#christopher newfield
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
During the pandemic, we, fans, have been able to rely on some of our already existing coping mechanisms to deal with the increased strain of our mental health due to the global crisis. Participants in a study about the mental health of PhD students during the pandemic responded that their coping strategies mainly included social interaction and recreational activities. Furthermore,
Lower scores of depression and anxiety were predicted by the strength of the overall social network (…) NAUMANN, SANDRA, LENA MATYJEK, KATHARINA BÖGL, SCHOLAR MINDS, AND ISABEL DZIOBEK. UPDATE ON THE MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS IN ACADEMIA: EFFECTS OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC ON EARLY CAREER RESEARCHERS’ MENTAL HEALTH AND SATISFACTION WITH PHD TRAINING, 2022.
In another survey, this one about Philippine BTS fans, social interaction and recreational activities were both listed as ways that fandom supported participants’ mental health.
Despite being isolated from one another geographically due to the lockdown, the fans felt that BTS was with them throughout the pandemic, through their music, live videos, tweets, pictures, and even the mere thought of them. VANGUARDIA, MARC. “LOVE YOURSELF, BTS ARMY: PARTICIPATORY FANDOM AND AGENCY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.” PHILIPPINES COMMUNICATION SOCIETY REVIEW, 2021, 229.
These digital networks of intimacy allowed for comfort, happiness, and healing to be conveyed and received across miles in the physical realm and created imagined yet profound connections that acted as safe spaces for ARMYs online. VANGUARDIA, MARC. “LOVE YOURSELF, BTS ARMY: PARTICIPATORY FANDOM AND AGENCY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.” PHILIPPINES COMMUNICATION SOCIETY REVIEW, 2021, 231.
By seeing other ARMYs and interacting with them on various social networking sites, the (survey) participants felt less lonely as a part of a community of people who shared not only the same interest and admiration for BTS but also similar experiences regardless of their cultural, linguistic, gender, and other identifying background. (Participants) pointed out that relationships were formed not only as fans of the same idols but as individuals who were included in each other’s support systems. VANGUARDIA, MARC. “LOVE YOURSELF, BTS ARMY: PARTICIPATORY FANDOM AND AGENCY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.” PHILIPPINES COMMUNICATION SOCIETY REVIEW, 2021, 241-242
The individual activities and actions that the participants engaged in as fans of BTS served as a distraction from the bleak reality of the pandemic. By being occupied with tasks such as streaming, voting, and getting updated on the fandom over stan Twitter, the fans were able to focus on accomplishing things instead of dwelling on their problems and concerning themselves with the situation of the world around them. By being able to control something they found an anchor that was constant, and had a sense of agency in a time of almost complete uncertainty. (…) The participants exhibited a high level of consciousness of the positive effects and potential drawbacks of their engagement in the fandom. They recognized the various ways that their actions could affect their well-being, and adjusted accordingly by putting themselves in conducive situations that would provide them the greatest benefit. VANGUARDIA, MARC. “LOVE YOURSELF, BTS ARMY: PARTICIPATORY FANDOM AND AGENCY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.” PHILIPPINES COMMUNICATION SOCIETY REVIEW, 2021, 239-240.
Fandom might be seen then, as a culture that adapted well to the pandemic. It would be tempting to characterise academia as also not needing to change drastically in a world in lockdown.
Drawing a parallel between these two is not a new statement.
In some cases, we argue that academic research interests paralleled fannish passion. HAYASHI, AYA ESTHER. 2020. “REIMAGINING FAN STUDIES IN THE AGE OF COVID-19 AND BLACK LIVES MATTER.” TRANSFORMATIVE WORKS AND CULTURES, NO. 34. HTTPS://DOI.ORG/10.3983/TWC.2020.2029.
However, both fandom and academia have their issues, which were not only carried over into the pandemic but might have been amplified by it . As McMillan Cottom explained in a roundtable about the state of higher education,
Overall, most college leaders saw COVID-19 as an opportunity to do more of what they had already been doing. Schools that had wanted to respond to inequality doubled down on that. School that had been trending toward profit-seeking especially under the guise of a public institution-like Purdue and Arizona State -doubled down. SHENK, TIMOTHY, MAGGIE DOHERTY, NILS GILMAN, ADAM HARRIS, TRESSIE MCMILLAN COTTOM, AND CHRISTOPHER NEWFIELD. ACADEMI AFTER THE PANDEMIC: A ROUNDTABLE ON HOW COVID-19 HAS CHANGED AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES. OTHER. DISSENT, 2021.
(…) participatory culture of affiliation in the BTS ARMY fandom can be ambiguous at best in its effect on fan mental health. VANGUARDIA, MARC. “LOVE YOURSELF, BTS ARMY: PARTICIPATORY FANDOM AND AGENCY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.” PHILIPPINES COMMUNICATION SOCIETY REVIEW, 2021, 243.
Notwithstanding the positive impacts of involvement in BTS ARMY? The participants generally agreed that some other ARMYs can be very “toxic”, or overly competitive, intense, or aggressive in their way of supporting BTS and engaging in “fan wars” with fans of other groups. To address this problem, some fans distanced themselves from stan Twitter altogether, avoided “toxic” fans by curating the accounts they were following or accounts following them, or decided to temporarily leave or stayed only to focus on ARMY common goals true to the ideals of BTS: The process if compartmentalization of personal and fandom life and interactions between online ARMY friends and personal/in-real-life friends that some participants reported as coping mechanisms for their mental health were a steady reality in network society where inclusions and exclusions always came together. VANGUARDIA, MARC. “LOVE YOURSELF, BTS ARMY: PARTICIPATORY FANDOM AND AGENCY DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.” PHILIPPINES COMMUNICATION SOCIETY REVIEW, 2021, 243.
In a world so changed by the pandemic, looking forward, we cannot accept neither the idea that we can go back to normal, nor the idea that we have moved toward a digital utopia. Harris says,
During the protests and reckoning over systemic racism in American life over the past year, students have been a major part of the national energy. But they haven’t had the chance to be on campus, to be in spaces where they can organize. A lot of college leaders, particularly at predominantly white institutions, are very concerned about what is going to happen when students come back. I think a lot of energy that has been pent up over the last sixteen, seventeen months will reveal itself on campuses. SHENK, TIMOTHY, MAGGIE DOHERTY, NILS GILMAN, ADAM HARRIS, TRESSIE MCMILLAN COTTOM, AND CHRISTOPHER NEWFIELD. ACADEMI AFTER THE PANDEMIC: A ROUNDTABLE ON HOW COVID-19 HAS CHANGED AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES. OTHER. DISSENT, 2021.
We have to reflect on how to adapt to this world, possibly, how to use our current opportunities to change.
What practices can we introduce at conferences that don’t tokenize BIPOC scholars? (…) Let’s diversify editorial boards and conference planning committees. (…) Let’s create alternative funding for conferences and journals, to transform these practices from unremunerated service activities to activities where labor is honored. HAYASHI, AYA ESTHER. 2020. “REIMAGINING FAN STUDIES IN THE AGE OF COVID-19 AND BLACK LIVES MATTER.” TRANSFORMATIVE WORKS AND CULTURES, NO. 34. HTTPS://DOI.ORG/10.3983/TWC.2020.2029.
#fanhackers#fandom studies#academia#aya esther hayashi#timothy shenk#maggie doherty#nils gilman#adam harris#tressie mcmillan cottom#christopher newfield#marc vanguardia#katharina bögl#sandra naumann#lena matyjek#isabel dziobek#author: szabo dorottya
13 notes
·
View notes
Text
My new current household
** I Have been obsessed with @marilynjeansims & @bbygyal123's content lately, and it inspired me to create my new main household
Introducing : Camile Everett!
Zodiac Sign: Leo Birthday: August 13th Age: 26 Marital status: Single Occupation: Former Model Current Residence: Brindleton Bay Life Goals: "Find true happiness on my own."
Born into a wealthy family & raised in San Sequoia, Camile's life seemed straightforward and all set out for her. She would eventually become engaged to the "dashing" Christopher Newfield, who was the son of her father's closest and longest business partner, but on the day of the wedding, she was nowhere to be found. Both of her parents were furious, but little did they know that Camile's grandmother left in her will for Camile to inherit her summer home located all the way in Brindleton Bay. With the tension back home, Camile decided to head to the cozy coastal town and start anew.
#s4cc#simblr#sims 4 cc#my sims#sims 4 gameplay#sims 4 screenshots#the sims community#the sims 4#sims 4#camile everett#sims 4 story#new simblr#new sims blog#sims 4 screenies#sims 4 simblr#sims 4 lookbook#current household
7 notes
·
View notes
Photo
WASHED IN THE SALT It's no easy hike to reach the spot where the S.S. Princess Louise went down, all those years ago in 1883. It's a couple kilometres of raw and rugged coastline with no easy shortcut, about halfway between Point Prim and Culloden Road. It's a world that's windswept, weather-beaten, and utterly unwelcoming on an afternoon like this. Still, it seemed like an appropriate day to drag myself out here, misty rain blowing sideways and soaked to the skin. It's not half as rough as what those sailors endured, so perhaps it serves as some sort of tribute not to visit when the skies are clear and the seas are calm and still. Princess Louise was one of the early iron ships, built at the O'Brien yard in Maccan, before being sent to Scotland where her engines would be installed. She left port early on the morning of Sunday, December 2nd, being towed by the steamer Newfield. They were connected by a two-inch thick steel cable called a "hawser", which would have been more than enough in most seas. But a big storm hit around noon, when they were only halfway through the Bay of Fundy, so plans were made to go ashore. After searching and failing to find the mouth of the Annapolis Basin, they turned north for Saint John instead. Soon after this, the cable snapped, and that was the last the two boats saw of each other. With no engines on board, the Princess Louise stood no chance against the storm. They dropped anchor, but with the ship being only partially constructed, the chains were unattached, and sank straight to the seabed. The boat struck shore at 4AM. The men ran for the rigging and tried to lash themselves on, but most didn't make it. Captain Brown was later found hanging on a sharp outcropping, and the body of another officer was discovered in a crack beneath a large boulder. Others were drowned in the hold. Eight of the ten men died in those first few minutes. Richard Soy and Jim Daine managed to survive in the front ballast until the tide fell, waiting hours in the bitter late-autumn cold. Once the sun rose, they lowered themselves to the rocks, and headed up through four inches of snow into the forest. Soy pushed ahead after Daine fell, finally reaching a small farmhouse off Broad Cove Road. Christopher Stark took him in, then Stark and a neighbour went back to rescue Daine. Both men survived that night, but Jim Daine never fully recovered, and would die young a few years later. Richard Soy lived to be an old man, and in 1923 – the fortieth anniversary – went back to thank those who rescued him. He made the hike to visit this monument as well. Seventeen years later in the fall of 1900, the towing boat Newfield was lost as well. Just down the coast of Digby Neck, it ran aground through thick fog at White's Cove. No lives were lost. After efforts failed to tow it back to sea, the ship eventually broke in two and was salvaged. Those boats leave their memories and stories on this shore, like countless others lost, all the way up till today. You could hardly record every body buried at sea, every hard tale forgotten, washed in the salt. At least this one has something set in stone to recall it. Just inches from the high water line and tilting precariously – eventually, the ocean will take it too. June 6, 2023 Culloden, Nova Scotia Year 16, Day 5686 of my daily journal.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Ralph Waldo Emerson is the bard of the professional managerial class, his ideas of social subjectivity have led this class to deny freedom to themselves such that they don’t know how to wish that freedom be granted to others.
