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Archive for 2009

In Theaters Movie Reviews Ocotber 24, 2009

In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 24, 2009 at 8:38 pm

Carey Mulligan & Peter Sarsgaard in the movie An Education


An Education

Novelist Nick Hornby’s screenplay for British journalist Lynn Barber’s memoir sands a few edges off the
corners of its heroine’s story, yet the film is awfully charming. It bops along with so much esprit and lively acting.

 

Hilary Swank & Richard Gere in the movie Amelia

Hilary Swank & Richard Gere


Amelia

This Amelia Earhart biopic isn’t a bad movie, but it’s distressingly ordinary for such an extraordinary
subject. Played by an aptly cast and game Hilary Swank, Earhart becomes a checklist of Historical Legend accomplishments

 

Freddie Highmore & Kristen Bell in the movie Astro Boy

Astro Boy Anime Movie Feature


Astro Boy

Astro Boy first appeared in a Japanese comic in 1951. His adventures led to a ’60s Japanese TV series, then to the first of the American spin-offs, and now “Astro Boy” hits the big screen. I wish the film version of “Astro Boy” provided a stronger antidote to mediocrity. With the voices of Freddie Highmore, Kristen Bell and Nicolas Cage

 

John C. Reilly & Patrick Fugit in the movie Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant

John C. Reilly & Patrick Fugit


Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant

In this campy vampire flick, the truce between vampires who sip, leaving humans a little weaker but
none the wiser, and those who gorge, leaving death and destruction behind, comes to an end. This is an adaptation of the
frothy kids book series by Darren Shan.

NFL 2009 Week 7

In NFL 2009, NFL Football on October 24, 2009 at 8:33 pm


NFL 2009 Standings & Scores

NFL 2009 | Drew Brees Saints QB

Drew Brees Saints QB


NFL 2009 Week 7 Preview: Pats & Bucs Meet in London Plus 3 Unbeatens in Action

The Patriots-Buccaneers’ meeting is the third regular-season game at Wembley Stadium.

Meanwhile, back home stateside, three of the remaining four unbeatens – Indianapolis (5-0), Minnesota (6-0)
and New Orleans (5-0) – will be in action. Denver (6-0) has a bye in Week 7 after a 34-23 win at San Diego on Monday night.


Talent & Athleticism Changing Game at Safety Position

Teams are looking to find players who can guard against the deep throws and disrupt receivers coming over the middle but also make the key tackles as the last line of defense. Among the checklist of things that teams look for in a safety are versatility, athleticism, toughness, speed and the ability to read and react to different offenses.


Execution is Key in Short-Yardage Situation

Every inch is earned in the NFL and a physical rushing attack is required to excel in short-yardage situations. NFL Network analyst and former All-Star running back Marshall Faulk knows the importance of executing on short-yardage opportunities. Faulk totaled 12,279 career rushing yards in 13 NFL seasons (1994-2006) and says finishing on short-yardage opportunities can be the difference in a team being a pretender or contender.


NFL 2009 Week 7 – Picks, Selections & Latest Line

Daily Comics & Your Favorite Comic Strips Online

In Uncategorized on October 18, 2009 at 6:48 am

ComicStripNation.com
http://www.ComicStripNation.com

Your favorite comics strips Animal Crackers, Annie, Bound & Gagged, Brenda Starr, Brewster Rockit: Space Guy, Broom-Hilda, Dick Tracy, Gasoline Alley, Gil Thorp, Housebroken, Loose Parts, The Middletons, Pink Panther, Raising Hector, Sylvia, 9 to 5, Bliss, Bottom Liners, Love Is…, Pluggers all online at ComicStripNation.com

Your Favorite Comic Strips Online

NFL 2009 Week 6

In NFL 2009, NFL Football on October 18, 2009 at 3:32 am

NFL 2009 | Eli Manning & His 5-0 Giants


Giants (5-0) Visit Saints (4-0) in Battle of Unbeatens


NFL 2009 Week 6 Preview

“This is certainly the game of the week,” says NFL Network analyst STEVE MARIUCCI of this Sunday’s showdown between the 5-0 New
York Giants and 4-0 New Orleans Saints.

NFL 2009 | Brett Favre Minnesota Vikings QB

Brett Favre


5 Undefeated Teams: Most Ever through 5 Weeks


NFL 2009 Week 6 Preview

Five teams – Denver, Indianapolis, Minnesota, New Orleans and the New York Giants – enter Week 6 without a loss, the most undefeated clubs through the first five weeks of a season in NFL history.
“This is the first time in my career to be 5-0,” says Vikings quarterback BRETT FAVRE. “I’m very proud of this team. It’s
important to start fast. But it’s not how you start, it’s how you finish.”


Year Two – The Second Time Around for NFL Players


NFL 2009 Week 6 Preview

“The growth of most players from year one to year two is phenomenal,” says former Dallas Cowboys vice president of player personnel (1960-1989) and NFL.com senior analyst GIL BRANDT


NFL 2009 Week 6 – Picks, Selections & Latest Line


Movie Reviews … In Theaters

In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on October 18, 2009 at 3:27 am

Max Records & Catherine Keener in the movie Where the Wild Things Are

Where the Wild Things Are


Where the Wild Things Are


Max Records & Catherine Keener in Where the Wild Things Are

Based on Maurice Sendak’s 338-word storybook, Spike Jonze’s film strikes minor chords and plaintive emotions where other directors would’ve gone for the throat. A boy (Max Records) coping with a household unsteadied by divorce sets sail for an island where the Wild Things wrestle with the same clique issues and hurt feelings the boy deals with back home.

 

Michael Sheen & Timothy Spall in the movie The Damned United

Michael Sheen & Timothy Spall


The Damned United


Michael Sheen & Timothy Spall in The Damned United

This engaging film, a winner for soccer fans and soccer idiots alike, focuses on Brian Clough, one-time English footballer turned failed manager of the Leeds United club. Michael Sheen, who played David Frost in ‘Frost/Nixon,’ portrays Clough

 

Jamie Foxx  & Gerard Butler in the movie Law Abiding Citizen

Jamie Foxx & Gerard Butler


Law Abiding Citizen


Jamie Foxx & Gerard Butler in Law Abiding Citizen

Gerard Butler and Jamie Foxx star in this brutal, preposterous revenge fantasy that taps into a lot of fears about the American legal system. Butler plays a gadget-maker who survives the slaughter of his family and sets out to get even, and then some. Foxx is the politically ambitious Philadelphia prosecutor who lets one of the killers get off easy so the other will be executed.

 

Natalie Portman & Maggie Q in the movie 'New York, I Love You'

Natalie Portman & Maggie Q


New York, I Love You


Natalie Portman & Maggie Q in ‘New York, I Love You’

The ongoing ‘Cities We Love’ project that began three years ago with ‘Paris, je t’aime’ continues its global exploration with ‘New York, I Love You.’ Eleven directors and 16 screenwriters contributed to the omnibus affair. I like the idea of the film more than the film itself; the batting average with the Paris project was a good deal higher. Nonetheless, this one provides some compensatory satisfactions

 


Couples Retreat


Vince Vaughn & Jason Bateman in Couples Retreat

Four couples on a tropical retreat think they’re in for umbrella drinks and beach time. They’re met instead with a stern regimen of ‘couples-whispering’ tactics. Though it boasts a good cast that also includes Jason Bateman, Kristen Bell and Jon Favreau, ‘Couples Retreat’ is pretty meager and more than a little depressing.


A Serious Man


Michael Stuhlbarg & Richard Kind in A Serious Man

Set in 1967 in the Minneapolis suburbs, ‘A Serious Man’ is a tart, brilliantly acted fable of life’s little cosmic difficulties, a Coen brothers comedy with a darker philosophical outlook than ‘No Country for Old Men’ but with a script rich in verbal wit.


Good Hair


Chris Rock & Paul Mooney in Good Hair

Comedian Chris Rock’s ‘Good Hair’ consists of two documentaries braided together, one enjoyable, the other enjoyable and provocative. Rock and a film crew covered the 2007 edition of the Bronner Bros. Hair Show in Atlanta and its climactic Hair Battle Royale


Free Style


Corbin Bleu & Penelope Ann Miller in Free Style

Corbin Bleu may have graduated from “High School Musical,” but he stays close to his Disney Channel roots in “Free Style,” a squeaky-clean sports flick about a poor kid with big dreams (and bigger hair) trying to make it in the motocross world.

Feature Articles of the Week

In Uncategorized on September 22, 2009 at 2:00 am


7 Ways to Cut Thousands from your College Costs


by Kim Clark

Many students are ratcheting their budgets downward because of reduced incomes and financial aid. Nevertheless, college aid officers still see plenty of students appealing for aid for what the colleges call “lifestyle” expenses.


Secrets to Finding a Student Loan


by Kim Clark

The credit crunch and debacle on Wall Street have wiped out those easy-peasy $40,000 college loans that used to be all over late-night TV. And the feds are considering a dramatic consolidation of the educational lending industry that could reduce options still further. But no matter …


Is Student Debt Really a Problem?


by Kim Clark

Most college students and recent graduates are not saddled with oppressive educational loans, according to a report issued by the College Board. But the report also documented a surprising and troubling increase in the debt loads shouldered by students attending the lowest-cost schools of all — local, public community colleges

10 Things You Did Not Know About the Swine Flu

By Queenie Wong


Clinical Trials Are Testing Stem Cells as Heart Failure Treatment


Sarah Baldauf

The ongoing study is one of many clinical trials now testing the ability of heart failure patients’ own stem cells–which renew themselves and can develop into a range of cell types–to regenerate heart muscle and restore blood flow inside the heart tissue.


8 Tips Can Help Fight Ragweed Pollen Allergy


January W. Payne

No matter how long ragweed season lasts this year, experts suggest getting a jump-start on symptoms before you start to feel lousy. This should come as no surprise to people accustomed to dealing with seasonal allergy symptoms, but we offer eight refreshers for making this ragweed season as painless as possible.


Drug-Free Approaches to Managing ADHD


Megan Johnson

For decades, Ritalin and similar stimulants have reigned over other treatments for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, also known as ADHD or ADD. The meds are seemingly tried and true, with numerous studies backing their effectiveness. However, the latest results from the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD found that stimulants’ effects wane over time. Here’s 9 Drug-Free Approaches to Managing ADHD …


Hamstrung! How to Prevent and Help Heal Hamstring Injuries


Katherine Hobson

This season, hamstring injuries have benched at least four members of the New York Mets. Then it got personal: my boyfriend started hobbling after one of our outdoor workouts, having suffered his own mild hamstring pull. What is this injury, anyway? And what makes everyone from pro athletes to weekend warriors susceptible to it?


Cap-and-Trade Will Reduce Global Warming and Create Jobs


John Podesta

New investments in the clean energy technologies of the future would slash global warming pollution and reduce the use of foreign oil while also creating jobs and increasing our economic competitiveness vis-à-vis China and other nations.


Cap-and-Trade Would Make the American Dream a Nightmare


William O’Keefe

In 1984, the late historian Barbara Tuchman wrote The March of Folly, in which she chronicled the phenomenon of governments pursuing policies directly at odds with their self-interest. Tuchman used the term “wooden-headedness” to describe the tendency of leaders to assess situations using preconceived notions while ignoring or rejecting any contrary signs. History may be repeating itself in Washington as they fight to pass a climate bill that most lawmakers have not read and even fewer understand. In spite of growing evidence …


Behind the Rage at Healthcare Town Hall Meetings


Kent Garber

This healthcare town hall was only nominally about healthcare. It was really about something else. It wasabout anger and fear. It was about a trenchant sense of disillusionment, resentment, and powerlessness.


Healthcare Is a Precious Commodity That Must Be Used Wisely


Michael D. Tanner

We tend to talk about healthcare in the philosophically abstract. ‘Is healthcare a right or a privilege?’ goes the refrain. In reality, it is neither. Healthcare is a commodity–and a finite one at that. There are only so many doctors, hospitals, and, most important, money to go around. After all, every dollar spent on healthcare is one not spent on education, infrastructure, or defense.


Healthcare Is In The Eye Of The Beholder,
And Should Be In The Hands Of The Patient


Laura Hershey

Expectations of medical treatment can run up against physicians’ opposing views and hospitals’ rules. In dozens of states, laws allow doctors to unilaterally deny lifesaving treatments that they deem ‘futile,’ even if the patient or a surrogate decision maker wants care continued. Some people actually advocate this, as a way to ration healthcare — limiting the resources available to sicker patients, to extend basic care to more healthy people


Healthcare Reform a Tough Sell in Town Halls Where Recession Has Hit Hardest


by Mary Kate Cary

Most adults alive today have seen an increase in healthcare costs over the last few decades, but they’ve also seen advances like MRIs, PET and CAT scans, cholesterol, cancer, diabetes, and heart medications for their loved ones; and a concurrent jump in our expected life spans. Unlike, say, monetary policy, healthcare is something about which most Americans have a very strong opinion.


Why Obama’s Failing Big on Healthcare Reform


Mortimer B. Zuckerman

Why does it cost the United States about $7,000 per person annually in our incomplete national healthcare system, while other major economic competitors provide universal coverage for about half that amount? The answer is quite simple: The federal government pays whatever the cost will be. Virtually every expert agrees that the root of our runaway health inflation is the fee-for-service approach.


Health Reform Fattens Big Insurance and Taxes the Young


by Bernadine Healy, M.D

Insurers agreed months ago to clean up at least some of their hated practices, such as denying insurance for prior illnesses and canceling coverage when someone gets sick. In return, they stand to get some colossal plums: a mandate not only that every American buy health insurance but that the mandated insurance be “comprehensive,” another word for expensive.


Obama Not Overexposed, but Flaws in His Healthcare Reform Have Been


by Clark S. Judge

From network reporters to online commentators, the story of the day about White House communications is that President Obama getting overexposed. That’s why, media critics say, the President’s approval numbers have dropped so low and his healthcare package isn’t selling. But they are wrong. Something very different is happening, and it has to do not with style but with substance.


Obama Shines in Character Department: Despite falling job approval numbers


by Kenneth T. Walsh

Despite setbacks on the political front, President Obama is succeeding where many other politicians have failed — in the character department. He has become a role model for the kind of traditional values that Americans have long celebrated. For years, the Democrats have been criticized by conservatives for lacking “family values.” But today, it is Obama, a Democrat, who has emerged as the paragon of personal virtue, and even Republicans see it as a source of political strength.


Obama Not Overexposed, but Flaws in His Healthcare Reform Have Been


by Clark S. Judge

From network reporters to online commentators, the story of the day about White House communications is that President Obama getting overexposed. That’s why, media critics say, the President’s approval numbers have dropped so low and his healthcare package isn’t selling. But they are wrong. Something very different is happening, and it has to do not with style but with substance.


10 Best Places to Live for Pet Lovers


Kimberly Palmer

For the 4 in 10 American families that own at least one dog, choosing a place to live isn’t just about the humans in the family: They want their pets to be happy, too. Green spaces and good weather make pets — and their owners — happy.


General Motors: ‘Cash for Clunkers’ a Huge Success


Amanda Ruggeri

Not everyone supported the Senate’s passage of a bill that boosted “cash for clunkers” by $2 billion, effectively extending it through Labor Day. But it’s hard to argue that the program, which gives rebates to people who trade in old cars for more fuel-efficient vehicles, hasn’t made the auto industry happy. That’s true for General Motors …


General Motors: ‘Cash for Clunkers’ a Huge Success


Amanda Ruggeri

Not everyone supported the Senate’s passage of a bill that boosted “cash for clunkers” by $2 billion, effectively extending it through Labor Day. But it’s hard to argue that the program, which gives rebates to people who trade in old cars for more fuel-efficient vehicles, hasn’t made the auto industry happy. That’s true for General Motors …


Michael Leiter Works to Keep Tabs on Terrorists


Alex Kingsbury

In his current job as head of the National Counterterrorism Center, Michael Leiter is again in the business of interfering with the enemy. But instead of radar units in the former Yugoslavia or air defenses in Iraq, the adversary is global terrorist networks. And rather than scramble enemy communications, he is coming up with new strategies to match the new attitudes in the intelligence community.


Biofuel Technology and Performance Issues Could Slow Acceptance


Ari Axelrod

Biofuels are a conundrum. Their potential advantages are undeniable: reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, lessening of our dependency on imported oil, support of domestic agriculture. And they certainly have their supporters. The Obama administration repeatedly affirmed its backing of rapid development of alternative energy sources, including biofuels. Still, the hurdles are high.


