Category Archives: Others

Economist Monti to quickly form new Italian govt

ROME (AP) — Economist Mario Monti accepted the monumental task Sunday of trying to form a new government that can rescue Italy from financial ruin, expressing confidence that the nation can beat the crisis if its people pull together.
His selection came a day after Silvio Berlusconi reluctantly resigned as premier, bowing out after world markets pummeled Italy‘s borrowing ability, reflecting a loss of faith in the 75-year-old media mogul’s leadership. Berlusconi quit after the Italian parliament approved new reform measures demanded by the European Union and central bank officials — but even those are not considered enough to right Italy‘s ailing economy.
“There is an emergency, but we can overcome it with a common effort,” Monti told the nation, shortly after Italy‘s president formally asked him to see if he can muster enough political support to lead the country out of one of its most trying hours since World War II.

“In a moment of particular difficulty, Italy must win the challenge to bounce back, we must be an element of strength and not weakness in the European Union, of which we are founders,” he added.
Monti must now draw up a Cabinet, lay out his priorities, and see if he has enough support in Parliament to govern. Rival political parties offered various degrees of support, including one demand from Berlusconi’s party — the largest in Parliament — that his government last only as long enough as it takes to heal Italy‘s finances and revive the economy.
The 68-year-old economics professor is no pushover, earning a reputation for staring down challenges as a tough EU competition commissioner. But he’ll have to win a confidence vote in Parliament before he can lead the nation.
Monti told reporters he will carry out his task “with a great sense of responsibility and service toward this nation.” Italy must heal its finances and resume growth because “we owe it to our children, to give them a concrete future of dignity and hope.”
Berlusconi’s party also demanded that only technocrats — not politicians — make up Monti’s Cabinet in exchange for its crucial support.
Monti faces a daunting challenge — preventing an Italian default that could tear apart the 17-nation eurozone and send Europe and the U.S. into new recessions.
Italy‘s economy is hampered by high wage costs, low productivity, fat government payrolls, excessive taxes, choking bureaucracy, and an educational system that produces one of the lowest levels of college graduates among rich countries.
In addition, as the third-largest economy in the eurozone, Italy is considered too big for Europe to bail out like Greece, Portugal and Ireland have been.
The next Italian government needs to push through even more painful reforms and austerity measures to deal with euro1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) in debt — about 120 percent of the country’s economic output. And many of those debts are coming due soon — Italy has to roll over more than euro300 billion ($410 billion) of its debts next year alone.
Some political forces, including some from Berlusconi’s ranks and that of his allies, have been clamoring for early elections. But President Giorgio Napolitano cited approaching treasury bond auctions — one as early as Monday and other bonds maturing in the next few months — as a main reason he decided to “avoid early elections and the consequent government vacuum” until a new one could be formed.
Asked by journalists if he thought Monti could form his government by week’s end, Napolitano responded positively.
The yield on Italian 10-year bonds fell to 6.48 percent Friday, below the crisis level of 7 percent reached earlier last week, a level that forced the three other EU nations into international bailouts.
Centrist and center-left parties in the opposition during Berlusconi’s rule offered their support for Monti.
“Italian parties are at fork in the road. Either they speculate on the situation, hoping that they can get some campaign capital from it, or they take up their responsibilities to save the country,” said centrist opposition leader Pier Ferdinando Casini.
The leader of Italy‘s largest labor confedation, the left-wing CGIL, Susanna Camusso, expressed hope that Monti could pull together a government capable of “giving back the international credibility that we have lost in these years.”
Union leaders, along with industrialists, have accused Berlusconi of doing virtually nothing to create jobs during his tenure.
Berlusconi’s main ally in his 17 years of politics, Umberto Bossi, said his Northern League, a regional party with its power base in the affluent north, would stay in the opposition and insisted early elections are the true solution.
“We won’t give him any blank check,” Bossi said of Monti.
Warmly welcoming the new prime minister-designate were European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy.
“We believe that it sends a further encouraging signal,” following Italy‘s final passage Saturday of new austerity measures, they said in a statement, adding that the EU will keep monitoring Italy‘s implementation of the measures “with the aim of pursuing policies that foster growth.”
The measures that were passed Saturday include raising the retirement age to 67 by 2026 and to 70 by 2050 and selling off state property.
Some analysts expect the return of the property tax on primary residences, a tax that Berlusconi had abolished.
A crowd of supporters applauded Berlusconi on Sunday at his private residence in Rome — in sharp contrast to the hundreds Saturday night who heckled and jeered him and popped open bottles of sparking wine to toast his departure.
It was an ignoble end for the billionaire media mogul, who came to power for the first time in 1994 using a soccer chant “Let’s Go Italy” as the name of his political party and selling Italians on a dream of prosperity with own transformation from cruise-ship crooner to Italy‘s richest man.
While he became Italy‘s longest-serving postwar premier, Berlusconi’s three stints as premier were tainted by corruption trials and accusations that he used his political power to help his business interests. His last term was marred by sex scandals, “bunga bunga” parties and criminal charges he paid a 17-year-old girl to have sex — accusations he denies.
Berlusconi appeared on TV in a recorded message Sunday, pledging to stay a vigorous political force in Parliament, where he is still a lawmaker.
“(I) resigned out of a sense of responsibility and of state, to ward off more speculative financial attacks on Italy,” he said.
Looking somber, Berlusconi said he was sad that his “generous gesture” of resignation was greeted by “hoots and insults” from the crowds.
___
Gabriele Steinhauser contributed from Brussels.

