph Mu'awiyah hived the northern half of Jund Hims to form a separate district, Jund Qinnasrin, apparently as punishment. Ali's oratory (mash-had 'Ali) was located in the city, and Islamic tradition claims his fingerprints are engraved on it. Despite repression by the Umayyads, Homs remained a center of Shia Islam for a while longer. As a stronghold of the Banu Kalb, the city became involved in the latter's conflicts with the Qais tribal faction. The last Umayyad caliph, Marwan II, enjoyed the support of the Qais and subsequently razed the city walls in response to a rebellion by the Banu Kalb.

In 750 the Abbasids wrested control of Syria, including Homs, from the Umayyads, but the Arab tribes continued to revolt against the Caliphate. Despite the prosperity Homs experienced during this era, Abbasid rule was generally not welcomed nevertheless. During and after the reign of caliph Harun al-Rashid (796-809), the Abbasid authorities sent numerous punitive expeditions against Homs. Under the reign of al-Mutawakkil, in October 855, an uprising by the Christians of the city erupted in response to additional taxation. The caliph put down the revolt by expelling Christians from the city, burning down its churches, and executing members of its leadership.

With Abbasid rule over the Caliphate weakening in the mid 9th-century, Homs became sought after by rebel dynasties contending for control of Syria due to the city's strategic position. Initially, the Egypt-based Tulunids came into control of it, but they were forced out by the Aleppo-based Hamdanids who were briefly succeeded by the Qarmatians, after their Turkish rebel ally Aftakin invaded northern Syria and established Homs as his base. In 891 Muslim geographer al-Yaqubi noted that Homs was situated along a broad river which served as a source of drinking water for the inhabitants. It was one of the largest cities in Syria and had several smaller districts surrounding it. In 944 the Hamdanids took definitive control of the city, dominating it until 1016. Arab geographer al-Mas'udi claimed in the early 10th-century that Homs was "noted for the personal beauty of its inhabitants." In 985 al-Muqaddasi noted that Homs was the largest city in all of Syria, but it had suffered "great misfortunes" and was "threatened with ruin." He stated that when the city was conquered by the Muslims they turned half of its church into a mosque.

For roughly thirty years during the 10th-century, Homs was raided by the Byzantines and its inhabitants were subject to slaughter and plunder while the city's mosque was briefly restored as a church. Throughout most of the 11th-century, the Byzantine raids receded greatly and the Mirdasids of the Banu Kalb tribe ruled over Homs, replacing the Hamdanids. Inclined towards Shia Islam, they did not oppose the Shia Fatimid Caliphate of Egypt which was aiming to extend its rule into northern Syria and Iraq at the time. This precipitated a Sunni Muslim reaction led by the Seljuk Turks who occupied Homs under the leadership of Aq Sunqur al-Hajib in 1090.

Seljuk, Ayyubid, and Mamluk rule

The First Crusade was launched in 1096, and in 1098, the Crusaders captured Antioch to the northwest, looted Ma'arat al-Numan, and finally besieged Homs itself. Although they managed to cut the city off from its main port Tartus, they failed in taking the city. Soon after, Homs came under the control of the Seljuk ruler of Damascus who transformed it into a large, fortified camp and key fortress effectively preventing the Crusaders from penetrating deeper into Muslim territory. Immune from attack, Homs became a point where the Muslims could marshal their forces and launch raids against Crusader holdings along the Mediterranean coast. In the early 12th-century, the Seljuks engaged in internal fighting, during which Homs was often a prize. In 1149 the Mosul-based Zengids under Nur al-Din captured the city.

Muslim geographer Al-Idrisi noted in 1154 that Homs was populous, had paved streets, possessed one of the largest mosques in Syria, contained open markets, and was frequented by travelers attracted to its "products and rarities of all kinds." He also reported that its residents were "pleasant; living with them is easy, and their manners are agreeable. The women are beautiful and are celebrated for their fine skin." A series of earthquakes in 1157 inflicted heavy damage upon Homs and its fortress, then in 1170, a minor quake finished off the latter. However, because of its strategic importance, being opposite of the Crusader County of Tripoli, the city and its fortifications were soon restored. In 1164 Nur al-Din awarded Homs to Asad ad-Din Shirkuh as a fief, but reclaimed it five years later following Shirkuh's death. The latter's nephew, Saladin, gained control of the city in 1175 and in 1179, after reorganizing his territories in northern Syria, restored the fief to his Ayyubid dynasty. Shirkuh's descendants retained Homs for nearly a century until 1262 with the death of al-Ashraf Musa. In 1225 Arab geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi mentioned that Homs was large, celebrated and walled, having a strongly fortified castle on its southern hill.

Towards the end of Ayyubid rule, Homs remained a centerpiece of the wars between them and the Crusaders, as well as internecine conflicts with the Mongol Empire and the Mamluks. The first battle between the Mongols and the Mamluks took place on December 10, 1260, ending in a decisive Mamluk victory. A second battle was fought on October 29, 1281, also ending in a Mamluk victory. The Mamluks were finally defeated in the Battle of Wadi al-Khazandar, also known as the "Third Battle of Homs," in 1299.

Homs declined politically after falling to the Mamluks under Baibars because their campaigns effectively drove out the Crusaders and the Mongols from the entirety of Syria. At the beginning of the 14th-century, the city was merely the capital of the smallest province of Syria and was often attached to the province of Damascus. Ibn Batuta visited Homs in 1355, writing that it had fine trees, good markets, and a "fine Friday Mosque," noting that all of its inhabitants were Arabs. Timur seized the city in 1400, and later in the 15th-century as Mamluk weakness had brought insecurity to the countryside, Homs was ravaged by Bedouin raids; In 1510 a powerful tribe led by al-Fadl bin Nu'ayr was sent on an expedition by the governor of Damascus to loot the city markets as Homs had failed to pay compensation for his "services."

Ottoman rule

In 1516 Homs was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire and consequently suffered a greater political eclipse, but it continued to thrive as an economic center, processing the agricultural and pastoral products that flowed to it from surrounding districts. Homs was particularly well known for silk and wool weaving, especially the alaja, which was mottled muslin run through with gold threads and used in feminine apparel. This silk was exported as far as the Ottoman capital Istanbul. In addition to weaving industries, there were olive oil presses and water mills for wheat and sesame, while grapes and rice, grown in the surrounding marshlands from the 16th-century, were found in abundance in the city's markets. Moreover, the markets of Homs were the center of a trade in livestock, where flocks of sheep and goats coming from Aleppo met camels and cattle moving north from Damascus.

