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Bruce Gendelman established Bruce Gendelman Insurance Services over 30 years ago to provide the utmost care in risk assessment, technical detail, and superior insurance company relationships – all with the purpose of giving clients the best coverage at competitive prices. Today we are proud of the Bruce Gendelman Insurance Services team who work tirelessly to satisfy clients with risk exposures in the United States and overseas. Our commercial and personal advisors ensure each client is afforded a unique and understandable insurance program.

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Louisiana

This article is about the U.S. state of Louisiana. For other uses, see Louisiana (disambiguation).
This article is about the U.S. state abbreviated as LA. For the U.S. city abbreviated as LA, see Los Angeles.
State of Louisiana
Flag of Louisiana State seal of Louisiana
Flag Seal
Nickname(s): Bayou State • Child of the Mississippi
Creole State • Pelican State (official)
Sportsman's Paradise • Sugar State • The Boot
Motto(s): Union, Justice, Confidence
Map of the United States with Louisiana highlighted
Official language English
Spoken languages

As of 2007

Demonym Louisianian
Capital Baton Rouge
Largest city New Orleans[1][2][3]
Largest metro Greater New Orleans
Area Ranked 31st
• Total 51,843 sq mi
(135,382 km2)
• Width 130 miles (210 km)
• Length 379 miles (610 km)
• % water 15
• Latitude 28° 56′ N to 33° 01′ N
• Longitude 88° 49′ W to 94° 03′ W
Population Ranked 25th
• Total 4,670,724 (2015 est)[4]
Density 105/sq mi (40.5/km2)
Ranked 24th
Elevation
• Highest point Driskill Mountain[5][6]
535 ft (163 m)
• Mean 100 ft (30 m)
• Lowest point New Orleans[5][6]
−8 ft (−2.5 m)
Admission to Union April 30, 1812 (18th)
Governor John Bel Edwards (D)
Lieutenant Governor Billy Nungesser (R)
Legislature State Legislature
Upper house State Senate
Lower house House of Representatives
U.S. Senators David Vitter (R)
Bill Cassidy (R)
U.S. House delegation 5 Republicans, 1 Democrat (list)
Time zone Central: UTC −6/−5
ISO 3166 US-LA
Abbreviations LA, La.
Website louisiana.gov
[show]Louisiana state symbols
Louisiana entrance sign off Interstate 20 in Madison Parish east of Tallulah.

Louisiana (Listeni/lˌziˈænə/ or Listeni/ˌlziˈænə/; French: État de Louisiane, [lwizjan]; Louisiana Creole: Léta de la Lwizyàn) is a state located in the southern region of the United States. Louisiana is the 31st most extensive and the 25th most populous of the 50 United States. Its capital is Baton Rouge and largest city is New Orleans. Louisiana is the only state in the U.S. with political subdivisions termed parishes, which are the local government's equivalent to counties. The largest parish by population is East Baton Rouge Parish, and the largest by land area is Plaquemines. Louisiana is bordered by Arkansas to the north, Mississippi to the east, Texas to the west, and the Gulf of Mexico to the south.

Much of the state's lands were formed from sediment washed down the Mississippi River, leaving enormous deltas and vast areas of coastal marsh and swamp.[7] These contain a rich southern biota; typical examples include birds such as ibis and egrets. There are also many species of tree frogs, and fish such as sturgeon and paddlefish. In more elevated areas, fire is a natural process in the landscape, and has produced extensive areas of longleaf pine forest and wet savannas. These support an exceptionally large number of plant species, including many species of orchids and carnivorous plants.[7]

Some Louisiana urban environments have a multicultural, multilingual heritage, being so strongly influenced by a mixture of 18th-century French, Spanish, Native American, and African cultures that they are considered to be exceptional in the US. Before the American purchase of the territory in 1803, the current Louisiana State had been both a French colony and for a brief period, a Spanish one. In addition, colonists imported numerous African slaves as laborers in the 18th century. Many came from peoples of the same region of West Africa, thus concentrating their culture. In the post-Civil War environment, Anglo-Americans increased the pressure for Anglicization, and in 1921, English was made the only official language of the state.[8] Louisiana has more Native American tribes than any other southern state, including four that are federally recognized, ten that are state recognized, and four that have not yet received recognition.[9]