Economist Monti to quickly form new Italian govt

ROME (AP) — Economist Mario Monti accepted the monumental task Sunday of trying to form a new government that can rescue Italy from financial ruin, expressing confidence that the nation can beat the crisis if its people pull together.
His selection came a day after Silvio Berlusconi reluctantly resigned as premier, bowing out after world markets pummeled Italy‘s borrowing ability, reflecting a loss of faith in the 75-year-old media mogul’s leadership. Berlusconi quit after the Italian parliament approved new reform measures demanded by the European Union and central bank officials — but even those are not considered enough to right Italy‘s ailing economy.
“There is an emergency, but we can overcome it with a common effort,” Monti told the nation, shortly after Italy‘s president formally asked him to see if he can muster enough political support to lead the country out of one of its most trying hours since World War II.

“In a moment of particular difficulty, Italy must win the challenge to bounce back, we must be an element of strength and not weakness in the European Union, of which we are founders,” he added.
Monti must now draw up a Cabinet, lay out his priorities, and see if he has enough support in Parliament to govern. Rival political parties offered various degrees of support, including one demand from Berlusconi’s party — the largest in Parliament — that his government last only as long enough as it takes to heal Italy‘s finances and revive the economy.
The 68-year-old economics professor is no pushover, earning a reputation for staring down challenges as a tough EU competition commissioner. But he’ll have to win a confidence vote in Parliament before he can lead the nation.
Monti told reporters he will carry out his task “with a great sense of responsibility and service toward this nation.” Italy must heal its finances and resume growth because “we owe it to our children, to give them a concrete future of dignity and hope.”
Berlusconi’s party also demanded that only technocrats — not politicians — make up Monti’s Cabinet in exchange for its crucial support.
Monti faces a daunting challenge — preventing an Italian default that could tear apart the 17-nation eurozone and send Europe and the U.S. into new recessions.
Italy‘s economy is hampered by high wage costs, low productivity, fat government payrolls, excessive taxes, choking bureaucracy, and an educational system that produces one of the lowest levels of college graduates among rich countries.
In addition, as the third-largest economy in the eurozone, Italy is considered too big for Europe to bail out like Greece, Portugal and Ireland have been.
The next Italian government needs to push through even more painful reforms and austerity measures to deal with euro1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) in debt — about 120 percent of the country’s economic output. And many of those debts are coming due soon — Italy has to roll over more than euro300 billion ($410 billion) of its debts next year alone.
Some political forces, including some from Berlusconi’s ranks and that of his allies, have been clamoring for early elections. But President Giorgio Napolitano cited approaching treasury bond auctions — one as early as Monday and other bonds maturing in the next few months — as a main reason he decided to “avoid early elections and the consequent government vacuum” until a new one could be formed.
Asked by journalists if he thought Monti could form his government by week’s end, Napolitano responded positively.
The yield on Italian 10-year bonds fell to 6.48 percent Friday, below the crisis level of 7 percent reached earlier last week, a level that forced the three other EU nations into international bailouts.
Centrist and center-left parties in the opposition during Berlusconi’s rule offered their support for Monti.
“Italian parties are at fork in the road. Either they speculate on the situation, hoping that they can get some campaign capital from it, or they take up their responsibilities to save the country,” said centrist opposition leader Pier Ferdinando Casini.
The leader of Italy‘s largest labor confedation, the left-wing CGIL, Susanna Camusso, expressed hope that Monti could pull together a government capable of “giving back the international credibility that we have lost in these years.”
Union leaders, along with industrialists, have accused Berlusconi of doing virtually nothing to create jobs during his tenure.
Berlusconi’s main ally in his 17 years of politics, Umberto Bossi, said his Northern League, a regional party with its power base in the affluent north, would stay in the opposition and insisted early elections are the true solution.
“We won’t give him any blank check,” Bossi said of Monti.
Warmly welcoming the new prime minister-designate were European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy.
“We believe that it sends a further encouraging signal,” following Italy‘s final passage Saturday of new austerity measures, they said in a statement, adding that the EU will keep monitoring Italy‘s implementation of the measures “with the aim of pursuing policies that foster growth.”
The measures that were passed Saturday include raising the retirement age to 67 by 2026 and to 70 by 2050 and selling off state property.
Some analysts expect the return of the property tax on primary residences, a tax that Berlusconi had abolished.
A crowd of supporters applauded Berlusconi on Sunday at his private residence in Rome — in sharp contrast to the hundreds Saturday night who heckled and jeered him and popped open bottles of sparking wine to toast his departure.
It was an ignoble end for the billionaire media mogul, who came to power for the first time in 1994 using a soccer chant “Let’s Go Italy” as the name of his political party and selling Italians on a dream of prosperity with own transformation from cruise-ship crooner to Italy‘s richest man.
While he became Italy‘s longest-serving postwar premier, Berlusconi’s three stints as premier were tainted by corruption trials and accusations that he used his political power to help his business interests. His last term was marred by sex scandals, “bunga bunga” parties and criminal charges he paid a 17-year-old girl to have sex — accusations he denies.
Berlusconi appeared on TV in a recorded message Sunday, pledging to stay a vigorous political force in Parliament, where he is still a lawmaker.
“(I) resigned out of a sense of responsibility and of state, to ward off more speculative financial attacks on Italy,” he said.
Looking somber, Berlusconi said he was sad that his “generous gesture” of resignation was greeted by “hoots and insults” from the crowds.
___
Gabriele Steinhauser contributed from Brussels.

