"CHICAGO
-- Nan Wigmore brought her walker and packed her sign, “Grateful
Great Grandmas Circle The Wagons, Support Occupy,” and rode on a
bus for some three days, sleeping in the same clothes, to make it to
the NATO protests in Chicago.
The 75-year-old from Portland, Ore., says she couldn't imagine being anywhere else despite the discomfort of her journey.
“My feelings are too deep to keep me in my old comfortable place, so I had to learn some new things and that means to move out of my comfort zone,” Wigmore said as she sipped a hot chocolate late Friday after a few hundred protesters met at a downtown Chicago plaza in the lead-up to the two-day summit that begins Sunday."
The 75-year-old from Portland, Ore., says she couldn't imagine being anywhere else despite the discomfort of her journey.
“My feelings are too deep to keep me in my old comfortable place, so I had to learn some new things and that means to move out of my comfort zone,” Wigmore said as she sipped a hot chocolate late Friday after a few hundred protesters met at a downtown Chicago plaza in the lead-up to the two-day summit that begins Sunday."
--
All of us need to take a lesson from Nan Wigmore and find ways to
move out of all of our comfort zones. If this doesn't inspire you, I
am not sure what will. -- JB, Supervising Editor
Fatal Mississippi prison riot quelled, authorities say
"(CNN) -- Authorities said early Monday they had put down a prison riot that claimed the life of a guard as it continued into the late evening Sunday.
A 23-year-old guard died of head injuries in the disturbance at the Adams County Correctional Facility in Natchez, Mississippi, according to county coroner James Lee."(CNN) -- Authorities said early Monday they had put down a prison riot that claimed the life of a guard as it continued into the late evening Sunday.
A 23-year-old guard died of head injuries in the disturbance at the Adams County Correctional Facility in Natchez, Mississippi, according to county coroner James Lee.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- 19 people, including three inmates, were injured
- The prison was secured at 2:45 a.m. (3:45 a.m. ET) Monday
- The disturbance lasted about 12 hours
- A guard died of
head injuries, officials say"
CNN article
-- Whether on Wall St., at private homes or police stations, theft, in some form or fashion, is taking place on every level. And the brazenness of these acts are just growing. How much more people will allow to happen is up to all of us to decide. -- JB, Managing Editor
OUTRAGE:
Police Accused Of Stealing Citizens' Bail Money
"She
used part of her disability payment and her tax return. Joel Greer's
wife also chipped in, as did his brother and two sisters. On Feb. 29,
a judge set Greer's bail at $7,500, and his mother called the Brown
County jail to see where and how she could get him out. "The
police specifically told us to bring cash," Greer says. "Not
a cashier's check or a credit card. They said cash."
Huffington Post article
Airlines
Could Charge Extra For Seats Together: AP
If
you're flying this summer in the U.S., be prepared to kiss your
family goodbye at the gate. Even if they're on the same plane.
21
May, 2012
U.S.
airlines are reserving a growing number of window and aisle seats for
passengers willing to pay extra. That's helping to boost revenue but
also making it harder for friends and family members who don't pay
this fee to sit next to each other. At the peak of the summer travel
season, it might be nearly impossible.
Buying
tickets two or more months in advance makes things a little easier.
But passengers are increasingly finding that the only way to sit next
to a spouse, child or friend is to shell out $25 or more, each way.
With
base fares on the rise – the average domestic roundtrip ticket this
summer is forecast by Kayak.com to be $431, or 3 percent higher than
last year – some families are reluctant to cough up more money.
For
article GO
HERE
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