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"ROSENTHAL, ANDREW"
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The rhetoric of : Scapegoating, utopia, and the privatization of social responsibility
1998
This article performs an ideographic analysis of the bipartisan political deployment of the slogan during the 1992 Presidential election campaign. The analysis shows that talk functioned during that campaign to scapegoat Black men and poor Americans for social problems. However, the ideograph also is invested with a gendered utopian narrative that makes its scapegoating less apparent and more persuasive. Ultimately, in constructing the family as the site of all responsibility and change, the rhetoric of privatizes social responsibility for ending poverty and racism.
Journal Article
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Politics and the young
2006
This should be a matter of concern for everyone living in a democracy. Young people can bring to the cynical business of politics enthusiasm and an unwillingness to be deceived by fine words or false sentiments.
Newspaper Article
Survivors thank trauma teams for 'miracles' Event at hospital reunites patients and their caregivers
2015
\"I was in the ICU for seven weeks,\" Tursi said at Memorial Regional Hospital on Tuesday. \"I got out, took months of therapy and they got me walking and eating and talking and I couldn't do any of that at first.\" \"I was walking into my apartment complex and I just saw a guy jump out of nowhere, and he pointed the gun at me so I just started running,\" he said. \"I'm still sore inside, getting therapy and I'm taking it one day at a time.\" \"We're all pieces of the puzzle,\" he said. \"But, no matter how often you do this, you're going to be continually surprised by people's recoveries that you didn't anticipate would be as dramatic as they are.\"
Newspaper Article
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Honoring the dead
2003
Italy's war dead are being honored as symbols of the sacrifices that ordinary Italians are being asked to make in Iraq. While the Italian government surely realizes the political consequences of publicly recognizing casualties in an unpopular war, it nonetheless has chosen to honor its war dead with the full dignity they deserve.
Newspaper Article
N.Y. Times wrong to lobby for lifting Cuba embargo
2014
Mauricio Claver-Carone is the Executive Director of Cuba Democracy Advocates in Washington, D.C., a non-partisan organization dedicated to the promotion of a transition in Cuba toward human rights, democracy and the rule of law, said that when Andrew Rosenthal, the editor of The New York Times' opinion pages was asked about the series of editorials and blogs, he admitted they were part of a lobbying campaign. In his latest editorial [Ernesto Londono] says Cuba makes \"$8.2 billion from its medical workers overseas. The vast majority, fewer than 46,000, are posted in Latin American and the Caribbean. A few thousand are in 32 African countries.\" He added that Cuba pays the doctors who go to Brazil $1,200 per month, much more than the $60 per month the doctors make in Cuba. What he does not say is Brazil pays Cuba $4,430 per month for each doctor. Cuba keeps the difference between what it pays their doctors and what Brazil pays the Castro regime.
Newspaper Article
Briefing
2006
Gail Collins, the first woman to run the editorial page of The New York Times, is stepping down Jan. 1 and will be succeeded by Andrew Rosenthal,...
Newspaper Article
Pumping up WEIGHT PLAN FPC puts emphasis on strength training
2004
EIGHT PLAN PALM COAST The sign over the door to the Flagler Palm Coast weight room says it all: \"Go Hard or Go Home.\" Summer in Florida provides numerous distractions for teenagers with summer jobs, the beach, family vacations and the like. The last thing they want to do is work out hard with free weights. But football players have little choice. The difference between winning and losing in November is directly tied to the sweat and pain of June and July as athletes throughout the state condition themselves for the fall games. Flagler Palm Coast's taste of success last season a 7-5 mark and a history-making Class 5A playoff win came in part because of hard work. It's gratifying for coaches that their players are applying themselves to weight training. Summer workouts began in earnest last week and the attendance some 50 players per day has been pretty good for the two-hour morning sessions. The workouts have attracted everyone from the skinniest incoming freshmen to a handful of former FPC players home on summer break who are playing college football. This isn't just banging barbells and plates around and it's not meant for posers. Workouts are done by a specific schedule. WARMUP TIME It's Tuesday morning and the heat of the previous weekend has subsided only a little as football players arrive in the parking lot of Sal Campanella Memorial Stadium. After some light stretching, the players warm up by jogging a lap around the track, then congregate on the south turn of the track nearest the weight room for more stretching. Stretching, like everything else in the Bulldogs weight training program, is done on a buddy system. The players pair off and take turns helping each other with the routine. Flexibility is as an important component of the workouts as it is during football games. TRAINING TIPS The players gather inside the weight room with assistant coaches Duane Hagstrom and Daryll Oliver. Hagstrom, the defensive line coach and head coach of FPC's weightlifting team, brings out a box of booklets he's prepared that outline the goals of the summer camp, like \"We must realize that lifting is done for one reason to win.\" The booklets also contain the day-to-day regimen and charts so the players can monitor their progress. The Bulldogs program is built on gradually, adding more weight in each exercise and working to maximum efficiency. Players almost exclusively use free weights and the program includes exercises with ominous-sounding names like skull crushers not really so ominous, it's a triceps development routine that uses a lightly-loaded curl bar while lying on one's back on a bench. \"It's about concentration,\" Hagstrom tells those present. \"The last rep must be total maximum effort. You should barely be able to do it. The last two reps should be done with a spotter.\" Technique is everything, according to Hagstrom. It does no good to jerk weights up and down haphazardly. \"When you bench press, I don't want to see the bar bouncing off your chest.
Newspaper Article
Shark attack victim recovering
2015
\"She was as calm as could be and she said, 'A shark bit me,'\" [Britt Martin] told reporters outside the hospital Thursday. \"I thought she was kidding and when I helped her climb up the ladder onto the boat a huge piece of her back was missing.\" \"She's actually excited about it [and] said she's going to make a necklace for the shark tooth,\" Martin said. \"She's just amazing, how upbeat she is and how positive.\" \"I would consider her extremely lucky to have survived what she survived,\" [Andrew Rosenthal] said. \"I consider us lucky to have a patient who's so easy to deal with.\"
Newspaper Article
Shark attack victim is recovering in Hollywood
2015
\"She was as calm as could be and she said, 'a shark bit me,'\" Martin told reporters outside the hospital Thursday. \"I thought she was kidding and when I helped her climb up the ladder onto the boat a huge piece of her back was missing.\" \"She's actually excited about it [and] said she's going to make a necklace for the shark tooth,\" Martin said. \"She's just amazing how upbeat she is and how positive.\" \"It's a miracle that she's alive but she really owes it to herself because she's the one who stayed so calm through the whole ordeal,\" Martin said. \"It's a life-changing event.\"
Newspaper Article