vineri, 24 februarie 2017

Event Registration


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Friends of Edmonds Library Monthly Meeting






Event Type: Friends of the Library
Age Group(s): Adults
Date: 3/23/2017
Start Time: 6:00 PM
End Time: 7:45 PM

Description:

 The mission of the Friends of the Edmonds Library is to support and enhance the Edmonds Library, promote literacy, reading and the use of information resources, and to advance education in library and information sciences.

Join us for Nancy Leson, award-winning food writer, radio personality, cooking instructor and public speaker who learned much of what she knows about food during her first career: waiting tables.

This event is free and open to all.



Library: Edmonds Library

Sno-Isle Teens • Vlog Squad Top 3 of 2015



Vlog Squad Top 3 of 2015


To wrap up a great year of reading, our Vlog Squad reviewers are here to share their Top 3 of 2015!

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1) Mistborn - Brandon Sanderson

2) Queen of Shadows - Sarah J Maas

3) The Wrath and the Dawn - Renee Ahdieh

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1) Simon VS the Homo Sapiens Agenda - Becky Albertalli

2) Saint Anything - Sarah Dessen

3) Made You Up - Francesca Zappia

 

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1) Illuminae - Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristoff

2) I’ll Meet You There - Heather Demetrios

3) The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer - Michelle Hodkin


 

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1) Carry On - Rainbow Rowell

2) Golden Son - Pierce Brown

3) Challenger Deep - Neal Shusterman

 

What were your Top 3 of 2015? Email teens@sno-isle.org to be featured in the new year!


Der Spiegel: Serviciile de informaţii germane spionează jurnalişti de la marile trusturi de presă | Stiriletvr.ro


Potrivit cotidianului Der Spiegel, serviciile de informaţii germane   spionează jurnaliştii celor mai importante trusturi de presă. Printre acestea, BBC, Reuters sau New York Times.



24 Februarie 2017, 23:16
(actualizat 24 Februarie 2017, 23:39)

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Potrivit Der Spiegel, supravegherea a început încă din 1999, iar serviciul german de informaţii externe urmărea emailurile, faxurile şi telefoanele ziariştilor.

Cel puţin 50 de numere de telefon folosite de jurnalişti străini sunt ascultate de nemţi.

Der Spiegel a descoperit acest lucru în documentele oferite de servicii parlamentului, în cadrul anchetei privind ascultările în masă practicate de americani şi cărora i-a căzut victimă inclusiv cancelarul Merkel.





The Lego Batman Movie (2017)




The Lego Batman Movie Synopsis


In the irreverent spirit of fun that made “The LEGO® Movie” a worldwide phenomenon, the self-described leading man of that ensemble – LEGO Batman – stars in his own big-screen adventure: “The LEGO® Batman Movie.”



Read Full Synopsis

Trump vows military build-up, hammers nationalist themes | Reuters






By Emily Stephenson and Steve Holland
| NATIONAL HARBOR, Md./WASHINGTON

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md./WASHINGTON President Donald Trump said he would make a massive budget request for one of the "greatest military buildups in American history" on Friday in a feisty, campaign-style speech extolling robust nationalism to eager conservative activists.

Trump used remarks to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), an organization that gave him one of his first platforms in his improbable journey to the U.S. presidency, to defend his unabashed "America first" policies.

Ahead of a nationally televised speech to Congress on Tuesday, Trump outlined plans for strengthening the U.S. military, already the world's most powerful fighting force, and other initiatives such as tax reform and regulatory rollback.

He offered few specifics on any initiatives, including the budget request that is likely to face a harsh reality on Capitol Hill: At a time when he wants to slash taxes for Americans, funding a major military buildup without spending cuts elsewhere would add substantially to the U.S. budget deficit.

Trump said he would aim to upgrade the military in both offensive and defensive capabilities, with a massive spending request to Congress that would make the country's defense "bigger and better and stronger than ever before."

"And, hopefully, we’ll never have to use it, but nobody is going to mess with us. Nobody. It will be one of the greatest military buildups in American history," Trump said.

Appealing to people on welfare to go to work and pledging to follow through on his vow to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexican border, Trump drew rounds of applause from the large gathering of conservatives, many of them wearing hats emblazoned with the president's campaign slogan, "Make America Great Again."



His speech was heavy on the nationalist overtones from his campaign last year, focusing on promises to boost U.S. economic growth by retooling international trade deals, cracking down on immigration and boosting energy production.