The coming of the Ottomans brought administrative changes to Homs, as it became the capital city of sanjak ("district") of Homs, attached to the eyalet ("province") of Tripoli?its old rival. At this time, a French visitor noted that the city walls and citadel were in good repair, but all within was in decay and only its covered markets "retained their beauty." In 1785 French traveler, Volney wrote of the city's once great importance and its current "miserable" condition. He described it as a large, but ruined village administratively dependent on Damascus. The Ottomans did little to revitalize Homs or ensure its security against Bedouin raids. Tribal unrest throughout the 17th and 18th centuries resulted in the sacking of its markets on several occasions. Security was even more hampered, when in the 18th-century, the Ottomans tore down the gates of the city's walls.

The countryside of Homs saw an increase in Bedouin raids in the first half of the 19th-century, interrupted by its occupation by Muhammad Ali's Egypt led by Ibrahim Pasha between 1832 and 1840. The city rebelled against Egyptian rule and consequently, the citadel was destroyed when the Egyptians suppressed the revolt. Ottoman rule was soon restored and up to the 1860s, Homs was large enough to form a discrete economic unit of trade and processing of agricultural products from its satellite villages and the neighboring Bedouin tribes.

The local economy was stimulated when the Ottoman government extended security to the city and its surrounding areas; new villages were established and old ones were resettled. However, Homs found itself faced with European economic competition since Ottoman rule was restored. Homs' economic importance was boosted again during the depression of the 1870s, as its cotton industry boomed due to a decline European textile production. The quality and design of cotton goods from Homs satisfied both the lower and upper classes of the local, Ottoman, and foreign markets. There were around 5,000 looms in Homs and nearby Hama, and one British consul referred to Homs as the "Manchester of Syria."

Modern era

Throughout the 20th-century Homs held high political importance in the country and was home to several heads of state and other high-ranking government officials. During the French mandate, Homs was part of the State of Damascus. In Autumn 1925, the city joined Damascus and the southern Druze chieftains in a full-blown revolt against French rule. In 1932 the French moved their military academy from Damascus to Homs, and it remained the only military academy in Syria until 1967. The French authorities had created a unit of Special Forces in which the Alawites were given privileged positions. The military academy in Homs served as a stronghold for these Special Forces. The Homs Military Academy played a major role in the years following Syria's independence, as many of its graduates went on to become high-ranking officers in the Syrian Army, many of them taking part in the series of coup d'?tats that were to follow. An important example was Hafez al-Assad who became the president of Syria from 1971 until his death in 2000.

An oil pipeline between Tripoli and Kirkuk was built in Homs in the early 1930s and it followed an ancient caravan route between Palmyra and the Mediterranean. In 1959, an oil refinery was built to process some of this oil for domestic consumption. The city's oil refinery was bombed by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.

Syrian civil war

Homs is one of many cities in Syria where large anti-government demonstrations have been held, part of the wider Syrian civil war. It has been referred to as the "Capital of the revolution." Thousands to tens of thousands gathered in the city's main square on April 17?18, 2011 in a sit-in protesting the regime of current president Bashar al-Assad. At least 62 people were killed by government security forces in armed clashes against local anti-government militants.

Starting on May 6, the city has been under siege by the Syrian Army and security forces. The Syrian government claims it is targeting "armed gangs" and "terrorists" in the area. According to the Syrian opposition, Homs has since become a "blighted city," where authorities regularly block deliveries of medicine, food and fuel to the inhabitants of certain districts. By June, there were near-daily confrontations between protesting residents and Syrian forces. As a result of these circumstances, there have been more deaths in Homs and its vicinity than other areas of Syria. Homs was the first Syrian city where images of al-Assad and his family were routinely torn down or defaced and the first place where Syrian forces used artillery during the uprising. The Center for Documenting Violations in Syria claims that at least 1,770 people have been killed in Homs since the uprising began.

In February 2012 Syrian government forces carried out a major attack on Homs to regain control over the city which was turned into an operation center for the Free Syrian Army, a collection of anti-government fighters and army defectors. Ten days of operations resulted in the deaths of about 700 people in the city according to the Local Coordination Committees. On 1 March the Syrian Army had gained control over the Baba Amr district while lesser clashes continued in other neighborhoods.

Geography

The Governorate of Homs is the largest in Syria. Homs, the governorate's capital, is located in central western Syria, situated along the east bank of the Orontes River in a particularly fertile area. The city is in between the southern outliers of al-Ansariyah mountains located to its west and Mount Lebanon, overlooking the Homs Gap. Because of the gap, the area around Homs receives much more rainfall than interior regions to its north and south. To the east of Homs, is the Syrian Desert. Lake Homs, impounded by a huge dam of Roman origins, is to the southwest, lying some south of Aleppo and south of Hama, halfway on the road between the capital Damascus and Aleppo. The Orontes River splits the city into two main sections: To the east, on a flat land lies the city center and the main neighborhoods; to the west, lies the more recent and modern suburb of al-Waer. The city spans an area of .

Homs is located north of Damascus, south of Aleppo, south of Hama, and southeast of Latakia on the Mediterranean coast. Nearby towns and villages include al-Qusayr to the southwest, Fairouzeh in the southeast, Zaidal to the east, Shin, Marmarita and Zweitina to the west, Mashrafah to the northeast, al-Ghantoo, Talbiseh and ar-Rastan to the north and Houla to the northwest.

Old City and subdivisions

The Old City is the most condensed area of Homs, and it includes the neighborhoods of Bab Tadmur, Bab al-Dreib, and Bab Hud and the area around the citadel, covering an area of . Little remains of the Old City; its walls and gates were demolished in the Ottoman era, but a short section of fortified wall with a circular corner tower still exists. Half a kilometer to the south, a large earth mound marks the site where the citadel once stood. To the north of the citadel lies the Christian Quarter, known as "al-Hamidiyah". This neighborhood is one of the few areas of Homs that retains its older look, with most of the black-and-white stone buildings dating from the Mamluk era. They are still used as shops and dwellings, and there has been recent renovation.

At the time of the Abbasids, Homs was known for its seven gates. They were Bab al-Souq (Gate of the Market), Bab Tadmor (Gate of Palmyra), Bab al-Dreib (or Bab al-Deir), Bab al-Sebaa (Gate of the Lions), Bab al-Turkman (Gate of the Turkmen), Bab al-Masdoud (Closed Door), and Bab Hud (The Gate of Hud). Only two gates?Bab Tadmor and Bab al-Dreib?remain today. The oldest of Homs' mosques and churches are located in the Old City.