Etymology

Louisiana was named after Louis XIV, King of France from 1643 to 1715. When René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle claimed the territory drained by the Mississippi River for France, he named it La Louisiane.[10] The suffix -ana (or -ane) is a Latin suffix that can refer to "information relating to a particular individual, subject, or place." Thus, roughly, Louis + ana carries the idea of "related to Louis." Once part of the French Colo

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Baton Rouge MS

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alabama state parks

List of Alabama state parks

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Alabama state parks)

This list of Alabama state parks covers state parks and reserves in the Alabama park system. The majority are run by the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

Current parks

Parks under direct state management
Name County Area Estab-
lished
River / lake /
other
Image Remarks
Blue Springs State Park Barbour 103 acres (42 ha)


Near Clio; swimming in natural spring, camping, picnicking
Buck's Pocket State Park DeKalb, Jackson, Marshall 2,000 acres (810 ha) 1971

Near Grove Oak; scenic vistas, camping, hiking and equestrian trails
Cathedral Caverns State Park Marshall 461 acres (187 ha) 1987
Stalagmites
Located in Grant; cave tours, tent camping
Cheaha State Park Clay, Cleburne 2,799 acres (1,133 ha) 1933
Stone tower
State's highest point; scenic views, hiking, camping
Chewacla State Park Lee 696 acres (282 ha)
Lake Chewacla
Dashing waterfalls
Located in Auburn; fishing, swimming, non-motorized boating, hiking, camping, cabins
DeSoto State Park Cherokee, DeKalb 3,502 acres (1,417 ha)
Little River
Located on Lookout Mountain; camping, lodging, picnicking, hiking and biking trails
Florala State Park Covington 40 acres (16 ha)
Lake Jackson
Boating, fishing, swimming, picnicking, camping
Frank Jackson State Park Covington 2,050 acres (830 ha)
Lake Frank Jackson
Boating, fishing, swimming, picnicking, camping
Gulf State Park Baldwin 6,150 acres (2,490 ha)
Gulf of Mexico
White sands with surf
Fresh and saltwater fishing and swimming, 18-hole golf course, camping
Joe Wheeler State Park Lauderdale, Lawrence 2,550 acres (1,030 ha)
Wheeler Lake
Near Rogersville; lodge, campground, marina, hiking and biking trail, 18-hole golf course
Lake Guntersville State Park Marshall 6,000 acres (2,400 ha)
Guntersville Lake
Resort complex, cottages, campground, 18-hole golf course, hiking, fishing
Lake Lurleen State Park Tuscaloosa 1,675 acres (678 ha)
Lake Lurleen
Boating, fishing, swimming, hiking, biking
Lakepoint Resort State Park Barbour 1,220 acres (490 ha)
Lake Eufala
Convention center, 18-hole golf course, lodge, campground, cabins, cottages, marina, hiking, picnicking
Meaher State Park Baldwin 1,327 acres (537 ha)
Mobile Bay
Nature trails with wetlands boardwalk through the wetlands, boat ramp, fishing pier, picnicking, camping
Monte Sano State Park Madison 2,140 acres (870 ha) 1938

Located in Huntsville; picnicking, hiking, cabins, campground
Oak Mountain State Park Shelby 9,940 acres (4,020 ha)
Double Oak Lake
Alabama Wildlife Center; golf, swimming, hiking, mountain biking, horseback riding, camping, fishing, hunting
Rickwood Caverns State Park Blount 380 acres (150 ha) 1974
Illuminated cave pasage
Cave tours, swimming, picnicking, hiking, camping
Wind Creek State Park Tallapoosa 1,445 acres (585 ha)
Lake Martin
Camping, swimming, boating, fishing, picnicking, hiking, biking

Other parks

Parks under other management or closed
Name County Area Established Management River / lake /
other
Image Remarks
Bladon Springs State Park Choctaw 357 acres (144 ha) 1939 None
Gazebo
Historic spa grounds with mineral springs; closed 2015
Historic Blakeley State Park Baldwin 1,400 acres (570 ha) 1981 Historic Blakeley Authority Tensaw River
Country road
Camping, picnicking, hiking trails
Brierfield Ironworks Historical State Park Bibb 486 acres (197 ha) 1976 Alabama Historic Ironworks Commission
Remnants
Industrial ruins, historic buildings, trails, campsites
Chattahoochee State Park Houston 596 acres (241 ha)
Houston County Irwin's Mill Creek
Fishing, swimming, boating, picnicking, hiking, camping
Chickasaw State Park Marengo 520 acres (210 ha) 1935 None

