четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Indonesia's Democratic Party elects new head

A 40-year-old politician on Sunday won a surprising victory over the two top contenders in the election to lead Indonesia's largest political party.

Anas Urbaningrum was elected chairman of the Democratic Party in a two-part vote Sunday at the conclusion of the party's three-day Congress in the west Java city of Bandung, party official Evert Ernst Mangindaan announced.

The outcome shows that the party of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is looking to a younger generation of politicians to take on the political maneuvering necessary to stand off against the opposition or even pro-government coalition parties.

"The young figure who has …

Hurting Fallon will survive; Large Minneapolis agency, grappling with loss of United business, says it deserves credit for keeping 'Time to Fly' fresh

The news -- first revealed in this column Wednesday -- thatUnited Airlines has decided to move its advertising account toBarrie D'Rozario Murphy/Minneapolis was, understandably, a tough nutto swallow in the offices of Fallon/Minneapolis yesterday.

Fallon is the agency where United's distinguished and hugelydistinctive "It's Time to Fly" ad campaign was conceived some threeyears ago. Fallon, which has worked with United for more than 10years, landed the account when the airline parted ways with longtimeagency of record Leo Burnett/Chicago.

Bob Barrie and Stuart D'Rozario, co-founders of the new boutiqueagency that will handle the United ad business going forward, …

Orioles 8, Nationals 3

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Diaz (de la Peña), Eugène (-Emile)

Diaz (de la Pe�a), Eug�ne (-Emile)

Diaz (de la Pe�a), Eug�ne (-Emile) , French composer, son of the celebrated painter; b. Paris, Feb. 27, 1837; d. Coleville, Sept. 12, 1901. He was a pupil at the Paris Cons., studying with Halevy and Reber. He …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

"The Subversive Charm of the Bourgeoisie"

EINDHOVEN, NETHERLANDS

"The Subversive Charm of the Bourgeoisie"

VAN ABBEMUSEUM

Like many European and American museums, the Van Abbemuscum was founded by a wealthy iiultistrialist. In "The Subversive Charm of the Bourgeoisie," artworks and documents from the museum's collections were combined with recent works that are said to contain "bourgeois elements." In a Europe beset by discussions about (the need for) a renewal of bourgeois values or of a bourgeois lifestyle, such an exhibition is timely, although it turned out to be at least as confused as those discussions. In the media, the historical-and by now largely defunct-bourgeoisie is often turned into a …

Russia Opposition to Field Candidates

MOSCOW - Russia's most vocal opposition alliance said Thursday it would seek to field hundreds of candidates in December parliamentary elections, setting ambitious goals in the face of government pressure.

The Other Russia coalition will nominate 450 candidates and demand that authorities allow their participation even though none of the organizations in the alliance is registered as a political party, said Eduard Limonov, one of the group's top leaders.

"We cannot boycott the election," he told a news conference.

The strategy appears likely to lead to confrontation with the Kremlin ahead of the parliamentary election and the March presidential vote. It may be …

GM hoping for speedy sale and exit from Chapter 11

General Motors Corp. took a key step toward its downsizing on Tuesday, striking a tentative deal to sell its Hummer brand, while also revealing that it has potential buyers for its Saturn and Saab brands.

Detroit-based GM said it has reached a memorandum of understanding with a buyer for Hummer, though it did not name the buyer or the price. The automaker said the sale will likely save more than 3,000 U.S. jobs in manufacturing, engineering and at various Hummer dealerships.

"We're not today in a position to be able to identify a buyer. It was part of the agreement," GM Chief Executive Fritz Henderson told CBS's "The Early Show." "We …

Preservation framing protects precious art and photos

A great way to wreck your prized photo, pastel, chalk sketch orwatercolor is to frame it by sticking it right against the glass orplastic, backing it with a sheet of cardboard and hanging it up.

Condensation on glass will pull emulsion from photos and pigmentfrom watercolors. Static electricity that builds up on plastic willpull the chalk or pastel dust right off the paper. Acid that occursnaturally in cardboard made from wood pulp will eat into the artworklike flame. That's what those brown spots on old photos are.

It broke my cheapskate's heart to have members of theProfessional Picture Framers Association drive it into my head thatthey have reasons for …

Gaza Hamas police stop protest over youth group

JERUSALEM (AP) — Hamas police have broken up a protest against a decision to close down Gaza's largest independent youth organization.

Demonstrators say they were beaten and detained while trying to protest in front of the office of Sharek, a U.N.-funded group that provides youth services. Sharek was shut down by Hamas last week.

They say 12 protesters were arrested, and an Al-Jazeera …

Spanish jobless claims rise

The number of people seeking unemployment benefits in Spain rose by 54,657 in December to a total of nearly 4 million as the recession continued to bite, government figures showed Tuesday.

The number increased by nearly 800,000 in 2009 and now totals 3,923,603 _ 25.4 percent more than at the end of 2008, the Labor Ministry said.

It was the fifth consecutive monthly increase after claims numbers had dropped for three straight months over the summer period.

The …

Teams continuing to see red over league officiating

For the third straight week, an officiating controversy erupted inMajor League Soccer.

Referee Rich Grady of Buffalo Grove ejected three Miami Fusionplayers and D.C. United forward Roy Lassiter on Saturday in FortLauderdale, Fla. Nine minutes into the game, Grady red-carded Miamidefender Leo Cullen, who Grady said had tackled Lassiter from behind.

"I think the ref was trying to get the game under control early,but he had a bad angle on my call," Cullen told the Miami Herald. "Igot all ball. I probably deserved a yellow, but to give a red inthat situation . . . things got out of control anyway."

Miami midfielder Nelson Vargas got the next red card, for …

Wild center James Sheppard fractures left kneecap

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Minnesota Wild center James Sheppard has a fractured left kneecap and there is no timetable for his return.

The team disclosed the injury Tuesday. It said Sheppard was hurt in an off-ice accident on Saturday night in Vail, Colo., but …

Thai government refuses to disclose its location

The Thai government insisted Tuesday it was "fully functional" but refused to disclose where officials were working to avoid provoking more protests with anti-government activists who have vowed to bring the administration to a standstill.

Spokesman Nattawut Saikau indicated the Thai government had effectively gone into hiding to avoid thousands of protesters who surrounded the prime minister's temporary headquarters at Bangkok's domestic airport and embarked on a cat-and-mouse chase to block their meetings.

Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat was in Peru for a summit of Pacific Rim leaders and not expected back until Wednesday. But when he returns he will confront the latest twist in Thailand's political crisis _ and the need to find a new office space.

Protesters seeking Somchai's resignation have occupied his Bangkok headquarters, known as Government House, since Aug. 26, forcing him to relocate to a makeshift office in the VIP area of the former international airport.

Thousands of protesters from the People's Alliance for Democracy, or PAD, surrounded the government's makeshift offices at Don Muang airport Tuesday, a day after blockading Parliament and forcing the postponement of an important parliamentary session.

Protest leaders said their goal is to block the government from meeting _ whenever and wherever that may be.

"We'll protest until there is no Cabinet meeting," said a protest leader, Somsak Kosaisuk. "We'll interrupt their every attempt to ruin the country further."

The weekly Cabinet meeting is usually held Tuesdays but was changed to Wednesday because of Somchai's absence.

A few thousands protesters marched later Tuesday from the airport to the nearby Thai army headquarters, where they believed a government meeting was taking place.

Nattawut said he would not confirm where the government was meeting.

"The government is fully functional and continues to work as usual but we cannot disclose where the government is working right now because it will provoke PAD and might cause a lot of trouble," he said, speaking by telephone.

He added that the government "intends to negotiate with PAD to get the temporary government house back in a few days."

The protesters, seeking the resignation of what they allege is a corrupt government, camped overnight at Don Muang airport.

Nattawut said more than 1,000 government employees evacuated the offices at Don Muang airport Monday afternoon.

The airport's VIP section was about half a mile (1 kilometer) from the main passenger terminal and protesters showed no immediate sign of trying to disrupt travel.

However, travelers were advised to arrive early for flights, and traffic was expected to be heavier than usual because of the protest, the airport's deputy director, Viroj Ewcharoen, said in a statement.

Tuesday's activities marked the second day of what the People's Alliance for Democracy calls its "final showdown" with the government.

Thousands of protesters blockaded Parliament on Monday and forced it to postpone a special joint session of both houses. Smaller rallies were held at the Finance Ministry and other government offices.

Thailand's political crisis began in 2006, when a similar campaign against then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra led to a him being deposed by a military coup for alleged corruption and abuse of power. But further efforts to cripple Thaksin's political machine failed, and his political allies won a December 2007 election.

The alliance then resumed its street protests and finally stormed Government House on Aug. 26, vowing not to leave until they have forced Thaksin's allies from power. They accuse Somchai of acting as a proxy for Thaksin, who is his brother-in-law.

Police, under strict orders to avoid the use of force, exercised restraint Monday as demonstrators pushed past them, sometimes showering them with expletives in an apparent effort to provoke a violent response that might discredit the authorities. There were only minor scuffles Monday with protesters at Parliament.

Thailand's economy, already struggling amid the global downturn, has been hit hard by the political turmoil. The state planning agency said Monday it grew at its slowest pace in more than three years this past quarter.

Oil Prices Steady Around $63 a Barrel

SINGAPORE - Oil prices were steady around $63 a barrel in Asian trading Friday despite a spate of oil worker kidnappings and attacks in Nigeria's oil-rich delta region.

Light, sweet crude for June delivery rose 5 cents to $63.24 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange mid-afternoon in Singapore.

Brent crude contract for June delivery gained 27 cents to $66.32 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

Gunmen in Nigeria, Africa's leading oil exporter, kidnapped at least 21 people in three attacks that left a Nigerian soldier dead, officials and witnesses said Thursday. Nine captives were later reported freed, of whom eight were foreigners.

Unrest has plagued Nigeria's oil-rich southern delta region for years, and in recent months gunmen have stepped up a campaign against the oil industry, blowing up oil pipelines to cut production by a fifth and kidnapping scores of foreign workers.

Analysts said despite the possibility of disruption in crude supplies, the Nigerian unrest is already factored into prices, meaning that traders expect violence in the African nation to be a regular occurrence.

The Nymex crude June contract fell 49 cents to settle at $63.19 a barrel Thursday after the United States said it would suspend oil purchases for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, intended to be the country's backup oil supply in the event of a severe, unexpected disruption, until at least after the summer driving season.

Heating oil futures gained 1.02 cents to $1.8555 a gallon while natural gas prices rose 0.4 cent to $7.951 per 1,000 cubic feet.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Judge orders US government to make polar bear threatened species listing decision by May 15

A federal court judge has ordered the government to decide within 16 days whether polar bears should be listed as a threatened species because of global warming.

U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken of Oakland, California, agrees with conservation groups that the Department of the Interior missed a January 9 deadline for a listing decision.

She rejected a government request for further delay until June 30.

Wilken says in her ruling that the government has been in violation of the law requiring the listing decision for nearly 120 days.

Wilken says in the ruling released lated Monday that the government offered no specific facts that would justify the delay other than the general complexity of finalizing a rule.

Powder Mixing

Powder Mixing Brian H. Kaye

Kluwer Academic Publishers, Norwell, MA, 276 pages, $129.95 Although the mixing of powders is a commonly practiced unit operation in many processes, this is the first book devoted entirely to this subject in English, to the best of my knowledge. The author is an internationally known researcher in the physics of powder mixing, and has written extensively on particulate technology. The book contains nine chapters, an author index, a subject index, and a wordfinder index at the beginning to enable the reader to find the first occurrence and definition of technical terms used throughout the book.

