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Sunday, June 15, 2014

New Graceland Hotel Approved

The proposed Guest House at Graceland would be built on the west side of Elvis Presley Boulevard if Elvis Presley Enterprises gains approval.
Guest House at Graceland
The Memphis-Shelby County Land Use Control Board approved a proposal from Elvis Presley Enterprises to build a 450-room hotel on the same side of Elvis Presley Boulevard as the historic Graceland mansion, one of the city's top tourism sites.
The project faced no opposition at the Thursday, June 12, LUCB meeting, and City Council member Harold Collins said the hotel would provide much-needed economic investment in the community while complementing major upgrades to Elvis Presley Boulevard, the primary artery in Whitehaven.'I want to rise and say this particular project will generate up to $70 million in the inner city', Collins said. 'Very seldom does the inner city get an opportunity where a private developer will invest that kind of money in the community'.
The 450-room hotel, which will include meeting spaces and a restaurant and bar, would be the biggest hotel in Memphis outside the Downtown area, including the Hilton in East Memphis and Hotel Memphis on Thousand Oaks Boulevard in Parkway Village. The hotel plan will still need approval from the council, but that appears to be a lock.
Collins said the hotel project comes as welcome news to most Whitehaven residents and stakeholders, who, for years, have yearned for investments on Elvis Presley Boulevard.



Collins – who was instrumental in securing the $43 million in local, state and federal funding for streetscape improvements on Elvis Presley Boulevard between Brooks Road and Shelby Drive – said the hotel would allow for more tourists to stay in Whitehaven and support businesses in the area.The approval of the hotel plans happened after New York-based Authentic Brands Group LLC in November completed its purchase of a majority of Elvis Presley Enterprises from CORE Media Group, which had acquired a majority stake in Elvis Presley Enterprises from CKX Inc.
CKX had proposed a massive, $250 million investment in Graceland and the surrounding area, including hotels, a new visitor center and extensive exhibit upgrades. The company began aggressively acquiring properties around the mansion before the 'Great Recession' tightened its grip on the global economy and many of the plans were put on hold.
The new hotel appears to be part of a broader effort by Authentic Brands to invest in Graceland. Authentic Brands officials have spoken in broad terms about Graceland upgrades but have revealed few details.
The first sign of new life in the development plan occurred in March, when Elvis Presley Enterprises filed a $670,000 permit application with the city-county Office of Construction Code Enforcement to build a new 'studio building' also on land north of the mansion.
The permit is for property at 3674 Elvis Presley Blvd., which had been a car lot in the past and was bought by EPE in 2006 in anticipation of the CKX expansion.

This site plan shows the proposed Guest House at Graceland's intersection paving that would celebrate Elvis Presley Boulevard. The property would keep many trees for its resort setting.

This site plan shows the proposed Guest House at Graceland's intersection paving that would celebrate Elvis Presley Boulevard. The property would keep many trees for its resort setting. -

See more at: http://graceland.elvis.com.au/new-graceland-hotel-approved.shtml?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+elvis_presley+%28Elvis+News+from+Elvis+Australia%29#sthash.GDIyvp2I.dpuf

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Angelina Jolie speaks out on sexual assault


RONAN FARROW DAILY 06/13/14
Angelina Jolie speaks out on sexual assault

Actress Angelina Jolie is in London but not for a movie premiere, but to speak out against sexual violence in places of conflict.  The actress speaks with Ronan Farrow about this important cause.

Jolie believes that men need to speak up


RONAN FARROW DAILY 06/13/14
Jolie believes that men need to speak up

Angelina Jolie, along with Secretary of State John Kerry, are at a high-level summit on sexual violence as a tool of war. Jolie joins Ronan Farrow to discuss the summit and what people can do to help.

