Daily Archives: March 31, 2021

Review: Spacebase Startopia Is the Space Station Management Game I Always Wanted – thirdcoastreview.com

Posted: March 31, 2021 at 5:57 am

Screenshot: Spacebase Startopia

Ive always wanted a good space station management game. There have been a few Ive played, but none have come close to giving me the feeling of operating a sprawling space station full of strange alien creatures with their alien needs before Spacebase Startopia. While Spacebase Startopia isnt a perfect game, it has engaging gameplay, humor, and a wonderful colorful art style to make it my favorite starbase management gameand thats surprisingly something Ive had to look for for a long time.

Spacebase Startopia is a business management game with some strategy and even some combat elements thrown in. In it, you play as the Commandera remote working space manager tasked with running a large space station. The stations needs are your concern, and that can range from anything from air quality, places to eat and sleep, as well as how clean your station is. Youll even have to deal with the criminal element with security forces, brigs, and even cool mechs that you can use to fight off pests and pirates.

Screenshot: Spacebase Startopia

These space stations arent just large flat surfaces to build on. In Spacebase Startopia you actually work on a cylindrical space station that is constantly spinningIm assuming to provide artificial gravity. Thats a neat detail, and it also presents an interesting form factor for consideration when you have to build your facilities and amenities in cylindrical rooms. The stations normally have three floors: the sub deck, the fun deck, and the bio deck. Each of these three floors have their own needs, considerations, and facilities you can build. As your need for more space increases, you can open up more of the space station by spending energy to open bulkheads. Be careful though: some of those bulkheads havent been opened in ages, and who knows whats behind therethough its usually just garbage.

I think its a strange design decision to prohibit crossover facilitiesfor instance, you cant build a disco on the sub deck, nor can you put a brig on your fun deck. There are even similar buildings functions between floors. For instance, both the sub deck and the fun deck need garbage bots and O2 purifiers to keep your alien denizens happy. And keeping your alien visitors happy is one of your main goals in Spacebase Startopia.

Screenshot: Spacebase Startopia

Aliens will visit your Startopia station for many reasons: some want to relax and get a room for the night, others want to party, while still others might be sick and immediately seek medical attention. There are facilities to construct to meet these various needs. You can choose to make each of these facilities as you see fit: by designating an area and populating them with the proper equipment. Or you can choose from a series of blueprints to build these areas quickly. If you have a particularly good configuration, you can even save your blueprints to be used later. Of course, building and maintaining facilities isnt free, and you have to find the right employees to man themalien themwhatever.

Your main currency in Spacebase Startopia is energy. Energy is gathered from your visitors as they use facilities, and recycling garbage. There is also a secondary currency called prestige which is used to unlock new facilities. Prestige is gathered from happy customersthe happier your visitors, the more prestige youll accumulate. But aliens visiting your station arent just there to consume goods and gamble on the fun decktheyre prospective employees as well.

Screenshot: Spacebase Startopia

Each of the stations in Spacebase Startopia has a specific requirement in regards to what species controls them. If you want doctors you hire Gresularians, garbage recylclers are Telgors, etc. You dont put out classified ads, eitheryoure stuck hiring from whatever aliens are on your station. Luckily, there doesnt seem to be a shortage of manpower once your station begins to get livelier. The more your employees work, the more experience they gainand once they gain enough experience, theyre eligible for a promotion, etc.

Everything on the management side of Spacebase Startopia is pretty well implemented, and funthough not perfect. Sometimes aliens, inexplicably, dont look out for their best interests. Ive had sick aliens ignore the medical facilities, even when the facilities are staffed and without a queue. If you want to die from space plague, thats your choiceId just rather you not do it on my station. But perhaps my biggest problem with Spacebase Startopia is its half-assed real-time strategy and combat elements.

Screenshot: Spacebase Startopia

Combat in my management game? Sure, why not? I just finished playing a game with a similar featureCartel Tycoon. While it was implemented in a way that made sense in that game, Im not too thrilled with Spacebase Startopias use of combat. In some scenariosand while playing against players in multiplayeryou can attempt to disrupt your enemies using various means of sabotage. You can send bombs, propagandists, and even squads of pirates to disrupt your enemies, while setting up ways to defend against similar such attacks against yourself. There are even a few large mechs to choose from. Mechs have their own infrastructure considerations, and require specialized lifts to travel between the three decks. While these combat parts dont necessarily tank my enjoyment of the game, I would have preferred if it wasnt a thing. Though, this type of competition could be interesting in a multiplayer matchbut I havent had a chance in my review time to properly test this out.

There are a few ways you can play Spacebase Startopia. There is a campaign with ten campaign missions that get increasingly difficult as you play through them. There is a multiplayer co-op mode, where you can play through the campaign with a friendand multiplayer versus modes where you can compete to see who is the better station manager. Theres also a tutorial mode, which I would have liked to see incorporated into the campaign mode. Even with the tutorial missions, it took me a little bit to get the swing of things before I really started enjoying this game. The new user experience could have been handled just a little better.

Screenshot: Spacebase Startopia

Spacebase Startopia is an attractive game, and one that is enjoyable just to play. There are too many city building or management games that have terrible UI and sluggish gameplay. Not so hereeverything is smooth, the UI is mostly great, and the art style is on point. There are a few times I missed UI elements, but I chalk that up to a tutorial that could use some help. I enjoyed the humor that Spacebase Startopia uses. Youre even given an option between three different narrators, with one an homage to GLaDOS and another a nod to Hal 9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Spacebase Startopia is one of those rare games that Ill probably play for a while past my review. I really enjoyed its presentation and humor. I would have preferred for there to be a more comprehensive tutorial, but learning the ropes of station management isnt too difficult. I could have done without the options for combat, but sabotaging friends in multiplayer can potentially be great fun. Overall, I really enjoyed my time with Spacebase Startopia, and Ill most likely visit it from time to time.

Spacebase Startopia is available today on Steam, and for PlayStation 4|5, and Xbox.