Christopher Newfield
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Great Mistake?
Sometimes things don’t work out because they are difficult or complicated. Sometimes they fail because of error or mistakes. And sometimes they don’t succeed because there isn’t interest or support.
Christopher Newfield is a professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and a leading scholar of universities. He oversees a really interesting blog on higher education, Remakin…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Photo
B&B: Populism // Rostow’s economics and Vietnam War // Informal economy grows // Universities’ privatization failures // Deficit hawks deceive you // Inequality // One-sided economists
> What is Populism? Its defining feature is not anti-elitism but anti-pluralism; it’s based on a fiction but it is not fictional politics — by Jan-Werner Müller
> A standard format of budget reporting is deceptive, but it works for the deficit hawks in economics and politics — by Dean Baker
> “Economics is so one-sided, I think, because it’s the rich who hire economists; it’s just as simple as that” — an interview with Moshe Adler
> W.W. Rostow’s economic theory and ideas helped persuade US Presidents that Vietnam War was right and just — by Joseph M. Long
> Informal Economy’s alternatives take root when capitalism fails: barter, time trading, and gifts in crumbling Detroit — by Valerie Vande Panne
> Universities tried the soft privatization, but that has failed to stabilize their finances and miseducated people about the social value of Higher Education — by Christopher Newfield
> Inequality is the topic of this illuminating issue of Economic Sociology European newsletter, edited by Olivier Godechot
17 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Giao dịch Bất động sản Quận Erie - Tin tức Buffalo Sau đây là các giao dịch bất động sản trên 5.000 đô la như được liệt kê trong hồ sơ của văn phòng thư ký Quận Erie trong tuần kết thúc vào ngày 20 tháng 12. ALDEN • 2323 Đường Wende, William C. Foley; Leonard A. Weisbeck III đến Thomas F. James, $ 208,000. • 1131 Two Rod Road, Gary N. Stoldt to Daniel Woloszyn, $ 62.500. • 1131 Two Rod Road, Lynn Stoldt to Daniel Woloszyn, $ 62.500. 012794 Tr đến Lisa A. Woodard; Steven J. Woodard, $ 7,700. AMHERST • 167-173 Miller Road, 167 Miller Road LLC đến Caroles Estates LLC, $ 1,812,000. • 138 Promenade Lane, James A. Materese; Virginia L. Materese đến Zoey Glick; Matthew Swerdlin, $ 565.000. • 254 Northill Drive, Marrano / marc Equity Corporation đến Jenneth C. Lane, $ 459,216. • Công viên 15 Bay Lea, Edwin Bailey đến Erin M. Slazak; Matthew F. Slazak, $ 423.000. • 129 Lord Byron Lane, Arline A. Engasser; Wayne D. Engasser đến Wade Bunz; Elizabeth C. Day, $ 390,000. • 90 Koster Row, Mark A. Deers to Ian C. Fasking; Carly M. Minderler, $ 329,900. • Tòa án 38 Thames, Jill Berman; Stephen Berman cho Angela Mekker; Christopher Mekker; Deborah Mekker; Mark Mekker, $ 329,800. • 65 Deville Circle, Kats Development LLC đến Joseph Patrick Cal; Kelly A. Cal, $ 320.000. • 125 Huxley Drive, Brendan Kelly; Elizabeth Kelly đến Teressa Flynn, $ 319.500. • 53 Tartan Lane, Johanna Oreskovic đến Colleen J. Madden; Patrick L. Madden, $ 311.000. • 90 Sylvan Parkway, Corn Hill Property Holdings LLC đến Plaza Group LLC, $ 290.000. • 218 Bentham Pkwy E, Colleen A. Kerr; Michael D. Kerr cho Michael A. Kugel, $ 288,900. • 217 Schoelles, Andrew D. Heim cho Lucas D. Vorpahl; Rachel M. Vorpahl, 280.000 đô la. • Northill Drive, Công ty cổ phần Marrano / marc cho Chelsea E. Gilbert; Richard N. Gilbert, $ 275,900. • 134 Wedgewood Drive, Jill M. Rank; Xếp hạng của Todd cho Carol L. Fuller, $ 275,000. • 33 Foxfire Drive, Gemma Bossi; Gregg M. Geraci; Herman C. Geraci; Jeffrey R. Geraci; Hoa hồng Ann Geraci cho Lynn M. Lopez, $ 275,000. • 40 Tristan Lane, Victor Cannarozzo Jr. đến Amanda M. Batt; Daniel A. Batt, $ 273.000. • 438 Sprucewood Terrace, Grady John Swearingen đến Staci Shick, $ 265.000. • 176 Đường Haussauer, Thomas M. Galdys đến Brian Meier; Hannah M. Meier, $ 257.500. • 128 Cherrywood Drive, Robert Rauh Family Living Trust 090994 Tr cho Sean T. Pellow; Meri J. Tomasulo-Pellow, 255.000 đô la. • 69 Berryman Drive, Anne M. Beiter to Clay E. Case; Megan C. Kuechle, 227.500 đô la. • 210 Oakwood Drive, Andrew S. Vaughn; Caila B. Vaughn đến Mark A. Leiter; Linda K. Ruisi-Leiter, 220.000 đô la. • 148 Ransom Oaks Drive, Lucy G. Braun cho Brian J. Minchen; Jacquelyn G. Minchen, 220.000 đô la. • 2463 Kensington Ave., Roberto A. Lleras đến Katharine Petrillo; Keith Petrillo, 209.000 đô la. • 278 Shady Grove Drive, Bey Bohannon đến Cody Romanos; Meghan Warnke, $ 208,000. • 116 Hamilton Drive, Sarah Bolt đến Johnathon N. Lumadue, 205.000 đô la. • 40 Park Drive, Eric Heffler cho Melissa Heffler; Kostantinos Tsigkrelis, 200.000 đô la. • 760 Robin Road, Donald R. Gerbracht đến Indhirani Balasundaram, 200.000 đô la. • 5854 Main St Unit 603, Judith Michael to Sharon Press, 200.000 đô la. • 5 Tòa án Harvard, Daniel Mcmahon; Mcmahon tin tưởng Tr vào Frances Carter-Johnson; John P. Johnson, 200.000 đô la. • 161 North Linden St., Julio Gonzalez đến Brendan F. Schober, 195.000 đô la. • 11 Đường Manning, James R. Neiler đến Brian Slaybaugh; Carolyn Slaybaugh, 194.200 đô la. • 89 Pearce Drive, Jill Morrison đến Pauline M. Kulchot, 170.100 đô la. • 176 Rosemont Drive, Sandra Carlucci; Pamela Derossi; Jodi Militello; Rhonda Trifilo cho Lisa K. Hamlin; Steven W. Hamlin, 170.000 đô la. • 90 Pearce Drive, Darren J. Jurewicz đến Andrea M. Beacham; Michael F. Beacham, 169.000 đô la. • 209 Hillcrest Drive, Rachel M. Gau; Lucas D. Vorpahl cho Justin K. Garus, 164.000 đô la. • 69 Nancy Lane, Karthic R. Raghupathi đến Dassalegn H. Taddess; Negat M. Tadesse, $ 162.500. • Tòa án 22 Castle, Ralph Meccay đến Brianna Marie Cimato, $ 162.000. • 1264 Dodge Road, Russell A. Bieger; Wayne E. Bieger đến Lise M. Michael, 160.000 đô la. • 183 Darwin Drive, Nancy Twombly; Susan Twombly đến 177 Darwin LLC, $ 159.000. • 72 Vòng hoa, Marcella A. Baumler cho Guo He; Melissa He, 158.000 đô la. • 86 Cindy Drive, Dolores M. Snyder tới Donald E. Manta, 155.000 đô la. • 18l Thomas Jefferson Lane, Daniel Jammal đến Diane Lorenzi, 127.000 đô la. • 492 Sweet Home Road, Michael S. Anasiewicz đến Teresa Maluegeg 100.500 đô la. • 3952 Ridge Lea Rd Đơn vị A, Kathleen A. Hutton đến Zachary Masiewicz, 86.000 đô la. • 25 Coolbrook Ct Đơn vị A, Janice J. Kapturowski; Ronald A. Kapturowski đến Anchor Family Real Real LLC, $ 78.500. • 97 Altair Drive, Ronen LLC đến Misbah Bhatti, $ 42,650. • Keph Dr Garage 39, Joanne M. Rich cho Linda Blasik, $ 6.000. AURORA / ĐÔNG AURORA • 156 Pratt St., Max R. Lafer; Michelle Lafer cho Colin Toolan, 48.500 đô la. • 51 Paine St., Colin Toolan cho Amy Sue Martin, $ 325.000. • 1535 Emery Road, Mark Kuschel; Sharon Kuschel đến Alexander Paul Jordan; Kali Ann Rizzo, $ 225,000. • 452 North St., Lois Claire Hensel đến Amy E. Holtz; Charles A. Holtz, 210.000 đô la. BOoston • 7510 Hạt dẻ, Karl Biggersetaff; Sandra M. Biggerstaff cho Laura R. Mulholland; Dylan M. Pfohl, 180.000 đô la. • Đường Vl West Tillen, Christine L. Rychlik; Daniel Rychlik đến Margaret L. Winnicki; Richard H. Winnicki, 94.500 đô la. • 5569 Đường Shero, Leslie C. Bloom; Michele L. Bloom đến Adam R. Cournan, 70.000 đô la. • Đất trống Cole Road, Hany