World's first heritage sites

Established in 1872, Yellowstone National Park is one of the few remaining large, intact ecosystems in the planet's northern temperate zone. The Yellowstone River is shown here.
Yellowstone National Park, United States          Established in 1872, Yellowstone National Park is one of the few remaining large, intact ecosystems in the planet's northern temperate zone. The Yellowstone River is shown here.


(CNN) -- Checking off the world's most important natural and cultural wonders can be a herculean task.
The World Heritage List -- that most lauded and recognizable of preservation lists -- includes nearly 1,000 sites all over the world.
That number will almost certainly increase when the World Heritage Committee of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization meets June 15-25 in Qatar.
Instead of sorting through that encyclopedic list, why not start at the very beginning with the first 12 sites?
The Galapagos Islands in Ecuador, Yellowstone National Park in the United States and the Island of Goree in Senegal were among the 12 sites named to the first list in 1978.
Only countries that sign the convention creating the World Heritage Committee and list can nominate sites, and that was just 40 countries when the first nominations came out. Thirty-six years later,191 nations have signed the convention.
"There is an incredible diversity of sites both natural and cultural around the world," said Mechtild Rossler, deputy director of UNESCO's World Heritage Centre, a 22-year veteran of the organization. "The beauty of this convention is that the text defining natural and cultural heritage is very broad."
Being named to the list is a big deal. Government officials work for years to prepare their nominations, and preservation officials hope for those designations to support their work. And what tourist site doesn't tout its World Heritage Site designation?
While we wait to learn the newest members of this prestigious list, here are the first 12 World Heritage sites, listed in the order in which they are listed in the minutes of the September 1978 meeting in Washington.
L'Anse aux Meadows National Historic Park, Canada
What's left of the 11th-century Viking settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows National Historic Park on the island of Newfoundland in Canada is the earliest evidence of the first European presence in North America.
Excavations have found timber-framed, peat-turf buildings like those found in Iceland and Norse Greenland during the same period. It's the first and only known Viking site in North America. The site was protected by the government of Canada in 1977, just a year before its inclusion on the World Heritage List.
Nahanni National Park, Canada
Located in Canada's Northwest Territories along the South Nahanni River and the Flat River, Nahanni National Park was protected as a national park by Canada in 1972.
Nahanni includes almost every known type of North American river and stream, enormous waterfalls, granite peaks, deep canyons, a unique limestone cave system and evidence of ancient rivers. Some 40 types of mammals and 170 bird species call this park home.
Galapagos Islands, Ecuador
The 19 islands and surrounding marine reserve that are theGalapagos Islands are part of a unique archipelago of unusual animals, plant life and seismic activity that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution.
Located about 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) from the South American continent where three currents meet in the Pacific Ocean, the Galapagos host an intriguing collection of animal and plant life. Residents include the blue-footed booby, giant tortoises, flightless cormorants and marine iguanas.
Some 97% of the total emerged surface was declared a National Park in 1959. The Galapagos Marine Reserve was created in 1986 with an area of 70,000 kilometers and was expanded to 133,000 kilometers in 1998.
City of Quito, Ecuador
Named for the Quitus, who lived in the area before the Spanish conquest, the capital city of Ecuador was built in the 16th century on the ruins of an Incan city. Despite many earthquakes, Quito's historic center is quite well-preserved.
See the style of the Baroque school of Quito, a fusion of European and indigenous elements, in the monasteries of San Francisco and Santo Domingo and the Church and Jesuit College of La Companía. Built in the old Spanish style, the cathedral, archbishop's palace, government palace and city hall face onto the city's main square.
Simien National Park, Ethiopia
Incredible mountain peaks, deep valleys and rare animals callSimien National Park home. You'll find the Walia ibex (a goat found nowhere else in the world), the rare Gelada baboon and Simien fox. There are also leopards, spotted hyenas, jackals and 400 bird species.
The park holds incredible significance because of its biodiversity, with views said to rival the Grand Canyon in the United States. However, it was established in an area inhabited by people and faces human and livestock demands on its resources.