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British musician’s moon-themed song beamed to International Space Station – Inverness Courier

Posted: at 5:57 am

A young British musician said she cant quite believe it after her music was beamed to the International Space Station.

Moonlit Skies by Sally Robinson, a student from Cardiff, was sent to the ISS after she made contact with one of its former residents as part of an ongoing musical project.

Ms Robinson, 22, told the PA news agency: Scott Kelly, the astronaut, heard it and was like, Yeah, thats really cool, Im gonna send it up to the ISS, which I still cant quite believe.

The track, released on Sunday, is part of a suite of eight songs produced by Ms Robinson themed around the four elements: air, earth, fire, and water.

For each the Bath Spa University student, who described her music as on the indie side of folk, is attempting to have them played in a relevant unique environment.

The next pair represents earth, and that is going to go to scientific research facilities for the rainforest and the deserts, she said.

The pair after that is representing fire, so thats going to go to volcanoes, all the way around the world I think, hopefully thatll be really cool.

And then the last pair is representing the water so thats going to go to boats.

Moonlit Skies, and its sister air track Leaves In The Light, have been played in polar research facilities at both poles, as well as being sent into space.

She made contact with Mr Kelly, the American astronaut who commanded three missions to the ISS, through his representatives and was delighted to get positive feedback.

He just said yeah, Sally, these are great, Ms Robinson said.

He said he could really relate to Moonlit Skies, which I think is really cool.

The project brings together Ms Robinsons interests in art and science, in particular astronomy, a fascination which goes back to her childhood.

Its just something that Ive always just found absolutely amazing, she said.

Whenever you look up to the sky at night and you see the moon and then you feel so tiny, I find it so calming which is what Moonlit Skies is about, that feeling.

I think the first song I ever wrote was about missing the moon because I couldnt see it from my bedroom window.

Long term Ms Robinson, who is originally from Cornwall, hopes to make music professionally, but she is intending to study for a masters degree in psychology to become a therapist if that does not work out.

She enjoys bringing art and science together, something that is reflected in her elements project.

I kind of feel like there should be much more of a crossover than there actually is at the minute, thats kind of part of the idea, she said.

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In Trumpland, history isnt being erased its being reestablished – The Boston Globe

Posted: at 5:56 am

No, no, no, I misspoke. My dreaded inner RINO stormed my brain and seized temporary control of my tongue. No doubt I will be censored by the local Conservative Speech Correction Commission, as our state parties are now known. And deservedly so, for I have given voice to a thought crime and must be made to pay.

What I meant was, this is the Time of Re-remembering, an era to begin honoring larger truths than our own poor senses can perceive. Back on Jan. 6, some thought they saw a violent pro-Trump mob attacking, punching, beating, thrashing, and stomping on police officers as the rioters pushed to break into the US Capitol. But if you believed any of that, your senses clearly betrayed you.

Thankfully, Big Brother, speaking from the MAGA Ministry of Truth, has revealed that what some mistakenly thought was a dangerous storming was really an amiable warming.

Some of them went in, and they are hugging and kissing the police and the guards, you know, they had great relationships, Our Dear Leader proclaimed to one of his favored Fox State News amplifiers. And a lot of the people were waved in, and then they walked in and they walked out.

You may have thought you saw one insurrectionist toting the Confederate flag, and another dressed in a Camp Auschwitz sweatshirt, but those were mere optical illusions.

They wave American flags, in many cases, they are waving the American flag, and they love our country, Big Brother clarified. If someone does something seemingly violent or hateful while carrying an American flag, we all must understand, its actually an act of patriotism.

So as you can now see, Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin was absolutely right recently when he said there was nothing to worry about from this crowd. He knew those were people that love this country, that truly respect law enforcement, would never do anything to break the law, and so I wasnt concerned.

Mind you, thats not to say it wouldnt have proved perilous under different circumstances.

Had the tables been turned, and President Trump won the election and those were tens of thousands of Black Lives Matter and Antifa protesters, I might have been a little concerned, he continued.

Then all that hugging and kissing and patriotic flag-waving would obviously have been real violence.

So now you know the official truth: Jan. 6 was nothing more than a good-natured lark, a fun-loving group of patriots making us all smile with a little madcap mischief. The modern equivalent of a 1950s college-campus panty raid, really.

And what of the stuff you may have heard about Drs. Deborah Birx and Anthony Fauci suggesting Our Dear Leader botched the coronavirus pandemic? Lies, all lies. How do we know? Because Big Brother established the truth on Monday. Sure, some are saying his statement denouncing Birx and Fauci reads like the work of a lackadaisical GED student, but pay them no mind. In Trumplandia, a GED is the new PhD.

Besides, as Big Brother noted, Fauci, then 79, delivered a wild ball when he threw out the ceremonial first pitch to start last years baseball season. If that doesnt prove Our Dear Leaders point, what possibly could?

As we march proudly ahead into the Era of Renewed History, please recall the lessons Winston Smith learned in 1984, as they will stand you in good stead here in Trumplandia:

The past was alterable. The past never had been altered. Oceania was at war with Eastasia. Oceania had always been at war with Eastasia.

As for our movement?

Well, Big Brother has always been at war with truth.

OMG, Ive done it again.

Please, dont cast me out. Im not an incorrigible thought criminal. I just need the same factcine youve all had.

Ill sit down in front of Fox State News for Tucker, Sean, and Laura every night, I promise.

That way, Ill be reeducated into a trustworthy citizen of Trumplandia in no time.

After all, ignorance is strength.

Scot Lehigh is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at scot.lehigh@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeScotLehigh.

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Dr. Scott Atlas blasts ‘despicable’ Birx and Fauci ‘trying to overtly rewrite history’ on coronavirus, Trump – Fox News

Posted: at 5:56 am

Dr. Scott Atlas, a member of former President Trump's coronavirus task force, blasted his ex-colleagues Drs. Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx, after they went on CNN and tried to 'rewrite history.'

Atlas told "The Ingraham Angle" that Birx' and Fauci's comments about Trump were "despicable,"and that the pair are trying to blame their criticsfor the socioeconomic and medical problems across the country, despite it being their policies that led to the crises.