‘Super Mario’ tapped to cure Italy’s economic ills

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MILAN (AP) — The man tapped to be Italy‘s next premier earned the moniker “Super Mario” in the halls of the European Commission, stopping such corporate giants as Jack Welch and Bill Gates in their competitive tracks.
Elegantly attired with a formal demeanor, Mario Monti proved his mettle as a tough negotiator when he blocked the merger of General Electric and Honeywell and levied a euro500 million fine against Microsoft for abusing its dominant position.
“He moves with caution and speaks with nuances. But he moves,” said Carlo Guarnieri, a political scientist at the University of Bologna.
A leading economist, Monti is among the most respected men in the country and the most admired Italians 
in Europe.
That will be no guarantee for success in the Herculean task before him: building a majority large enough to push painful structural reforms through a fractured Parliament to prevent Italy from being dragged into the burgeoning debt crisis.

But he has some clear assets: he is part of the Italian financial establishment, has strong ties to European institutions and governments and enjoys the clear support of President Giorgio Napolitano, who gave Monti a mandate Sunday to form a new government.
Providing a sober contrast to the audacious Silvio Berlusconi, who resigned Saturday, Monti also is the favorite of the financial markets, which eased pressure on Italian borrowing costs after his candidacy gained currency.
Monti, 68, cuts an austere and serious figure, which people who know him say defies a subtle wit. He is multilingual and moves easily among European capitals. Now the president of Milan’s prestigious Bocconi University, he spent 10 years at the European Commission, about half in the powerful post of competition commissioner, and is one of the founders of the Brussels-based Bruegel think tank, which blends research with policy recommendations.
Monti is fully engaged in the European conversation on the common currency and the role of its institutions. The night Napolitano named him senator for life in Rome this past week, Monti was sitting on a panel discussing the euro’s future in Berlin.
“A person on the flight from Milan this morning asked me, ‘Mr. Monti, are you sure your are taking the right flight?’” he quipped.
While there is no question Monti is part of the political elite and travels in the rarified circles of European policymakers, he does not give the impression of being out of touch with ordinary Italians. TV clips show Monti filling his car with gas — a clear contrast with fumbling responses by lawmakers asked recently by TV satire programs the price of fuel.
In perk-filled Italy, the image of Monti at the gas tank carries more meaning than that of a powerful figure engaged in ordinary tasks, but that of a powerful man who does not seek privilege — something he says he wants to stamp out.
“By introducing more competition, we will in due course introduce more merit and less of a role for nepotism, clientism, corruption, whatever,” Monti said in Berlin this week.
Monti was born in the town of Varese, north of Milan, the son of a bank manager. As a teen, his father took him to see the U.S. and the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War so he could form a personal view of the two powers.
He earned an economics and management degree at Bocconi and later studied in the U.S. at Yale, and spent years teaching economics at several Italian universities. He is recognized as a champion of the free market and reduced government spending, who has been influential in setting European and international antitrust standards.
“I have always been considered to be the most German among Italian economists, which I always received as a compliment, but which was rarely meant to be a compliment,” Monti told a panel on the euro crisis hosted by the Dahrendorf Symposium in Berlin.
He has called the German culture of stability one of its “better exports” — a view which certainly will help Rome’s relations with powerful Berlin as he tackles Italy‘s enormous debt and stagnant growth. But associates say he also is confident to stand up to European institutions — something the Berlusconi government has lacked.
Monti is well aware of the negative prejudices faced by Italians in the European arena, a view only exacerbated in recent years by Berlusconi’s sex scandals, numerous trials for business dealings and public gaffes, sometimes at the expense of other leaders.
Although well-known in his own right, the contrast with Berlusconi is playing well across Europe. ZDF German television this week described Monti as a “sober finance expert — the opposite of Berlusconi.”
“I think Mario is viewed as a breath of fresh air which would immediately garner that kind of positive sense from other major European leaders,” a former U.S. ambassador to Italy, Ronald Spolgi, said on the sidelines of a conference at Stanford University.
Fellow Milan resident Giorgio Armani thinks Monti “is physically perfect for being premier,” praising his “cerebral elegance.”
Monti has managed a difficult feat in polarized Italy: He has respect both of the left and the right. Few would be able to court favor from both Berlusconi and archrival Romano Prodi, but Monti did just that. Berlusconi’s government nominated Monti to the European Commission in 1994, while Prodi, at the time EU president, made him EU competition commissioner in 1999.
Berlusconi this week offered his congratulations to Monti on his appointment as senator for life, recognizing his “outstanding achievements in the field of science and social work.”
Only in recent months has Monti openly said it was time for Berlusconi to go in the occasional commentaries he has published in Corriere della Sera since 1978.
While his lack of political strings has gained him widespread trust, it could also work against him as the head of a government of technocrats.
“There is concern being voiced here in some quarters about whether it is a good move to install a government which is not anchored in partisan politics in Italy. You need politics in Italy,” said Paris-based Thomas Klau of the European Council of Foreign Relations. “Leaving that objection aside, I think there is no other figure currently in Italy enjoying so much cross-border respect as Mario Monti.”
Monti has indicated his strategy for governing a politically divided Italy in editorials on the crisis he has written for Corriere, said Francesco Giavazzi, an economics professor at Bocconi. Recognizing that structural reforms will be unpopular in vast segments of the population, Monti’s philosophy is to spread the pain: balance reforms harmful to voters on the left with those harmful to voters on the right.
“At the end of the day, you are at the same point. That is his philosophy to avoid the deadlock in the reform process,” Giavazzi said. “You can argue that his theory will be very hard to implement. I think the strong point of the government is that it would have a very clear idea of what to do.”
___
Brooke Donald contributed from Palo Alto, California.

