Saturday, August 4, 2012

Infographics on North American homeowners and other interesting ...

August 2nd, 2012

Exports, Strategies

In the past few weeks, I visited Domicile Experts, a Laval marketing and communications firm that works exclusively with the construction industry. Their blog is filled with articles about different aspects of marketing construction products.

For example, they?ve taken Statistics Canada and U.S. Census Bureau data on homeowners in North American states and provinces and prepared a series of infographics. They?ve found a fun and ingenious way of providing otherwise dry information while at the same time promoting their own services. Here is the link to the infographic on the U.S. home market. http://www.domicileexperts.com/blog/2012/07/11/the-sorry-state-of-us-homes/

Bruno S?guin

Source: http://www.lavaltechnopole.org/cailt/en/2012/08/02/infographics-on-north-american-homeowners-and-other-interesting-articles-about-the-construction-industry/

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Friday, August 3, 2012

JUST A JEEP GUY: TMI ANSWERS: DEATH AND DYING

DEATH AND DYING

1. How would you like to die?
- In some spectacular fashion - hit by a meteorite, in a place crash, something from Final Destination.

How don't you want to die?
- I don't want to burn! Nor do I want it to be slow and linger. I've been hours away from death once and in extreme pain, I don't want to go through that again.

2. Do you want to go before or after your spouse?
- If I ever have a spouse again, I'd go last. I have thought that if I went before my doggies, I'd want them to join me.

3. Have you planned your wake or funeral??

?- I think wakes and funerals are for the living so I have no desires or plans that need to be followed. My friends and family can do what ever will give them the most comfort.

4. How do you want your body laid to rest?

- I would like my body donated to science but my family is horrified by this so if I go before my parents, then I want to be cremated and they can either keep or spread my ashes. I do not want to be buried.

5. What do you think happens to you after you die?

- I think our bodies are recycled into the universe and that our energy or spirit lives on in those we knew in life. If there is a "heaven" then I have lived a life worthy of a spot. If there isn't then I have lived a worthy life.

Bonus
If you died today but could be frozen and brought back in 100 years, would you?
- HELL YES! I'd like to come back for like a month or year like David's mother in?A.I. Artificial Intelligence. I'd love seeing the advances, wee how the culture wars played out and answering so many questions we still have. If the world survives, I'd only be brought back to something better than we have now, if the world has gone in the toilet, then I'd obviously not be brought back.

Source: http://justajeepguydc.blogspot.com/2012/08/tmi-answers-death-and-dying.html

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Location Spotlight: SoHo Restaurant and Music Club

?

A restaurant and music club, SoHo offers an exciting venue for corporate events, birthday parties, wedding receptions, and rehearsal dinners complete with delicious food and live music. ?There are three beautiful dining rooms, a patio, a dance floor, and a full bar. ?With the decor of an urban warehouse, SoHo offers a contemporary space for guests to relax and enjoy the night.

There is artwork displayed every month from upcoming local Santa Barbara Artists. ?You can request specific theme or style if time allows for the venue to source out an appropriate artist.

The menu features California faire with unique pasta dishes, steaks, fresh seafood, gourmet pizzas, vegetarian entrees, and mouthwatering desserts. With items on their menu ranging from chicken fingers to wild boar shank, SoHo offers dishes for the adventurous as well as more conservative guests, ensuring that every guest enjoys a delectable meal. With wine and music flowing, any event at SoHo is guaranteed to be a night that is filled with laughter and dancing.

?


This is a Ceremony and Reception Venue.

For more information on pricing and availability contact Heather Luikart at (805) 962-7776 or email her at heather@sohosb.com.

Pricing: $$ ? $$$
Site fee: The site fee for SoHo varies on the size of your party, the area used, and the day of the week of the event. SoHo will add tax and 20% gratuity for all food and beverage tabs. Additional fees include a rental and set up fee for private use of the venue, along with a sound engineer fee if the sound system is used.

Capacity: 325 people cocktail style inside and outside. ?180 people seated reception with dance floor.

Areas:3 dining rooms, a patio, a dance floor and a full cocktail bar. The venue is handicapped accessible, including an elevator from the bottom floor.