In a clip played by host Laura Ingraham, Fauci told CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta that he was "shocked" when Trump tweeted that Virginia and Michigan should be "liberated" from lockdown orders.

Meanwhile, Birx told Gupta that she in turn was disheartened when, during an April 2020 meeting, Trump declared he would "never shut the country down again," and that with the exception of the first 100,000 deaths from the initial coronavirus "surge," the rest could have been "mitigated or decreased substantially" if the correct actions were taken by the White House at the time.

The comments enraged Atlas. "We are witnessing somethingincredible which is peopletrying to overtly rewritehistory.It's the most insane thing Ihave ever seen.Of all the insanity I saw in theWhite House, this is the mostdespicable," he said.

"What they are doing -- these arepeople that advocated forcurfews, lockdowns, schoolclosures, the business restrictions,the lack of group visits foryour own family and those wereimplemented.Those were the policies on theground of almost every singlestate including the ones thatFauci just mentioned."

"Now they are saying the peoplewho criticize the policies thatwere implemented are responsiblefor the failures of the policiesthat were implemented," Atlas added.

Atlas told Ingrahamhe should have expected such commentary because his contrarian views never fit with the rest of the task force team.

"This is insane, it isdespicable.I'm shocked but I shouldn't be...These people don't know thetruth if it hit them in thehead," he said.

"You're blaming people forcriticizing what was done andthose are the people on yourshow who wanted what was done.They ought to look in the mirrorand they ought to go on TV andapologized if they think 500,000people died, they were the causeof the policy, they recommendedthe policy."

He also dismissed criticisms from Adm. Brett Giroir and ex-Trump CDC Director Dr. Robert R. Redfield.

Redfield told CNN that Atlas' viewpoint "allowed him to ill-inform a lot of people" and "negate Birx, Fauci and [former FDA Commissioner Stephen] Hahn's voice."Giroir, meanwhile, said that he found some of Atlas' recommendations to be "fallacy."

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In response, Atlas said the two ex-officials don't understand what their positions truly represented, and they have no regard for the economic impact of their decisions.

"I'm speechless, again theydon't understand what theyadvocated was done.I was the one brought in because I was the only one whocared what was happening byshutting down medical care,closing schools, closingbusinesses, destroying lowincome families, sacrificing ourchildren," he said.

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This Day in History (1983): Fresno State beats DePaul to win the NIT – YourCentralValley.com

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(KSEE/KGPE) On this day 38 years ago, the Fresno State mens basketball team was the last team standing in New York City. On March 30th, 1983, the Bulldogs defeated DePaul, 69-60, to win the National Invitational Tournament.

Its a dream come true, said Boyd Grant, Fresno States head coach. New York is the hub of basketball. This is the biggest thrill of my life.

Fresno State began its NIT run that season with a 71-64 win over UTEP, followed by a 72-58 win over Michigan State and a 76-67 win over Oregon State to reach Madison Square Garden.

In New York City, the Bulldogs beat Wake Forest, 86-62, before taking on DePaul in the NIT championship game.

Bernard Thompson scored 22 points against the Blue Demons to lead Fresno State (25-10). Ron Anderson, who scored 14 points in the championship game, was named NIT MVP.

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Piece of History: Grant Wood got married then divorced nearly four years later – The Gazette

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By Tara Templeman, The History Center

It was a Saturday March 2, 1935 that the Cedar Rapids Gazette reported artists Grant Wood and Sara Sherman Maxon were to be married that night in Minneapolis.

Maxon was at least seven years older than Wood who was 44 at the time and an artist in her own right, as well as a singer, teacher and pioneer in regional music.

The two were married at the home of Maxons son and daughter-in-law with no guests in attendance.

Both had been born in Jones County, and Maxon had two sisters in Cedar Rapids, Mrs. Edward W. Haman and Mrs. Glenn Averill.

Recent publications have debated the circumstances around Woods short-lived and perhaps platonic marriage, but we know their friends disapproved of the union.

Shortly after the marriage, Wood left his comfortable home at 5 Turner Alley in Cedar Rapids. The couple bought and renovated a home at 1142 E. Court St. in Iowa City. Just seven months after the marriage, Woods mother, Hattie. died.

Wood and Maxon divorced in 1939 after less than four years of marriage. Wood died of cancer a few years later, in 1942, at age 50.

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Tara Templeman is curator at The History Center. Comments: curator@historycenter.org

By Tara Templeman, The History Center

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Inside Gracie Mansion, then and now: A history of the NYC mayor’s home – New York Post

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Gracie Mansion, the official residence of New York City mayors, is getting a new tenant next year.

The Little White House has been Mayor Bill de Blasios home for seven years, but when he retires from mayorship next year, the 220-year-old mansion will be occupied by whichever candidate New York elects on Nov. 2.

Whoever wins, the pale yellow-ocher-colored home is expected to continue hosting teas, fashion shows, fund-raisers, tours, meetings, protests and parties.

The white-trimmed, green-shuttered buildings address is at the corner of East 88th Street and East End Avenue and located in Carl Schurz Park on the east side of Manhattan.

While the coronavirus pandemic has halted a historic tradition of live tours through the mansion, the de Blasio administration has offered virtual tours on Zoom.

Explore the busy buildings history including facelifts, restorations, famous visitors and, yes, scandals through the photos below.

The NYC homes yellow paint was chosen by former mayor Michael Bloomberg for historical accuracy, based on the coloring of a painting of a nearby house.

The gracious wraparound porch, restored in 1983, is actually the historic site where the New York Posts founder Alexander Hamilton recruited investors for the budding New York Evening Post in 1801, according to the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation.

Its yellow front door has a wooden frame carved like seed pearls. It is flanked by leaded glass windows and topped with a semicircle window. The interior is a mix of modern and historical artifacts strewn across a ground-level floor plan that includes a foyer, parlor, kitchen, library and dining room.

Inside, the foyer has tan-and-white striped wallpaper and a faux marble painted floor, a style called trompe-loeil that was popular in the 1800s. The center of the floor has a compass pattern and is overlooked by a chandelier.

