2 Ekim 2012 Salı

Trista Sutter's silhouette by Dr. Franklin and Cindi Rose by E.D. Woods

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Trista Sutter’s sculpting by Dr. Franklin and Cindi Rose

Lucky for the Bachelorette’s and Bachelor’s that Erica Rose’s father is famous plastic surgeon Dr. Franklin Rose, and her mom is noted silhouette artist, Cindi Rose. It makes the contestants and winners look and stay beautiful. Recently, the first reality Bachelorette, Trista Sutter, met up with Bachelor legal star, Erica Rose, and discussed her wanting an updated look. Although Erica thought Trista looked beautiful, she referred her to her father (who would never operate on his family). Trista had been admiring Emily Maynard’s plastic surgery, and did not want to be Bachelorette history. For her first meeting, in Franklin Rose’s hometown, Aspen, Colorado, Trista drove in from Vail. The petite beauty was met by Franklin and Cindi Rose.

As always, Cindi took out her surgical scissors and in a minute sculpted the world’s darling’s profile. Trista loved it, and signed it with her good-valued signature. Trista commented that her children would love Cindi Rose’s artwork. Her real concerns however was, a drop of fat, droopy eyes, and breasts that were not what they were pre-children.

Franklin Rose, a board-certified MD, who studied at Yale, Manhattan Eye and Ear, and Baylor College of Medicine, booked the soon to be 40 year-old at his doctor owned surgical center, First Street in Houston, Texas.

Trista got small breast implants, and the tired look erased from her lovely blue eyes with upper and lower eye lifts. In her pre and post-op photos it appears that she may have had liposuction. Word is that there is a room in The Rose Home devoted to patient care, and that after a luxurious stay at First Street Hospital (with culinary meals and wait staff), patients recover with Cindi Rose’s low-fat, organic nutritious meals and care. No wonder, the most beautiful men and women in the country get on Bachelor and Bachelor Pad, they have a connection—Erica Rose’s father. Unlike what people would think, Erica’s perfect size 4, 5’ 8” figure is natural. Her mother and grandmother where former beauty contest winners, and it is a natural for Erica. Read Life & Style Weekly to see Trista’s before and after plastic surgery photos and decide yourself, if she did or did not also have liposuction. I think somewhere there is also word that there could be a book coming out about parenting, and being in love, penned by no-other than America’s darling, Trista Sutter!