Restrooms: On site.

Requirements: Balance of all food, beverage, gratuity, and tax are due the night of the event by cash or check. SoHo does not accept credit card payments for banquets.

Time Allotments:
Varies based on event, as needed.

Catering:Food done by restaurant itself. ?Offers appetizers, entrees, desserts, and a kids buffet as well as a full cocktail bar. Overall food choices must be made two weeks prior and individual choices must be submitted one week before the event.

Parking: Public parking structure adjacent with fee.

Music: Offers live music and is set up with audio/visual facilities. A sound engineer may be used for a fee or entertainment at events expense. There is a full sound system available for use.

Alcohol Policy: Full cocktail bar is provided. No alcohol is served after 1:30 am.

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What is Provided: Food and drink vary based on events, but options include passed appetizers for adults, dinner for adults, (including salad, bread, main course, and dessert), bar tab varies in price for adults, buffet for children, and soft drinks for children. Also equipped with Audio/Visual facilities, high speed wireless internet and HD plasma screens for presentations.


Decoration:
SoHo is able to organize themed events, complete with decor, costumes, and live music. Speciality linens and decor are okay at your expense, and you are responsible for assembly and disassembly.

Cancellation Policy: There is a non-refundable deposit to hold the date.

Address:
1221 State Street, Suite 205

Phone: (805) 962-7776

Email: heather@sohosb.com

Website: www.sohosb.com

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Source: http://santabarbarawedding.com/blog/?p=13500

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Too cool to follow the law: Viscous materials do not follow standard laws below a sub-melting point threshold

ScienceDaily (Aug. 1, 2012) ? So-called glass-formers are a class of highly viscous liquid materials that have the consistency of honey and turn into brittle glass once cooled to sufficiently low temperatures. Zhen Chen and his colleagues from Arizona State University, USA, have elucidated the behaviour of these materials as they are on the verge of turning into glass in an article about to be published in The European Physical Journal E.

Although scientists do not yet thoroughly understand their behaviour when approaching the glassy state, this new study, which relies on an additional type of dynamic measurements, clearly shows that they do not behave like more simple fluids, referred to as "activated" fluids. This is contrary to recent reports.

Typically, the dynamics of materials are described using a formula called the Arrhenius law, which is well known for chemical reaction rates. It states that a very simple law regulates how temperature affects characteristics such as viscosity and relaxation times -i.e., delay in returning to equilibrium after the material has been subjected to a perturbation.

The authors used a so-called "residuals" analysis to show that Arrhenius type dynamics is not a common behaviour at temperatures between a sub-melting point threshold, called the crossover temperature, which occurs at a dynamic transition point, and the glass transition temperature, where the liquid becomes a glassy solid.

Zhen Chen and co-authors came to this conclusion by analysing not only the material's viscosity but also more precise data on the dielectric relaxation time available within the same temperature range. This gave them a more exact account of relaxation dynamic properties in highly viscous materials.

The study revealed the need for greater precision in the viscosity data of glass-former materials to avoid masking its actual behaviour from data treatment and graphical representation.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Springer Science+Business Media, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Z. Chen, C. A. Angell, R. Richert. On the dynamics of liquids in their viscous regime approaching the glass transition. The European Physical Journal E, 2012; 35 (7) DOI: 10.1140/epje/i2012-12065-2

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/nIViZ2XgoL8/120801093626.htm

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Thursday, August 2, 2012

Buenos Aires province devises its own Falklands ship ban

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Lawmakers in Buenos Aires province passed a bill on Thursday to prohibit ships involved in business activities off the disputed Falkland Islands from mooring at its ports, part of Argentina's drive to discourage oil exploration in the area.

Argentina had already banned ships flying the Falklands flag from stopping at the country's ports. The regional Mercosur trade group backed the move.

President Cristina Fernandez has launched a wide-ranging diplomatic offensive to assert Argentina's claims to the British-ruled islands 30 years after the Falklands war. She has accused London of maintaining "colonial enclaves" and demanded sovereignty talks - which Britain has rejected.

The South American country has also threatened legal action against companies searching for oil and gas off the islands, known as the Malvinas in Spanish.