Rock-Hewn Churches, Lalibela, Ethiopia
At a time when Muslim conquests made it impossible for Christians to make pilgrimages to the Holy Land, King Lalibela decided in the 12th century to build a "New Jerusalem" in the mountain region of Ethiopia. The 11 medieval, monolithic cave churches of the 13th century are the result.
The churches were hewn from rock, and doors and windows and other parts of the structures were chiseled out. There's also an extensive system of passages, ditches, caves and catacombs.
Lalibela's churches and traditional village are still a place of pilgrimage and devotion where the faithful flock to celebrate the important dates of the Ethiopian Christian calendar.
Aachen Cathedral, Germany
The Frankish royal estate of Aachen in western Germany had served as a spa since the first century. Soon after Charlemagne took over the government in AD 768, he made the estate his permanent residence and turned it into a center of religion and culture.
Emperor Charlemagne´s own Palatine Chapel was the first vaulted structure north of the Alps since Antiquity. The chapel was considered an artistic wonder from its creation. It had bronze doors, columns of Greek and Italian marble and a grand mosaic (now destroyed).
The unification of the West under Charlemagne is symbolized in part by the construction of the chapel between 793 and 813. Charlemagne was buried there in 814, and 200 years later, he was canonized -- attracting pilgrims to the site.
Krakow's historic center, Poland
The former capital city of Poland, Krakow's historic center has its roots in the 13th century as a merchants' town with Europe's largest market square and one of the oldest university quarters in Europe.
Boleslaw the Chaste ordered the old city, called Stare Miasto, be laid out in a strict grid of orthogonal streets in 1257, when he decided to unify the different peoples around the Wawel, a hill inhabited since Paleolithic times and site of the Royal Wawel Castle, which now houses a museum. The beginnings of the castle date back to the 11th century, and there are remnants of fortifications dating back to the 14th century.
The Wawel also contains the Royal Treasury and the Gothic cathedral of St. Wenceslas, which hosted many important events for the Polish royal families, including coronations, weddings and funerals.
Separate from Stare Miasto, the old district of Kazimierz was the city's Jewish quarter. Kazimierz's Jewish community of 64,000 individuals was deported to Auschwitz. Only 6,000 returned after World War II ended.
Wieliczka and Bochnia Salt Mines, Poland
While the Wieliczka and Bochnia Salt Mines in Poland are excellent examples of mining techniques from the 13th to the 20th centuries, there is much more in their underground chambers than a historical ode to the mining of salt.
Areas excavated for salt were turned into storehouses, workshops and chapels, with statues and other decorations carved into the rock salt. Tourists have visited the site since the early 19th century.
Island of Goree, Senegal
From the 15th century through the 19th century, an estimated 20 million Africans passed through the Island of Goree, the largest slave-trading center on the African coast.
Ruled first by the Portuguese and followed by the Dutch, English and French, the island just two miles off the coast houses the elegant homes of the slave traders and the horrific cells in which captured Africans were held before being shipped to the Americas. The Dutch-built House of Slaves, which dates back to 1776, is the last surviving slave house on the island.
Listed as a historical site by the colonial administration in 1944, Goree didn't have any subsequent construction that might have damaged the historic elements of the island. Senegal gained its independence in 1960, and the island was inscribed on the independent nation's national heritage list in 1975.
Mesa Verde National Park, United States
Spectacular structures of the Pueblo Nation in southwest Colorado are protected at Mesa Verde National Park, where ancient Pueblo dwellings dating from the 6th to the 12th century are still standing at an altitude of more than 8,000 feet.
There are impressive villages built on the Mesa top and imposing cliff dwellings built of stone. There is evidence of advanced knowledge of building techniques and irrigation, crucial to surviving in the land in which the Pueblo Nation lived.
Yellowstone National Park, United States
Established as the United States' first national park in 1872,Yellowstone National Park is one of the few remaining large, intact ecosystems in the northern temperate zone on Earth.
Yellowstone has more than 10,000 thermal features -- about half of all thermal features in the world. It has more than 300 geysers, a volcano and many waterfalls.
The park is also home to the few remaining members of the wild, continuously free-ranging bison herd that once roamed the Great Plains.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Dear Google: don't screw up Android

KitKat made the best of Android accessible to more people than ever, but what will the next version do?


