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Clamato, Canada, Caesar Cocktail







Clamato, Canada, Caesar Cocktail

Clamato, Canada, Caesar Cocktail 01/01/2004 12:16 PM

Hangover Heaven By The Sea: In 1969, Canadian Montenegran W alter Chell invented the Caesar Cocktail as the perfect reflection of (and introduction to) Italian food, by mixing tomato juice, clam juice and oregano with Brazilian lime juice and Russian vodka. Canada, Montenegro, Italy, Russia, Brazil, California: is this the perfect multi-ethnic hangover-buster or what? [More inside.]




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Ray Caesar


Ray Caesar 09/17/2004 11:42 PM
"I was born in London, England on October 26 1958, the youngest of four and much to my parent's surprise, I was born a dog." The rich inner life of artist Ray Caesar. {keep clicking to see details of prints}

New Julius Caesar Always Alert on Ides
of March (Reuters)


New Julius Caesar Always Alert on Ides
of March (Reuters)
03/17/2005 03:16 AM
Reuters - Sharing a name with the most famous leader of ancient Rome is not always easy when you're a modern politician -- especially on the Ides of March, when the first Julius Caesar was assassinated.

Ray Caesar and Amy Hill at Roq La Rue
Gallery in Seattle, September 10 -
October 7, 2004


Ray Caesar and Amy Hill at Roq La Rue
Gallery in Seattle, September 10 -
October 7, 2004
09/08/2004 02:13 PM
Mark Frauenfelder: Roq La Rue gallery in Seattle has a two-artist show opening on September 10, featuring the work of artists Ray Caesar and Amy Hill. Both artists are terrific.
HealingLightRay Caesar creates fantastical, grimly hopeful and gravely whimsical images of wizened children who radiate an enigmatic serenity. Sprouting bio-mechanical limbs and appendages, the figures are otherworldly, a melding of sci fi fantasy, lush landscapes, and Victorian sensibilities. Ray's work is astonishing in the fact it is all digitally created, most people assume they are looking at paintings due to the seamless blending and "painterly quality" of the work as well as its unique emotional impact. Creating models in a 3D modeling software he then wraps them in painted and manipulated texture maps. Each model is set up with an invisible skeleton that allows him to pose each figure in its 3D enviroment.  

moeAmy Hill paints with a notoriously difficult Dutch Renaissance technique, using formality in the execution and opting for non-conventionality in her subject matter. In her newest series, Amy has painted a series of classic movie monsters as businessmen in suits. Earthy, luminous portraits are painted in tones perfect for the discriminating boardroom, as repulsive monsters are lovingly painted and renamed with "normal" societially accepted names. Funny, yet thought provoking, the initial assumption of "businessmen as monsters" begins to expand as the viewer considers what the artist might actually be implying. Amy will be showing her entire series of oil on panel Monster paintings.


Link

Cocktail Bar 1.0.0


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A searchable database of cocktails and ingredients.

Cocktail 3.3


Cocktail 3.3 12/18/2003 09:48 PM
A general purpose utility that simplifies system maintaince and use of advanced UNIX functions.

Cocktail 3.4.2


Cocktail 3.4.2 02/19/2004 06:04 PM
Cocktail delivered as promised and didn't disappoint me in the least. By Lars Dueck (Inside Apple via MyAppleMenu)

Cocktail 1.2


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Cocktail is free general purpose utility for Mac OS X 10.2 or later. The application simplifies the use of of advanced UNIX functions and gives access to hidden Mac OS X settings.

Update: Cocktail 3.4.2


Update: Cocktail 3.4.2 02/16/2004 12:04 PM
The Mac OS X maintenance utility fixes several problems, including one in which network optimization may fail on Mac OS X 10.3.x.

"Personality cocktail"


"Personality cocktail" 06/16/2004 11:01 PM

Jingle Cocktail has been released!


Jingle Cocktail has been released! 07/23/2004 03:09 AM
Stylish festive puzzle for everyone. [PRWEB Jul 23, 2004]

Cocktail 3.3 adds new scheduling options


Cocktail 3.3 adds new scheduling options 12/17/2003 07:20 PM
Cocktail 3.3 is the latest version of the popular general purpose utility for Mac OS X that allows you to easily use advanced UNIX functions and gives access to hidden features...

