Finally something we can read@NewAgeofActivism.com is guided by the knowledge that the Origin of All life is Lov. We believe that respecting and taking care of our home planet 'earth' keeps us safe and healthy. New ageofactivism.com is dedicated to all men and women who have been persecuted or murdered because of their sexual orientation, spiritual beliefs, race, age, gender, martial status, disability, or HIV infection. We loves god very very much.

Showing posts with label Obituaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obituaries. Show all posts

Monday, October 1, 2012

Giordano Bruno




Giordano Bruno (Italian pronunciation: [dʒorˈdano ˈbruno]; 1548 – February 17, 1600), (Latin: Iordanus Brunus Nolanus) born Filippo Bruno, was an Italian Dominican friarphilosophermathematician and astronomer. His cosmological theories went beyond theCopernican model in proposing that the Sun was essentially a star, and moreover, that the universe contained an infinite number of inhabited worlds populated by other intelligent beings.[1] After the Roman Inquisition found him guilty of heresy for hispantheism, he was burned at the stake. After his death he gained considerable fame, particularly among 19th- and early 20th-century commentators who, focusing on his astronomical beliefs, regarded him as a martyr for free thought and modern scientific ideas.
Some assessments suggest that Bruno's ideas about the universe played a smaller role in his trial than his pantheist beliefs, which differed from the interpretations and scope of God held by the Catholic Church.[2][3] In addition to his cosmological writings, Bruno also wrote extensively on the art of memory, a loosely organized group of mnemonic techniques and principles. The work ofFrances Yates, especially influential in anglophone scholarship, argues that Bruno was deeply influenced by the astronomy found in Arab astrologyNeoplatonism and Renaissance Hermeticism.[4] Other recent studies of Bruno have focused on his qualitative approach to mathematics and his application of the spatial paradigms of geometry to language.
Source: Wikipedia

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Monday, May 21, 2012

Robin Gibb died at age 62

Beloved Angels, thank you for everything. Come back soon.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Donna Summer, Queen of Disco, dies at 63

Beloved angel! We Love you forever and ever! Thank you for everything.  Come back soon.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Levon Helm Dies: 'The Band' Singer Was 71


Newageofactivism,com: Thank you for everything! Come back soon.#LOVE
Levon Helm, the singer and drummer who anchored the legendary rock group The Band in the 1960s and '70s, and enjoyed a remarkable comeback nearly four decades later after throat cancer had reduced his voice to a whisper, has died.
He was 71.
Helm's website, levonhelm.com, confirmed his death.
"Levon Helm passed peacefully this afternoon," the site's home page said. "He was surrounded by family, friends and band mates and will be remembered by all he touched as a brilliant musician and a beautiful soul."
Helm appeared frail in recent years, but there was no inkling his health had taken a grave turn until Tuesday, when his wife and daughter posted a statement on his website announcing, "Levon is in the final stages of his battle with cancer."
"Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way on this stage of his journey," they wrote.
Helm was inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994 with the other members of The Band. And in 2003, Rolling Stone magazine named him as one of the "100 greatest singers of all time."
His voice reflected an Arkansas drawl and lifetime of musical influences, from country to blues and soul. He could be haunting or howling, melodic or mournful.
That voice soared to prominence with The Band, providing the lead on such lasting classics as "The Weight," "The Night They Drove Ol' Dixie Down" and "Up on Cripple Creek."