The history of Android has always been about more. From its inception with the T-Mobile G1 in 2008, Google’s mobile operating system has sought to compete by having more features, higher specs, and bigger devices than everyone else. Improving relentlessly with each new release, Android’s rise has produced excellent new phones but also many disappointed users who were either left on an old version of the software or bought a device that was never good enough in the first place. Late last year, Google sought to correct that by putting the brakes on and introducing Android 4.4 KitKat, an OS update that was about less.
THE LEANER KITKAT OPENED THE DOOR TO MUCH NICER CHEAP ANDROID PHONES
KitKat simplified the interface, reduced the minimum specs for a good user experience, and made it easier for Google’s partners to update their devices more rapidly. As a result, Android is now more inclusive and consistent than it’s ever been. But to rectify the fragmenting effects of Android’s constant evolution, Google had to pause that essential process. What happens when the L successor to KitKat debuts, most likely at Google I/O later this month?
The motivation behind KitKat was as ambitious as any goal the Mountain View company had previously set for itself. Having just recorded its billionth Android device activation, Google was eager to "reach the next billion" smartphone users. The company was already in charge of the globe’s most popular mobile platform, but obsolete versions of Android were cannibalizing the most price-sensitive markets in developing countries with dirt-cheap devices that didn’t include access to the Google Play Store. That created a dual problem for Google: complete Android neophytes were getting a bad first experience of the OS, and even those who liked it weren’t spending their time and money inside Google’s service ecosystem. The trouble was that good Android and cheap Android were two different things.
KitKat was the solution.
Motorola’s software VP Steve Horowitz credits KitKat’s lower spec demands for making the extraordinarily affordable Moto E possible. The E is the first of what should be a cavalcade of new Android phones that finally combine smooth user responsiveness with rock-bottom pricing. Yes, Motorola was already on this track with the excellent $179 Moto G, but the $129 Moto E addresses a far wider market. The G was cheap by European and American standards, whereas the E is cheap globally.
THE MOTO E IS THE PUREST EMBODIMENT OF THE KITKAT PHILOSOPHY
The Moto E is one of the missionaries spreading the Google KitKat gospel to the world. It proves that Android’s best and latest really is versatile enough to be used on every device, no matter the size or price. In India, one of the fastest-growing smartphone markets, demand for the Moto E has been high enough to twice take down the distributor’s website and the handset is currently out of stock. Even with the lingering high reputations of Nokia and BlackBerry in the country, the new Google phone is attracting buyers with a superior user experience and broader ecosystem. Whereas previously the manifestation of Android in developing markets might have been some Gingerbread monstrosity defaulting to Baidu as its main search engine, Google can now offer its finest software across the widest price range ever.
UNITING ALL THE PHONE-MAKING HOUSES UNDER THE "POWERED BY ANDROID" BANNER
At the other end of the scale, even Vertu is now selling phones with the latest version of Android on board, proudly offering the ruby-infused Signature Touch with 4.4 as the default OS. All the big Android device makers have also finally gotten their ducks in a row and have this year shipped their devices with KitKat preloaded instead of as a promise for the near future.
Google's KitKat has been surprisingly successful at reducing the amount of fragmentation in the Android ecosystem. It's still far from the unity of iOS, but it's much better than it used to be. Now, Google is preparing to unveil its next big wave of Android updates.
Recent reports have suggested the introduction of a new Android Silver initiative that would bring in a tier of certified premium devices with a high minimum standard of quality and consistency. It would formalize Google’s demand for limited customization of the user experience and ensure that more software updates are delivered more rapidly. As such, it portends a return to the familiar strategy of focusing on high-end devices first.
Whatever Google chooses to do with Android’s future development, there are signs to suggest that KitKat’s democratizing legacy will endure even beyond the next big feature update. KitKat, as embodied by the exemplary Moto E, crosses a threshold of usability that Android hasn’t previously been able to offer at the lowest end of the market. Even if Google widens its Nexus program of paragon handsets into the proposed Android Silver group, the achievement of a usable entry-level Android smartphone may not be lost.
THERE'S REASON TO BELIEVE KITKAT'S DEMOCRATIZING LEGACY WILL ENDURE
Additionally, this year’s Android phones are consistent from a hardware perspective as well as in their software. Qualcomm’s latest chips are dominating every segment of the market and their efficient performance is part of what’s made Android viable on so many more devices. That won’t change no matter what happens at Google I/O.
It may be damning with faint praise, but Android's never felt as cohesive and consistent as it does today. Whether you buy a Vertu, a Moto, or a Sony phone, the basic user experience, performance, and features are similar enough to make them all feel like part of the same software family. Now Google’s about to resume its old habit of additive innovation and, if that innovation’s any good, disruption to the status quo should be expected. Current phones won’t slow down and functionality won’t be reduced, but the perception of a fragmented Android landscape could arise again. The tricky task for Google is to figure out how to keep moving forward without leaving anyone behind.

