Beyond Race is an American based magazine devoted to music, film, poetry, photography, graffiti, comedy, literature, fashion, art, and culture that is published quarterly.
Early Issues
The first issue of Beyond Race featured Don 1 from the Fugees and the Dub Trio. Since then they have featured covers of music legends like Garland Jeffreys and the band Locksley, who made their cover debut on the magazine. In Summer 2007, the magazine celebrated their one-year anniversary with a cover featuring The Beastie Boys and The Chappelle Show's Donnell Rawlings. Other artists that have been featured in past issues are director Ryan Fleck (Half Nelson), singer Suzanne Vega, rapper L.I.F.E Long, Tommy Chong, comedian Patton Oswalt, and tattoo artist Chris Nunez.
Beyond Race in Popular Culture
Beyond Race Magazine's Launch Party for Issue 2 was featured on the show Graffiti NYC.
The cover of the Summer 2006 issue of "Beyond Race" magazine will appear on a billboard in the background of a scene from the Disney movie "Enchanted," due out later this year. The billboard was shot on location at the corner of Broadway and North Moore in Tribeca, New York City.
www.beyondracemag.com
http://www.myspace.com/beyondrace
Early Issues
The first issue of Beyond Race featured Don 1 from the Fugees and the Dub Trio. Since then they have featured covers of music legends like Garland Jeffreys and the band Locksley, who made their cover debut on the magazine. In Summer 2007, the magazine celebrated their one-year anniversary with a cover featuring The Beastie Boys and The Chappelle Show's Donnell Rawlings. Other artists that have been featured in past issues are director Ryan Fleck (Half Nelson), singer Suzanne Vega, rapper L.I.F.E Long, Tommy Chong, comedian Patton Oswalt, and tattoo artist Chris Nunez.
Beyond Race in Popular Culture
Beyond Race Magazine's Launch Party for Issue 2 was featured on the show Graffiti NYC.
The cover of the Summer 2006 issue of "Beyond Race" magazine will appear on a billboard in the background of a scene from the Disney movie "Enchanted," due out later this year. The billboard was shot on location at the corner of Broadway and North Moore in Tribeca, New York City.
www.beyondracemag.com
http://www.myspace.com/beyondrace
Until the summer of 2007 the awareness of Jenkem was limited to sporadic posts on online forums and blogs citing the article and the news reports mentioned therein. What apparently set off the current barrage of media attention started when a 14-year old whose online identity is "Pickwick" posted the TOTSE Better Living Through Chemistry discussion forum that he was going to try out Jenkem based on the recipe provided in the aforementioned sources. Then in early September a concerned parent reported to the principal of Palmetto Ridge High School in Naples, Florida that she had heard about Jenkem from her child who was a student there. No usage was claimed, however the principal passed the information on to the Collier County Sheriff's Office in Naples, and the sheriff office's intelligence bureau issued an internal intelligence bulletin on September 26 which contained the alarmist phrase "Jenkem is now a popular drug in American Schools." It appears that this assertion was mere conjecture, as later news scrutiny has by November 9 still not been able to confirm such usage. In the meantime, on September 25, "Pickwick" posts to the TOTSE community "The jenkem thing was a hoax" where he retracts his previous trip report asserting it "was faked using flour, water, beer and Nutella." A nationwide DEA bulletin was also issued, however the time of this and its relation to the Collier County Sheriff's Office's bulletin remains unclear. The timeline subsequent to these events can be studied below.
October/November 2007
On October 26 Associated Content participatory media website Chrissy & Company published a story on Jenkem giving off the impression that "many drug prevention trainers" were commenting on the Jenkem phenomenon, and that "Parents often confused jenkem for a science project on fermentation." This report did not cite any sources.