An ancient grandfather clock has ticked in the corner since at least 1942. Above the fireplace, a gold-framed mirror is flanked by light fixtures.

A winding staircase leads upstairs to the bedrooms, which are closed off to visitors. The second floor has five rooms which, for various tenants, have been configured as bedrooms, sitting rooms and dressing rooms.

A patent yellow parlor sits to the right of the foyer and nods to the homes early history with a cannonball on the fireplace mantel. The cannonball was excavated from the site of the mansion, where a British loyalist home once stood until it was destroyed in September 1776 perhaps by that very cannonball, according to NYC.gov.

The parlor also has a circular convex mirror with an ornate gold frame and six candle sconces built into the fixture. The convex mirror maximizes light in the room, a trick that might have been used in the house before the installation of electric lights.

But the parlor also celebrates a side of history less often told. Under the de Blasio administration, the house has been filled with art by diverse talents. The yellow parlor most recently displayed art from Japanese artist Tk Shinoda and New York City collage artist Baseera Khan.

Behind the parlor is a kitchen that received a $1.4 million facelift under Mayor Bloomberg in 2012, according to the Observer.

To the left of the foyer is a very teal library. The carpets are teal, the sofas are teal, the walls are teal you get the idea. Even the curtains, installed by Mayor John Lindsay in the 1960s, are a floral chintz pattern with a blue background.

The library is also noted for its historic figurines of George Washington but, in a nod to more recent history, the library window is etched with the name Caroline, a mark by ex-Mayor Rudy Giulianis daughter in a tradition of children marking up the house.

The library fireplace mantel features art entitled Raise Up, a 2014 installation by Hank Willis Thomas that shows the heads and arms of 10 black men raising their arms; above them two posters say, I am a man.

Raise Up reflects on the American legacy of slavery and lynching as well as todays mass incarceration. The repeating hands-up gesture is a nod to the vulnerability of African-American men in the face of systemic racial injustice, wrote the Gracie Mansion Conservancy on Instagram.

Through the library, a carpeted dining room is famous for its ornate French wallpaper.

The covering depicts a landscape garden scene and was manufactured in the 1820s by Zuber et Cie and installed under the Edward Koch administration to reflect the original style of the house.

The wallpaper actually does not reach the ceiling of the room, and the area above the wallpaper was painted to match the sky of the landscape, according to the conservancy.

Mayor Robert F. Wagner Jr., who served from 1954 to 1965, installed an entire new wing to the house for entertaining in an attempt to create more privacy and safety for his family in the main house a balance that has proved difficult for mayors throughout their residency in the hybrid public-and-private space.

She started to complain that people found their way upstairs, Paul Gunther, executive director of the Gracie Mansion Conservancy, said in a 2017 lecture. She said, Sometimes I have to get dressed in my closet. They took ashtrays, pipes, lipsticks and jewelry. The solution became a new wing.

But Wagners wife wouldnt live to see the completion of the $800,000 renovation designed by architect Mott B. Schmidt. Even as the 54-year-old selected silks and decor for the addition, she secretly battled lung cancer. She died at Gracie Mansion in 1964, and the renovation was completed in her name in 1966.

Today, guests enter the blue foyer in the Wagner Wing through heavy wooden doors topped with an ornate semicircle window.

An ornate chandelier and crown molding overlook the room, as does another golden convex mirror topped with a bald eagle sculpture and installed by Bloomberg that was used for maximizing light in the space during historical times. The mirror hangs above a historic fireplace taken from the Bayard home where Alexander Hamilton died following his ill-fated duel with Aaron Burr.

Through Sept. 8, 2021, the wing is displaying CATALYST: Art and Social Justice, a show of artwork by photographers Gordon Parks and Martine Fougeron.

Next to the foyer, carved white doorways lead to the blue room, an even bolder blue space equipped with a large bookshelf once owned by a Revolutionary War officer, an ornate chandelier, a fireplace, a convex mirror and a circular mahogany table with four chairs that originally belonged to descendants of Scottish shipper Archibald Gracie, who commissioned Gracie Mansion as a country house (that part of Manhattan was not yet developed) on the site in 1799, according to the conservancy.

Speaking of privacy, theres the matter of the fence a criticism even older than the tradition of mayoral residence at Gracie Mansion.

When the NYC Parks department acquired the home in 1896, they installed the propertys first fence, maintaining fencing until former mayor Fiorello LaGuardia began his residence in 1942, conservancy director Gunther recently told The Post.

LaGuardia, the first mayor to live in Gracie Mansion, installed a wrought-iron fence, and ODwyer moved it 25 feet further away from the house for privacy. Lindsay added a yellow pine stockade fence just inside the wrought-iron fence, and Koch had a double fence as well. Most recently, De Blasio built an additional privacy fence inside a brick wall and a wrought-iron fence.

Inside the fences, the homes gardens have featured centuries of careful cultivation. The original residents of the house had shade trees and flower beds, according to the National Archives Catalog.

Today, the front of the house is flanked by tulips, when in season. They offer free seeds for edible or flowering plants to the public in a small seeds library.

The grounds are used to teach local students and young parents why and how fresh foods advance healthy living in a greenhouse collaboration with Project EATS, according to the conservancy.

British Loyalist Jacob Walton built a house on the site in 1770. His home was commandeered during the Revolutionary War for its strategic position near the water and was destroyed in September 1776, according to the NYC Parks website.

Historians believe Archibald Gracies house was built in part by slaves of Ezra Weeks, who is believed to be the builder, along with John McComb Jr., who also built City Hall, according to amNY.

Gracie lived there with his eight children, his wife Esther and three indentured servants. New Yorks Gradual Emancipation Act passed the year Gracie Mansion was built. Among other measures, the act mandated that slaves would be called indentured servants, but essentially still treated them as slaves. Gracie finally released them from bondage in 1801. He completed a side addition on the house in 1811 before he ran aground with debts.