Teen Smoking, Sex Hit New Lows But Texting, Fat Are New Dangers

BY MAGGIE FOX
Kids today — they’re smoking less, having less sex, and fighting less often at school. They’re less likely to use drugs, and they’re more likely to wear seat belts and helmets when they are supposed to.
The latest federal look at teenage behavior is reassuring and suggests that some safety messages are getting through to American youth.
On the downside, kids are fatter than ever before and just a third are eating anywhere near as many fruits and vegetables as they need to stay healthy. And less than a third are getting enough sleep.
And a very troubling new statistic shows that more than 40 percent of teenagers who drive cars admit to having texted or emailed while driving recently.
Image: A girl photographs the Kingston University show on an iPad during day 3 of Graduate Fashion Week 2014 at The Old Truman Brewery on June 2 in London, England.TRISTAN FEWINGS / GETTY IMAGES, FILE
Teens are spending more time on computers, and an alarming 40 percent say they have texted or emailed while driving recently, the CDC reports.
But on the whole, it's a snapshot of progress. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which organizes the every-other-year survey, was especially pleased about the drop in smoking.
“I think it's really encouraging that we're seeing the lowest cigarette smoking rate ever,” CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden told NBC News.
“We've actually reached the goal that the nation set for ourselves for 2020 early. So that's one of the most positive trends that we see here — down to 15.7 percent — less than one out of six kids in our high schools is smoking. That's great news.”
About 20 percent of Americans smoke, down from 40 percent in the 1960s.
While smoking is the single biggest preventable cause of death in the United States — it causes heart disease, cancer and lung disease — teenagers face a more immediate risk. Their single biggest killer is motor vehicle crashes, causing 23 percent of deaths among 10 to 24-year-olds, CDC says.
Another 18 percent of young deaths come from other unintentional injuries, 15 percent from homicide and 15 percent by suicide.
The good news is that only 7.6 percent of the students surveyed said they never or rarely wore a seat belt when riding in a car driven by someone else — down from nearly 26 percent in 1991.
“I think it's really encouraging that we're seeing the lowest cigarette smoking rate ever."
Frieden said public health campaigns make a difference.
“These positive trends didn't just happen. They're the result of hard work in communities all over the country — doing things like protecting kids from secondhand smoke, passing laws that are graduated driving laws so that kids don't drink and drive,” he said.
Other car-related behavior isn’t so good. The survey of more than 13,000 students taken at schools across the country showed that nearly 22 percent admit to having ridden one or more times in a car or other vehicle driven by someone who had been drinking in the past month. That’s down, however, from nearly 40 percent in 1991.
Ten percent of teen drivers admit they’ve sometimes gotten behind the wheel after drinking.
Image: A woman smokes a cigarette in Los Angeles, Calif. on May 31, 2012. JONATHAN ALCORN / REUTERS FILE
Teen smoking rates dropped in the latest CDC report.
But most startling, 41.4 percent of teen drivers said they had texted or emailed while driving a car or other vehicle on at least one day during the 30 days before the survey.
"It puts not only them but every other driver on the road at risk,” said Dr. Stephanie Zaza, director of CDC’s Division of Adolescent and School Health. “Teenagers are particularly susceptible to distraction. Parents need to model good behavior.”
