Wednesday, January 27, 2010

National Holocaust Remembrance Day, Goodbye to a $43-million clown and a requiem For Georges & Mireille Anglade


Hi again and yep, from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Today, we join Jews and Gentiles alike around the world in a solemn observance of Holocaust Remembrance Day, Yom Hashoah. This date was selected to mark the Holocaust because it commemorates the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.

In all, some six million children, women and men perished in the Holocaust. They were murdered, systematically and with malice aforethought, for being Jewish. It is not the first time genocide has happened in history and there is hardly a nation on the face of this planet which has not engaged in a form of it. In remembering this Holocaust, we remember them all, and in so doing, perhaps prevent them from ever happening again, anywhere, to anyone. For more on this one, please go here.

I found it very “interesting” that so much of the news was dominated by an Irish-American comedian whose forehead looks to me stretched by a funhouse mirror and whose red hair reminds me of the Joker in Batman whining about not being as media immortal as his predecessors and walking away with $43-million buyout for himself and another $12-million for his staff.

Meanwhile, the state I’m living in has 300,000 unemployed actively looking for work and Haiti’s still desperately in need of the kind of help that comes from small weekly donations as well corporate pledges and the ongoing aid of the international community.

I found myself wondering just how much ten percent of what this comedian is going to be making for NOT performing would go toward making a critical difference to a small island nation fighting so hard for its very life right now.

I get kidded sometimes for going to bed way before these people come on. With all due respect, I really can’t see as how I’ve missed much. I was raised partly on a ranch and the most egotistical creature on it was a jackass.

We join Canada and the international community in mourning the death, during the Haitian Quake, of Quebec author, geographer and former Haitian cabinet minister Georges Anglade and his wife, Mireille. According to Quill & Quire’s Laura Godfrey:

“The two were there on a family holiday, and Anglade was meant to take part in the international literary festival Étonnants Voyageurs, which has now been cancelled.

“Georges Anglade, former professor at the University of Quebec in Montreal, was 65.

The CTV reports:

“Georges and Mireille Anglade were trapped in the rubble of a home on Tuesday and did not survive. They became the second and third Canadians killed by the Caribbean catastrophe.…

‘A former political prisoner under the Duvalier regime, [Georges] was active in pushing for democracy in the poverty stricken country and wrote several books.”

For more on this one, please go here.

Even though the Haitian government has officially suspended rescue operations, those continue on the part of the international community and the need for more ongoing relief continues. Here is a list of ways to do this and even if it’s just a dollar or two per week, it mounts up fast and it goes a long way.

MORE GOOD NEWS

This one resonates some under the LONG OVERDUE category
. It is about unsung heroes, lady heroes, and under a headline Pioneering women pilots of WWII get a belated honor, Seattle Times reporter Nancy Bartley tells us:

“They were mavericks of their day, taking to the skies when the nation was at war and most women were at home caring for families. At a ceremony this spring, 11 Washington women will join the 200-some surviving Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) in receiving Congressional Gold Medals for service during World War II.

“Sixteen more medals will be given to local WASPs posthumously.”

For more on this one, then, please go here.

While one Washington National Guardsman was serving in Iraq, his wife, sons and sister-in-law were murdered and his home burned to the ground. I’ve seen less destroy stronger men but it’s not going to happen, thanks in part to this soldiers neighbors. For a story about what happens when a community cares, please go here.

In acknowledgement that obesity is killing America’s children at an alarming rate, First Lady Michelle Obama is declaring her own war. In stating that the rate of childhood obesity has tripled in the last 30 years, and acknowledging that money is tight right now, she nonetheless reminded us that kids are still the greatest natural resource any nation has and, as well, that:

"Leadership is about having the foresight and the courage to make those sacrifices and investments in the short run that pay big dividends, often paying for themselves many times over in the long run."

For more on this one, please go here.

Seattle’s using some of its garbage to generate electricity. According to KPLU radio’s Liam Moriarty:

“Seattle residents recycle about half of their waste. The rest, about 400,000 tons a year, gets put on trains and shipped to a massive landfill in north-central Oregon. Waste Management, the company that runs the Columbia Ridge landfill, collects the methane gas produced as garbage decomposes and burns it to generate electricity. Waste Management's Dean Kattler says that closes an energy loop.

