ProPublica editor named to Pulitzer Prize Board
Columbia University announced Thursday that Stephen Engelberg will join the board. Engelberg has been managing editor of ProPublica since it was started in 2008.
Before joining ProPublica, Engelberg worked for The Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, The Dallas Morning News, The New York Times and The Oregonian of Portland, Ore.
NEW YORK (AP) — The managing editor of the nonprofit news organization ProPublica has been named to the 19-member board that administers the Pulitzer Prizes in journalism and the arts.
ProPublica was the first online news organization to win a Pulitzer. It won the investigative reporting prize in 2010 for chronicling life-and-death decisions by a hospital’s exhausted doctors after Hurricane Katrina. A year later it won the national reporting prize for exposing Wall Street practices that contributed to the nation’s economic meltdown.
The mystery over who attacked the Holy Thorn Tree
In fact, that one died due to drought, and was secretly replaced a few months later.
Or catch up later via iPlayer Attacked Holy Thorn tree replaced
Second, that it was militant pagans, opposed to its use as a Christian symbol. Third, that it was part of a private vendetta against a landowner.
Clough displays her shrine to witchcraft on which she had placed a twig of the thorn. "Anything that is a symbol of peace and a symbol of love is something that all witches and Wiccans aspire to."
Walking down the High Street, you could easily get the impression you have stumbled into Witchcraft Central. The shop names tell the story - The Cat and Cauldron, Man, Myth and Magick, The Goddess and Green Man, The Psychic Piglet.
Nowadays, though, it's not the Christians who are conspicuous in Glastonbury but the pagans who have flocked there.
MacGeoch was visited by a mystic who told him of a vision. That there were two men. That the chainsaw had been borrowed by somebody. And the person that he'd borrowed the chainsaw from didn't know the reason why. He told her to go to the police.
"We will hear the women drumming up on the top of the hill. We will see the people dancing round the thorn. Drumming you usually get at a full moon."
The thorn tree, however, is not all that it seems. The one that was cut down was definitely not planted by Joseph of Arimathea, but by a council official in the summer of 1951, to commemorate the Festival of Britain.
Many gathered to see the tree after it was attacked - the cut branches were left at the base
So there are two mysteries of the holy thorn. One is who cut it down, and why? The other is why it seems to mean so much not just to Christians, but to pagans worldwide.
Coles removes them. "It takes daylight away from the trunk," he explains. He also prises out the coins that people have jammed into the bark.
When the tree was attacked, there was an online outpouring of grief. And when, a year later, new growth started to sprout from the trunk, the joy among international pagans was similar.
But the case has gone cold. I only came across one lead, and not a very strong one.
As for the extraordinary beliefs of Glastonbury's new residents, local historian Paul Ashdown takes the long view.
So who cut down the thorn? There are three theories, apart from the mundane explanation of mindless vandalism. First, that it was militant Christians opposed to its use as a pagan symbol.
Whether or not the story is true, Glastonbury became an important early Christian centre, the site of an abbey founded in the 7th Century but closed down by Henry VIII.
The Mystery of the Holy Thorn is on BBC Radio 4, Wednesday 4 April at 11:00 BST
"I have in the past found signs of rituals having been performed on the church steps. And that usually would involve candle grease and herbs and feathers, and sometimes blood," he says.
The Church of England vicar, David MacGeoch, seems a bit less sanguine. He moved to the town precisely because he "felt that Christianity in Glastonbury had got slightly lost".
I found a small piece of it in a surprising place - the Covenstead Bed and Breakfast, whose owner is a witch, Adele Clough.
The local Catholic priest, Father Kevin Knox-Lecky, has also come across signs of Satanism.
In the small hours of 8 December 2010, the Holy Thorn Tree of Glastonbury was cut down by somebody wielding a chain saw. Was it an act of mindless vandalism, or something more significant, asks Jolyon Jenkins.
After that, nothing about Glastonbury is surprising.