The bill approved by provincial lawmakers in Buenos Aires, the country's most populous district, is aimed at keeping ships from obtaining supplies or raw materials in Argentina that could be used in energy exploration or the fishing industry off the Falklands.

"The law prohibits any ship with a U.K. flag or other flag of convenience that comes to the area of the Malvinas to explore or exploit natural resources from mooring, anchoring or getting logistical help," said the bill's sponsor, Patricia Cubria.

The broadly backed bill must be signed into law by Gov. Daniel Scioli, a member of the ruling Peronist party. Other Argentine provinces with Atlantic Ocean ports have taken similar steps.

Cubria said the measure would not affect cruise ships or other vessels used for tourism.

Two sources with knowledge of the shipping sector said the province's move is largely symbolic since ships en route to the Falklands rarely stop in Argentina.

The islands' 3,000 inhabitants are planning a referendum on whether they want to stay part of Britain's self-governing overseas territories, a step designed to outflank Argentina's sovereignty claims.

(Reporting by Guido Nejamkis; Writing by Hilary Burke; Editing by David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/buenos-aires-province-devises-own-falklands-ship-ban-224811516.html

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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

EYES ON LONDON: A call from Obama; Sideburn craze

(AP) ? Around the 2012 Olympics and its host city with journalists from The Associated Press bringing the flavor and details of the games to you:

___

OBAMA AND THE GYMNASTS

First you're getting a gold medal. Then you're on the phone with the president of the United States.

What a 24 hours.

President Barack Obama spoke to the American gymnasts after they won the gold Tuesday night. He spoke to each of them ? Aly Raisman, Jordyn Wieber, McKayla Maroney, Kyla Ross and Gabby Douglas.

According to the White House, this is what the president said:

?To Raisman: "Michelle and have watched and decided of all the Olympians you guys amaze us the most."

?To Wieber: "I'm so impressed by how you bounced back and led the team. Tell your parents I'm proud of them too. I don't think I could watch if I were them."

?To Maroney: "Way to nail that vault. It was unbelievable."

?To Ross, whom he called "really steady": "I was impressed by how cool you were. I don't know how you do what you do, especially the balance beam."

?To Douglas: "You just tore it up. I know how hard you worked to get there." And, then: "Keep at it. Stay cool."

? Julie Pace ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

___

NBC RAKES IT IN

NBC is raking in the Olympic gold: It now expects to break even on the London games rather than take a loss.

NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke says "We are way ahead of where we thought we'd be."

With London five hours ahead of New York, NBC isn't able to show any Olympic events live in U.S. prime time this year like it did with Michael Phelps' gold-medal swims at the 2008 Beijing games. But instead of the expected 20 percent ratings plunge compared with Beijing, Burke said NBC is seeing audiences up 9 percent so far.

Tuesday's Olympics telecast, featuring Phelps' record-setting swim and the gold-medal performance of the U.S. women's gymnastics team, had the highest rating of any Olympic night so far this year, according to the Nielsen ratings company.

Higher ratings translates into higher revenues from last-minute ads.

NBC paid $1.2 billion for the rights to show the games on TV and online in the U.S.

? David Bauder ? Twitter http://twitter.com/dbauder

___

OLYMPIC PEOPLE-WATCHING

Located directly across from the Athletes Village, Westfield Mall seems to be the place the Olympians are flocking to during their time off. Many are wearing either official team gear or clothing that reveals their country.

It's the perfect place for people who don't have tickets to any events but want to enjoy some of the Olympic experience. Fans can stand at the top of the mall stairs and get a glimpse of the village, and wait to see athletes come up the escalator.

"I've met Australians, South Africans, seen all kinds of athletes," said Farrukh Jamal, who was taking pictures at the top of the steps. "This is the place to hang out."

? Jenna Fryer ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

___

BRITONS YES, BRETONS NO?

Thierry Le Sommer traveled to Scotland to see his daughter play soccer for France ? but was almost kicked out of the stadium for waving the flag of Brittany, northwestern France.

He says security officials wanted to take it off him and even threatened to call police.