Homs consists of several subdivisions outside the Old City. The large neighborhood of Khaldiyah spreads along its northern edge, while the more modern neighborhoods of al-Sabeel, al-Zahra, and Jub al-Jandali are situated to the east of the Old City. South of it are the neighborhoods of Bab al-Sebaa, al-Mreijeh, al-Nezha, Akrama and beyond them lay the Karm al-Zaytoun and Karm al-Loz neighborhoods. The modern commercial center lies to the west in the neighborhood of Jouret al-Shayyah, and further west are the upscale neighborhoods of Qusoor, al-Mahatta and al-Ghouta. The suburb of al-Waer is located even further west, separated from the city by areas of farmland called al-Basateen and the Orontes river forming a green belt where it is forbidden to build anything. The al-Baath University complex and dormitories are located on the western-southern edge of the city next to the neighborhood of Akrama.

Climate

Homs' location ensures that it receives softening influences and breezes from the Mediterranean . As a result, the city has a much milder climate than nearby Hama, with higher average rainfall of instead of , but it also experiences greater winds.

Demographics

Year ! Population
12th-century ~7,000
1785 ~2,000
1860s (estimate) 15,000?20,000
1907 (estimate) ~65,000
1932 65,000
1960 136,000
1978 306,000
1981 346,871
1994 540,133
2004 652,609
2005 (estimate) 750,000
2008 (estimate) 823,000

Homs was one of the largest cities in Islamic Syria in the 12th-century with a population of 7,000. In 1785, the inhabitants of Homs numbered more than 2,000 and the population was divided almost evenly between Muslims and Greek Orthodox Christians. The 1860s saw a rise in the population to 15,000?20,000. By 1907, Homs had roughly 65,000 inhabitants, of which two thirds were Muslims and the remainder Christians. In the 1981 census, the population stood at 346,871, rising to 540,133 in 1994. According to the 2004 census by Syria's Central Bureau of Statistics, Homs had a population of 652,609 of which 51.5% were male and 48.5% female. In an independent 2005 estimate the city had 750,000 residents, and as of 2008 the population was estimated at about 823,000.

Today, Homs' population reflects Syria's general religious diversity, and is made up of Sunni Muslims, of Alawite Muslims, Greek Orthodox and Syriac Orthodox Christians. In the 1880s, the Survey of Western Palestine noted that there were 5,500 Greek Orthodox Christians and 1,500 Syriac Orthodox Christians. The Syriac Patriarchate was transferred to Homs from Mardin in 1933, but relocated once more to Damascus in 1959.

Homs camp, a Palestinian refugee camp, is located within the city of Homs, and has a population of nearly 14,000. Most of its residents are originally from the Acre and Haifa areas in what had been northern Palestine (present-day Israel.) During the Armenian Genocide in the early 20th-century, about 20,000 Armenians immigrated to Homs and the surrounding villages. A small Greek community also exists in the city.

Economy

After long periods of stagnation under Ottoman rule, Homs started to flourish again in the 20th-century. Its geographic and strategic location has made it a center of agriculture and industry. The "Homs Irrigation Scheme", the first of its kind in modern Syria, brought prosperity to cultivators and the long-established enterprises involved in the processing of agricultural and pastoral products. Crops grown in Homs include, wheat, barley, lentils, sugar beets, cotton, and vines, as well as serving as a point of exchange between the sedentary zone and the desert. Moreover, because of easy access to the Mediterranean, Homs has attracted overland trade from the Persian Gulf and Iraq.

Homs is also home to several large public heavy industries, such as the oil refinery west of the city which opened in 1959. A fertilizer plant was built in 1971 to process phosphates from their deposits near Palmyra; the fertilizer is for domestic consumption and export. A growing private industrial sector has flourished in the past decade and many small to medium sized enterprises occupy the industrial zones northwest and south of the city. A new sugar refinery is being built by a Brazilian company, and an automobile plant is under construction by Iran Khodro. Also a new phosphate plant and oil refinery are being built east of the city. Homs is also the hub of an important road and rail network, it is the central link between the interior cities and the Mediterranean coast.

A major industrial project was the establishment of a new industrial city in Hissaya, south of the city of Homs. Spreading across some , the city covers four main industrial sectors: textiles, food, chemical, engineering and vocational. In all, the facilities are designed to accommodate up to 66,000 workers and their families. Moreover, a free zone has been established within the city.

The hinterland of Homs is well known for its grapes which are used in Syria's liqueur industry, particularly in producing arak, nectar wine, and red wine. The city is considered a good base for day trips and excursions to the many historical and touristic sights nearby. Popular destinations include Krak des Chevaliers, Qatna, Talkalakh and Marmarita. Homs has several hotels; Safir Hotel is considered one of Syria's best five-star hotels and the only one of that status in the city. An-Nasr al-Jedid Hotel is built in a 100-year-old mansion and is labeled by tour guides as the "best budget hotel in Homs". Other hotels include Hotel al-Mimas, Ghazi Hotel, and Hotel Khayyam.

Culture

Cuisine

Although people in Homs eat the same foods common in Levantine cuisine, the city is well known throughout Syria for its own cuisine. A prominent dish is Batarsh, a type of baba ghanouj made with yogurt and garlic instead of tahini. Homs is also home to a variety of kibbeh mishwiyyeh or "grilled kibbeh". It consists of two pancakes of kibbeh stuffed with ground lamb, cooked with lamb fat and various spices. Batata mahshi ("stuffed potatoes") is native dish in Homs and is made of baby potatoes stuffed with ground lamb, pine nuts, and pomegranate molasses. The city specializes in cooking a type of okra meal, known as bamya bi-l zayt ("okra with olive oil").

Homs has an array of restaurants, some of the most highly acclaimed are those within the Safir Hotel: Mamma Mia and Mersia. The former specializes in Italian cuisine, while the latter serves Arabic food. For the local population, popular restaurants include Prince Restaurant which acts as a type of fast-food place, serving shawarma, grilled chicken, and other common Syrian foods, as well as homemade juices. In the Old City, low-price restaurants are grouped together along Shoukri al-Quwatly Street and sell similar foods, such as hummus, falafel, various salads (mezze), kebabs and chicken dishes. Restaurants and coffeehouses typically offer hookahs and are a common place for men to gather and smoke.

Like in Damascus and Aleppo, many houses in the Old City of Homs have been renovated and transformed into restaurants specializing in Levantine cuisine. Most notable of these is Beit al-Agha restaurant, situated in a renovated palace that dates back to the mid 19th-century with Ottoman and Mamluk architecture, and Julia Dumna Restaurant, which has been described as the best example of traditional Homsi houses, with its white and black stones.

Museums

There are two main museums in Homs, both located in the central part of the city. Azze Hrawe Palace, a former Mamluk-era palace belonging to Ali ibn Abi al-Fadl al-Azzhari, a subordinate of Baibars, the Mamluk sultan, is now the National Folklore Museum. Outside the building is a courtyard, occupied on one side by a large terraced liwan with a conch shell semi-dome. In the opposite wall, there is a carving of two lions, a symbol of Baibars. The first museum built in the city is located along Shoukri al-Quwatly Street and contains a selection of artifacts from the Homs region, covering the time between the prehistoric and Islamic eras.

