Tag Archives: election

World’s Oldest Shoe Discovered, Dates Back 5,500 Years


world's oldest shoe brown sheep  dung lace-up stuffedYou won’t find this style on Zappos! The world’s oldest shoe dates back 5,500 years. Photo: AP Photo/Department of Archaeology University College Cork
Looks like our ancestors had a little trouble watching their step.

Researchers excavating an Armenian cave have discovered the world’s oldest shoe — a cowhide lace-up encased in a pile of sheep dung, The New York Times reports.

(Ew. We suspect even Imelda Marcos might give this one a pass.)

Tanned in oils from a plant or vegetable and bearing leather eyelets for its laces, the right shoe reportedly pre-dates Stonehenge, the Egyptian pyramids and Joan Rivers.

“These were probably quite expensive shoes, made of leather, very high quality,” Gregory Areshian of the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California, a lead scientist on the project, told the paper.

The shoe is estimated to date back to the Copper Age, around 3653 to 3627 B.C., and would fit a woman (or petite man) with a size 7 foot, according to The New York Times.

Scientists told the source that the shoe appears to have been deliberately preserved, with grass stuffing and yellow clay lining keeping its shape intact. (Nice to know ancient gals were as shoe-obsessed as we are.)

“You can see the imprints of the big toe,” another team leader, Ron Pinhasi of Ireland’s University College Cork, told the paper.

“As the person was wearing and lacing it, some of the eyelets had been torn and repaired.”

The discovery was reportedly made after the National Geographic Society-funded researchers found other artifacts, including horns, pottery, and something doctoral student Diana Zardaryan thought felt like “an ear of a cow.”

“But when I took it out, I thought, ‘Oh my God, it’s a shoe,'” she told the paper. “To find a shoe has always been my dream.”

Ah — a woman after our own hearts!

So who was this Copper Age Carrie Bradshaw? We may never know… but it makes for one heck of a good, old-school Cinderella story.

In other shoe news, read about this government-funded “Sexy Heels in the City” college course.

by Erin Donnelly

A better tomorrow means less Tea in Congress


In March of 2010, a Gallup Poll report stated that if a vote from We the People for Congress were taken right now it would result in 47% voting for Democrats and 44% Republicans. My response, if this is true, organizers definitely need to get prepared for November 2010.  That the numbers were this close because the Democrats have not gone big bold and progressive as most of us want. Well, we all know what happened and granted the process of changing policy and or making better laws are not easy or pleasant but it should not be the reason for changing your attitude or your vote solely for hating the process.  The bills that are being considered or waiting in the Senate, could improve the lives of the many rather than a select few and we need to get beyond the status quo Republicans seem to have claimed as the best way to gain back Congress. I don’t know about you but what I hear and see just makes it clear that Republicans like Speaker Boehner and Senator Mitch McConnell do not represent America… period.  We need Senator Reid to find the will not only be tough but remember this is not just a historic moment for everyone it is the opportunity to move America into the 21st Century. The people spoke in 2008 and again in 2012 with 53% voting for Barack Obama for a 2nd term. Now,  it’s time for Congress to stop acting out earn their pay and do the right thing.

The fact is while Congress ignores passing legislation the Sequester is moving into the living rooms of families all over the country … invisible to those on tv from commentary reporters or journos offering entertainment judgments advice as well as conservative politicians who we call public servants seemingly acting extreme … are bad actors

The Media continues to speculate or re-enforce the negative and mocking President Obama’s so-called improbable agenda of climate change, immigration overhaul as well as stating that Democrats are wavering on a vote that could quite possibly bring all that is Democratic down.   It is at this moment that the Democratic Party should be willing to create change that has been needed for quite some time and like the President has stated…

My question for you voters is … if not now when, because we may never get this chance for a long time if ever.

Tell the Department of Labor: Do Not Create Burdensome Barriers for Women


National Women's Law Center
Submit your comments!
                Tell the Department of Labor to ensure that wellness programs are not burdensome for women.

Picture this… A woman sees her family’s health insurance premiums increase from $175 per month to $320 per month because she failed to meet an arbitrary weight-loss goal, even though her doctor advised her not to lose weight because she was breast feeding, diabetic, and trying to manage frequent episodes of low blood sugar. With your help, we can ensure that this doesn’t happen again!
Now that the health care law is here to stay, it’s time to get into the nitty-gritty details of implementing the law. The Department of Labor is asking the public to comment on Wellness Programs in group health plans, and we need you to make your voice heard.
Promoting wellness in the workplace is a good thing but it’s important to make sure premiums for health care coverage stay affordable for women and is not tied to their health conditions.

Submit your comments to DOL now!
Wellness programs are meant to encourage healthier behavior among employees or other people on health plans. For example, a workplace might start providing on-site flu shots, start a walking group at lunch or provide healthy snacks in the break room. However, some wellness programs have financial penalties and these types of programs are subject to federal regulations. For example, a plan might increase premiums for people who don’t meet a certain height to weight ratio. We need to ensure that these programs take into account women’s unique healthcare needs and financial circumstances, and make sure that they do not allow for discrimination or gender rating.
Let’s work together to make sure more women do not experience this type of discrimination and that wellness programs are a benefit — not a burden — for women.
Submit your comments now!
Thank you for all you do to ensure women have access to quality, affordable health care.

