Posts Tagged life

MLK Day: Ten great Martin Luther King Jr quotes – Vancouver Sun

For a pictorial look at MLK Jr.’s greatest quotes, please click here.

For our neighbours to the south, the third Monday in January is a time to reflect on one of the men who shaped modern America. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day began in 1983, a decade and a half since the civil-rights leader was assassinated. A gifted writer and orator, below is a sampling of his many great quotes, to mark the day:

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” — From a letter written in a Birmingham Jail in April 1963.

“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” — From his speech “I Have A Dream” delivered at The Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC, 1963.

“Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.” — From 1963′s “Strength to Love”

“The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.” — From “Strength to Love”.

“I submit to you that if a man hasn’t discovered something he will die for, he isn’t fit to live.” — From a speech given in Detroit in June, 1963.

“Courage is an inner resolution to go forward despite obstacles;

Cowardice is submissive surrender to circumstances.

Courage breeds creativity; Cowardice represses fear and is mastered by it.

Cowardice asks the question, is it safe?

Expediency ask the question, is it politic?

Vanity asks the question, is it popular?

But conscience ask the question, is it right? And there comes a time when we must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but one must take it because it is right.”

“From every mountainside, let freedom ring. When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, “Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!” — From his speech “I Have A Dream” delivered at The Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC, 1963.

“On the one hand we are called to play the good Samaritan on life’s roadside; but that will be only an initial act. One day we must come to see that the whole Jericho road must be transformed so that men and women will not be constantly beaten and robbed as they make their journey on life’s highway. True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not haphazard and superficial. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.” — From a sermon delivered at Riverside Church.

““Whatever your life’s work is, do it well.”

“I’ve looked over, and I’ve seen the promised land. I may not get there with you, but I want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the promised land. So I’m happy tonight. I’m not worried about anything. I’m not fearing any man.” — From a speech delivered in Memphis on April 3, 1968. King was assassinated the next day.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

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MLK Quotes: The Best Of The Best – Wager Run News

January 17, 2011 in Latest News, US News, World News by Lacy Bryant

MLK Quotes: The Best Of The Best

Martin Luther King JR was one of the great influences that helped to make things equal when it came to blacks and whites. He worked hard at this between 1955 and 1968. The 14th amendment which gave blacks citizenship and the 15th amendment which gave blacks the right to vote were a step in the right direction but more needed to happen. MLK quotes were some things that were very helpful in the change that was about to take place.

mlk quotesMLK quotes always seem to inspire people because of their great wisdom. “Hate can not drive out hate” is one of the very powerful quotes from this great man in history. The truth of this should still ring true to each and every one of us today. This is one of the MLK quotes that we should all remember.

Have you ever wondered if someone was a real man? How about this quote? “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.” Keep some of these MLK quotes around and you may be able to create some change in your life, many of his quotes coincide with principles in the Bible.

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Daily guide – Boston Globe

ON WGBH Rough Cut—Woodworking With Tommy Mac 4:30 p.m. WGBH (Channel 2) Making a serving tray that has a complicated compound angle.

RADIO HIGHLIGHTS E-Town 7 a.m. WUMB-FM (91.9) Bob Schneider and the Flatlanders.

Highway 61 Revisited 8 a.m. WUMB-FM (91.9) Tribute to the final broadcast of Shindig! in 1966.

Mountain Stage 2 p.m. WUMB-FM (91.9) Anais Mitchell, Black Dub, and more.

This American Life noon WGBH-FM (89.7) The inner workings of the Federal Reserve.

A Celtic Sojourn 3 p.m. WGBH-FM (89.7) Players who have adapted the American Dobro guitar to traditional Irish music.

Boston Symphony Orchestra 7 p.m. All Classical (99.5) James Levine operas by Stravinsky and Bartók.