Shehata đến Reynold H. Wierzba, 60.000 đô la. BUFFALO • 165 Summer St., Townsend Stephen C đến Tbjz Development LLC, 970.000 USD. • 32 Harbor Pointe, Elizabeth A. Vealey đến Elizabeth J. Hoak; Robert P. Hoak Jr., $ 565.000. • 148 South, Peter W. Rains to Jc Properties Qozb LLC, 480.000 đô la. • 166 Rachel Vincent Way, Marrano / marc Equity Corporation cho Andrew Lưu, 397.628 đô la. • 25 Covington, Stephen J. Duszynski ; Victoria J. Weise đến Bridget E. Brace-Macdonald; Brian A. Macdonald, 355.000 đô la. • 174 Chicago St., Chicago Fire LLC đến Jemals Hook & lad 8 LLC, $ 325.000. • 71 Livingston St., John J. Pantalena đến Alex Cuevas, $ 290.000. • 194 Voorhees Ave., Diana Lougen; James P. Lougen đến Shirley J. Burns; Carolyn Jordan, $ 288.000. • 186 Chapin Pkwy # 5, Giulio A. Santarosa cho Steven Dreisin; Rodica M. Tenenbaum, 285.000 đô la. • 488 Lưỡi liềm, Bridget E. Brace; Brian A. Macdonald đến Bá tước Cantwell III; Hy vọng M. Dunbar, $ 260.000. • 138 đồng cỏ, Delmas J. Costello; Delmas J. Costello Sr. đến Dale T. Hohl; Susan M. Hohl, 250.000 đô la. • 401 West Utica St., Angela Mosseau đến Aaron J. Brock-Huffman; Andrew D. Hiệu trưởng, $ 248,400. • 1998 South Park Ave., Daniel J. Bonner; John D. Bonner III; Kevin R. Bonner; Michael J. Bonner đến Mccarty Properties LLC, $ 233,900. • 723 Amherst St., Ashley Eisen; Ross Graney đến Kevin Martin, $ 230.000. • 238 Crestwood Ave., Dominic A. Pecoraro; Ignatius Pecoraro; Orazio F. Pecoraro; Peter J. Pecoraro; Vincent Pecoraro đến 2712 Đại lộ New York. LLC, $ 225,000. • 16 Bell Ave., Karen Wutz; Karen L. Wutz đến Davilyn Marie Stief; Kẻ trộm William Anthony II, 218.000 đô la. • 15 Tennyson Ave., Pamela A. Milkie; Ramon G. Milkie Jr. đến Joshua Jeff; Molly Jeff, $ 215.000. • 165 Fifteenth St., Anderson Place Development LLC đến Jonathan V. Gerber, 210.000 đô la. • 125 / 1g Edward, Beth A. Gần với Taylor L. Tobias, 209.900 đô la. • 587 West Ave., Ariel Franco Jr đến Craig N. Gardo, 200.000 đô la. • 144 Tây Nguyên, Maureen A. Mcc sẵn cho Ryan Kennedy, 200.000 đô la. • 49 Britt Ave., Megan E. Parkinson tới Nathan M. Manna, 195.000 đô la. • 40 Grooween St., Callie Georger; Michael C. Georger to Brooke A. Densing, 195.000 đô la. • 11 Robie Ave., Michelle Bennett-Stieglitz cho Bobby Anderson; Jamie Evan, 195.000 đô la. • 149 Đường gốm, David Scott Paulus; Staci Marie Tojek đến Kyle Anderson; Amanda L. Kenzler, $ 191.000. • 46 Vernon Place, Nancy L. Wakshull đến Eileen C. Berbary; Zachary Berbary, $ 181.000. • 226 Stevenson, Gino Zirpoli cho Alexander J. Lonczak; Sarah E. Mahoney, 180.000 đô la. • 51 Alamo P, Hiệp hội Giáo hội Công giáo La Mã St Agathas của Buffalo đến Alamo Archives LLC, 175.000 đô la. • 552 Marilla St., Michael A. Thomasulo đến Joseph W. Hollinger, 173.500 đô la. 3, Gary Leigh Quảng trường đến Vanessa C. Schmidt, $ 172.500. • 48 Nhà thờ Ấn Độ, Daniel R. Fitzpatrick đến Sean P. Corcoran, $ 170.000. • 161 Whitfield Ave., Rise Up Renovations LLC đến Alexandra L. Cox, $ 168.000. • 251 Columbus, Edward J. Baun II; Tracy A. Baun cho James J. Felschow, 165.000 đô la. • 422 Colvin Ave., Ramon G. Milkie; Vita M. Milkie đến Buffalo Renaissance Properties LLC, 165.000 đô la. • 291 Riley, Lee & vivian LLC đến Christopher J. Murray, 154.750 đô la. • 59 Columbus Ave., Amanda Batt; Daniel Batt đến William P. Davin; Amanda C. Mee, 149.350 đô la. • 356 Herkimer St., Tamla Moo; Soe Ngwe cho William Peri, 138.500 đô la. • 45 Doyle Ave., Paul Darling đến Day Wah, 137.000 đô la. • 226 Sanders, Lynn P. Craig đến Diamond Acer Inc, 135.000 đô la. • 129 Whitfield Ave., John J. Mckeone; Mary C. Mckeone cho Jonathan & elisabeth Langley 2017 Trust Tr, 129.900 đô la. • 215 Rhode Island St., 508 Plymouth LLC đến Djb Residences LLC, 120.000 đô la. • 117 Trang St., Richard M. Farkas; Richard Michael Farkas đến Kriti Dahal; Birat Kadariya, $ 120.000. • 179 Newfield, Phillip J. Ormsby cho Hser Eh; Hser Htoo, $ 116,000. • 411 Parkdale, Devin Eckert; Noreen Eckert; Devin Kelly đến Keith Pawlowski, $ 115.000. • 114 Ladner Ave., Mcdonald Trust 091009 Tr đến Kellen L. Pinkston, $ 114.000. • 1133 Tonawanda St., James D. Battaglia cho Abdulhadi Jassim, $ 110.000. • 743 Tifft WNY Properties LLC, 100.000 đô la. • 2450 Seneca St., John M. Mullins Jr. đến Clovis Daniels III, 100.000 đô la. • 335 Austin St., Sally S. Jorani đến Mohamad Y. Yakub, 99.000 đô la. • 279 Weston Ave., Ugr Giới hạn LLC đến Anis Aba Zaid, 95.500 đô la. • 681 Northumberland Ave., Jason Shakeel Mahmood; Tahir Mahmood to Jermaine D. Brown, 93.000 đô la. • 2293 Niagara St., Michelle L. Carey to Chri Moo, 91.000 đô la. • 333 Vermont, Denise Nichols cho Md Touhidul Hồi giáo; Md Shahnur Talukder, 85.000 đô la. • 318 Woodside Ave., David M. Tuần; John L. Tuần,; Michael L. Tuần; Robert B. Tuần tới Hook & Lad Development LLC, 85.000 đô la. • 63 Littlefield, Debra Chillis đến Farjana Akter; Mohammed Manik, 81.100 đô la. • 187 Sumner, Robert M. Ciesielski; Andrew Smith; Andrew W. Smith gửi Ngân hàng Hoa Kỳ NA, $ 80,153. • 789 Glenwood Ave., Armo Holdings LLC đến Ahamed Mohammad Hassan Sedik, $ 78.000. • 7 Lilac St., Dawn M. Rogalski; Steven R. Teeft cho Ashley Walker; Robert T. Walker, 75.000 đô la. • 145 Cáp St., Michael A. Federici đến Tarsi L. Nathan, 75.000 đô la. • 584 Utica St West, Commonwealth Properties Lc to Buffalo Renaissance Properties LLC, 72.000 đô la. • 219 French St., Ahmed Bhuiyan ; Mohammed Yasin đến Khan Md Azmal Hossain; Sonia Khan, 72.000 đô la. • 36 Custer, James M. Joyce đến Kaijar Ahmed, 70.000 đô la. • 60 Clayton St., Mark J. Schlant đến Thui Lawn Mathning, 68.000 đô la. • 60 Clayton St., Cynthia S. Farney; Roger J. Farney III; Roger J. Farney Jr. đến Thui Lawn Mathning, 68.000 đô la. • 25 Pulaski St., Anthony Post; Gloria M. Đăng lên Barry J. Wilkins; Jamie E. Wilkins, 65.000 đô la. • 249 Madison, Evelyn Hall đến Công ty Bất động sản Quốc tế, 62.000 đô la. • 312 Weston, Mahabbat Ali Akhund đến Sobila Properties Inc, 56.000 đô la. • 114 Spann, Cecile M. Meyer cho Bank of America NA, $ 50,648. • Công viên 118 South, Mueller Ben Kurt; Công ty ủy thác vốn chủ sở hữu dba; Sterling ủy thác cho Darryl Carr; Công viên Ave. Estates LLC, 50.000 đô la. • 452 Willett St., Third World Holdings LLC đến Rj Fitz Properties LLC, 50.000 đô la. • 135 Sweet St., Jobrul Amhed đến Shahana Properties LLC, 50.000 đô la. • 74 Decker, Ivory L. Bouyer cho Queen City Invest LLC, 50.000 đô la. • 132 Royal, Sandra L. Williams đến Meira Thực phẩm LLC, 50.000 đô la. • 74 Howell, Sandra L. Williams; Sandra Long Williams đến Meira Thực phẩm LLC, $ 50.000. • 565 Walden, Mohammed Ismail đến Zulakha Morris, $ 48.000. • 944 West, Dyl Realty LLC đến Raghad T. Dhaifallah, $ 48.000. • 51 Moreland, John J. Sotack cho Rza Group Inc. 46.000 đô la. • 39 Manitoba St., Hook Handyman Service LLC đến Hillel Goral, 45.000 đô la. • 1031 East Lovejoy St., Third World Holdings LLC đến Rj Fitz Properties LLC, 45.000 đô la. • 18 Spaulding St., Third World Holdings LLC đến Rj Fitz Thuộc tính LLC, 45.000 đô la. • 57 Schiller, 35 Sayre LLC cho Công ty quản lý tài sản Ababil, 45.000 đô la. Gibson St., Angelo Quattrociocchi đến Sunshine Buffalo Inc, $ 42,602. • 394 Dearborn, Frederick J. Lynch; Mary E. Lynch đến Four Points Property Management LLC, $ 40.000. • 164 Kilhoffer, Công ty ủy thác vốn chủ sở hữu; Regina M Neff Ira (200355483) Ben đến Abu Sufian, $ 40.000. • 