Auteur Sujet: bzol Supreme Court to Hear Christian Group s Appeal  (Lu 2 fois)

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bzol Supreme Court to Hear Christian Group s Appeal
« le: Décembre 22, 2024, 03:09:55 pm »
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 Target Corp., Gap Inc. and five other U.S. retailers that buy clothing made on Saipan and 23 manufacturers on Thursday agreed to pay $11.25 million to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging factory sweatshop conditions.The settlement would assure consumers who buy clothing labeled  Made in the U.S.A.  that the workers who sew the clothes on Saipan, part of the U.S. Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands, are protected by American law, said lawyer Michael Rubin, one of the lead attorneys for the workers.Nineteen other retailers previously reached settlements totaling $8.75 million.In addition to Target and Gap, the new settlements involve J.C. Penney Co., Abercrombie  Fitch, Lane Bryant, Th stanley cup usa e Limited and Talbots. One defendant, Levi Strauss  Co., has not agreed to the settle stanley flask ment but has stopped buying garments from Saipan.The companies, which did not admit wrongdoing, agreed to adopt a code of conduct and pay for independent monitoring of factories on Saipan, a 13-mile long island in the stanley uk  Pacific about 3,700 miles southwest of Hawaii.        Under the settlement, each company will make a one-time contribution to a fund that will finance the monitoring program and compensate more than 30,000 garment workers. The fund also will cover administration costs and pay attorneys  fees.A panel of three retired judges will be set up to oversee monitoring, with the power to make unannounced factory inspections and investigate worker complaints. The judges can order payment  Wxck Report Blasts U.S. Anti-Terror Strategy
 Sometimes we use GIFs for reactions, sometimes they ;re a punchline, and in some cases, they ;re art. That   certainly true of the ones made by Istanbul-based artist Erdal Inci, who masterfully creates mesmerizing GIFs using cloned pieces of videos.     In many cases, Inci, who usually works alone, is the subject. He takes slices of footage to create the illusion of an endless flock of men siding down a railing or jogging on a path. Speaking over email, Inci told Gizmodo a bit about how he turns one subject into a giant animated army: In my GIFS the figure is a perform stanley cup er performing with the street itself or the space. He or she will pass in front of the camera for 20 seconds, for example. So what you see in a GIF is made from a 20 second video recording. When you clone that motion at sequence times, it turns out a motion pattern. So you eventually see all that 20 seconds in a single second. Or even shorter like five frames. This idea pops up all these repetitions. I started to think about time mainly and how I can perform in the street to make them not only somehow beautiful visual loops but ones that can feel you indes stanley quencher cribable or indistinct. I also use different kinds of instruments like flashlights, leds, big portions of styrofoam to vary those feelings. Inci   GIFs don ;t just exist inside the internet, although you can check out more of them on his blog. They ;ll als stanley tumbler o be on display in real life at Action Gallery in Milan on Ma