Biofuel Technology and Performance Issues Could Slow Acceptance


Ari Axelrod

Biofuels are a conundrum. Their potential advantages are undeniable: reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, lessening of our dependency on imported oil, support of domestic agriculture. And they certainly have their supporters. The Obama administration repeatedly affirmed its backing of rapid development of alternative energy sources, including biofuels. Still, the hurdles are high.


The Diplomatic Myths and Illusions of the Middle East


by Robert Schlesinger

Incorrect preconceptions and misguided conventional wisdom hamper American policy in the Middle East, Dennis Ross and David Makovsky write in Myths, Illusions, and Peace: Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East.


What Parents Do not Know About How Their Kids Use Facebook & MySpace


Nancy Shute

Parents of teenagers know how important texting and social networking sites like MySpace, Bebo, and Facebook are to the over-13 set. But if we think we know what our kids say and do on the sites, we’re kidding ourselves. My 13- and 14-year-old nephews kindly remind me more often than I’d like of my cluelessness, and a new survey confirms that I’m not the only parent who has no idea.


Should You Invest in Socially Responsible Funds


Kimberly Palmer

Socially responsible investing, often referred to as SRI, has grown so much over the past decade that the industry group Social Investment Forum estimates it accounts for 1 out of every 9 dollars that is professionally managed in the United States today. But some consumers hesitate to put their money into socially responsible funds. Here are questions and answers to help you decide if socially responsible investing is right for you.


How to Choose and Book Your Ideal Cruise Vacation


Kim Michele

Choosing and booking a cruise can be overwhelming if you’re not familiar with the industry and the destinations served. However, it doesn’t have to be. Here are a few tips to help you decide what you want from a cruise vacation, how to pick the best cruise line for you, and how to go about making your booking.


3 Ways to Avoid the Newest Travel ‘Gotcha’


Christopher Elliott

Kenneth Miller thought he had squirreled away more than 100,000 Delta Air Lines frequent flier miles, which he planned to use for a special 20th anniversary trip. He thought wrong. When he checked with the airline, it claimed he had no miles.


5 Secrets for Avoiding Sky-High Phone Bills on the Road


Christopher Elliott – The Travel Troubleshooter

When it comes to “gotcha” fees, the cellular phone industry makes travel companies look like rank amateurs. Take what happened to P. Morgan Brown when his wife decided to take a spur-of-the-moment vacation to Indonesia.


Charge This: 7 Tips for a Successful Credit Card Dispute


Christopher Elliott – The Travel Troubleshooter

Credit cards are not exactly what you’d call reliable. That’s because disputing a card charge is more of an art than a science. Here’s what you need to know in order to file a successful dispute.


‘No Waivers, No Favors’ Reaches New Highs


Christopher Elliott – The Travel Troubleshooter

The travel industry, hammered by the worst economic downturn in more than a generation, is taking a hard line in an effort to contain costs and preserve profits.

Vacation Travel Not Your Grandfather's Branson
Branson Landing Trolley


Not Your Grandfather’s Branson


Suzi Parker

I have found the most unlikely of vacation spots: Branson, Missouri A town of 6,000 inhabitants nestled in the rolling Ozark Mountains, Branson has grown into one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country. Hard to believe, though, for people who like myself journeyed to this hamlet back in the 1970s to visit Silver Dollar City, then an old-time amusement park that peddled corn husk dolls and homemade candles made while you watched

5 Family Hotels in Rome

Rome’s Spanish Steps


5 Family Hotels in Rome


Amie O’Shaughnessy

The biggest challenge in finding a family-friendly hotel in Rome (or any major European city) is figuring out which properties have separate areas for sleeping and/or rooms that can accommodate four or more people.

Vacation Travel Basha Kill Vineyards, Sullivan County New York
Basha Kill Vineyards


Basha Kill Vineyards, Sullivan County New York


Leo Jakobson

Wine aficionados planning a vineyard tour in New York will generally turn to the Hudson River Valley, Long Island or the Finger Lakes regions, where most of the state’s grapes are grown — excluding, of course, the huge Concord …

Vacation Travel Top 10 English Country Manor Hotels
Chewton Glen Hotel


Top 10 English Country Manor Hotels


Jonathan Lerner

The English landscape is dotted with grand old houses in picturesque settings. Staying in one of these country house hotels on your England vacation puts you right in the glorious green countryside.

Vacation Travel Unwind, Vehicle Free in Matheran, India
Matheran, India


Unwind, Vehicle Free in Matheran, India


Jonathan Lerner

Mumbai’s heat and blaring traffic can be wearing. When I went to Matheran, instead of horns and motors I heard drums and chants from distant villages, and the howls of monkeys

5 National Park Treasures to Visit Before You Die Grand Canyon National Park

Grand Canyon


5 National Park Treasures to Visit Before You Die


Debbie K. Hardin

National parks exert a primeval pull on visitors from around the world, who come by the millions to drink in their natural wonders. There are 391 national parks in the United States. 5 National Parks to See Before You Die.

Alaska Bear Camp Taking the Kids to Alaska and Meeting Some Bears

Alaskan Bear Watching


Taking the Kids to Alaska and Meeting Some Bears


Eileen Ogintz – Taking the Kids

Welcome to ‘bear camp,’ an outpost of the Kenai Peninsula fishing lodge Great Alaska International Adventure Vacations, where families come to hike, fish, raft and, of course, check out the bears.

Hawks Cay Spa

Hawks Cay Spa


Taking the Kids and Myself to a Spa


Eileen Ogintz – Taking the Kids

Of course, my mom never took me to a spa — I don’t think she’s ever been to one herself — but I’ve taken my daughters to spas from the Caribbean to Colorado, from Arizona to Austria from the time they were young teens, and like others their age, they are perfectly at home getting facials and massages. It turns out they’ve got plenty of company

Ceiba del Mar Mexico

Ceiba Del Mar


Taking the Kids To Mexico Where You’ll Find Adventure, Culture, Beaches and Great Deals


Eileen Ogintz – Taking the Kids

We’re just an hour or so from Cancun, a few miles from Playa del Carmen, five miles off the highway along a bumpy road in Rio Secreto, a unique cave just opened to the public last year, after the owner of the land, Don Cleo, inadvertently discovered it while chasing one of his animals

Cathedral of Saint James Santiago Spain

Santiago Spain


Binging on Barnacles in Spain


Rick Steves

I’m tucked away in Santiago de Compostela, in the northwest corner of Spain. I have a three-part agenda: see pilgrims reach their goal in front of the cathedral, explore the market, and buy some barnacles in the seafood section — then have them cooked for me, on the spot, in a cafe.

Vacation Travel Tuning in to Tasty Italy

Tasty Tuscan Cuisine


Tuning in to Tasty Italy


Rick Steves

Recently when I was in Tuscany, a region fiercely proud of its beef, I sunk my teeth into a carnivore’s dream come true. In a stony cellar, under one long, tough vault, I joined a local crowd for dinner.

Vacation Travel To Market, to Market in Provence

Provence Markets


To Market, to Market in Provence


Rick Steves

Market days are an especially big deal throughout France especially in Provence. You can find an endless array of products at Provencal markets, from clothing to crafts, art to antiques, pates to picnic fare. Arles stands out among Provencal market towns


Seniors on the Go: Factory Tours — Still the Best Free Shows


Ed Perkins On Travel

If you’re a senior on a budget, you can’t beat free for admission to a visitor attraction. Despite the lousy economy you can still find factories that allow you to see how the stuff you buy is actually made. Admission to most is free and the fees are nominal at the few that do charge.


A Tale of Two Cards and Their Reward Programs


Ed Perkins On Travel

American Express and Diners Club have changed their “rewards” programs. By adding British Airways to its list of partner airlines, AmEx has clearly improved its already strong position. On the other hand, by devaluing its points, Diners seems to be headed in some other direction.


Fall & Winter Travel – What’s It Going to Be


Ed Perkins On Travel

A reporter recently asked me about the fall and winter travel outlook, and I suspect that question is on your mind, too. I see two main forces driving the current and future travel marketplace: The economy.


Websites for Traveling Women


Ed Perkins On Travel

Although most of the travel industry still thinks of travelers as traditional couples, an increasing number of women are traveling alone or with other women. Here’s a brief overview of web sites tailored toward women travellers …


Finding Those Great Fall Hotel Deals


Ed Perkins On Travel

Fall is traditionally the slowest travel season of the year. Despite good weather and lots of interesting activities in many popular destinations, people seem to have other things on their minds. Low occupancies are the norm for vacation centers. And, of course, this year’s dismal economic picture makes things worse than usual. Clearly, these factors mean lots of opportunities for travelers able to take advantage.


AARP Travel Program Not Much New for 2009


Ed Perkins On Travel

Some suppliers still offer discounts to AARP members – mainly for hotels and rental cars. The details have changed a bit since my last summer update, but the basic conclusions remains: Many of AARP’s discounts are also available to travelers of any age through AAA, credit cards, or other organizations. Still, if you’re 50 or over, AARP is useful as a fallback position to be used when you can’t find a better deal.

Personal Finance


A Tale of Two Cards and Their Reward Programs


Ed Perkins On Travel

American Express and Diners Club have changed their “rewards” programs. By adding British Airways to its list of partner airlines, AmEx has clearly improved its already strong position. On the other hand, by devaluing its points, Diners seems to be headed in some other direction.

Lifestyle-Women


Websites for Traveling Women


Ed Perkins On Travel

Although most of the travel industry still thinks of travelers as traditional couples, an increasing number of women are traveling alone or with other women. Here’s a brief overview of web sites tailored toward women travellers …

Internet


Websites for Traveling Women


Ed Perkins On Travel

Although most of the travel industry still thinks of travelers as traditional couples, an increasing number of women are traveling alone or with other women. Here’s a brief overview of web sites tailored toward women travellers …

Real Estate


Ask the Real Estate Lawyer – September 6, 2009


By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin


Ask the Real Estate Lawyer – August 30, 2009


By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin


Ask the Real Estate Lawyer – August 23, 2009


By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin


Ask the Real Estate Lawyer – August 16, 2009


By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin


Ask the Real Estate Lawyer – August 9, 2009


By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin


Real Estate Matters: Financial Questions and Answers – September 5, 2009


By Ilyce Glink


Real Estate Matters: Financial Questions and Answers – August 29, 2009


By Ilyce Glink


Real Estate Matters: Financial Questions and Answers – August 22, 2009


By Ilyce Glink


Real Estate Matters: Financial Questions and Answers – August 15, 2009


By Ilyce Glink


Real Estate Matters: Financial Questions and Answers – August 8, 2009


By Ilyce Glink


Loan Modification Mess: Are Lenders Dragging Their Feet


By Ilyce Glink

Once a mortgage is more than 90 days delinquent, few homeowners are able to catch up on their payments. That’s why loan modifications originally targeted those homeowners who had fallen so far behind.


Vacation Homes: Rent or Buy


By Ilyce Glink

There’s an American mythology about vacation homeownership. There are images of idyllic afternoons by the lake or swimming pool, small towns with farmers’ markets on Saturdays, and lazy summer evenings roasting marshmallows and watching fireflies.


Real Estate Deals Must Be in Writing to Be Enforceable


By Ilyce Glink

Real estate deals must be in writing to be enforceable. Usually, when a real estate broker takes an earnest money check, the buyer has signed a purchase and sale agreement (or purchase contract).


Craigslist Apartment Rental Scam


By Ilyce Glink

The FBI released a scam alert recently announcing that Nigerian scam artists had been placing phony ads for rental property online, most notably in Craigslist.

Home Decor

Banquette Seating Maximizes Efficiency and Comfort

Banquette Seating


Banquette Seating Maximizes Efficiency and Comfort


By Rita St. Clair

Don’t assume that an attractive design featured in a magazine can be applied only in a space of similar dimensions. Good ideas can often be adapted to rooms much larger or smaller than the original. Functional issues may have to be addressed of course, trickier — and crucial — is the question of scale

These opaque glass panels function much like Japanese shoji panels, but have an attractive modern look.

Opaque Glass Panels


Sliding Opaque-Glass Panels Are Attractive and Functional for Modern Interior


By Rita St. Clair

The designs associated with the Arts and Crafts movement and with architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright have powerfully influenced the look of the modern American interior. So it’s important to realize that Wright’s work and the Arts and Crafts style in California were themselves shaped by Japanese design.

A handy carpenter can repurpose a piece of antique furniture into a handsome household fixture. This wet bar was once a wardrobe.

Winebar


Turn Antique Furniture into Unique Fixtures


By Rita St. Clair

Design schools never include “investment” in the lexicon they teach their students, but they should. Good interior design not only produces visual pleasure, it also enhances the value of a home by adding structural improvements and high-quality fixtures. And for homeowners seeking a return on the money they put into their homes, the art and antiques they buy will do better these days than the equity of the real estate itself.



Leafy Plants & poolside landscaping


Poolside Landscaping Should Emphasize Ease and Beauty


By Sean Conway

A backyard pool is a great place to relax in the summer heat, but it can present landscaping challenges.
Planting trees and shrubs too close to the pool should be avoided since they will block sunlight, not to mention deposit leaves and other debris in the pool. A similar caveat applies to planting grass close to the edge of a pool. It may look pleasing, but every time the grass is mowed the clippings invariably end up in the water.

———
Healthcare


What is the Actual Number of Americans Without Health Insurance


Bonnie Erbe

The number of Americans without health insurance the Obama administration and Democrats have used for more than a
year now ranges between 40 million and 46 million — at the upper end, that would be somewhere between 1 in 6 and 1 in 7 Americans.
So, how many Americans are truly uninsured?

Domestic
+ Family


America’s 10 Best Places to Grow Up


Luke Mullins

Low crime, strong schools, green spaces, and fun activities are key ingredients for a happy childhood.
So we dug into our database of 2,000 different places all across the country and pinpointed the locales that met these criteria.
We then examined these communities more closely to determine which places offered the best combination …

Politics


Frustrated Baby Boomers Alienated from the Political Debate


by Mary Kate Cary

There’s a big disconnect in politics right now. The older baby boomers, the ones in their 50s and 60s, are increasingly
left out of the political discourse. That crowd is part of the biggest demographic segment of our population — more than a quarter of our
citizens. They’re dismayed that their local newspaper — if it still exists — places more emphasis on obituaries and local real estate news.
Any national news is buried somewhere far from the front page. They feel like they can’t get issue-oriented policy news anymore and are …

Economy
+Auto I


Maybe Cash For Clunkers Helped The Economy After All


Matthew Bandyk

Daniel Gross at Slate makes the case that the evidence is in, and cash-for-clunkers gets a pretty good return as
stimulus: If we use Taylor’s estimate, about 250,000 extra cars were purchased (40 percent of 625,000). And if each cost $29,000, those
sales generated about $7.3 billion in revenue in the space of a few weeks. That’s a pretty good return on $2.6 billion in government
spending.
+ Auto I
BX


Auto Dealers: Cash for Clunkers a Needed Boost


Amanda Ruggeri

John McEleney is the chair of the Virginia-based National Automobile Dealers Association, which represents more than 90
percent of new-car dealers nationwide and lobbied hard for the program. He recently spoke about how dealers have been reacting to the program
and what the problem was with reimbursements.


Beware of False Hopes on the Economy


Mortimer B. Zuckerman

Is there light at the end of this very long tunnel of a recession? Government spokespeople, keen to encourage
confidence, say there is (their metaphor is “green shoots”). Many private business people concur. Let’s do a reality check …

Swine Flu ??
Home


Obama Advisers: Swine Flu Could Infect Nearly Half of U.S. Population


By Queenie Wong

President Obama’s science advisers warned recently that swine flu could infect nearly half the U.S. population this fall and winter and
cause up to 90,000 deaths, mostly in kids and young adults. The estimate is double the deaths normally associated with the seasonal flu.

+ Kids Health
+Parenting
+ Family
BX


What Parents Should Know About Swine Flu Shots


Nancy Shute

The questions I asked at my daughter’s well-child doctor visit this week were not happy ones: They were all about what to do if the swine flu pandemic gets much worse this fall and she becomes sick. I left the pediatrician’s office just as worried.