Change of Plans 8 p.m. (25) A childless married couple (Brooke White, Joe Flanigan) find their lives dramatically changed. NR (2011)

Clash of the Titans 8 p.m. (HBO) Courageous warrior Perseus (Sam Worthington) fights to prevent Hades from overthrowing Zeus. PG-13 (2010)

Livin’ Large 8 p.m. (TV1) A dry cleaner presses for a TV career. T.C. Carson. R (1991)

Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist 8 p.m. (TBS) Romantic comedy about a young woman (Kat Dennings) who recruits a musician to be her boyfriend. PG-13 (2008)

Pretty Woman 8 p.m., 10:45 p.m. (OXY) Stellar fairy tale stars Julia Roberts as a hooker transformed by a corporate raider. R (1990)

The Princess Diaries 8 p.m. (E) A queen grooms her granddaughter for the throne. Julie Andrews. G (2001)

Road to Morocco 8 p.m. (TCM) Spoof with Crosby, Hope, and Lamour in the Arab world. NR (1942)

Death at a Funeral 9 p.m. (STARZ) Aaron (Chris Rock) attempts to bury his recently deceased father while dealing with his family. R (2010)

Ghost Ship 9 p.m. (SYFY) A salvage crew finds a haunted passenger ship. Good special effects, cliched script. Gabriel Byrne. R (2002)

Perfectly Prudence 9 p.m., 11 p.m. (HALMRK) Advice guru Prudence McCoy (Jane Seymour) tries to protect her TV show from producers. NR (2011)

Sorority Row 9 p.m. (TMC) A group of sorority sisters (Audrina Patridge, Rumer Willis, Jamie Chung) cover up a murder. R (2009)

Sugar Hill 9 p.m. (BET) Sibling drug dealers clash when one wants to go straight. Wesley Snipes. R (1993)

The Craigslist Killer 9 p.m. (LIFE) The story of Philip Markoff (Jake McDorman), dubbed the Craigslist Killer. NR (2011)

The Hurt Locker 9 p.m. (SHO2) Jeremy Renner stars as one of three soldiers tasked with dismantling explosive devices in Baghdad. R (2008)

Legally Blonde 9:45 p.m. (TBS) Breezy romp about a ditz (Reese Witherspoon) who attends Harvard Law School to win back her beau. PG-13 (2001)

Street Kings 9:53 p.m. (USA) LA’s mean streets get meaner after someone sets up disgraced detective Tom Ludlow (Keanu Reeves). R (2008)

Best of the Best 2 10 p.m. (FXM) Martial artists avenge a friend’s death. Eric Roberts. R (1993)

Cheaper by the Dozen 10 p.m. (FAM) Innocuous fluff about ambitious parents struggling to raise 12 children. Steve Martin. PG (2003)

Cop Out 10 p.m. (MAX) Cop Jimmy Monroe (Bruce Willis) teams up with a crazy partner to recover a stolen baseball card. R (2010)

Fire Down Below 10 p.m. (ENCR) Steven Seagal as an environmentalist fighting toxic-waste dumpers. R (1997)

Full Grown Men 10 p.m. (SUND) Childhood friends Alby (Matt McGrath) and Elias (Judah Friedlander) take a road trip. NR (2008)

A Perfect Getaway 10 p.m. (HBO) A couple (Milla Jovovich, Steve Zahn) are hunted by a psychopath during their Hawaiian vacation. R (2009)

Take the Lead 10 p.m. (VH1) Inspiring tale of a dance teacher (Antonio Banderas) who works with inner-city teens. PG-13 (2006)

Punisher: War Zone 10:15 p.m. (SHO) The tough-guy vigilante (Ray Stevenson) is in NYC to battle a ruthless scar-faced mob boss. R (2008)

Hannibal Rising 10:30 p.m. (SPIKE) Plodding early years of Hannibal “The Cannibal’’ Lecter (Gaspard Ulliel). R (2007)

The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 10:40 p.m. (STARZ) Denzel Washington stars as an NYC subway dispatcher who attempts to diffuse a hostage situation. R (2009)

Doppelganger 10:45 p.m. (TMC) A woman is pursued by her ghostly double. Drew Barrymore. R (1993)

© Copyright 2011 Globe Newspaper Company.