355 Longnecker St., Annette Glowka; Susan Karalus cho Kats Development LLC, $ 37.000. • 41 Jones, Michael A. Seaman; Thành phố Buffalo cho Tập đoàn Amanut, 37.000 đô la. • 186 Barnard St., Sonny Nguyễn đến Bích-Dao Thi Tran, 35.000 đô la. • 650 Utica E, Md Abu Naser đến Parvin Aktar; Md Azgar Hossain, 35.000 đô la. • 111 Shumway St., Gold Rock Properties WNY LLC đến Darren Martin; Gisele Martin, 35.000 đô la. • 43 Fox, Mary A. Carter đến Mohammed Ahmed, 35.000 đô la. • 262 Sobieski, Kenneth M. Mazur đến Syed U. Qadri, 35.000 đô la. • 34 Reed St., April M. Thompson đến 4 Linc Inc. 35.000 đô la. • 55 Hồng, David Hayes đến Rosa Rosado, 34.400 đô la. • 111 Jones St., Deucemont LLC đến Ida Munga; Victor Mwanzo, 34.000 đô la. • 198 Jewett Parkway, Jennifer L. Schaffstall đến James A. Schaffstall, 33.700 đô la. • 191 Newburgh Ave., Michael Heflin; Tami Heflin đến Umma S. Shazia, $ 32.500. • 233 Dutton Ave., Jerry C. Thomas đến Arif Shakil; Syeda Tarannum, 30.000 đô la. • 137 Clarence, Oneil Brown đến Ahmed Bhuiyan; Mohammed Yasin, 30.000 đô la. • 83 Clarence Ave., Leslie Brown đến Ap Multibuz Inc, 30.000 đô la. • Đất trống Peremont Place, Nhà thờ Baptist Cazenovia Park cho Edward Weber, 30.000 đô la. • 283 Leroy Ave., Artis L. Pierce; Tara Y. Đâm vào Jayed Ahmed; Numan Ahmed, 29.000 đô la. • 297 Đinh lăng, Karen M. Herman; Richard E. Herman đến Roebling LLC, $ 28.500. • 32 Woodside, Hamilton Enterprises LLC đến Vin7 LLC, $ 23.000. • 530 Busti Ave., Antonino Pecoraro; Michael Pokriki cho Người chăn cừu & Peterson Properties LLC, $ 18,900. • Cuộc diễu hành 85 Đông, Demario Bonner; Johnny Lee Bonner đến Aquas Corp, 17.500 đô la. • 415 Winslow Ave., Mahabbat Ali Akhund đến Sobila Properties Inc, 16.900 đô la. • 74 Lemon, Michael A. Seaman; Thành phố Buffalo cho Michelle Mayo, $ 16.500. • 103 Thomas St., James L. Murphy đến Richard P. Markert, $ 15.000. • 292 Stockbridge, Alfred T. Warren đến Kamrun Nahar, $ 8,500. • 38 Royal Av, Kervin Mateo cho Michael Tôn giáo, 8.000 đô la. CHEEKTOWAGA • 3085 Harlem Road, Cheektowaga I Medical Properties LLC đến Pmak Cheektowaga LLC, 36.000.000 USD. • 50-950 Thruway Plaza Drive, G & i Ix Empire Thruway Plaza LLC đến Carrols LLC, $ 1.200.000. • 60 Hickory Grove Marshall, $ 212.500. • 109 Preston St., David M. Wilkosz; Judith A. Wilkosz cho Steve Simme, $ 185,000. • 93 Sebring Drive, Craig M. Emminger; Kimberly Lewis đến Qin Yong Huang, 180.000 đô la. • 203 Lydia Lane, Christopher J. Santora đến Steven J. Herod, 180.000 đô la. • 16 Fairoaks Lane, Joseph A. Devincentis; Margaret L. Devincentis; Kathleen Ann Lyons; Patricia Cecelia Russ đến Jerry Sharpe, $ 169,900. • Sân thượng 32 Manlon, Michelle L. Adams; Heather L. Morgante đến Dimond M. Truesdale; Michael L. Truesdale Jr., 169.900 đô la. • 118 Nam Prince Drive, Jacqueline M. Amodeo; Anthony S. Labarbara; Anthony Labarbara đến Craig M. Emminger; Kimberly A. Emminger, 168.450 đô la. • 941 Tòa án Sherwood, George Poulos đến Kelsey Leon-Wedmore, 168.000 đô la. • 112 Đại lộ Greenway, Eye On Design Homes Inc đến Nancy E. Highway, 165.000 đô la. • 4 Joseph St., Patricia A. Kupkowski ; Sharon M. Kupkowski đến Pháp Khanal; Yam Khanal, 164.000 đô la. • 184 Diane Drive, Harry D. Smith đến Matthew G. Reinbold; Tháp Patricia L., $ 163.500. • 94 Yvette Drive, Kelsey Fitzgerald; Andrew Fogelsonger đến Joseph A. Todoro, 157.500 đô la. • 1684 Kensington Ave., Brian P. Meier đến Jacobi Whitfield, 157.000 đô la. • Đường 22 Yorktown, Lisa M. Voelker đến Rachel M. Stotz, 153.000 đô la. • 74 Judith A, Renee Carroll ; Irene Romanowski; Robert Romanowski đến Mariola Niewiadomski, 150.000 đô la. • 108 Cornell Drive, Lynn Karp đến Andrew Fogelsonger; Kelsey Fogelsonger, 150.000 đô la. • 180 Cass Ave., Alan F. Zdon; Sharon M. Zdon đến Jacob Walkow; Sara Walkow, 149.000 đô la. • 390 Mcnaughton Ave., Richard Lasker; Ying Lasker cho Jocelyn J. Folaron, $ 147.000. • 151 Kilbourne Road, Joseph A. Oscarier; Linda A. Oscar cho Bridget D. Randle, $ 145.000. • 236 Poinciana Parkway, Christopher E. Boyd; Miranda L. Boyd cho Adam M. Ryan; Richard J. Ryan, $ 145,000. • 57 đường Meadowlawn, Tracy L. Bieber đến Arielle N. Brown, $ 143.500. • Ngõ 82 Constance, Gerald W. Felckowski; Michelina Odonnell cho Callie J. Weigand, 140.000 đô la. • 1372 Đường Harlem, Thuộc tính Cao nguyên của Buffalo Inc đến Andrew Ha Sr., 135.000 đô la. • 58 Satinwood Drive, Joyce Ritenburg; Jean M. Tocha cho Michael R. Beutler, 132.000 đô la. • 28 Yvonne Ave., Carol Skotnicki; David M. Skotnicki đến Erika Skotnicki, 125.000 đô la. • 329 Mcnaughton Ave., Audrey L. Latza đến Jeffrey P. Torgalski, 122.000 đô la. • 157 Briarcliff, Kevin Seaman Ira Ben; Công ty ủy thác vốn chủ sở hữu đối với Courtney E. Helinski, $ 115.000. • 35 Mafalda Drive, Joseph P. Laporta; Susan M. Laporta đến Abdulaziz Alharbi, 112.500 đô la. • 44 Rumford St., Sue A. Winklhofer đến Ryan P. Mooney, 112.500 đô la. • 1194 Đại lộ đô thị George, Chehabi Catherine El; Barbara M. Lynch; Barbara Zygmunt cho Gary M. Ryan; Karen M. Ryan, 104.000 đô la. • 76-78 Đại lộ đô thị George, Thuộc tính vùng cao của Buffalo Inc đến Andrew Ha Sr., 100.000 đô la. • 1071 Cleveland Drive, Michele A. Meldrum đến Joshua C. Crosby, 96.000 đô la. • 10 Village Lane, Ngăn xếp Lorraine; Richard E. Stack đến Md Mayen Uddin, 95.300 đô la. • Đường thế kỷ 114, Chứng chỉ tài sản bảo đảm vốn chủ sở hữu sê-ri 2006-3 Tr; Chứng khoán tài sản đảm bảo tài sản của Wells Fargo 2006-3 Tin tưởng vào Yesmin Management LLC, 95.000 đô la. • 79 Le Havre Drive, Carol J. Calo cho Mathew Matla, 92.000 đô la. • 232 Curtiss St., Terena K. Clore to Kenneth R. Murphy, 85.000 đô la. • 147 Gualbert Ave., Ruth Peters đến Kanij FHRa Nijum; Mohammed L. Rahman, $ 80,250. • 41 Đường Meaford, Monir Hossain; Nundes A. Hossain đến Yesmin Management LLC, $ 80,096. • 186 Willowlawn Parkway, Angel C. Cruz; Lorraine M. Cruz đến Mohammed Delowar Hossain; Nowshara J. Hossain, 65.000 đô la. • 124 Willowlawn Pky, Helen M. Arent to Todd R. Benzin, 58.000 đô la. • 32 Audet Drive, Nicole L. Guyer; Carrie M. Guyer-Woodard; Nicole L. Guyer-Woodard; Carrie M. Woodard cho Nicole L. Guyer-Woodard, $ 11,512. CÂU HỎI • 10390 Main St., Rbj Properties LLC để hoàn thành 7 thuộc tính LLC, $ 912.000. • 9684 Cobblestone Drive, Andrea T. Esch; Andrew E. Esch đến Adam E. Chipalowsky; Kristen L. Chipalowsky, $ 765.000. • 9674 Tòa án Aster vàng, Frank J. Marracino; Wende Anne Marracino đến Bình minh M. Nicosia; Michael L. Nicosia, $ 730.000. • 8972 Marcos Hideaway, Forbes Homes Inc cho Christopher J. Rogers; Erika A. Rogers, $ 625,894. • 5417 Alderbrook Lane, Dog Bone Partners LLC đến Darlene R. Witkowski; Thomas H. Witkowski, 597.620 đô la. • 8353 Black Walnut Drive, Lisa Paige; Sean Paige đến Alexander Stremiakov; Volha Stremiakova, $ 549,900. • 4667 Brentwood Drive, Adam E. Chipalowsky; Kristen L. Wilson đến Joseph P. Heins; Maria M. Heins, $ 460.000. • 9250 Qua Cimato, Anna M. Diliberto; Joseph J. Diliberto đến Paul A. Lilley; Zografia Lilley, $ 417.500. • 4561 Gentwood Drive, Gentwood Development LLC đến David P. Jernigan, 394.450 đô la. • 5391 Briannas Nook, Marrano / marc Equity Corporation cho Gary W. Derner; Sharon Derner, 385.834 đô la. • 5652 Ferncrest Ct -b, Biệt thự tại Spaulding Green LLC đến Mary E. Levea, 379.424 đô la. • 5035 Glenwood Drive, Caleb A. Hamlin; Jennifer L. Hamlin đến Craig Zimpfer, 