DS Graphics/Universal Wilde Expands Inkjet Footprint with ProStream 1800
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Designed to push the boundaries of commercial print and meet changing customer demands, the recent launch of the Canon ProStream 1800 production inkjet press has helped to expand print offerings by migrating higher-volume jobs from offset to digital inkjet. Serving as one of the first customers in the United States to install the new press, and the very first in the greater Northeast region, DS Graphics|Universal Wilde, a Canon Solutions America, Inc., production print customer in Massachusetts, quickly expanded its footprint and fleet of cutsheet and roll-fed digital equipment.
Designed to push the boundaries of commercial print and meet changing customer demands, the recent launch of the Canon ProStream 1800 production inkjet press has helped to expand print offerings by migrating higher-volume jobs from offset to digital inkje
Committee Reports
House Appropriations Human Resources Subcommittee
Chairman Katie Dempsey (R-Rome) and her Human Resources Subcommittee spent a part of President’s Day hearing more specifics regarding the FY 2022 Budget needs, particularly around the areas of the Departments of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities, Human Resources (including Division of Family and Children’s Services), Veterans Services, Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities and Georgia Vocational Rehabilitation Agency. The full tracking document for HB 81, the proposed spending plan for FY 2022, is here.
The Subcommittee heard presentations from the Departments and agencies, but the real discussions were the testimonies provided by the public. A few highlights of the agencies presentations included:
A Rocha’s ‘4 R’ planet By Jake Cleaver, in Renature, News · 12-02-2021 01:00:00 · 0 Comments
’How can something disposable be made of something indestructible?’
That’s the line that really stuck with me after attending a Zoom call between the Portuguese branch of the Christian environmental association A Rocha, and the Saint Vincent’s Anglican Chaplaincy in the Algarve at the end of last month.
The video call was attended by more than 100 people from all around the world and was created to spread the word about A Rocha’s ‘Plastic Free February’ project. Holding the event this month neatly coincides with the Christian tradition of giving up something for lent, and I have to say I think it’s an excellent idea, as not only are you doing something that will benefit the planet, but you still get
metajournalistic discourse explore the ways journalists use their public discourse to protect their own autonomy and jockey for cultural legitimacy. For many journalists, defending yourself is just part of the job.
That’s why Moon’s study of Rwandan journalists is so remarkable. In interviews with 40 Rwandan journalists as part of an ethnography of the country’s newsrooms, Moon found that their professional identity is dominated by a metanarrative in which they are untrustworthy, too powerful, and need to be reined in by other social institutions. This narrative stems from Rwandan journalists’ deeply rooted sense of complicity and guilt in helping foment the genocide of the 1990s. As a result, they’re treated extremely skeptically by audiences, sources, and policymakers, and in their eyes, they deserve it. It’s a haunting and fascinating picture of the power of negative discourse to shape professional identity in post-conflict journalism, fueled by collective guilt.