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Megan Mcallister: Craigslist Killer’s Latest Victim – Wager Run News

January 4, 2011 in Latest News, World News by Lacy Bryant

Megan Mcallister: Craigslist Killers Latest Victim

There are many weird things that happen in your life and I am sure that you have your stories. There is one girl that has a horrible story that can probably trump almost any of ours. This girl is the Craigslist Killer’s last victim. His ex-fiancee Megan Mcallister.

Megan Mcallister stuck with her fiancee while the whole mess was going on. She really believed that they were going to be together and get married. After she figured out it was all true she went into the jail and broke it off with him. Megan Mcallister finally decided she wanted to move on with her life.

Not long after this Philip Markoff killed himself but not before he wrote her name in blood on his jail cell wall. How scary must that be to think that she was dating a serial killer all of that time and didn’t even know it? Now she is still studying medicine. I expect that Megan Mcallister will make a great professional in her career field.

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‘Greek”s Jake McDorman Takes on ‘The Craigslist Killer’ – Entertainment Tonight News

prashant gupta/ Lifetime TV

By PAULETTE COHN

December 30, 2010

“The Craigslist Killer” is a cautionary tale about the dangers of the Internet, which has been made into a Lifetime Television movie. The film investigates the dark side of Philip Markoff’s (Jake McDorman) life, which he led while preparing for a promising future as a doctor and a wedding to his fiancée, Megan McAllister (Agnes Bruckner).

Now, ETonline chats with Jake about going to that very dark place and also the series finale of “Greek,” on which he plays Evan, a character that is most definitely 180 degrees from Philip Markoff.

ETonline: Were you aware of the Philip Markoff case before you landed the audition?

Jake McDorman: I had heard of it. I hadn’t heard all the details of what happened. I wasn’t nearly as familiar with it as I was once I took the role. I hadn’t heard he had a fiancée and the double life he was living. It did really fall into that category of you never know who you are talking to on the Internet.

ETonline: Philip Markoff seemed to have it all. What do you think drove him?

Jake McDorman: The thing the director and I talked about when I first met him and the thing that got me interested in the story was the fact that, especially when we found out he had taken his life in prison, and the way he did it, it didn’t look like any sort of cry for attention. When I read the script, he hadn’t done that yet. It wasn’t until about three weeks before pre-production that I got word that he had committed suicide in jail. It added this new level of validation to the story.

As far as what drove him, I think he really wanted to be THAT guy. A big part of him was THAT guy who was a medical student, a fiancé and the charismatic good guy, but he had these demons that made him feel he wasn’t deserving of it. And a lot can be said for the anonymity of the Internet. The Internet has given everybody an opinion and an ability to be extremely mean because nobody knows where it is coming from or who you are. I feel like when you get into that world, it can get addicting. His crimes became a lot more violent in the months leading up to the wedding. It was like the more responsibilities he had, the more he would do on the other end to self-sabotage.

ETonline: Why do you think it was so hard for people — especially his fiancée — to believe he was guilty? Was it his fresh-faced look?

Jake McDorman: Sure. I think he was just as surprised that it went as far as it did himself. If you watch the arraignments — I was given this big packet of DVDs, articles and transcripts to watch and read — in all of those, he never changes his plea from not guilty, even though there is this indisputable evidence stacked against him. There was a solid case. The Glock 9mm was found under his bed in a hollowed-out book of Gray’s Anatomy and so were the women’s underpants that he kept — and he kept them right under his mattress.