Festivals

Homs has several festivals, and the city annually co-hosts the Desert Folk Festival and the Al-Badiya Festival with Palmyra. The Desert Folk Festival is an annual festival of the ancient traditions and costumes of the Badiya (Syrian Desert) and it includes exhibitions and concerts between Homs and Palmyra. The festival is held in the first week of May. The Al-Badiya Festival, which is held mainly in Palmyra with some events in Homs, draws approximately 60,000 tourists during the last week of May. Activities include horse, camel, and car races, horse contests, music and theatre shows, antique exhibitions, and a crafts market. Other festivals include the al-Nasarah Festival and the Festival of Krak des Chevaliers and the Valley. An annual festival is held at the Church of Saint Elian, attracting large numbers of pilgrims.

Sports

Homs is the home city of two football clubs. The Al-Karamah Sports Club was founded in 1928 and is one the oldest sports club in Syria. The Al-Karamah Sports Club is widely acclaimed on the regional and national levels, having won eight Syrian League titles, and eight Syrian Cup titles. Al-Karamah was runner-up in the 2006 AFC Champions League. The second sports club of the city is Al-Wathba Sports Club, which was founded in 1937. The Khaled Ibn Al Walid Stadium has a 35,000-seat capacity and is home to both football clubs. Homs has produced a number of well-known sportsmen, including footballers Firas Al Khatib and Jehad Al Hussain.

Government

Homs is the capital of the Homs District, and the capital of the Homs Governorate?the largest governorate in Syria, and houses the seat of its governor, appointed by the president. The city of Homs is governed by a city council and is home to the Executive Office. The latter consists of nine elected members, in addition to the president of the city council. The Office aids the Governor in making management decisions related to the Governorate, while the city council is responsible for decisions specific to the city of Homs. It is headed by a president, Nadia Kseibi, and is responsible for the day-to-day management of the city.

The council's organizational structure is composed of the top leadership, consisting of the president, vice president, and secretary, and the lower leadership, made up of the directors of seventeen city branches: Administrative Affairs, Finance, Technical Affairs, Health Affairs, Legal Affairs, the Fire Department, Mechanisms, Parks, Hygiene, Property, Provisional Register, Services and Maintenance, Works, IT, Planning and Statistics, Culture, and Internal Oversight Service.

Education

Homs is home to the Al-Baath University, one of four major universities in Syria was founded in 1979. A specialist engineering foundation, the university has one of the largest student bodies. It houses several faculties including medicine, engineering, liberal arts, and sciences and a number of two-year career (vocational) institutions. It is the only university in the country to have departments in petroleum engineering and veterinary medicine.

The German University at Wadi al-Nasarah opened in 2004 and is located west of the city. In 2005, the International School of Choueifat opened a school outside the city. Al-Andalus University for Medical Sciences was established in 2005 near Homs, and is constructing one of its University Hospitals in the city.

There are 1,727 schools and 15,000 kindergartens in the Homs Governorate, most of which are public facilities. In 2007, 375,000 students in the governorate were enrolled in elementary schools (6?15 years), 36,000 in high schools (15?18 years), and around 12,000 in vocational training schools.

Local infrastructure

Transportation

Homs is considered a transportation hub in Syria, by virtue of its central location between the coastal cities and the interior. The main bus terminal is Karnak, situated along Hama Street, north of the city center on the outskirts. The terminal offers connections to most Syrian cities and Beirut, Lebanon. It also has international bus connections to Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. A second "luxury" bus station is located a little further north. Minibuses operate from Karnak station with destinations to Tartus, Palmyra, and Hama in northern Syria, as well as Baalbek, Tripoli, and Beirut in Lebanon. Newer microbuses that mostly travel to Hama are also based in Karnak and are mostly used for quick transportation.

Homs has a large railway station, with two Chemins de Fer Syriens operated daily departures to Damascus and Aleppo. The nearest airports are Bassel Al-Assad International Airport in Latakia to the west, Damascus International Airport to the south, Aleppo International Airportto the north, and Palmyra Airport in the Syrian Desert to the east.

Hama Street starts at the Old Clock Square in the city center and crosses Homs from south to north, where it continues along the neighborhood of al-Khaldiyah on to the Karnak station, and turns into the Homs-Hama-Aleppo highway. Quwatli Street, named after former president Shukri al-Quwatli, is a short but vital street that connects the Old Clock Square and Quwatli Square in Downtown Homs. It branches into several smaller streets on its western end, one of which is al-Dablan Street which is the main commercial block in the city, and the other continues west to connect with the Homs-Tripoli highway. On the eastern end, al-Quwatli street continues as al-Hamidiyah Street which crosses the old Christian quarter and continues to the eastern edge of the city. The Homs-Damascus highway crosses the city from the south and reaches the city center in Quwatli Square.

Landmarks

The city itself is famous its historic mosques and churches. It is also well recognized by its twin clock towers. The older one, facing al-Hamidiya Street, was built by the French in the early 1930s, and the newer one in al-Quwatli Square facing al-Dablan street. Homs is well known for its historical roofed souks. These consist of a complex maze of narrow streets and covered commercial alleys extending from the south and east from the Great Mosque towards the ancient citadel. The souks?lined with grocery and clothing stores, and workshops for carpenters, artisans, cobblers, metalworkers, and knife-sharpeners?are busiest in the evening.

Homs and the surrounding countryside bear many landmarks, including a world heritage site, the Krak des Chevaliers and Citadel of Salah Ed-Din. Other landmarks include the Great Mosque of al-Nuri. Originally a pagan temple dedicated to El-Gabal, it was consecrated as the Church of Saint John the Baptist under the Byzantines. Later, it was established as a Friday mosque during the Islamic Arab rule of Homs. The Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque has been considered "the only edifice of any real note" in Homs, and was built in the last few years of Ottoman rule in Syria during 1900s. The mosque is named after early Arab general Khalid ibn al-Walid, whose tomb is located within the building.

The Um al-Zennar Church ("Church of the Virgin's Girdle") was built in 1852 atop an earlier church dating back to the 4th-century, and perhaps 59 CE. The other prominent church in Homs is the 5th-century Church of Saint Elian, built in honor of Christian martyr Saint Elian, whose tomb is located in the crypt.

Sister cities

Belo Horizonte, Brazil (2001) Kayseri, Turkey Yazd, Iran

Photos

Bibliography

. . . . . . . . . . .