‘Super Mario’ tapped to cure Italy’s economic ills

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MILAN (AP) — The man tapped to be Italy‘s next premier earned the moniker “Super Mario” in the halls of the European Commission, stopping such corporate giants as Jack Welch and Bill Gates in their competitive tracks.
Elegantly attired with a formal demeanor, Mario Monti proved his mettle as a tough negotiator when he blocked the merger of General Electric and Honeywell and levied a euro500 million fine against Microsoft for abusing its dominant position.
“He moves with caution and speaks with nuances. But he moves,” said Carlo Guarnieri, a political scientist at the University of Bologna.
A leading economist, Monti is among the most respected men in the country and the most admired Italians 
in Europe.
That will be no guarantee for success in the Herculean task before him: building a majority large enough to push painful structural reforms through a fractured Parliament to prevent Italy from being dragged into the burgeoning debt crisis.

But he has some clear assets: he is part of the Italian financial establishment, has strong ties to European institutions and governments and enjoys the clear support of President Giorgio Napolitano, who gave Monti a mandate Sunday to form a new government.
Providing a sober contrast to the audacious Silvio Berlusconi, who resigned Saturday, Monti also is the favorite of the financial markets, which eased pressure on Italian borrowing costs after his candidacy gained currency.
Monti, 68, cuts an austere and serious figure, which people who know him say defies a subtle wit. He is multilingual and moves easily among European capitals. Now the president of Milan’s prestigious Bocconi University, he spent 10 years at the European Commission, about half in the powerful post of competition commissioner, and is one of the founders of the Brussels-based Bruegel think tank, which blends research with policy recommendations.
Monti is fully engaged in the European conversation on the common currency and the role of its institutions. The night Napolitano named him senator for life in Rome this past week, Monti was sitting on a panel discussing the euro’s future in Berlin.
“A person on the flight from Milan this morning asked me, ‘Mr. Monti, are you sure your are taking the right flight?’” he quipped.
While there is no question Monti is part of the political elite and travels in the rarified circles of European policymakers, he does not give the impression of being out of touch with ordinary Italians. TV clips show Monti filling his car with gas — a clear contrast with fumbling responses by lawmakers asked recently by TV satire programs the price of fuel.
In perk-filled Italy, the image of Monti at the gas tank carries more meaning than that of a powerful figure engaged in ordinary tasks, but that of a powerful man who does not seek privilege — something he says he wants to stamp out.
“By introducing more competition, we will in due course introduce more merit and less of a role for nepotism, clientism, corruption, whatever,” Monti said in Berlin this week.
Monti was born in the town of Varese, north of Milan, the son of a bank manager. As a teen, his father took him to see the U.S. and the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War so he could form a personal view of the two powers.
He earned an economics and management degree at Bocconi and later studied in the U.S. at Yale, and spent years teaching economics at several Italian universities. He is recognized as a champion of the free market and reduced government spending, who has been influential in setting European and international antitrust standards.
“I have always been considered to be the most German among Italian economists, which I always received as a compliment, but which was rarely meant to be a compliment,” Monti told a panel on the euro crisis hosted by the Dahrendorf Symposium in Berlin.
He has called the German culture of stability one of its “better exports” — a view which certainly will help Rome’s relations with powerful Berlin as he tackles Italy‘s enormous debt and stagnant growth. But associates say he also is confident to stand up to European institutions — something the Berlusconi government has lacked.
Monti is well aware of the negative prejudices faced by Italians in the European arena, a view only exacerbated in recent years by Berlusconi’s sex scandals, numerous trials for business dealings and public gaffes, sometimes at the expense of other leaders.
Although well-known in his own right, the contrast with Berlusconi is playing well across Europe. ZDF German television this week described Monti as a “sober finance expert — the opposite of Berlusconi.”
“I think Mario is viewed as a breath of fresh air which would immediately garner that kind of positive sense from other major European leaders,” a former U.S. ambassador to Italy, Ronald Spolgi, said on the sidelines of a conference at Stanford University.
Fellow Milan resident Giorgio Armani thinks Monti “is physically perfect for being premier,” praising his “cerebral elegance.”
Monti has managed a difficult feat in polarized Italy: He has respect both of the left and the right. Few would be able to court favor from both Berlusconi and archrival Romano Prodi, but Monti did just that. Berlusconi’s government nominated Monti to the European Commission in 1994, while Prodi, at the time EU president, made him EU competition commissioner in 1999.
Berlusconi this week offered his congratulations to Monti on his appointment as senator for life, recognizing his “outstanding achievements in the field of science and social work.”
Only in recent months has Monti openly said it was time for Berlusconi to go in the occasional commentaries he has published in Corriere della Sera since 1978.
While his lack of political strings has gained him widespread trust, it could also work against him as the head of a government of technocrats.
“There is concern being voiced here in some quarters about whether it is a good move to install a government which is not anchored in partisan politics in Italy. You need politics in Italy,” said Paris-based Thomas Klau of the European Council of Foreign Relations. “Leaving that objection aside, I think there is no other figure currently in Italy enjoying so much cross-border respect as Mario Monti.”
Monti has indicated his strategy for governing a politically divided Italy in editorials on the crisis he has written for Corriere, said Francesco Giavazzi, an economics professor at Bocconi. Recognizing that structural reforms will be unpopular in vast segments of the population, Monti’s philosophy is to spread the pain: balance reforms harmful to voters on the left with those harmful to voters on the right.
“At the end of the day, you are at the same point. That is his philosophy to avoid the deadlock in the reform process,” Giavazzi said. “You can argue that his theory will be very hard to implement. I think the strong point of the government is that it would have a very clear idea of what to do.”
___
Brooke Donald contributed from Palo Alto, California.

Reading the North

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By Katie Mangelsdorf (Publication Consultants, $19.95)

The blurb: This biography tells the story of Joe Redington and how he would go on to become the “Father of the Iditarod.”