I talked to a therapist about this just before I started shooting because that was the one thing — especially from the angle going at in the script — we were arguing that there was a big part of him that was not THIS guy and was embarrassed about being THIS guy but needed to feed that side of him. But it was a good point of view to give because he knew that he had this dark side and the only redeemer was Megan because Megan McAllister really loved him and she was such a sweet person and he would never want her to see that side of him. But he knew he couldn’t get rid of it. By keeping those trophies right under the mattress, it is almost like completing the circle. It was as close as he could get to ever telling her.

ETonline: How hard was it for you to go to such a dark place?

Jake McDorman: The interesting thing about “The Craigslist” movie and the character was the fact that it felt like I was playing two different movies. There were the scenes where you just got to be in love and happy and I am doing well and I am smart and getting good grades. Then there are the scenes where he goes to that place of: I can only have all that good stuff with this bad stuff. The way we did it in the movie was that it was a necessary evil.

It was almost like playing a vampire. This was the analogy that [director] Stephen [Kay] used. It is going to sound crazy, but not a Transylvania-type vampire, but a vampire who needs blood to survive. Philip has Megan and he can’t get the blood from her, but the longer he goes without getting the blood or that rush, he starts to get agitated and irritated and has to put the leather jacket and the cap on and leave and go find it. It is almost like a release and then he could be a good guy again because he got that out of his system. The biggest challenge was the balancing act between the [two] Philips.

ETonline: What can we expect from Evan on “Greek” as the series wraps up?

Jake McDorman: We just finished the last 10. We finished right before I started “Craigslist.” Those are going to be the last 10 episodes unless there is a big boom in the ratings. It is a great 10. It starts with graduation and then it warps six months ahead. Evan is now a graduate student in law school. Casey (Spencer Grammer) has to figure out where she is going to go to law school because she didn’t get into CRU [Cyrus-Rhodes University] law school. She might have to leave. Everybody, obviously, except for Cappie (Scott Michael Foster), who were seniors have graduated and have to figure themselves out. The undergrads are now juniors or seniors and it is now them taking over the Greek system.

ETonline: Do you make New Year’s resolutions? And if you do, do you keep them?

Jake McDorman: The things I really want to change, I don’t say out loud because they will fall apart.

“The Craigslist Killer” premieres Monday, January 3 at 9 p.m. on Lifetime. “Greek,” too, returns with all-new episodes Monday, January 3 at 9 p.m. on ABC Family.

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A new year and a fresh start – Telegraph.co.uk

I recently came across a formula for successful change: D + V + F > R. For any change to work, our D (dissatisfaction with the status quo), V (vision for a better future) and F (first steps that are doable) have to be greater than R (our resistance). Apply that to our New Year resolutions and for us to succeed, we need to be clear with ourselves as to “why” we want the change to happen, we need to envisage “what” will be different and we need to plan the “how” (with small, measurable steps).

I would add an S for support to the formula. It is a great help to have someone (whether it is a friend, spouse or coach) to give us encouragement, accountability and the odd kick up the backside when needed.

I also think we need to cut ourselves some slack and not give up at the first sign of failure. Too many of us take the “all or nothing” approach to resolutions and we therefore surrender at the first bite of forbidden chocolate cake, a missed gym appointment or a budget overspend. It is good to remember that change is a process and it is OK to mess up. The important thing is to give yourself another chance until the change you want to make becomes a habit.

So I’ll let you into a secret. I don’t make resolutions any more. Instead, I use the whole of January to take stock. My husband David and I go into a form of hibernation. We decline invitations (not that there are many in January), don’t entertain and we quit watching DVDs. With the spare time that we gain, we focus on getting our house in order, thinking through our priorities and deciding what we want the year ahead to be about.

We also use the time to give ourselves a quick relationship MOT. We check on how we are doing as a couple and also reflect on whether we are giving enough time to the most important people in our lives.

Perhaps as 2010 draws to a close, you, too, may want to reflect on your relationships. If you haven’t read it, my book, Authentic: Relationships from the Inside Out, is a good way to give your relationships a general check-up. But if you want to get started now, here are 10 points you could do to make a positive investment in your relationships. Try one or all 10, and I’m certain you will see healthy returns from all your efforts.