The episode highlights a patriotic sore point at these carefully regulated Olympics. Instructions on all tickets advise spectators that they must not arrive in Olympic venues bearing "flags of countries not participating in the games."

We've now clarified what the rules are ? and Le Sommer did nothing wrong.

The London organizing committee explained to The Associated Press that security officials should permit flags from "nations under the umbrella of participating countries." And they said that this extends to flags of regions, too.

? Shawn Pogatchnik ? Twitter http://twitter.com/ShawnPogatchnik

___

THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT

Musician Paul Weller says it feels "great" to have inspired an Olympian ? cycling gold medalist Bradley Wiggins of Britain.

Wiggins, who took gold in the men's time trial on Wednesday after winning the Tour de France last month, is both a champion athlete and a well-known mod, a follower of the sharp-suited music and fashion movement epitomized by Weller's former band, The Jam.

Wiggins has cited Weller as a hero, and Weller ? nicknamed the "Modfather" ? says it feels great to have inspired "a fellow stylist."

Weller told the AP just before Wiggins' Olympic victory that "it's just nice to see an Englishman win something. But he's great, he's at the top of his game, isn't he?"

? Jill Lawless ? Twitter http://twitter.com/JillLawless

___

HERE WIGGO!

British cyclist Bradley Wiggins has inspired a nation ? to don sideburns.

Thousands of fans, men and women, boys and girls, taped fake hair to their cheeks in hopes of creating a winning karma for Wiggins, the Tour de France champ renowned for his scraggly sideburns.

"We all love Wiggo," said Wayne Coxon, a 39-year-old fan near Wednesday's finish line who had taped his own custom-made fur to his face for the occasion. "People have come from all over the country to be here."

Two rival British tabloids, the right-wing Sun and left-wing Daily Mirror, both sought to capture the British zeitgeist by turning their front pages into populist cut-outs of Wiggins' facial hair.

"HERE WIGGO! Help Bradley triumph by wearing his lucky sideburns with pride," the Mirror declared on its front page featuring a lifesize cutout of Wiggins' hair and ears.

The Sun offered readers a pair of "24-carat" sideburns colored gold for the occasion.

? Shawn Pogatchnik ? Twitter http://twitter.com/ShawnPogatchnik

___

LEYVA'S TOWEL

What's the deal with that Danell Leyva and his ever-present towel? Call it superstition.

The U.S. gymnast likes to pull the grayish-blue towel with stars on it over his head between events so he can maintain his focus and not get distracted. He used to have two, but one ripped so now he carries the same one everywhere he goes (yes, he does wash it).

Any doubts about the power of the towel were erased earlier this year at Winter Cup, a ranking meet for the U.S. men. Leyva forgot to pack the towel and had one of his worst meets in a long time, falling on parallel bars, where he's the reigning world champion, during qualifying, and high bar, his other best event. He wound up a distant fourth.

The towel has become so "famous" it now even has its own Twitter account: http://twitter.com/leyvastowel.

? Nancy Armour ? http://twitter.com/nrarmour

___

NEW KIND OF UNITARD

Ghada Hassine of Tunisia is now the first Olympic weightlifter to compete in a newly approved "unitard" that covers most of her body.

Rules requiring lifters to wear a costume that doesn't cover the arms and lower legs were changed last year. The U.S. had petitioned for a change on behalf of a Muslim lifter.

Hassine, 19, wore the unitard Wednesday under the traditional weightlifting outfit and a hijab covering her hair as she participated in the "B'' group of lower-ranked lifters in the women's 69-kilogram category. She cleared 102 kilograms in the snatch and 120 in the clean and jerk for a 220-kilogram total, putting her in second place before the top medal contenders had competed in the "A'' group.

? Karl Ritter ? Twitter http://www.twitter.com/karl_ritter

___

DRESSED DOWN

It had to happen.

After a week of being asked about bikinis, Dutch beach volleyballer Reinder Nummerdor snapped at a reporter asking about the traditional women's uniform.

"I don't want to talk about that," he said with a dismissive wave of the hand. "It has nothing to do with our sport."