The Secret Sauce of the Explosive
Cocktail


The Secret Sauce of the Explosive
Cocktail
02/16/2004 12:10 PM
Loïc Le Meur reflects upon the Etech conference to come up with the secret sauce of an unwired conference (go read the descriptions): -Prepare the sauce ingredients on a wiki and let it grow during the conference -Make wifi and...

Linux-powered Mobile Cocktail Mixer


Linux-powered Mobile Cocktail Mixer 12/05/2003 11:15 PM
weissi writes "You remember the slashdot.org story Linux-based Bar-Monkey? We found it pretty cool, but it has/had problems: definitely too big, and no plans ...

Before webl0gs, "bl0g" was a kind of
cocktail at sf cons


Before webl0gs, "bl0g" was a kind of
cocktail at sf cons
07/14/2004 05:06 AM
Ev searched Google's Usenet archives for early uses of the term "blog" and uncovered a science-fiction fannish cocktail called the "blog" that predates weblogs by years:
You should be aware that Blog was originally devised by British fans in the 1950s. There were two versions. A Liverpool fan named Peter Hamilton came up with the recipe for Blog Mark I, which consisted of "a brandy and egg flip base, to which was added black currant puree, Alka Seltzer, and Beechan's Powder. It effervesced." A second, simplified version (Blog Mark II) was produced by hotel barmen at the first Kettering Eastercon (1955) and consisted of "a half-pint of cider and a measure of rum." Anybody know what `egg flip' and `Beecham's Powder' are? (Quoted material taken from p.168 of A WEALTH OF FABLE, by Harry Warner, Jr.)
Link

Chance to win iPod mini with purchase of
Cocktail


Chance to win iPod mini with purchase of
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01/16/2004 11:33 AM
From January 15 through February 15, every order of Cocktail, the popular general purpose utility for Mac OS X, will be entered in a drawing to win one of five iPod minis...

Cocktail 3.4 offers easier log file
viewing, managing


Cocktail 3.4 offers easier log file
viewing, managing
01/26/2004 12:04 AM
Cocktail 3.4 is the latest version of the popular general purpose utility for Mac OS X that allows you to easily use advanced UNIX functions and gives access to hidden features...

Jaguar Cocktail update released; Tiger
version due in April


Jaguar Cocktail update released; Tiger
version due in April
03/14/2005 06:28 PM
Cocktail developer Kristofer Szymanski has announced that the Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar version of his general purpose utility has been updated to version 3.5...

""I work as a clothed cocktail waitress
at a strip club on Manhattan's far West
Side... It's not far from Madison Square
Garden and, this week, the GOP
convention.""


""I work as a clothed cocktail waitress
at a strip club on Manhattan's far West
Side... It's not far from Madison Square
Garden and, this week, the GOP
convention.""
08/31/2004 08:45 PM

DARFUR: A
COCKTAIL OF SUFFERING AND
GENOCIDE


DARFUR: A
COCKTAIL OF SUFFERING AND
GENOCIDE
08/27/2004 02:02 PM
darfur
Sudan has a great deal in common with Afghanistan. Both countries are horrendously overpopulated relative to their carrying capacity, and have exploding populations -- Sudan's population of 40 million people is doubling every 25 years and that rate is not slowing, raising the spectre of its population topping a half billion by the end of the century. Both Sudan and Afghanistan are also desperately poor, with only 7% of Sudan's land and 12% of Afghanistan's capable of supporting agriculture. What's worse, over-farming, over-grazing and global warming are producing chronic drought, which in turn causes massive famine and desertification. Encroaching desert has already halved arable land in Afghanistan since 1975, and the same phenomenon  is happening in Sudan. Both countries have long legacies of brutal and repressive dictatorships, foreign occupation, savage and interminable civil war, lawlessness, genocide and, in the case of Sudan, slavery. And both countries provided safe harbour for Osama bin Laden.