But then he endured a series of personal crises that nearly ended his career and his life.
In 1991, a fire destroyed Helm's home and studio in Woodstock, N.Y. Then, in 1998, he was diagnosed with throat cancer and suffered through 28 radiation treatments, leaving him unable to speak. The cost of his new mortgage and medical care drove him into bankruptcy.
He began hosting a series of jam sessions at his rebuilt home to help pay the bills and celebrate the music he loved. Musicians from Elvis Costello to Emmylou Harris dropped in to play with him. The sessions, which came to be known as The Midnight Ramble, continued until a few weeks before his death.
Helm's voice gradually came back, first in a whisper and then a raspy version of what it had been -- about 80 percent restored, he once said. In 2007, he released his first major solo album in 25 years, the critically acclaimed "Dirt Farmer." Two years later, he released "Electric Dirt" as a follow-up. Both won Grammy Awards. His comeback was complete.
"It's amazing," Helm told the Times Herald-Record of Middletown, N.Y. "Just one miracle after another."
Mark Lavon Helm -- he became known as Levon after one of his early band mates kept pronouncing it that way -- was born in 1940 and grew up on a cotton farm in Turkey Scratch, Ark.
His father often took the family to see traveling music shows. Little Levon was 6 years old when he saw his first live performance, a show by Bill Monroe and His Bluegrass Boys. The young boy was smitten.
"This really tattooed my brain. I've never forgotten it," Helm wrote in "This Wheel's On Fire, The Story of Levon Helm and The Band," his 1993 autobiography.
Helm learned to play several instruments and performed in Arkansas throughout his teenage years before joining Ronnie Hawkins' rockabilly band, The Hawks, after high school.
Helm and Hawkins played frequently in Canada, where they recruited other musicians to play with them -- guitarist Robbie Robertson, bassist Rick Danko, pianist Richard Manuel and Garth Hudson, who played the organ.
Helm and his new band mates eventually split from Hawkins and struck out on their own, touring as Levon and the Hawks before becoming Bob Dylan's road band in the mid-1960s.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Dick Clark has died after a heart attack earlier this morning By JULIA KATHAN and SHEILA MARIKAR via ABC NEWS

New age of Activism.com: Forceofnature Thank you for everything! Take a break you deserve it. Come back Soon. #LOVE

Dick Clark, the music industry maverick, longtime TV host and powerhouse producer who changed the way we listened to pop music with "American Bandstand," and whose trademark "Rockin' Eve" became a fixture of New Year's celebrations, died today at the age of 82.
Clark's agent Paul Shefrin said in statement that the veteran host died this morning following a "massive heart attack."
Born in Mount Vernon, N.Y., on Nov. 30, 1929, Richard Wagstaff Clark began his lifelong career in show business began before he was even out of high school. He started working in the mailroom of WRUN, a radio station in upstate New York run by his father and uncle. It wasn't long before the teenager was on the air, filling in for the weatherman and the announcer.
Clark pursued his passion at Syracuse University, working as a disc jockey at the student-run radio station while studying for his degree in business. After graduating in 1951, Clark went back to his family's radio station, but within a year, a bigger city and bigger shows were calling.
Clark landed a gig as a DJ at WFIL in Philadelphia in 1952, spinning records for a show he called "Dick Clark's Caravan of Music." There he broke into the big time, hosting Bandstand, an afternoon dance show for teenagers.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Community Mourns Loss of Transgender Leader Alexis Rivera is remembered as a courageous advocate for transgender rights and social justice for all shared by Dan Fotou

Newageofactivism.com:#FORCEOFNATURE#We Love you forever and ever!Thank you for everything. Come back soon. 

SAN FRANCISCO - Alexis Rivera, a beloved community leader and transgender advocate died on Wednesday, March 28th in Los Angeles. Memorials will be held this weekend in Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Alexis began her activism in California's transgender community almost fifteen ago as an outreach worker for LGBT youth in Hollywood. She was hired at Children's Hospital Los Angeles' Division of Adolescent Medicine where she became a case manager and eventually became the first program director for CHLA's groundbreaking Tranny Rockstar program, where she helped hundreds of transgender youth in Los Angeles. A natural leader, she served as Commissioner for the Los Angeles County Commission on HIV/AIDS; founding board member of FTM Alliance of Los Angeles; and, chair of the Transgender Service Provider Network. Alexis was also a founding member of the League of Trans Unified Sisters (LOTUS), a sisterhood for transgender women.

Transgender Law Center was honored to have Alexis join its staff as Policy Advocate in 2007. Alexis advocated for statewide policy change and trained hundreds of transgender community members to build relationships with their elected officials. During this time, Alexis was also a leader of the Transgender Law Center's Health Care Access Project and helped secure affordable transgender health care services in several counties across California.

Alexis received many awards and honors in recognition of her leadership, including the Trans-Unity Trailblazer and Spirit Awards, the Latino Caucus on HIV Prevention Leadership Award, and the first QUEST Advocacy Pageant sash in 2002.

"Words can barely express the grief experienced by California's trans communities this week," said Masen Davis, Executive Director of Transgender Law Center. "A proud trans Latina and natural leader, Alexis Rivera was a role model and inspiration for countless youth - and many "elders" too. She understood that we are stronger together, and she kept organizing until the very end. Alexis' death is a reminder that the fight for equality - and against AIDS - is far from over."