335.000 đô la. • 5550 Via Marina Drive, Daniel A. Parisi; Marilyn E. Parisi đến Mkj Buffalo Group Inc, $ 322,000. • 10065 Clarence Center Road, Laurence W. Graves; Lee Ann Graves đến Heath R. Marchand; Sarah E. Marchand, $ 275,000. • 8285 Đường Greiner, Bryan P. Lorenz; Jennifer A. Lorenz đến Christopher G. Gromek, 255.000 đô la. • 8947 ngõ gỗ, Melissa M. Haentges; Sean M. Haentges cho Jessica Costantino; Gary Westberg, $ 248,000. • 10190 Clarence Center Road, Keith J. Byers đến Michele C. Brayley, 238.000 đô la. • 5462 Village Station Circle, Peter T. Loconti đến Margot Bailey, 230.000 đô la. • 4299 Roxbury Drive, Heath R. Marchand; Sarah Newman đến Deborah M. Delucia, 230.000 đô la. • 7345 Đường vận chuyển, Kim N. Athans đến Wendybird Properties LLC, 180.000 đô la. • 10745 Main St., Newhouse Gordon LLC đến Derose Properties LLC, 117.000 đô la. COLDEN • 8675 Thác Road, Tod D. Smith đến Max Brock, $ 160.000. • 8321 Knapp Road, Richard J. Maciejewski; Suzanne M. Maciejewski đến Dylan J. Kerlin; Shannon M. Miller, $ 121,191. THU THẬP • Đất trống Wilson Road, Emil Filkorn; Sigrid Filkorn cho John R. Pusztay; Loriann Pusztay, 47.322 đô la. CONCORD • 10901 Đường Glenwood, Nancy A. Ballantyne; Carolyn E. Leed đến Deutsche Bank Company Trust Tr; Các khoản phải thu bảo đảm tài sản được bảo đảm LLC Trust 2006-Wm3 và xem, $ 321,569. • 36 Edelweiss Drive, Wesley Burris; Lynn Goble cho Chad Beers, 110.000 đô la. EDEN • 4254 Mary Drive, Lina Capital LLC đến Bradley Schreiber, 158.000 đô la. ELMA • 1291 Đường Jamison, Sara A. Meiler; Steven M. Meiler cho Nicole Serio Nhu cầu bổ sung của bên thứ nhất Tr, Trust, $ 689.500. • 1540 Billington Road, Gail M. Magdon; David R. Petrille đến Bowen Road Properties LLC, $ 310.000. • 101 Fairway Drive, John T. Nowak Sr.; Rosemarie Nowak cho David Skotnicki, 265.000 đô la. • 661 Stolle Road, B & e Trust không thể hủy ngang 090415 Tr cho Joseph A. Oscarier; Linda Oscarier, 250.000 đô la. • 1030 Đường Ostrander, Sandra J. Junkin đến Angela L. Patti, 245.000 đô la. • 1840 Đường Bullis, Julianna T. Gauthier đến Ellen Durkin, 236.100 đô la. MỌI NGƯỜI • 8756 Đường Bờ Hồ, Kenneth R. Wyman; Phyllis M. Wyman cho Eric Heffler, 525.000 đô la. • 6789 Đường Derby, Jessica L. Persichini; John J. Persichini cho David C. Weber, 227.000 đô la. • 875 Đường Bennett, Adalbert Rojek III đến Jean C. Cosenza, 186.170 đô la. • 9405 Đường Versailles, Roseann Zielinski; Thomas J. Zielinski đến Thomas G. Colligan, 170.000 đô la. • 600 Milsom Parkway, Betty A. Waddell; Ernest J. Waddell cho Daniel P. Duhan; Laura S. Duhan, 130.000 đô la. ĐẢO GRAND • 126 Country Club Drive, John W Stickl Construction Co Inc đến Fred B. Klein, 295.000 đô la. • 3427 Stony Point Road, Alfred O. Minklei; Alfred Minklei; Elizabeth N. Minklei cho Emily A. Carowick; Fred M. Carowick Jr., 270.000 đô la. • 1806 Đường Stony Point, Jennifer Schneider; Kimberly A. Schrey; Kimberly Schrey; Geraldine Witkowski cho Lisa M. Grochowski; Michael L. Grochowski, 199.000 đô la. • 2610 Đường cơ sở, Elsie O. Gasbarro đến Richard S. Campagna Sr.; Rosemary A. Campagna, 165.000 đô la. • 3325 Wallace Drive, Pretium Mortimbition Trust Tr to Stephen Liebler, 105.000 đô la. • Đất trống 34 Eagleview Drive, Whitehaven Properties LLC đến Betty A. Armenia; Joseph P. Armenia Jr., 40.000 đô la. HAMBURG • Đất trống Đại lộ Tây Nam, Hamburg Land Associates LLC đến Jl Hamburg 1301 LLC, $ 575.000. • 5460 Cooper Ridge, Forbes Homes Inc đến Olejniczak 2018 Family Trust, $ 419.921. • 5197 South Park, Elaine Benes; Randolph F. Benes để nuôi dưỡng Buffalo Inc, 400.000 đô la. • 2436 Hobblebush Lane, Marrano / marc Equity Corporation đến Cindy L. Adymy; John J. Adymy III, $ 384.900. • 75 Elmview Ave., 75 Elmview Associates LLC đến J Milligan Properties LLC, $ 365.000. • 4750 Clifton Parkway, Arthur Petch đến Deborah J. Jablonski; John R. Keem Jr., 363.000 đô la. • 2428 Hobblebush Lane, Marrano / marc Equity Corporation đến Tina M. Monaco; Vincent Monaco Jr., $ 305,511. • 2924 Amsdell Road, Christopher M. Triviz đến Deborah L. Roehm, $ 290.000. • 4550 Tomaka, Raymond suchan cho Brenda A. Gyer; Richard T. Gyer, 280.000 đô la. • 47 Allie Lane, Ryan Homes; Ryan ngôi nhà của New York đến Christopher Pendergast, $ 245,450. • 22 Stelle St., Ryan ngôi nhà; Ryan ngôi nhà của New York đến Charles W. Boehler; Pamela Fechter-Boehler, $ 239,550. • 55 Allie Lane, Ryan ngôi nhà; Ryan ngôi nhà của New York đến Dawn St Eoiff; Eo biển Ronald, 238.060 đô la. • 3367 Creekview, Carol B. Dane cho Emily Bauer; Eric Bauer, 222.000 đô la. • 51 Allie Lane, Nvr Inc; Nhà Ryan; Ryan ngôi nhà của New York đến Elmer Fos; Maria Fox, $ 220,575. • 4929 Roseview Ave., Gerald M. Hartnett; Renee S. Hartnett cho Anthony J. Mingarelli Jr., 199.700 đô la. • 4575 Parker Road, Russell E. Fullone to Matthew Cook, 195.000 đô la. • 4092 Highview Parkway, Mark Tredinnick cho Ryan P. Cole, 195.000 đô la. • 1571 Sundance Trl, Iva J. Bailey-Pháo; William R. Cannon đến Grace A. Christiansen; Ryan P. Walchot, 195.000 đô la. • 4417 Stratford Terr, Linda A. Decarlo to Susan L. Grady; John M. Seward, $ 170.000. • Đường mòn 3605 Connie, Patricia T. Fedele đến Baun Edward John II; Tracy A. Baun, 165.000 đô la. • 3966 Yale Ave., Cheryl L. Pulinski; Paul S. Pulinski cho Michael Morgante, 157.500 đô la. • 4793 Chapman Parkway, Carol J. Sutfin; Richard D. Sutfin đến Stephanie L. Duffany, 155.000 đô la. • 5502 Đường Rogers, Dennis E. Fabin; Patricia A. Krakowski đến Erika Aeryn Mirossay, $ 151,050. • 85 Browning Drive, Carl E. Wahl; Hoa hồng Mary Wahl; Rosemary Wahl cho Angela Lambrix; Brett L. Lambrix, 150.100 đô la. • 4602 Chapman Parkway, Elizabeth A. Taylor; Michael E. Taylor đến Marissa S. Taylor, 144.000 đô la. • 424 Pleasant Ave., Laelia LLC đến Rita J. Hagelin, 116.000 đô la. • 69 Newton Road, Patricia A. Tomaka; Robert E. Tomaka đến Richard R. Tomaka, 100.000 đô la. • 3692 First St., Nasser Saeed to Holley Mann; Steven Mann, 78.000 đô la. • 64 Allie Lane, Country Lawn Associates đến Ryan ngôi nhà của New York, 48.000 đô la. • 2700 Riverton Ave., Cindy Staffeldt; Lloyd Staffeldt; Terry Staffeldt đến Sonia Perez, 47.500 đô la. • Đất trống Holly Place, Robert G. Wolfe đến Elaine Radder; Mark J. Radder, 12.500 đô la. HÀ LAN • 9737 Warner Bay Road, David C. Hall đến Raymond suchan, $ 290.000. • 7744 Vermont Hill Road, Gregory G. Ruchser đến Denielle A. Swinarski; Steven Swinarski II, $ 6.000. LACKAWANNA • 51 Burke Drive, Mobarhan & burke LLC đến Fawaz Kaid, 145.000 đô la. • 122 West Elmview Ave., Mark T. Pcionek tới Ramsey Nagi Trust 040219 Tr, 145.000 đô la. Caitlin M. Garry, 135.000 đô la. • 112 Milnor Ave., Susan M. Terzian đến Jeremy D. House; Amy L. Troy, 125.000 đô la. • 218 Warsaw, Denise A. Bociek; Richard E. Bociek đến Amanda K. Jedraszczak, $ 103,880. • Địa điểm 24 Edgewood, Richard Gasiorowski; Sophia E. Gasiorowski đến Abdulnaser A. Abdulaziz; Samar Hassan, 74.000 đô la. • 176 Wilmuth Ave., Gerald Gladney; Bức tường Carolyn đến Petra Z. Gayton; Gregorio Matta Nokers, 50.000 đô la. • 33 Norman Way, Thành phố Lackawanna đến Brandon Falbo; Shannon Falbo, $ 22.000. LANCASTER • 11 Tòa án Bridgwater, David P. Jernigan đến Marybeth Gianni; Dennis Komrek, $ 310.000. • 1338 Đường chuộc, Derrick W. Linde; Derrick W. Linde Jr. đến Matthew Linde; Michael Linde, 240.000 đô la. • 5291 William St., James Edward Benz; Benz M. Margaret; Mary