Apart from witches and goddess worshippers, there are fairy followers, astrologers, shamans, alchemists, geomancers, druids, spiritualists and every possible variety of alternative healer.
"The oldest version of the Glastonbury legend of all, which we find in the 900s, is the most outrageous of all in a sense.
The apparent takeover of the town by new age believers disturbs him. "There's nothing wrong with paganism but there is a certain taste of Satanism as well and I have always regarded Glastonbury as a Christian town."
He doesn't think it's the work of local witches but outsiders. "I find it a nuisance when I have to clear it up, but that's as far as it goes really."
People took sprigs from the cut branches of the holy thorn
"Blessed Be the Holy Thorn - May it have as many fruit as the tears that have been shed," said one comment on the tree's Facebook page.
The former mayor John Coles tends to the remnants of the thorn. In recent years, people have tied ribbons to it bearing messages, prayers and maybe even spells.
According to legend, the thorn tree sprung from the staff of Joseph of Arimathea, Jesus's great-uncle, when he stuck it in the Somerset soil after voyaging to England in the 1st Century AD.
"It's the heart chakra of the world," says Georgina Sirett-Armstrong-Smith, who is a priestess of Avalon at the local Goddess Temple. Others see strange forms and figures in the local landscape - a swan, a dragon, a pregnant woman.
"All later versions are, to varying degrees, rationalisations of this oldest belief that Glastonbury was one of the most special places in the world - a place where a church can just appear from the heavens."
Continue reading the main story The legend of the holy thorn The holy thorn was first written about in 1502, but it wasn't directly associated with Joseph of Arimathea until the 17th Century According to legend, Joseph travelled to Britain after Jesus was crucified He is said to have stuck his wooden staff into the ground on Wearyall Hill. When he awoke it had sprouted into a thorn tree The original holy thorn was felled in the 1640s during the English civil war, with a replacement planted by the local council in 1951
"We can see it from our front door," says Martin Wheeler, a local blogger.
"Many of us are here to put Christianity back on the map of Glastonbury," he says.
"This never used to happen even eight or nine years ago," he says sadly.
Knox-Lecky is relaxed about witchcraft and paganism, drawing the line only at the occasional attempts by local priestesses to co-opt the Virgin Mary into their pantheon of goddesses.
Continue reading the main story Find out more
"It says that no skill of man built the church in Glastonbury. It was prepared in heaven for the salvation of mankind.
Keri Russell Pregnant With Second Child
“Keri has such a slight frame,” the source said. “She’s going to have to work hard to cover up any baby bump at all.”
With the advances in special affects these days and good ol’ fashioned discreet camera angles, we have a feeling that won’t be a problem.
It’s baby number two on the way for Keri Russell and hubby, Shane Deary. The ‘Felicity’ star has one son, 4-year-old River, who will be the perfect built-in playmate for his forthcoming baby brother or sister.
“Ker is a couple of months pregnant and she’s thrilled,” a friend of the couple told Star Magazine (via HollyBaby). “She and Shane have really wanted another baby, and now it’s actually happening.”
Russell and Deary have been married for four years — the former ‘Felicity’ star has been out of the spotlight for the majority of her spousal life other than her recent starring role on Fox’s ‘Running Wilde.’ But Russell’s news now coincides with her filming schedule for the forthcoming flick, ‘Austenland’ — sounds like Russell may need an extra bustle in her hoop skirt to hide her soon-to-be baby bump.
BBC News - George Harrison memorabilia on show in LA
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A collection of items from George Harrison's childhood and music career are on show at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles.
The museum's deputy director, Rita George, said Harrison's widow, Olivia,wholesale Louis vuitton jewelry, provided the museum with the collection from their home in Henley-on-Thames. It includes some objects that have never been seen in public before.
Jennifer Lopez’s Stylist Speaks Out on Her Supposed Wardrobe Malfunction
“Jennifer’s dress was custom made to fit her every curve,wholesale Seven jeans,” says Rob Zangredi, of the styling duo Rob and Mariel. 10:04 PM PST 2/27/2012 by Merle Ginsberg