Chapter 1 is a general review of mixing technology that includes: an historical overview of powder mixing science and technology; a holistic approach to powder mixing, mixers, and powder mixing mechanisms; techniques for describing the structure of a powder mixture; and graphical and experimental descriptions of a powder mixture structure. The technology for characterizing single powders and powder mixtures is discussed in Chapter 2. Prof. Kaye thoroughly describes methods for sampling a powder mixture, techniques for characterizing the grain sizes of a powder, quantitative evaluation of the shape of powder grains, fingerprinting of powder mixtures using an aerosol spectrometer, and characterizing a powder mixture by its permeability. In Chapter 3, the principles of powder rheology are reviewed, among them: powder flow characterization (angles of repose and sliding or drain, effects of flowassisting agents, and flow characterization funnels); the use of flowassisting agents; settling in a vibrated bed (evaluation of tapped bulk density and bed voidage); and characterizing the flow behavior of a powder by studying avalanching behavior (a major contribution by the author to powder rheology).

Chapter 4, "Can Ingredient Modification Expedite Mixing Strategies?," discusses alternative ingredient strategies for solving powder mixing problems, modifying the size distribution (some interesting actual solutions to industrial problems are presented), microencapsulation of ingredients, and techniques for producing microcapsules (a number of industrial processes and equipment are described). The monitoring of mixers and mixtures is thoroughly reviewed in Chapter 5, which covers topics such as distinguishing between chaos-creating operations and dispersion mechanisms, Poisson tracking as a technique for studying chaotic conditions in a powder mixer, using radioactive tracers to follow powder dispersion in powder mixing equipment, monitoring mixture structure by optical reflectance, fingerprint sizing of powder mixtures to monitor the performance of powder mixing equipment, characterizing the structure of consolidated mixtures by optical inspection, auto- and cross-correlation of mixture structure, and infrared fingerprinting of powder mixtures.

The impact of chaos theory and experimental mathematics on powder mixing theory and practice is discussed in Chapter 6. It opens with an introduction to chaos theory as it applies to powder mixing, and then discusses random walk models of powder mixing. This short chapter will be very useful to those engineers not familiar with chaos theory, which is becoming more widely used in analyzing mixing of liquids, powders, and pastes. Chapter 7 is devoted to active mixing machines (ribbon, tumbling, and high-shear mixing and multimechanism mixers), while Chapter 8 covers passive powder mixing systems (baffled passive mixers and gravity in-bin mixing devices). Both of these chapters describe a number of industrial mixers and provide the names and addresses of manufacturers. Some widely used industrial mixers with which I am familiar and have used are only briefly mentioned, or not even cited. It would have been helpful if the author had also included tables comparing the performance characteristics and applications for various types of mixers. The final chapter on turning powder mixtures into crumbs, pastes, and slurries reviews how liquid bridges hold together the constituents of a powder mixture and how pastes are formed for use as extrudates.

An excellent review of one aspect of mixing technology, this highly readable book should prove useful to chemical engineers involved with powder mixing processes (both in development and plant operations), powder technology researchers, and grad students.

[Author Affiliation]

Stanley S. Grossel

S. S. Grossel is president of Process Safety & Design, Inc., Clifton, NJ.

Today's corrupted notion of love robs us of joy

'What's love got to do with it?" That's the refrain from ahit song by Tina Turner.

I thought of that as I watched my children duking it out --figuratively speaking, of course -- over whose turn it was to ride aparticular scooter. There's one for each child, but Dad and I neveractually "assigned" them (big mistake -- duh), and now it's too late.

So, there they were scrapping over one of them, for no otherreason than the other child wanted it.

What does love have to do with it?

Everything. Only, here's the problem. In today's language, "love"means a gooey warm feeling toward another. So, as the children werefighting, if I were to say, "Do you feel love toward each other rightnow?" I'd probably get a big fat "NO!" in unison.

But the proper meaning of love really isn't warm or romanticfeelings, as wonderful as those are. The proper meaning of "love" isa more ancient, even biblical one, meaning to be committed toanother, to doing good unto that other, regardless of any feelingsinvolved at the moment, and regardless of whether the object of thatlove even deserves it at the moment.

I've been talking about that lately with my kids. I don't askthem, "Do you feel loving toward your sister right now?" I ask them,"Are you showing love toward your sister or brother right now? Areyou committed to doing good to them even if you don't 'feel' likeit?"

I'm trying to teach them that love is action.

So, when it comes to things like the scooter, sometimes I'll stepin and say, "that toy is a lot less important than your relationshipas sisters. I want you to show love to each other right now and workit out."

When the answer "I'm trying" comes back through two sets oftightly clenched jaws, I'm not naive enough to think the lesson hasgotten through. But hopefully, it's a start.

Feelings come and go, but true love, a commitment to anotherinstead of ourselves, perseveres.

Unfortunately, our culture revolves around "feelings" of love asthe be-all and end-all. So, in marriage, if I don't "feel" in lovewith my spouse, I'm out of here! But what about nurturing that senseof love, being committed to doing good unto another regardless of thewhims of the moment? It used to be well understood that a feeling ofromantic love couldn't sustain a marriage over a lifetime, and sothere was a need for a legal contract.

Now, the contract is deemed meaningless if romantic love does notflourish every moment.

So people rob themselves of the opportunity to experience "truelove" -- the joy of a sustained commitment to another, not ourselves.

Hey, I love being "in love" with my husband, but even that termhas taken on a much deeper and more satisfying meaning for me than itdid when we married 17 years ago.

The notion of love is so corrupted in our culture. Look at anywoman's magazine or television show. We've come to believe, as theRighteous Brothers put it in a hit song long ago, that if "you'velost that lovin' feeling"' then that means you've lost love.

But of course there are many times when we ourselves are not beingparticularly "lovable." Don't we want to believe, to know, thatothers who are committed to us, who love us, don't stop beingcommitted to us during those times? Yet, if we are so fixated on lovebeing nothing but a feeling, as we are in our culture, how can wepossibly have that assurance?

In many marriage ceremonies, someone will read First Corinthians13 from the Bible, about how love is patient and kind, suffers long,does not seek its own, and the list goes on. Are they reallylistening? Love is in the doing. Love is putting the object of ourlove before ourselves, even if they don't deserve it at the moment.

That's what we are trying to teach our kids. To ignore themessages from the popular culture that have corrupted the meaning oflove, to understand that warm feelings of love are wonderful, buttrue love is action. True love is commitment. The marvelous thing, ofcourse, is that that action and commitment can produce a richness anddepth of feeling and emotion far greater than we'd otherwiseexperience.

In fact, the irony is that today's corrupted notion of love hasrobbed too many people of the joy of true love.

Selanne, Ducks Become Road Warriors

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Teemu Selanne scored a goal and assisted on three third-period power-play goals, and the Anaheim Ducks beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 5-2 Thursday night to set a franchise record for road wins with 20.

Chris Pronger had two goals and an assist for Anaheim, who are chasing their first division title since entering the league in 1993 and the President's Trophy for the most regular season points.

Ryan Getzlaf and Francois Beauchemin each added a goal and an assist.

The Ducks, who won 3-1 in Chicago on Wednesday, entered with a four-point edge over Dallas in the Pacific Division. They won their 46th game and now have 104 points, extending their franchise records.

Aaron Johnson and Sergei Fedorov scored for Columbus, which had a 2-1 lead early in the third period but had its four-game winning streak snapped.

Down in the third period, the Ducks scored four goals, including two on the power player 3:50 apart to take the lead.

Moments after the Ducks had a goal waived off, Selanne fed former Blue Jackets defenseman Beauchemin at the back post to make it 2-2 at 3:48.

Selanne then sent a pass to Getzlaf, who stepped from the left end line and let go a shot at 7:38 that hit off the leg of Columbus defenseman Ron Hainsey and past goaltender Fredrick Norrena, who was stellar the first two periods.

Pronger scored his 13th with a slap shot from the right circle at 14:53 to make it 4-2 with another power play goal.

Selanne scored into an empty net with 2 seconds remaining.

During a scoreless first period, Norrena made two superb saves during the second half of the period on point blank chances by Anaheim's Andy McDonald and Chris Kunitz on odd-man rushes. Norrena finished with 26 saves.

Ducks goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere then stood strong, flashing his glove to stop David Vyborny's snap shot minutes into the second period. He made 23 stops.

Columbus broke through on a fluky goal at 6:40 to make it 1-0.

Jody Shelley smacked a slap shot from the left circle that Giguere kicked aside into traffic. Johnson was credited with the rebound goal, which withstood video review after it appeared to hit the skate of defenseman Kent Huskins and quickly bounce off the net.

With Ole-Kristian Tollefsen and Kunitz in the penalty box for roughing late in the period, Pronger's shot from the left boards deflected off Columbus defenseman Anders Eriksson and past Norrena at 19:20 to tie it.

The goal was Pronger's first point in his fourth game back since missing with seven games with a broken toe.

The Blue Jackets quickly regained the lead early in the third period.

Rick Nash cut across the Anaheim blue line, dropped a pass to Fedorov, who fired a shot from the slot through traffic to score at 1:02 for his 18th and first in 12 games. Fedorov has played the last nine games on defense.

Notes:@ Since joining the league in 2000, Columbus has never finished higher than 13th in the Western Conference. The Blue Jackets entered in 11th place. ... Anaheim plays three of their remaining four games on the road. ... The Blue Jackets' Fredrik Modin, who has 22 goals, left with a groin injury in the second period and did not return.

Israelis 'shocked' at Egypt TV Schalit interview

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli officials harshly criticized an Egyptian television interview with soldier Gilad Schalit minutes after Hamas militants freed him in a prisoner swap Tuesday, saying the questioning was inappropriate and insensitive.

A gaunt, pale and uncomfortable looking Schalit appeared to struggle to speak at points during the appearance on Egyptian state TV, and his breathing was noticeably labored as he awkwardly answered questions. The footage, along with earlier video showing Schalit being transferred to Egypt, were the first images seen of the soldier after more than five years in Hamas captivity.

Hamas militants were in the area as the interview was being set up. One of them stood behind Schalit's chair, wearing a black face mask, a green headband of the Qassam brigades — Hamas' military wing — and filming with a video camera in his hand.

"You have known what it is like to be in captivity," interviewer Shahira Amin said to Schalit. "There are more than 4,000 Palestinians in Israeli jails. Will you help campaign for their release?" she asked in English.

Schalit took a long pause before answering, then said he would be happy if all those prisoners were freed so that they can go back to their families and loved ones.

"What has the experience brought you? Has it made you stronger?" she asked at another point.

And, brushing aside the fact Hamas had barred anyone from visiting Schalit, she asked why he only gave one interview while held captive. Schalit gasped for air, the handler suggested halting the interview because Schalit wasn't feeling well, and he didn't answer the question.

Amin insisted Schalit had not been coerced to give the interview.

An Israeli official questioned the ethics of the journalists involved.

"We are all shocked that a so-called interview was forced on (Schalit) before he could even talk to his family or set foot on Israeli soil," the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a sensitive diplomatic matter, but said the sentiment was widely shared in official Israeli ranks.

Israeli security officials told Israeli YNet News the interview was a violation of the deal for Schalit's release.

However, an Egyptian security official said the interview and all the details of Schalit's handover went according to agreements between Israel, Egypt and Hamas. The official said Israel knew about the interview in advance.

"The Egyptians didn't force him to give the interview. If he refused or if the Israelis refused, he wouldn't have given the interview," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

With Schalit's interview on state television, the Egyptians appeared to be trying to show the success of their mediation efforts at winning freedom for so many Palestinians at a time when the ruling military council, which took power after the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in an uprising, has come under heavy criticism for mismanagement of the transitional period.

The presenter even tried to get Schalit to credit the Egyptians, asking: "It was the Egyptian national security that mediated your release. There were previous failed mediation efforts including one by the Germans. Why do you think that this time the round of mediation was a success?"