Visit “Changing America” Support NMAAHC


NMAAHC -- National Museum of African American History and Culture

President & Mrs. Obama at Commander in Chief's ball 1-20
President & Mrs. Obama at the
Commander-in-Chief’s Ball.
January 20, 2009.
Photographer: Petty Officer 1st Class
Chad J. McNeeley, USN

Dear Friend of the Museum,

Being President of the United States is the most demanding, stressful job one could ever imagine. Knowing all we know about the position, it is something close to a miracle that good people still seek the office. We also know that every President operates under the powerful microscope of history.

In 2009, Barack Obama became the first African American to serve in the White House. That alone ensures him a significant chapter in our nation’s history. His chapter, however, is far from finished. He is just days away from taking the oath of office for a second time — still another historic occasion.

To fully appreciate what this inauguration means, it is important to consider it in the context of 237 years of American history. The American Presidency: Glorious Burden is the title of the permanent exhibition, which I co-curated, on the presidency at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. While the exhibition examines the men and the office from a range of perspectives including political and cultural, a great deal of its substance emphasizes the human and personal dimensions.

It is quite revealing. Visitors gain an insight into the lives, characters, emotions, deepest thoughts about the office, the trust the American people bestowed on them, and the weight of that responsibility.

Smithsonian museums are renowned for powerful exhibitions like The American Presidency. It is this type of power that your support of the National Museum of African American History and Culture is helping create — a museum dedicated to making history come alive, making it relevant, and ensuring it provides a deeper, more enriching experience.

I often point out that the African American experience is not separate from our nation’s history; rather, it is intricately woven into it. The National Museum of African American History will reveal that to visitors from around the globe.

Emancipation Proclamation Reproduction
Reproduction of the Emancipation
Proclamation at the National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, Ohio.

The second inauguration of Barack Obama is an auspicious moment. However, African Americans have played vital roles in presidential tenures from the very beginnings of our republic. One of the Museum’s recent exhibitions provided an in-depth study of Thomas Jefferson and the inner conflicts he faced as a slave owner who penned “all men are created equal.”

Titled Slavery at Jefferson’s Monticello: Paradox of Liberty, this exhibition featured new material on Jefferson, as well as the enslaved who worked on his plantation.

Currently, our exhibition Changing America, now open at the American History Museum, showcases the role African Americans played in ensuring our nation lives up to one of its founding principles — equality for all.

Slavery and its aftermath was an issue that took its toll on every president. This year marks the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. Many of us connect this not only with the Civil War and the ultimate freeing of African Americans from bondage, but to President Abraham Lincoln, as well. One wonders if Lincoln could have imagined a day when America swears into office for the second time an African American president!

By supporting the National Museum of African American History and Culture, you become deeply rooted in this present moment in history. You are helping to bring to life a museum that will not only tell the long overdue story of the African American experience, it will create an atmosphere enabling visitors to feel that experience, as well.

Before I close, let me share this: the Museum’s staff knows there are many worthwhile organizations and causes you could — and may well — assist. However, we are honored to count you among our friends, and sincerely thank you for your support of the Museum.

dd-enews-temp-lonnie-bunch-2.jpgAll the best,
Lonnie_Signature.jpg

Lonnie Bunch
Director

#NowIsTheTime


 

 
Now is the time – A letter from Grant
 
When President Obama announced the concrete plan he was putting forward to reduce gun violence, he shared the stage with four of the young people who wrote him letters on the issue. Watch Grant read the letter he wrote to President Obama. Then, learn more about his plan to reduce gun violence and join the conversation at WhiteHouse.Gov/NowIsTheTime
 
Now is the time – A letter from Julia
 
When President Obama announced the concrete plan he was putting forward to reduce gun violence, he shared the stage with four of the young people who wrote him letters on the issue. Watch Julia read the letter she wrote to President Obama. Then, learn more about his plan to reduce gun violence and join the conversation at WhiteHouse.Gov/NowIsTheTime
 
Now is the time – A letter from Taejah
 
When President Obama announced the concrete plan he was putting forward to reduce gun violence, he shared the stage with four of the young people who wrote him letters on the issue. Watch Taejah read the letter he wrote to President Obama. Then, learn more about his plan to reduce gun violence and join the conversation at WhiteHouse.Gov/NowIsTheTime
 
 
 
Now is the time – A letter from Hinna
 
When President Obama announced the concrete plan he was putting forward to reduce gun violence, he shared the stage with four of the young people who wrote him letters on the issue. Watch Hinna read the letter she wrote to President Obama. Then, learn more about his plan to reduce gun violence and join the conversation at WhiteHouse.Gov/NowIsTheTime