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Grantham seeking second term in Colo. Senate

By Carie Canterbury

canterburyc@canoncitydailyrecord.com

Kevin Grantham

Kevin Grantham is hoping voters will re-elect him to his second and final term in the Colorado State Senate, representing District 2.

When the Republican ran for office the first time, he said there was a change in direction in the state and in the country that many people in conservative areas didn't agree with. A number of people asked Grantham to run for office so he could take their values to Denver, and he said that's exactly what he's done.

"There is unfinished business that needs to be taken care of when it comes to things like energy policy and Second Amendment rights," he said. "We are still heading in the wrong direction, and the conservative values of this community are not being reflected right now in total up in Denver."

He said he wants to make sure the people and their values continue to be represented.

"I think they saw that being done with me, and I hope they will put their trust in me just one more time, and we'll continue to fight for those things" he said.

During his last four years, Grantham said many of the issues he fought for are items that didn't pass, and some of the things he fought against did pass.

"The gun control legislation and the way our Second Amendment advocates up there fought for Constitutional rights was outstanding, but ultimately, we didn't have enough votes," he said. "Certainly, I am proud of the fight that we waged. Even then, at the same time, there is still legislation that needs to happen other than that."

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Grantham seeking second term in Colo. Senate

Casa Luis Apartments Ibiza – Ibiza – Spain – Video


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By: Przemysaw Tomaszewski

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Casa Luis Apartments Ibiza - Ibiza - Spain - Video

Travel: Barcelona: Where have you been all my life?

Sunny, in climate and in disposition, Barcelona is an absolute pleasure. Same Same explored this seductive city and fell in love in the process.

Have you ever been to Spain before? Ive been asked a few times over the years. I guess so, Ive often replied. I went to Ibiza once for a few days but Im not sure if that really counts. This is usually met with agreement. No you have to go to the mainland. Its a totally different experience.

Now that Ive been to Barcelona, I can see what they all meant. When I flew out of Ibiza, I was certain that Id never return. Upon leaving Barcelona, I found myself saying Ill live here someday.

Barcelona lane Jonathan Percy

I fly into Barcelona from nearby Prague. Its easily 15 degrees warmer, not to mention bright and sunny an instant mood lift. After a swift airport transfer into town, I see Catalan flags waving from practically every balcony. Im reminded of the cultural and political landscape here: Catalonia is a region with its own traditions, cuisine, culture and language, and it wants independence from Spain. Meanwhile, Spain refuses to allow the referendum that could permit it. In Catalonia, weve always done things a little differently, Im told by a fellow passenger.

Barceloneta Christine Espino

Its clichd, but Barcelona really does have something for everyone. Gay travellers will love the lively, sometimes sleazy bars and clubs of Eixample. Foodies will be spoiled for choice with the citys many wonderful cafs and restaurants. Beach lovers will enjoy a stroll or a dip at Barceloneta (but dont expect big waves!). History buffs will spend hours in the Gothic Quarter. Architecture aficionados will be blown away by the Sagrada Familia, Casa Batll and the National Museum of Art.

Berceloneta Hector Garcia

One of Barcelonas simplest delights is allowing yourself to become lost in the narrow, winding streets of the gothic quarter. Theres a surprise around every corner from crafty shops to funky bars and restaurants. Benedict Bar if you can find it is a great place to kick back and rest your weary legs. The decor is creative and colourful, the wine delicious and the staff warm and friendly. The hours will just fly by.

Kylie fans must pay a visit to the Montjuc Municipal Pool, which not only boasts jaw dropping views of the city but was also the location for her 2003 video Slow. The pools were built to host the diving events for the 1992 Olympic Games and are open to the public in the summer for less than 7 each bargain.

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Travel: Barcelona: Where have you been all my life?

Hamlet remake row shines light on Indias culture wars

Shahid Kapoor stars in Haider the controversial film remake of Shakespeare's Hamlet

The tone is uncompromising. The language is harsh. The sovereignty and integrity of India has been attacked with impunity, the court documents claim. The unity of the nation has been undermined.

But the source of the alleged threat to the worlds largest democracy is a somewhat surprising one: a cinematic remake of Hamlet.

Shakespeares great tragedy has always provoked strong emotion but it is rare that anyone seeks to ban productions of it on the grounds of national security.

On Friday, a court in a northern Indian state will hear that a recently released film of the play in a contemporary local setting should be banned to preserve the emerging economic powerhouse and its 1.25 billion inhabitants from further harm. The lawyers bringing the case are from a group calling itself Hindus for Justice and claim to be acting on behalf of the 80% of citizens who follow the faith.

The film has now finished its run, so the move to ban it is largely symbolic. But the case in Uttar Pradesh is being closely watched, seen as yet another skirmish in a long-running cultural war pitting conservatives who say they are defending Indias culture, security and identity against creative artists who argue that they should be free to express themselves.

The film called Haider is set in Kashmir, the former Himalayan princedom where separatist insurgents have fought Indian security forces for 25 years. Scenes showing the Indian army committing human rights abuses and the use of a temple for the play within a play sequence performed by dancers wearing shoes, are anti-Indian divisive [and] hurt the sentiments of Hindus, the legal petition says.