See also

  • List of cities in Syria
  • List of people from Homs
  • Cities and towns during the Syrian civil war
  • References

    External links

  • eHoms ? Official website for Homs.
  • Homs Online ? Brief information about the city of Homs.
  • Emesa-net Executive Branch of Homs

    Category:Cities in Syria Category:Populated places established in the 3rd millennium BC Category:Roman towns and cities in Syria Category:Royal Family of Emesa

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    Source: http://article.wn.com/view/2012/12/30/Syrian_troops_press_Homs_offensive_23_children_die/

    Jessica Ghawi People Water Fred Willard Emmy nominations 2012 Ramadan 2012 Michelle Jenneke batman

    New Year's Resolutions You Should Skip - Devour Recipe & Food ...

    Dec 30

    Why does putting up a fresh cat calendar always inspire us to promise ourselves wild things we can never live up to? Fact is, you?re pretty bitchin? already, so feel free to keep these resolutions out of your 2013 plans.

    Lose Weight
    Trimming up is great, but setting unrealistic goals like dropping a third of your body weight by summer is just going to get you down. Which in turn will cause you to assume the fetal position while binging on ice cream. Instead, just focus on staying active and healthy.

    Take The Stairs
    Admirable, but totally undoable. You?ll be in a rush one day, or stuck behind too many slow walkers, or wanting to get in some elevator chat time with that cute guy/girl from the third floor office. Either way, you?ll befriend the elevator again.

    Less Time on The Internet
    I?m pretty sure Facebook and YouTube will be equally entertaining in 2013. Sure, 10 hours a day online is ruining your real life, but think of your Twitter followers!

    Eat Healthy Food
    You should totally attempt to eat some more healthy, home cooked meals. But face it: pizza night isn?t going to take a hike any time soon. It?s all about balance.

    Save Money
    Starting a loose change piggy bank is a great way to save money ? until you get a midnight craving for chow mein (note: It is perfectly acceptable to pay a $20 delivery bill with quarters and dimes!)? A better way to save money is to save up for something you want. Like shoes.

    Drink Less
    If 2013 turns out to be a bust, you?re not going to drink less. And if 2013 has tons of cause for celebration, you?re not going to drink less. Accept it and move on.

    Here?s to 2013! A year to be our best without being so hard on ourselves! Tsaketa!

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    Tags: Nadia G Nadia G's Bitchin' Kitchen new year's resolutions

    Source: http://blog.cookingchanneltv.com/2012/12/30/new-years-resolutions-you-should-skip/

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    Boston Mayor Tom Menino's tweet earlier this morning: "Snow emergency and parkin...

    Boston Mayor Tom... | Facebook Sign Up
    • Boston Mayor Tom Menino's tweet earlier this morning: "Snow emergency and parking ban lifted at 9am. If your car is in an alternate lot, it must be moved by 11am to keep discounted rate."

    Source: http://www.facebook.com/necntv/posts/10151317937469016

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    রবিবার, ৩০ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১২

    The Week In Arts & Culture: Worst Of 2012, Best Of 2013 And More (PHOTOS)

  • Pinaree Sanpitak: Temporary Insanity - Austin Museum of Art

    <a href="http://amoa-arthouse.org/2012/pinaree-sanpitak-temporary-insanity/">Pinaree Sanpitak: Temporary Insanity</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> Exhibition of Southeast Asian artist, Pinaree Sanpitak, who combines organic symbols and brightly colored sculptural installations to reflect on themes of spirituality, femininity, and equality in the region. <strong>WHEN: </strong>January 12th - March 3rd, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://amoa-arthouse.org/">Austin Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> One hundred amorphous, squeezable sculptures that you can play with. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Pinaree Sanpitak, Temporary Insanity, 2003-4 (installation detail) Silk, stuffing, motion sensors and devices, dimensions variable, Courtesy of the artist and Tyler Rollins Fine Art

  • Enrico David - Hammer

    <a href="http://hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/detail/exhibition_id/228">Enrico David</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> An exhibition of Italian-born artist, Enrico David, known for his figurative multimedia works that reveals a dark underworld of surreal, craft-informed creatures. <strong>WHEN:</strong> January 12th - May 5th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://hammer.ucla.edu/">Hammer Museum</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Paper mummies, hand-crafted tapestries and cavernous paintings <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Enrico David Untitled 2012 Acrylic on canvas. 103 3/4 x 91 3/4 inches. 281 x 233 cm. Courtesy Michael Werner Gallery, New York and London. Michael Werner Gallery, New York and London.

  • American Vesuvius: The Aftermath of Mount St. Helens - The Cleveland Museum of Art

    <a href="http://www.clevelandart.org/events/exhibitions/american-vesuvius-aftermath-mount-st-helens-frank-gohlke-and-emmet-gowin">American Vesuvius: The Aftermath of Mount St. Helens</a> <strong>WHAT: </strong>An exhibition dedicated to the volcanic eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington State. <strong>WHEN:</strong> January 13th - May 12th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.clevelandart.org/">The Cleveland Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for: </strong>Many photographs revealing the transformation of Mt. St. Helen's surrounding landscapes taken throughout the 20th century. <strong>IMAGE: </strong>Inside Mount St. Helens Crater, Base of Lava Dome on the Left (detail), 1983. Frank Gohlke (American, born 1942). Gelatin silver print; 45.3 x 55.9 cm. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of museum members in 1989 1989.433

  • Alexandre Singh: The Pledge - The Drawing Center

    <a href="http://www.drawingcenter.org/exh_upcoming.cfm?exh=899">Alexandre Singh: The Pledge</a> <strong>WHAT: </strong>The first North American museum exhibition of New York-based artist, Alexandre Singh. <strong>WHEN:</strong> January 17th - March 13th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.drawingcenter.org/">The Drawing Center</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Collage art accounts of interviews conducted by the artist with noted scientists, artists, writers and filmmakers. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Alexandre Singh, Assembly Instructions (The Pledge- Leah Kelly), 2011. Framed inkjet ultrachrome archival prints and dotted pencil lines, 18 x 24 inches, #6 from a set of 37. Courtesy Art: Concept, Monitor gallery, Spr?th Magers

  • The Artist and the Poet - Art Institute of Chicago

    <a href="http://www.artic.edu/exhibition/artist-and-poet">The Artist and the Poet</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> Planned to coincide with the institute's "Picasso and Chicago" exhibition, the array of prints and drawings reveal the collaborative relationship between artists like Pablo Picasso, Robert Motherwell and David Hockney and poets such as Max Jacob, Rafael Alberti and Wallace Steves, respectively. <strong>WHEN: </strong>February 1st - June 2nd, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.artic.edu/">The Art Institute Chicago</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> "Skin with O?Hara Poem" (1963?65), a print by Jasper Johns that was inspired by the poet Frank O'Hara.