Snopes (Urban Legends Reference Pages) published a report on October 30, 2007 focusing on the veracity of Jenkem. Its conclusion was to initially list the phenomenon as undetermined, however, by November 9 this had been altered to false. Snopes in its first version cited both a widely circulated trip report from an American teenager posted to the online forum TOTSE (this thread was deleted without explanation on October 7, 2007), and a leaked alert bulletin from the Collier County Sheriff's Office in Naples, Florida which asserted that "Jenkem is now a popular drug in American Schools."
A few days after the Snopes report had been published, on another website investigating urban legends, About.com, David Emery, described by Salon.com as an "urban legend guru," also issued a report, more analytic than the Snopes report, concluding that the recent news media reports that Jenkem is gaining a foothold as a substance of abuse among American youth is doubtful and "based on faulty Internet research."
November 3
On November 3, two mainstream media outlets, television station KIMT of Mason City, Iowa and WINK NEWS, a Fort Myers, Florida broadcaster, reported on the rumours of Jenkem being a new hallucinogenic drug among American high school students. According to WINK News, Collier County Sheriff's Office confirms having issued the drug alert.
November 6
On November 6, Washington Post columnist Emil Steiner in his OFF/beat blog commented on the Collier Sheriff's Office memo, the Snopes report and the WINK-TV news story apparently introducing his own contamination of the story by reporting the origin of Jenkem to be "Africa and other third world countries." Steiner goes on to report that "a spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Agency insists that 'there are people in America trying .'" The unnamed DEA spokesman stated that the agency had yet to test Jenkem, however volunteering a theory that "hallucinations from methane fumes" are involved. He also labeled any use of Jenkem "dangerous, bad and stupid."
Fox News ran with the story 8 hours after the Steiner Washington Post column entry. Fox also published the Internet alias of the boy who had published a "trip report" in the TOTSE online forum in July, as well as his later retraction. The boy, "Pickwick," in September claimed that the "Jenkem" displayed in the photos accompanying his trip report "was faked using flour, water, beer and Nutella." He also stated "I never inhaled any poop gas and got high off it I have deleted the pictures, hopefully no weirdo saved them to his computer. I just don't want people to ever recognize me as the kid who huffed poop gas." In the same article, a Washington D.C. DEA spokesman, Garrison Courtney, informed that "We wouldn't classify it as a drug so much because it's feces and urine."
November 7
On November 7, ABC News reported on Jenkem on their website. They also interviewed DEA spokesman Garrison Courtney who stated that, "It is in Africa, we know that… We've heard rumors and speculation about it here, but part of looking for trends is listening first for speculation. It is something we want to keep on top of. The same sort of thing happened when we first heard of kids huffing freon or whippets [nitrous oxide, often found in whipped cream canisters]." The ABC report also focused on the need for law enforcement agencies to go with rumours and unconfirmed reports because so much of police work depends on early intervention which would be impossible if officers had to wait before something was a confirmed reality before acting on it. WSBT-TV in South Bend, Indiana ran the story on its local newscasts and posted it to their web site, including advice that parents "wait up for them (their children) at night and not let their kids go to bed until they have seen them and smelled their breath." The same day, Austin, Texas NBC affiliate KXAN-TV ran a story on Jenkem interviewing a local teenager and a parent. Michael Ginsberg of Clean Investment Counseling stated to KXAN that he was "Not surprised, a little bit nervous and scared for adolescents." Ginsberg did not find it unrealistic that Jenkem would become popular locally stating, "Once it becomes OK with a certain group of adolescents, it becomes OK with a lot more."
November 8
An Australian broadcaster, ninemsn, carried the Jenkem story on its website on November 8 based on American news reports. A syndicated report published on ABC affiliate CBS-47 and Fox affiliated Fox 30, both of in Jacksonville, Florida, reported on Jenkem on their web pages, also referring to it by the slang term "butt hash," and also citing media reports from Washington Post, the Drudge Report and Inside Edition. This was also followed up by a Fox 30 televised news segment. In it captain Tim Guerrette of the Collier County Sheriff's department was also interviewed. Talking to young people in their district did not reveal any awareness of Jenkem's existence and when hearing what it was people expressed revulsion. A Florida syndicated newspaper article also appeared on November 8 focusing on the leaked police memo. In the article another DEA spokesman Rusty Payne was also interviewed as well as the Palmetto Ridge High School principal and a spokeswoman for the Collier County Health Department, all of whom had very little to add to the existing vague reports that are circulating in the media.