Closed in 2015
Florala City Park Covington 40 acres (16 ha)
City of Florala Lake Jackson
Lake view
Boating, fishing, swimming, picnicking, camping
Paul M. Grist State Park Dallas 1,080 acres (440 ha) 1930s Dallas County

Swimming, fishing, boating, camping
Roland Cooper State Park Wilcox 236 acres (96 ha) 1969 None William "Bill" Dannelly Reservoir
Closed in 2015
Tannehill Ironworks Historical State Park Tuscaloosa 2,063 acres (835 ha) 1969 Alabama Historic Ironworks Commission
Industrial structure
Preserved industrial sites, museum, crafts cabins, hiking trails

See also

References

External links

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Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Mizzou News

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Reservations: 800-873-1229
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The State of Mizzou II

10 ways Tigers are committing to Mizzou

Crowd shot at State of the University Address.
Last semester the climate at Mizzou was marked by discord and heated exchanges, often illuminated or distorted by a national spotlight. Things were tense. But even when members of the Mizzou community have been at odds with one another, our disagreements have been fueled by love — our shared love for Mizzou. For some Tigers, this love emerges as devotion to our history and traditions. For others, it’s passion for progress and fairness. For all of us, it’s dedication to fellow Tigers — past, present and future.
This semester Tigers are coming together to foster a community we’re even prouder to be part of. We’re committing to Mizzou. We’ve heard the concerns of current and prospective students, of faculty and staff, of alumni and donors, of curators and legislators — and of all Missourians, really. We’re listening. Above all, we’re learning. We’re a university; that’s what we do best.
Here’s a peek at just a few things Tigers are doing to bring us all together:

1. We’re teaching new students about inclusion.

Anes Ouadou and Fis Malësori converse during the International Welcome Party. Ouadou is a Fulbright scholar from Algeria and Malësori is an MBA student from Kosovo. Photo by Hanna Yowell.
Anes Ouadou and Fis Malësori converse in the MU Student Center. Ouadou is a Fulbright scholar from Algeria, and Malësori is an MBA student from Kosovo. Photo by Hanna Yowell.
Last semester underscored the importance of getting to know people from all walks of life and learning to treat one another with kindness and respect; these skills are a fundamental part of higher education. This semester all incoming students are taking part in a diversity-orientation program created and taught by award-winning faculty members Stephanie Shonekan, chair of Black Studies, and Joan Hermsen, chair of Women’s and Gender Studies. Panelists include faculty members Tony Castro, Scott Brooks, Nathan Hofer, Urmeka Jefferson, Andy Hoberek and Rebecca Martinez. Welcome, new Tigers! You’re in good hands.

2. We’re rather robustly celebrating cultures.

Nisa Ismail, member of the Malaysian Student Association, serves food to an attendee of the International Welcome Party.
Nisa Ismail, a member of the Malaysian Student Association, serves food to an attendee of an international Welcome Party. Photo by Hanna Yowell.
Last semester (really, every semester) Mizzou’s reputation as a fun school was buoyed by the likes of massive Fall Welcome extravaganzas and off-the-charts sports fandom. That hasn’t changed. But this semester the label has taken on multicultural dimensions. International students threw a huge party in the Student Center. The Cultural Association of India put on the first MU India Day. The newly revived Black Alumni Network held events. We celebrated the Chinese New Year, ringing in the Year of the Monkey. And Tigers assembled an impressive series of Black History Month events highlighted by live music —jazz, hip-hop, gospel — and movie screenings.

3. We’re welcoming new administrators and educating all administrators.

Mike Middleton and Hank Foley
UM System President Mike Middleton greets MU Chancellor Hank Foley before Foley’s State of the University Address. Photo by Shane Epping.
Last semester issues arose between administrators and students — and between administrators and faculty — regarding fair treatment of all Tigers. This semester we have a new Mizzou interim chancellor (Hank Foley) and a new UM System interim president (Mike Middleton). We also have a Mizzou interim vice chancellor for inclusion, diversity and equity (Chuck Henson), and the UM System is hiring for a similar position to work with all four campuses. Meanwhile, MU administrators are in training with Benjamin Reese of Duke University to work on better understanding issues such as equity and implicit bias. They’re discovering new ways to be inclusive and leading by example.