"’The waste collected in the city of Seattle goes to our Columbia Ridge landfill, and now the energy produced at the landfill comes right back to the city of Seattle.'

With Valentine’s Day coming up, you might want to check out this list of foods that can increase the libido and these that can increase your overall enjoyment of life. Yep, I eat a lot of them and they’ve certainly made a difference in my life.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES


Believe it or not, despite all the bad news about layoffs and jobs being hard to find, there are a growing number of people who, as reported by The Tyee’s Pia Bahile, Curtis File and Kevin Young, are finding some unique ways to put things they love doing anyway toward generating an income.

From EduPunks to food jewelers, people are using new tools to take learning, art, entertainment, technology, politics, and even science into their own hands. Behold the growing Maker Movement.

This one is a romp, particularly for those who tinker, spend lots of time with arts and crafts, or who are just desperate enough to see how other people are generating some income during these hard times.

This is the first in a series and I highly recommend bookmarking this one. For more, of course, go here.

CRITTER STUFF


The Labrador retriever remains the most popular breed of dog in the United States, according to a report released today by the American Kennel Club. That’s a distinction Labs have held for 19 years. German Shepherds, in second place since the days of Hollywood canine actor Rin Tin Tin, held that spot while Yorkshire Terriers came in third. To see how other dogs ranked and which breeds were most popular in major American cities, please go here. For a video on the top ten, check this out.


FROM YOU GUYS FOR YOU GUYS

We’d like to take this opportunity to wish a very special human being a Happy 70th Birthday. She’s from a part of America made famous by Mark Twain, Bret Harte, Jack London, William Saroyan and John Steinbeck. It’s also where writer Joan Didion grew up and from where she drew the heart of Slouching Toward Bethlehem. It’s a land rich in heritage and hard times and she’s very much of both. She’s a devout family woman who does for her community. She’s lived that way all her life and to her 70 is just a number. She’ll be rocking and rolling for some while yet and inspiring others some by her example. Happy Birthday, Peg. Finest kind. You rock, girl.






YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP. Anyone who flips me an attitude about global warming until after the 2010 Winter Olympics is likely to get a wet mitten right in the kisser. We’ve just learned that because of an usually dry and balmy winter, attributed to the same phenomenon which is melting the polar ice caps and opening up the Northwest Passage all year round is making it necessary to truck and helicopter in thousand of cubic yards of snow in time for the Games. Someone asked me if Canadians had snow machines and aside from a low tolerance for stupid questions, logic would suggest that for a global sports event of this magnitude, said machines probably aren’t going to cut it. Yep, oh ye of little faith, check it out here.

That’s it for this week. We’ve got some cool stuff down below you might want to check out. Stay the course, gang. We’re getting there and we’re going to make it. And thanks once again for the ear. And stuff.

Rusty


NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

FUN STUFF


Ever been told you look like someone famous? Ever not been told that but would like to have been? Find a photo of yourself, go to this site, MyHeritage.com, upload it and get a gallery of celebrities you resemble, to one degree or another. Yep, it’s a total waste of time and an unabashed indulgence of ego. Probably two reasons why I totally loved it, even though a couple of my own pix didn’t turn up any results. It’s fun to play with so enjoy.

How about a trip to Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo to watch a couple of grizzly bears in their Northwest setting? Yep, click here and thanks to our friends at Puget Sound NBC affiliate KING 5.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

Grub you libido will love.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Take this test to see how your memory compares with the average. Click here for fun games to improve your memory.


ONLINE TOOLS FOR THE KIT

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.


REVIEWS

If you like your news proactive and edgy, we strongly recommend this daily ezine out of Western Canada. It might also go a bit toward the re-education of those who consider their neighbor to the north long on good manners but short on guts and good sense. Canadians pick their battles and this is one good window into how they do it. For more on this one, please go here.

FOR YOUR ONLINE SHOPPING CONVENIENCE


We invite you to do all your amazon.com shopping by tapping this link.