There has been a lot of attention on the women's outfits, especially in light of a new FIVB rule that allows shorts and T-shirts for those whose cultural beliefs would prevent them from wearing bikinis. (It is unrelated to the longtime rule that allows them to cover up in cold weather.)

The players have been largely tolerant of the questions.

American Kerri Walsh Jennings says people might come for the scantily-clad women, but once they see the sport they understand they are looking at world-class athletes.

But Nummerdor had enough, pointing out that the beach volleyball uniforms are not really any different than what sprinters wear and ? as far as the men are concerned ? much less revealing than the swimmers' suits.

? Jimmy Golen ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jgolen

___

PRESIDENTIAL PROPS

The congratulations keep rolling in for the women's gymnastics team. Here's what Jordyn Wieber just tweeted:

"Just talked to the President on the phone! Pretty much the coolest thing ever!!"

? Jenna Fryer ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

___

THE PHOTO OF BORIS

Here's the photo of London Mayor Boris Johnson stuck and dangling from the zip wire.

"Can you get me a rope? Get me a rope, okay?" he said.

And the crowds responded with laughter.

? Sylvia Hui ? Twitter http://twitter.com/sylviahui

___

PLAYING IT SAFE

Over at the gymnastics, the public announcer wanted to make absolutely sure he'd got this one right. You know, there's been enough confusion already about North and South Korean flags.

As he introduced Kim Soo-myun, he hesitated, almost got it wrong ? and then everything went silent.

The crowd started to laugh and applaud.

Then, in an assured tone, the nationality was finally given: South Korea!

"I am sure you would appreciate that i want to be absolutely sure," said the announcer, to much amusement.

He didn't know, presumably, that the North Koreans aren't even taking part in the gymnastics here. They were banned as punishment for a case of age falsification.

? Peter DeJong

___

LOOSEN UP!

"Don't be robotic!" That was the advice coming from Chinese basketball coach Bob Donewald to his players during practice Wednesday.

China has lost the first two games of the Olympics and Donewald is trying to get his players to loosen up and improvise as the game goes along.

They play Australia on Thursday, and desperately need a win to start validating all the changes Donewald has made since taking over the program three years ago.

"We need results," he says.

?Jon Krawczynski ? Twitter http://www.twitter.com/APKrawczynski

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? "Eyes on London" shows you the Olympics through the eyes of Associated Press journalists across the 2012 Olympic city and around the world. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item.

(This version Corrects spelling of name to Aly Raisman, sted Reisman. )

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-08-01-OLY-Eyes-on-London-Package/id-3bbe4b4907704f268e4a0e7b47346106

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Opera about Iraq War reaches out to veterans

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

explore.org

The Vancouver City Opera staged a workshop of "Fallujah," the first opera about the Iraq War, but the production still needs to find a theater home.

Can the stirring sounds of?opera reach out to a young generation of veterans dealing with the pain of post-traumatic stress disorder??That's what Marine and Iraq War vet Christian Ellis?and Iraqi American playwright Heather Raffo are hoping.

Along with composer Tobin Stokes, Ellis and Raffo worked to set Ellis' wartime experiences to music, creating "Fallujah," the first-ever opera written about the Iraq War.

But it?wasn't easy for?Raffo and Ellis?to come together to work on?the project. Ellis?said that while it's hard for him to admit he held prejudice against those of Iraqi descent,?those feelings were?there.

"It took a lot for me to actually go meet (Raffo), and I'm glad I did," he told NBC News.

And Raffo, whose earlier one-woman play, "9 Parts of Desire" focuses on Iraqi women, had her own worries.?After a lifetime of hearing stories from her father's family in Baghdad, she says she wasn't sure she was ready to "fully take on (the U.S. military's) story and to let it live in me as humanly as the Iraqi side."

That all changed within minutes of their meeting. "The moment I walked into (Raffo's) apartment?... she gave me a hug and?(our connection)?was like -- instant," Ellis said.

Raffo agrees. "I might have been most moved and surprised by the level of clarity, honesty, and ulimately vulnerability with which he spoke," she says. "I mean, Marines are really strong people, but I noticed how emotionally strong and fragile Christian is. He was an absolute open book."