Excerpt: “The Redingtons now had their first Alaska winter under their belt. Spring was poking its nose around the corner and Joe had made a decision. Time to build a new cabin. This new cabin would have only one stove to stoke this time. And no running water. The first batch of mosquitoes made its grand and noisy entrance. Though their bite was weak, their size foretold the next wave of vicious and voracious mosquitoes. What the second wave lost in size, they sure made up in numbers. But as most Alaskans do, the Redingtons learned to overlook those noisome insects and tune in only to the work at hand. Joe learned that ‘if you don’t make a fuss at them, they won’t make a fuss at you.’

“Vi added with a smile, ‘When people fuss about mosquitoes now, I just kinda laugh.’

“Joe had a house to build.”

012 to Oneness: What World Do You Choose?

By Lizette Estelle Stiehr (Northbooks, $22)

The blurb: A collection of poetry, Stiehr offers a view of the year 2012 as an end of an era, not the end of the world, drawing inspiration from extensive study of the Mayan calendar.


Excerpt: “No one snowflake

“thinks it is responsible

“for the avalanche.

“Yet as each crystalline form

“seeks to reflect the light,

“the light switch

“is turned on.

“No more shoveling out the dark.

“The balance has shifted.

“An avalanche of Light!”

Alaska Quarterly Review

Edited by Ronald Spatz (University of Alaska Anchorage, $6.95)

The blurb: The literary journal is published twice each year and features collections in fiction, nonfiction and poetry.


Excerpt: “It happens when she’s in the checkout line at Kroger: the child ahead of her — a toddler, no more than three, says loudly, ‘Mommy, did that lady eat a baby?’ He’s staring at Gretel’s bright red sweatshirt.

“The toddler‘s mother is in high heels. Her hair is perfect. She smiles at Gretel and says, ‘I’m sorry about him. When are you due?’

” ‘I didn’t eat a baby,’ Gretel informs the toddler. Then, to his mother: ‘I’m not pregnant, I’m fat. You should teach your son that it’s rude to ask personal questions.’

“Then she leaves her cart where it is and steps out the sliding doors into the Mississippi sunshine.”

Reading the North

1 comment
By Katie Mangelsdorf (Publication Consultants, $19.95)

The blurb: This biography tells the story of Joe Redington and how he would go on to become the “Father of the Iditarod.”


Excerpt: “The Redingtons now had their first Alaska winter under their belt. Spring was poking its nose around the corner and Joe had made a decision. Time to build a new cabin. This new cabin would have only one stove to stoke this time. And no running water. The first batch of mosquitoes made its grand and noisy entrance. Though their bite was weak, their size foretold the next wave of vicious and voracious mosquitoes. What the second wave lost in size, they sure made up in numbers. But as most Alaskans do, the Redingtons learned to overlook those noisome insects and tune in only to the work at hand. Joe learned that ‘if you don’t make a fuss at them, they won’t make a fuss at you.’

“Vi added with a smile, ‘When people fuss about mosquitoes now, I just kinda laugh.’

“Joe had a house to build.”

012 to Oneness: What World Do You Choose?

By Lizette Estelle Stiehr (Northbooks, $22)

The blurb: A collection of poetry, Stiehr offers a view of the year 2012 as an end of an era, not the end of the world, drawing inspiration from extensive study of the Mayan calendar.


Excerpt: “No one snowflake

“thinks it is responsible

“for the avalanche.

“Yet as each crystalline form

“seeks to reflect the light,

“the light switch

“is turned on.

“No more shoveling out the dark.

“The balance has shifted.

“An avalanche of Light!”

Alaska Quarterly Review

Edited by Ronald Spatz (University of Alaska Anchorage, $6.95)

The blurb: The literary journal is published twice each year and features collections in fiction, nonfiction and poetry.


Excerpt: “It happens when she’s in the checkout line at Kroger: the child ahead of her — a toddler, no more than three, says loudly, ‘Mommy, did that lady eat a baby?’ He’s staring at Gretel’s bright red sweatshirt.

“The toddler‘s mother is in high heels. Her hair is perfect. She smiles at Gretel and says, ‘I’m sorry about him. When are you due?’

” ‘I didn’t eat a baby,’ Gretel informs the toddler. Then, to his mother: ‘I’m not pregnant, I’m fat. You should teach your son that it’s rude to ask personal questions.’

“Then she leaves her cart where it is and steps out the sliding doors into the Mississippi sunshine.”

UAA anthropology found rewrite Aleutian social history

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UAA anthropology found rewrite Aleutian social history
Diane Hanson can look back and laugh — right now.
More than 25 years have elapsed since she was young, and reported to the Alaska Anthropological Association as a graduate student in anthropology at Adak in the usual place, about 1. archeological site — Aleutian-coastline She and fellow workers found it very far inland, along the coast.
This is common. Since the 1950s, anthropology coastal communities was all that mattered was claimed in the Aleutians. Villagers hunting, wildlife need access to the island and most of all, there are no mammals just no reason to go hunting inland. The island interior were simply natural barrier between the marginal coastal communities. They were related.
Anthropology graduate student research results, kind of a young audience. “Cross” Hanson was how to remember the experience.
But later in the year, Hanson, now a Professor of anthropology, her hair to UAA. As it turns out, she was found in 1983, the site is independently confirmed by another anthropologist, 1993 and 2005, the National Science Foundation grant in the end $ 430000 help her win a $ 10,000 grant from the UAA‘s Secretary of graduate and undergraduate students with Hanson, she was discovered in 1983 near the site were excavated and Adak again one.
And guess what? She was right.