How to learn to cut silhouette profiles from sight

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How to learn to cut silhouette profiles from sightBy silhouette artist Cindi Harwood Rose                When I was a little child, I would sit with my talented mother, and cut-out Valentine’s, snow-flakes, paper dolls, flowers, and  butterflies. My mother, Doris Harwood, a paper-cutting artist and architectural designer would also draw portraits, front and side-view.  Little did she know that this practice in contour would prepare her to be a natural in the fine art of English and French profile hand-cutting, an art difficult to master, that only a few handfuls of fine artists, are prolific at.   You can look on-line at The Guild of Paper cutters and see a listing of the world’s best silhouette artists and paper cutters from the past 300 years, and samples of their works.                As a natural artist, skilled in life drawing, I got a job in my early teens at an amusement park drawing portraits.  While taking a tour, I saw a silhouette artist—someone cutting out profiles from black paper freehand without sketching or using a light—and said “I can do that.”   Laughed at, I was handed scissors, and thin black paper.  Freehand, without a sketch, or light, I cut out the manager’s profile, in less than two minutes, and the prior silhouette artist was fired on the spot.  What I did most, was compare each feature, the same way I would when I draw.  I used my scissors as I would “a thumb” to eyeball the spaces between the features in the subject’s profile                Silhouette cutting for the Disney art concessionaire became my summer job, throughout high school and The University of Texas where I graduated in fine art and journalism. Later, I worked for Disney World and Disneyland, where  I broke park production records doing 600 silhouettes in a day.  Soon, I found myself doing silhouettes all over the world, for many celebrities, families, formal affairs, television shows, galleries, department stores, and collections. I made a world speed record in 1982, 144 silhouettes of 144 individuals cut-out in one hour, timed by The San Antonio Express Newspaper. After a busy career, I married Franklin Rose, and had two children, Erica and Ben.  I used my silhouette art, as a fund-raiser for their schools, and many philanthropic causes, including Texas Children’s hospital, The Woman’s Hospital of Texas, The American Heart Association, The Ronald McDonald House, The Houston Symphony, and The Holly Rose Ribbon Foundation, a non-profit, I formed with my husband for uninsured cancer survivors.
                Paper-cutting was discovered in northwestern China around 386-586 AD with Chinese embroidery patterns, for the royal dynasties.  Silhouette-cutting  was associated with the royal courts.  It was not uncommon to have a silhouettist employed, capturing every movement of the entire court. Some paper-cutting artists, told stories, such as Hans Christian Anderson.  The name silhouette, is from Etienne de Silhouette, a French minister of Finance, who was dismissed in 1759, after 9 months in office. He had cut out pensions and luxuries, thus, items “cut-out” or minimal in expense, reminded people of him.  Silhouettes were the way to have a profile made by an artist, without having to have a portrait drawn.  Oddly, a true silhouette, hand-cut by an artist, is more difficult than drawing a portrait, and all silhouette artists can draw portraits, but not all portrait artists can do silhouettes free-hand.  There are only around 25 to 50 real silhouette profilist artists in the world, and hand-cut silhouettes, not computer generated ones, only become more valuable in time.  It is not necessary to have little embellishments in your silhouettes. A good silhouette artist, will not give everyone the same hair-do and face, they will make you look like yourself, with the details that express your style.                   The beauty of a silhouette is passed down from generation to generation.  Rose has done silhouettes for over 35 years, and has done generations of families.  She prides herself on her likeness’s and embellishments—the white- cut-outs, when it adds to the profile and the style of the individual subject.   If you are a gifted portrait artist, especially keen with the profile, you have a good shot at being a real silhouette artist.  Not one who Photoshops, or traces a shadow off a wall, but a person, who can see features in comparison to other features, and in proportion.  You can start by drawing a profile, around 4 inches high, and cutting it out, or taking profile photos and cutting them out.  Once you figure out how to draw with scissors.  Practice with real people and pets.  Wrapping paper is a good medium to begin with, or computer paper.  If you want to make if official, spray paint one side black, but use the white side to cut from. You can also buy real French silhouette paper on the internet, or at your favorite art supply store.  Barber and surgical scissors make great tools to use, but are costly.  You want to make sure the scissors you use has a straight edge, so that you can control your cuts.  I like to start cutting from the bottom up, which is different than the way I draw. For fun, use colored backgrounds and junk mail.  It is wonderful what you can do withthe silhouette and your imagination.  Silhouettesbycindi.com 

1 Ekim 2012 Pazartesi

Criminal corporations: Prof argues 'corporate criminal liability is a question of corporate power'

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The US Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling, famously echoed by GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, held that corporations are people (and thus possess free speech rights). But that hasn't stopped some in academic and corporate circles from maintaining that corporations should be exempt from criminal law. This author, for example, in 2009 compared criminal punishment of corporations to punishing animals or inanimate objects (likening it to a biblical practice archaically referred to as "deodand"). Others argue criminal law should focus on the individuals engaged in misconduct instead of punishing a "legal fiction." But the Corporate Crime Reporter alerts us to a rebuttal to such views in a story which opens:
The question of corporate criminal liability is a question of corporate power.

That’s according to Charles R.P. Pouncy, a professor of law at Florida International School of Law in Miami. Pouncy is author of, most recently, Reevaluating Corporate Criminal Responsibility: It’s All About Corporate Power (Stetson Law Review, 2012).
Pouncy tackles head on the increasingly popular idea that we should eliminate corporate criminal liability.
“The notion that corporations, and derivatively, capital, should be exempt from punishment under the criminal law — which expresses societal standards and expectations — is inconsistent with the expectations of most members of the communities that corporations inhabit,” he writes.

“This challenge against using the criminal law to control corporate behavior is a component of a larger struggle . . .to determine which forces will control the shape of future society,” he writes. “It is a struggle about which institutions will structure the nature of the world we live in.”

“Will human societies be controlled by the institutions that have structured their existence for the last few thousand years —  kinship, community, religion/philosophy, and social provisioning?” Pouncy asks. “Or will economic institutions, specifically the institutions of the corporation and capital, dominate society and subordinate its human members to the interests of its artificial citizens and their advocates?”