4. We’re listening.

From left, Interim Chancellor Hank Foley and his wife sit with Interim UM System President Mike Middleton and his wife during Professor Diane Mutti Burke's presentation of "Contesting Slavery: Enslaved MissouriansÕ Enduring Struggle for Self Determination" Wednesday evening, Feb. 3, 2016 in Jesse Auditorium.
From left, Interim Chancellor Hank Foley and his wife,  Dr. Karin Foley, listen to a presentation by UMKC Professor Diane Mutti Burke with Interim UM System President Mike Middleton and his wife, Dr. Julie Middleton, and Interim Vice Chancellor Chuck Henson. Photo by Tanzi Propst.
Last semester some Tigers said they felt they weren’t being heard. This semester administrators are holding regularly scheduled listening sessions. Provost Garnett Stokes has implemented traveling office hours. Vice Chancellor Chuck Henson has established the Working Group to open lines of communication. And Chancellor Hank Foley is holding Friday-afternoon chats, 4–5 p.m. in the Jesse Rotunda. Stop by! All ears are open.

5. We’re taking better care of graduate students.

Graduate students respond to the news of benefits changes.
Graduate students respond to the news of benefits changes. Photo by Shane Epping.
Last semester graduate students protested proposed cuts in health insurance benefits and changes to stipends. This semester, in his State of the University Address, Interim Chancellor Hank Foley announced plans to continue to provide health insurance to graduate students and to increase stipends by $6,000 over the next two fiscal years. We need you, beloved graduate students. You are essential.

6. We’re making our campus even safer for students.

April Colvin
MUPD Lt. April Colvin trains members of the Mizzou community in personal safety and dealing with active-threat situations.
Last semester incidents of racism on campus and threats of violence in social media left some students feeling unsafe. Mizzou already has a dedicated and fully professionally accredited police force, and this semester we’ve made plans to increase the number of MUPD officers by 25 percent and the number of dispatchers by 50 percent over the next three years to serve and protect all Tigers. Thank you, MUPD, for looking out for us.

7. We’re combating discrimination.

Ellen Eardley in center of audience.
Assistant Vice Provost Ellen Eardley (center, in blue scarf) watches the State of the University Address with faculty and administrators. Eardley’s duties as Title IX administrator have expanded to encompass civil rights as well. Photo by Gene Royer.
Last year we welcomed Ellen Eardley as our new Title IX coordinator to handle sex discrimination issues on campus. This year Eardley leads the new centralized Office for Civil Rights and Title IX, which addresses all types prohibited discrimination, including race, color, national origin, ancestry, religion, age, disability, veteran status, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression and genetic information. Do you have an incident to report? Let the staff know.

8. We’re learning about our own history.

From left, Zora Mulligan and Tamar Hodges laugh with Kelley Stuck during the reception in the foyer of Jesse Hall just before the "Contesting Slavery: Enslaved MissouriansÕ Enduring Struggle for Self Determination" presentation Wednesday evening, Feb. 3, 2016.
From left, Zora Mulligan and Tamar Hodges laugh with Kelley Stuck during a reception in the Jesse Rotunda before the inaugural African-American Experience in Missouri lecture. Photo by Tanzi Propst.
Last semester Tigers talked about placing recent conflicts in historical, social and cultural context. This semester we launched a new lecture series titled “The African-American Experience in Missouri,” curated by Keona Ervin, assistant professor of history, and Gary Kremer, director of the State Historical Society of Missouri. UMKC historian Diane Mutti Burke gave the inaugural lecture, an eye-opening examination of slavery in central Missouri. (Read her book: On Slavery’s Border: Missouri’s Small-Slaveholding Households, 1815–1865.) The next lecture is March 23.

9. We’re making conscientious hiring decisions.

Noor Azizan-Gardner
Noor Azizan-Gardner became Mizzou’s chief diversity officer in 2012 and now serves as MU senior associate vice chancellor for inclusion, diversity and equity. She’s working to help search committees develop more inclusive hiring practices. Photo by Shane Epping.
Last semester community members criticized the disproportionately small percentage of people of color on Mizzou’s faculty. This semester, the Division of Inclusion, Diversity and Equity has joined forces with the Office of the Provost and the department of Human Resources to roll out a training module that helps ensure search committees start with the most diverse and inclusive candidate pool they can when hiring new faculty and staff. We’re reaching out.

10. We’re doing really, really awesome things in classrooms, in laboratories and in the community.

Young woman playing a violin.
Violinist Britney McMurray plays the Forest Park Rhapsody composed by Ben Colagiovanni, a student in the Mizzou New Music Initiative, during a gift announcement. Jeanne and Rex Sinquefield announced Feb. 1 that they plan to give $2.1 million over three years to support the composition program. Photo by Rob Hill.
Every day this university gives us scads of reasons to be proud. Here are just a few very recent examples.
There’s more to come, Tigers. Stay tuned. And let us know how we’re doing.
 