During the Napoleonic period, fighting on the high seas increased, embargos were imposed, and finally the war with England broke out in 1812. Gracies ships were in trouble and so was Gracie. He was a man so well-liked in the community that friends and associates tried to assist him financially, but in spite of their efforts, his company failed in 1819, reads the National Registry of Historic Places application.

That year, Federalist statesman Rufus King, who signed the Declaration of Independence, took ownership of the house in exchange for loans he had given Gracie, according to the application.

Gracies son-in-law, a merchant named Joseph Foulke, bought the house from King in 1823 and sold it in 1857 to Noah Wheaton, who decorated the house in the Victorian style, according to the application.

The house still bears the mark of the Wheaton family. Amelie Hermione Quackenbush, Wheatons granddaughter, etched her name into a window with a diamond ring in 1893, and the mark still remains today beginning the tradition of children marking their stint in the home.

The citys parks department took over the house when Wheaton, who hadnt paid his taxes, died in 1896.

The house became a public bathroom and concession stand for Carl Schurz Park before the Museum of the City of New York took it over in 1923, according to the museum website.

In 1934, the Parks Department began a $25,000 restoration of the house to a residence. Until then, mayors had lived in private residences.

LaGuardia began his mayorship at 1274 Fifth Ave., but he made Gracie Mansion his new home in 1942.

After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, famed city planner Robert Moses convinced LaGuardia to move into the space for security reasons during his third term. In preparation, the city added modern features like heating and electricity, juxtaposing them with 18th-century furniture.

The petitioner told him [the briber] to drop up to Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the Mayor of New York.

During his tenancy at the mansion, it was filled with items on loan from local museums, plus the familys own personal household items.

Mayor William ODwyer wasnt in the house very long, but he managed to get divorced and remarried during his residency. He resigned in 1950 because of bribery allegations. In fact, some of the bribery occurred at Gracie Mansion, according to legal documents.

After Mayor ODwyer resigned, acting Mayor Vincent Impellitteris wife, Elizabeth Agnes McLaughlin, said she planned to make no changes to the house when they moved in and, in fact, her only complaint was that there werent enough ashtrays, according to historical reports.

The Wagners are the darlings of Gracie Mansion history simply because they loved the house and not only through the addition of the Wagner Wing.

Susan, who died in Gracie Mansion before the end of their tenancy, painted the living room pale blue and added eggshell damask upholstery. The home was littered with globes, radios, toy soldiers and roller blades, according to historical reports.

Susan took her children Robert and Duncan into consideration in the design, tossing a landscape in the drawing room that her children disliked and repainting Roberts room light blue because he said he couldnt sleep in a dark red room. She also converted the homes elevator into a coat room, fearing it would be unsafe for the children.

Fun fact: In the 1600s, the site was a Dutch farm and later a tavern called the Horns Hook.

Susan Wagner died in 1964, and Robert remarried in 1965 before the end of his term. But he and his new bride, Barbara Joan Cavanagh, did not make Gracie their home. Wagners new wife became a champion of Susans work, defending her when the Lindsay family criticized the condition of the house when they moved in.

The Lindsays did not love their stint at Gracie Mansion, to say the least. John and Mary Annes loud dissatisfaction offended the Wagners, especially since renovations had been done in the name of the late Susan Wagner.

Fun fact: Gracie Mansion was actually bugged during the Lindsay administration, which was during the same time period as the Watergate scandal, though no connection was ever found.

Susan was ill for a year before she died how was she going to worry about curtains and carpets? I felt miserable because of Susan, and have ever since. And no one seems to answer back on it. So I will, Wagners new wife Barbara Joan Cavanaugh said in 1966.

To be fair, the Lindsays had their fair share of woes at Gracie Mansion. The couples move-in was delayed by the Wagners renovations, and they found plenty of work left to do when they finally moved in.

The bedroom door often jammed, causing the couple to have to climb out the window and re-enter the house from another bedroom window, Gunther recently confirmed to The Post.

The windows were rotted with water, the floors were dull, the carpets had holes burned by cigarettes, and Lindsays wife objected to the outdated style. They discovered fire code violations and occasionally lost heat, said Gunther.

But by 1966, Cavanaugh said that she and Lindsay had kissed and made up.

Nonetheless afterdepartingat the end of 1973, theformerfirst lady said that despite the wear and tear of a nearly 200-hundred-year-oldhouse, We had awonderfultime,' Gunther recounted.

But Gracie Mansion found itself redeemed under the Abraham Beame administration, which added the house to the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural merit.

The mansion is one of the finest Federal-style country seats remaining on the Island of Manhattan from that early period. It is a remarkably distinguished example of the Federal architecture and, as the home of the Mayors of the City of New York, it possesses a distinction in keeping with its architectural qualities and its historical renown, said original application in 1978.

Susan was ill for a year before she died how was she going to worry about curtains and carpets?

For Mayor Edward Koch, Gracie Mansion was a slow burn.

The bachelor mayor started off his term living in Gracie Mansion part-time while spending weekends at his Greenwich Village rent-controlled apartments.

But he eventually moved in full-time and even established the Gracie Mansion Conservancy to care for the house. Today, the nonprofit spends $400,000 of privately-raised money annually to run and manage the house, according to tax documents.

By the end of his first term, Koch had solicited private donations and loans from museums and other collectors to furnish the home in the Federal style of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, said Gunther.

Koch also borrowed some notable and strange artwork for the house during his residency, including a 44-inch-high, black-and-white rabbit sculpture in the bedroom. The wooden, polyester-resin-coated work was selected by his art curator, Henry Geldzahler, Gunther confirmed.

Fun fact: Over the past two centuries, the mansion has played host to John Quincy Adams, Washington Irving, General Lafayette, Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, Frederick Douglass and countless other history-makers.

David Dinkins was the citys first black mayor, serving from 1990 to 1993, and while the couple didnt make many changes to the house his wife, Joyce Dinkins, took on the role of special projects organizer at Gracie Mansion, with a focus on children and literacy, according to her obituary.

Former mayor Rudy Giulianis then-wife Donna Hanover barred Giulianis then-girlfriend, Judith Nathan, from visiting the house.