“The question of the corporation’s and capital’s accountability to the criminal law is one of the frontlines in determining whether the . . . principles organizing human societies are designed to serve the interest of corporations or of people. Therefore, this question is central to whether human power will be supplanted by the power of artificial entities.”
I recall a humorous sign from one of the Occupy Wall Street rallies that declared, "I'll believe corporations are people when Texas executes one."

In truth, though corporations theoretically may be held criminally liable, in practice that itself a legal fiction. When companies are caught engaging in bribery or money laundering, for example, they're inevitably allowed to squeeze out from under criminal charges via civil penalties and financial settlements under "deferred plea agreements." Rarely if ever are the companies themselves or corporate officials who made such decisions held criminally responsible for such behavior. If corporations are people, though, why shouldn't they be subject to criminal sanctions?

Prof. Pouncy contends that, "money alone does not satisfy society’s need to condemn the behaviors it finds damaging to its interests," arguing that "the prospect of having to endure moral condemnation" under criminal law supplies greater deterrent. For my part, I think a) that the idea that corporations are people is BS and b) symbolic condemnation matters much less to corporations than financial liability. I'd rather see individual corporate decision makers held criminally responsible, with corporations punished through regulatory sanctions and civil liability. But in the wake of Citizens United, the personhood of corporations, however absurd, now has been enshrined as the law of the land. And if corporations are people, it follows they can be criminals.

5th Circuit to decide whether police can get cell phone tracking records without warrant

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TechHive on Saturday published an effective preview of an important case before the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to determine whether law enforcement can obtain cell phone tracking data from service providers without a warrant:
The U.S. government will be taking a second crack Tuesday at overturning a lower court ruling that's preventing police from obtaining cell phone location records from two wireless carriers without a search warrant.

Now before the U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans, the government's attempt to obtain 60 days of records from the carriers as part of a "routine" law enforcement investigation was previously rebuffed by a magistrate judge in a federal district court in Texas.

The Texas judge ruled that a warrant was necessary to obtain the information because the data was protected by the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects an individual's privacy.
In papers filed with the appeals court, the government is arguing that the Fourth Amendment doesn't apply to location records archived by carriers because they are business records.

The courts have ruled that business records are subject to something called "the third-party doctrine." That doctrine excludes from Fourth Amendment protections records that an individual has neither ownership nor possession of.

In addition, the government is arguing consumers should not have a "reasonable expectation" that their carriers will keep records containing location information private. "Reasonable expectation" is one of the measures established by the courts to determine if Fourth Amendment rights can be asserted by a person.
Orin Kerr at the Volokh Conspiracy has been arguing vociferously, and at length, that the magistrate judge whose ruling is being appealed had no authority to prevent law enforcement from acquire such data, insisting that he could not do so until law enforcement actually abused the information. Scott Greenfield posted an effective rebuttal to Kerr's argument, and Orin posted links to several amici briefs, including three which argue in favor of affirming the magistrate's order.

IMO, if the courts don't forbid police from accessing this data without a warrant, Congress and/or state legislatures should do so.

Scroggin, Eddie 'E.S.', Jr (22 May 1919 - 10 Jan 2012) [49765]

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Scroggin, Eddie 'E.S.', Jr, , Record added: Jan 10, 2012, Find A Grave Memorial# 83240776

Eddie "E.S." Scroggin, Jr
Birth:     May 22, 1919
Center Ridge
Conway County
Arkansas, USA
Death:     Jan. 10, 2012
Little Rock
Pulaski County
Arkansas, USA

Eddie "E.S." Scroggin Jr of Little Rock was born May 22, 1919 in Center Ridge Arkansas to parents Eddie S. Scroggin Sr. and Jewell Dickson Scroggin and passed away on January 10th, 2012 in Little Rock, Arkansas. He is preceded in death by his parents and his wife of 70 years Geneva Scroggin with whom he has been reunited; his son Dwayne Scroggin; grandson David Lynn Scroggin and granddaughter Sara Alysha Wilson and a brother Donald Freeman and a sister Lucille Roy

Mr. Scroggin was a veteran of WWll and was a HAM Radio Operator, WN5QAT, which was his favorite pass time. He was also a member of Park Hill Baptist Church.