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Health
+Ailments


9 Safe Ways to Help Cure Insomnia


January W. Payne

Insomnia — difficulty falling or staying asleep — can wreak havoc on people’s lives. And with the coroner’s finding that Michael Jackson died from a lethal dose of the anesthesia medication propofol (Diprivan), which the pop star reportedly received routinely because of his chronic inability to sleep, it’s a good time to revisit safe ways to help cure insomnia.
+Ailments


7 Things That Make Sleep Apnea Worse


Lindsay Lyon

More than 12 million Americans have obstructive sleep apnea, the most common form of sleep-disordered breathing and many are unaware, according to the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
Untreated, sleep apnea has been linked to high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, memory loss, obesity, parasomnias, and insulin resistance, a precursor to type 2 diabetes

+ Drugs
+ Merck
+ Pharma
BX


Gardasil Side Effects Tough to Monitor


Deborah Kotz

Gardasil, the vaccine that protects against the cervical-cancer-causing human papillomavirus, got a bit of a smack-down from two studies published in the Journal of the American Medical Associationdetailing safety risks associated with …


Foods Surprisingly High in Added Sugar


Sarah Baldauf

Added sugars, which are sprinkled on and processed into packaged foods and beverages, have become all too common in the American diet, says the American Heart Association. The group argues that sugar bingeing is helping drive the uptick in metabolic changes in the American population, including the exploding obesity rate, and has now recommended an upper limit on daily consumption …


Why You Should Think Twice Before Using Alli or Other Weight Loss Aids


Deborah Kotz

When it comes to losing weight, we’d all love that quick fix: a pill, shake, heck, even surgery to ease our efforts. Unfortunately, weight-loss aids — even when approved by the Food and Drug Administration — come with risks as well as benefits.

+Aging


8 Facts to Know About Palliative Care: Misconceptions abound


Sarah Baldauf

The term “palliative care” often conjures tones of a death knell, but the reality of what such services provide — and when they can and should be recruited — might be surprising. While death might ultimately become a part of the conversation, recruiting such care is not just about dying.

+ Education


School Lunches Go Vegetarian


Zach Miners

A new nationwide survey by the School Nutrition Association says almost 2 out of 3 U.S. schools now offer vegetarian fare for lunch on a regular basis. That’s a 40 percent increase since 2003, the first year veggie meals were tallied by the nonprofit group.
However, rising prices are hitting districts hard …

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Technology
+Education
BX


An Amazon Kindle for Every Student


Zach Miners

Forget better standards, merit pay for teachers, or rebuilding the crumbling infrastructure of America’s aging schools. No, if we really want to fix the U.S. education system, we must start with Kindles. Thomas Z. Freedman, the primary author of the paper, writes that having a “Kindle in every backpack” (the title of the proposal) is not just an educational gimmick but could improve education quality and save money

+Education
BX


Technology as Our Teacher


Mortimer B. Zuckerman

How can average teachers become better teachers? The secretary’s special funding could make a crucial difference by financing a national program exploiting the electronic miracles of the Internet and video. We could escape geography by using the technology to have the best teachers appear in hundreds of thousands of disparate classrooms. This is a force multiplier.

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Personal Finance
BX


5 First Steps to Deal With Debt


Kirk Shinkle

If your credit card’s monthly minimum payment is starting to look more like your old balance or you’re not answering the phone for fear of another call from a creditor, it’s time to take drastic action. As thousands of Americans are finding out during this recession, personal debt can become a nightmare

Travel
+ Wireless
+Airline
BX


Allowing Cellphones In-Flight Would Make Air Travel Even Worse


Peter DeFazio

With airline customer satisfaction at an all-time low, this is not the moment to consider making airplane travel even more torturous by allowing in-flight cellphone conversations. After arriving hours early at the airport and often after waiting for a delayed, or even canceled, flight, what could make air travel worse?

+ Wireless
+Airline
BX


If Europe Can Handle In-Flight Cellphone Use, So Can America


Carl Biersack

Despite predictions that in-flight cellphone usage would lead to Armageddon, the global rollout has been just the opposite. In 20 months of global usage, there has not been one reported incident or problem. In fact, 93 percent of passengers who flew on an in-flight communication-equipped aircraft want all jets so equipped. So why not U.S. carriers?

Careers
+ HR


Tips for Dealing With Age Discrimination


Emily Brandon

Under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, it’s illegal to discriminate against anyone age 40 or older in the workplace with regard to hiring, layoffs, promotions, pay, and benefits. Here’s what you should do if you think age is playing a role in your workplace woes

+ Education
BX


New Path to a Career in Education


Jessica Calefati

Since it began in 2002, the little-known Broad Residency has placed more than 130 participants in 32 of the nation’s largest urban school districts. There, they have led efforts to overhaul budgeting processes, revamp human resources departments, and make the purchase of textbooks and supplies more efficient. Interest in the program is starting to skyrocket, perhaps because of President Barack Obama’s advocacy of public service and school reform.

Education

Trials and Tribulations of a College Education in the 21st Century | iHaveNet.com

College Education Concerns in the 21st Century
(c) M. Ryder

BX


Turning Two Years Into Four


Carol Frey

Can’t come up with the money for four years at a traditional college? What if you could take the same courses far more cheaply, experience life on a residential campus, and transfer smoothly after two years to complete your bachelor’s degree at the university you thought you couldn’t afford? That’s the attraction of many community colleges.

BX


The Challenge for Black Colleges


Kim Clark

The downturn that has forced cutbacks at some of the nation’s richest colleges is endangering survival of some of the poorest, including some historically black colleges and universities. But alumni, professors, and outside analysts say that the better-funded HBCUs’ experience weathering hard times and helping students whom other schools have shut out may boost their appeal

BX


First-rate Colleges Not as Selective as the Top Universities


Diane Cole

A truth that college applicants all too often forget: Beyond the small roster of nationally renowned schools lie many that aren’t household names but have first-rate programs and strong reputations.

BX


Different Paths to a College Degree


Carol Frey

Unemployment has changed many a kitchen-table conversation about college. One of the best ways to ensure a job is to have a bachelor’s degree. But a college education is now more difficult for many families to afford. That means many students are on the prowl for bargain bachelor’s degrees–and some are finding them in nontraditional programs such as three-year bachelor’s degree programs, online education, and work colleges.

BX


Unified Admissions, Affordable Loans and ‘Gap Years’ — Might Help American Colleges


Thomas K. Grose

While many foreign models won’t work in the States there are some practices, mainly cherry-picked from Britain, that would be welcome additions: a less punishing student loan program; more encouragement for students to follow the British tradition of taking a ‘gap year’ break before starting college; and, of course, a central admissions process

BX


SAT Offers Level Playing Field in College Admissions process


Gaston Caperton

The SAT is the most widely used and most heavily researched college admissions test in the country.
In combination with other data, such as a student’s grade-point average, college application essays, and letters of recommendation,
the SAT has proven to be a valid, fair, and reliable data tool for college admissions. All of the available research supports this point.

BX


Students are More than SAT Scores and Numbers in College Admissions Process


Jill Tiefenthaler

The accepted framework for college admissions is showing rust at the joints and no longer supports the right parts of the educational enterprise. It is time to rethink college admissions, and particularly the role of standardized testing. With only marginal predictive value for performance in college, standardized scores do nothing to suggest what a student might contribute to the character and vitality of an intellectual community.

BX


Dreaded Financial Aid Form will be Easier to Fill Out Next Year


Kim Clark

Applying for financial aid is about to get a little less annoying, and loan repayment will get more affordable for some students, thanks to recent initiatives from the U.S. Department of Education.

+ Personal Finance
BX


Casting the Widest Possible Net: College Tuition Assistance & Financial Aid


Kim Clark

Back when jobs were plentiful, investments were growing nicely, and borrowing was easy students and parents could generally cobble together
the $18,000 or so cost of a year at a public university using some variation of the oft-recommended “thirds” strategy: one third from
savings, one third from debt, and one third out of the family paychecks. But how can they scrape together tuition money now that the
bear market has wiped out savings, banks are scared to make loans, and layoffs have eliminated millions of high-paying jobs? Simple …

+ Personal Finance
BX


Serious Tracking to Hunt Down Cheapest Student Loans


Kim Clark

One of the most surprising results of the turmoil in the lending markets is how students’ loan options have diverged from parents’. Here are the keys both should bear in mind

+ Personal Finance
BX


Calculating the Hidden Costs of College


Kimberly Palmer

Forget the meal plan and new computer — those college costs pale in comparison with the unexpected school expenses that add up each
month, from vitamins to stave off exam-season colds to formal wear for the next big Saturday night soiree. Here are 13 often-overlooked
items that you might want to budget for, along with their estimated costs …

BX


Regional Agreements allow Hefty Discount for Students from Nearby States


Nikki Schwab

Out of State at In-State Tuition Rates. In many areas, regional tuitiion rate agreements for public state colleges and universities
allow a hefty discount for students from nearby states. But you have to know where to look …

BX


The Real Secret of College Admissions


David L. Marcus

I’m a volunteer interviewer for my alma mater, Brown University. I know the hard statistics: Only 1 out of 10 of those I meet will be admitted. I’ve come to see the admissions process as a game whose stakes really are not that high. While screening these applicants for the past couple of years, I was writing a book about the college quest. I became convinced that rejection is frequently a blessing.

+ Careers
+Healthcare


Healthcare Giving Students Opportunity to Pay their Way through College


by Steven Yaccino

Many students are expected to lean on the healthcare industry for employment this year as the part-time job market
sinks even further south. Lucky for them, a deluge of aging baby boomers drives one of the healthiest industries today. Seven of the 20
fastest-growing occupations are related to healthcare, according to government data.

+ Internet Features
BX


Students & Professors use Twitter to Communicate Inside & Outside the Classroom


by Zach Miners

Though Twitter might not be quite as popular among students as Facebook or MySpace, a growing cadre of professors and administrators are embracing it and using it to introduce their classes to a different kind of communication and networking — one that doesn’t involve “poking” friends or posting your results from quizzes and polls.

+ Economy
BX


Budget Cuts Hit Nation’s Public Colleges Hard, Even as Demand for Well-educated Workforce Soars


Kim Clark

The recession, state budget cuts, and hidebound bureaucracies are endangering some of the most important foundations of the American dream — the low-cost, high-quality public colleges created to provide anyone with smarts and diligence the training needed to succeed.


Women’s Colleges have had to Broaden their Appeal and Support


Jessica Calefati

According to one study, just 3 percent of collegebound women will even consider attending a women’s college. Yet on many traditional coeducational
campuses across the country, female students now outnumber their male peers. Some argue that this combination of factors demonstrates that women’s
colleges are obsolete, some think otherwise …


Best Tech for the Collegebound


David LaGesse

At the top of every college student’s list are the modern tools of campus life, the technology that gets students through their academics and
socializing. We’ve scanned five key categories of tech for collegiates. While these can be used for entertainment, the emphasis is on work and
communications.


Here Comes the NFL


NFL 2009 Week 1

Every last player, coach and fan is ready! The NFL returns this week and it’s time to “Own the Moment.” That means
the next four months will be packed with the sizzle and suspense that comes only with the National Football League. And then come the
playoffs! Everybody is ready for the unique unpredictability of the NFL. And every team enters the new season with hope.


Team-by-Team Review of the NFL’s Starting Quarterbacks


NFL 2009 Week 1

Quarterbacks throughout the league find themselves in the spotlight as the NFL begins the new season, all hoping to
lead their teams to a berth in Super Bowl XLIV on February 7 at Dolphin Stadium in South Florida. Following is a team-by-team look at the
NFL’s starting quarterbacks heading into NFL 2009 Week 1.

Picks, Selections and Latest Line

In NFL 2009, NFL Football on September 13, 2009 at 2:24 pm

NFL 2009 Week 1 Kickoff Weekend

In NFL 2009, NFL Football on September 13, 2009 at 2:23 pm


Team-by-Team Review of the NFL’s Starting Quarterbacks


NFL 2009 Week 1

Quarterbacks throughout the league find themselves in the spotlight as the NFL begins the new season, all hoping to
lead their teams to a berth in Super Bowl XLIV on February 7 at Dolphin Stadium in South Florida. Following is a team-by-team look at the
NFL’s starting quarterbacks heading into NFL 2009 Week 1.

 

 


Steelers & Titans Kickoff NFL 2009


NFL 2009 Kickoff Weekend

The NFL kicks off its 2009 season when the Super Bowl XLIII champion PITTSBURGH STEELERS host the TENNESSEE TITANS on
NBC at 8:30 PM ET. Continuing a tradition that started in 2004, the previous year’s Super Bowl winner hosts the NFL Thursday night season
Kickoff the following September. This year’s Kickoff Weekend features …


Jail Behind Him, Will a New Michael Vick Finally Emerge


Steve Dale

The majority of fans contended their disgust with Michael Vick. Yet, I wonder how many season ticket holders would actually cancel, and how many would turn off their TVs on Sunday afternoons. I argue, it’s a sad reality that there may be an increase in seats filled and TV ratings might shoot up, especially if the team signing Vick has little else to offer.

NFL 2009 Week 1 – Here Comes the NFL

In NFL 2009, NFL Football on September 13, 2009 at 2:20 pm


Here Comes the NFL

Every last player, coach and fan is ready! The NFL returns this week and it’s time to “Own the Moment.” That means the next four months will be packed with the sizzle and suspense that comes only with the National Football League. And then come the playoffs! Everybody is ready for the unique unpredictability of the NFL. And every team enters the new season with hope.

MORE >>


Here Comes the NFL

Feature Articles and Commentary of the Week

In Uncategorized on July 19, 2009 at 11:07 pm


Under COBRA, Act Quickly to Retain Health Plan After Job Loss


Kathy Kristof

If you’ve lost your job, you need to act fast to maintain adequate health insurance. You have to decide, within 60 days of your separation, whether you want to stay on your former employer’s plan through COBRA.


Job-Winning Tactics for Phone Interviews


Joyce Lain Kennedy – Careers Now

Nowadays it seems that about 90 percent of the initial job interview is done via phone — questions asked to see if you make the cut for the in-person interview. I hardly ever get any further than the phone interview


Job Search: Pulling Out All the Stops


Joyce Lain Kennedy – Careers Now

Recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data reveals that less than one job opening exists for every five seekers. Clearly, the time has come to pull out all the stops in your search and begin thinking outside the box.


Investors Near Retirement Age Face Big Challenges


Mark Miller – Retire Smart

New data shows just how steep a climb older investors face in attempting to recover from the market crash. It appears that younger retirement investors are faring much better than those near retirement age in bouncing back from last year’s market crash.


Avoid These Personal Investing & Financial Gaffes


Andrew Leckey

People want to read about how to make money, not how to avoid losing money. The depth of this recession, however, makes capital preservation every bit as important as positioning yourself to make money as the economy improves. Investors typically make mistakes during this murky in-between economic period.


How to Check Your Life Insurer’s Health


Kathy Kristof

If you want to know why it’s important to know the health of your life insurance company, ask Vince Watson. His daughter, Katie, was left severely disabled and in need of 24-hour care. The life insurance policy that was supposed to pay for Katie’s care for the rest of her life. But less than a decade later, the insurance company failed and the Watsons learned a hard lesson about the limits on life insurance company guaranty funds.


Choose an Investment Professional Carefully


Andrew Leckey

When it comes to selecting an investment professional, trust is a relative term. Many investors understandably feel a need for additional
help in navigating today’s volatile markets and economy. That means carefully checking out individual securities brokers or financial
planners to find those who merit their confidence.


If Retirement Planning Is a Game Show, Most Couples Are Failing


Mark Miller – Retire Smart

The Fidelity Investments Couples Retirement Survey results should be embarrassing for anyone age 45 to 72 who is married (the range of ages studied). It seems husbands and wives are doing a remarkably poor job of communicating, managing and planning for retirement.


Immediate Annuities Offer Security, But Tread Carefully


Humberto Cruz – Savings Game

An immediate or income annuity is an insurance product that turns a lump sum premium into lifetime income. Many people
hate giving up their principal to an insurance company, and immediate annuities had been slow to catch on. But amid the stock market
meltdown.


Aston Martin DB9 Volante & Rolls-Royce Phantom


Test Drive by Jim Mateja

2010 Car Reviews Auto Review Auto Review Aston Martin DB9 Volante & Rolls-Royce Phantom | Aston Martin or Rolls-Royce. What a choice | iHaveNet.com

Aston Martin DB9 Volante

What better than a pair of once-in-a-lifetime machines: the Aston Martin DB9 Volante and the Rolls-Royce Phantom.