Margaret Benz; Patrick Gerard Benz; Paul Gerald Benz; Terry Raymond Benz đến Christian Sậy; Jillian Zymanek, $ 233,900. • 310 Broezel Ave., Suzanne E. Cruz đến Mia Christopher; Morgan J. Christopher, $ 197.500. • 15 Ivy Way, Carol A. Casey; James F. Casey Jr. đến James A. Bistoff, $ 172.000. • 6020 Genesee St., Geraldine E. Reigle; Milton J. Reigle cho Christopher Eric Boyd; Miranda Lee Boyd, 88.900 đô la. • 0 Đường vỉa hè, Tập đoàn cung cấp khí đốt nhiên liệu quốc gia cho Trung tâm lưu trữ Alden Self LLC, 34.000 đô la. MARILLA • 2608 Đường Ba Rod, Margaret M. Thompson-Vaccaro đến Peter John Horn, 133.000 đô la. • Đất trống Bullis, Chris A. Huston; Rob J. Huston; Tad S. Huston; Cindy L. Nowak đến Toffoli 2017 Family Trust, 75.000 USD. • 1064 Đường Four Rod, Daniel G. Tiện dụng cho Anita M. Foss; Dale R. Foss, 60.000 đô la. BẢN TIN MỚI • 12586 Đường Meahl, Nancy E. Ohara; James D. Pixley đến Victoria P. Donnelly; David Neurohr, $ 185,000. • 11825 Đường chính, Carol Ann Sauer đến Rock Garden Properties LLC, $ 165,000. PHÍA BẮC • 3217 Langford Road, Charles A. Richmond; Mary J. Richmond; Charles A & mary J Richmond Tin tưởng có thể hủy ngang Tr cho Michaela A. Richmond, 35.000 đô la. ORCHARD PARK • 500 Sterling Drive, Orchard Park I Medical Properties LLC đến Pmak Orchard Park LLC, $ 9.700.000. • 16 Aspen Lane, Oak Orchard Development LLC đến Maria L. Wood; Wood R. Christopher, $ 616,720. • 7 Fox Drive Drive, Cheryl M. Patton; Đánh dấu G. Patton cho Charles Key; Jessica Key, 360.000 đô la. • 3920 Taylor Road, Ủy ban phòng cháy chữa cháy quận Park Park đến Timbury LLC, 350.000 đô la. • 103 Burbank Drive, Thomas Turk đến Anne M. Kidney; Dennis D. Thận, 350.000 đô la. • 22 Green Lake Drive, Marilyn J. Pelleschi; Paul R. Pelleschi cho Jessica L. Persichini; John J. Persichini, $ 312.000. • 4 Timberlake Drive, Gale L. Genco; Thomas J. Genco đến Carol O. Strauch; Daniel W. Strauch, $ 293.000. • 17 ngõ Wellington, Anne M. Thận; Dennis D. Thận đến Carey C. Beyer; Grace E. Golando, $ 275,000. • 170 Velore Ave., James Selice; Michelle R. Selice cho Jeffrey A. Zimmerman; Kara S. Zimmerman, $ 174.000. • 5540 Lake Ave., Christine Lis; Roger J. Lis đến Amy Lynn Szyszkowski, 160.000 đô la. • 192 Velore Ave., Kara S. Parkinson; Jeffrey A. Zimmerman đến Megan Parkinson, $ 131.500. SARDINIA • 10170 Đường Vịnh Warner, Kathleen L. Newman; Ralph T. Newman đến Palmer sữa Farms LLC, $ 120.000. THÀNH PHỐ TONAWANDA • 141 Clinton St., Gary M. Bisone; Mary Lynne Bisone cho Christopher P. Heyer, 225.000 đô la. • 30 Fillmore Ave., David N. Kuczkowski; Peter K. Kuczkowski; Thomas E. Kuczkowski đến Jc Tonawanda Tower Qozb LLC, 165.000 đô la. • 149 Clinton St., Gary M. Bisone; Mary Lynne Bisone cho Daniel P. Walters, 160.000 đô la. • 91 Đường Frederick, Justin Dyson; Lacey Huss cho Paul Darling, $ 145.000. • 166 Canton, Joann K. Mileham; Jack D. Parmentier; James R. Parmentier; Robert C. Parmentier cho Rachel M. Carroll, 136.000 đô la. • 196 Walter Ave., Keith G. Harter đến Stanley A. Musielak, 127.000 đô la. • Đường 116 Frederick, John Garner Lawrence; Karen E. Lawrence đến Brian Zwack, $ 110,600. • 394 Fletcher St., Linda Volmrich cho Jane M. Meer, $ 108.000. • 18 Fremont St., Thomas J. Makar cho Catherine E. Horton; Joshua P. Horton, 106.000 đô la. • 19 Fillmore Ave., 316 Fletcher LLC đến Jc Tonawanda Tower Qozb LLC, 106.000 đô la. • 80 Canton St., Ryan Leonard; Lillian E. Simon đến Lmb Capital Inc, 102.203 đô la. • 66 Coshway Place, Steven M. Sommers đến Casey Deuser; Peter G. Sivu, 90.566 đô la. • Đường Willowbend, Meghan J. Jopp đến Oa Buffalo IV LLC, 80.000 đô la. • 20 Dexter St., Karen Koch đến Stephen Didas; Susan Didas, 55.000 đô la. TONAWANDA • 1609 Kenmore Ave., Power International Inc đến Jasnov Realty LLC, $ 273.000. • 93 Forbes Ave., Gloria Sanders-Wingrove; Daniel Wingrove đến Monica C. Biggie; Marc R. Dratch, $ 225,600. • 161 Raintree Parkway, Suzanne M. Smith đến Kris V. Irwin, $ 222,000. • 103 Green Tree Road, Daniel R. Hanna đến Jamie Garrow; Jessica Garrow, $ 185,297. • 532 Moore Ave., Lindsey A. Knoph đến Travis Terreberry, $ 175.000. • 103 Mayfield Ave., Megan Baumann đến Dominic J. Eusanio, 155.000 đô la. • Đại lộ 319 Parkhurst, Christopher P. Sajda; Teresa M. Siminski đến Heather A. Kowalewski, 152.000 đô la. • 84 Melody Lane, Mark K. Oetinger; Paul K. Oetinger cho Sarah M. Bertram, $ 145,516. • 280 Đại lộ Victoria, Michael A. Kugel đến Grace Butler; Matthew Butler, $138,000.• 76 Linden Ave., Jennie J. Lee to Sondra Lee Forgie, $136,900.• 107 Lyndale Ave., Nicholas Kozminski; Jonathan Kurtz to Denis Kulev, $125,000.• 969 Parker Boulevard, Edwin C. Anker III; Lorettann Anker; Cathleen L. Crieco; Susan L. Esford to Sead Balic, $125,000.• 55 Delaware Road, Michael J. Lococo; Sally Lococo; Thomas C. Lococo to Caroline Horrigan-Maurer; Paul Maurer, $125,000.• 137 Midland Ave., Huda Mahmood Hebeeb to Michael Hamilton, $105,000.• 439 Woodstock Ave., Hoover Irrevocable Trust Tr to Pm Property Solutions LLC, $90,000.• 362 Harrison Ave., Frank S. Wojcik Jr.; Michael J. Wojcik to Aleksandr Livshits; Marina Livshits; Leonid Pais, $80,000.• 428 Mang Ave., Joseph R. Teglash; Leonard Zaccagnino to Allison Rauch; Scott Rauch, $69,800.• 86 Somerton Ave., Timothy James Andruschat; Jason Barbarino; Jason Barbrino to 6831 Seneca St. LLC, $67,101.• 340 Floradale Ave., Thomas S. Abate; Diana L. Grenier to Diana L. Grenier, $44,000. WALES• 6595 Meadow Lane, Jessica L. Molino; John P. Molino to School Gow, $300,000.• 11822 Carpenter Road, Delores A. Wild; Robert W. Wild to Kathleen T. Wild; Robert W. Wild Jr., $189,000. WEST SENECA• 39 Tracy Lynn Lane, Stephen J. Lanza to Nicole L. Larusch; Robert F. Larusch, $270,000.• 294 Oakbrook Drive, David H. Cook; Melissa D. Cook to Cartus Financial Corporation, $233,000.• 294 Oakbrook Drive, Cartus Financial Corporaiton to Nicole M. Barry; Daniel R. Fabin, $233,000.• 3612 Seneca St., Isosceles D. Garbes; Kathleen Garbes to Bouttime Ashare LLC, $230,000.• 36 Phyllis Drive, Michelle John; Timothy John to Mark R. Theurer, $223,000.• 22 Blair Lane, Henry A. Eismann to Deborah Campbell, $189,500.• 87 Treehaven Road, Anthony P. Buttino; Suzanne M. Buttino to Meghan N. Guerin; Nicholas J. Guerin, $185,000.• 27 Centennial Court, Edward J. Harmon to Lisa J. Prizel; Ronald E. Prizel, $183,166.• 151 Boncroft Drive, Nicholas J. Guerin; Meghan N. Mcnamara to Jacob K. Ciulla, $158,000.• 19 Willink Ave., David J. Collins to Marc Vitagliano, $145,000.• 118 Chamberlin Drive, Eileen M. Landseadel; Gary A. Landseadel to Christine Rottger, $143,000.• 264 Wimbledon Court, Robert E. Jones to Conor M. Murray, $141,000.• 59 Electric Ave., Paige E. Taylor to Christopher W. Redlein; Jennifer Redlein, $137,800.• 30 Greenfield Ave., Andrew A. Schlenker to Erica S. Odonnell; Ryan M. Odonnell, $122,000.• 32 Benson Ave., HUD to Jonathan S. Klimek, $105,777.• 3448 Clinton St., Janice Nice; Debra Rego to Dump King LLC, $100,000.• 36 Boynton Ave., Gary Toner to Lawrence W. Kosowski, $54,000.• 3448 Clinton St., Salvatore Rizzo to Dump King LLC, $50,000.• 132 Phyllis Drive, John E. Borngraber to David Salazar, $50,000.• Vacant land Seneca Creek Road, Joseph Florea; Patricia A. Florea to Christopher M. Klimek, $45,000. [ad_2] Nguồn
0 notes
Text
About a third of DoorDash drivers make negative wages after expenses are deducted...