What is happening now in the Western Sudanese provinces of Darfur is merely a continuation of a centuries-long legacy of misery, poverty, conflict and violence. In this week's New Yorker Pulitzer Prize winner Samantha Power reports from Darfur, with first-person interviews with government and rebel leaders and the victims caught eternally in the middle. Some of the information she reveals in telling the agonizing story of this impoverished and hopeless nation:
  • The military dictatorship that governs Sudan is desperate to end US sanctions so that its newly-found oil, which came onstream only five years ago, can start generating revenue for the bankrupt nation, so much so that it agreed to end its long and savage civil war against the rebels in Southern Sudan (where the oil is), and exempt Sudanese Christians from Sharia law.
  • That Southern war has cost two million lives, and the Bush Administration was active in brokering the peace for three reasons: (a) many of the casualties were Christians, which led to pressure from American evangelical churches, a bastion of Bush support, for US action, (b) the US would have access to an additional source of much-needed oil and (c) peace would have allowed Bush, in an election year, to portray himself as a peacemaker as well as a 'war president'.
  • Plans to announce the peace were undone when the Western Darfur provinces, suffering from horrendous drought, rapid desertification, increasing tension between Arabs and non-Arabs for scarce land, and long government neglect, began to clamour for independence (Darfur was an independent Sultanate until Britain annexed it into its Sudanese colony); the government, tapped out militarily and not wanting to jeopardize the possible end of sanctions, responded by outsourcing military retaliation against Darfur's six million people to local Arab sheiks, warlords and tribal leaders, who they financed and armed heavily and supported with aerial bombing raids in key areas occupied by the pro-independence Sudanese Liberation Army.
  • These local Arab leaders used this power and military might to launch a genocidal attack on all non-Arabs in Darfur, deputizing murderous gangs of Arab bandits called janjaweed, whose intimidation tactics include burning whole villages, gang-raping women, decapitation, burning children alive, mass public executions, ransoming community leaders, burying victims of atrocities and precious wells in sand, and kidnapping women and children. The bandits steal everything of value in the destroyed villages as compensation for their 'enforcement' of government authority. As a consequence over a million Darfur residents have fled their villages to massive refugee centres elsewhere in the provinces, where there is at least safety in numbers (50,000-75,000 per camp), and in neighbouring Chad.
  • USAID estimates that the death toll from genocide, starvation and disease will, even with humanitarian and peacemaking intervention now, exceed 300 thousand and could, without intervention, top one million by the end of this year. The UN has already established a food program that has reached 900 thousand of the 1.5 million affected in Darfur, but the threat to the safety of both Darfur natives and humanitarian workers is severe.
  • There are all kinds of reasons for Western reticence to get involved: Darfur is an all-Muslim area, so the genocide is ethnic, not religious, and it is resource-poor, unlike the oil-rich South. European leaders, not wanting to give Bush a smokescreen for his foreign policy blunders and rebukes of its allies, have been perversely reticent to support US humanitarian efforts in Darfur. Arab sheiks and tribal leaders in Darfur and elsewhere in Sudan have announced they will consider any intervention by the West in their 'internal dispute' as an unwanted foreign invasion, which they will liken to the US invasion of Iraq, and will use it to recruit zealous young Arabs to kill all foreigners, including humanitarian workers and peacemakers, producing a fiasco similar to the one that occurred in Somalia. One recruiting brochure says "We call upon you to head immediately to Darfur and dig the ground deep for the mass graves of the crusader army". Darfur's refugees say that bringing peacekeepers from the African Union won't work either, because "African troops are too susceptible to bribes". And the Sudanese government is probably both unwilling and unable to rein in the local sheiks and warlords and the rogue janjaweed gangs. And the only non-Sudanese body with authority to bring thm to justice for genocide is the International Criminal Court, which the US government has repudiated.
What can be done? Samantha argues that, despite the danger, we have a global responsibility to bring in peacemakers and protect the people of Darfur (and, if the detente with the Southern provinces falls through, which appears likely, the people of the South as well). But, just as in Rwanda ten years ago, how can that be done over the violent opposition of the ruling government of the country? You can only make peace where there is a desire from both sides to achieve a workable peace. Without that, peace efforts will constantly be sabotaged by the side uninterested in peace, which will produce retribution and escalate into full civil war.