The disagreement prompted a torrent of legal and personal drama that eventually prompted Giuliani to leave the mansion before his term ended.

During Giulianis administration, the house fell into disrepair with peeling paint, according to complaints at the time.

The house is crying, former mayor Koch said, according to Vanity Fair. The house wants to be loved.

Giuliani actually did have the house repainted as part of regular maintenance, and he also re-carpeted the floors, the conservancys Gunther told The Post. The homes location near East River winds and Franklin D. Roosevelt Drives fumes may have accelerated the need for renovations.

Giuliani married Nathan on the lawn of Gracie Mansion in 2003.

When Mayor Bloomberg took office in 2002, a peeling, drafty mansion didnt seem to be the luxurious life he was accustomed to.

Bloomberg was the only mayor since LaGuardia not to live in the house but, rather than let it rot, he poured $7 million into its restoration, calling it The Peoples House and opening it up for tours, meetings and events.

With the help of designer Jamie Drake, Bloomberg repainted, added mahogany and faux-bamboo furniture in the Federal-century style, installed French bronze chandeliers, re-carpeted and re-upholstered the furniture to be historically accurate, according to Architectural Digest.

When de Blasio moved in, he found the mansion to be more like a museum than a home particularly the bedrooms, which Bloomberg had not lived in and were filled with antique furniture for tours.

De Blasio received a donation of at least $65,000 in furniture from the multi-billion-dollar Brooklyn-based furniture chain West Elm in 2014 for the familys bedrooms, putting some of Bloombergs period furniture in storage.

When the presentadministration chose in 2014 to revive the residential role as envisioned by both the Parks Department and the GMC, the late 18th and early 19th century (often fragile) antique furnishings had to be placed in collections storage for future resident consideration. Thus these bedrooms were suddenly empty with immediate need to make them habitable for a 21st century family, said Gunther.

In the public spaces, the home furniture remains unchanged and now offers even more historical and cultural education opportunities through first lady Chirlane McCrays art exhibitions.

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Inside Gracie Mansion, then and now: A history of the NYC mayor's home - New York Post

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Christof Heyns: A tribute to a giant of human rights – Amnesty International

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This weekend, respected human rights lawyer Professor Christof Heyns passed away, aged 62.

Most recently, Professor Heyns was the was the Director of the Institute for International and Comparative Law in Africa at the University of Pretoria, and had also served as United Nations Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions from 2010 to 2016.

In his distinguished career, Professor Heyns worked closely with and inspired Amnesty International staff and volunteers around the world. Here, his friends and colleagues pay tribute to a giant of global human rights.

Dr. Agns Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International, said: Christof Heyns was a brilliant human rights lawyer and thinker, gentle personHe leaves behind such an extraordinary legacy.

Shenilla Mohamed, Executive Director of Amnesty International South Africa, said: A mighty baobab has fallen! The untimely death of renowned human rights law expert, Professor Christof Heyns, is a devastating loss. In Africa the Baobab Tree is considered a symbol of power, longevity, presence, strength and grace. Professor Heyns was a baobab in the human rights world. A giant in his field, he fought hard for a just world. As Director of the Institute for International and Comparative Law in Africa, he was involved in a number of critical initiatives. His contributions included: Chair of the UN independent investigation on Burundi, leading on the drafting of UN human rights guidelines on peaceful assembly and the use of less lethal weapons. He also served as the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial executions. Hamba Kahle Professor Heyns, Ke a Leboga, Enkosi, Ngiyabonga, Thank you for your service to humanity. You have left indelible footprints and we salute you!

Sam Dubberley, Amnesty Internationals Head of Crisis Evidence Lab, said: Christof's support for establishing a hub of Amnesty's Digital Verification Corps at the Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria was unequivocal. He gave time, advice and space for this project to emerge, and welcomed the Amnesty team on every visit to Pretoria despite his always frantic schedule. Christof made everyone feel valued, and was a source of energy and sage advice. How he will be missed.

Netsanet Belay, Research and Advocacy Director of Amnesty International, said: Words fail me to express the profound sense of loss with the sudden passing of Professor Heyns. Like many, I had the privilege of working with him and benefited much from his wisdom, mentorship and guidance. He was a rare breed, one of Africas great legal minds, a passionate human rights defender and a kind, passionate, humble person. He nurtured and cultivated a cadre of human rights experts and activists in Africa, including by transforming the human rights centre at the University of Pretoria into a world class institution that produced Africas leading human rights scholars and practitioners. His publications on various human rights issues in leading academic journals are testament to his brilliance, wisdom and dedication. He was a true pan-Africanist, as exemplified in his work to champion and strengthen the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights. His passing is also a great loss to Amnesty International. As [recently] as last week we were working with Professor Heyns on the draft report by the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights on the use of force by law enforcement officials in Africa. We shall strive to ensure his last vision [is seen] to fruition. Rest in peace dear brother!

Rasha Abdul-Rahim, Director of Amnesty Tech, said: It was devastating to hear of the passing of Professor Heyns. All my thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends. Not only was Christof a renowned human rights expert, he was fiercely justice-focused and an absolute joy and pleasure to work with.Christof wrote the seminal Human Rights Council report that put the human rights risks of autonomous weapons systems on the agenda. He was always extremely generous with his expertise and time. This is a huge loss for the human rights movement, and we will miss him deeply.

Avner Gidron, Senior Policy Adviser on Amnesty Internationals Law and Policy Programme, said: I worked most closely with Professor Heyns on The Minnesota Protocol on the Investigation of Potentially Unlawful Death in 2016. Its a practical tool for human rights defenders and advocates around the world seeking accountability for unlawful killings; and it is now a small, but important, part of Christofs vast legacy. As well as his importance as a brilliant legal mind, scholar and activist, I will remember Christof for actually embodying human rights values: being an incredibly warm, generous and considerate human being. His death is a tremendous loss for the human rights movement, and an unimaginable tragedy for his family and friends.

Simon Crowther, legal advisor at Amnesty International, said:Christof was a legal giant who approached his work with kindness, humility, humour and immense intelligence. He will be greatly missed.

