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Wednesday, January 13 Play today's show | How to listen "Hello Mr. Addinsell?" Today's date marks the birthday of Richard Addinsell, a versatile British musician who became one of the most famous film score composers of his generation. Addinsell was born in London on January 13, 1904. He studied music at London's Royal College of Music, and pursued additional studies in Berlin and Vienna before heading off to America in 1933 for some practical education at Hollywood film studios. He put both his theoretical and practical learning to good use when he returned to England, where he began composing for a series of successful British movies. Addinsell wrote the score for the Oscar-winning 1939 film "Goodbye, Mr. Chips." At the same time, Addinsell also achieved a different sort of musical fame as the songwriter and accompanist for some popular British comediennes and cabaret singers of the day. But Addinsell is best known as the composer of the "Warsaw Concerto," a piano concerto consciously modeled on the big Romantic scores of Rachmaninoff. This concerto originally appeared in the 1941 British adventure film "Dangerous Moonlight" (retitled "Suicide Squadron" when it was released in the States in 1942). After that mega-hit, Addinsell's fluent and versatile writing continued to grace a goodly number of post-War British films and TV dramatizations, ranging from historical epics to psychological thrillers, gritty "slice-of-life" dramas, and whimsical, light-hearted comedies. Addinsell died in London at the age of 73 in 1977. | Music Played on Today's Program: Additional Information: About the Program Support Composers Datebook Your support makes our online services possible. Contribute Now. | |||||||
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Composers Datebook for January 13, 2010
MENAFN Summary- Daily Business News
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The Writer's Almanac for January 13, 2010
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Local Breaking News: Marsden wins Va. state Senate race
09:02 PM EST Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Marsden wins Va. state Senate race
Del. David W. Marsden (D-Fairfax) is elected as the new state senator in Virginia's 37th district in southwestern Fairfax County.
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Local Breaking News: Ivey not running for Congress, sources say
04:52 PM EST Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Sources: Ivey not running for Congress
Prince George's County State's Attorney Glenn F. Ivey has decided not to challenge incumbent Rep. Donna F. Edwards for her seat in Maryland's 4th District, sources say.
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Seven Priorities for EPA's Future
Seven Priorities for EPA's Future
Tue, 12 Jan 2010 14:55:02 -0600
Today, Administrator Lisa P. Jackson announced seven priorities for EPA’s future: Taking Action on Climate Change Improving Air Quality Assuring the Safety of Chemicals Cleaning Up Our Communities Protecting America’s Waters Expanding the Conversation on Environmentalism and Working for Environmental Justice Building Strong State and Tribal Partnerships Read her memo for the details.
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Sent by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency · 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW · Washington DC 20460 · 202-564-4355
Technology: Afternoon Edition
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EPA News Release (HQ): Memorandum From Lisa P. Jackson, Administrator to EPA Employees
CONTACT:
Adora Andy
press@epa.gov
202-564-6794
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 12, 2010
MEMORANDUM
From: Lisa P. Jackson, Administrator
To: All EPA Employees
Colleagues:
Almost one year ago, I began my work as Administrator. It has been a deeply fulfilling 12 months and a wonderful homecoming for me. As our first year together draws to a close, we must now look to the tasks ahead.
In my First Day Memo, I outlined five priorities for my time as Administrator. We have made enormous strides on all five, and our achievements reflect your hard work and dedication. By working with our senior policy team, listening to your input and learning from the experiences of the last 12 months, we have strengthened our focus and expanded the list of priorities. Listed below are seven key themes to focus the work of our agency.
Taking Action on Climate Change: 2009 saw historic progress in the fight against climate change, with a range of greenhouse gas reduction initiatives. We must continue this critical effort and ensure compliance with the law. We will continue to support the President and Congress in enacting clean energy and climate legislation. Using the Clean Air Act, we will finalize our mobile source rules and provide a framework for continued improvements in that sector. We will build on the success of Energy Star to expand cost-saving energy conservation and efficiency programs. And, we will continue to develop common-sense solutions for reducing GHG emissions from large stationary sources like power plants. In all of this, we must also recognize that climate change will affect other parts of our core mission, such as protecting air and water quality, and we must include those considerations in our future plans.
Improving Air Quality: American communities face serious health and environmental challenges from air pollution. We have already proposed stronger ambient air quality standards for ozone, which will help millions of American breathe easier and live healthier. Building on that, EPA will develop a comprehensive strategy for a cleaner and more efficient power sector, with strong but achievable emission reduction goals for SO2, NOx, mercury and other air toxics. We will strengthen our ambient air quality standards for pollutants such as PM, SO2 and NO2 and will achieve additional reductions in air toxics from a range of industrial facilities. Improved monitoring, permitting and enforcement will be critical building blocks for air quality improvement.
Assuring the Safety of Chemicals: One of my highest priorities is to make significant and long overdue progress in assuring the safety of chemicals in our products, our environment and our bodies. Last year I announced principles for modernizing the Toxic Substances Control Act. Separately, we are shifting EPA’s focus to address high-concern chemicals and filling data gaps on widely produced chemicals in commerce. At the end of 2009, we released our first-ever chemical management plans for four groups of substances, and more plans are in the pipeline for 2010. Using our streamlined Integrated Risk Information System, we will continue strong progress toward rigorous, peer-reviewed health assessments on dioxins, arsenic, formaldehyde, TCE and other substances of concern.
Cleaning Up Our Communities: In 2009 EPA made strong cleanup progress by accelerating our Superfund program and confronting significant local environmental challenges like the asbestos Public Health Emergency in
Protecting
Expanding the Conversation on Environmentalism and Working for Environmental Justice: We have begun a new era of outreach and protection for communities historically underrepresented in EPA decision-making. We are building strong working relationships with tribes, communities of color, economically distressed cities and towns, young people and others, but this is just a start. We must include environmental justice principles in all of our decisions. This is an area that calls for innovation and bold thinking, and I am challenging all of our employees to bring vision and creativity to our programs. The protection of vulnerable subpopulations is a top priority, especially with regard to children. Our revitalized Children’s Health Office is bringing a new energy to safeguarding children through all of our enforcement efforts. We will ensure that children’s health protection continues to guide the path forward.
We will also focus on improving EPA’s internal operations, from performance measures to agency processes. We have a complex organization -- which is both an asset and a challenge. We will strive to ensure that EPA is a workplace worthy of our top notch workforce. Our success will depend on supporting innovation and creativity in both what we do and how we do it, and I encourage everyone to be part of constructively improving our agency.
These priorities will guide our work in 2010 and the years ahead. They are built around the challenges and opportunities inherent in our mission to protect human health and the environment for all Americans. We will carry out our mission by respecting our core values of science, transparency and the rule of law. I have unlimited confidence in the talent and spirit of our workforce, and I will look to your energy, ideas and passion in the days ahead. I know we will meet these challenges head on, as one EPA.
Sincerely,
Lisa P. Jackson
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Community Action For Radon - An Important Step For Better Indoor Air Quality
Community Action For Radon - An Important Step For Better Indoor Air Quality
Tue, 12 Jan 2010 14:00:38 -0600
January is National Radon Action Month, or NRAM. Read more about EPA’s radon activities and what others are doing to reduce their radon exposure. While many people have heard of radon and some even know it is a carcinogen, not enough are taking action to reduce their risk. That’s why the EPA Radon program is working [...]
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Sent by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency · 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW · Washington DC 20460 · 202-564-4355
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