Egyptian reporter Salah Gomaa, who attended the interview, said that the room was packed, small and hot. Schalit stopped several times to catch his breath or to drink water. Gomaa said that the presenter insisted on asking questions in English and getting answers in English.

"Schalit told her that he has not practiced his English for five years and it is better to speak Hebrew," Gomaa said.

However, another Egyptian security official said the Egyptian information minister asked the intelligence chief for an exclusive interview with Schalit. It was not a condition in the deal but a request from Egypt.

An ashen-faced Schalit answered a range of questions on his captivity and what he thought of the 1,027 Palestinian prisoners released for his freedom.

He was then handed over to Israeli officials and only then given a medical examination, where doctors determined he showed signs of malnutrition and lack of exposure to sunlight.

He called his family shortly afterward.

Israeli media discussed the interview at length, with commentators calling it insensitive.

Channel 10 commentator and presenter Raviv Drucker said her questions would "likely win the title of the stupidest questions of the past 100 years."

"It wasn't the most sensitive thing to do. An interview forced on a prisoner just released is a low thing to do," Drucker said.

Israeli TV anchor Yonit Levy called the interview "borderline torture"

Amin is a respected journalist within Egypt. During the Jan. 25-Feb. 11 Egyptian uprising she resigned from her job at Egyptian state television Nile TV, saying she did not want to be part of the "state propaganda regime."

She told Israel's Channel 10 TV that she would not have forced Schalit to speak if he didn't want to, and he seemed willing to do so.

Nonetheless, "he seemed extremely tired, thin and pale, voice very faint, very difficult to concentrate. I had to repeat the questions several times," Amin told The Associated Press. She acknowledged that he was accompanied by Hamas gunmen when he arrived for the interview.

Earlier this week, major Israeli media outlets agreed not to disseminate new video or photos of the Schalits for 10 days following the release.

____

AP writer Maggie Michael contributed to this report from Cairo.

Number of illegal migrants arriving in Spain falls

The Interior Ministry says the number of illegal immigrants risking their lives in rickety boats to reach Spain's Canary Islands from northwest Africa has descended to levels last seen a decade ago.

In 2009, a total of 2,041 adults arrived in the islands or were rescued as they sailed toward them, a ministry spokeswoman said.

The number of immigrants began to shoot up in 2002, when 9,929 arrived, and peaked in 2006 when 31,859 had to be housed, the spokeswoman said Saturday on condition of anonymity in keeping with government rules.

More than 96,116 people have sought shelter on the islands since 1994.

The recession, which has caused unemployment in Spain to ascend to nearly 18 percent, along with coastal patrols, have helped slow immigration.

Sarah Palin: Letterman owes women an apology

Sarah Palin says David Letterman owes an apology to young women across the country for his joke about her daughter.

The Alaska governor appeared on NBC's "Today" show Friday, continuing a feud with the CBS "Late Show" funnyman over his joke earlier this week that Palin's daughter got "knocked up" by New York Yankee third baseman Alex Rodriguez during their recent trip to New York.

Palin also said she doesn't believe she should be automatically considered the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012.

Asked by Matt Lauer whether Letterman owed her daughter an apology, the former vice presidential candidate broadened it.

"I would like to see him apologize to young women across the country for contributing to kind of that thread that is throughout our culture that makes it sound like it is OK to talk about young girls in that way, where it's kind of OK, accepted and funny to talk about statutory rape," she said. "It's not cool. It's not funny."

Letterman has said his joke was about Palin's 18-year-old daughter Bristol, who is an unwed mother (no name was used). Problem was, the Alaska governor was traveling with 14-year-old Willow. Palin said it took Letterman time to think of the "convenient excuse" that he was talking about Bristol instead of Willow.

Letterman said on his show Wednesday that he would "never, ever make jokes about raping or having sex of any description with a 14-year-old girl." He said he was guilty of poor taste.

Palin said Friday that it was time for people to rise up against Letterman's form of humor.

"No wonder young girls especially have such low self-esteem in America when we think it's funny for a so-called comedian to get away with such a remark as he did," she said. "I don't think that's acceptable."

The National Organization for Women placed Letterman in its "media hall of shame."

"I think what David Letterman said is terrible, is inappropriate and nobody should be making jokes about the sexual activities of teenagers, whether they are the daughters of politicians or not," said Kim Gandy, NOW president.

"Comedians in search of a laugh should really know better than to snicker about men having sex with teenage girls or young women half their age," NOW wrote on its Web site. Rodriguez is 33; Letterman is 62.

Palin said there was a double standard where the media treats President Barack Obama's family as generally off-limits, while her family was the butt of jokes during last fall's presidential campaign and beyond.

She's a favorite target of Letterman's. The "Late Show" host made 95 jokes about Palin after the election through March 15 _ more than Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert combined, according to the Center for Media and Public Affairs.

Palin denied that it was also in bad taste for her spokeswoman, Meghan Stapleton, to say Thursday that Palin would not appear on Letterman's "Late Show" because "it would be wise to keep Willow away from David Letterman."

"Maybe he couldn't be trusted because Willow has had enough of this type of comments and maybe Willow would want to react to him in a way that maybe would catch him off-guard," she said. "That's one way to interpret such a comment."

The controversy may wind up giving both Palin and Letterman attention at a time both could use it. Palin is considered a potential future candidate for national office, and standing up for her family could make her a hero to her fans. She was asked on "Today" whether last year's candidacy effectively puts her in the position of front-runner for the GOP presidential nomination in 2012 and replied, "Oh, heck no."

Letterman is in the second week of his new competition with NBC's O'Brien, and won by a solid margin Thursday night in Nielsen Media Research's overnight ratings measurement of the nation's top media markets. Letterman has a strong shot at beating the "Tonight" show for a week in these ratings for the first time since 2005.

On his show Thursday, Letterman joked that Palin had called to invite him on a hunting trip _ the punch line no doubt a reference to former Vice President Dick Cheney accidentally shooting a friend while hunting.

His other references to the controversy were more oblique. When guest Denzel Washington said he would get in trouble with Obama for making a joke about the president's big ears, Letterman clearly had something else on his mind.

"You aren't in the kind of trouble I'm in," he said.

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NBC is a unit of General Electric. CBS is a division of CBS Corp.

___

On the Net:

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/

http://www.cbs.com/

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Heiple impeachment panel to begin work next week

SPRINGFIELD A House panel investigating the possible impeachmentof Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice James Heiple will organizeearly next week and begin hearing testimony the following week, thepanel's co-chairman said Tuesday.

In Chicago, Gov. Edgar signaled support for the impeachmentprobe because it will provide for a public airing of the allegationsfacing Heiple, unlike at his disciplinary hearing earlier this month.

The House late Monday voted to create a 10-member, bipartisancommittee to investigate whether there is cause to impeach Heiple forallegedly using clout to avoid speeding tickets and improperlyshaping the disciplinary commission judging him.Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie (D-Chicago), co-chairman of thecommittee, said the panel will hold an organizational meeting inSpringfield either Monday or Tuesday to draft ground rules forinvestigating Heiple."We want to make sure we have good solid rules of evidence andprocedure, and we want to establish a schedule for hearings, whichprobably will begin the week after next," Currie said.It is possible the committee will meet daily and perhaps onweekends in order to meet a May 12 deadline to determine whetherthere is justification to impeach Heiple, Currie said.Currie said she also would like the committee to hear directlyfrom Rep. Gwenn Klingler (R-Springfield), sponsor of the impeachmentprobe, on why Heiple ought to be ousted."My view is that we should not be on a fishing expedition. Iwould like to hear from the sponsor of the resolution what itemsmerit our investigation," Currie said.Klingler said that Heiple's testimony before the Houseimpeachment panel is vital. If the chief justice refuses to appear,Klingler predicted either she or other Heiple critics wouldimmediately seek to proceed with an impeachment vote.Neither Heiple nor his attorney, George Mahoney III, could bereached Tuesday.Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported Tuesday that Heiple'sadministrative assistant landed a job as the highest-paid staffattorney in the Administrative Office of Illinois Courts. LiamBrennan, 29, three years out of law school, began making $53,864 inFebruary, 19 percent more than the average pay of the four otherstaff attorneys, the report said.Heiple already had come under fire for appointing a friend ashead of the Illinois Courts Commission, which is looking into chargesagainst him, and for appointing an Appellate Court justice as courtadministrator.Contributing: David Roeder

IDAHO'S EPIDEMIC OF FEAR

VACCINATION LIBERATION MOVEMENT TAKES A SHOT AT PUBLIC HEALTH

Some contend that there are two Idahos. Divided by rivers, mountains and even a time zone, North Idaho has a new and possibly more potent distinction from its southern half - fear.

An increasing number of Idahoans living north of the 45th Parallel are afraid of vaccinations. For whatever reason - and there are quite a few- more Panhandle parents are opting not to vaccinate their children against diphtheria, hepatitis, measles, mumps, pertussis, polio, rubella and/or tetanus. Analysts are hard pressed to stereotype exemption seekers. They include the college educated and high-school dropouts, six-figure-salaried professionals and families requiring government assistance, uber-conservatives and left-wing progressives - all with a common fear of the needle.

But the fear of vaccinations in the north is matched only by the fear of the lack of vaccinations in the south - in particular, at the Boise office of the Department of Health and Welfare. That's where the state's top health officials have been pouring over the latest statistics on Idaho's vaccination exemptions, and they don't like what they see.

In fact, the contrasting fears may be best represented by two very different women. One, in the north, is a heart-on-her-sleeve rabblerouser who takes on everyone "from the governor on down" in her fight against vaccines. The other, in the south, may be Idaho's most authoritative voice on disease, yet she has no desire to engage in a heated debate over vaccinations.

INGRI CASSEL

When Ingri Cassel walked into the Common Knowledge Tea House, a cozy usedbook store doubling as a tea room tucked into a Sandpoint neighborhood, both arms were filled with anti-vaccination literature. She is usually poised to convince anyone who will listen that vaccinations are an ultimate evil. But between her promotions of alternative medicine and diatribes against the government, it quickly becomes clear that Cassel's motivations are quite personal. Within seconds of beginning our conversation, Cassel said she needed to "make one thing clear."

"First of all," Cassel said, her finger punctuating the air with each word. "I need to correct you. You need to stop using the word immunization. We don't say immunization. Vaccines don't immunize anything."

The tone had been set.

"I started doing this work because I'm not vaccine free," said Cassel. "There was a car accident when I was 3 or 4, and I ended up in an emergency room. They gave me a tetanus shot. That was the first assault."

Cassel is a second-generation crusader. Her mother, Walene James, is the author of several books, including 1988's Immunization: The Reality Behind the Myth, based, Cassel said, on her sister's court battle in Virginia, where she was accused of child neglect for not having her son vaccinated.

Cassel is the president of a group called Vaccination Liberation, which trumpets on its website such topics as: "Why Doctors are Idiots," "Vaccines Exposed: A Hidden Crime Against Children," and "Doctors Are the Third Leading Cause of Death." Cassel insisted that her group was not registered as a business or nonprofit in spite of the fact that it collects membership dues ($30) and sells products (books, DVDs and CDs).

"We don't register and we won't," said Cassel. "But I have over 500 members that have paid dues over the years."

Without divulging membership, Cassel said she has a few political allies, too, including State Sen. Shawn Keough.

"That's not exactly accurate," Keough told BW "I support vaccines."

But the eight-term District 1 senator said she agreed with Cassel in objecting to the exemption form used by parents to opt their children out of vaccinations.

"I would never sign that form the way it's written now," said Keough, who expects to bring up the controversial issue in the 2012 legislative session.