1. Take time to work out your priorities. Too often we spend time on the urgent at the expense of the important and we find our loved ones are left with the dregs of our time, energy and focus. Why not decide who or what is most important to you and make sure that they are getting the attention they need? It may sound contrived, but booking in time in your diary with your favourite people is the only way to make sure that the days or weeks don’t pass without you spending quality time together.

2. Increase your amount of “face-to-face” time. Next time you are tempted to email your work colleague at the next desk or text your friend who lives around the corner, resolve to talk to them in person.

3. Limit your criticisms. If you have something negative to say to someone, make sure you match it with at least five positive points. Negative comments stick much longer than nice ones, so you need to input a lot more positive ones if you don’t want the balance of your relationship to go into the red.

4. Learn from your anger. Anger is like an alarm system: it is telling you something is wrong. Pay attention to it and ask yourself what is the cause. Is it something someone has done to you or is it indicating a problem within yourself that you need to look at? Sometimes our anger tells us more about ourselves than the apparent target of our wrath.

5. Practise being a good listener. When we really listen to another person, we offer them a great gift. It demonstrates that we want to understand them better. If someone tells you something important, try to refrain from interrupting, giving advice or bringing the topic back to “you”.

6. Take responsibility for your actions. When relationships go wrong, it can be tempting to blame the other person and to focus on all the ways that they need to change. The truth is we cannot make another person change, but we can alter our own reactions and behaviour. It only takes one to change the dynamic in a relationship.

7. Be prepared to say, “I’m sorry” – and mean it. It can be a hard to admit when we’re wrong or when we’ve messed up, but when we do – it opens the door to healing in relationships and also to greater depth.

8. Show your appreciation. No ones likes to be taken for granted and most people can’t mind-read, so if you are thankful that someone is in your life or for the things they have done for you, tell them. Even better write them a proper letter – one with a pen – so that they can keep it and re-read it.

9. Take the initiative. Whatever change you want to see in your relationships, start by taking the initiative. If you want your partner to love you better, then show them love in the way they would like to receive it. If you are single and want to go on a date, ask someone out. If you are lonely, reach out to someone else who also might be feeling lonely. In other words, treat others, as you would like to be treated.

10. Let your “no” be “no” and your “yes” be “yes”. If you say, “yes” to something – to helping out, to keeping a confidence or to taking the rubbish out – keep your word. And if you are someone who says “yes” when you really mean “no”, then don’t give an answer under pressure. Tell the person that you’ll think about it and then get back to them. Too many relationships suffer and too many people get stressed because they cannot say “no”. If that is you, saying “no” more often could be this year’s resolution.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for all your support, questions and letters and also to let you know that, sadly, this will be the final InsideOut column in the paper. From the new year, it will be moving online. I do hope you will join me there and that you will continue to contribute with your questions, comments and advice.

Wishing you all a very happy New Year.

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VIDEO: Patriots OG Dan Connolly runs into hearts of linemen everywhere – USA Today

Dec 20, 2010

VIDEO: Patriots OG Dan Connolly runs into hearts of linemen everywhere

On Sunday night, anybody who has ever assumed a three-point stance watched with delight as New England Patriots guard Dan Connolly rumbled 71 yards with what is thought to be the longest kick return by an offensive lineman in NFL history.

His second-quarter runback of a squib kick ended at the 4-yard line, when the 5th-year pro was dragged down by a shocked Packers special teams unit.

“I’ve never seen anything happen so slow in my life,” Pats QB Tom Brady joked after the game. “They won’t be kicking to him anymore, I’ll tell you that.”

Connolly, who’s listed at 6-4, 313 lbs., fielded a low kick off the foot of Mason Crosby, hunched over the ball and chugged slowly for middle of the field. When two Packers collided in front of him, Connolly stood up and accelerated through a gaping hole. Several broken tackles later, he was finally dragged down and immediately mobbed by ecstatic teammates. The Patriots scored three plays later to trim their deficit to 17-14 on the way to a 31-27 win.