  • Shinique Smith: Firsthand - LACMA

    <a href="http://www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/shinique-smith-firsthand">Shinique Smith: Firsthand</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A exhibition of Shinique Smith's work that reflects on the artist's Baltimore upbringing and early desire to work with fashion and design. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 8th, 2013 - ongoing <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/shinique-smith-firsthand">Los Angeles Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> A combination of costumery and textiles tangled into sculptural installations like "Swaying Beauty." <strong>IMAGE: </strong>Shinique Smith, Swaying Beauty, 2007, clothing, foam, rope, and twine, 60 x 22 x 22 in., Los Angeles County Museum of Art, gift of Schiff Fine Art, ? Shinique Smith.

  • Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui - Brooklyn Museum

    <a href="http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/el_anatsui/">Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> The first solo exhibition in a New York museum by the Ghana-born artist El Anatsui. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 8th - August 4th, 2013 <strong>WHERE: </strong><a href="http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/">Brooklyn Museum</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Twelve giant wall and floor sculptures made from metal, wood and appropriated objects. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> El Anatsui (Ghanaian, born 1944). Earth?s Skin, 2009. Aluminum and copper wire, 177 x 394 in. (449.6 x 1000.8 cm). Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York. Photograph by Joe Levack, courtesy of the Akron Art Museum

  • Angles, Demons, and Savages: Pollock, Ossorio, Dubuffet - Phillips Collection

    <a href="http://www.phillipscollection.org/exhibitions/2013-02-09-exhibition-pollock-ossorio-dubuffet.aspx">Angles, Demons, and Savages: Pollock, Ossorio, Dubuffet</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> An exhibition of work by American artists Jackson Pollock and Alfonso Ossorio, as well as French painter Jean Dubuffet. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 9th - May 12th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.phillipscollection.org/index.aspx">Phillips Collection</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Around 53 paintings and drawings that show a visual friendship enjoyed by all three artists. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Number 7, 1952 1952 Enamel and oil on canvas 53 1/8 x 40 inches The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

  • Eye Level in Iraq: Photographs by Kael Alford and Thorne Anderson - de Young

    <a href="http://deyoung.famsf.org/deyoung/exhibitions/eye-level-iraq-photographs-kael-alford-and-thorne-anderson">Eye Level in Iraq: Photographs by Kael Alford and Thorne Anderson</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> The photographs of Kael Alford and Thorne Anderson, two American-trained photo journalists who documented the aftermath of the US-led allied invasion of Iraq in 2003. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 9th - June 16th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://deyoung.famsf.org/">de Young</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Images taken outside the confines of the U.S. military's embedded journalist program. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Thorne Anderson, Thawra, Baghdad, Iraq, April 18, 2003. Digital inkjet print. High Museum of Art, Atlanta. ? Thorne Anderson

  • Gutai: Splendid Playground - Guggenheim

    <a href="http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/exhibitions/upcoming/gutai-splendid-playground">Gutai: Splendid Playground</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> The first U.S. museum retrospective of Gutai, a postwar Japanese artist collective and influential avante-garde proponent of the 1950s and '60s. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 15th - May 8th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york">Guggenheim</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> A whirlwind of paintings, conceptual art, experimental performance and film, indoor and outdoor installations, sound art, mail art, interactive art, light art... and kinetic art. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Murakami Sabur? Passing Through, 1956 Performance view: 2nd Gutai Art Exhibition, Ohara Kaikan, Tokyo, ca. October 11?17, 1956 ? Makiko Murakami and the former members of the Gutai Art Association, courtesy Museum of Osaka University

  • William H. Johnson: An American Modern - Georgia Museum of Art

    <a href="http://georgiamuseum.org/art/exhibitions/upcoming/william-h.-johnson">William H. Johnson: An American Modern</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> An exhibition of the work of modern American artist William Henry Johnson, the self-described "primitive and cultural painter." <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 16th - May 12th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://georgiamuseum.org/">Georgia Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Twenty landscapes, still-lifes and portraits including the iconic "Blind Singer" and "Aunt Alice." <strong>IMAGE: </strong> William H. Johnson (American 1907?1970) Aunt Alice (detail), ca. 1944 Oil on compressed board 33 3/4 x 28 5/8 inches Collection of Morgan State University

  • NYC 1993: Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star - New Museum

    <a href="http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/nyc-1993-experimental-jet-set-trash-and-no-star">NYC 1993: Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A time capsule-esque exhibit that centers on the art, pop culture and politics of 1993 in New York. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 13th - May 26th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> The New Museum <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Time-specific references to the ongoing conflict in Europe, attempts at peace in the Middle East, the AIDS crisis, and national debates on health care, gun control, and gay rights. <strong>IMAGE: </strong> Art Club 2000, Untitled (Conrans I), 1992?93. Chromogenic color print, 8 x 10 in (20.32 x 25.4 cm). Courtesy the artist and the Estate of Colin de Land

  • Chagall: Beyond Color - Dallas Museum of Art

    <a href="http://www.dallasmuseumofart.org/View/FutureExhibitions/dma_488367">Chagall: Beyond Color</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A look at the paintings, sculpture, ceramics and collage of the Russian-French artist, Marc Chagall. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 17th - May 26th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.dallasmuseumofart.org/">Dallas Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> A display of costumes made by Chagall in 1942 for the production of the ballet "Aleko," choreographed by L?onide Massine with music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Marc Chagall, Double Portrait with Wine Glass (Double Portrait au Verre de Vin)1917-1918 Oil on canvas Overall: 92 17/32 x 53 15/16 in. (2 m 35 cm x 137 cm) Framed dimensions: 97 1/4 x 58 21/32 x 2 3/4 in. (2 m 47 cm x 149 cm x 7 cm) Centre Pompidou Photo : (c) Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI, Dist. RMN / Adam Rzepka. (c) 2012 Artists Rights Society. (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris

  • Kehinde Wiley: The Memling Series - Phoenix Art Museum

    <a href="http://www.phxart.org/exhibitions/69dc7ab9-a14b-4eac-dfea-2d73f0e5b946">Kehinde Wiley: The Memling Series</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A new series of paintings by the New York artist Kehinde Wiley, who is known for his knack for re-envisioning classical styles of portraiture. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 20th - June 23rd, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.phxart.org/">Phoenix Art Museum</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Eight paintings based on the work of Hans Memling, the Flemish master painter of the Northern Renaissance. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Kehinde Wiley, Marechal Floriano Peixoto (The World Stage: Brazil), 2009. Oil on canvas, 96" x 84." Phoenix Art Museum. Museum purchase with funds provided by Contemporary Forum in honor of the Museum's 50th Anniversary.