What about invading Sudan? Its government is much more popular, at least in the North, than the government of Afghanistan, and the end result of an invasion would inevitably be the same as what we see in Afghanistan: Tyranny replaced by anarchy, the retrenchment of the power of local warlords, massive resentment by the locals of the invading force's inability to bring order or build infrastructure to allow even the promise of a normal life. Intractible civil war and strife. And quagmire for the invaders.

Should we arm the non-Arab people of Darfur so they can defend themselves? After all, the weapons used in the genocide against them came from the West and from Russia, so can two wrongs make a right? And we can't disarm the janjaweed -- in Sudan, as in Afghanistan, there are so many weapons that disarmament is an impossible objective. This was, of course, how we dealt with the earlier problem in Afghanistan -- providing arms to the Taliban and other extremists to allow them to defend themselves from the invading Russians. We all know how successful that was.

Should we relocate a million or two million people to Chad, and pay Chad to take them in, and protect their borders? This was how we dealt with the persecuted Jews after World War II, helping them build a new homeland in Israel. That, too, has been a political nightmare. Why would the people of Chad, itself overpopulated and struggling, be willing to give up part of their homeland to accommodate a huge exodus of destitute foreign refugees?

The sad reality is that there is no answer. The problem is that there are too many people and not enough land, water, or resources to support them. Throughout human history, the maximum sustainable population has been 160 people per arable square mile (1 person per 4 arable acres), which would mean that Sudan should have no more than 11 million people, a quarter of its current population. By the end of the century it could have fifty times this maximum sustainable population, and if desertification isn't halted, it will be even worse. If we think democracy, 'free' trade, education and technology are somehow going to prevent this situation from being catastrophic, we're wildly deluding ourselves.

What's happening in Sudan, now, is foreshadowing what will happen worldwide by the end of this century if we don't address massive overpopulation, unsustainable resource consumption, and all the consequences that these two excesses produce: famine, war, destitution, lawlessness, epidemic disease, terrorism, tyranny, oppression, suffering, genocide, and ecological collapse. Sudan is a country out of control, and while we must of course provide humanitarian aid to its needy masses, and do everything we can to persuade its government to allow us to help it broker a lasting peace, this is only a stop-gap. We must convince the government and the people of Sudan that it must reduce its population and start stewarding its resources in a sustainable and responsible way. Otherwise the next war, the next genocide, the next famine, the next epidemic, the next oppressive government, will be incomparably, unimaginably worse. They say you can't get blood from a stone, but there seems to be no limit to how much blood can be wrenched from an ocean of sand.

Photograph of a Darfur refugee camp from this remarkable online portfolio by Bruno Stevens at New Yorker online.

Oh Canada - here I come


Oh Canada - here I come 06/04/2004 01:14 AM

My Canada includes Murff. Mu rff: "I love Canada and I love blogs.  It's all very very cool.  Trust me."

Scott's the office barometer of popular culture. If he says this stuff is cool, then it must be.

Trust me.

Welcome to the blogosphere Scott. Now go find your voice.

[Random Bytes]

Man on Man  - I've been hooking up with more Canucks lately - than any other nationality.  Someone from Vancouver was just saying the other day.....  Trips to Toronto and Vancouver coming up soon.


Only in Canada, eh


Only in Canada, eh 12/19/2004 03:40 PM
Court quashes levy on MP3 players TORONTO - The Federal Court of Appeal has ruled that a $25 levy on iPods and all other MP3 players must be dropped. The surcharge was imposed by the Copyright Board of Canada last December as a means of protecting artists hurt by illegal downloading. It was quashed after an appeal was launched by several major retailers, including Future Shop and Wal-Mart. They argued that the levy was “unconstitutional…

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Canada 2.0


Canada 2.0 12/17/2004 06:29 PM
You'll be hearing a lot of "I'm moving to..." the next couple days. Well, I'm not moving anywhere. I'm staying put. The borders? Well, that's another story. From the moment I woke up this morning, I been hearing Ving...