MEDIA

Overview


For those interested in what’s going on in the world of magazines and newspapers in general, we highly recommend Woodenhorsepub.com. They publish a weekly online newsletter for media professionals and for readers simply interested in the future of the publications they enjoy and an advance on new ones they might. Their website is located here.

GOOD READS


Entertainment

BBC Knowledge Magazine – designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

TomatoMan Times -- For those who love good writing, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsman out there now than professionally known as Tomatoman Mike. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

News

BBC – Best source of international news.

Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (multi-media), the Toronto Globe & Mail and the Vancouver Sun -- outstanding sources for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

KING 5 News – Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

New York Times – Best source of American news.

Reuters – Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.


Talent For Hire

Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist – Whether it’s a one time press release, book or product review, difficult business correspondence, resume or classified ad composition you need, take a look at the services offered menu on my writer-for-hire homepage and we’ll get together on it.

Are you a travel editor looking for color shots of Seattle? Are you an art dealer looking for new work to carry on consignment? You might enjoy checking out a gallery of my work for sale

See you next week, eh?

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Seattle dries out after heavy rains, Haitian relief escalates and Happy Birthday, Michelle

The Seattle Chamber of Commerce is probably not going to like us very much, but honesty compels. This is what it looks like in this town sometimes. This was taken in the University District of Seattle over the weekend. Photo by MS(R)M
Hi again and yep, from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound, it’s been another interesting week. January’s been an exceptionally wet month, with most of the western part of Washington on flood and landslide alert. But it’s nothing compared to what Haiti and other parts of North America and the UK have gone through. We’re cognizant of that and reflecting on it some as we dry out.

Our hearts and prayers continue to go out to all those impacted by the Haiti Quake. We are very proud that two former American presidents for forming a non-partisan organization to fund the long haul restoration of that devastated island nation. We also applaud President Barack Obama and his staff for, what in our personal experience at the trenches end of this kind of thing, has been a prompt, measured and well orchestrated response to this natural disaster.

Given that my own True North was among the first to respond, that gratitude extends to Canada and some beyond the five flags this modest weekly ezine reaches.

The entire international community is united in this one and I’m encouraged. It seems that more and more of us agree with English cleric and essayist John Donne, who, in Meditations 17, contended that no man is an island.

Thank you, one and all and that having been said and some closer to home…

We are also flying the Northstar flag at half mast this week as Washington State mourns the loss of one of its own to the earthquake in Haiti. The body of 22-year-old Molly Hightower was found in the wreckage of the orphanage where she worked as a volunteer. Molly was a credit to her country, her region, her community and her family. If you’d like to be inspired by a good example, please go here.

And yes, the Michelle in the headline is Michelle LaVaughn Robinson Obama, daughter of blue collar stock in Chicago who took her bachelors in sociology from Princeton and her law degree from Harvard and was a corporate lawyer assigned to mentor a new attorney when she met her husband.

So we’d like to take this opportunity to wish America’s First Lady a happy birthday. She turned 46 this past Sunday, January 17. For more on this remarkable individual, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

There’s a certain irony in this one. At press time, we’re still watching the results of the senatorial race in Massachusetts. Their Democratic candidate and our governor, Christine Gregoire, have something in common besides gender and political affiliation. Chris was Washington State’s attorney general before she became our state’s chief executive. She’s promised to create 40,000 jobs at a time when there are a third of a million of us on unemployment. To find out why I think she’s going to be able to pull this off, please go here.

MORE GOOD NEWS

We meant to run this one last week but Haiti took center stage. Seven women from the International Community celebrated the new decade by skiing to the South Pole. This one’s in the finest tradition of Shackleton and Amudsen both and coming from a gene pool of strong women, I just rocked with this one and I have a feeling some of you will too. This is REAL adventure. So yep, please go here.

CRITTER STUFF

Well, thank you very much to a very distant cousin in Australia for this one. Not being inclined to dance with wolves or swim with anything bigger than I am, I remain terminally baffled by this one. I am, however reminded (constantly, sigh) that this would be a pretty boring little magazine if we had to rely on me for content. So yep, this one is about the thrill of going to Fiji and getting in the water with sharks. Have fun being a Devonian lunch and tell ‘em Charlie sent ya. Sharks. Brrrrrrrrrr.