The 2009 DB9 Volante (convertible) tops $200,000 after options. The link to James Bond is standard. But that’s a
bargain compared with the $380,000 base price on the 2009.5 Rolls-Royce Phantom we piloted. The 6.75-liter, 453-h.p. V-12 is potent and
impressive and so silent that we committed the cardinal sin of trying to restart an idling car …

 


Auto Review Toyota Prius


Test Drive by Jim Mateja

Car Reviews Auto Review Auto Review Toyota Prius | Improvements Keep Prius as Hybrid to Beat | iHaveNet.com

The Toyota Prius that debuted in the U.S. in the 2001 model year has become the nation’s best-selling hybrid.

But with Chevrolet, Saturn, Ford, Mercury and Honda now in the game, Prius needs more than just high gas prices to keep folks interested.

Perhaps the 50 m.p.g. city/48 m.p.g. highway rating in Gen III will do it. That’s a sizable gain from the industry leading 48/45 for 2009.
It also delivers a 600-mile range …

 


Academy Awards Expand Oscar Best Picture Nominations to 10


Timothy M. Gray

And the winner is… well, actually there are lots of winners with the decision to broaden the best-picture Oscar race to 10 films. The board’s
decision to double the category to 10 nominees “may make it more interesting and less cloistered,” said Academy of Motion Picture Arts &
Sciences president Sid Ganis at a press conference Wednesday morning.


Strawberry Rhubarb Almond Crumble Dessert Recipe


Wolfgang Puck

One of my favorite things to do with fresh berries is to prepare a crumble. This classic dessert is made by tossing the fruit with a
little sugar and sweet spices; spreading it in a baking dish; scattering on a hand-crumbled mixture of flour, other grains, or nuts,
sugar and butter; then baking the whole thing until the juices are syrupy and bubbly and the topping turns brown and crunchy.


Salad Nicoise, A Colorful Summertime Salad Recipe


Diane Rossen Worthington

This classic Provencal salad is said to originate in the city of Nice, France. It can be served on a bed of lettuce with the vegetables grouped together along with the eggs, tuna and black olives.


Shrimp and Salad Greens Recipe


Bev Bennett

Shrimp is delicious in a simple salad of greens and an Asian-influenced salad dressing. Nuts bring a lively texture to the dish.


Salt and Pepper Shrimp: Sweet, Salty, Crisp — the Perfect Shrimp Recipe


Anne Willan

Occasionally an ideal recipe comes along, and here is one of them. Salt and pepper shrimp need only a skillet (well, two actually) and tongs for turning. They can be cooked indoors or outside on the grill. Any shrimp will do, large or small


Mocktails: Making Memorable Non-Alcoholic Drinks


Jenn Garbee

You’ve hosted dozens of summer barbecues without giving the non-alcoholic beverages a second thought. However,
serving powdered lemonade again this year suddenly sounds like a bad idea. The good news is making memorable mocktails — cocktails
without the power — is even easier than shaking up spiked drinks. Without the spirit, you’re dealing with one less flavor wild card.
It’s easier still if you approach them as gussied up versions of lemon and limeade.


Corn, Leek and Chorizo Gratin Recipe


Betty Rosbottom

This Corn, Leek and Chorizo Gratin Recipe is delectable as a summer staple. Diced chorizo, the slightly spicy Spanish sausage, fresh corn
kernels, and chopped leeks are sauteed. This dish makes a fine side to such main courses as barbecued chicken, grilled steaks, or sauteed
pork chops.


Talk About an Air Strip


by Dave Barry

For some reason, my traveling party had been singled out by the security people for a near-proctological level of scrutiny. This surprised me, because my party consisted of me, my wife and our 20-month-old daughter. I cannot imagine terrorists getting anything done if they were traveling with a baby


The Class-Conscious Diet


by Dave Barry

My favorite part of The New York Times is a weekly section that reports on things that trendy New Yorkers are doing. This section is called Sunday Styles, because it would be rude to come right out and call it Rich Twits on Parade.


Born to Lose


by Andy Rooney

I’m a world-class loser. There are very few people better at losing things than I am. I was getting into bed and I thought to myself, “Maybe losing stuff would make a column.” So I scribbled some notes about it on a piece of paper, turned out the lights and went to sleep …


Summer Vacation: It’s That Time of Year, Again


by Andy Rooney

Looking forward to a good time is one of the pleasures of life, and it’s that time of the year for me. It’s just before my summer vacation. Looking forward to a vacation can often be better than the vacation itself.


School’s Over Way Too Soon, Literally


by Ana Veciana-Suarez

These days, though, pushing for a longer school year is akin to asking the boss for a pay raise. Chances are I’ll get laughed right out the recessionary door. School districts around the country have cut programs and laid off teachers. How are we going to fund an initiative that obviously will require more money


New Initiatives Tout Value of Microchipping Pets


By Steve Dale

A microchip is a permanent form of identification; it’s the size of a grain of rice and is implanted just under a pet’s skin by a veterinarian. Estimates are that somewhere around half of all dogs in the U.S. are microchipped, yet less then 10 percent of cats have chips.


Tick Numbers Climbing, Even in Urban Areas


By Steve Dale

Ticks, and the diseases they transmit, are now in all 50 states. And experts concur that their numbers are rising. Dr. Dwight Bowman, a veterinary parisitologist at Cornell University, says that a general increase in wildlife numbers — including deer, wild turkey, raccoon and other animals — intersecting with suburbia likely has the most impact


Michael Jackson, Gone Too Soon


Leonard Pitts Jr.

Sometimes, death is lightning from a clear blue sky, a car that runs the red light, ice-cold water dumped on you from behind. That’s how it was last week when Michael Jackson died.


Michael Jackson: ‘Thriller’ Was Greatest Triumph, Greatest Tragedy


Leonard Pitts Jr.

I got to interview Michael Jackson only once, at the family home in Encino, Calif. I remember Jackson did not walk about the place so much as haunt it, slumping from room to room as a great weight rested upon his sparrow shoulders.


Michael Jackson’s Creative Self-Destruction


Clarence Page

Which was your favorite Michael Jackson? News that the “King of Pop” had died at age 50 might well have felt more shocking had he not shocked us so often in the past. He shocked the world in a good way back when he was a kid.


Remembering My Michael Jackson


Liz Smith

Here’s how I want to remember Michael — not as the mega-star, not as Wacko Jacko, but as a lovely boy
whom I got to know a bit during the filming of “The Wiz” when he was 16. He was shy — surprisingly so, for somebody who was
already a show biz veteran, and a star. His solo “Off the Wall” and “Thriller” albums were just around the corner. He was
still the brilliant lead singer of the Jackson Five — a group that never would have gotten off the ground had it not been
for Michael’s unique talents.


Gardening – Not Too Late to Plant Vegetables


Cultivating Life by Sean Conway

If you’re just realizing that summer is here and you never got around to planting a vegetable garden, don’t despair. While it may be too late to plant cool season crops such as peas, lettuce and broccoli, it is still not too late to plant heat-loving vegetables.


Gardening – Clay, the Unsung Mineral Beneath Your Feet


Cultivating Life by Sean Conway

The amount of clay in our soil has a lot to do with how well the soil drains, and how well plants will
grow in it. Most soils are composed of sand, silt, clay and organic matter. Good garden soil contains a balance of these
components, but when there is an overabundance of one or the other, many plants simply will not grow — or grow well — in it.


Why Paint When You Can Give the House a Good Wash


Ask the Builder – Tim Carter

Painting the exterior of a home can be very expensive, and sometimes it’s not necessary. I’ll gladly
share my exterior cleaning house tips. It might save you thousands of dollars.


Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince


Emma, Watson, Daniel Radcliffe & Rupert Grint

This meticulously atmospheric, wonderfully acted Potter adventure lands happily — broodingly, but
happily — near the top of the series heap. As the concerns of novelist J.K. Rowling’s characters gravitate toward matters
of the heart and the hormones, the Potter films are leaving childhood behind.


500 Days of Summer


Joseph Gordon-Levitt & Zooey Deschanel in 500 Days of Summer

Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays L.A. greeting-card writer Tom, whose heart gets kicked around by free-spirited co-worker Summer (Zooey Deschanel). As Tom sifts through memories of his time with Summer, the movie clicks onto different days, out of order, letting us eavesdrop on one vignette or conversation or argument after another. “Days” plays some fun structural mind games, Deschanel is captivating, and the film has an easygoing, inquisitive spirit.


The Hurt Locker


Jeremy Renner & Anthony Mackie in The Hurt Locker

Jeremy Renner & Anthony Mackie in the movie The Hurt Locker. Movie Review & Trailer. Find out what is happening in Film visit iHaveNet.com

The Hurt Locker

Vivid, assured and extremely suspenseful, director Kathryn Bigelow’s latest (and strongest) film takes
moviegoers by the collar and throws them headlong into one horrifying life-and-death situation after another. Jeremy Renner
plays a soldier in Iraq running toward the explosives while everyone else is ducking and covering.

Time will tell if this politically neutral war movie is a classic, but it’s certainly a formidable experience

 


Bruno


Sacha Baron Cohen & Gustaf Hammarsten in Bruno

Extraordinarily raunchy, occasionally funny, Bruno takes everything Borat did so well three years ago
and pushes it further, swapping one primary target for another. But comic nerve has little to do with sheer excess. The
fashionista at the center of Bruno” is a pretty tedious fellow …


I Love You Beth Cooper


Hayden Panettiere & Paul Rust in I Love You Beth Cooper

Provides so few laughs, I nearly wandered out of the theater midway to go look for some somewhere.
Columbus strains to set up sight gags. You may wince, but it’s not a ha-ha wince. Both as written and acted, Denis quickly
becomes a tedious motormouth, not helped by Columbus’ uncertain pacing, with big, blobby pauses clogging up the plot machinery.


Blood: The Last Vampire


Gianna & Allison Miller in Blood: The Last Vampire

A beautiful half-human, half-vampire government agent (played by one-named South Korean star Gianna)
hunts demons in Japan with her American schoolgirl sidekick during the Vietnam War. If you’re going “huh?” already, just wait. …


Feel the Spirit


Rick Steves

For years, I’ve believed that anyone who enjoys getting close to God should pack their spirituality
along with them in their travels. Here are some experiences in Europe that spiritual people — from conservative Catholics
to Buddhists to tree-huggers to Methodists to curious European bus drivers who’ve never thought about this while on a tour
before — would enjoy.


Taking the Kids – Seeing More Than the Typical Sites in New York City


Eileen Ogintz

Visitors to New York have their pick of world-class iconic sites — Museum of Natural History, Metropolitan Museum of Art, two new Major League baseball stadiums, Empire State Building and Central Park. But there is a lot more to New York especially for the kids


Taking the Kids – Shaun White at Skateboard Camp in the Cayman Islands


Eileen Ogintz

It’s vacation and the teens are awake and ready to roll before 8 a.m.! The 22-year-old White has come down to Grand Cayman, his parents and sister in tow, to inaugurate Skate Cayman an 11-week summer program


The Case Against (Some) ETFs


By Kirk Shinkle

Touted as a revolution in transparency, cost, and access to exotic investments, ETFs are now being slammed
for inefficiencies, hidden fees, and opaque structures. Some experts argue that ETFs are just the latest means for investment advisers
to hoist flawed products on unsuspecting customers. …


5 Funds That Are Off to a Fast Start in 2009


By Katy Marquardt

Categorywise, large growth, midsized growth, and small growth funds have fared the best so far this year (although small
companies have led the rally over the past three months). But not all of the top performing funds fall into one of those categories. Here’s a
look at some of the front-runners among diversified U.S. stock funds … But beware …


After the Housing Crisis


By Ilyce Glink

Much has changed in the world of real estate over the past 18 months — new tax credits, tax deductions,
and tax laws relating to short sales and foreclosures. New rules relating to appraisals, mortgages and home equity loans. And
there are new entities to oversee and manage the crisis. Despite these changes, some key parts of the home buying process
haven’t changed at all. Here is a list of things that have remained constant through the tumult …


10 Most Dollar-Discounted Housing Markets


By Luke Mullins

As the historic real estate bust continues to gut home prices throughout the country, property owners everywhere
are scrambling to attract buyers. For some home sellers, that might mean chipping in for closing costs; others might try to sweeten the
deal by handing out perks, like a free parking spot. But for many homeowners, the most efficient way to sell a home in a depressed market
is to simply drop the listing price.


Entrepreneur: Why You Should Outsource Domestic Chores Now


Kimberly Palmer

Outsourcing chores by hiring a cleaning service or personal assistant might sound like the kind of splurge that a
recession-era budget would quickly eliminate. But outsourcing certain household tasks can end up saving so much time and energy that the
cost is well worth it — as long as you use your newly freed-up time wisely.


10 Great Places for Entrepreneurs to Retire: Jump in Start-ups Led by Baby Boomers


Emily Brandon

Entrepreneurs never really retire. Contrary to the stereotype of 20-somethings starting Web-based businesses in their
basements, it’s actually the baby boomers who best embody the entrepreneurial spirit.


Entrepreneur: 6 Tips for Starting a Small Business After Age 50


Emily Brandon

Starting a business is difficult at any age. Here are some tips to help baby boomer start-ups boom: Tap your network.
Use your experience. Find start-up funds


Cyberwar Is the New Atomic Age


Mike McConnell Interview

A level of vulnerability has been introduced into our way of life that is unprecedented. We now have a smaller connected globe where information can be moved in seconds, where information managed by computer networks — which runs our utilities, our transportation, our banking and communications — can be exploited or attacked in seconds from a remote location overseas


All-in-One PCs Take Aim at the Kitchen

Most PC-savvy Americans keep their address books, calendars, and notes on computers. But not the family address book
and calendar, which stick stubbornly to corkboard and paper in a corner of a busy kitchen. PC Manufacturers like Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Averatec, Asus,
Acer, and others are aiming new desktop models at the kitchen, or whichever crowded room is the center of a busy household. They’re pitching
relatively inexpensive all-in-one computers that bring added power to Mom’s calendar while not taking much more space than the paper version.


Obama Administration Launches Technology Spending Tracker


by Nikki Schwab

In this year’s budget, 72 billion tax dollars were budgeted for IT projects. And today, the Obama White House unveiled a way for citizens to
keep track of it.


Things to Avoid When Trying to Cut Health Costs


Kimberly Lankford – Kiplinger Personal Finance

Everyone’s looking for ways to trim expenses including ways to reduce healthcare and health-insurance costs. However, people have been making big mistakes in an attempt to save money. Avoid the following pitfalls, which can actually end up costing you more money


Day of Reckoning at Hand for Health Insurers


by Robyn Blumner

President Obama and the Democratically-led Congress are rolling up their sleeves, sharpening pencils and trying to deliver health-care changes that cover many more people, provide a safety net for the rest of us and won’t bankrupt our nation the way the current system most assuredly will


America’s Hospitals Can’t Afford Healthcare Cuts


by Rich Umbdenstock

Rich Umbdenstock is president and CEO of the American Hospital Association.
We must not lose sight of the fact that we will need good healthcare policy changes — not just payment cuts — if we hope to find long-term
solutions to the healthcare challenges vexing America: 46 million uninsured, an aging population, an epidemic of obesity and chronic disease
and the need for a more coordinated system of care.


Uwe Reinhardt: Plain Talk on Healthcare Reform


by Bernadine Healy M.D.

If there were a Straight Talk Express for health economists, Princeton professor Uwe Reinhardt would be the engineer. Born in Germany and raised in Canada, Professor Reinhardt has personally experienced medical systems in different countries. Over the past 25 years, he has become a critical voice in the debate about reforming America’s healthcare system.


Healthcare Reform Estimates Have Democrats on Defensive


by Kent Garber

The inciting spark was the Congressional Budget Office’s released of preliminary estimates on the costs of the
two main Senate bills. Kennedy’s was tagged at $1 trillion. The other, being developed by Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, would
cost $1.6 trillion.


Antacids Not Meant to be Used as Long-Term Treatment for Acid Reflux

Taking antacids for as long as you have can cause long-term side effects. Treatment for acid reflux has advanced considerably over the last 20 years. I recommend you talk with your doctor about …


Atril Fibrillation Treatment Involves Reducing Risk of Stroke


Stephen Hammill M.D., Cardiovascular Diseases, Mayo Clinic

Atrial fibrillation is an irregular heart rhythm that involves the upper heart chambers (atria). factors such as high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity can increase the risk of atrial fibrillation. Treatment usually involves a combination of lifestyle changes, medication and, in some cases, surgery or catheter ablation.