  • Color Rush: 75 Years of Color Photography in America - Milwaukee Art Museum

    <a href="http://mam.org/exhibitions/details/color-rush.php">Color Rush: 75 Years of Color Photography in America</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A history of color photography in the United States from 1907 to 1981, including magazine images, gallery works, advertisements, and photojournalism. <strong>WHEN: </strong>February 22nd - May 19th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://mam.org/">Milwaukee Art Museum</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> References to Life, Vogue and Kodak. <strong>IMAGE: </strong> Edward Steichen (American, b. Luxemburg, 1879?1973) Bouquet of Flowers, January 8, 1940 Dye transfer print image: 9 9/16 x 6 5/8 in. (24.3 x 16.8 cm) Collection of George Eastman House (Bequest of Edward Steichen by Direction of Joanna T. Steichen) Permission of the Estate of Edward Steichen, Courtesy of George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film

  • Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity - The Metropolitan Museum of Art

    <a href="http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2013/impressionism-fashion-modernity">Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A survey of the fashion trends that appeared in the works of the Impressionists and their contemporaries. <strong>WHEN:</strong> February 26th - May 27th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.metmuseum.org/">The Metropolitan Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for: </strong>Around eighty major figure paintings seen in conjunction with period costumes, accessories, fashion plates, photographs, and popular prints that also show the relationshi between fashion and art at this time. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926) Women in the Garden 1866 Oil on canvas 100 3/8 x 80 11/16 in. (255 x 205 cm) Mus?e d'Orsay, Paris

  • Workt by Hand: Hidden Labor and Historical Quilts - Brooklyn Museum

    <a href="http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/quilts/">Workt by Hand: Hidden Labor and Historical Quilts</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> The exhibition examines the impact of feminist scholarship on historical quilts, giving focus to the ways in which ideas of anonymity, authorship and collectivity affected the interpretation of the craft. <strong>WHEN:</strong> March 15th - September 15th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/">Brooklyn Museum</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Thirty-five American and European quilt masterpieces. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Elizabeth Welsh (American). Medallion Quilt, circa 1830. Cotton, 110 ? x 109 in. (280.7 x 267.8 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of The Roebling Society, 78.36. Photo by Gavin Ashworth

  • James Turrell: A Retrospective - Museum of Fine Arts Houston

    <a href="http://www.mfah.org/exhibitions/james-turrell-retrospective/">James Turrell: A Retrospective</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A collection of the many light installations of American artist James Turrell, concurrently presented by the MFAH, LACMA and the Guggenheim <strong>WHEN:</strong> June 9th - September 22nd, 2013 at MFAH (May 26th, 2012-April 6th, 2014 at LACMA and June 21st-September 25th, 2013 at Guggenheim) <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.mfah.org/">Museum of Fine Arts Houston</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> "Vertical Vintage", a grouping of a dozen interactive, light-based installations. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> James Turrell, The Light Inside, 1999, neon lights, gypsum board, plaster, glass, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, museum commission, gift of Isabel B. and Wallace S. Wilson. (c) James Turrell

  • Claes Oldenburg: The Street and the Store - MoMA

    <a href="http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1320">Claes Oldenburg: The Street and the Store</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> A retrospective of Claes Oldenburg, an artist who once rented a storefront in New York City and filled it with handmade, painted sculptures that mimicked the everyday commercial products sold in stores throughout the neighborhood. <strong>WHEN:</strong> April 14th - August 5th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.moma.org/">Museum of Modern Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> A selection of Oldenburg?s past "Store" performances, seen through films projected throughout the exhibition's halls. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Claes Oldenburg (American, born Sweden 1929). Two Girls? Dresses. 1961. Muslin soaked in plaster over wire frame, painted with enamel. 44 1/2 x 40 3/4 x 6? (113 x 103.5 x 15.2 cm). Private collection. ? 1961 Claes Oldenburg. Photo: Gunter Lepkowski

  • Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Masterpieces of Modern Mexico - The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

    <a href="http://www.nelson-atkins.org/art/Exhibitions.cfm?id=157">Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Masterpieces of Modern Mexico</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> An exhibition of works collected by Jacque and Natasha Gelman, Eastern European ex-pats who became Mexican citizens in 1942 and subsequently acquired art by Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro and more. <strong>WHEN: </strong>May 25th - August 18th, 2013 <strong>WHERE: </strong><a href="http://www.nelson-atkins.org/">Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> More than 100 paintings, sculptures, photographs, and drawings. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Frida Kahlo (Mexican, 1907-1954). Diego en mi pensamiento (Diego on My Mind), 1943. Oil on Masonite, 29 7/8 x 24 inches. The Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection. The Vergel Foundation. Conaculta/INBA. ? Banco de M?xico Diego Rivera & Frida Kahlo Museums Trust. Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

  • Mika Taanila - Contemporary Art Museum in St. Louis

    <a href="http://camstl.org/exhibitions/main-gallery/mika-taanila/">Mika Taanila</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> An exhibit dedicated to Finnish artist Mika Taanila, who has created works in film, video, photography, sound, and installation that explore technological innovations and human's innate desire to continuously advance. <strong>WHEN: </strong>May 31st - August 11th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://camstl.org/">Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> The CAM show will feature large multi-channel video installations, 35mm film presentations, and new photographic works.

  • Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes - MoMA

    <a href="http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1321">Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> The works of Le Corbusier (aka Charles-?douard Jeanneret), whose work spanned architecture, interior design, visual art, city planning, writings, and photography. <strong>WHEN:</strong> June 9th - September 23rd, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.moma.org/">Museum of Modern Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> The exhibition will place particular focus on the ways in which Le Corbusier imagined landscapes, in his early watercolors of the Mediterranean, his sketches of India, and his photographs of architectural projects. <strong>IMAGE: </strong>Le Corbusier (Charles-Edouard Jeanneret) (French, born Switzerland. 1887-1965) with Pierre Jeanneret (Swiss, 1896?1967). Villa Savoye Poissy-sur-Seine, France. 1929-31. Wood, aluminum, and plastic. 16 x 34 x 32? (40.6 x 86.4 x 81.3 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchase. ? 2012 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / FLC

  • Future Beauty: Thirty Years of Japanese Fashion - Seattle Art Museum

    <a href="http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibit/exhibitDetail.asp?eventID=23201">Future Beauty: Thirty Years of Japanese Fashion</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> An entire exhibit dedicated to revolutionary Japanese fashion designers who are credited with influencing Western couture as we know it. <strong>WHEN:</strong> June 27th - September 8th, 2013 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/default.asp">Seattle Art Museum</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Eighty gowns by designers like Rei Kawakubo, Yohji Yamamoto and Jun Takahashi. <strong>IMAGE: </strong>ISSEY MIYAKE ( Naoki Takizawa) + Aya Takano / Kaikai Kiki Autumn/Winter 2004 Collection Collection of the Kyoto Costume Institute,Gift of ISSEY MIYAKE INC.