She again throughout every summer since, Adak, and expand her survey there has been a lot of upland sites away from the coastline. Answers to questions, and share this news is worried about Hanson and her research team.
Among them:
· The most accessible inland waterfowl in the Lake was an important food source?
· Some plants were required and how they use?
· Site for what was used in the Highlands?
· What is the relationship between these new coastal dwellings and found enclaves exist in upland between the?
· What’s your story to the daily life can be for these new discoveries at?
“We were like, what life really is a simple way to view” co-worker Debbie Corbett, United States fish and Wildlife Service and the archaeologists said. “Scientists ‘ biological units, sharp objects and food are increasingly talking in terms of ‘ walk around, but these were people like us.
“They said, raising kids, sometimes irrational things, and getting into a political Brawl. There ALE actions, and we just don’t know there are so many nuances in the activity. “
Whatever her research team finds public information widely Aleutian Island native groups, land managers, and educators will be shared with. Already have their Facebook page, and you tube channel, they find it has been a conduit for sharing what they find.
Thomas Mack, President of the Corporation says Hanson ALE works “our history and our culture, you can learn about. We like her integrity. She gives us the full report, and all the relics came back to us. “
Hansen describes her latest research and free public talk UAA campus bookstore, 5-7: displaying photos on Monday. Parking is a parking lot outside a bookstore to attend free of charge.

Modify the doctrine

As it turns out, the insist science Diane Hanson, this gene may be lucky.
Boss accused her of it once when she looked at him and asked, “How do you think I’m where I am?”
“Working class women in the home, the school made it through as a matter of fact, it is important to keep in your field. Especially in the field of anthropology, where they are looking for a husband to find really picture. I don’t think they’ll amount to anything because it does not get much attention.
“So you have your head down and get your degree or your research your way through the Bull.”
It is a young graduate student of Anthropology Association has gelled that grit before castigated internal. “You told me you are in the wrong, you don’t forget it at 25,” she said.
But more personal satisfaction, Hanson and her graduate and undergraduate student researchers will achieve a significant contribution. They and the archaeological record, you’re correct in fact confirmed by Corbett.
“All our research, we are a conservative bunch, archaeologists,” she said, “especially when you’re not a ‘ challenge ‘ received wisdom.” a lot of forgiveness out there.
Corbett’s favorite Aleutian for example? Every single home site excavated extensively on Adak charcoal exhibits use despite the fact that the structure and fire-cracked rock records, hearth still reflect the Aleuts did not use in their homes and hearths. Supposedly, they open the lamp and food to eat only raw. The evidence is just that longer, she said, is not supported.

A logistical nightmare

In the summer of 2010, probably the toughest years. Tempest hit a Weatherport equipment tent uprooting and briefly airborne spend their research sites. They lost their outhouse. Saturated electric gears filled with rain water, their excavation of the site. They are still alive and the outside world had to use their satellite phones.
This past summer, before they had their anchorage to Adak, finally landing a plane transmission from there, although much more fog. they to the West of Ireland for the scene around the United States fish and Wildlife Service vessel. Once he leaves the ship, Hanson said, they can be 4-8 weeks during his fieldwork season.
“3 weeks you anxiety,” Hanson said. “6, you are like a couple with a different Quark. 8 yet? 8 weeks long really. “
But the team needs a lot of time to complete a single upland House thoroughly dig. It was a random selection of potential in the area of 22.
They go inside, and with them to plan for potential residents had taken everything, because the symbol artifact free “planned giving” House features. They make the most of what you find outside the points, had deleted things lamp broken broken.
But inside, they are Alaska Native science and engineering program to decrypt invites engineering students in both UAA some hope on the stove I’ve found a vent with sloping. What is the purpose of the circular floor down and back vents —? the column If you want to sort out yet another new puzzle for them.
Social media debut
Erica Saint Malo, the research team of graduate students the opportunity to develop and communicate with the audience, such as Facebook and you tube is introduced.
Photography, weekly outdoor work updates and video are common staples. Saint Malo her audience how to make it use Facebook page reader survey is completed and all have been for about a year, live.
Education in the subject area and environment interact with social media are in progress, currently are the subject of her master’s thesis.
She still analyze the survey results; closed November 7. But she can provide this perspective. A total of 156 followers her survey audience of 32.
Whether or not they know what Adak was asked her “upland sites”, which is the archaeological field school.
Facebook readers well done. everybody knows where what Adak, 86% of the audience fully understood that the most difficult questions about seemed “upland sites”.
Hanson said she was a research fellow, social media, as soon as it is science publications than it is to hang about, consider how to push it.
“As soon as we get carbon date on the site, they come to Facebook,” she said.
As far as the Central Aleutian-life and culture back to 2600 more revelation of the clock. Hanson is just more national research project will continue to apply for funding. If you go to next spring, will hear from her.  
Graduate student Erica Saint Malo archeological site describes the action in the field that was created by.
Kathleen McCoy College of the University of Alaska Anchorage Office of development for the work.

UAA anthropology found rewrite Aleutian social history

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UAA anthropology found rewrite Aleutian social history
Diane Hanson can look back and laugh — right now.
More than 25 years have elapsed since she was young, and reported to the Alaska Anthropological Association as a graduate student in anthropology at Adak in the usual place, about 1. archeological site — Aleutian-coastline She and fellow workers found it very far inland, along the coast.
This is common. Since the 1950s, anthropology coastal communities was all that mattered was claimed in the Aleutians. Villagers hunting, wildlife need access to the island and most of all, there are no mammals just no reason to go hunting inland. The island interior were simply natural barrier between the marginal coastal communities. They were related.
Anthropology graduate student research results, kind of a young audience. “Cross” Hanson was how to remember the experience.
But later in the year, Hanson, now a Professor of anthropology, her hair to UAA. As it turns out, she was found in 1983, the site is independently confirmed by another anthropologist, 1993 and 2005, the National Science Foundation grant in the end $ 430000 help her win a $ 10,000 grant from the UAA‘s Secretary of graduate and undergraduate students with Hanson, she was discovered in 1983 near the site were excavated and Adak again one.
And guess what? She was right.