His return is officially the longest since 1976, when the league began keeping such records. Detroit’s Larry Tearry had a 30-yard return in 1978 that had been recognized as the longest since then, according to the Associated Press.

Connolly later left the game with a head injury.

– Robert Klemko

See photos of: New England Patriots, Green Bay Packers

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification. To view our corrections, go to corrections.usatoday.com.

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Dan Connolly: Patriots Guard Amazing Run Caps Strange Game – Bleacher Report

Dan Connolly had a fairly good night. As it is, linemen don’t usually end up with a near 100 yard game. But that is just what the guard for the New England Patriots did on Sunday night. With minutes left on the clock in Foxboro, the guard fielding a flubbed kickoff. He then ran 71 yards down field getting taken down by Packers defenders at the two yard line. 

The Patriots would later score in the drives with a two yard pass from Tom Brady to Aaron Hernandez. Brady was again magnificent in this one but found tremendous amusement in the kick return. He told ESPN, ”I’ve never seen anything happen so slow in my life,” Brady said with a laugh. “They won’t be kicking to him anymore, I’ll tell you that.”

The Patriots are the hottest team in the NFL. It seems that no matter what they do, they win. They now can count on their linemen to be other worldly. 

Related Story: DeSean Jackson Vs. Dan Connolly Video: Which Run Was More Impressive?

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Video muted: click volume for sound Trailer: ‘Blue Valentine’ From the 2010 … – Newsweek

There’s an achingly sad transition midway through Blue Valentine. We’ve been following the courtship of Dean (Ryan Gosling) and Cindy (Michelle Williams). He’s a sweet, feckless college dropout making a living as a moving man. Cindy, more practical and ambitious (she wants to become a doctor), is gun-shy from too many bad affairs. They’re wandering the nighttime streets of Brooklyn on a date, and they pause in a lighted storefront where the ardent Dean strums on a small guitar and serenades her. She’s touched by the passion in his voice and begins, sexily and a little awkwardly, to dance for him. In this lovely, spontaneous moment the movie becomes flushed with the sweetness and promise of young love.

The movie then cuts to the present time. Dean and Cindy, now unhappily married with a daughter, have checked into the hideously metallic “future room” of a sex hotel, where the ever-hopeful Dean—heavier now, his hairline receding—is vainly attempting to romance his unhappy, withholding wife. But she’s had enough of Dean’s drinking, his complacency, his refusal to make anything of his life. The contrast between then and now is heartbreaking.

The death of love is a painful thing to watch, and Derek Cianfrance, the director and co-writer of Blue Valentine, wants it to hurt. His raw, sexually and emotionally intimate movie starts at the sour tail end of a marriage and jumps back and forth between 24 hours of the couple’s present life (shot in static, often claustrophobic compositions on a digital camera) and the hopeful early days of their relationship (shot in handheld 16mm images). The effect of these recurring juxtapositions is poignant but problematic. Thematically, Blue Valentine keeps repeating the same unhappy message over and over, and you may feel your patience tested.

Yet the movie keeps hooking you back in, because Williams and Gosling are so damn good. Neither seems capable of an emotionally dishonest moment. He has the more volatile, flashy part—and his volatility becomes truly terrifying as Dean’s desperation comes to a head at the doctor’s office where Cindy works as a nurse. But Williams’s work is no less stunning: watch her face when she decides not to go through with an abortion (Dean marries her, knowing she’s carrying another man’s child)—the anguish is bone-deep and electrifying. The frustrating thing about Cianfrance’s pungent but draining movie (which owes an obvious debt to John Cassavetes) is that its many memorable, deeply felt scenes don’t quite coalesce into a satisfying whole. See it for Gosling and Williams, but be advised: if you take a date, you’ll be sorry.

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