By the Way, Doctor: Can Ginkgo Biloba Slow Dementia


Anthony Komaroff, M.D. – Harvard Health Letters

Ginkgo is prescribed in many parts of the world as a memory remedy and is readily available in the United States as an over-the-counter herbal supplement. It does have some antioxidant properties


Weight Loss Drugs & Diet Pills Have Many Drawbacks


Mary Pickett, M.D.

I wish we had a diet pill that could help people lose weight easily. None of the medicines on the market are worth using, if you ask me


Health, Nutrition & Diet: Getting Out the Gluten


Harvard Health Letters

Gluten seems to be the food ingredient non grata these days. Bakers are coming up with recipes for gluten-free cupcakes and baguettes.
Anheuser-Busch sells Redbridge, a gluten-free beer made from sorghum. By some estimates, the sales of gluten-free foods have tripled
since 2004. Gluten-free food has become more popular partly because doctors are diagnosing more cases of celiac disease, an autoimmune
disorder whose symptoms are triggered by gluten, the protein content in wheat, barley, rye …


Summer Safety: 8 Reasons Kids End up in the ER & How to Prevent It


Sarah Baldauf

Summer has arrived. And for all its pleasant, warm-weather pastimes — pool parties, barbeques, bicycling, and more — an emergency department near you is feeling the usual seasonal spike in children’s unintended injuries. No wonder summer is known in the medical business as trauma season.


Power of Positive Thinking Is Psychology’s Latest Focus


Lindsay Lyon

Positive psychology itself is a relatively nascent field. Formally founded a decade ago by the
University of Pennsylvania’s Martin Seligman, its emphasis on what goes right with people was a sea-change from psychology’s
traditional preoccupation with what goes wrong — from depression and anxiety to mental illness of all flavors. …


How Positive Psychology Can Increase Your Happiness


Lindsay Lyon

You can thank your parents — in part — for how happy you are; roughly half of human happiness is
genetically determined. Another 10 percent comes from your life circumstances, like how happy you are with where you live.
according to longtime happiness researcher Sonja Lyubomirsky, a professor of psychology.


Positive Emotional Psychology: Daily Diet of Positive Emotions


Lindsay Lyon

Joy. Interest. Love. Serenity. Awe. Amusement. Pride. Such positive emotions, fleeting feelings that
last just seconds or minutes, are the subject of Barbara Fredrickson’s research, a professor of psychology at the University
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.


Positive Psychology in Your Relationships


Lindsay Lyon

By studying hundreds of couples, Shelly Gable has found that when romantic partners disclose positive
news, how the other reacts matters — a lot. In fact, partners’ reactions to each other’s good news can better predict the
quality of a relationship–and whether it will endure — than can partners’ reactions to bad news.


Drinking Coffee May Be Good for You


January W. Payne

Despite past concerns about coffee, tea, and other sources of caffeine being detrimental to health, recent research suggests that regular coffee consumption may reduce the risk of health conditions such as type 2 diabetes, Parkinson’s disease, and liver cancer–and regular coffee drinkers might even live longer.


Exercise Boosts Your Brainpower; Intensity May Matter


Katherine Hobson

In an attempt to hang on to your cognitive function as you age, you may do crossword puzzles, join a book club, or keep up friendships to stay connected. But to do all you can to maintain your mental abilities, you really should be exercising.


Teens Who Think They’ll Die Young Take More Risks

Teenagers tend to wildly overestimate the odds of dying young, and teenagers who think they’ll be dead before age 35 are far more likely to
abuse drugs, attempt suicide, get arrested, or contract HIV. Scientists have known for quite a while that teenagers tend to think that an early death is much more likely than the infinitesimally
small risk it really is.


Shot at Universal Flu Vaccine: Protection from swine flu, bird flu & other viruses


By Nancy Shute

Wayne Marasco is no doubt the only Harvard medical researcher who abandoned a successful construction firm, Waymar Roofing and
Siding, to become an immunologist. The man with the unorthodox history recently made a striking discovery: a human antibody that attacks a
newfound vulnerability in flu viruses.


3 Tips for Boosting Your Fitness as You Age: One Triathlete’s Advice


by Katherine Hobson

It’s easy to think that athletic improvement after age 40 is something reserved for those who can afford to spend the time and money it takes to
train full time. Debi Bernardes, a swimming and triathlon coach in King George, Va., was asked what she’s done to keep
improving after three decades of competition. Here’s what she thinks makes a difference, plus how you can apply it to your own training.


Anthony Atala: Grinding Out New Organs One at a Time


Megan Johnson

Anthony Atala was the first to build a functioning organ from scratch — a bladder made cell by cell — and put it into a patient, a child
whose own bladder was congenitally deformed. Since that breakthrough a decade ago, the 50-year-old pediatric urologist, director of Wake Forest University’s
Institute for Regenerative Medicine, has moved on to cobbling up bones, heart valves, muscles, and some 20 other body parts.


Jean Bennett and Albert Maguire: Gene Therapy to Reverse Near-Blindness


Deborah Kotz

The partners have restored much of the vision in patients who have a rare genetic form of severely impaired eyesight called Leber’s
congenital amaurosis, in which a mutated gene prevents the retina from manufacturing a nutrient vital to eye health. The technique
eventually could be tried to treat macular degeneration.


Fear of Crowds. When You Need Help for Anxiety


Deborah Kotz

Certain people find the feeling of a crowd pressing in on them to be extremely stressful. When such a feeling causes a panic attack, that’s a sign of the anxiety condition claustrophobia. Feeling panicked by the mere presence of strangers is a condition known as agoraphobia


5 Lessons From the Nation’s Obesity Report Card


Katherine Hobson

We’re still getting fatter, albeit at a slightly slower rate. That’s the chief takeaway from a yearly report on the U.S. obesity epidemic, which found that rates of obesity rose in 23 states (last year, rates rose in 37 states). Almost two thirds of states now have adult obesity rates above 25 percent, according to the report


Discovery Channel explains Nitty-Gritty of Dirty Jobs


Liz Wolgemuth

Throughout the course of the Discovery Channel show “Dirty Jobs”, Mike Rowe, 47, has parachuted into incredibly dirty jobs,
including coal miner, shrimper, and even skull cleaner, paying tribute to the value and integrity of manual laborers as he sloshes around in
knee-high nastiness right beside them. A recent interview with Mike Rowe about Dirty Jobs …


America’s New Energy Dependency: China’s Metals


by Kent Garber

America’s Clean-energy economy needs rare-earth metals to succeed and China has a near monopoly.
In 2007, a standoff unfolded between China and several American companies. China was threatening to withhold supplies that keep refiners
in business. A worried State Department intervened. Because the metals come almost exclusively from China, if the government had not acted,
sources say, oil refineries could have been forced to shut down, possibly triggering shortages across the country.


Addressing China’s Fear Of North Korean Collapse


Joseph S. Nye Jr. Interview

It is by now a cliche to say that greater pressure from China can force North Korea to change. The problem is that China has two objectives: They want a de-nuclearized North Korea, but they also want a North Korea that doesn’t collapse into chaos on their borders. The consequence of these cross-purposes is that the Chinese have been reluctant to use the leverage they have


Europe: Battle Over the Burqa


by William Pfaff

Since President Barack Obama in his recent Cairo speech made a tut-tutting remark about countries that restricted wearing religious garb in school, the controversy over the Muslim burqa has resumed in Europe


Afghan Presidential Candidate Takes a Page From Obama’s Playbook


by Anna Mulrine

Presidential candidate Ashraf Ghani, the leading challenger to incumbent Hamid Karzai, has embarked on an Internet fundraising campaign modeled on that run by President Obama.


Obama Presses Israel on Settlements


by William Pfaff

The Obama administration’s confrontation with Israel over its colonies inside the Palestine territories began as a test of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s willingness to enter serious negotiations on a Middle Eastern settlement.


‘W’ is For Withdrawal


by Robert C. Koehler

National Sovereignty Day, the day U.S. troops withdrew from Iraqi cities. Sorry, but Iraq is still America’s sovereign lackey: broken and smoldering. Some 130,000 U.S. troops remain in the country, withdrawn for the most part to the permanent bases we’ve built over the last six years. The country’s infrastructure is shattered, and shocking bursts of violence remain a common occurrence


U.S. Troops Leave Iraqi Cities, but Unsettled Issues Remain


by William Pfaff

If all goes correctly, when this column is read American troops will be gone from the cities of Iraq. Then the calculation must begin as to whether some half-million to million lives lost, and the infrastructure and social structure of Baghdad, and much of the rest of the Iraqi nation, ruined, have served some good purpose.


Violence Spikes as U.S. Troops Withdraw From Iraq’s Cities


by Alex Kingsbury

Militants in Iraq staged a series of bomb and machine gun attacks in the past ten days that left more than 250 dead and the country on edge. Increased carnage as the U.S. forces prepare to depart was not unexpected, American and Iraqi officials say.


Attacks on U.S. Soldiers Show Iraq Is Not Yet Safe


by Anna Mulrine

U.S. combat troops officially withdrew from all Iraqi cities this week, and the Iraqi government declared a national holiday to commemorate the event. But with the celebration came a stark reminder that the war in Iraq continues for U.S. troops and that the country is far from safe.


ALBA Bloc Leaders’ Main Obsession: Indefinite Rule


Andres Oppenheimer

It’s hard to keep cool while watching the dismantling of democracy in Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Honduras. When
the presidents of these countries met in Venezuela, for a special ALBA bloc summit — the Venezuelan-led alliance of mostly radical leftist
countries — it was hard not to see the group as a society of mutual support for self-perpetuation in power.


Chile Should Tout Its Passage to First World


Andres Oppenheimer

By the end of this year, Chile is likely to become the first South American country to join the exclusive club of the world’s 30 richest countries.


Obama’s Iran “Crisis”


by Jules Witcover

Rather than leaping in with breast-beating bravado of the sort too often associated with his departed predecessor, Obama has responded with measured and gradually escalated criticism of the Tehran regime’s repressive measures to deal with the street protests of the recent election.
This controlled reaction, not surprisingly, has been met with overheated squawks from conservative Republican hard-liners


Missing Our Moment in Iran


by Victor Davis Hanson

Last month, hundreds of thousands of Iranians took to the streets to protest a rigged presidential election. Our president was extremely cautious in his initial criticism of the Iranian government’s fierce crackdown against the protestors. At first, President Obama said that the United States — given our history in Iran — should not be “meddling” in


Iran: Death to Election Fraud


by Rick Steves

Last year, while in Iran producing a documentary for public television, I observed freedom-loving people patiently making do under a repressive regime. Today, the relatively peaceful Iran I experienced is in turmoil.


Iran Election Mess Is Just a Reflection of Global Human Failings


by Louis René Beres

Today’s dramatic Iranian instability is more a specific symptom of general civilizational fragility than an isolated disease. Beneath
the surface, all world politics readily reveals a distinctly common disorder. This is the incapacity of human beings to find both meaning
and identity as individuals, within themselves.


Iran Election Twitters In a Revolution


by Mary Kate Cary

It was a battle to show who could best harness the only real news source on the ground — the new social media — to
report fast, accurate, and insightful information. Cable and network news lost both the battle and the war. Two of the journalists who won
were Andrew Sullivan, a political blogger for the old-line magazine Atlantic Monthly, and Nico Pitney of the younger Huffington Post.
Sullivan and Pitney looked at the gold mine of information sitting on the new social media platform and, with two staffers, jumped in.
Sullivan and his staff cut and pasted the most interesting, useful, and profound tweets into a document he called “Live-Tweeting the
Revolution,” updated every few minutes.


Iranian Protests a Direct Challenge to Khamenei


by Anna Mulrine

“Flexing muscle on the streets after the election is not right,” warned Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in the days before the
bloodshed. “If they don’t stop, the consequences of the chaos would be their responsibility.”
Those consequences included casualties that resulted from the worst upheaval in Tehran in 30 years, as well as mass arrests last week, with
more than 600 protesters jailed …


Obama’s Hidden Business Tax Increase


by Matthew Bandyk

Obama’s proposal would require companies to account for their inventories on a first-in-first-out (FIFO) basis rather
than a last-in-first-out (LIFO) one — an eye-glazing change that’s highly significant. In an era of rising costs, to assume that you’re
selling your oldest inventory rather than your newest increases reported profits and thus taxes, even though nothing real has changed. If
inflation turns worse, as many analysts predict, FIFO would force companies to pay real taxes on phantom profits as the value of goods gets
inflated while they sit in inventory.


On Terror ‘No-Fly’ List, But Still Buying Guns


Clarence Page

For gun purchasers, should “no-fly” mean “no buy?” People on the government’s terrorist watch list tried to buy guns almost 1,000 times in the last five years, a federal study finds. In nine out of 10 cases, federal authorities let them do it, the report finds, because there was no legal way to stop them. And that appears to be OK with the gun lobby


Sotomayor Leaves a Fan Wondering


Clarence Page

The case of Ricci v. DeStefano sounds like countless other police and firefighter discrimination cases across the country.
What makes this one different is its intersection with Judge Sonia Sotomayor, current Supreme Court nominee. That’s why I am eager to hear Judge Sotomayor face the questions that surely will come up about the Ricci case during her confirmation hearing


God Bless This Honorable Court


Paul Greenberg

In a case out of New Haven, Conn., a bare majority of the court ruled that a group of firefighters who passed the test for promotion should indeed be promoted. How remarkable. Especially in these strange times of groupthink and sociospeak.


Court Was Right to Douse ‘Disparate Impact’ Fire


Robyn Blumner

When race is involved no case is minor, but Ricci v. DeStefano gained blockbuster status after the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor. She was part of an appellate panel that threw out the claims of the 18 white firefighters, one of whom is Hispanic, who lost out on promotions due to the city’s actions


5 Things to Know About the Employee Free Choice Act


Liz Wolgemuth

The heated debate over the merits of the Employee Free Choice Act is particularly poignant for both union leaders and business interests, as it plays out during a recession that has ransacked corporate profits but sharpened the perception of high times that excluded workers in favor of shareholders and executives.


Yucca Mountain: Harry Reid Declares Nevada Nuclear Containment Facility Dead


Robert Bryce

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has declared that Yucca Mountain, the site in Nevada where the federal government has been planning to store high-level radioactive waste, is “never going to open.” Reid may be right. President Obama’s 2010 budget nearly zeroes out federal funding for the waste site.


Immigration Reform Now Moves to Center Stage


Nikki Schwab and Paul Bedard

It has been delayed twice and is flying in under the healthcare debate, but the president and a select group of lawmakers
are finally talking about immigration reform.


Break Political Traffic Jam on Transportation Overhaul


Joshua Schank and Matthew Dallek

Any transportation project, including the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere” in Alaska, creates jobs.
However, transportation has become a policy orphan amid the healthcare tsunami that’s overwhelmed the news coverage of Obama’s
America. Thus, stalling all the economic benefits that flow from enacting a revitalized transportation policy.


Supreme Court: Strip Search of 13-Year-Old Unconstitutional


by Zach Miners

In a decision that could have significant implications for school administrators’ ability to keep their campuses safe, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 8 to 1, this week that the strip search of a 13-year-old Arizona girl by school officials who were looking for prescription-strength drugs violated her constitutional rights.


Political History of the Stars & Stripes


by Andrew Burt

The history of the American flag is the story of a nation struggling to find its identity, Woden Teachout argues in her new book,
Capture the Flag: A Political History of American Patriotism. Teachout, a professor of graduate studies in history and culture at the online Union
Institute and University, recently spoke about the evolving meaning of the flag in American culture.


We’ve Gone From Saving Wall Street in Order to Save Main Street to Just Saving Wall Street


Arianna Huffington

Remember how, when taxpayers were being asked to fork over billions of dollars to bail out Wall Street, we were told it
was essential to saving Main Street? Well, in just a few months, we’ve gone from saving the banks in order to save the economy
to just saving the banks. It’s the opposite of mission creep.


Lobbyists on a Roll: Gutting Reform on Banking, Energy, and Health Care


Arianna Huffington

Remember all that change Americans voted for in November? Well, there’s been a change in the plans for change. The detour has come courtesy of a familiar nemesis: DC lobbyists who, this year alone, have watered-down, gutted or out-and-out killed ambitious plans for reforming Wall Street, energy and health care.