"We have quite a bit of political support up here," Cassel said. "But we don't have support from down south. They just wallow in ignorance."

"Down south" would include the Governor's Office. In an email to BW, Cassel referred to Gov. CL. "Butch" Otter as "Butcher."

"When I called the Governor's Office regarding the vaccination exemption form, they basically told me that I'm going to get in trouble if I keep telling people how to fill it out," she said.

Cassel's organization publishes a how-to guide to alter the document. By crossing out or inserting key words, the form is dramatically altered.

For example, the document includes the following:

"I know that failure to follow the recommendations about vaccination may endanger the health or life of my child and others ..."

Cassel recommends parents alter the document to:

"I know that failure to following the recommendations about vaccination may endanger the health or life of my child and others ..."

CHRISTINE HAHN

Christine Hahn knows that - due in large part to Cassel's coaching - some of Idaho's vaccination exemption forms have been altered by parents, but she's not too worried about it.

"If a parent tweaks this form, they're going to exempt anyway," said Hahn. "They see the language on the form. They have already decided that they disagree with it. I just don't think that's a fight we're going to get into. Push hasn't come to shove on any of this."

Hahn said she's less concerned about words that may have been crossed out or altered on the front of the exemption form and more concerned about what parents are writing on the back.

"For the first time, beginning this fall, we asked parents to explain their personal, religious or medical reasons why they're not having their child immunized. We're going to ask the school districts to deidentify the forms - in other words, take away any names from the form - and then forward them to us. We have no desire to track anyone down, but we really need to better understand their reasoning."

Hahn spread a number of graphs and charts across a huge conference table at Health and Welfare's State Street headquarters. The one chart that stood out from the rest contained what Health and Welfare would consider some good news (Eastern Idaho's 2.4 percent immunization exemption rate, for example), some so-so news (District 4, including Ada County's rate, which is 3.3 percent), and some rather troubling news.

"There's definitely a disturbing trend up in the Panhandle," said Hahn. "We're talking about this quit� a bit lately here at Health and Welfare."

Hahn's finger traced a steadily rising line representing the school exemption rate by Public Health District 1, representing Benewah, Bonner, Boundary, Kootenai and Shoshone counties. Since the beginning of the 2006-2007 school year, the northernmost district's exemption rate has grown nearly one-third, registering 7.4 percent at the end of the last school year, nearly double the state rate of 3.8 percent.

"We're worried most about that particular trend," said Hahn. "I think we have an issue, in particular, with young parents who are too young to personally remember some diseases - -for example, measles."

Hahn said she was recently at an Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices meeting in Atlanta, where there was quite a bit of talk about measles outbreaks in Canada, Mexico and Europe.

"You've heard of snakes on a plane," she asked. "Well, what scares us is measles on a plane."

MEASLES AND MYTHS

A closer look at school immunization records in North Idaho reveals the vaccination that parents choose to keep their children away from more than any other is MMR (measles, mumps and rubella).

"Even after the misinformation spread by Andrew Wakefield has been put to rest, those doubts still linger," said Hahn.

Andrew Wakefield, a former surgeon from Britain, is largely credited for creating a global pushback against the MMR vaccine in 1998, even though he was barred from further practicing medicine and ruled to be "dishonest and irresponsible" by a statutory tribunal of the British General Medical Council.

Wakefield's 1998 document presented what turned out to be false evidence that autism spectrum disorders could be caused by the MMR vaccine. Investigations by the Sunday Times of London revealed that Wakefield had manipulated evidence. But by then, Wakefield's article had swept across the world, causing MMR vaccination rates to drop precipitously.

Wakefield is not alone with his MMR infamy. Former Playboy Playmate-turnedactress Jenny McCarthy found notoriety with her book Healing and Preventing Autism: A Complete Guide, documenting her son's autism while blaming vaccinations for many instances of the affliction. McCarthy plugged her story on Oprah, the Today Show and the Tonight Show as a self-professed vaccine expert. In April, Time Magazine reported that as many as 24 percent of parents surveyed by the University of Michigan said they placed "some trust" in information provided by celebrities about the safety of vaccines.

Yet another well-known figure, Bill Gates, pushed back against claims such as McCarthy's in a February interview with CNN.

"It's an absolute lie that has killed thousands of kids," said Gates, who recently pledged $10 billion to distribute vaccines worldwide. "The mothers who heard that lie, many of them didn't have their kids take either pertussis or measles vaccines, and their children are dead today."

GROUND ZERO

If Idaho's Panhandle is a key target for state health officials to improve vaccination rates, the Lake Pend Oreille School District No. 84 is ground zero.

"We probably have a higher immunization exemption rate than the whole United States," said Dana Williams, head nurse for the district. "A lot of it has to do with misinformation regarding the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella. Some keep saying that MMR is supposedly connected to autism, which is bunk."

Williams is a busy woman lately. She's the lone full-time nurse for the entire district. The recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is one nurse per 750 students.

"But we have 3,700 kids in the district," said Williams. "So far this semester, I've done 360 action plans, and that's not even including our high schools. We have some sick kids here. It's everything from mild asthma to diabetes. I've been traveling quite a few miles between schools this year."

Williams said she's anxious to have conversations with parents who may choose to exempt their children from vaccinations.

"There's a lot of people up here that are, let's say, off the grid," said Williams. "But we sit down and talk with them. And we tell them that if there's an outbreak and their child doesn't have a vaccine, he or she can be kept out of school for up to six weeks. And one more thing - our school board policy doesn't force us to give the child their homework once they have been sent home. Our policy pretty much tells the parent, 'You're on your own,' even though a lot of our teachers feel guilty and send work home anyway."

Williams said her fear is even greater than her frustration.

"This is stupid. There's absolutely no reason for these exemption rates," she said. "We're going to end up with something bad happening here. People don't realize that a child can die from a bad case of chicken pox or the mumps."

Cynthia Taggart, public information officer of the Panhandle Health District, which includes Williams' school district, said the vaccination exemption rates aren't anything new to her part of the state.

"It's a mind set," said Taggart. "We have had vaccination opponents here for many, many years. It goes way back."

Taggart said the region's "streak of independence" runs through each of the many reasons for exemptions.

"Idahoans want freedom of choice in everything," said Taggart. "And, well, this is their choice. We don't argue with them, but we do tell them that their choice has consequences. That's really all we can do."

Taggart said she was quite familiar with Cassel and her Vaccination Liberation movement. In fact, everyone that BW spoke with in North and Southern Idaho knew of Cassel and her initiative.

Cassel is gearing up for a new debate, this time over Gardasil, the human papilloma virus vaccine designed to prevent cervical cancer, genital warts and some other cancers.

"It's not required in Idaho right now but they're pushing for it," said Cassel. "They're chomping at the bit to force that vaccine on little girls and boys. But if I have anything to do with it, that will never happen in Idaho. Over my dead body."

[Sidebar]

Ingri Cassel has turned a personal crusade against vaccinations into Vaccination Liberation

Activists hang climate banners from Berlin station

Environmental activists have hung a banner demanding that German Chancellor Angela Merkel take action against global warming on the facade of Berlin's main train station _ within sight of the chancellery.

Greenpeace activists draped the building Thursday with a picture of Merkel and a banner reading "Mrs. Merkel: Rescue the Climate! Now or Never!"

Tobias Riedl, a Greenpeace climate expert, said that the climate conference starting in Copenhagen next week "must not degenerate into a festival of political rhetoric."

Inside the chancellery, Merkel met Thursday with Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. She called for Copenhagen to produce a "political agreement" that would be turned into a legally binding deal over the following months.

Recovery in developed economies gathering pace

Economic recovery in the world's richest countries is accelerating thanks to a "substantial" rebound in trade and growth in Asia, but austerity measures are needed to reduce deficits _ as Europe's debt crisis proves, a leading agency said Wednesday.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a watchdog for 31 of the world's most developed economies, said that serious risks including Europe's sovereign debt crisis and a possible boom-bust scenario in emerging markets such as Brazil, India and China still threaten what it calls a "relatively auspicious" economic environment.

"The period of significant financial instability that began in August 2007 is not yet over," the OECD warned in its latest biannual Economic Outlook.

The Paris-based group also raised its forecasts for economic growth in its member countries _ which include the U.S., Japan, Germany and the United Kingdom _ to 2.7 percent this year, up from its forecast of 1.9 percent last November.

The OECD lifted its forecasts for Japan, the United States and the eurozone countries, but Japan and the U.S. are still expected to outpace Europe, the report said.

"The outlook has really improved in this short period" since the OECD's last forecast, Secretary-General Angel Gurria said in a news conference at the organization's headquarters.

But the OECD chief urged member countries to pursue "fiscal consolidation" _ reducing their deficits through spending cuts and a clampdown on tax evasion _ which he said was "imperative" to make the OECD's positive growth outlook a reality.

The OECD publishes its economic outlook twice a year, although it updated some 2010 forecasts in an interim assessment published in April.

Europe's response to its sovereign debt crisis _ the latest chapter in the global financial and economic turmoil that began three years ago _ has been "prompt and massive," the OECD said, but has failed to settle the currency bloc's "underlying weaknesses."

The OECD called for "bolder measures" _ up to and including an effective fiscal union _ among eurozone countries in order to "dissipate doubts about the long-term viability of the monetary union."

"Bolder measures need to be taken to ensure fiscal discipline, along a continuum that ranges from stronger surveillance and more effective sanctions for noncompliance, to external auditing of national budgets all the way to de facto fiscal union," the OECD said.

Gurria stressed that the current turbulence in Europe is part of the same crisis that began in the U.S. in 2007. "This is the same crisis, it's a continuum," Gurria said, adding that the next challenge after slashing the massive debt loads countries took on save the banking industry and combat recession is unemployment.

Unemployment in the OECD area is forecast to peak at 8.5 percent by the middle of this year, Gurria said. It will remain stuck at over 8 percent next year however, as companies in Japan and Europe are expected to increase working hours of employees rather than hire new workers.

The U.S. economy has been boosted by stimulus measures, improving financial conditions, demand from the fast-growing non-OECD economies of Asia _ especially China _ and the stabilization of the housing market.

The employment outlook in the United States also looks better than in Europe and Japan. The OECD predicted that unemployment will come down to 8.9 percent next year from a high of 9.7 percent this year, as unlike their counterparts in Europe and Japan, U.S. businesses shed large numbers of employees in the downturn and should "rehire relatively strongly" in the upturn, the OECD said.

The OECD predicts the U.S. economy will expand at a rate of 3.2 percent in 2010, up from a November forecast of 2.5 percent.

In Europe, the economies of the 16 countries sharing the euro are now expected to grow by 1.2 percent this year compared to a November forecast of 0.9 percent.

Unemployment will peak at 10.1 this year in the eurozone and stay stubbornly at that level in 2011, sapping the strength of the recovery, the OECD said.

The recent weakness in the euro versus the dollar will benefit European growth, OECD chief economist Pier Carlo Padoan said. "I would not be concerned if we see a further decline in the euro," Padoan said, "This would be a welcome addition to external demand for the euro area."

Padoan added that "the global economy needs some rebalancing in exchange rates," saying that the euro has been overvalued versus the dollar and China's currency undervalued.

Japan's economy will grow by 3 percent this year compared with the November forecast of 1.8 percent, the report said.

Libertadores: Cienciano beats Bolognesi 1-0 to claim share of group lead

A late header from defender Carlos Solis handed Cienciano a 1-0 victory over fellow Peruvian club Coronel Bolognesi on Tuesday and gave the Cusco club a share of the Group 4 lead in the Copa Libertadores.

The victory gave Cienciano six points and tied it on points with Uruguay's Nacional. Brazil's Flamengo is next with four points, and Bolognesi with one.