Anja Bienert, Senior Programme Officer at Amnesty International Netherlands, said: I first met Christof in 2013 and immediately felt connected to him: his sharp mind, the careful and perfectly articulated thoughts on the many pressing human rights issues, but more importantly, his warm and welcoming personality, with whom it was a pleasure to discuss. Since then, he was an ongoing source of inspiration to me and a great ally in the fight for greater protection of human rights. He constantly strove not just to write excellent publications, but to have a real impact for the respect of human rights across the world. We will miss him incredibly. It will be our mission to uphold his great legacy in the field of human rights.

Jan Wetzel, senior legal advisor at Amnesty International, said: Christof Heyns was extremely open and welcoming in engaging with civil society in the improvement of human rights standards. At the same time, he rigorously challenged NGOs, including Amnesty, to ensure that our advocacy was firmly based on international law.

Hilary Power, Amnesty Internationals Representative to the United Nations in Geneva, said: It is hard to find words to express the profound sadness we all feel at the loss not only of a brilliant human rights scholar, lawyer and activist, but a kind and gentle soul with immense warmth, dedication and a great sense of humour. His ability to achieve human rights impact was a result not only of his academic excellence and strategic thinking, but his ability to connect and empathise with people. A teacher and mentor to so many of us, he touched so many lives and will be so incredibly missed. I send my deepest condolences to his family.

Solomon Sacco, Deputy Director of Amnesty Internationals Law and Policy Programme, said: Professor Christof was an stunningly warm, kind and generous man, whose conceptual and radical approach to human rights has stayed with me since I first heard him lecture at the University of Pretoria more than 15 years ago. In addition to being a passionate and strong defender of human rights, he was an engaging and generous man who remembered and listened to his students whenever he met them. The world has lost a great spirit.

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How pollution and unhealthy lifestyle are causing havoc with human reproductive health – Free Press Journal

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What does Ayurveda say?

Ayurveda states: Vayudosham, bhojnam iti pratipadye nirmalam ayuvrate (Pure air-Pollution is called Vayudosham in Sanskrit-and clean food help one live longer and in a healthy manner).

In Charak Samhita, there's an invaluable Sanskrit shloka: Anavil vaayu, pavitra khaadyam, titiksham vistar cha jeevansya sootram (Unadulterated air, clean food and salubrious surroundings are the keys to a healthy life).

It's not for nothing that the legendary Hakim Luqman (he wasn't fictional; but did exist) of ancient Arab peninsula would advise the men suffering from getting a hard-on to go to Nakhalistan (oasis) to sexually rejuvenate themselves in pure air and healthy environs: Shad matzat yaq'fahil yaa'n jism ul-anoz ( Clean air makes a man virile and sexually robust).

Arabic sexual manual Lazzatunnisa (called the Kamasutra of Arabs) states that fresh water, clean air and light food are enough for men to stay sexually fit like a horse! What a simple formula to everlasting male sexuality! Alas, we've been ignoring it, much to our peril.

Our wayward lifestyle coupled with declining environs can be adduced as reasons for a legion of ailments we're afflicted with. By the way, according to Dr Swan's research, this disruption is caused by phthalates, chemicals used in plastic manufacturing, which can impact how the functioning of the endocrine glands. This group of chemicals is used to help increase the flexibility of a substance. They can be found in toys, food packaging, detergents, cosmetics, and many more products. Dr Swan believes that these substances are radically harming human development.

It's time to wake up and smell the coffee and understand that if we don't take drastic steps to ameliorate our surroundings, tackle pollution and stop having junk food laced with chemicals, human race will be impotent erelong. On a lighter note, it can be said that since men are too focused on their 'manhood', its shrinkage may certainly egg them on to do something to stem (pun intended) the rot and flaccidity !

- SUMIT PAUL

The writer is an advanced research scholar of Semitic languages, civilizations and cultures.

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From Rights To Jobs LBGTQ+ Liberation In The Arab World – Forbes

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Before the Beirut Port blast last August that killed hundreds and destroyed entire neighborhoods, Lebanons economy was already under enormous pressure due to long-standing political challenges and the Covid pandemic. Amid all of this, Lebanons LGBTQ+ community has been particularly hard hit. Social entrepreneurs like Tarek Zeidan are building a better economic future for Lebanon that elevates queer voices.

We are publishing this story on March 31, in honor of the International Transgender Day of Visibility.

Tarek Zeidan, CEO of Helem, says "We have to convince people that changing their attitudes towards ... [+] LGBT people is not a betrayal of who they are, who their parents were, and what our culture represents."

Zeynep Meydanoglu: You head-up Helem, the first LGBTQ+ organization in the Arab World. Tell us about it.

Tarek Zeidan: We provide services and protection to the LGBT community in Lebanon and the region. Whether it means representing people in court, getting them out of jail, providing assistance around domestic abuse, suicide prevention. Whatever it is, you call our hotline, and we're there to help you.

The community center is where it gets more interesting. Anyone can join Helem, as long as they respect our rules, rights and responsibilities. In the center, people can start all sorts of projects for and with the LGBT community. As an organization we provide the space, the resources and the technical know-how. Some of our best ideas have come from these convenings of people that come together and debate solutions to our biggest challenges.

For example, we have a committee of trans* sex workers. They prioritize their work around the communitys needs. Many of them want to start small to mid-scale businesses that support trans* people. Some want to learn computer skills because working online feels safer and it would make them more competitive on the global job market. Our job is to listen to their dreams and help to make them happen.

Meydanoglu: How did 2020 impact your work?

Zeidan: 2020 has been a hard year for everybody, and particularly in Lebanon, because of the political and economic crisis, followed by the pandemic; and then, of course the Beirut Port blast. So many of the things that we knew for sure last year are not necessarily what we know for sure now. All of a sudden, we have 40 to 50 percent of the LGBT community that has been plunged into poverty, into homelessness. This isn't something that we had six months ago. Direct aid, economic empowerment, workplace equality, and labor law reform are our top concerns right now.

Meydanoglu: Can you give us an example of how you are responding?