A memorial gathering will be held in Fiesta Hall at Plummer Park, 7377 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, on Sunday, April 1st at 12:15pm. A viewing will be held on Monday, April 2nd from 1pm to 3pm at Abbott Abbott & Hast Mortuary.

A San Francisco memorial gathering will be held at the SF LGBT Center, 1800 Market Street, on Saturday, April 7th from 3pm to 5:30pm.

Transgender Law Center will continue to post reflections, videos, and links to information about ways to celebrate Alexis on transgenderlawcenter.org. To submit your reflections or information please emailmark@transgenderlawcenter.org.

Transgender Law Center works to change law, policy, and attitudes so that all people can live safely, authentically, and free from discrimination regardless of their gender identity or expression. 

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Davy Jones of the Monkees dead at 66

Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
 Without a question, We Love you forever and ever force of nature hurry back soon. Thank you for your LOVE.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

The Death of Alexander...


The death of Alexander the Great is still shrouded in mystery to this day. It seems hard to believe that a 33-year-old man could die of natural causes that spring up out of the blue, and consequently, modern historians have made many attempts to explain exactly what happened. According to Plutarch, the events leading up to his death are as follows:

Alexander proceeded to Babylon, even after receiving word of several bad omens, such as ravens fighting each other over the city wall with some falling dead right in front of him, a man with a deformed liver being sacrificed in the king's honor, and his best lion was kicked to death by an ass. The god Serapis told a man to put on the king's robes and sit upon the throne. These all served as warnings to Alexander about what may lie in store for him, but they did not deter him.
Once in Babylon, he drank heavily at several banquets. One such banquet was hosted by his friend, Medius. In the Armenian version of the story, Psuedo-Callisthenes wrote that this banquet was a conspiracy involving Iollas, Cassander, and others who were unhappy with Alexander. They gave him poisoned wine, and immediately after drinking it, Alexander felt as if he had "been hit in the liver with an arrow." When he tried to throw it back up, he was given a poisoned feather, which ensured that the poison would reach his blood stream. He proceeded to get very sick and his condition deteriorated until his death. Plutarch did not believe this version, saying the sudden pain Alexander felt after drinking was a detail "with which certain historians felt obliged to embellish the occasion, and thus invent a tragic and moving finale to a great action. Aristobulus tells us that he was seized with a raging fever, that when he became thirsty he drank wine which made him delirious."
We will probably never know the truth, even though new theories are still coming out. We do know that on the 7th of June, 323 BC, the Macedonians were allowed to file past their leader for the last time and finally, three days later, he succumbed to the illness. Thus, on June 10, 323 BC, Alexander the Great died at the age of 33.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Whitney Houston dead at age 48

@WhitneyHouston-We Love you forever and ever! Hurry back force of nature. 
You seemed to LOVE earth very much. Mother Earth LOVES you. We LOVE you.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

POLAND's 1996 Nobel peace prize winner Poet Wislawa Szymborska dies at 88 today...

Newageofactivism.com: Take a break you deserve it@Wislwa Szymborska. You seem to LOVE earth very much. Earth LOVES you. We will be seeing you shortly.#FORCEOFNATURE
INTO THE ARK
An endless rain is just beginning.



Into the ark, for where else can you go:
you poems for a single voice,
private exultations,
unnecessary talents,
surplus curiosity,
short-range sorrows and fears,
eagerness to see things from all sides.

Rivers are swelling and bursting their banks.



Into the ark: all you chiaroscuros and halftones,
you details, ornaments, and whims,
silly exceptions,
forgotten signs,
countless shades of the color gray,
play for play's sake,
and tears of mirth.

As far as the eye can see, there's water



and a hazy horizon.
Into the ark: plans for the distant future,
joy in difference,
admiration for the better man,
choice not narrowed down to one of two,
outworn scruples,
time to think it over,
and the belief that all of this
will still come in handy some day.

For the sake of the children



that we still are,
fairy tales have happy endings.
That's the only finale that will do here, too.
The rain will stop,
the waves will subside,
the clouds will part
in the cleared-up sky,
and they'll be once more
what clouds overhead ought to be:
lofty and rather lighthearted
in their likeness to things
drying in the sun —
isles of bliss,
lambs,
cauliflowers,
diapers.

Friday, January 20, 2012

See You soon@Etta James#LOVE


Etta James, whose powerful, versatile and emotionally direct voice could enliven the raunchiest blues as well as the subtlest love songs, most indelibly in her signature hit, “At Last,” died Friday morning in Riverside, Calif. She was 73.
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