Suddenly Democrats have 60 Filibuster-Proof Senate Votes and No More Excuses


by Bill Press

It took 239 days, but the Minnesota Supreme Court finally declared Al Franken the winner over Norm Coleman. And suddenly Democrats have 60 votes in the Senate — and no more excuses. For six months, we’ve heard nothing but complaining from Democrats: Our hands are tied, they insisted


Obama’s Honduras Predicament


by Cal Thomas

President Obama immediately “meddles” in the affairs of Honduras, denouncing a military coup, the intent of which is to preserve the country’s constitution, but when it comes to Iran’s fraudulent election and the violent repression of demonstrators who wanted their votes counted, the president initially vacillates and equivocates. Are we expected to accept this as a consistent foreign policy


Pork: It’s for Everyone, Including Obama


by Jonah Goldberg

More and more, it seems the Obama administration has just that attitude toward the economic crisis: doling out pork for as long as possible.


A Letter to Sarah Palin


by Jonah Goldberg

Dear Governor Palin, You’re blowing it. We haven’t met, but you might remember I was one of the first columnists to tout you for John McCain’s running mate. There’s a reason why the left and much of the media establishment hated you from day one.


Ghosts of 1994 Loom for Obama and Democrats


by Robert Schlesinger

Everywhere I look, I see the ghosts of 1994. There’s the young Democratic president with an ambitious agenda, seemingly intent on doing it all at once. The Democratic president faces a Republican Party thirsting for a return to power.


Sanford’s Argentina Affair
Please Cry For Me, Argentina


by Bill Press

Governor Mark Sanford’s fall from grace may be the most bizarre of all. When Lt. Governor Andre Bauer first reported his absence from the state, Sanford had already been missing in action for five days, over Father’s Day weekend. He told no one where he was going. He left no one in charge. He did not phone or email. And nobody knew where he was. Not his staff. Not the Lt. Governor. Not even his wife and kids.


Governor Mark Sanford’s Argentina Affair
‘I Made a Mistake’ Excuse Getting Flimsier


by Leonard Pitts Jr.

Next time some politician goes before the cameras with his figurative pants down around his metaphoric ankles and says, “I made a mistake,” let’s form a mob and drag him from the podium. You bring the lanterns, I’ll bring the pitchforks. South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford is, of course, the latest.


Governor Mark Sanford’s Argentina Affair
Spare Us the Bedroom Farce


by Mary Sanchez

Forgive me if I find the travails of South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford tedious. I could have been spared his rambling, weird mea culpa of adultery, and the media’s inevitable rehashing of the Democrat-vs.-Republican scorecard of personal peccadilloes. Can the nation finally move on from its fascination with the sexual dalliances of officials


Governor Mark Sanford’s Argentina Affair
Of Shame, Folly & True Grit


by Paul Greenberg

“Affair took S.C. governor away,” said the headline in the paper. Indeed it did — far, far away, and not just geographically. Mark Sanford is now in a whole different place, social and political and personal.


Governor Mark Sanford’s Argentina Affair
Lesson on Character and Power


by Linda J. Killian

It’s no big surprise that yet another political figure has been involved in an affair or sexual indiscretion. But as someone who has known Mark Sanford since he was elected to Congress in 1994 as part of the class that gave House Republicans their historic majority, I must admit to being shocked. And I wasn’t the only one.


Future Of The Federal Reserve – Exclusive Conversation With Ron Paul


by Matthew Bandyk

The person in Congress with perhaps the most unconventional point of view on these issues in American politics is
Congressman and former presidential candidate Ron Paul (R-TX), a longtime critic of the very institution of the Fed and fractional reserve
banking. He recently sponsored a bill that would audit the Fed.


Obama Won’t Procrastinate His Push for Change


by Kenneth T. Walsh

Some say President Obama’s focus on healthcare, energy, and overhauling the financial system is too much at once.
His critics have a point. Obama’s challenge to the status quo may be causing too many powerful forces to line up against him, including
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, members of the medical establishment, the conservative power structure in Washington, and Rush Limbaugh and
his cohorts in the punditocracy of the right. If Obama fails to overcome them, his credibility could be shattered, and his dreams of change
could evaporate.


HBO’s Shouting Fire Is More Congratulatory Than Analytical on Free Speech Issues


by Andrew J. Rotherhamis

Despite frequent admonitions from our political leaders to do so, it sure is proving hard to move past the last eight years. Add to the
retrospectives Oscar-nominated director Liz Garbus’ Shouting Fire: Stories from the Edge of Free Speech. Through accounts of flashpoints
since 9/11 about the freedoms Americans enjoy under the First Amendment, the documentary film is intended as a sobering check-in on what’s
happening on the ragged edge of free-speech debates.


Strategists Worry Obama’s Popularity is Dropping


by Kenneth T. Walsh

President Obama is heading into stormy waters. His healthcare plans have stalled on Capitol Hill; he is being faulted
for a shaky response to the post-election violence in Iran; his job-approval ratings are dropping; and confidence in his handling of the
economy is ebbing. The warning signs are enough to worry Democratic strategists that Obama may be sinking into a trough that will sap his
influence just when he needs it most.


Obama Criticized as Mr. Nice Guy Toward Iran, Congress


by Kenneth T. Walsh

Critics argue President Obama is too conciliatory in dealing with Iran, Republicans, and other adversaries.
Barack Obama is an accommodating and engaging fellow who aims to please. And this was important during the campaign, when likability counted
for so much in courting voters. Now, however, it could actually be a problem for him as commander in chief.
The question is whether his “politics of nice” is appropriate in a sharply divided capital and a dangerous world.

Politics

In politics on July 6, 2009 at 2:31 pm


What’s in the Headlines


by Andy Rooney

Look at these headlines. Does everyone know what the editors are talking about


Bulldozing American Cities: Shrink to Survive Flint, Michigan Program


by Cal Thomas

There are perhaps dozens of small towns and failing neighborhoods beginning to resemble ghost towns. The Obama administration reportedly is considering whether to broaden an experimental shrink to survive program in Flint, Mich., — one of the nation’s poorest cities — that proposes to raze districts within some cities and towns while bulldozing others in their entirety.


President Obama’s Iran News Conference


by Cal Thomas

For the first time in a long time, the president was challenged about his positions on Iran, health care and his “occasional” smoking. This may be due to the heavy criticism the media have been getting from commentators who have accused them of not doing their jobs with coverage that has bordered on the worshipful.


Barack Obama, We Hardly Know Ye


by Joseph L. Galloway

Who stole our change? What happened to Barack Obama on his way to the White House? The Republicans have been so busy trying to paint President Obama as a socialist, as a radical, as a Marxist, as a Muslim, as the Devil, that they haven’t even noticed that he has become one of them.


Et Tu, Big Business?


by Jonah Goldberg

It certainly seems a fitting declaration as the coup de grace of capitalism’s murder is at the hands of its most successful child: big business


Obama – A Plea for Public Patience


by Jules Witcover

The latest public-opinion polls indicate President Obama’s personal popularity remains very high after five months in office. But the same doesn’t go for Obama’s mammoth spending plans, including the bailouts of Wall Street and Detroit


Former President George W. Bush Speaks


by Jules Witcover

In a closed-door talk to businessmen in Erie, Pa., former President George W. Bush according to the Washington Times jumped into the Republican-led argument that President Obama’s sweeping and expensive government interventions into the private sector are steering the country into “socialism.”


OBAMAWORLD


by Victor Davis Hanson

Are you confused by all that has changed since President Barack Obama took office in January? If so, you’re not alone. Perhaps, though, this handy guide to Age of Obama “logic” might be of some assistance.


Justice for the Privileged


by Robert C. Koehler

“Are we really going to insist,” Texas Sen. John Cornyn asked the other day, after President Obama talked about closing down the Guantanamo detention facility, “that the jihadist with a suitcase nuke captured in Times Square be read his Miranda rights . . .?”
In other words, who needs all this complication — the luxury of rights and other froo-frah — when we’ve got so much evil bearing down on us?
Take empathy out of the concept of justice and what you have left are rules: simple, mechanical, lifeless.


The Incredible Disappearing Opposition to Sonia Sotomayor


by Bonnie Erbe

So the GOP is finally awakening to the fact that Judge Sonia Sotomayor is not as left wing as opponents might have hoped she would be


Obama’s Wrong Turn on Detention


by Robyn Blumner

As he was taking leave of Louis XIV, the French commander Marechal Villars is believed to have said: “Defend me from my friends; I can defend
myself from my enemies.” This is how I feel right now about President Barack Obama. As Obama tries to clean up the mess surrounding the terror suspects at Guantanamo,
he is flirting with cementing in law some of the worst excesses of the Bush/Cheney regime.


Why Doesn’t Obama Just Stay Home


by Bill Press

How unusual. A president and his wife who actually seem to enjoy each other’s company and, no matter how difficult it may be, love getting out of the White House. Which, of course, is driving Republicans crazy. Unwilling to criticize Obama’s public policies, they’ve decided to attack his personal lifestyle instead


Keeping Up With the Obamas


by Clarence Page

When it comes to annoying somebody or other, American presidents can’t catch a break even when they decide to take a break.
As predictably as potholes follow a Chicago winters, critics will pounce on presidential vacation trips as too being extravagant, too inconvenient or too self-indulgent.


Chuck Hagel Looks at His Party


by Jules Witcover

Former Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, now on the sidelines after two terms of impressive service
voices his opinion on the future of the Republican Party. Hagel not always appreciated by the Bush administration, with whom he did not
always agree, often supported the domestic agenda but evolved into outspoken critic of Bush’s war of choice in Iraq.


Dick Cheney’s Tower of Lies


by Arianna Huffington

Dick Cheney’s recent statement to Greta Van Susteren that “On the question of whether or not Iraq was
involved in 9/11, there was never any evidence to prove that” is being widely portrayed as an admission. But it’s less an
admission than a PR move.

Vacation Travel

In Vacation Travel on July 6, 2009 at 2:30 pm


Guaranteed Dollar Rates: Some Good, Some Not


Ed Perkins – On Travel

Now that the dollar is slowly losing against the euro and the pound you can expect to see more “guaranteed dollar rate” hotel, tour, and rental car promotions. They’re sometimes a good deal, and sometimes not.


Dublin’s Irrepressible Spirit


Rick Steves

Ireland is still vibrant as can be for travelers. And Dublin offers the best urban thrills in the Republic of Ireland. Here are a few of my favorite things to do in Dublin — Ireland’s capital


Beyond Prague


Rick Steves

From its colorful Old Town square to sumptuous Art Nouveau facades, Prague offers plenty to see and do. Thirty miles south of Prague is Konopiste Castle, the lavish residence of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand.


Taking the Kids Camping & the Great Outdoors


Eileen Ogintz

Just being in a tent is an adventure for young kids, says Nancy Ritger, an Appalachian Mountain Club naturalist who has camped with her three teens since they were bab


Taking the Kids and Learning New Tricks at Caribbean Resorts This Summer


Eileen Ogintz

Whether you want to learn to dive with your tween or snorkel with your kindergartner, teach your grade-schooler to sail or
fly on a trapeze, you’ll find plenty of opportunities at Caribbean resorts — at prices that are surprisingly affordable.


Kids on a Plane! 5 Fixes for Unruly Junior Passengers


Christopher Elliott

Kids on a plane. No four words incite more acrimonious debate among air travelers. On one side, you have childless customers who just want a little civility while they’re locked inside a pressurized aluminum tube. Talk about oil and water.


Children in First Class: 3 Suggestions for the Kids ‘Up Front’


Christopher Elliott

The overwhelming number of travelers I spoke with said kids should be able to fly in first class if their parents could afford to pay the freight. But they were quick to add that they expected the children to behave.

Iran Elections 2009

In Iran on July 6, 2009 at 2:28 pm


As Iranians Revolt, Their Government Reveals True Self


by William Pfaff

The truly significant result of the suppressed Iranian revolt is that the most important Islamist radical movement in the contemporary world has demonstrated that it has become a brutally repressive dictatorship whose leaders rig elections and beat down clear popular demands for a true election count or repeat of the election itself.


The War Between Civilizations That Never Was


by William Pfaff

An important change is evident in what since Samuel Huntington’s time has been mistakenly identified and manipulated as a war between Muslim and Western civilizations.


Iran’s (So Far) Revolution-less Struggle


by William Pfaff

Iran’s cosmopolitan and liberal middle classes and its students are making a revolutionary bid without intending a revolution. Few think that the demonstrations in Tehran, and now in other Iranian cities, can produce a change in regime.


Hungary 1956, Iran 2009


by Paul Greenberg

Liberty is not something that can be rationed; one freedom leads to another. Iran’s demagogue-in-chief understands that old truth, which is why he is so determined to crush this peaceful revolution in today’s Iran. All the odds are in favor of his doing just that, but Mahmoud Ahmedinejad has already lost something far more important than Iran’s presidency; he has lost legitimacy.


Iran Elections: The Silent Revolution


by Paul Greenberg

This is something new: a Silent Revolution. The huge throng that marched through the Iranian capital last Monday
spoke nary a word, Theirs was a silent vigil for a liberty not so much lost as never gained, from Shah to Ayatollah.
Meanwhile, the White House and President Obama practiced its own form of silence. Things have changed since a president of the United States could be counted
on to at least voice a protest when another people are cowed.


Iranian Regime Change Is for Iranians to Decide


by Mary Sanchez

I find Iran’s government structure of vaguely democratic elections and Islamic theocracy almost incomprehensible. However, if Iran’s
government needs reform, it is Iran’s people that must make that case — and they are, very eloquently and tragically even with their
lives. The last thing Iranian reformers and protesters need is to be painted as agents of the Great Satan.


The ‘Neda Moment’ Shows Promise of Social Networking


by Leonard Pitts, Jr.

Maybe you were there when Neda died. If you were, you saw a tragedy, of course, a 26-year-old Iranian protester gunned down in the streets. But I am convinced you also saw the future — a profound change in the way you and I will henceforth comprehend the world.


Obama’s Iran Policy Is a Bomb


by Jonah Goldberg

Here is the one immutable fact of Barack Obama’s foreign policy agenda as it relates to Iran: It’s over. If the forces of reform and democracy win, Obama’s plan to negotiate with the regime is moot, for the regime will be gone.


Obama’s Choice Is Not to Choose on Iran


by Jonah Goldberg

Stop measuring the success of your diplomacy with Iran by the degree to which the grinning, hate-filled stooge of a clerical junta will “temper” his rhetoric about the pressing need to destroy Israel and slow his ineluctable pursuit of nuclear weapons.


Iran’s Crisis of Legitimacy


Ramin Jahanbegloo – Global Viewpoint

Increasingly, Iran’s divine sovereignty has been less about religion than about political theology. As for the popular sovereignty, it has found its due place in social networks and political action of Iranian civil society


Iran Must Void Elections to Restore Peace on Streets


Shirin Ebadi – Global Viewpoint

People’s dissatisfaction with the results does not concern the present elections alone: Many objections were made four years ago when Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was first elected president.
Ahmadinejad’s most important position until then had been mayor of Tehran. He was, however, supported by Basij and Ayatollah Khamenei, the Islamic Republic’s leader for life.
Ahmadinejad’s four years of presidency resulted in people’s great dissatisfaction.


Will Iran Look More Like Turkey, or Turkey Like Iran


Nathan Gardels – Global Viewpoint

The effort to forge new forms of non-Western modernity in the Muslim world has pushed Iran into bloody civil strife while Turkey swirls with persistent rumors of military plots against the Islamist-rooted government. The great historical question is whether, at the end of the day, Iran will look more like Turkey, or Turkey like Iran


A Cedar Grows in Lebanon


by Paul Greenberg

The election returns in Lebanon represent an impressive comeback for the cause of the martyred Rafik Hariri. He led the party that finally drove the Syrians out of Lebanon in the Cedar Revolution of 2005. And paid for it with his life. His son Saad now leads the coalition of Sunni, Christian and Druze voters that emerged victorious. Its win revives hope — not just for Lebanon but for democracy in the Middle East

Healthcare

In Healthcare on July 6, 2009 at 2:25 pm


Employers to Make Deeper Cuts in 2010 Health Coverage


by Martha Lynn Carver

Look for employers to cut more deeply than ever into health care coverage for their workers in 2010. Companies are getting walloped by higher than expected costs just when they can least afford it.


More Competition in Health Care


by Bill Press

On health care, we are, in short, paying more for less — in a system that is so complicated, so multilayered that even those who can afford it find it impossible to negotiate. The status quo is no longer acceptable or affordable.


