Tag Archives: Santa Anna

Pope Francis Preaches Mercy At Mass in Vatican Parish

By The Huffington Post News Editors

* Pope says Mass in Vatican’s small parish church
* Says people should not be so quick to condemn
* Delivers simple homily without notes
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY, March 17 (Reuters) – Pope Francis took on the role of a simple parish priest on Sunday, saying Mass for the Vatican’s resident community and urging listeners to not to be so quick to condemn others for their failings.
Francis, the former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, said Mass for a few hundred people in Santa Anna, a church just inside the Vatican walls that is used as the parish church for workers in the city-state.
Before he entered the tiny church, Francis stopped to greet cheering well-wishers who had lined up outside a nearby Vatican gate shouting “Francesco, Francesco, Francesco,” his name in Italian.
He chatted and laughed with many of them before pointing to his black plastic wrist watch and saying: “It’s almost 10 o’clock. I have to go inside to say Mass. They are waiting for me.”
Wearing the purple vestments of the liturgical season of Lent, which ends in two weeks on Easter Sunday, he delivered a short homily in Italian, without notes, centred on the gospel story of the crowd that wanted to stone a woman who had committed adultery.
Jesus told them “let him among you who is without sin, cast the first stone” and then told the woman “go and sin no more”.
“I think even we are sometimes like these people, who on the one hand want to listen to Jesus, but on the other hand, sometimes we like to stone others and condemn others. The message of Jesus is this: mercy,” he said.
“I say in all humility that this is the strongest message of the Lord: mercy,” Francis said, speaking in a soft voice. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Hundreds of family pets, protected species killed by little known federal agency

By Cristina Corbin

It was an August morning two years ago when Maggie, a spry, 7-year-old border collie, slipped through the backyard fence of her family’s suburban Oregon home. Minutes later, she was dead – her neck snapped by a body-gripping trap set by the U.S. government less than 50 feet from the home she shared with the four children who loved her.

“It is an image that will never leave me,” Maggie’s owner, Denise McCurtain, of Gresham, Ore., said of her death. “She was still breathing as we tried to remove the trap. Her eyes were open and she was looking at me. All I could say was ‘I’m trying so hard. You didn’t do anything wrong.'”

Maggie’s death at a minimum was one of hundreds of accidental killings of pets over the last decade acknowledged by Wildlife Services, a little-known branch of the U.S. Department of Agriculture that is tasked with destroying animals seen as threats to people, agriculture and the environment. Critics, including a source within the USDA, told FoxNews.com that the government‘s taxpayer-funded Predator Control program and its killing methods are random — and at times, illegal.

Over the years, Wildlife Services has killed thousands of non-target animals in several states – from pet dogs to protected species – caught in body-gripping conibear traps and leg hold snares, or poisoned by lethal M-44 devices that explode sodium cyanide capsules when triggered by a wild animal – or the snout of a curious family pet.

The McCurtains, like many other families, were never informed that such deadly devices were placed so close to their home in grass near the edge of a pond where their young son kicks his soccer ball and their daughter catches turtles.

The traps, set on communal property owned by the neighborhood association, were meant to kill an infestation of nutria, rat-like pests that pose no danger to people but can be harmful to the environment. The only warning sign was a small placard in the grass that identified the device as government property and cautioned against tampering with it. The neighborhood association told the McCurtains it never would have approved such traps had it known they were so deadly.

“It’s unconscionable that anybody with an ounce of common sense would set these traps in an area frequented by the public and their pets,” said Brooks Fahy, executive director of Predator Defense, a national watchdog group that advocates non-lethal predator control.

The M-44’s intended targets are coyotes that kill or harass livestock primarily in the western states, where Wildlife Services is most active and critical to farmers protecting their livestock.

But, like Maggie, there often are unintended victims — like a puppy belonging to J.D. and Angel Walker of Santa Anna, Texas.

In February 2011, the couple’s 18-month-old pit bill was killed when it sniffed and pulled on a meat-scented M-44 placed about 900 feet from its home.