She again throughout every summer since, Adak, and expand her survey there has been a lot of upland sites away from the coastline. Answers to questions, and share this news is worried about Hanson and her research team.
Among them:
· The most accessible inland waterfowl in the Lake was an important food source?
· Some plants were required and how they use?
· Site for what was used in the Highlands?
· What is the relationship between these new coastal dwellings and found enclaves exist in upland between the?
· What’s your story to the daily life can be for these new discoveries at?
“We were like, what life really is a simple way to view” co-worker Debbie Corbett, United States fish and Wildlife Service and the archaeologists said. “Scientists ‘ biological units, sharp objects and food are increasingly talking in terms of ‘ walk around, but these were people like us.
“They said, raising kids, sometimes irrational things, and getting into a political Brawl. There ALE actions, and we just don’t know there are so many nuances in the activity. “
Whatever her research team finds public information widely Aleutian Island native groups, land managers, and educators will be shared with. Already have their Facebook page, and you tube channel, they find it has been a conduit for sharing what they find.
Thomas Mack, President of the Corporation says Hanson ALE works “our history and our culture, you can learn about. We like her integrity. She gives us the full report, and all the relics came back to us. “
Hansen describes her latest research and free public talk UAA campus bookstore, 5-7: displaying photos on Monday. Parking is a parking lot outside a bookstore to attend free of charge.

Modify the doctrine

As it turns out, the insist science Diane Hanson, this gene may be lucky.
Boss accused her of it once when she looked at him and asked, “How do you think I’m where I am?”
“Working class women in the home, the school made it through as a matter of fact, it is important to keep in your field. Especially in the field of anthropology, where they are looking for a husband to find really picture. I don’t think they’ll amount to anything because it does not get much attention.
“So you have your head down and get your degree or your research your way through the Bull.”
It is a young graduate student of Anthropology Association has gelled that grit before castigated internal. “You told me you are in the wrong, you don’t forget it at 25,” she said.
But more personal satisfaction, Hanson and her graduate and undergraduate student researchers will achieve a significant contribution. They and the archaeological record, you’re correct in fact confirmed by Corbett.
“All our research, we are a conservative bunch, archaeologists,” she said, “especially when you’re not a ‘ challenge ‘ received wisdom.” a lot of forgiveness out there.
Corbett’s favorite Aleutian for example? Every single home site excavated extensively on Adak charcoal exhibits use despite the fact that the structure and fire-cracked rock records, hearth still reflect the Aleuts did not use in their homes and hearths. Supposedly, they open the lamp and food to eat only raw. The evidence is just that longer, she said, is not supported.

A logistical nightmare

In the summer of 2010, probably the toughest years. Tempest hit a Weatherport equipment tent uprooting and briefly airborne spend their research sites. They lost their outhouse. Saturated electric gears filled with rain water, their excavation of the site. They are still alive and the outside world had to use their satellite phones.
This past summer, before they had their anchorage to Adak, finally landing a plane transmission from there, although much more fog. they to the West of Ireland for the scene around the United States fish and Wildlife Service vessel. Once he leaves the ship, Hanson said, they can be 4-8 weeks during his fieldwork season.
“3 weeks you anxiety,” Hanson said. “6, you are like a couple with a different Quark. 8 yet? 8 weeks long really. “
But the team needs a lot of time to complete a single upland House thoroughly dig. It was a random selection of potential in the area of 22.
They go inside, and with them to plan for potential residents had taken everything, because the symbol artifact free “planned giving” House features. They make the most of what you find outside the points, had deleted things lamp broken broken.
But inside, they are Alaska Native science and engineering program to decrypt invites engineering students in both UAA some hope on the stove I’ve found a vent with sloping. What is the purpose of the circular floor down and back vents —? the column If you want to sort out yet another new puzzle for them.
Social media debut
Erica Saint Malo, the research team of graduate students the opportunity to develop and communicate with the audience, such as Facebook and you tube is introduced.
Photography, weekly outdoor work updates and video are common staples. Saint Malo her audience how to make it use Facebook page reader survey is completed and all have been for about a year, live.
Education in the subject area and environment interact with social media are in progress, currently are the subject of her master’s thesis.
She still analyze the survey results; closed November 7. But she can provide this perspective. A total of 156 followers her survey audience of 32.
Whether or not they know what Adak was asked her “upland sites”, which is the archaeological field school.
Facebook readers well done. everybody knows where what Adak, 86% of the audience fully understood that the most difficult questions about seemed “upland sites”.
Hanson said she was a research fellow, social media, as soon as it is science publications than it is to hang about, consider how to push it.
“As soon as we get carbon date on the site, they come to Facebook,” she said.
As far as the Central Aleutian-life and culture back to 2600 more revelation of the clock. Hanson is just more national research project will continue to apply for funding. If you go to next spring, will hear from her.  
Graduate student Erica Saint Malo archeological site describes the action in the field that was created by.
Kathleen McCoy College of the University of Alaska Anchorage Office of development for the work.

Oysters, King crab can soothe the winter blahs

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Oysters, King crab can soothe the winter blahs
For people who love the winter is the time to celebrate.
Sympathy for the people who hate the winter time.
One way to do one with a good meal.
10 amp; M lot in Anchorage Dannon Southall seafood fresh from the sea have options.
“This is such a cool temps and deep snow, the perfect way to spoil yourself,” he said.
Southall both spoiling suggests options for:
First, you can use this for $ 9.95 Alaska oysters live 12 weeks. Southall oysters, halibut is still available, including some fresh fish will pair well but will be in short supply as soon as possible.
Halibut fish or fillets ($ 19.95 per pound).
“Halibut season is soon, and how to take advantage of this fresh handling of last week, along with the weather turning there is expected to be finalized,” said Southall.
Second, fresh Jumbo Red King crab, you will be able to on Friday.
Fresh from the Southall Southeast will be limited to the cluster, and he suggested to make a reservation call ahead.