Ailments in Our Health Care Debate


by Clarence Page

As debate over President Obama’s health care proposals kicks off, his opponents are lining up in a predictable way. On one side, conservatives call Obama a “socialist.” On the other side, left-progressives wish that he were

Economy

In economy on July 6, 2009 at 2:24 pm


Economic Crisis will Create the Social Heroes of Tomorrow


Alvin and Heidi Toffler

The economic crisis now gripping the world is going to go away. We may not know precisely when, where and how. But one thing is certain. Nothing is likely to blow away the waves of change that have marked human history


Whistling Past Economic Graveyard: Audacity of Misplaced Hope


by Arianna Huffington

When Tim Geithner unveiled the Public Private Investment Program, he said that dealing with these assets was a “core” part of solving the financial crisis. But the banks would much rather keep pretending that their toxic assets are not that toxic, and worth much more than they really are — a risky charade the relaxed mark-to-market rules allow them to continue to pull off


Geopolitical Consequences of the Financial Crisis


Roger C. Altman

It is now clear that the global economic crisis will be deep and prolonged and that it will have far-reaching geopolitical consequences. The long movement toward market liberalization has stopped, and a new period of state intervention, reregulation, and creeping protectionism has begun.


House Prices, Mortgage Interest Rates Key to Housing Market Recovery


By Ilyce Glink

With housing prices falling and mortgage interest rates rising, it’s hard to say the housing market has bottomed out.
And, yet, there are some reasons for a more optimistic housing forecast, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com


Happy Economic Recovery vs. An Anemic One


Paul A. Samuelson

The number-one question preoccupying economists, policy agents of government and Main Street families is this: Will “recovery” from the current U.S. financial meltdown arrive before the end of 2009?


Asia Economy: Tamed Asian Tigers, Distressed Chinese Dragon


by Brian P. Klein and Kenneth Neil Cukier

Since the 1960s, Asian economies have focused primarily on exports. It was the key to success in Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan. Much of Southeast Asia and China soon followed suit. Over the past decade, the region’s exports have increased from 37 percent to 47 percent of GDP. By hitching their wagons to exports, however, Asian countries left themselves vulnerable to a drop-off in Western consumption

Recipes

In Recipes on July 6, 2009 at 2:21 pm


Bulgur Pilaf with Walnuts and Dried Cranberries Recipe


Joanne Capano

In addition to being delicious, this pilaf also has the virtue of using healthier ingredients than you might otherwise find in the dish. Bulgur Pilaf with Walnuts and Dried Cranberries


Goodness Gracious Greens Recipes


Joyce White

Today supermarkets and farmers markets almost everywhere offer collards, mustard greens, turnips, kale, dandelion, spinach, chard, broccoli raab and bok choy.
Then savor the goodness. Here are favorite recipes, along with tips on buying, washing and trimming greens for the pot.


Baby Beet-Salad with Arugula Goat Cheese & Hazelnuts Recipe


Wolfgang Puck

I’ve found it fascinating to watch how people’s tastes have changed regarding certain ingredients during my four and a half decades in the restaurant business. Beets are a perfect example.


Barbecues: Celebrity Chefs Bobby Flay, Sara Moulton & Mollie Katzen Recommend – Tips & Recipes


Francine Segan

For this 4th of July’s cookout and summer barbecues, I asked TV chefs Bobby Flay and Sara Moulton, as well as award-winning cookbook author Mollie Katzen, to share tips and recipes.


Roasted Eggplant Dip with Tomato Relish & Crispy Pita Toasts


Diane Rossen Worthington

Even if eggplant is not your favorite vegetable, you’ll find this dip is a winner for dinner parties or backyard barbecues — and perfect to serve as an appetizer


Smoked Salmon Picnic Spread


Bev Bennett

Blend goat cheese with chopped smoked salmon and herbs; stir in yogurt to create a spreading consistency. Prepare this up to a day in advance and refrigerate


Strawberry and Rhubarb Crumble Dessert Recipe


Bev Bennett

Even if you don’t own a rolling pin or never made a pastry recipe, you can make a mouthwatering, crust-topped dessert.
A crumble is the easy and delicious cousin to a pie.


Chocolate Banana Crepes Dessert Recipe


Lisa Odegard

Dessert crepes are a perfect way to end the meal and not feel like you have consumed a ton of calories


Old Fashioned Pound Cake with Honey Whipped Cream Dessert Recipe


Betty Rosbottom

Pound cake is definitely an all-American favorite, not only because of its tempting butter-rich taste and fine
texture, but also because of its simplicity.


Strawberries in Their Prime: Strawberry Souffle with Strawberry Sauce Dessert Recipe


Nick Malgieri

Try this easy strawberry souffle. It’s nothing more than pureed berries, sugar and whipped up egg white, and it preserves the flavor of the berries intact without drowning them in oceans of butter, flour and eggs


Summer Berries: Cooking With Just One Pint Dessert Recipes


Emma Christensen

One solution is to make scaled-down versions of these classic summer dessert recipes. Individually baked berry cobblers and parfaits served in wine glasses give a taste of the season without breaking the budget or feeling overwhelming to prepare.

Politics

In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 11:28 pm

  • Obama Reaches Out to Muslim World

  • Obama Cairo Speech: The Prism of Obama

  • Middle East Middle Ground

  • Obama Cairo Speech Significant, Eloquent & Perhaps Just the Beginning

  • National Debt: Too Many Zeroes to Count

  • Rating President Obama’s First 100 Days in Office

  • There’s No Place Like Home
    President & First Lady Making Themselves Comfortable in Washington

  • A New Role for Religion

  • Obama’s New Antitrust Rules Have Big, Powerful Companies Sweating

  • Why Women Are Fleeing the Republican Party

  • Biden Key Adviser & Confidant in Obama Administration

  • Obama’s Uphill Battle to Reform Healthcare

  • Obama Blazing New Trail With His Bold Moves on Economy

  • Waiting for the Payoff
    Debate Continues Over Obama’s Recovery Plan

  • Tax Cuts: Why Obama is Leaving the Reagan Era Behind

  • In Defense of Civil Rights:
    Justice Department renews fight against discrimination after years of neglect

  • Facing the Race Factor
    Civil rights leaders want Obama to talk more about racial inequality

  • Long Road to Remaking Supreme Court
    Limits to How Much Obama will Shift Judicial Branch Balance

  • Moving Beyond Bush’s War on Terrorism
    Obama Changed Tone, But There is Some Surprising Continuity

  • When Healthcare Reform Hits Grandma

  • Government-run Healthcare Insurance Program Sure to Backfire

  • A Positively Reaganesque Start to Obama Presidency

  • Tax Cuts: Why Obama is Leaving the Reagan Era Behind

  • Obama: A Potentially Transformational President

  • Obama: Franklin D. Roosevelt? Try Ulysses S. Grant

  • Is Obama’s Big Start Too Big?

  • A New Political Epoch Begins: The Age of Obama

  • Congressional Friends & Foes
    Obama’s Agenda Faces Cheers & Jeers from Capitol Hill

  • Five presidents with the Most Effective First 100 Days

  • Not Business as Usual in East Wing with Michelle Obama in Charge

  • In the Senate, Two Is a Lonely Number

  • In Afghanistan, It’s President Obama’s War Now

  • A Bright Star on the World Stage: Smiles & handshakes a Start
    But Obama’s real challenge will be to show results

  • Which Colleges Leave Students With Most Debt
  • Auto Reviews

    In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 10:56 pm

    Recipes

    In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 10:53 pm

    In Theaters … Movie Reviews

    In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 10:48 pm

    Movie Reviews: This week’s theater releases …

    Obama Cairo Speech: The Prism of Obama – Jonah Goldberg

    In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 10:46 pm

    Obama Cairo Speech: The Prism of Obama

    There is one thing about Barack Obama’s speech in Cairo that critics and supporters can agree on: It was vintage Obama. As an Obama critic, let me say from the outset that there was much that was good and praiseworthy in the president’s address at Cairo’s Al-Azhar University on Thursday. But that may put the cart before the horse …

    Obama Cairo Speech: The Prism of Obama

    Obama Reaches Out to Muslim World – Bill Press

    In Uncategorized on June 7, 2009 at 10:41 pm

    One of the greatest challenges facing President Obama when he took office was restoring America’s standing among other nations, especially our standing in the Arab and Muslim world, so badly shattered …

    Daily Comics and Popular Comic Strips Online

    In Uncategorized on May 11, 2009 at 2:31 pm

    Visit ComicStripNation.com for your favorite classic comics strips online

     


    Animal Crackers comic strip by Fred Wagner Lyle the lion, Eugene the elephant and the rest of these civilized animals deliver a glimpse of life in the Freeborn Wildlife Preserve. Animal Crackers' brief text and clean drawings are great for kids.

    ANIMAL CRACKERS


    Annie by Jay Maeder and Ted Slampyak An American icon and respected adventurer, Annie sets out on voyages that pit her against some of the comics pages' most notorious criminals. Annie's tireless pursuit of justice has reinvigorated this classic strip, giving it more action, intrigue and curls than ever before.

    ANNIE


    Bliss Men, women, smart-aleck pets, relationships, hackers, slackers, modern life, modern strife-they're all fair targets for New Yorker cartoonist and best-selling children's book illustrator Harry Bliss. Blending equal parts sass and sophistication-plus exquisite artistic style-Bliss will be a hit in print and on your readers' cubicle walls and refrigerator doors.

    BLISS


    Bottom Liners by Eric and Bill Teitelbaum The Teitelbaum brothers offer a funny and perceptive panel that injects humor into a variety of business predicaments-from the lunchroom to the boardroom.

    BOTTOM LINERS


    Bound and Gagged comic strip by Dana Summers From the ridiculous to the sublime, Summers' sight gags turn everyday occurrences upside down. His clean art style and sharp humor give readers a quick laugh each day.

    BOUND & GAGGED


    Brenda Starr by June Brigman and Mary Schmich. Follow redheaded reporter Brenda Starr as she combines a career in a modern-day newsroom with traditional glamour, intrigue and romance. Starr is an independent professional who exemplifies the modern woman-making her a great role model for teens.

    BRENDA STARR


    Brewster Rockit: Space Guy! by Tim Rickard Brewster Rockit is an unlikely captain. He's woefully ill-prepared to lead ... and that's part of his charm. Orbiting the stars in the space station R.U. Sirius, Brewster and his crew of misfits encounter a host of interplanetary anomalies. Brewster Rockit: Space Guy! pushes the limits of space, time and humor.

    BREWSTER ROCKIT


    Broom-Hilda by Russell Myers A strong, character-driven strip, Broom-Hilda enchants readers with the story of a love-starved witch, a troll and their buzzard friends who all live in the forest. While many other comic strips are extensions of reality, Broom-Hilda deals in pure fantasy, making the strip bewitchingly unique.
    BROOM HILDA




    DICK TRACY


    Gasoline Alley by Jim Scancarelli Gasoline Alley, the first comic to have its characters age in real time, uses gentle humor to make astute observations on small-town living and modern family life.

    GASOLINE ALLEY


    Gil Thorp by Neal Rubin and Rod Wigham The perfect bridge between the worlds of ever-expanding big-time sports and the slower-paced times (despite being an accelerating object of fanatical devotion) of high school sports is Tribune Media Services’ classic and newly updated comic strip Gil Thorp, the Friday Night Lights of the funny pages. With sharp, contemporary story lines and new, graphically outstanding artwork, Gil Thorp takes readers into the halls of Milford High School, where the legendary Thorp himself is an example of what high school coaches can be on their best days.

    GIL THORP


    Housebroken by Steve Watkins Housebroken stars the Watsons, a middle-class black family whose life changes when a former rap- star dog becomes the family's permanent houseguest. Suddenly, their once normal house becomes a chaotic doghouse. The hip-hop story line keeps readers coming back to witness DJ Dog, Mya and Malik's crazy antics. Watkins infuses the strip with situations from suburban American life.
    HOUSEBROKEN


    Loose Parts by Dave Blazek Blazek exposes the peculiar thoughts that ooze from every man, woman and animal. Whether mocking management or revealing the secrets behind the Big Bang theory, Loose Parts gives readers a quirky, funny moment each day.

    LOOSE PARTS


    Love Is...  by Kim Casali, drawn by Bill Asprey A heart-warming panel that explores the characteristics of love. Readers enjoy this wildly popular comic because of its innocence and simplicity.

    LOVE IS …


    The Middletons by Ralph Dunagin and Dana Summers The Middletons is a gentle spoof on the realities of middle-class America. The cast of characters features Morris and Midge Middleton, the archetypical suburban family,and their next-door neighbors, The Wades.

    THE MIDDLETONS


    Pink Panther by Eric and Bill Teitelbaum Paint your Sunday comics pink with one of the most recognizable characters of all time, the Pink Panther. Celebrating his 40th anniversary, this fabulously cool cat and his friends, Mr. Man and Inspector Clouseau, are back on the scene. Pink Panther uses clever humor and amusing sight gags to comment on the world today. The strip's subtle humor and clean visuals will help readers start their Sunday morning in style.
    PINK PANTHER


    Pluggers by Gary Brookins America's first interactive, reader-participation comic, Pluggers chronicles the hardworking people the world depends on. They represent the 80 percent of humanity who unceremoniously keep plugging along, balancing work, play and family life.

    PLUGGERS




    RAISING HECTOR


    Sylvia by Nicole Hollander Sylvia's sly observations catch readers off guard, provoking laughter as they explore larger issues. Opinionated, yet humorous, she often holds court on politics and cultural issues before they hit readers' radar. Her prickly commentary will raise your comics page to a new level-and keep readers coming back for more.

    SYLVIA


    9 to 5 by Harley Schwadron Schwadron offers a look at the chaos and camaraderie of office life through the eyes of the 9-to-5ers around the world.
    9 TO 5

    Animal Crackers, Annie, Bound & Gagged, Brenda Starr, Brewster Rockit: Space Guy, Broom-Hilda, Dick Tracy, Gasoline Alley, Gil Thorp, Housebroken, Loose Parts, The Middletons, Pink Panther, Raising Hector, Sylvia, 9 to 5, Bliss, Bottom Liners, Love Is…, Pluggers

    Check out THE WORLD’S WOES By Andy Rooney | iHaveNet.com

    In Uncategorized on April 22, 2009 at 4:59 pm

    I want you to take a look at:
    THE WORLD’S WOES By Andy Rooney | iHaveNet.com 

    As you may have read, I read the newspaper every day and I think of myself as someone who knows what’s going on in the world, but who am I kidding?

    Just look at some of the headlines and decide for yourself whether either you or the newspaper know what they’re talking about

    THE WORLD’S WOES By Andy Rooney | iHaveNet.com 

    Check out Here’s a Switch: Some Good News About Banking Arianna Huffington | iHaveNet.com

    In Uncategorized on April 22, 2009 at 4:46 pm

    I want you to take a look at:
    Here’s a Switch: Some Good News About Banking Arianna Huffington | iHaveNet.com 

    And now for something completely different: some good news about banking. 
    Yes, I know that an upcoming analysis by the IMF reportedly says that toxic debts on the balance sheets of banks and insurers could go as high as $4 trillion.

    And I realize that last weekend saw the FDIC take over two more banks, but it’s not all doom & gloom.

    Full Article:
    Here’s a Switch: Some Good News About Banking Arianna Huffington | iHaveNet.com 

     

    Check out Roving Towards Irrelevancy: GOP in the Obama Era – Chris Thomas | iHaveNet.com

    In Uncategorized on April 22, 2009 at 4:38 pm

    I want you to take a look at:

    Roving Towards Irrelevancy: GOP in the Obama Era – Chris Thomas | iHaveNet.com 

    Self-audit is a positive driver in the cycle of decay and regeneration that affects all societies and institutions. After all, if we can’t learn from our mistakes, then we usually find a way to go nowhere fast.

    Which brings us to current state of the Republican Party in 2009.

     

    Check out Larry Summers: Brilliant Mind, Toxic Ideas

    In Uncategorized on April 12, 2009 at 3:39 am

    I want you to take a look at: Larry Summers: Brilliant Mind, Toxic Ideas 

    Check out Tim Geithner, CNBC & the Second Coming of Known Unknowns | Huffington

    In Uncategorized on April 12, 2009 at 3:33 am

    I want you to take a look at: Tim Geithner, CNBC & the Second Coming of Known Unknowns | Huffington

    A formerly famous and now mostly forgotten poet of nonsense verse once said:

    “There are known knowns. There are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns . . . there are also unknown unknowns.”