Kyle Traweek, the Wildlife Services employee who set the device, violated at least three M-44 restrictions set by the Environmental Protection Agency, according to Texas …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Javier L.: UGJ, Mexico city, March 2013

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So.., today was our UGJ.., and we’re reporting back =), I think we couldn’t get a better place to jam, the guys of the vision cafe got us to one of the Santa Anna personal rooms (thank you!, your service is one of the best!), Mexico downtown is full of colonial buildings and this one was not the exception. We jammed for ~4 hours, which we used to ping the problems we had reported previously, looked at translations, art, talked about the strategies to keep improving the Ubuntu-mx team and ate lots of pizza, I love to see this energy at the keyboard, we even went online:

Hey, I know we may seem some kind quiet but we where focusing on our topic list (those white papers we keep looking at): http://tinyurl.com/points-lst, we also took some pictures:

Click to view slideshow.

How was yours? =)

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet Ubuntu

Famous 'Victory or Death' letter returns to Alamo

Brought by police escort and welcomed with honor guards, drawn swords and a drum roll, the iconic “Victory or Death” letter written by Alamo commander William Barret Travis returned Friday to San Antonio for the first time since it left by courier at the start of the famous siege at the old Spanish mission 177 years ago.

Travis’ letter seeking reinforcements to bolster his badly outnumbered rebel Texans failed to prevent their deaths nearly two weeks later on March 6, 1836. But the following month, Alamo-inspired men led by Gen. Sam Houston defeated elements of the same army under the Mexican president, Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, in an 18-minute battle outside present-day Houston to win independence for Texas from Mexico.

“This is a day of pride — pride in our state, pride in our history,” Michael Waters, chairman of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission, said, calling it a “reunion of two icons of Texas history.”

The single-page faded and yellowing letter, with Travis’ some 200 words written on both sides, arrived by police motorcycle escort in a truck with Massachusetts license plates that backed up on the grounds of the Alamo. It’s to be displayed for 13 days inside the shrine, beginning Saturday.

With a drum roll in the background, four police officers reverently carried a blue crate containing the letter through an arch of sabers held by members of the Texas A&M Corps of Cadets and into the mission.

Travis’ letter, written Feb. 24, 1836, was addressed to “the People of Texas and All Americans in the World.”

“I call on you in the name of Liberty, of patriotism & everything dear to the American character, to come to our aid, with all dispatch,” the 26-year-old lawyer wrote. He also promised: “I shall never surrender or retreat.”

Historians consider Travis’ words a heroic reflection of individual sacrifice for a bigger and nobler cause.

Lynn Jones, a 53-year-old graphic artist from Mesquite, made a special trip to San Antonio for Friday’s event.

“It’s just history,” said Jones, her face painted with the image of the Texas flag. “The hair on the back of my neck was standing up.”

The state of Texas owns the letter, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

'Victory or Death' letter returns to the Alamo

A plea for help penned in 1836 by the commander of the besieged rebel Texas forces at the Alamo, in which he vowed “Victory or Death,” returns to old Spanish mission for the first time Friday.

William Barret Travis‘ famous letter to “the People of Texas and All Americans in the World,” will get a police escort from the state archive in Austin to the Alamo, which is now in the heart of downtown San Antonio. The weathered, single-page letter will go on display for two weeks, starting this weekend, and will be kept in a special display cabinet and given round-the-clock guards.

The exhibit coincides with the 177th anniversary of the siege, which culminated with the March 6, 1836, fall of the Alamo and the deaths of Travis and the roughly 180 men in his command.

“I call on you in the name of Liberty, of patriotism & everything dear to the American character, to come to our aid, with all dispatch”, Travis wrote in the roughly 200-word letter dated that Feb. 24.

Travis, a 26-year-old South Carolina native and lawyer who left his family in Alabama for Texas, wrote that the forces under Mexico‘s president, Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, were subjecting him and his men to “continual” cannon fire. Knowing the odds were against them, Travis wrote that he responded to a surrender demand with a single cannon shot of his own and the promise that, “I shall never surrender or retreat.”

“It’s something about martyrs and last stands,” Michael Parrish, a Baylor University history professor, said of the letter’s allure. “There’s just something very, very romantic and epic and heroic and all the grandiose terms you want to apply.”

The letter was smuggled out of the Alamo at night by a courier on horseback, but by the time it was published in leaflets and newspapers, Travis and his men were dead. But volunteers crying “Remember the Alamo!” and led by Gen. Sam Houston routed Santa Anna‘s forces more than a month later outside what’s now the city of Houston, securing Texas’ independence from Mexico.

Ultimately, Texas was annexed by the United States, contributing to the Mexican War in the late 1840s. An American victory led to the acquisition of much of what is now the southwest U.S., including California.

“The writing of the letter by Travis is a pivotal and very, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News