Although Cienciano had the advantage in possession throughout, most of the action took place midfield until Carlos Solis scored on a pass from teammate Julio Romana in the 76th minute.

Cienciano and Bolognesi will meet again in Tacna, Peru on March 25.

Boat captain tries to escape Somali pirates

Defense Department officials say the American boat captain held by Somali pirates tried to escape but was recaptured. Capt. Richard Phillips jumped over the side of the small lifeboat where he has been held for two days and began swimming.

Officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to talk about unfolding operations, say Phillips was retaken by the pirates after he jumped from the boat around midnight local time in open ocean off the Somali coast.

A U.S. Navy ship patrolling nearby was able to see Phillips moving around and talking after his return to the pirate's boat. The defense officials think he is unharmed.

BOOK MARKS

IN 1998, MEXICAN-BORN ILAN STAVANS edited an excellent collection, The Oxford Book of Jewish Stories (Jewish Star review, Nov. 17, 1998), and now he's back with his newest collection -- only this time, the focus is on Sephardic literature.

The Schocken Book of Modern Sephardic Literature (Schocken Books, 2005, 240 pp., $27.50), covers the same time period as the Oxford collection -- from the 19th Century to the present -- although it includes fewer authors.

Not surprisingly, there is some crossover. Primo Levi, A.B. Yehoshua and Elias Canetti are three well-known writers who are included in both collections.

Also not surprisingly, readers are likely to be more familiar with writers in the Oxford collection.

For both, Stavans has written valuable, informative introductions, providing an overview of his subject, historical context and descriptions of his selection process. Necessity has required him also to define first, Jewish literature, and now, for the current collection, Sephardic literature.

Is it language? Content? Heritage? Geography? Religion? The author's identity?

These are questions and issues Stavans addresses, and because he does so, our understanding and appreciation of the literature is enhanced.

As he wrote in his Introduction to the Oxford collection, these literary works serve "as maps across linguistic and geographical spheres."

Thus The Schocken Book of Modern Sephardic Literature acts as a more detailed map to that less familiar region of Jewish literary imagination.

As defined by Stavans, Sephardim are descendants of Jews who lived in Spain and Portugal before the expulsion of the Jews from those countries in 1492.

The resulting dispersion, according to Stavans, has meant that the "Sephardic condition is one of fracture and displacement" and "Sephardic identity is ... a hall of mirrors."

The collection, which is arranged chronologically according to the author's date of birth, opens with selections from two women.

First is a short story by the Sephardic English novelist Grace Aguilar, "The Escape", published in 1844. It is set in Portugal, home to her ancestors until the Inquisition.

This is followed by three poems by the American, Emma Lazarus, whose father was Sephardic.

Another woman that Stavans has included is Veza Canetti, wife of the Nobel Prize winning writer Elias Canetti. Most of her writing was published after she died in 1963, and not available in English translation until 1990.

An excerpt from her novel The Tortoises, "Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement", is printed in this collection, chillingly evoking the coming Holocaust.

Bulgarian-born Elias Canetti, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1981, is represented by excerpts from his memoir, The Tongue Set Free: Remembrance of a European Childhood, published in English in 1979.

Here, memories of a happy childhood in Bulgaria, and of the Sephardic pride his family held (he calls it "naive arrogance"), are conveyed as Canetti recalls holiday celebrations and daily incidents.

An excerpt from another memoir, Out of Egypt by the Egyptian-born Andr� Aciman, titled "The Last Seder", is the story of the family's last Passover in Alexandria, in 1965.

"They don't want us in Egypt," the author's father tells him one day. Aciman continues, "But we had always known that, I thought. Then he blurted it out: we had been officially expelled and had a week to get our things together."

On the eve of their departure, the family, which had lived in Egypt since 1905 (before that in Italy and before that in Turkey), decides to hold a seder.

They left Egypt for Rome, then Paris, and eventually, New York, a journey illustrative of the Sephardic "fracture and displacement" of which Stavans writes in his Introduction.

The divide between Sephardim and Ashkenazim is bitingly captured in a poem by Moroccan-born Israeli Sami Shalom Chetrit.

"Who Is a Jew and What Kind of a Jew?" constructs a conversation between the poet and an American Jew.

The poet describes himself: "I'm an Arab Jew."

The American protests that the two words don't go together.

"...how can you say 'Arab Jew' when all the Arabs want is to destroy the Jews?

"And how can you say 'European Jew' when the Europeans have already destroyed the Jews?"

IN THESE 28 WRITERS, WHO cross borders, languages and cultures -- often multiple times -- Ilan Stavans offers a volume that is educational, informative and thought-provoking.

At the end of the day, however, the writers stand on their own, giving diverse expression to the Jewish experience. The literary portrait they present differs in many ways from the Euro-centered one many of us are familiar with.

Yet even in these differences these writers implicitly illustrate, as Stavans has phrased it, one literature, many tongues.

Article copyright Star Media Group, Inc.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Penn, actress parents of girl

Actor Sean Penn and his girlfriend, actress Robin Wright, are theparents of a girl.

Dylan Frances Penn was born Saturday night at UCLA MedicalCenter, a publicist said Tuesday. The baby weighed 8 pounds, 11ounces, and mother and child were doing well.

Penn, who was married previously to Madonna, met Wright whilefilming the movie "State of Grace." The publicist said no weddingplans have been scheduled.

Eons in the making: Yellowstone, America's first national park, is as thrilling as ever

If you go Yellowstone Park is open year-round, although in thewinter months, only the north entrance is accessible by the public.The peak season runs from April to November and visitors can enterthe park at four spots: Cody and Jackson, Wyo., and Gardiner and WestYellowstone, Mont. WHEN Thomas Jefferson sent two intrepidmountaineers into the wilderness to find an all-water route to thePacific, no one imagined the untamed wilderness that Meriwether Lewisand William Clark would explore. Though the pair stopped 50 milesoutside Yellowstone, a member of their entourage, John Colter,decided to split from the return caravan eastward to explore more ofthe virgin terrain. In his journals, he described the nearly volcanicgeysers and crystal-clear lakes that would later compose thecountry's first national park, Yellowstone.

Traversing the park is still an adventuresome experience yearslater, even if you roll along watching wildlife within the comfort ofyour SUV. Although the majority of the park lies in Wyoming, the twomajor entrances are in Montana, which earns its moniker as Big SkyCountry quite well as expansive clouds rise on an endless horizon.Through twisting mountain passes shielded in the highest points ofthe Rockies (between 7,000 and 9,000 feet in elevation) the sceneryon the way to the park equals the beauty found within the boundariesof Yellowstone.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. As I look out the window, I see cityslickers of all types jumping out of their cars with cameras. Atourist from California pops out of his vehicle and declares, "Hey,kids, I think there's a moose down there!" This is known as an"animal jam."

It is recommended to approach the park from its west entrance.There you can view fly fishermen perched on the banks of the MadisonRiver and bait fisherman trying their luck in Earthquake Lake -reminiscent of scenes from the award-winning Norman McLean shortstory and subsequent motion picture "A River Runs Through It." Twoother advantages lie with this route: There's less traffic and youcan visit three Western states (Montana, Wyoming and, after a 10-minute detour, Idaho) in a single day.

In recent years, West Yellowstone, which borders the park, hasblossomed into a stereotypical tourist town complete with a rusticshanty McDonald's among other fast food offerings and souvenir shops(think Niagara Falls). A few hundred yards from the park is an IMAXcomplex, which daily shows a film about the famed national park.Though the documentary is not the same caliber as other IMAX journeysto Mount Everest or the Grand Canyon and is rather short for the $8admission fee, it gives visitors an appropriate grounding in thepark's historical and geological importance.

Admission to the park itself is relatively inexpensive for largefamilies - an entire carload can visit the park and the nearby GrandTeton mountain range for $20. Passes to the park are valid for aweek, so visitors can come and go from Yellowstone as they please.Many prefer to rough it within the park, entering the park withrecreational vehicles or with campers trailing behind minivans.Lodging is available inside the park as well.

From the west entrance, the initial scenery is quite surprisingand somewhat quashes expectations - however temporarily. A pair offorest fires in 1988 and 2001 ravaged the towering ponderosa pines,leaving slender, barren matchsticks in their wake. To preserve thenatural ambiance of the park and to allow nature to replenish itself,the lumber that parallels driftwood has been left in its place.Because of a hot, dry summer, forest fires have burned throughout theWest - including Yellowstone this year. Rather than try to extinguisheach fire, as long as permanent structures or homes are not in thepath of the flames, firefighters often simply let the conflagrationsburn themselves out.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. Everyone in our car wonders, "Is there anaccident?" "Could it be a roadblock?" "Are there just a lot of peoplehere?" As I look out the window, I see city slickers of all typesjumping out of their cars with cameras. This must be something tosee. Hundreds of people are lurking in the woods beside the road,stealthily camouflaged with brightly colored shirts and gigantic zoomlenses. A tourist from California pops out of his vehicle anddeclares, "Hey, kids, I think there's a moose down there!"

Known colloquially as "animal jams," hundreds of people descendfrom the road to a riverbed where a moose lays asleep to thecommotion. The peaceful serenity of nature is broken by cameraclicks, advancing film and cheers such as "Hey, Moose, can you lookup for a second?" The moose is either sleepy or camera-shy and couldeasily eat members of the public paparazzi for lunch.

Park rangers are scarce within Yellowstone and visitors walk amongthe habitat at their own risk. But the park newspaper that isdistributed to every visitor warns of foreboding animal attacks,stampedes, scaldings, drownings, maulings and other horribleaccidents that could happen.

Farther down the road, a collection of strange geysers known asthe Fountain Paint Pots are a must-see. Their strange aromas andnoises would certainly satisfy a 7-year-old boy. Geologically,Yellowstone lies over a "hot spot" and is the remnant of a volcaniccrater called a caldera. Hot water still brews underneath the surfaceuntil the pressure is so great that it bubbles to the surface, oftenin fantastic displays. Seismic readings are recorded daily, asanother eruption is eminent. Scientists try and predict the smallerhydrothermic eruptions that occur yearly, but are more concerned witha major explosion estimated at 20,000 years down the road that couldcreate havoc from Yellowstone to Bozeman, Mont.

Despite their ominous presence, the nearly 10,000 geysers areworth visiting (not every single one, of course) and vary in colorfrom sky blue to jack-o'-lantern orange. Some appear as bubblingconcrete, others smell like rotten eggs, while others produce heatthat reaches several hundred degrees.

Perhaps the most well-known geyser of all is Old Faithful. Thoughyears ago the interval between its eruption times was clocked atprecisely an hour, as the geology of the park changes, the rush ofsteam to the surface has become more erratic. Park officials statethat Old Faithful blows her top approximately every 94 minutes -however, that time can stretch to 120 minutes. (And don't ask parkofficials about the Metamucil commercial where they stuff the fiberproduct down the geyser to keep it regular. They don't find itfunny.)

Thousands gather around the circular base of the geyser every hourand a half and sit on benches. It's a great place to chat with peoplefrom across the country as you sit there waiting for water to spewout of the ground 200 feet in the air. Don't be fooled by theminiature shows of power that occur before the real eruption, as onefamily was. Several minutes before the actual expulsion of scalding,hot water occurs, steam shoots up from the geyser. Unfortunately, amother and her son walked away muttering, "I'm sorry Jake, that's allit was, buddy." The real eruption is a spectacular show of nature atwork. Slowly, the water builds to a crescendo and a height of severalstories in the air. Again, cameras flash and people turn their necksat an uncomfortable angle to see the water show.

Yellowstone Lake lies a few miles from Old Faithful and is themost visual representation of the park's geologic past. The perfectlyround lake is the shape of the ancient caldera that remains from theinitial blast 150,000 years ago. Today, the lake circles the parktranquilly, although visible wildfires hazed the sky in the distance.It's a favorite watering hole along with nearby waterfalls for bison,as signs remind to not approach the animals.

