Friday, January 3, 2014

John Graham | The Royal Conservatory of Music

John Graham | The Royal Conservatory of Music

John Graham | Multimatic Motorsports

John Graham | Multimatic Motorsports

Archives for John Graham | The Occidental Observer - White Identity, Interests, and Culture

Archives for John Graham | The Occidental Observer - White Identity, Interests, and Culture

John Graham–Concert Violist–Professor of Viola

John Graham–Concert Violist–Professor of Viola

John Graham-Cumming: The greatest machine that never was | Video on TED.com

John Graham-Cumming: The greatest machine that never was | Video on TED.com

Milestones | FleishmanHillard

Milestones | FleishmanHillard

Musichall - international representation of opera singers, directors, conductors etc.

Musichall - international representation of opera singers, directors, conductors etc.

John Graham - YouTube

John Graham - YouTube

Move: a short film by John Graham

Move: a short film by John Graham

Rev John Graham, aka crossword setter Araucaria, dies aged 92 | Crosswords | theguardian.com

Rev John Graham, aka crossword setter Araucaria, dies aged 92 | Crosswords | theguardian.com

John Graham - IMDb

John Graham - IMDb

The Tyee – Delivering 'Framed' John Graham

The Tyee – Delivering 'Framed' John Graham

John Graham VICTORIA BC Canada

John Graham VICTORIA BC Canada

John Graham in South Africa

Nkandla's weakest link is its chimney

 PHILLIP DE WET
A complaint to the public protector has exposed a possible fire hazard at President Jacob Zuma's homestead.
Experts say the thatched buildings at Nkandla could be at risk from a chimney that is too short. (Madelene Cronje, M&G)
It took three security agencies, an army of contractors and at least R71-million to secure President Jacob Zuma'shomestead in Nkandla, according to a government fact-finding exercise. Fire protection alone saw the construction of both a reservoir and a "fire pool", which has a remarkable resemblance to a swimming pool. But all of that missed what may be the biggest and most glaring threat to the safety of the president, a complaint lodged with the public protector this week says: a chimney that is far too short.
"It is absolutely elementary," says social worker John Clarke, who is responsible for the latest formal complaint relating to the more than R200-million of taxpayer funds spent on Zuma's Nkandla residence. "Thirty years ago they taught us that thatched roofs need to be specially dealt with. You don't need to be an architect to see that."
The supposed chimney on the roof of one of the main structures of the compound, Clarke says, is too short. This presents a clear fire hazard, which should, by rights, have been detected and rectified during the work of the interministerial task team that investigated public spending at Nkandla. But the formerly top-secret report compiled by that task team and released in December takes no notice of the clear and present danger. That, Clarke told the public protector in a complaint lodged on Thursday, "suggests that President Zuma may be more at risk from the apparent incompetence of members of his own Cabinet than any external threat".
And if the chimney is really a chimney – which is not as obvious as it may appear amid the Byzantine complexity that is Nkandla – that argument could hold some merit.
Building regulations
South African building regulations set complex rules for the construction of safe chimneys, but do not set standards specific to highly combustible thatched roofs. Those who deal with chimneys and thatch have a simple rule of thumb, however: build tall chimneys, certainly taller than what appears to be a chimney in the Nkandla complex.
One fireplace company recommends that a chimney on thatch should extend past the apex of the roof by at least 600mm, another that the difference in height should be no less than a metre. One thatching company says chimneys "should be well above the highest point of the thatch", another that there should be at least 1.8m of clearance from the top of the chimney stack to the closest thatch in any direction. None recommends what appears to be the case in Nkandla, which is a chimney-like structure well below the line of thatch, regardless of other safety mechanisms such as spark arrestors.
The supposed Nkandla chimney also appears to fail to comply with regulations that apply to all roofs, even those not so likely to catch fire as to require a fire pool, said John Graham, the chief executive of inspection company HouseCheck, after examining photographs supplied by the Mail & Guardian.
One regulation, Graham said, "states that the height of any chimney outlet must be 1 000mm above the highest point of contact of the chimney [the base of the chimney stack] and the roof covering [and] at least 600mm above the ridge line of a pitched roof; the top of the chimney stack must also be at least 1 000mm from the roof covering [measured horizontally]. The chimney on the main building in your picture fails on all three of these specs."
That is aside from possible problems with lightning arrestors and the proximity of other thatched dwellings. But in a twist that building regulations do not normally need to consider, the chimney may not be a chimney at all, according to documents relating to Nkandla previously published by the M&G. It could, instead, be part of an elaborate defence against chemical or biological weapons.
In the early stages of the security project in 2009, the documents show, a proposal was presented on providing a filtered air supply to the secure section of a tunnel complex beneath the compound, a supply that could withstand a gas attack. Part of the proposal included an "air intake" that was to be "concealed as a high chimney at the main house".
The documents are not clear on whether the proposal was ever accepted, and it remains unknown whether the chimney functions as a chimney