November 9
Salon.com featured an in-depth exposition of the Jenkem story by freelance news and culture writer Jamie Pietras.
October/November 2007
On October 26 Associated Content participatory media website Chrissy & Company published a story on Jenkem giving off the impression that "many drug prevention trainers" were commenting on the Jenkem phenomenon, and that "Parents often confused jenkem for a science project on fermentation." This report did not cite any sources.
Snopes (Urban Legends Reference Pages) published a report on October 30, 2007 focusing on the veracity of Jenkem. Its conclusion was to initially list the phenomenon as undetermined, however, by November 9 this had been altered to false. Snopes in its first version cited both a widely circulated trip report from an American teenager posted to the online forum TOTSE (this thread was deleted without explanation on October 7, 2007), and a leaked alert bulletin from the Collier County Sheriff's Office in Naples, Florida which asserted that "Jenkem is now a popular drug in American Schools."
A few days after the Snopes report had been published, on another website investigating urban legends, About.com, David Emery, described by Salon.com as an "urban legend guru," also issued a report, more analytic than the Snopes report, concluding that the recent news media reports that Jenkem is gaining a foothold as a substance of abuse among American youth is doubtful and "based on faulty Internet research."
November 3
On November 3, two mainstream media outlets, television station KIMT of Mason City, Iowa and WINK NEWS, a Fort Myers, Florida broadcaster, reported on the rumours of Jenkem being a new hallucinogenic drug among American high school students. According to WINK News, Collier County Sheriff's Office confirms having issued the drug alert.
November 6
On November 6, Washington Post columnist Emil Steiner in his OFF/beat blog commented on the Collier Sheriff's Office memo, the Snopes report and the WINK-TV news story apparently introducing his own contamination of the story by reporting the origin of Jenkem to be "Africa and other third world countries." Steiner goes on to report that "a spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Agency insists that 'there are people in America trying .'" The unnamed DEA spokesman stated that the agency had yet to test Jenkem, however volunteering a theory that "hallucinations from methane fumes" are involved. He also labeled any use of Jenkem "dangerous, bad and stupid."
Fox News ran with the story 8 hours after the Steiner Washington Post column entry. Fox also published the Internet alias of the boy who had published a "trip report" in the TOTSE online forum in July, as well as his later retraction. The boy, "Pickwick," in September claimed that the "Jenkem" displayed in the photos accompanying his trip report "was faked using flour, water, beer and Nutella." He also stated "I never inhaled any poop gas and got high off it I have deleted the pictures, hopefully no weirdo saved them to his computer. I just don't want people to ever recognize me as the kid who huffed poop gas." In the same article, a Washington D.C. DEA spokesman, Garrison Courtney, informed that "We wouldn't classify it as a drug so much because it's feces and urine."
November 7
On November 7, ABC News reported on Jenkem on their website. They also interviewed DEA spokesman Garrison Courtney who stated that, "It is in Africa, we know that… We've heard rumors and speculation about it here, but part of looking for trends is listening first for speculation. It is something we want to keep on top of. The same sort of thing happened when we first heard of kids huffing freon or whippets [nitrous oxide, often found in whipped cream canisters]." The ABC report also focused on the need for law enforcement agencies to go with rumours and unconfirmed reports because so much of police work depends on early intervention which would be impossible if officers had to wait before something was a confirmed reality before acting on it. WSBT-TV in South Bend, Indiana ran the story on its local newscasts and posted it to their web site, including advice that parents "wait up for them (their children) at night and not let their kids go to bed until they have seen them and smelled their breath." The same day, Austin, Texas NBC affiliate KXAN-TV ran a story on Jenkem interviewing a local teenager and a parent. Michael Ginsberg of Clean Investment Counseling stated to KXAN that he was "Not surprised, a little bit nervous and scared for adolescents." Ginsberg did not find it unrealistic that Jenkem would become popular locally stating, "Once it becomes OK with a certain group of adolescents, it becomes OK with a lot more."