Yellowstone is difficult to see in just a couple of days. The parkspans an unfathomable 3,472 square miles of territory, making for alengthy expedition (maybe that's why Lewis and Clark bypassed thearea in the first place). But Yellowstone Park is an unforgettableexhibition of nature that shouldn't be missed.

Eons in the making: Yellowstone, America's first national park, is as thrilling as ever

If you go Yellowstone Park is open year-round, although in thewinter months, only the north entrance is accessible by the public.The peak season runs from April to November and visitors can enterthe park at four spots: Cody and Jackson, Wyo., and Gardiner and WestYellowstone, Mont. WHEN Thomas Jefferson sent two intrepidmountaineers into the wilderness to find an all-water route to thePacific, no one imagined the untamed wilderness that Meriwether Lewisand William Clark would explore. Though the pair stopped 50 milesoutside Yellowstone, a member of their entourage, John Colter,decided to split from the return caravan eastward to explore more ofthe virgin terrain. In his journals, he described the nearly volcanicgeysers and crystal-clear lakes that would later compose thecountry's first national park, Yellowstone.

Traversing the park is still an adventuresome experience yearslater, even if you roll along watching wildlife within the comfort ofyour SUV. Although the majority of the park lies in Wyoming, the twomajor entrances are in Montana, which earns its moniker as Big SkyCountry quite well as expansive clouds rise on an endless horizon.Through twisting mountain passes shielded in the highest points ofthe Rockies (between 7,000 and 9,000 feet in elevation) the sceneryon the way to the park equals the beauty found within the boundariesof Yellowstone.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. As I look out the window, I see cityslickers of all types jumping out of their cars with cameras. Atourist from California pops out of his vehicle and declares, "Hey,kids, I think there's a moose down there!" This is known as an"animal jam."

It is recommended to approach the park from its west entrance.There you can view fly fishermen perched on the banks of the MadisonRiver and bait fisherman trying their luck in Earthquake Lake -reminiscent of scenes from the award-winning Norman McLean shortstory and subsequent motion picture "A River Runs Through It." Twoother advantages lie with this route: There's less traffic and youcan visit three Western states (Montana, Wyoming and, after a 10-minute detour, Idaho) in a single day.

In recent years, West Yellowstone, which borders the park, hasblossomed into a stereotypical tourist town complete with a rusticshanty McDonald's among other fast food offerings and souvenir shops(think Niagara Falls). A few hundred yards from the park is an IMAXcomplex, which daily shows a film about the famed national park.Though the documentary is not the same caliber as other IMAX journeysto Mount Everest or the Grand Canyon and is rather short for the $8admission fee, it gives visitors an appropriate grounding in thepark's historical and geological importance.

Admission to the park itself is relatively inexpensive for largefamilies - an entire carload can visit the park and the nearby GrandTeton mountain range for $20. Passes to the park are valid for aweek, so visitors can come and go from Yellowstone as they please.Many prefer to rough it within the park, entering the park withrecreational vehicles or with campers trailing behind minivans.Lodging is available inside the park as well.

From the west entrance, the initial scenery is quite surprisingand somewhat quashes expectations - however temporarily. A pair offorest fires in 1988 and 2001 ravaged the towering ponderosa pines,leaving slender, barren matchsticks in their wake. To preserve thenatural ambiance of the park and to allow nature to replenish itself,the lumber that parallels driftwood has been left in its place.Because of a hot, dry summer, forest fires have burned throughout theWest - including Yellowstone this year. Rather than try to extinguisheach fire, as long as permanent structures or homes are not in thepath of the flames, firefighters often simply let the conflagrationsburn themselves out.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. Everyone in our car wonders, "Is there anaccident?" "Could it be a roadblock?" "Are there just a lot of peoplehere?" As I look out the window, I see city slickers of all typesjumping out of their cars with cameras. This must be something tosee. Hundreds of people are lurking in the woods beside the road,stealthily camouflaged with brightly colored shirts and gigantic zoomlenses. A tourist from California pops out of his vehicle anddeclares, "Hey, kids, I think there's a moose down there!"

Known colloquially as "animal jams," hundreds of people descendfrom the road to a riverbed where a moose lays asleep to thecommotion. The peaceful serenity of nature is broken by cameraclicks, advancing film and cheers such as "Hey, Moose, can you lookup for a second?" The moose is either sleepy or camera-shy and couldeasily eat members of the public paparazzi for lunch.

Park rangers are scarce within Yellowstone and visitors walk amongthe habitat at their own risk. But the park newspaper that isdistributed to every visitor warns of foreboding animal attacks,stampedes, scaldings, drownings, maulings and other horribleaccidents that could happen.

Farther down the road, a collection of strange geysers known asthe Fountain Paint Pots are a must-see. Their strange aromas andnoises would certainly satisfy a 7-year-old boy. Geologically,Yellowstone lies over a "hot spot" and is the remnant of a volcaniccrater called a caldera. Hot water still brews underneath the surfaceuntil the pressure is so great that it bubbles to the surface, oftenin fantastic displays. Seismic readings are recorded daily, asanother eruption is eminent. Scientists try and predict the smallerhydrothermic eruptions that occur yearly, but are more concerned witha major explosion estimated at 20,000 years down the road that couldcreate havoc from Yellowstone to Bozeman, Mont.

Despite their ominous presence, the nearly 10,000 geysers areworth visiting (not every single one, of course) and vary in colorfrom sky blue to jack-o'-lantern orange. Some appear as bubblingconcrete, others smell like rotten eggs, while others produce heatthat reaches several hundred degrees.

Perhaps the most well-known geyser of all is Old Faithful. Thoughyears ago the interval between its eruption times was clocked atprecisely an hour, as the geology of the park changes, the rush ofsteam to the surface has become more erratic. Park officials statethat Old Faithful blows her top approximately every 94 minutes -however, that time can stretch to 120 minutes. (And don't ask parkofficials about the Metamucil commercial where they stuff the fiberproduct down the geyser to keep it regular. They don't find itfunny.)

Thousands gather around the circular base of the geyser every hourand a half and sit on benches. It's a great place to chat with peoplefrom across the country as you sit there waiting for water to spewout of the ground 200 feet in the air. Don't be fooled by theminiature shows of power that occur before the real eruption, as onefamily was. Several minutes before the actual expulsion of scalding,hot water occurs, steam shoots up from the geyser. Unfortunately, amother and her son walked away muttering, "I'm sorry Jake, that's allit was, buddy." The real eruption is a spectacular show of nature atwork. Slowly, the water builds to a crescendo and a height of severalstories in the air. Again, cameras flash and people turn their necksat an uncomfortable angle to see the water show.

Yellowstone Lake lies a few miles from Old Faithful and is themost visual representation of the park's geologic past. The perfectlyround lake is the shape of the ancient caldera that remains from theinitial blast 150,000 years ago. Today, the lake circles the parktranquilly, although visible wildfires hazed the sky in the distance.It's a favorite watering hole along with nearby waterfalls for bison,as signs remind to not approach the animals.

Yellowstone is difficult to see in just a couple of days. The parkspans an unfathomable 3,472 square miles of territory, making for alengthy expedition (maybe that's why Lewis and Clark bypassed thearea in the first place). But Yellowstone Park is an unforgettableexhibition of nature that shouldn't be missed.

Eons in the making: Yellowstone, America's first national park, is as thrilling as ever

If you go Yellowstone Park is open year-round, although in thewinter months, only the north entrance is accessible by the public.The peak season runs from April to November and visitors can enterthe park at four spots: Cody and Jackson, Wyo., and Gardiner and WestYellowstone, Mont. WHEN Thomas Jefferson sent two intrepidmountaineers into the wilderness to find an all-water route to thePacific, no one imagined the untamed wilderness that Meriwether Lewisand William Clark would explore. Though the pair stopped 50 milesoutside Yellowstone, a member of their entourage, John Colter,decided to split from the return caravan eastward to explore more ofthe virgin terrain. In his journals, he described the nearly volcanicgeysers and crystal-clear lakes that would later compose thecountry's first national park, Yellowstone.

Traversing the park is still an adventuresome experience yearslater, even if you roll along watching wildlife within the comfort ofyour SUV. Although the majority of the park lies in Wyoming, the twomajor entrances are in Montana, which earns its moniker as Big SkyCountry quite well as expansive clouds rise on an endless horizon.Through twisting mountain passes shielded in the highest points ofthe Rockies (between 7,000 and 9,000 feet in elevation) the sceneryon the way to the park equals the beauty found within the boundariesof Yellowstone.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. As I look out the window, I see cityslickers of all types jumping out of their cars with cameras. Atourist from California pops out of his vehicle and declares, "Hey,kids, I think there's a moose down there!" This is known as an"animal jam."

It is recommended to approach the park from its west entrance.There you can view fly fishermen perched on the banks of the MadisonRiver and bait fisherman trying their luck in Earthquake Lake -reminiscent of scenes from the award-winning Norman McLean shortstory and subsequent motion picture "A River Runs Through It." Twoother advantages lie with this route: There's less traffic and youcan visit three Western states (Montana, Wyoming and, after a 10-minute detour, Idaho) in a single day.

In recent years, West Yellowstone, which borders the park, hasblossomed into a stereotypical tourist town complete with a rusticshanty McDonald's among other fast food offerings and souvenir shops(think Niagara Falls). A few hundred yards from the park is an IMAXcomplex, which daily shows a film about the famed national park.Though the documentary is not the same caliber as other IMAX journeysto Mount Everest or the Grand Canyon and is rather short for the $8admission fee, it gives visitors an appropriate grounding in thepark's historical and geological importance.

Admission to the park itself is relatively inexpensive for largefamilies - an entire carload can visit the park and the nearby GrandTeton mountain range for $20. Passes to the park are valid for aweek, so visitors can come and go from Yellowstone as they please.Many prefer to rough it within the park, entering the park withrecreational vehicles or with campers trailing behind minivans.Lodging is available inside the park as well.

From the west entrance, the initial scenery is quite surprisingand somewhat quashes expectations - however temporarily. A pair offorest fires in 1988 and 2001 ravaged the towering ponderosa pines,leaving slender, barren matchsticks in their wake. To preserve thenatural ambiance of the park and to allow nature to replenish itself,the lumber that parallels driftwood has been left in its place.Because of a hot, dry summer, forest fires have burned throughout theWest - including Yellowstone this year. Rather than try to extinguisheach fire, as long as permanent structures or homes are not in thepath of the flames, firefighters often simply let the conflagrationsburn themselves out.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. Everyone in our car wonders, "Is there anaccident?" "Could it be a roadblock?" "Are there just a lot of peoplehere?" As I look out the window, I see city slickers of all typesjumping out of their cars with cameras. This must be something tosee. Hundreds of people are lurking in the woods beside the road,stealthily camouflaged with brightly colored shirts and gigantic zoomlenses. A tourist from California pops out of his vehicle anddeclares, "Hey, kids, I think there's a moose down there!"

Known colloquially as "animal jams," hundreds of people descendfrom the road to a riverbed where a moose lays asleep to thecommotion. The peaceful serenity of nature is broken by cameraclicks, advancing film and cheers such as "Hey, Moose, can you lookup for a second?" The moose is either sleepy or camera-shy and couldeasily eat members of the public paparazzi for lunch.

Park rangers are scarce within Yellowstone and visitors walk amongthe habitat at their own risk. But the park newspaper that isdistributed to every visitor warns of foreboding animal attacks,stampedes, scaldings, drownings, maulings and other horribleaccidents that could happen.