John Graham Clinician


John M. Graham Jr., MD, ScD

Director, Clinical Genetics and Dysmorphology

John M. Graham, Jr., MD, ScD is Director of the Division of Clinical Genetics and Dysmorphology at Cedars-Sinai and Director of Clinical Training for the Medical Genetics Fellowship Training Program.

Board certified in both pediatrics and medical genetics, Dr. Graham is a member of numerous professional organizations, including the American Society of Human Genetics, American College of Medical Genetics, American Academy of Pediatrics, Society for Pediatric Research, American Pediatric Society, Society for the Study of Behavioral Phenotypes and the Teratology Society.

Dr. Graham's background in public health, communication disorders, developmental pediatrics and dysmorphology has helped to branch his research into a wide variety of medical conditions that lead to developmental disabilities. He also has a research interests in various teratologic disorders and craniofacial disorders, such as craniosynostosis, plagiocephaly, cleft lip and palate, hemifacial microsomia and microtia. Additional research interests include the genetics of mental retardation and common birth defect syndromes. He has written well over 200 peer-reviewed scientific articles and book chapters and recently revised his book, Smith's Recognizable Patterns of Human Deformation.
Dr. Graham received his undergraduate and Doctor of Science degrees from Johns Hopkins University and his medical degree from the Medical University of South Carolina. He completed his pediatrics residency at Boston Children's Hospital, a Dysmorphology fellowship at University of Washington at Seattle, and a Developmental Disabilities fellowship at Boston Children's Hospital.

Click here for a list of Dr. Graham's published articles.

John Graham Canadian Spy



ESPIONAGE

Canadian diplomats spied on Cuba for CIA in aftermath of missile crisis: envoy


In a little-known chapter of the Cold War, Canadian diplomats spied for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in Cuba in the aftermath of the 1962 missile crisis – and for years afterward.