0 notes
Text
Books Read/Reread, July/August 2017
Homer (Caroline Alexander trans.), The Iliad Jesmyn Ward, Men We Reaped Clarice Lispector, Aqua Viva* Tressie McMillan Cottom, Lower Ed: The Troubling Rise of For-Profit Colleges in the New Economy Christopher Newfield, Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-year Assault on the Middle Class* Anna Journey, An Arrangement of Skin Elizabeth Kolbert, The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History Ursula K. Heise, Imagining Extinction: The Cultural Meaning of Endangered Species Helen Pilcher, Bring Back the King: The New Science of De-Extinction Edwidge Danticat, The Art of Death Fleur Jaggy, Three Possible Lives Lynn Coady, The Three Marys Jean Rhys, Good Morning, Midnight Denise Levertov, Poems 1972-1982 John Higham, Strangers in the Land: Patterns of American Nativism, 1860-1925 Margaret C. Jacob, The Radical Enlightenment: Pantheists, Freemasons, and Republicans Christine Garwood, Flat Earth: The History of an Infamous Idea Jeffrey Burton Russell, Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians Jesse Walker, The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution Halldór Laxness, World Light Bob Berman, Zapped: From Infrared to X-Rays, the Curious History of Invisible Light David Wiegel, The Show That Never Ends: The Rise and Fall of Prog Rock [Abandoned] Peter Manseau, The Apparitionists: A Tale of Phantoms, Fraud, and the Man Who Captured Lincoln’s Ghost Joachim Kalka, Gaslight: Lantern Slides from the Nineteenth Century Jenny Randles, UFO Study Leonora Carrington, The Hearing Trumpet Jim Steinmeyer, Charles Fort: The Man Who Invented the Supernatural Damon Knight, Charles Fort: Prophet of the Unexplained Kirk Savage, Standing Soldiers, Kneeling Slaves: Race, War, and Monument in Nineteenth-Century America Christopher Josiffe, Gef! The Strange Tale of an Extra-Special Talking Mongoose Toni Morrison, Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination Jan Harold Brunvard, The Vanishing Hitchhiker: American Urban Legends and Their Meanings Alan Loney, Beginnings Joshua Blu Buhs, Bigfoot: The Lift and Times of a Legend Henry H. Bauer, The Enigma of Loch Ness: Making Sense of a Mystery Susan Howe, My Emily Dickinson
* = Reread
2 notes
·
View notes
Quote
UNIVERSITIES AS BUSINESSES. For most of the post-World War II period, it was well understood that universities, whether public or private, operated under a model distinct from business. That began to shift in the 1980s and 1990s as American culture became fixated on the virtues of private enterprise, says Christopher Newfield, a literature professor at UC Santa Barbara and a leading critic of the corporatization of academia. “Until then, the private sector wasn’t the model for the public sector,” Newfield told me. “But the prestige of the private sector now requires imitation by the public sector. It’s almost as if we’re intimidated.” Adding to the pressure is a “massive defunding of public higher education” by state governments, says Hank Reichman, an emeritus professor of history at Cal State East Bay who writes frequently for the blog of the American Association of University Professors. In California, per student spending from the state’s general fund has fallen since 1980 by 43% at the California State University system and 54.7% at UC. Administrators scurrying to replace these lost resources have turned to what appear to be promising sources — scientific research grants and patent royalties. But the idea that these programs are the key to sustainable budgets is mythical. At some institutions, patent income looks like a big number, but it’s seldom more than a tiny fraction of total needs. UC patent royalty and fee income averaged about $104.5 million annually from fiscal 2011 through 2014; it soared to $177.2 million in fiscal 2015 thanks largely to the licensing of a single prostate cancer drug, Xtandi, developed at UCLA. But $43.4 million of that sum was distributed to the inventors; the net income flowing to UC amounted to a paltry one-half of 1% of the system’s total operating budget of $27 billion. Science and engineering programs are heavily funded by outside grants, but the traditional patrons – government and industry – have been stepping away from the plate. A 2014 survey by the Council on Governmental Relations, an association of research universities, found that federal spending on university R&D had fallen to 59.5% of the total in 2012, the lowest share since 1956, before the Soviet Union’s Sputnik launch spurred a massive increase in U.S. scientific research. Contributions from state and local governments and industry had fallen by roughly two-thirds. The burden of costs in higher education has been shifting to students: At UC, tuition and fees now cover 46.3% of the budget, according to the California Budget Project, up from 18.9% in 1998. These trends have pushed universities into questionable deals with donors. Last year, UC Irvine accepted the first installment of a $6-million gift from the Dharma Civilization Foundation for four endowed chairs in Hindu studies, before faculty members raised an alarm about the political agenda of the foundation. UCI ultimately rejected the entire donation. Arizona State in 2014 specified that applicants for a post at its new Center for Political Thought and Leadership display a focus on "the relations between free-market institutions and political liberty in modern history," which came suspiciously close to the mindset of the Koch family, which had contributed $1.3 million in seed money for the center. What’s really at stake in the corporatization of academia is the traditional role the university as a repository of culture and training ground for open inquiry. “The obvious risk,” says Michael Meranze, a professor of history at UCLA who shares a blog on academic issues with Newfield, “is that academic research gets done to advance the interests of outside corporations, rather than guided by the logic of the university’s mission.”
http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik/la-fi-hiltzik-university-business-20160602-snap-story.html
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Two excellent books added to the “recommended reading” list. Chris Newfield was a visiting scholar earlier this year and spoke on his recent co-authored book The Great Mistake: How We Wrecked Public Universities and How We Can Fix Them. Miranda Joseph will be giving a talk next week here at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa. Her book Against the Romance of Community (2002) has been instrumental in shaping how I think through the politics of participation.
Tuesday, April 18th 2017 "Performative Accounting of Debt, Time, and Labor in the Financialized University" 3:00-4:30pm in Saunders Hall, Room 244 Miranda Joseph, Professor of Gender & Women's Studies at the University of Arizona
Debt to Society: Accounting for Life under Capitalism Miranda Joseph 2014
It is commonplace to say that criminals pay their debt to society by spending time in prison, but what is a “debt to society”? How is crime understood as a debt? How has time become the equivalent for crime? And how does criminal debt relate to the kind of debt held by consumers and university students?
In Debt to Society, Miranda Joseph explores modes of accounting as they are used to create, sustain, or transform social relations. Envisioning accounting broadly to include financial accounting, managerial accounting of costs and performance, and the calculation of “debts to society” owed by criminals, Joseph argues that accounting technologies have a powerful effect on social dynamics by attributing credits and debts. From sovereign bonds and securitized credit card debt to student debt and mortgages, there is no doubt that debt and accounting structure our lives.
Exploring central components of neoliberalism (and neoliberalism in crisis) from incarceration to personal finance and university management, Debt to Society exposes the uneven distribution of accountability within our society. Joseph demonstrates how ubiquitous the forces of accounting have become in shaping all aspects of our lives, proposing that we appropriate accounting and offer alternative accounts to turn the present toward a more widely shared well-being.
Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class Christopher Newfield 2011
An essential American dream—equal access to higher education—was becoming a reality with the GI Bill and civil rights movements after World War II. But this vital American promise has been broken. Christopher Newfield argues that the financial and political crises of public universities are not the result of economic downturns or of ultimately valuable restructuring, but of a conservative campaign to end public education’s democratizing influence on American society. Unmaking the Public University is the story of how conservatives have maligned and restructured public universities, deceiving the public to serve their own ends. It is a deep and revealing analysis that is long overdue. Newfield carefully describes how this campaign operated, using extensive research into public university archives. He launches the story with the expansive vision of an equitable and creative America that emerged from the post-war boom in college access, and traces the gradual emergence of the anti-egalitarian “corporate university,” practices that ranged from racial policies to research budgeting. Newfield shows that the culture wars have actually been an economic war that a conservative coalition in business, government, and academia have waged on that economically necessary but often independent group, the college-educated middle class. Newfield’s research exposes the crucial fact that the culture wars have functioned as a kind of neutron bomb, one that pulverizes the social and culture claims of college grads while leaving their technical expertise untouched. Unmaking the Public University incisively sets the record straight, describing a forty-year economic war waged on the college-educated public, and awakening us to a vision of social development shared by scientists and humanists alike.
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
2017 books
1. Differences: Topographies of Contemporary Architecture, Ignasi de Solà-Morales
2. Walled States, Waning Sovereignty, Wendy Brown
3. Seamless: Digital Collage and Dirty Realism in Contemporary Architecture, Jesús Vassallo
4. The Violence of Financial Capitalism, Christian Marrazzi
5. Where Art Belongs, Chris Kraus
6. The System of Objects, Jean Baudrillard
7. Undoing the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class, Christopher Newfield
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
#DW: "′Treat Donald Trump like a normal politician who is wrong about everything′ | World | DW"
#DW: “′Treat Donald Trump like a normal politician who is wrong about everything′ | World | DW”
[ad_1]
DW: You argue that US President Donald Trump is less an anomaly than commonly thought. This may sound strange to many people who have observed him and his behavior not just during the campaign but also since becoming president. Why do you think that?
Christopher Newfield: A lot of his positions on policy matters are the same as the right-wing of the Republican Party. His gender attitudes,…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Link
For just $3.99 The Contender Released on May 10, 1944: A truck driver turns boxer and the only person that can beat him is a lady. Directed by: Sam Newfield Written by: George Wallace Sayre, Jay Doten and Raymond L. Schrock. The Actors: Buster Crabbe Gary Farrel, Arline Judge Linda Martin, Julie Gibson Rita Langdon, Donald Mayo Mickey Farrel, Glenn Strange Biff Benham, Milton Kibbee 'Pop' Turner, Roland Drew Kip Morgan, Sam Flint Major Palmer, George Turner Sparky Callahan, Duke York 'Bomber' Brown, Jimmy Aubrey dance club drunk, Jack Bailey second fight ring announcer, John L. Cason the Koko Kid, James Dime Stoker Cooley, fighter, Kit Guard Bomber Brown's second, Jack Hendricks trainer, Jack Ingram second reporter, Donald Kerr first reporter, Buddy Murr school boy, Joel Newfield school boy, Alfred Purcell school boy, Jack Raymond Bomber's heckler in club, Jack Roper fighter, Gene Roth first fight ring announcer, Wally West reporter, Christopher Wren school boy. Runtime: 1h 3m *** This item will be supplied on a quality disc and will be sent in a sleeve that is designed for posting CD's DVDs *** This item will be sent by 1st class post for quick delivery. Should you not receive your item within 12 working days of making payment, please contact us as it is unusual for any item to take this long to be delivered. Note: All my products are either my own work, licensed to me directly or supplied to me under a GPL/GNU License. No Trademarks, copyrights or rules have been violated by this item. This product complies withs rules on compilations, international media and downloadable media. All items are supplied on CD or DVD.
0 notes
Text
Stocks end modestly higher as earnings come in; oil surges
New Post has been published on https://goo.gl/X7PPPo
Stocks end modestly higher as earnings come in; oil surges
April 18, 2018 (AP)(STL.News) — US stocks finished broadly higher Wednesday, giving the S&P 500 its third gain in as many days. Energy companies rose more than the rest of the market, riding a big upturn in crude oil prices. Solid gains in industrial stocks and retailers outweighed losses among food and beverage companies, technology stocks and banks.
Investors continued to bid up companies that reported positive earnings or outlooks. Not all companies delivered welcome results. IBM slumped 7.5 percent, single-handedly pulling the Dow Jones industrial average into the red.
“Earnings are the principal thing this week,” said Paul Christopher, head of global market strategy for Wells Fargo Investment Institute. “The market wants to see more consistent evidence of strong earnings.”
The S&P 500 index rose 2.25 points, or 0.1 percent, to 2,708.64. The Dow slid 38.56 points, or 0.2 percent, to 24,748.07. The Nasdaq composite gained 14.14 points, or 0.2 percent, to 7,295.24. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks picked up 3.76 points, or 0.2 percent, to 1,583.56. The major stock indexes are all on track to finish the week higher.
Bond prices fell. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.87 percent from 2.83 percent late Tuesday.
Investors continued to sift through corporate earnings reports. Financial analysts are forecasting the strongest growth in seven years for S&P 500 companies, partly because of a resurgent global economy, but also because of expectations that last year’s corporate tax cut will have on corporate balance sheets. Roughly 10 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported results so far this earnings season, and some 67 percent of those have delivered both earnings and revenue that exceeded financial analysts’ expectations, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Railroad operator CSX jumped 7.8 percent to $61.01 and aircraft maker Textron climbed 6.8 percent to $63.99 after reporting results that beat analysts’ forecasts.
United Continental rose 4.8 percent to $70.58 after the airline company raised its earnings outlook for the year.
Best Buy added 3.6 percent to $75.40 after announcing a partnership to sell Fire TVs with Amazon. IBM was the biggest decliner in the S&P 500, sliding 7.5 percent to $148.79. That’s its biggest loss in five years. The technology company’s results failed to impress investors.
Oil futures surged, pushing closer to $70 a barrel. The pickup in the price of crude came as Reuters published a report citing unnamed industry sources saying that Saudi Arabia would be happy to see crude oil prices hit $100 a barrel.
Benchmark U.S. crude rose $1.95, or 2.9 percent, to settle at $68.47 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, used to price international oils, added $1.90, or 2.7 percent, to close at $73.48 per barrel in London.
“If you look at the activity in oil over the last couple of weeks, it almost seems like it’s destined to flirt with the $70 level to see if it can break through,” said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist for TD Ameritrade. “The market seems very comfortable between this $58 and $70-ish area.”
The surge in oil prices helped lift energy stocks. Newfield Exploration added 5.9 percent to $28.89.
The dollar gained to 107.26 yen from Tuesday’s 107.02 yen. The euro rose to $1.2377 from $1.2367.
Gold rose $4 to $1,353.50 an ounce. Silver gained 46 cents, or 2.7 percent, to $17.25 an ounce. Copper added 8 cents to $3.16 a pound.
In other energy futures trading, heating oil rose 3 cents to $2.09 a gallon. Wholesale gasoline picked up 3 cents to $2.07 a gallon. Natural gas was little changed at $2.74 per 1,000 cubic feet.
Major stock indexes in Europe finished mostly higher. Germany’s DAX was ended flat, while France’s CAC 40 rose 0.5 percent. Britain’s FTSE 100 added 1.3 percent. Indexes in Asia ended higher. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 rose 1.4 percent, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 0.7 percent. Seoul’s Kospi rose 1.1 percent.
By Associated Press – published on STL.News by St. Louis Media, LLC (U.S)
#energy companies#oil surges#Stocks end modestly higher#technology stocks and banks#US stocks finished broadly higher
0 notes
Text
Critical Thinking Crucible
“Wilfrid Laurier has been under an unrelenting avalanche of media attention and social-media criticism for almost two weeks, since Ms. Shepherd, who is a teaching assistant in communications studies, told a newspaper about being reprimanded for showing a clip of a Jordan Peterson debate in a tutorial.”
The Globe and Mail, November 27, 2017: “Wilfrid Laurier professors seek protection amid freedom-of-speech debate” by J.P. Moczulski
“Laurier's attempt to muzzle one of its lowliest student-employees, followed almost immediately by craven and mealy-mouthed apologies, is a sad illustration of how today's universities often work, and how they are sometimes not working in ways that are best for students, scholars or the search for Truth.”
The Globe and Mail editorial, November 24, 2017: “University, heal thyself”
YouTube, Novemeber 20, 2017: “Full Recording - Lindsay Shepherd Interogated by Wilfrid Laurier University's Gender Police”
“Every great advance in our world, whether scientific or social, has come in part thanks to freedom of expression and inquiry. Much of that freedom was found on universities, where professors, students and deans vigorously defended it against attacks by ideologues.”
Globe and Mail editorial, November 16, 2017: “Why are we killing critical thinking on campus?”
University crackdowns on speech hurt everyone
“Universities create knowledge through conflict over the biggest issues facing society. And no institution can help society appreciate what it really does by constantly whitewashing itself.”
Inside Higher Education, October 19, 2017: “Feeding a Dangerous Fiction: University crackdowns on speech hurt everyone, writes Christopher Newfield, and renew a false, decades-old depiction of campuses as overrun by censorious radicals.”
Debate: Is Free Speech Really Challenged on Campus?
“Keller: How do you foster a readiness to listen to different ideas when so much of the culture—both popular and high—is swept by forces that work against such a disposition? True, the imposition of political correctness on the campus still has far to go. But that does not mean that it is out of order to discuss how far it has already gone.”
“Zelizer: “This is a place where faculty and administrators have a big role to play—even if they are the focus of protest. Meaning, it is an important time to create functional and constructive spaces of dialogue and debate. That is what higher education can do well. This can encourage and channel the debates so that they don't become destructive and to ensure that all view points have a place to go.
Perhaps I am too optimistic, but I believe this has and can be done. It feels more vital today than ever before given the rather toxic climate students face when they leave.”
The Atlantic, September 14, 2017: “Is Free Speech Really Challenged on Campus? Two historians debate the role of universities in fostering a commitment to the open exchange of ideas.” by Julian E. Zelizer and Morton Keller
[Julian E. Zelizer is a historian at Princeton University and a CNN political analyst... Morton Keller is the Spector Professor of History Emeritus at Brandeis University]
#Critical thinking#universities#freedom of expression#academic freedom#freedom of speech#Laurier#University#Wilfrid Laurier#free speech
0 notes