ROCKY FIRST MONTH


Trump is looking to put behind him a rocky first month in office. An executive order he signed aimed at banning U.S. entry by people from seven Muslim-majority countries became embroiled in the courts and he had to fire his national security adviser, Michael Flynn, for Russian contacts before Trump took office.



With the federal budget still running a large deficit, Trump will have to fight to get higher military spending through Congress. In his speech, he complained about spending caps put in place on the defense budget dating back to 2011.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump's proposed budget for this year "will be very clear" on how to fund the military spending increase.

Trump also heaped criticism on what he called purveyors of "fake news," seeking to clarify a recent tweet in which he said some in the U.S. news media should be considered an "enemy of the people."

He said his main beef was the media's use of anonymous sources. "They shouldn't be allowed to use sources unless they use somebody's name. Let their name be out there," Trump said.



His comments came on the same day CNN reported that White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus asked FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe to deny a Feb. 14 report in the New York Times that said Trump's presidential campaign advisers had been in frequent contact with Russian intelligence officers. The request came after McCabe told him privately the report was wrong.

A senior administration official said on Friday that FBI Director James Comey told Priebus later that the story was not accurate. Priebus asked if the Federal Bureau of Investigation could set the record straight, but Comey said the bureau could not comment, the official said.

Trump has repeatedly chosen to make news media criticism a focus of his public remarks since taking office on Jan. 20.

The speech allowed Trump to put his stamp firmly on the conservative political movement, even as some activists fretted that his immigration and trade policies go too far.

With Trump in the White House and Republicans holding majorities in both houses of Congress, CPAC and the thousands of conservative activists who flock to the event each year from across the country are seeing their political influence rising.

(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan and Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Jonathan Oatis)

Editors Choice Pictures


Our top photos from the last 24 hours.

French judge takes over probe into Fillon 'fake jobs' scandal | Reuters






By Chine Labbé and Michel Rose
| PARIS

PARIS French presidential challenger Francois Fillon will face a full judicial inquiry into allegations he paid family members for fake parliamentary jobs after the country's financial prosecutor said he was appointing a magistrate to lead a deeper probe.

The escalation is another blow to the conservative candidate whose status as favorite to win the presidency has faded since the "Penelopegate" affair -- named after Fillon's wife -- first surfaced a month ago. But it may not stop him from standing in April-May vote.

By involving a magistrate in what had so far been a preliminary probe led by police, the prosecutor is putting more resources into the investigation.

The inquiry will examine possible misuse of public funds and a lack of full and proper disclosure, according to the prosecutor's statement that was issued as Fillon took to the stage at a campaign rally near Paris.

The judge can decide to drop the case, place the 62-year-old former prime minister under formal investigation, or send the case to trial.

It was not clear, however, if the inquiry could be concluded before the two-round election, scheduled for April 23 and May 7, but the French judicial process would not typically wrap up such a case in the nine weeks between now and the poll.

Under French law, if Fillon were to win the presidential race the investigation would be suspended during his time in office.



Fillon has denied any wrongdoing and says his wife was paid hundreds of thousands of euros for genuine work as his parliamentary assistant, though he has acknowledged giving her the work was an error of judgment.

INVESTORS CONCERNED BY ELECTION




Fillon made no reference to the prosecutor's decision at his rally, at which his supporters cried out "Fillon, President!".

Fillon has pledged to stay in the race come what may, after saying for weeks that he would step down if he were put under formal investigation.

"You are my companions, and with you at my side I can feel your energy that will give me the strength to win," Fillon told the rally.

Nevertheless, the issue has unnerved investors who fear Fillon's campaign woes have handed the anti-euro, anti-immigration Marine Le Pen of the National Front a higher chance of winning the presidency.



Opinion polls show Le Pen leading a fragmented field in the first round but then losing to independent centrist Emmanuel Macron in a second round run-off. Macron has been favorite to win the presidency since the Fillon scandal broke on Jan. 25.

Fillon - who has long cultivated an image of probity and criticized people for taking government handouts - has been heckled for weeks by protesters at campaign outings.

Macron got a boost on Friday when German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she was ready to meet him.

Le Pen, however, was roundly criticized by the French mainstream political establishment after she refused to attend a summons for questioning by police over allegations that she made illegal EU payments to her staff.

(Additional reporting by Michaela Cabrera; Writing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Richard Balmforth; Editing by Andrew Callus and Richard Lough)