Zeidan: Growing LGBT inclusive businesses can boost Lebanons tourism in staggering ways. Its a multi-billion dollar industry that the government is not letting into the country because of their archaic mindsets. This is the kind of information and action our movement needs to have in our arsenals, not just shaking our fists in the street. That's amazing to break the ice, but if we don't also have a long-term vision, it's a missed opportunity.

Meydanoglu: You mentioned labor law as well. When does that come into the picture?

Zeidan: Before being able to change labor law, we have to change the behavior. Many people in the global North generally believe that law reform comes first, but in places like Lebanon, where the rule of law is contested, thats not necessarily the best first step.

So, we are starting by creating a critical mass of young, entrepreneurial LGBT individuals that are trying to solve problems on the ground. For example, instead of handing out food boxes for people affected by the blast we created a community kitchen, which can become self-sustaining. It also creates an opportunity to get people together to learn and mobilize, rather than just receiving a food box.

But if we don't also work on the labor law, were actually just throwing people into the jaws of the wolves. Workplace equality and economic empowerment for queer people is the carrot, but it requires shifting values in the workplace and beyond. Thats something even a robust anti-sexual harassment and inclusion policy cant do. A reformed and inclusive labor law can be the stick that gives queer employees recourse to justice. The amounts of abuse and exploitation of LGBT people by the private sector is astonishing, so we need to approach it from both ends in order to ensure prosperity and protection simultaneously.

Meydanoglu: How do you bring people along?

Zeidan: We have to convince people that changing their attitudes towards LGBT people is not a betrayal of who they are, who their parents were, and what our culture represents. Were retaining what's important in our values system, and were choosing to let go of what no longer is relevant to the times.

That's easier said than done but, for example, when it comes to accepting trans* individuals working with you in your company. Weve found that it is not simply about countering all of the misconceptions and the phobias that people have. It's also about the fact that people have no idea how to communicate with people that seem so different from them. Theres a deep anxiety there. People tend to hire people that look like them, that are from the same religious or educational background. This is really detrimental to a place of business, because were not prioritizing the work itself, were prioritizing people that reinforce our world view and assuage our anxiety.

So we as queer and gender non-conforming people bring ourselves to the table and engage with employers directly. Everything changes once we are face to face in the same room, because so much of the phobia and the hate is based on mythologies that feed on estrangement. We use what we call compassionate and courageous confrontation.We never use guilt or shaming as a tool. We recognize that people dont resist change, they resist loss. Paradoxically, queer people represent a certain sense of loss to those who oppress them. We help them see that by releasing old habits or views (like homophobia) they are not losing who they are. They can thus see that our community is not responsible for their sense of loss.

Meydanoglu: Have you found some surprising allies along the way?

Zeidan: What has been surprising is the amount of people who agree with us but have not found the space to express that agreement and support. The parameters of what constitutes support have been incredibly narrow. If your only option to support LGBT rights is to become an activist, the vast majority of people who agree with you cannot express their support. The more we diversify how people can come and join in, the stronger we will be.

Meydanoglu: What are some of these new entry points?

Zeidan: We've been trying to work with youth for a very long time, but parents were simply not going to let us onto high school campuses. So, we werent able to deal with critical issues like bullying or sexual health. Some of the most elite schools in the country are still doing conversion therapy on LGBT youth, even though the Lebanese Psychological and Psychiatric Association has banned the practice. So, how on earth could we reach the kids? The scouts became one of our answers. We are now able to reach the same kids through a different venue! Interestingly, our meetings and events take place in the basement of a church, because the priest who runs it wants to support queer kids with his actions even if he cant do it with his sermons.

All we have to do is find these people that makes all of the difference! That's how we've been able to get legal and security information to youth, as well as workshops on how to counter bullying and hate speech. Were helping young queer people feel better about themselves and make things better for others who share their challenges.

Meydanoglu: You bring up the Church. How important has it been to bring these large institutions along?

Zeidan: Engagement with institutions, like the church or our government is nearly impossible to do here. People may be privately sympathetic, but publicly won't touch this issue. This is not just about LGBT people, but about any controversial topic. Where we've had a lot of success is precisely in ignoring the top hierarchies and identifying instead the layers of power within them that can shift. For example, we don't talk to Ministers, who are political appointees. We talk to the permanent staff of each ministry. Senior and junior staff across multiple key ministries have proven to be very LGBT inclusive, so we've been able to facilitate funds and access for HIV medication, aid for gender affirmation surgery, access to social security and more. We did not need to go through parliament to make the lives of LGBT people easier in the short and medium run.

Weve also worked this way with priests and sheikhs. We werent trying to find people who would publicly challenge the church on LGBT inclusion. We simply wanted individuals who believed faith and sexuality are reconciled to come and speak with LGBT people of faith, to help them reconcile their own internal struggles. We started by addressing the problem that the community was facing, as opposed to the problem that we as activists were facing.

That allows these clerics of both Christianity and Islam to gradually expand and evolve their role into something that's a lot more political, in terms of their actual support of the cause. And it also requires us as a secular organization to change our own inner culture to allow LGBT people of faith a safe space, to be heard and to be seen, to organize and be part of the solution.

Tarek Zeidan leads Helem, the first LGBT rights organization in the Arab World, founded in Beirut in 2004. He was an ELI fellow at the Harvard Center for Public Leadership and an emerging human rights fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard. Tarek joined Ashokas network in 2020.You can follow him on twitter @tarekzeidan @HelemLebanon

Zeynep Meydanogluis the Country Co-Director of Ashoka Turkey, and the field leader of Next Now/Gender. Prior to Ashoka, Zeynep led civil society strengthening initiatives and contributed to Turkey's womens movement in organizations like TUSEV, KAMER and Purple Roof Foundation.

Next Now:Ashokas Next Now highlights innovations in areas ripe for transformation, including Tech & Humanity, Aging and Longevity, Gender, and Planet & Climate.This series sheds light on the wisdom and ideas of leaders creating an equal world for people of all genders. ReadPart 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5 and Part 6 of the series.

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