November 8
An Australian broadcaster, ninemsn, carried the Jenkem story on its website on November 8 based on American news reports. A syndicated report published on ABC affiliate CBS-47 and Fox affiliated Fox 30, both of in Jacksonville, Florida, reported on Jenkem on their web pages, also referring to it by the slang term "butt hash," and also citing media reports from Washington Post, the Drudge Report and Inside Edition. This was also followed up by a Fox 30 televised news segment. In it captain Tim Guerrette of the Collier County Sheriff's department was also interviewed. Talking to young people in their district did not reveal any awareness of Jenkem's existence and when hearing what it was people expressed revulsion. A Florida syndicated newspaper article also appeared on November 8 focusing on the leaked police memo. In the article another DEA spokesman Rusty Payne was also interviewed as well as the Palmetto Ridge High School principal and a spokeswoman for the Collier County Health Department, all of whom had very little to add to the existing vague reports that are circulating in the media.
November 9
Salon.com featured an in-depth exposition of the Jenkem story by freelance news and culture writer Jamie Pietras.
A Clinical Transaction Repository (CTR) stores transactions as compared to a CDR that stores results. Transactions are captured by “listening” to the HL-7 stream from ancillary systems and capturing transactions to a database.
Information regarding the location of the result associated with the transaction is stored with the transaction. Here is an example of a CTR record: MRN ! Date/Time ! Category ! Description ! Physician ! Status ! Service ! Accession. The "Service" field describes the service used to retrieve a result and the field "Accession" is used to identify the specific result.
Note that all records in the CTR database are the same no matter the type of transaction being stored. One must compare this design with the design of a CDR database to fully appreciate the difference in complexity between the two.
The storage requirements of a CTR is much less than a CDR. The reason is only information about result is stored in the CTR. The actual result is stored on another system.
List of results do not access any ancillary system, only the CTR. Ancillary systems are queried only when a user requests to view a result. This is why a CTR puts much less of a load on ancillary systems as compared to a Virtual Database approach.
Information regarding the location of the result associated with the transaction is stored with the transaction. Here is an example of a CTR record: MRN ! Date/Time ! Category ! Description ! Physician ! Status ! Service ! Accession. The "Service" field describes the service used to retrieve a result and the field "Accession" is used to identify the specific result.
Note that all records in the CTR database are the same no matter the type of transaction being stored. One must compare this design with the design of a CDR database to fully appreciate the difference in complexity between the two.
The storage requirements of a CTR is much less than a CDR. The reason is only information about result is stored in the CTR. The actual result is stored on another system.
List of results do not access any ancillary system, only the CTR. Ancillary systems are queried only when a user requests to view a result. This is why a CTR puts much less of a load on ancillary systems as compared to a Virtual Database approach.
irrlamb is a free platform game, in which the player moves a ball through a 3d terrain. It is being developed by Alan Witkowski and is based on the Irrlicht Engine. irrlamb is licensed under the third version of the GPL.
Gameplay
The aim in each irrlamb level is to touch every glowing globe, sometimes within a time limit. In some levels the player has the grapple, which allows to shoot an elastic rope at objects and terrain. It can be used to climb walls.
Gameplay
The aim in each irrlamb level is to touch every glowing globe, sometimes within a time limit. In some levels the player has the grapple, which allows to shoot an elastic rope at objects and terrain. It can be used to climb walls.