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Just got home from watching In the Heart of the Sea, the movie based on the nonfiction book of the same title. Ya know, the one that tells the story that inspired the most famous whale tale. No, not Free Willy (though, I now want to rewatch that). The one about Donald Trump (big, white, and a dick).

Verdict: Ambergris (it stank, despite being expensive), despite inspiring a newfound fear of the sea in me. For the uninitiated, the film tells the story of how the crew of the Essex, a whaling vessel, found themselves shipwrecked after a disastrous encounter with a gigantic male sperm whale and what happened to them afterwards. Basically, Moby Dick with some cannibalism thrown in the mix.

The good: The whale nut in me will concede that seeing herds of whales swimming the open oceans in huge numbers as they used to was a joy. Ya know, before an arrogant fledgling species decided to hunt many of them to almost extinction to light their towns and fuel their industry. There's a certain "nature will bite back" parable in the mix with the white whale basically hunting them down with a certain sense of vengeance for hunting its brethren. There's even the gratuitous "God made us superior so that we can harness the world" line thrown in there. And given the current discussions on climate change, there's a sense of how humans never seem to learn how to be stewards rather than conquerors as the film concludes with Nickerson and Melville having a brief exchange about how the first oil well in Pennsylvania had just been discovered, which would of course change the course of history, not only for whalers but for the world. With the world's climate changing at an accelerated pace because of our carbon emissions, we're stranded on a shipwreck of our own doing with our own metaphorical great white whale on our tails.

The bad: The film never seems to capture the majesty and horror of its subject. The endeavor fails on most of its three narrative cores. The first being the whalers, their relationship with each other, what's at stake for the leads, etc. The second is of course the encounter with the whale. And lastly, the plight of the crew after they're shipwrecked.

On the first count, the characters were thinner that baleen filaments and the best sequences were the quiet moments between old Nickerson and Herman Melville. They sorta establish that the Nantucket whaling community has some kind of hierarchy situation going on, where farmers and landfolk were not highly regarded. They establish that there's tension between the newly appointed (and green) Captain Pollock and First Mate Owen Chase but other than literally a couple of scenes showing that they don't get along, the tension is pretty much dropped. In other words, it's Campbell's oxtail soup; it smells like beef, it kinda tastes like beef, but where's the beef? Their conciliation is therefore kinda meh as it doesn't feel like anything was really resolved there because there really wasn't anything to be resolved other than expository dick measuring. Furthermore, as the narrator of the story, Tom Nickerson is pretty inconsequential in the flashbacks of the story, which I thought detracted from the experience.

On the second count of narrative failure, I get that the whale is supposed to be somewhat mythic in its size, the way they talk about it, its avenging MO, and all that but that whole bit just seemed kinda rushed through. The actual attack has no build-up, other than a couple of ominous shots of the whale swimming underneath the ship. It's basically Jaws done poorly. And then, they build up this whole antagonistic relationship between the whale and Chase which is resolved in the lamest possible way (it involves gazing into each other's eyes and there being some sort of recognition of each other) which may not have felt as contrived if it had come across as having been earned.

On the final count of how the narrative failed to capture the horror of the plight of the shipwrecked crew, part of that probably has to do with the PG-13 rating. The major point here is that the crew (spoiler alert!) resort to cannibalism to survive, and that's what's been eating at Old Nickerson all these years. Because he's been unable to get that off his chest because they intentionally left that bit of information out from the accounts before his confession to Melville. The desperation that leads the crew to do that just never seems palpable, and the horror of the entire experience is reduced to wind- and sunburned faces, chapped lips, and towards the end, gauntness on the part of the survivors. But the psychological scars just aren't explored. The word "abominations" is bandied about to try and convince the audience that the survivors aren't proud of what they did but the guilt, the pain, the inner turmoil is completely sterile. It's not until you take the story in the larger context of it being a recollection by Old Nickerson that you actually feel the weight of that burden on him. Otherwise, it would appear that everyone just sorta went back to normal. And that's the greatest sin on the movie: that the tone of the narratives from the past and present don't match up. The past is glossed over so much that it would seem that the survivors merely survived a bit of seasickness instead of having been changed in any lasting way.  
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