Farther down the road, a collection of strange geysers known asthe Fountain Paint Pots are a must-see. Their strange aromas andnoises would certainly satisfy a 7-year-old boy. Geologically,Yellowstone lies over a "hot spot" and is the remnant of a volcaniccrater called a caldera. Hot water still brews underneath the surfaceuntil the pressure is so great that it bubbles to the surface, oftenin fantastic displays. Seismic readings are recorded daily, asanother eruption is eminent. Scientists try and predict the smallerhydrothermic eruptions that occur yearly, but are more concerned witha major explosion estimated at 20,000 years down the road that couldcreate havoc from Yellowstone to Bozeman, Mont.

Despite their ominous presence, the nearly 10,000 geysers areworth visiting (not every single one, of course) and vary in colorfrom sky blue to jack-o'-lantern orange. Some appear as bubblingconcrete, others smell like rotten eggs, while others produce heatthat reaches several hundred degrees.

Perhaps the most well-known geyser of all is Old Faithful. Thoughyears ago the interval between its eruption times was clocked atprecisely an hour, as the geology of the park changes, the rush ofsteam to the surface has become more erratic. Park officials statethat Old Faithful blows her top approximately every 94 minutes -however, that time can stretch to 120 minutes. (And don't ask parkofficials about the Metamucil commercial where they stuff the fiberproduct down the geyser to keep it regular. They don't find itfunny.)

Thousands gather around the circular base of the geyser every hourand a half and sit on benches. It's a great place to chat with peoplefrom across the country as you sit there waiting for water to spewout of the ground 200 feet in the air. Don't be fooled by theminiature shows of power that occur before the real eruption, as onefamily was. Several minutes before the actual expulsion of scalding,hot water occurs, steam shoots up from the geyser. Unfortunately, amother and her son walked away muttering, "I'm sorry Jake, that's allit was, buddy." The real eruption is a spectacular show of nature atwork. Slowly, the water builds to a crescendo and a height of severalstories in the air. Again, cameras flash and people turn their necksat an uncomfortable angle to see the water show.

Yellowstone Lake lies a few miles from Old Faithful and is themost visual representation of the park's geologic past. The perfectlyround lake is the shape of the ancient caldera that remains from theinitial blast 150,000 years ago. Today, the lake circles the parktranquilly, although visible wildfires hazed the sky in the distance.It's a favorite watering hole along with nearby waterfalls for bison,as signs remind to not approach the animals.

Yellowstone is difficult to see in just a couple of days. The parkspans an unfathomable 3,472 square miles of territory, making for alengthy expedition (maybe that's why Lewis and Clark bypassed thearea in the first place). But Yellowstone Park is an unforgettableexhibition of nature that shouldn't be missed.

Eons in the making: Yellowstone, America's first national park, is as thrilling as ever

If you go Yellowstone Park is open year-round, although in thewinter months, only the north entrance is accessible by the public.The peak season runs from April to November and visitors can enterthe park at four spots: Cody and Jackson, Wyo., and Gardiner and WestYellowstone, Mont. WHEN Thomas Jefferson sent two intrepidmountaineers into the wilderness to find an all-water route to thePacific, no one imagined the untamed wilderness that Meriwether Lewisand William Clark would explore. Though the pair stopped 50 milesoutside Yellowstone, a member of their entourage, John Colter,decided to split from the return caravan eastward to explore more ofthe virgin terrain. In his journals, he described the nearly volcanicgeysers and crystal-clear lakes that would later compose thecountry's first national park, Yellowstone.

Traversing the park is still an adventuresome experience yearslater, even if you roll along watching wildlife within the comfort ofyour SUV. Although the majority of the park lies in Wyoming, the twomajor entrances are in Montana, which earns its moniker as Big SkyCountry quite well as expansive clouds rise on an endless horizon.Through twisting mountain passes shielded in the highest points ofthe Rockies (between 7,000 and 9,000 feet in elevation) the sceneryon the way to the park equals the beauty found within the boundariesof Yellowstone.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. As I look out the window, I see cityslickers of all types jumping out of their cars with cameras. Atourist from California pops out of his vehicle and declares, "Hey,kids, I think there's a moose down there!" This is known as an"animal jam."

It is recommended to approach the park from its west entrance.There you can view fly fishermen perched on the banks of the MadisonRiver and bait fisherman trying their luck in Earthquake Lake -reminiscent of scenes from the award-winning Norman McLean shortstory and subsequent motion picture "A River Runs Through It." Twoother advantages lie with this route: There's less traffic and youcan visit three Western states (Montana, Wyoming and, after a 10-minute detour, Idaho) in a single day.

In recent years, West Yellowstone, which borders the park, hasblossomed into a stereotypical tourist town complete with a rusticshanty McDonald's among other fast food offerings and souvenir shops(think Niagara Falls). A few hundred yards from the park is an IMAXcomplex, which daily shows a film about the famed national park.Though the documentary is not the same caliber as other IMAX journeysto Mount Everest or the Grand Canyon and is rather short for the $8admission fee, it gives visitors an appropriate grounding in thepark's historical and geological importance.

Admission to the park itself is relatively inexpensive for largefamilies - an entire carload can visit the park and the nearby GrandTeton mountain range for $20. Passes to the park are valid for aweek, so visitors can come and go from Yellowstone as they please.Many prefer to rough it within the park, entering the park withrecreational vehicles or with campers trailing behind minivans.Lodging is available inside the park as well.

From the west entrance, the initial scenery is quite surprisingand somewhat quashes expectations - however temporarily. A pair offorest fires in 1988 and 2001 ravaged the towering ponderosa pines,leaving slender, barren matchsticks in their wake. To preserve thenatural ambiance of the park and to allow nature to replenish itself,the lumber that parallels driftwood has been left in its place.Because of a hot, dry summer, forest fires have burned throughout theWest - including Yellowstone this year. Rather than try to extinguisheach fire, as long as permanent structures or homes are not in thepath of the flames, firefighters often simply let the conflagrationsburn themselves out.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. Everyone in our car wonders, "Is there anaccident?" "Could it be a roadblock?" "Are there just a lot of peoplehere?" As I look out the window, I see city slickers of all typesjumping out of their cars with cameras. This must be something tosee. Hundreds of people are lurking in the woods beside the road,stealthily camouflaged with brightly colored shirts and gigantic zoomlenses. A tourist from California pops out of his vehicle anddeclares, "Hey, kids, I think there's a moose down there!"

Known colloquially as "animal jams," hundreds of people descendfrom the road to a riverbed where a moose lays asleep to thecommotion. The peaceful serenity of nature is broken by cameraclicks, advancing film and cheers such as "Hey, Moose, can you lookup for a second?" The moose is either sleepy or camera-shy and couldeasily eat members of the public paparazzi for lunch.

Park rangers are scarce within Yellowstone and visitors walk amongthe habitat at their own risk. But the park newspaper that isdistributed to every visitor warns of foreboding animal attacks,stampedes, scaldings, drownings, maulings and other horribleaccidents that could happen.

Farther down the road, a collection of strange geysers known asthe Fountain Paint Pots are a must-see. Their strange aromas andnoises would certainly satisfy a 7-year-old boy. Geologically,Yellowstone lies over a "hot spot" and is the remnant of a volcaniccrater called a caldera. Hot water still brews underneath the surfaceuntil the pressure is so great that it bubbles to the surface, oftenin fantastic displays. Seismic readings are recorded daily, asanother eruption is eminent. Scientists try and predict the smallerhydrothermic eruptions that occur yearly, but are more concerned witha major explosion estimated at 20,000 years down the road that couldcreate havoc from Yellowstone to Bozeman, Mont.

Despite their ominous presence, the nearly 10,000 geysers areworth visiting (not every single one, of course) and vary in colorfrom sky blue to jack-o'-lantern orange. Some appear as bubblingconcrete, others smell like rotten eggs, while others produce heatthat reaches several hundred degrees.

Perhaps the most well-known geyser of all is Old Faithful. Thoughyears ago the interval between its eruption times was clocked atprecisely an hour, as the geology of the park changes, the rush ofsteam to the surface has become more erratic. Park officials statethat Old Faithful blows her top approximately every 94 minutes -however, that time can stretch to 120 minutes. (And don't ask parkofficials about the Metamucil commercial where they stuff the fiberproduct down the geyser to keep it regular. They don't find itfunny.)

Thousands gather around the circular base of the geyser every hourand a half and sit on benches. It's a great place to chat with peoplefrom across the country as you sit there waiting for water to spewout of the ground 200 feet in the air. Don't be fooled by theminiature shows of power that occur before the real eruption, as onefamily was. Several minutes before the actual expulsion of scalding,hot water occurs, steam shoots up from the geyser. Unfortunately, amother and her son walked away muttering, "I'm sorry Jake, that's allit was, buddy." The real eruption is a spectacular show of nature atwork. Slowly, the water builds to a crescendo and a height of severalstories in the air. Again, cameras flash and people turn their necksat an uncomfortable angle to see the water show.

Yellowstone Lake lies a few miles from Old Faithful and is themost visual representation of the park's geologic past. The perfectlyround lake is the shape of the ancient caldera that remains from theinitial blast 150,000 years ago. Today, the lake circles the parktranquilly, although visible wildfires hazed the sky in the distance.It's a favorite watering hole along with nearby waterfalls for bison,as signs remind to not approach the animals.

Yellowstone is difficult to see in just a couple of days. The parkspans an unfathomable 3,472 square miles of territory, making for alengthy expedition (maybe that's why Lewis and Clark bypassed thearea in the first place). But Yellowstone Park is an unforgettableexhibition of nature that shouldn't be missed.

Eons in the making: Yellowstone, America's first national park, is as thrilling as ever

If you go Yellowstone Park is open year-round, although in thewinter months, only the north entrance is accessible by the public.The peak season runs from April to November and visitors can enterthe park at four spots: Cody and Jackson, Wyo., and Gardiner and WestYellowstone, Mont. WHEN Thomas Jefferson sent two intrepidmountaineers into the wilderness to find an all-water route to thePacific, no one imagined the untamed wilderness that Meriwether Lewisand William Clark would explore. Though the pair stopped 50 milesoutside Yellowstone, a member of their entourage, John Colter,decided to split from the return caravan eastward to explore more ofthe virgin terrain. In his journals, he described the nearly volcanicgeysers and crystal-clear lakes that would later compose thecountry's first national park, Yellowstone.

Traversing the park is still an adventuresome experience yearslater, even if you roll along watching wildlife within the comfort ofyour SUV. Although the majority of the park lies in Wyoming, the twomajor entrances are in Montana, which earns its moniker as Big SkyCountry quite well as expansive clouds rise on an endless horizon.Through twisting mountain passes shielded in the highest points ofthe Rockies (between 7,000 and 9,000 feet in elevation) the sceneryon the way to the park equals the beauty found within the boundariesof Yellowstone.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. As I look out the window, I see cityslickers of all types jumping out of their cars with cameras. Atourist from California pops out of his vehicle and declares, "Hey,kids, I think there's a moose down there!" This is known as an"animal jam."

It is recommended to approach the park from its west entrance.There you can view fly fishermen perched on the banks of the MadisonRiver and bait fisherman trying their luck in Earthquake Lake -reminiscent of scenes from the award-winning Norman McLean shortstory and subsequent motion picture "A River Runs Through It." Twoother advantages lie with this route: There's less traffic and youcan visit three Western states (Montana, Wyoming and, after a 10-minute detour, Idaho) in a single day.

In recent years, West Yellowstone, which borders the park, hasblossomed into a stereotypical tourist town complete with a rusticshanty McDonald's among other fast food offerings and souvenir shops(think Niagara Falls). A few hundred yards from the park is an IMAXcomplex, which daily shows a film about the famed national park.Though the documentary is not the same caliber as other IMAX journeysto Mount Everest or the Grand Canyon and is rather short for the $8admission fee, it gives visitors an appropriate grounding in thepark's historical and geological importance.