  • Fernand Leger and the Modern City - Philadelphia Museum of Art

    <a href="http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/766.html">Fernand Leger and the Modern City</a> WHAT: Using Fernand L?ger?s 1919 work, "The City," as a jumping off point, the exhibit showcases the French artist's array of paintings, all of which incorporate forms of cultural production central to modern cities, like graphic and advertising design, theater, film, and architecture. WHEN: October 2013 - January 2014 WHERE: <a href="http://www.philamuseum.org/">Philadelphia Museum of Art</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Over one hundred Leger works from collectors and institutions across Europe and the US. IMAGE: The City, 1919. Fernand L?ger, French, 1881 1955. Oil on canvas, 7 feet 7 inches x 9 feet 9 1/2 inches (231.1 x 298.4 cm). Philadelphia Museum of Art, A. E. Gallatin Collection, 1952. ? Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris Image courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art

  • Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris - National Gallery of Art in D.C.

    <a href="http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/marvilleinfo.shtm">Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris</a> <strong>WHAT:</strong> The first retrospective exhibition in the United States of 19th-century Parisian photographer Charles Marville, which serves as a biographical account of his life as well as an artist survey of his career. <strong>WHEN:</strong> September 29th, 2013 - January 5th, 2014 <strong>WHERE:</strong> <a href="http://www.nga.gov/home.htm">National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.</a> <strong>What to look out for:</strong> Around one hundred photographs, mostly of Paris, that range from city scenes and landscapes to architectural studies of Europe in the early 1850s. <strong>IMAGE:</strong> Charles Marville H?tel de la Marine, c. 1870 Diana and Mallory Walker Fund

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/29/the-week-in-arts--culture_n_2379418.html

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    South Africa waiting on Philander&#39;s fitness ? Cricket News Update ...

    South Africa waiting on Philander?s fitness ? Cricket News Update

    South Africa cricket team management is hoping for the promising paceman Vernon Philander to recover in time for the first Test of the two-match home series against New Zealand, starting at Newlands in Cape Town, on January 2, 2013.

    Philander, 27, injured his hamstring during a first class match between Cape Cobras and the Titans last week. The right-arm medium pacer bowled only five overs for the Cobras, claiming one wicket as well, before leaving the field for a treatment. Subsequent scans confirmed presence of a minor grade one hamstring strain. He is on the ninth day of a 10-14 day recovery programme, and will only be assessed next week for his availability for the New Year Test against the Black Caps.

    Though the right-arm seamer is in training with the national team, he is not bowling to full capacity yet. South Africa?s team manager Mohammad Moosajee, who is also a medical doctor, told media reporters on Friday that Philander is expected to be up to 80 per cent fit by the weekend.

    "He is still in the rehabilitation phase but is coming along nicely," Mohammed Moosajee told ESPNCricinfo yesterday. "We are definitely not ruling him out," insisted the Proteas? team manager.

    It may be noted here that the 27-year-old South African seamer had also sat out the second Test against Australia at the Adelaide Oval earlier this month due to a troublesome left hamstring and sore back.

    Should Philander not pass the next week?s fitness test,?his Cape Cobras teammate Rory Kleinveldt?will replace him in the Playing XI for the first Test against the Kiwis. The 29-year-old Kleinveldt?made his Test debut against Australia at Brisbane last month, and has so far played two matches picking up four wickets.

    Meanwhile, the Black Caps will be without middle-order batsman?Peter Fulton in the two-Test series, after he has been ruled out of the remainder of the itinerary due to a recurring knee injury. Colin Munro, who was part of the T20 squad that lost the recently concluded three-match series against the Proteas 2-1, has been called up to the Test side as cover for Fulton.

    Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/South-Africa-waiting-on-Philanders-fitness-Cricket-News-Update-a211862

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    Argentina to court: revert order on debt holdouts

    Argentina is asking a US appeals court to reverse an order for the country to pay $1.33 billion to "holdout" creditors who refused to join two swaps for the country's defaulted debt.

    Argentine government lawyers said in papers filed late Friday that the order violates the country's sovereignty. The lawyers said the order also threatens service on at least $24 billion of the county's restructured sovereign debt, impairs the rights of third parties and puts global debt markets at risk.

    "The Amended Injunctions have no basis in law, are inequitable, and threaten to wreak havoc on countless innocent third parties, which have already suffered losses due to the plunge in their bonds' value provoked by the insecurity that the Amended Injunctions have created in the market for Argentina's New York law-governed bonds," the briefing said.

    "This harm to private and sovereign creditors, as well as to New York law and New York as a place to do business, will only grow if the Amended Injunctions are affirmed. "

    The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ordered the country on Oct. 26 to pay the holdouts an equal amount whenever it makes payments on other debt that has been restructured since the country's economic collapse 11 years ago.

    It agreed with U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa, who ruled that with more than $40 billion in foreign reserves, Argentina can afford to pay. The ruling gave Argentina a difficult choice: pay all bondholders equally, or pay none of them and risk going into default.

    The court then returned the case to Griesa who ordered Argentina to pay the $1.33 billion into escrow for holders of its defaulted debt and banned banks and other third parties from intervening. Griesa based his ruling on the principle of "pari passu," or equal footing, which says debtors can't pick and choose between creditors.

    President Cristina Fernandez called Griesa's ruling "judicial colonialism," and Argentina sidestepped the impending economic chaos when the order was suspended by the appeals court on Nov. 28.

    But just the threat of the payment deadline set by Griesa had harsh outcomes. In the week after he issued his order, the cost of maintaining Argentina's overall debt soared in trading on U.S. and European bond markets and the cost of insuring those debts spiked.

    "A court can arguably enjoin a foreign state from engaging in a commercial activity within the United States. But it cannot issue an order to force or preclude a foreign sovereign to act or not act within the limits of that sovereign's own territory," Argentina's brief said.

    "By dictating to Argentina that it cannot pay moneys it owes to the exchange bondholders in a funds transfer in its own country, and commanding that it make a payment (including via escrow) to holdout creditors that it is precluded from paying under its own laws, the Amended Injunctions violate this fundamental principle."

    Argentina, however, said it's willing to make concessions. To end the lengthy dispute, government lawyers said the country is willing to ask Congress to give holdout creditors the same treatment as those who joined a 2010 debt swap.

    "The only definitive and equitable solution to pari passu claims that would bring legal and economic certainty is to treat plaintiffs and all other similarly situated claimants equitably on the same terms as participants in (Argentina's) 2010 Exchange Offer," the brief said.

    Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/12/29/3160281/argentina-to-court-revert-order.html

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