He had some heavy stories to share. A former machine gunner,?Ellis was in one of the first units to invade Fallujah in 2004, fighting in two of the bloodiest battles U.S. forces saw there. He's open about the four suicide attempts he made after his return home, and about the 33 friends he lost, some to battle, some to suicide. He's marked himself with intricate arm and chest tattoos that carry 33 drops of red to remember those friends, an idea inspired by the red "blood stripe" Marines wear on the trousers of their dress blues.

Ellis had?created a?written story outlining some of his experiences in Iraq, and with Raffo's help, the two set about turning that into an opera. "Fallujah" begins with a Marine named Phillip in the suicide ward of a VA hospital, trying to decide if he will allow his mother in to see him.

When the two met, Raffo had just given birth to her second child, so motherly emotions were flowing freely on many levels.

Chad Galloway / Opus 59 Films

Christian Ellis, a Marine veteran of the Iraq War, and Heather Raffo, an Iraqi American playwright, collaborated on "Fallujah," but both admit they had prejudices before meeting.

"Pairing these kind of in-depth conversations with mother-son relationships while I had just given birth to a son was really part of our bonding and coming together," she said. "We were really relating as a mother with a young man."

A duet between two grieving mothers, one American, one Iraqi, is a central part of the production. Ellis is quick to point out that?Phillip's mother in the opera is not based on his own mother, and mom Michelle Ellis says she understands.

"He told me, 'Mom, it's not you, it's a character that I've created'," Michelle Ellis said. "He has created a story, and I think that the power of it is real."

Michelle Ellis remembers her son's fascination with operatic music going way back, noting with a laugh that he would sing the famous "Figaro, Figaro" section of "The Marriage of Figaro" opera in the shower.

"He loved music ever since he was such a little kid," she said. ?"He's got a real big heart, and I'm hoping that will come out in the opera."

explore.org

"Fallujah" flashes between a suicidal Marine's struggles in the present day, and his flashbacks to his experiences during the war.

From all accounts, it has. The opera doesn't shy away from the brutality of battle, flashing back between Phillip's present-day struggle and what Raffo calls "daymares," flashbacks to the war. In one scene, Phillip watches his best friend die, and another involves a horrible event involving a young Iraqi boy he's befriended. Both events are drawn from Ellis' own war experiences.

Ellis himself is still living with the traumas he experienced in the war. His transition home was difficult, and it took some time before a friend who worked with veterans helped him realize he was suffering from PTSD. Even now, suicidal thoughts still come and go. And he's struggling to find work in a world that he notes seems unfriendly to all unemployed people, but especially to veterans. He's sent out 200 resumes and received only two calls about work.

"It's hard to put on a?resume, I've been a machine gunner, I've been an instructor, I've been a leader," he says. "I know how to manage people, but I really don't have the retail experience you seem to require."

City Opera Vancouver developed "Fallujah" with funds from Explore.org,?which is part?of the Annenberg Foundation. It's the rare opera that has almost the equivalent of a movie trailer --?clips from a May final workshop?are available to watch online.

Artistic director Charles Barber said despite its military theme, the opera is accessible to all. "I've never been?on a battlefield in my life," Barber said. "You don't have to have been there with an AK-47 to know what it means."

Composer Tobin Stokes worked to make each character's musical language fit his background and generation, even incorporating the sounds of an oud, a traditional Middle Eastern?stringed instrument.

"We have something here that tells a story, yes, but it digs deeper and touches the heart of the problems war leaves behind, and I know it can start dialogues and healing," Stokes said.?"I've seen it happening already."

But the opera has yet to find a company and theater willing to produce it. Raffo and Ellis would like to see "Fallujah" land in Washington, D.C., perhaps at the Kennedy Center.

Such a location, Raffo notes, would allow the opera to be seen?by employees of the State Department, Pentagon and?Iraqi Embassy, as well as regular members of the military and civilians.

"That makes for a conversation, and that is exactly what we want to happen," Raffo said.

Have you seen the returning vets in your life struggle to adjust to life after their wartime experiences? Tell us on Facebook.

Related content:

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Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/08/01/12971324-first-opera-about-iraq-war-reaches-out-to-veterans-suffering-from-ptsd?lite

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