Canada Day


Canada Day 07/01/2004 02:14 PM
Happy Canada Day .. Happy

pch.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/jfa-ha/canada_e.cfm
track this site | 5 links


Oh Canada


Oh Canada 04/09/2004 04:06 PM
Will the sanity ever stop?

Oh! Oh! Oh! Canada


Oh! Oh! Oh! Canada 08/31/2004 03:43 PM
Up north, Canadian Customs contend with porn all day. Down south, Utah's former Porn Czar lost her job due to budget cuts after fiel ding 1,500 complaints. In California, private "porn trackers" look at porn so other's won't be able to. Over in Washington D.C., Lam Ngyen sips coffee and trolls the Internet for porn. What a job that must be. [Some links may not be suitable for work]

"Canada Day"


"Canada Day" 07/03/2004 03:03 PM

Canada Oil: The Big Dig


Canada Oil: The Big Dig 05/06/2004 08:40 AM
Fortune May 6 2004 1:17PM GMT

More OTC In Canada


More OTC In Canada 07/30/2004 05:30 PM
This time it's the Millennium Falcon that has landed on Canadian shelves. So far the ship formerly owned by Lando Calrissian has been found at the Toys "R" Us in Burnaby, BC which means it should be trickling it's way across the rest of the country sometime next week. The price of this bad boy is $79.99 Cdn. Thanks to Bountyhunter69 for the head's up!

Business-Tax-Canada-0.01


Business-Tax-Canada-0.01 02/17/2004 06:25 PM

MSF Canada | Bienvenue | Welcome


MSF Canada | Bienvenue | Welcome 01/05/2005 03:39 AM
incredibly worthy relief agency .. Mdecins sans frontires .. Doctors Without Borders .. MSF

msf.ca
track this site | 3 links


HP Canada Gets Mobile


HP Canada Gets Mobile 07/08/2004 02:10 AM
HP Canada gets mobile with the nr3600 rugged Note-book weighing in at 7.9 lbs. This bad boy is not only waterproof, but it can survive 26 three-foot drops on plywood over concrete. Now that is tough computing!

ING branches into Canada


ING branches into Canada 12/22/2003 08:55 PM
Canadian Press via Canada.com Dec 22 2003 7:07PM ET

0 canada [Flickr]


0 canada [Flickr] 12/27/2004 03:23 PM

mathowie posted a photo:

0 canada

0 canada


Council In Canada


Council In Canada 07/26/2004 09:33 PM
It seems the drought in Canada might finally be over! First there were sightings of the OTC Vader's TIE Fighter followed shortly thereafter by both the OTC and VOTC figures. Now, the first Jedi Council scene has been spotted at Toys "R" Us stores across the country! Priced at a whopping $29.99, one might think that these packs have the potential to warm shelves but only time will tell. Happy hunting!

Canada Says No To DMCA


Canada Says No To DMCA 03/24/2005 07:38 PM

U.S. Says Mad Cow Was Imported from
Canada


U.S. Says Mad Cow Was Imported from
Canada
12/27/2003 04:09 PM
Reuters via Wired News Dec 27 2003 3:39PM ET

U.S. Mad Cow Hailed From Canada


U.S. Mad Cow Hailed From Canada 01/07/2004 01:55 PM
DNA tests confirm that the cow diagnosed with the first U.S. case of mad cow disease was born in Canada. Investigators will use the test results to search for the source of infection.

Canada Goes To War This Saturday


Canada Goes To War This Saturday 12/31/2003 05:02 AM
Canucks who aren’t chronically watching any of the cool programming on Teletoon might miss out on the promos informing us that we too get to join the rest of the civilized world and watch The Clone Wars on our very own televisions (yeah, believe it or not, we do have electricity in our igloos). Check out their site for scheduling information for the first ten episodes. Interestingly, the TV spots are advertising all twenty episodes, so we may actually see the second set along with everyone else.

Canada e-Book


Canada e-Book 02/19/2004 06:14 AM
Canada e-Book
http://142.206.72.67/r000_e.htm

Much like the rest of the world, Canada is still developing as a nation. To make sense of this ever-changing country, the Canada e-Book uses sound, images, tables, graphs and both analytical and descriptive text to look at Canada—The Land, The People, The Economy and The State.
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