A major part of that story is told in a forthcoming memoir by retired Canadian envoy John Graham. Mr. Graham was one of a series of Canadian diplomats recruited to spy for the CIA in Havana. The missions went on for at least seven years, during the 1960s.
“We didn’t have a military attachĂ© in the Canadian embassy,” explained Mr. Graham, who worked under the cover of Political Officer. “And to send one at the time might have raised questions. So it was decided to make our purpose less visible.”
Mr. Graham said he worked as a spy for two years, between 1962 and 1964. His mandate was to visit Soviet bases, identify weapons and electronic equipment and monitor troop movements.
The espionage missions began after President John Kennedy asked Prime Minister Lester Pearson – at their May, 1963, summit in Hyannis Port, Mass. – whether Canada would abet American intelligence-gathering efforts in Cuba.
As a result of the crisis, which brought the superpowers to the brink of nuclear war, the Soviets had agreed to withdraw nuclear missiles from Cuban territory, in exchange for Washington’s pledge to remove its own missile batteries from Turkey and Italy.
To monitor Russian compliance, the United States needed to supplement data gleaned from almost daily U-2 reconnaissance flights. It had few assets on the ground. Its networks of Cuban agents had been progressively rolled up by Castro’s efficient counterintelligence service. And having severed diplomatic relations with Cuba in 1961, it had no embassy of its own through which to infiltrate American spies.
Soon after the summit meeting, Ottawa sent diplomat George Cowley to Havana.
Now deceased, Mr. Cowley, who had served in the Canadian embassy in Japan and sold encyclopedias in Africa, spent about two months in Havana in the late spring of 1963.
He was followed by Mr. Graham, seconded from his post as chargĂ© d’affaires in the Dominican Republic.
His formal training, he told The Globe and Mail, was minimal – a few days at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va. At the end of it, an agency officer offered him a farewell gift – a sophisticated camera with an assortment of telephoto lenses.
He declined the present, arguing that if he were ever caught with it, he’d surely be arrested.
“But how will we know what the Soviet military convoys are carrying?” a CIA officer asked him. “We need precision. Configuration is essential for recognition.”
“I’ll draw you pictures,” Mr. Graham said. “It was a bit like the character in Graham Greene’s Our Man in Havana, but that’s what I did.”
In the Greene novel, an inept salesman, recruited to spy for Britain, sends illustrations of vacuum cleaner parts to his handler, calling them drawings of a military installation.
Mr. Graham’s sketches, however, were the real thing. To get them to Canada, he flew to Mexico City – the only regional air connection – and deposited the drawings at the Canadian embassy. From there, they were dispatched by diplomatic courier to Ottawa. Copies were subsequently sent to the CIA and, Mr. Graham later heard, to the Kennedy White House.
His written reports, sent by ciphered telegram to the Canadian embassy in Washington and then to Ottawa, contained details of electronic arrays in use at Soviet bases. “That information,” he said, “could tell an expert what weapons systems they had.”
Although Moscow had removed its nuclear arsenal by the time Mr. Graham arrived, it maintained a significant military presence. Russian soldiers typically dressed in civilian clothes, usually in plaid sport shirts, khaki pants and running shoes.
To fit in, Mr. Graham adopted the same ensemble – purchased at a Zellers store in Ottawa. Although many missions involved early morning surveillance of naval facilities, he was never followed. He was stopped only once by the police, roaming through a secure section of a communications building. He pretended to be a bumbling tourist and was let go.
On several occasions, Mr. Graham conducted joint reconnaissance with an agent of another Western country that he declines to identify. “He was brilliant and altogether remarkable. At parties, he composed Monty-Python-like lyrics to pet and lingerie commercials, accompanying himself on the piano.”
To relieve the stress of their missions, they would stop for seaside picnics on the way home. “Mr. X would pull out two crystal goblets and a Thermos of premixed martinis. I supplied the olives.”
Canadian officials, he said, went to extraordinary lengths to protect his identity as an agent. He stamped his sketches with the words, “For Canadian Eyes Only, Confidential.” But in Ottawa they were given an additional security designation – “Secret, Ottawa Only, Protect Source,” a classification he had never seen, before or since.
In 1964, Mr. Graham was promoted within the embassy and replaced in his espionage work by Alan McLaine.
In fact, he said, Canada’s role as CIA surrogate in Cuba continued for several years, even under the government of Pierre Trudeau, who had developed a personal friendship with Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Mr. Graham, now 78, later served in London, became Canada’s ambassador to Venezuela and headed the democracy promotion unit of the Organization of American States.
He recounts his Cuban and other foreign exploits in Whose Man in Havana?Adventures from the Far Side of Diplomacy, to be published by Penumbra Press.
One can only speculate what the Kennedy White House would have done if Conservative John Diefenbaker had won the April 8, 1963, federal election. The two leaders had clashed repeatedly, particularly over the issue of stationing nuclear warheads on Canadian soil.
Fortunately for Washington, Mr. Pearson won a minority government and readily acquiesced to Mr. Kennedy’s espionage request.

Indiana State U John Graham

http://www.indiana.edu/~spea/faculty/graham-johnd.shtml

Another John Graham

http://pattersoncreek.ca/john-graham-associate

Tips for a safe New Year's Eve

Tips for a safe New Year's Eve

Graham wants to create strong local government - The Sealy News: News

Graham wants to create strong local government - The Sealy News: News: John Graham, Austin County judge candidate, likes to figure out how things work, to build and create. Now he wants to build and create strong …