Admission to the park itself is relatively inexpensive for largefamilies - an entire carload can visit the park and the nearby GrandTeton mountain range for $20. Passes to the park are valid for aweek, so visitors can come and go from Yellowstone as they please.Many prefer to rough it within the park, entering the park withrecreational vehicles or with campers trailing behind minivans.Lodging is available inside the park as well.

From the west entrance, the initial scenery is quite surprisingand somewhat quashes expectations - however temporarily. A pair offorest fires in 1988 and 2001 ravaged the towering ponderosa pines,leaving slender, barren matchsticks in their wake. To preserve thenatural ambiance of the park and to allow nature to replenish itself,the lumber that parallels driftwood has been left in its place.Because of a hot, dry summer, forest fires have burned throughout theWest - including Yellowstone this year. Rather than try to extinguisheach fire, as long as permanent structures or homes are not in thepath of the flames, firefighters often simply let the conflagrationsburn themselves out.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. Everyone in our car wonders, "Is there anaccident?" "Could it be a roadblock?" "Are there just a lot of peoplehere?" As I look out the window, I see city slickers of all typesjumping out of their cars with cameras. This must be something tosee. Hundreds of people are lurking in the woods beside the road,stealthily camouflaged with brightly colored shirts and gigantic zoomlenses. A tourist from California pops out of his vehicle anddeclares, "Hey, kids, I think there's a moose down there!"

Known colloquially as "animal jams," hundreds of people descendfrom the road to a riverbed where a moose lays asleep to thecommotion. The peaceful serenity of nature is broken by cameraclicks, advancing film and cheers such as "Hey, Moose, can you lookup for a second?" The moose is either sleepy or camera-shy and couldeasily eat members of the public paparazzi for lunch.

Park rangers are scarce within Yellowstone and visitors walk amongthe habitat at their own risk. But the park newspaper that isdistributed to every visitor warns of foreboding animal attacks,stampedes, scaldings, drownings, maulings and other horribleaccidents that could happen.

Farther down the road, a collection of strange geysers known asthe Fountain Paint Pots are a must-see. Their strange aromas andnoises would certainly satisfy a 7-year-old boy. Geologically,Yellowstone lies over a "hot spot" and is the remnant of a volcaniccrater called a caldera. Hot water still brews underneath the surfaceuntil the pressure is so great that it bubbles to the surface, oftenin fantastic displays. Seismic readings are recorded daily, asanother eruption is eminent. Scientists try and predict the smallerhydrothermic eruptions that occur yearly, but are more concerned witha major explosion estimated at 20,000 years down the road that couldcreate havoc from Yellowstone to Bozeman, Mont.

Despite their ominous presence, the nearly 10,000 geysers areworth visiting (not every single one, of course) and vary in colorfrom sky blue to jack-o'-lantern orange. Some appear as bubblingconcrete, others smell like rotten eggs, while others produce heatthat reaches several hundred degrees.

Perhaps the most well-known geyser of all is Old Faithful. Thoughyears ago the interval between its eruption times was clocked atprecisely an hour, as the geology of the park changes, the rush ofsteam to the surface has become more erratic. Park officials statethat Old Faithful blows her top approximately every 94 minutes -however, that time can stretch to 120 minutes. (And don't ask parkofficials about the Metamucil commercial where they stuff the fiberproduct down the geyser to keep it regular. They don't find itfunny.)

Thousands gather around the circular base of the geyser every hourand a half and sit on benches. It's a great place to chat with peoplefrom across the country as you sit there waiting for water to spewout of the ground 200 feet in the air. Don't be fooled by theminiature shows of power that occur before the real eruption, as onefamily was. Several minutes before the actual expulsion of scalding,hot water occurs, steam shoots up from the geyser. Unfortunately, amother and her son walked away muttering, "I'm sorry Jake, that's allit was, buddy." The real eruption is a spectacular show of nature atwork. Slowly, the water builds to a crescendo and a height of severalstories in the air. Again, cameras flash and people turn their necksat an uncomfortable angle to see the water show.

Yellowstone Lake lies a few miles from Old Faithful and is themost visual representation of the park's geologic past. The perfectlyround lake is the shape of the ancient caldera that remains from theinitial blast 150,000 years ago. Today, the lake circles the parktranquilly, although visible wildfires hazed the sky in the distance.It's a favorite watering hole along with nearby waterfalls for bison,as signs remind to not approach the animals.

Yellowstone is difficult to see in just a couple of days. The parkspans an unfathomable 3,472 square miles of territory, making for alengthy expedition (maybe that's why Lewis and Clark bypassed thearea in the first place). But Yellowstone Park is an unforgettableexhibition of nature that shouldn't be missed.

Eons in the making: Yellowstone, America's first national park, is as thrilling as ever

If you go Yellowstone Park is open year-round, although in thewinter months, only the north entrance is accessible by the public.The peak season runs from April to November and visitors can enterthe park at four spots: Cody and Jackson, Wyo., and Gardiner and WestYellowstone, Mont. WHEN Thomas Jefferson sent two intrepidmountaineers into the wilderness to find an all-water route to thePacific, no one imagined the untamed wilderness that Meriwether Lewisand William Clark would explore. Though the pair stopped 50 milesoutside Yellowstone, a member of their entourage, John Colter,decided to split from the return caravan eastward to explore more ofthe virgin terrain. In his journals, he described the nearly volcanicgeysers and crystal-clear lakes that would later compose thecountry's first national park, Yellowstone.

Traversing the park is still an adventuresome experience yearslater, even if you roll along watching wildlife within the comfort ofyour SUV. Although the majority of the park lies in Wyoming, the twomajor entrances are in Montana, which earns its moniker as Big SkyCountry quite well as expansive clouds rise on an endless horizon.Through twisting mountain passes shielded in the highest points ofthe Rockies (between 7,000 and 9,000 feet in elevation) the sceneryon the way to the park equals the beauty found within the boundariesof Yellowstone.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. As I look out the window, I see cityslickers of all types jumping out of their cars with cameras. Atourist from California pops out of his vehicle and declares, "Hey,kids, I think there's a moose down there!" This is known as an"animal jam."

It is recommended to approach the park from its west entrance.There you can view fly fishermen perched on the banks of the MadisonRiver and bait fisherman trying their luck in Earthquake Lake -reminiscent of scenes from the award-winning Norman McLean shortstory and subsequent motion picture "A River Runs Through It." Twoother advantages lie with this route: There's less traffic and youcan visit three Western states (Montana, Wyoming and, after a 10-minute detour, Idaho) in a single day.

In recent years, West Yellowstone, which borders the park, hasblossomed into a stereotypical tourist town complete with a rusticshanty McDonald's among other fast food offerings and souvenir shops(think Niagara Falls). A few hundred yards from the park is an IMAXcomplex, which daily shows a film about the famed national park.Though the documentary is not the same caliber as other IMAX journeysto Mount Everest or the Grand Canyon and is rather short for the $8admission fee, it gives visitors an appropriate grounding in thepark's historical and geological importance.

Admission to the park itself is relatively inexpensive for largefamilies - an entire carload can visit the park and the nearby GrandTeton mountain range for $20. Passes to the park are valid for aweek, so visitors can come and go from Yellowstone as they please.Many prefer to rough it within the park, entering the park withrecreational vehicles or with campers trailing behind minivans.Lodging is available inside the park as well.

From the west entrance, the initial scenery is quite surprisingand somewhat quashes expectations - however temporarily. A pair offorest fires in 1988 and 2001 ravaged the towering ponderosa pines,leaving slender, barren matchsticks in their wake. To preserve thenatural ambiance of the park and to allow nature to replenish itself,the lumber that parallels driftwood has been left in its place.Because of a hot, dry summer, forest fires have burned throughout theWest - including Yellowstone this year. Rather than try to extinguisheach fire, as long as permanent structures or homes are not in thepath of the flames, firefighters often simply let the conflagrationsburn themselves out.

About 10 miles into the park, there's a traffic jam that wouldrival any urban commute. Everyone in our car wonders, "Is there anaccident?" "Could it be a roadblock?" "Are there just a lot of peoplehere?" As I look out the window, I see city slickers of all typesjumping out of their cars with cameras. This must be something tosee. Hundreds of people are lurking in the woods beside the road,stealthily camouflaged with brightly colored shirts and gigantic zoomlenses. A tourist from California pops out of his vehicle anddeclares, "Hey, kids, I think there's a moose down there!"

Known colloquially as "animal jams," hundreds of people descendfrom the road to a riverbed where a moose lays asleep to thecommotion. The peaceful serenity of nature is broken by cameraclicks, advancing film and cheers such as "Hey, Moose, can you lookup for a second?" The moose is either sleepy or camera-shy and couldeasily eat members of the public paparazzi for lunch.

Park rangers are scarce within Yellowstone and visitors walk amongthe habitat at their own risk. But the park newspaper that isdistributed to every visitor warns of foreboding animal attacks,stampedes, scaldings, drownings, maulings and other horribleaccidents that could happen.

Farther down the road, a collection of strange geysers known asthe Fountain Paint Pots are a must-see. Their strange aromas andnoises would certainly satisfy a 7-year-old boy. Geologically,Yellowstone lies over a "hot spot" and is the remnant of a volcaniccrater called a caldera. Hot water still brews underneath the surfaceuntil the pressure is so great that it bubbles to the surface, oftenin fantastic displays. Seismic readings are recorded daily, asanother eruption is eminent. Scientists try and predict the smallerhydrothermic eruptions that occur yearly, but are more concerned witha major explosion estimated at 20,000 years down the road that couldcreate havoc from Yellowstone to Bozeman, Mont.

Despite their ominous presence, the nearly 10,000 geysers areworth visiting (not every single one, of course) and vary in colorfrom sky blue to jack-o'-lantern orange. Some appear as bubblingconcrete, others smell like rotten eggs, while others produce heatthat reaches several hundred degrees.

Perhaps the most well-known geyser of all is Old Faithful. Thoughyears ago the interval between its eruption times was clocked atprecisely an hour, as the geology of the park changes, the rush ofsteam to the surface has become more erratic. Park officials statethat Old Faithful blows her top approximately every 94 minutes -however, that time can stretch to 120 minutes. (And don't ask parkofficials about the Metamucil commercial where they stuff the fiberproduct down the geyser to keep it regular. They don't find itfunny.)

Thousands gather around the circular base of the geyser every hourand a half and sit on benches. It's a great place to chat with peoplefrom across the country as you sit there waiting for water to spewout of the ground 200 feet in the air. Don't be fooled by theminiature shows of power that occur before the real eruption, as onefamily was. Several minutes before the actual expulsion of scalding,hot water occurs, steam shoots up from the geyser. Unfortunately, amother and her son walked away muttering, "I'm sorry Jake, that's allit was, buddy." The real eruption is a spectacular show of nature atwork. Slowly, the water builds to a crescendo and a height of severalstories in the air. Again, cameras flash and people turn their necksat an uncomfortable angle to see the water show.

Yellowstone Lake lies a few miles from Old Faithful and is themost visual representation of the park's geologic past. The perfectlyround lake is the shape of the ancient caldera that remains from theinitial blast 150,000 years ago. Today, the lake circles the parktranquilly, although visible wildfires hazed the sky in the distance.It's a favorite watering hole along with nearby waterfalls for bison,as signs remind to not approach the animals.

Yellowstone is difficult to see in just a couple of days. The parkspans an unfathomable 3,472 square miles of territory, making for alengthy expedition (maybe that's why Lewis and Clark bypassed thearea in the first place). But Yellowstone Park is an unforgettableexhibition of nature that shouldn't be missed.