He leaves to cherish his memory his children David Scroggin of Hot Springs Village; his daughter Deanne Hooker and her husband Mark of Maumelle 8 grandchildren, 18 great grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren.

The family will receive friends for a Life Celebration from 10:30 AM to 12:30 PM on Friday, January 13th, 2012 at Griffin Leggett Rest Hills Funeral Home, 7724 Landers Road in North Little Rock

Burial:
Unknown

Created by: KL
Record added: Jan 10, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 83240776

Scroggins, Mary K. (Shuster) (12 Mar 1917 - 23 Sep 2012) [50975]

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Gude Funeral Home, Mary K. (Scroggins) Shuster, ca. 25 Sep 2012
Mary K. Shuster, age 95, of Nebraska City, NE passed away on Sunday, September 23, 2012 at St. Mary’s Hospital in Nebraska City.

Mary was born on March 2, 1917 in Peoria, IL; the daughter of Edward and Etta (Walker) Scroggins. She was united in marriage to Wilbur Edward Shuster on April 8, 1937 in Falls City, NE. He preceded her in death on January 9, 2007.

She worked at Morton House in Nebraska City for 30 years before retiring.

She is survived by her children Jim Shuster of Nebraska City, NE and Rachel Graves of Fullerton, NE; 4 grandchildren: Tim Graves and wife Audrey of Nebraska City, NE; Christine Graves and sig. other Nick Roehl of Bellwood, NE; Jeremy Graves and wife Amber of Fullerton, NE and Deloris Kay Shuster of Little Rock, AR; 10 great-grandchildren and 1 great-great grandchild; sister Edna Mines of Nebraska City, NE; other family and friends.

In addition to her husband and parents, Mary was preceded in death by her sister Lucille and brother Bill.

Funeral Services will be at 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, September 26, 2012 at Gude Mortuary in Nebr. City; burial will follow at Wyuka Cemetery in Nebr. City.

The family will greet friends, at the mortuary, from 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m., prior to the funeral service.

Trista Sutter's silhouette by Dr. Franklin and Cindi Rose by E.D. Woods

To contact us Click HERE




Trista Sutter’s sculpting by Dr. Franklin and Cindi Rose

Lucky for the Bachelorette’s and Bachelor’s that Erica Rose’s father is famous plastic surgeon Dr. Franklin Rose, and her mom is noted silhouette artist, Cindi Rose. It makes the contestants and winners look and stay beautiful. Recently, the first reality Bachelorette, Trista Sutter, met up with Bachelor legal star, Erica Rose, and discussed her wanting an updated look. Although Erica thought Trista looked beautiful, she referred her to her father (who would never operate on his family). Trista had been admiring Emily Maynard’s plastic surgery, and did not want to be Bachelorette history. For her first meeting, in Franklin Rose’s hometown, Aspen, Colorado, Trista drove in from Vail. The petite beauty was met by Franklin and Cindi Rose.

As always, Cindi took out her surgical scissors and in a minute sculpted the world’s darling’s profile. Trista loved it, and signed it with her good-valued signature. Trista commented that her children would love Cindi Rose’s artwork. Her real concerns however was, a drop of fat, droopy eyes, and breasts that were not what they were pre-children.

Franklin Rose, a board-certified MD, who studied at Yale, Manhattan Eye and Ear, and Baylor College of Medicine, booked the soon to be 40 year-old at his doctor owned surgical center, First Street in Houston, Texas.

Trista got small breast implants, and the tired look erased from her lovely blue eyes with upper and lower eye lifts. In her pre and post-op photos it appears that she may have had liposuction. Word is that there is a room in The Rose Home devoted to patient care, and that after a luxurious stay at First Street Hospital (with culinary meals and wait staff), patients recover with Cindi Rose’s low-fat, organic nutritious meals and care. No wonder, the most beautiful men and women in the country get on Bachelor and Bachelor Pad, they have a connection—Erica Rose’s father. Unlike what people would think, Erica’s perfect size 4, 5’ 8” figure is natural. Her mother and grandmother where former beauty contest winners, and it is a natural for Erica. Read Life & Style Weekly to see Trista’s before and after plastic surgery photos and decide yourself, if she did or did not also have liposuction. I think somewhere there is also word that there could be a book coming out about parenting, and being in love, penned by no-other than America’s darling, Trista Sutter!