    That was, of course, Donald Rumsfeld.

    But it doesn’t sound too different from your average briefing/Congressional testimony/interview by Timothy Geithner.

    Check out Team Obama Flaw: Still Believing Universe Revolves around Banks | iHaveNet.com

    In Uncategorized on April 12, 2009 at 3:18 am

    I want you to take a look at: Team Obama Flaw: Still Believing Universe Revolves around Banks | iHaveNet.com

    A series of recent meetings with members of Barack Obama’s economic team (including running into Larry Summers on my way to an appointment in the West Wing, leading to a spirited back-and-forth that made me feel like I was back at Cambridge, debating the smartest kid in the class), left me with a pair of indelible impressions:

    1) These are all good people, many of them brilliant, working incredibly hard with the best of intentions to solve the country’s financial crisis.

    2) They are operating on the basis of an outdated cosmology that places banks at the center of the economic universe.

    2009 Oscar Winners – “Slumdog Millionaire” Leads the Way

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on February 28, 2009 at 5:01 pm

    “Slumdog Millionaire” Leads the Way

    In much the same manner that the film captured the hearts of movie-goers, “Slumdog Millionaire” captured the hearts and votes of the Academy garnering 8 Oscars in total, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Cinematography and Best Adapted Screenplay.

    READ ON >>
    2009 Oscar Winners – 81st Academy Awards

    The Credit Card Crisis: The Next Economic Domino

    In economy, politics on February 28, 2009 at 4:52 pm

    The Credit Card Crisis: The Next Economic Domino

    Hot on the heels of the banking crisis, the employment crisis and the mortgage-foreclosure crisis, the country is on the verge of experiencing a credit-card crisis.

    READ ON >>

    The Credit Card Crisis: The Next Economic Domino

    Bourbon Fudge Cake Recipe by Wolfgang Puck

    In wolfgang puck recipes on February 20, 2009 at 6:16 am

    Bourbon Fudge Cake Recipe Use bittersweet chocolate, chopped into small pieces.

    Bourbon Fudge Cake Recipe

    I know some women prefer to receive impressive jewelry, along with roses, on Valentine’s Day. But I just don’t get it. Why give jewelry when you can cook her something beautiful? After all, who likes the aroma or taste of a stone? Make her a wonderful chocolate dessert like my Bourbon Fudge Cake, however, and you’ll fill your kitchen and probably the rest of your home with a wonderfully romantic aroma. Then, you can offer a sensually delicious flavor you both will enjoy. (For ladies who are reading this, I can tell you that we men will also love this treat, should you be doing the cooking on Valentine’s Day.)

    READ ON >>

    FREE Bourbon Fudge Cake Recipe

    Jambalaya Recipe by Wolfgang Puck

    In Recipes, Wolfgang Puck on February 20, 2009 at 6:12 am

    Pressure Cooker Jambalaya Recipe

    AN EASY TREAT FOR OSCARS & MARDI GRAS

    A popular one-pot meal featuring rice, bell peppers, onion, garlic, okra, tomato, a touch of hot chilies, and any combination of meat, poultry, or seafood, jambalaya is one of the mainstays of the New Orleans kitchen. Yet, it’s really global in its appeal, with similar dishes found around the world, only the seasonings and proteins changing.

    READ ON >>

    Pressure Cooker Jambalaya Recipe

    Municipal Redemption Fund MuRF

    In politics on February 20, 2009 at 6:09 am

    America’s Best Bet: Municipal Redemption Fund (MuRF)

    Stopping Foreclosures & Protecting Investors

    An original economic stimulus plan developed by a real estate agent in New Jersey that is currently
    in the hands of the House of Representatives and every Senator in Washington D.C.

    Under this plan, the Federal Government purchases NO interest in any private property and may take NO assignment of any lien. This plan is strictly a transparent “time-out” and “reset” of the national tax lien industry for the sake of stopping foreclosures while simultaneously protecting investors by shoring up the absolute bedrock of the capitalist economy which emanates directly from real property values and the taxes thereon.

    READ ON >>

    America’s Best Bet: Municipal Redemption Fund (MuRF)

    Time to Treat American Homeowners as Well as Wall Street Bankers

    In Huffington, politics on February 20, 2009 at 6:05 am


    Time to Treat American Homeowners as Well as Wall Street Bankers

    “The banks are too big to fail” has been the mantra we’ve been hearing since September. But when you consider the millions of American homeowners facing foreclosure, aren’t they also too big to be allowed to fail? Despite being treated as an afterthought, foreclosures are actually a gateway calamity: every foreclosure is a crisis that begets a whole other set of crises. So why hasn’t the foreclosure crisis gotten the attention it deserves?

    A combination of perverse priorities and flawed thinking.

    READ ON >>


    Time to Treat American Homeowners as Well as Wall Street Bankers

    Academy Award Oscar Nominations 2009

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on February 20, 2009 at 6:00 am

    81st Academy Awards Oscar Nominations 2009

    “And the Oscar Goes to …”

    This year’s top Academy Awards nominated film is “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” starring Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett and Taraji P. Henson with 13 Oscar nominations including Best Picture. The 13 Oscar nominations falls one short of the current record of 14 nominations held by two films, “All about Eve” (1950) and “Titanic” (1997).

    Other highly Oscar nominated films include Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire (10 Oscar Nominations), Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight (8 Oscar Nominations) and Gus Van Sant’s Milk (8 Oscar Nominations).

    Super Bowl XLIII Steelers vs Cardinals

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs, Super Bowl XLIII on January 31, 2009 at 1:07 am
    Pittsburgh Steelers vs Arizona Cardinals

    Super Bowl XLIII: Pittsburgh Steelers vs Arizona Cardinals

    Cardinals Anquan Boldin Looking Good

    Wide receiver Anquan Boldin participated fully and showed no effects of a hamstring injury that caused him to miss the Divisional Playoff game against Carolina. “He looked good today and he also looked good late last week,” Whisenhunt said of Boldin. “We took a little easier on him early last week just to be safe.”

    Steelers Hines Ward Not 100% But Ready to Go

    Other than Ward, the 32-year old inspirational lead of the Pittsburgh offense, the Steelers have no health issues on either side of the ball, Tomlin said. But the coach was dismissive when asked if he was concerned about Ward’s status for Sunday’s game. “Hines is playing,” Tomlin said. “I’m not worried about him.”

    Cards Focus on Steelers’ Big 3-D

    For the two major practices in Tampa, the Cardinals have had scout defensive players wear the jersey numbers for Pittsburgh’s Big 3-D, linebackers James Harrison and LaMarr Woodley and safety Troy Polamalu. “It helps our receivers and Kurt (Warner) in order to identify defenses,” Whisenhunt said of the common practice method.

    Big Ben’s Health Often Subject of Inaccurate Reports

    Big Ben’s Health Often Subject of Inaccurate Reports Steelers Coach Mike Tomlin denied a Profootballtalk.com report that Roethlisberger has undergone X-rays on his back this week. “Not that I heard,” said Tomlin, who then asked Steelers spokesman Dave Lockett if he knew of any X-rays on Roethlisberger. Lockett said no. Then Tomlin said: “Ben’s health is often the subject of inaccurate
    reports. He’s fine.”

    Larry Fitzgerald, Simply Amazing

    Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald has been simply amazing with a playoffs record 419 receiving yards and an inspiring performance against the Eagles in the NFC Championship.

    Kurt Warner, Renaissance Man

    Not only is Kurt Warner getting better with age, but he’s raising his level of play as the stakes get higher. No better example than this year’s playoff run.


    Steelers Game-By-Game Playoff Statistics


    Cardinals Game-By-Game Playoff Statistics

    Super Bowl XLIII in the Cards for Arizona

    The Cardinals jumped out to a 24-6 halftime lead, but the Eagles stormed back with 19 unanswered points in the second half to take a 25-24 lead with 10:56 left in the game. Arizona responded with a 14-play, 72-yard drive of their own to advance to their first Super Bowl.

    The Pittsburgh Steelers advanced to their 7th Super Bowl appearance overall and second in four seasons by defeating the Baltimore Ravens 23-14 in the AFC Championship Game at Heinz Field.

    John Thain Poster Child for Era of Irresponsibility

    In Barack Obama, Barrack Obama, Huffington, politics on January 31, 2009 at 1:00 am
    John Thain, Poster Child for Era of Irresponsibility

    John Thain, Poster Child for Era of Irresponsibility

    John Thain, Poster Child for Era of Irresponsibility

    There is plenty of debate about what President Obama’s stimulus bill should look like — as well there should be, given all that is at stake.

    But there is a growing consensus that the guiding principle in that debate should be Obama’s call for a “new era of responsibility.”

    Recipes

    In Recipes, Wolfgang Puck on January 31, 2009 at 12:57 am

    Beef Filets in Puff Pastry Recipe

    The hilarious 1993 movie “Groundhog Day” — in which a reporter played by Bill Murray, on assignment in Punxsutawney, relives that day over and over again until he gets his life right — makes me reflect on what retro foods deserve to keep coming back again and again.

    One of my favorites, always worthy of revival, is beef filet baked in puff pastry.

    Bay Scallops with Sauteed Apples Recipe

    Wolfgang Puck New Year’s Resolution Healthy Eating Recipe

    Even though fish and shellfish are protein choices many people think about as part of their New Year’s resolutions to eat more healthfully, many of us regard seafood as something to eat mostly during warmer weather.

    Movie Reviews in Theatres this Weekend January 30, 2009

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on January 31, 2009 at 12:54 am
    The Movie Taken Starring Liam Neeson

    The Movie Taken Starring Liam Neeson

    Taken Movie Review

    Liam Neeson plays a former CIA spook whose clandestine career bled into his home and led to a divorce. After traffickers kidnap his daughter in Europe, our hero has 96 hours to save her, and he wastes no time karate-chopping his way through every mime and baguette peddler in France.

    New in Town Movie Review

    Renee Zellweger plays a hotshot Miami businesswoman whose firm assigns her to oversee a workforce reduction at a food-processing plant in New Ulm, Minn. Easygoing Harry Connick Jr. plays the union rep.

    The Uninvited Movie Review

    After a stay in a psychiatric clinic, teenager Anna (Emily Browning) returns home, with her father (David Strathairn) now engaged to the caregiver (Elizabeth Banks) who oversaw Anna’s invalid mother in her last days, before a fatal fire. Anna attempted suicide after the tragedy, and now she’s plagued by visions, one of which appears to be her late mother, crying out for revenge.

    Inkheart Movie Review & Trailer

    Brendan Fraser plays a single dad able to usher characters out of books and into the real world. Years earlier, his wife disappeared into a fantasy called “Inkheart,” trading places with a street performer (Paul Bettany). Dad and his daughter are now being stalked in preparation for the arrival of the fearsome “Shadow.”

    Waltz With Bashir Movie Review & Trailer

    Academy Award Oscar Nomination for Best Foreign Film

    An extraordinary achievement and a true visual feast, Ari Folman’s animated “Waltz With Bashir” is a detective story as well as an moral inquiry into the specific horrors of one war (the 1982 Lebanon War), and one man’s buried memories of it.

    Outlander Movie Review & Trailer

    Viking warriors and a stoic intergalactic traveler (Jim Caviezel) join forces in the eighth century to combat an enormous beetle with whiplash stingers.

    The movie overheats quickly, but Neeson and the filmmakers manage to make the Charles Bronson-style simplicity work.

    Movie Reviews In Theatres this Weekend January 16, 2009

    In Movie Reviews, Movie Trailers, Movies on January 16, 2009 at 6:24 pm

    Daniel Craig in a scene from the movie Defiance


    Defiance


    Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber portray two of the four Bielski brothers, Jewish farmers and smugglers who led more
    than 1,000 Jews to safety in a Belarusian forest during the Holocaust.

  • Paul Blart: Mall Cop
  • Notorious
  • Hotel for Dogs
  • The Movie “Che”
  • Last Chance Harvey

    Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson smooth over most of the problems just by showing up and doing what they do for a living. Hoffman plays a composer who meets the lonely-hearts frump played by the luminous Thompson and invites her to his daughter’s wedding.

    NFL 2008 Conference Final Playoffs: NFL Has ‘Mad’ Final Four of Its Own

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs on January 16, 2009 at 6:07 pm

    Before the NFL Playoffs started, many may have predicted the Steelers as an AFC Championship participant, some may have specifically picked one of three other teams, but few, if any, would have chosen this ensemble of teams to be one step away from Super Bowl XLIII.

    Eagles – Cardinals, Ravens-Steelers Preview

    READ ON >>

    One step away from Super Bowl XLIII. Eagles – Cardinals, Ravens-Steelers Preview

    US Airways Flight 1549: “Miracle on the Hudson”

    In Uncategorized on January 16, 2009 at 5:31 pm

    US Airways Flight 1549: “Miracle on the Hudson”

    US Airways Flight 1549 (Airbus 320) carrying 148 passengers and six crew on a domestic flight crashed into the Hudson River on the west side of Manhattan minutes after it took off on Thursday. Rescue workers and passenger ferries reached the scene within minutes.

    New York State Governor Paterson said it best:
    “We had a Miracle on 34th Street, now, I believe, we have a Miracle on the Hudson.”

    READ ON >>

    US Airways Flight 1549: “Miracle on the Hudson”

    Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants NFL Divisional Playoff Game

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs on January 11, 2009 at 3:22 am

    MVP Eli Manning of the New York Giants and coach Tom Coughlin celebrate after defeating the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona 03 February 2008. The Giants won 17-14. AFP PHOTO/Timothy A. CLARY (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

    The Giants are 7-1 at home this season while the Eagles are 4-4-1 on the road, including their 26-14 Wild Card victory over the Vikings last week in Minnesota.

    The Giants lost to the Vikings in Minnesota 20-19 in their regular season finale. The Eagles have now won 5 of their last 6 while the Giants have lost 3 of their last 4 after an 11-1 start.

    It seems only fitting that the Giants begin their 2008 playoff journey against against division-rival Philadelphia.

    READ ON >>

    Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants NFL Divisional Playoff Game – Analysis, Preview, Statistics, Prediction

    San Diego Chargers at Pittsburgh Steelers NFL Divisional Playoff Game

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs on January 11, 2009 at 3:13 am

    Philip Rivers and Chargers travel to Pittsburgh for AFC playoff divisional matchup against Steelers

    When San Diego plays Pittsburgh on Sunday it will mark the first time in the NFL playoffs since Denver (top offense) faced Baltimore (top defense) in the 2000 AFC Wild Card round that a conference’s top scoring offense goes against the top scoring defense.

    READ ON >>

    San Diego Chargers at Pittsburgh Steelers NFL Divisional Playoff Game – Preview, Analysis, Stats, Comparison & Prediction

    Barack Obama Presidential Inauguration 2009

    In Barack Obama, Barrack Obama, Presidents, politics on January 8, 2009 at 2:29 am

    NFL Playoffs Philadelphia Eagles vs Minnesota Vikings

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs on January 3, 2009 at 2:15 am

    Both clubs started the season slowly, the Eagles were 2-3 and the Vikings 1-3. But both finished the season with strong winning streaks as the Eagles won 4 of their last 5, while the Vikings won 5 of their last 6. “We had to earn it, as it should be, and that makes it that much sweeter,” says Vikings head coach Brad Childress, speaking, really, about both clubs. And why shouldn’t he? Childress was the Eagles’ offensive coordinator from 2002-05.

    READ ON >>

    Eagles and Vikings on a Mission

    NFL Playoffs Baltimore Ravens vs Miami Dolphins

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs on January 3, 2009 at 2:03 am

    This game is also a rematch of a regular season game between these teams this year, when Baltimore registered a 27-13 win on October 19 at Dolphin Stadium. Each team believes the result propelled them to the playoffs and where they are today.

    READ ON >>

    Ravens and Dolphins Again in AFC Wild Card Weekend Playoff Game

    NFL PLayoffs Indianapolis Colts vs San Diego Chargers

    In NFL 2008, NFL Football, NFL Playoffs on January 3, 2009 at 1:54 am

    Returning to San Diego for the second time in seven weeks to face a familiar playoff foe, the Indianapolis Colts, 12-4, meet the San Diego Chargers, 8-8, on Saturday, January 3 in the AFC Wild Card Playoffs.

    READ ON:


    Don’t Be Misled by Colts & Bolts Regular Season Records