Every artist has the right to express whatever they want but without hurting the sentiments of any community, said Ranjana Agnihotri, secretary-general of the group bringing the case. We definitely represent the Hindu community and we feel confident and strong.

Some commentators say the new Indian government, in power since May and led by a prime minister, Narendra Modi, whose political origins lie in a hardline Hindu revivalist organisation, has inadvertently encouraged an intolerant atmosphere. Others argue the new administration is simply caught in the middle.

It wouldnt surprise me if certain elements misappropriated the [new governments] mandate for their virulent ways of living and thinking but they will be disappointed, said Samir Saran of the Observer Research Foundation, a Delhi-based thinktank.

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Hamlet remake row shines light on Indias culture wars

Jeff Chang Questions Color-Blind America in New Book, 'Who We Be'

In his newest book, Who We Be: The Colorization of America, Berkeley-based author Jeff Chang likens cultural events to waves. They are remembered for the monumental moment when they crash on the shore, but only reach that point after miles of building momentum beneath the ocean's surface. In other words, cultural shifts are known for the historical events that mark them, but actually roll on the floor of the collective subconscious for years before they break.

In the 400-page tome, released in October, Chang traces the representation of race in America from the first newspaper comic to feature an integrated cast in 1965, through the culture wars of the 1990s and the Obama campaign of 2008, all the way to George Zimmerman's trial in 2013. But this wave has been building for Chang since he first moved to Berkeley from his hometown of Honolulu, Hawaii in 1985.

The part Chinese, part Native Hawaiian eighteen-year-old relocated to study at UC Berkeley. When he left the ethnic melting pot that he grew up in, his identity was thrown into stark relief. "In your first few weeks at Cal, people will let you know you're a 'chink,'" said Chang in an interview. He was radicalized by the experience of being othered, and threw himself into the fight for more ethnic diversity in public universities, including the curriculum, student body, and faculty. By the time he left, the admissions cap limiting the number of Asian-American students at UC Berkeley was abolished.

Although Chang majored in economics to please his parents, he took as many classes as he could with professors who were engaged with contemporary issues surrounding race, such as Ronald Takaki. Takaki was an Asian-American intellectual and activist, also from Honolulu, who fought against right-wing traditionalist academics who were afraid of losing the "real" America to people of color. "He was a superhero to us," said Chang.

Meanwhile, Chang also became heavily involved with KALX, the student-run radio station, which was at the height of its countercultural heyday at the time. "I'd DJ at night, and we'd be activists all day, and somewhere in between I'd do homework, I guess," Chang recalled.

After graduating, Chang was convinced that he would go into politics, but quickly figured out that expressing his political beliefs through art felt much more right. In 1991, he founded an underground hip-hop label called Solesides with a group of up-and-coming musicians, namely DJ Shadow, Lyrics Born, and the duo Blackalicious. "It was the kind of thing where we were living the ideals of what we were talking about what folks had been talking about when I was an undergrad," said Chang. "We were making art that was changing the aesthetics, and sort of embodied a kind of cultural politics."

After about five years, the musical careers of Chang's peers took off, and he returned to writing. As part of the first class of graduate students to enter UCLA after the LA riots in 1992, Chang struggled to reconcile his activist and academic principles with the urban realities his hip-hop idols, such as Ice Cube, were rapping about. Out of that personal struggle came the inspiration for his first book, Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation, which chronicles the way that hip-hop transformed politics and pop culture in America.

Chang finally published the book in 2005, garnering widespread acclaim and the American Book Award. But after eventually settling into a job as the executive director of the Institute for Diversity in the Arts at Stanford University, Chang realized that he had left out a crucial cultural moment: his own college years. He thought of Ron Takaki and all of his other heroes who were fighting for people of color to gain cultural visibility at the time. No one was telling that story coherently, because it was still too fresh. But when he engaged with his students about the culture wars of the 1990s, he saw lightbulbs go on. Unlike the Sixties, the Nineties represent an unromanticized history that's recent and real enough to inform the contemporary fight for diversity.

Chang now lives on the same block in the same neighborhood that he lived on when he was attending UC Berkeley, and recalled that it was once very culturally rich. He used to live in the house that blues master Johnny Otis lived in and the cartoonist Morrie Turner was his neighbor. Much of Chang's book takes place in places that would be familiar to East Bay residents. He starts off with the story of Turner, the artist behind the first integrated newspaper comic, Wee Pals.

The reader meets Turner as he is crying tears of joyful disbelief on the night of Obama's election. Chang threads Obama's presidential story throughout the book, discussing how sinister re-renderings of his iconic campaign poster are emblematic of the way that visibility for people of color in America is so often a double-edged sword. He also follows the story of Shepard Fairey, recounting how the successful pop artist in a wild convergence of politics, street art, and grassroots organizing under the sentiment of "HOPE" changed the way that America would view Obama forever with his memorable depiction.

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Jeff Chang Questions Color-Blind America in New Book, 'Who We Be'