Older teen drivers may do it more often — in 2012, the CDC found that 58 percent of high school seniors admitted to texting while driving.
Among all Americans, 57 percent of drivers admit to talking on a hand-held cell phone while on the road. About 35 percent say they have texted while driving,
Teens can be foolhardy in other ways. Nearly 88 percent said they skip wearing a helmet while biking all or most of the time. But this is down from 96 percent of teens in 1991.
“We're very concerned to see the decrease in condom use."
And while teen sex is at a low — 46.8 percent, down from 54 percent in 1991 — just 59 percent said they used a condom the last time. This is up from 46 percent in 1991, but down from 63 percent in 2003 and it’s not good enough, Frieden said.
Just over a third — 34 percent — are currently sexually active.
“We're very concerned to see the decrease in condom use,” Frieden said. “We worked hard, we educated and we had a steady increase in condom use until recent years. Now we've seen a slight decrease in condom use, and that's concerning."
Teens should use condoms even if they are also using other contraception, Frieden said. Pregnancy is a big worry, but STDs are even more likely, and Frieden fears "there may be a sense that, well, there's treatment for HIV so it's not such a terrible problem.”
There may be treatments for HIV but there’s no cure. People must take pills every single day for life and the virus can develop resistance to those medications.
And some kids are relying on dumb luck. Of those who were sexually active, 13.7 percent did nothing to prevent pregnancy during their last sexual intercourse.
Image: A teen drinks a large soda on Oct. 17, 2013 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES FILE
A teen drinks a large soda on Oct. 17, 2013 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
On the good news side, students are fighting less at school. Just under 25 percent had been in a physical fight one or more times during the past year, down from 42 percent in 1991, And just 25 percent had even been in a fight, down from a third in 2011.
The other long-term risks to health are poor diet and a lack of exercise. Teens are trying, but not reaching targets there, the survey indicates.
People should aim to eat at least three servings of fruit and three servings of vegetables every single day. More than 62 percent of the students had managed to get one fruit serving down a day for the week before the survey and 61 percent managed to eat one or more vegetables. Only 15 percent hit the three or more mark.
“We’ve seen a tremendous increase in screen time. It's remarkable."
Fifteen percent said they hadn’t exercised hard enough to get a little out of breath in the week before the survey, and only 47 percent had done so for five of the past seven days — another basic goal to stay healthy. And as a possible result, nearly 14 percent of the students were obese, the survey found, and another 16.6 percent were overweight.
It’s not hard to guess what they were doing instead of exercising. Nearly a third of students said they watched television three or more hours per day on an average school day. And 41.3 percent of students played video games or used a computer for something that was not schoolwork for three or more hours a day on school days.
“We’ve seen a tremendous increase in screen time. It's remarkable,” Frieden said.
“We have to constantly be vigilant about technology,” Zaza said. “Kids are constantly looking for the new thing.”
One other thing that hasn’t changed for years — kids don’t get enough sleep. Most teenagers need nine hours of sleep a night. The survey found that only 31 percent of students were getting eight or more hours a night on school nights.
NBC's Erika Edwards contributed to this story.