 
Farmers in the
All eyes will be on at 11: 00 am back: Earth Mall today at 6: farmers are not slowing down.
Stripetti organic sugar pumpkin, Rempel family farm, jumbo pink banana squash squash, radish, carrot, cabbage, potatoes, sugar beets, full duplex of eight varieties.
Bern Stockwell wave, onions, carrots, beets, kohlrabi, cabbage, potatoes and raised beef and pork market with Alaska.
Also in Alaska, in the market with beef country health foods. Duane Clark Clark is also a local free-range chicken, seafood, local honey, you must freeze.
4-color ad farm of Alex Davies carrots, potatoes, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and fresh full duplex, chicken and duck eggs. He also said, “I get a cut of pork meat swung by the Mount McKinley reload.”
So a freshly paved side pork, chops, roast, steak, ground pork, hocks, sausage, liver, fat expectations.
The following options are available in the market, good pork recipe gluten free simple options.
Teriyaki pork and vegetables with noodles
8 oz. uncooked spaghetti with gluten-free
4 green onions
1 tbsp dark sesame oil
1 cup thinly sliced red bell pepper
3 Center cut boneless pork loin (4 ounces each)
1 package dried mushroom slices (3 1/2 oz)
1/3 cup low-sodium teriyaki sauce
4 tsps chilli garlic sauce
Follow the instructions on the package of salt and fat, omit the pasta dishes. Drain the pasta, ¼ cup water; Reservations, keep warm.
Green Onion thinly slice and set aside from the removal of the green tops;. Green Onion; the white parts of the mince set aside.
A large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat the oil in a column. Chopped green onions, green peppers, pork and mushrooms; Add 3 minutes or until browned pork saute. ¼ Cup of pasta water, reserved teriyaki sauce and chili garlic sauce in a small bowl, stirring with a whisk combined. Fan; Add the pasta mixture, teriyaki sauce coats threw well. Stir sliced green onions on top.
Serve.
Source: “gluten-free Cookbook: simple food solutions for everyday meals” cooking light magazine ($ 21.95, Oxmoor House)
Steve Edwards, lives and writes in the anchorage. If you have suggestions for future market fresh column, please contact sedwards@adn.com.

Oysters, King crab can soothe the winter blahs

No comments
Oysters, King crab can soothe the winter blahs
For people who love the winter is the time to celebrate.
Sympathy for the people who hate the winter time.
One way to do one with a good meal.
10 amp; M lot in Anchorage Dannon Southall seafood fresh from the sea have options.
“This is such a cool temps and deep snow, the perfect way to spoil yourself,” he said.
Southall both spoiling suggests options for:
First, you can use this for $ 9.95 Alaska oysters live 12 weeks. Southall oysters, halibut is still available, including some fresh fish will pair well but will be in short supply as soon as possible.
Halibut fish or fillets ($ 19.95 per pound).
“Halibut season is soon, and how to take advantage of this fresh handling of last week, along with the weather turning there is expected to be finalized,” said Southall.
Second, fresh Jumbo Red King crab, you will be able to on Friday.
Fresh from the Southall Southeast will be limited to the cluster, and he suggested to make a reservation call ahead.

 
Farmers in the
All eyes will be on at 11: 00 am back: Earth Mall today at 6: farmers are not slowing down.
Stripetti organic sugar pumpkin, Rempel family farm, jumbo pink banana squash squash, radish, carrot, cabbage, potatoes, sugar beets, full duplex of eight varieties.
Bern Stockwell wave, onions, carrots, beets, kohlrabi, cabbage, potatoes and raised beef and pork market with Alaska.
Also in Alaska, in the market with beef country health foods. Duane Clark Clark is also a local free-range chicken, seafood, local honey, you must freeze.
4-color ad farm of Alex Davies carrots, potatoes, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and fresh full duplex, chicken and duck eggs. He also said, “I get a cut of pork meat swung by the Mount McKinley reload.”
So a freshly paved side pork, chops, roast, steak, ground pork, hocks, sausage, liver, fat expectations.
The following options are available in the market, good pork recipe gluten free simple options.
Teriyaki pork and vegetables with noodles
8 oz. uncooked spaghetti with gluten-free
4 green onions
1 tbsp dark sesame oil
1 cup thinly sliced red bell pepper
3 Center cut boneless pork loin (4 ounces each)
1 package dried mushroom slices (3 1/2 oz)
1/3 cup low-sodium teriyaki sauce
4 tsps chilli garlic sauce
Follow the instructions on the package of salt and fat, omit the pasta dishes. Drain the pasta, ¼ cup water; Reservations, keep warm.
Green Onion thinly slice and set aside from the removal of the green tops;. Green Onion; the white parts of the mince set aside.
A large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat the oil in a column. Chopped green onions, green peppers, pork and mushrooms; Add 3 minutes or until browned pork saute. ¼ Cup of pasta water, reserved teriyaki sauce and chili garlic sauce in a small bowl, stirring with a whisk combined. Fan; Add the pasta mixture, teriyaki sauce coats threw well. Stir sliced green onions on top.
Serve.
Source: “gluten-free Cookbook: simple food solutions for everyday meals” cooking light magazine ($ 21.95, Oxmoor House)
Steve Edwards, lives and writes in the anchorage. If you have suggestions for future market fresh column, please contact sedwards@adn.com.