Back on dry land and closer to home that Fiji, a species which was once nearly hunted into extinction in the Cascade Mountains of the American Pacific Northwest, and with which I’ve had some personal experience, is not only surviving but expanding its range. Yep, the howl of the wolf is being heard once again in the Deep Reaches.

If you’ve ever gone back three days into these or any other peaks and heard the primordial symphony these majestic creatures create, you’ll understand why some of us welcome them back as neighbors. For more on this one, please go here.

FROM YOU GUYS FOR YOU GUYS

FROM WINTER THE DOLPHIN AND OUR FRIENDS AT THE CLEARWATER MARINE AQUARIUM

We are all aware of the tragedy that is currently occurring in Haiti. CMA is doing our part by helping the Hilton Clearwater Beach collect donations for the relief effort. Hilton Clearwater Beach has received a donation of a 40’ container from A-Saf-T-Box and it is up to us to help fill it. Hilton will be accepting donations and Clean the World will pick up the container as it gets full to have it shipped.

The Haitian community is in need of canned food, clothing, packaged bottled cases of water, sheets, towels, blankets, hygiene products (shaving cream, razors, soap, lotions, deodorant, tooth brushes & tooth paste), and any pre-packaged, pre-made foods and products that don’t require cooking. This is one of several large hygiene product collections that Clean the World is currently mobilizing and organizing in addition to their normal processing and collection. Additionally, Royal Caribbean has graciously offered space on cruise ships this weekend and next weekend to deliver hygiene products into the northern region of Haiti, where Clean the World has direct distribution on the ground.

Cap Haitien Health Network and Evangelical Church of Haiti (ECH) will assist in providing transportation from the northern region into the impact zone as soon as the items arrive. As a CMA supporter, we know you want to make a difference and this is a wonderful opportunity to directly assist in the relief efforts. To make a donation, simply bring your items directly to the bell station at Hilton Clearwater Beach between 9am and 5pm each day this week. If you have any questions please feel free to reach out to Mike Morris at mike.morris@hilton.com or 727-461-3222 ext. 195.

For more information about Clean the World, visit http://www.cleantheworld.org. For information about Hilton Clearwater Beach visit http://www.clearwaterbeachresort.com.

Thank you for your support~

Click here to learn more about Clearwater Marine Aquarium or become a member of the CMA family

FROM BELOW THE MASON DIXON IN RESPONSE TO OUR ITEM ABOUT ARLINGTON, WASHINGTON GOATS EATING RECYCLED CHRISTMAS TREES

Here in the South, Christmas trees are frequently tied together along with a concrete block and put in lakes and ponds to build structure where bass and crappies can be found soon after the immersion. Many of them don't go to waste or wind up in a landfill. I abhor the cutting of trees and believe that Christmas trees should only be purchased at a Christmas tree farm. As a youth and even as a young father I went on the Christmas tree cutting expedition but as I've aged my views, as is often the case, have changed. The older I get, the more amazed I am at how much I DON'T know

Well, this one’s not exactly in the category of YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP. It’s more insidious. It’s like WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?! . There’s an eight-year-old New Jersey Cub Scout whose mother swears that young man cannot get on commercial transportation without a lot of extra hassle simply because he’s on the Transportation Security Administration’s Watch List.

And he’s only on that list because he shares the same name as someone (we can only assume, at this point) who “deserves” to be on it. Unflipping real that some acreage in Detroit almost became scorched earth because of someone who should have been on it was not caught and this evolving Boy Scout gets a bad time from the country he’s in training to serve. I guess this belongs under yet a third category. GIME ME A BREAK.

That’s it for this week. We’ve got some cool stuff down below you might want to check out. Stay the course, gang. We’re getting there and we’re going to make it. And thanks once again for the ear. And stuff.

Rusty



NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS (and also looks for same from you guys)


FUN STUFF

Interactive


Take this test to see how your memory compares with the average. Click here for fun games to improve your memory.

Virtual Experiences

How about a trip to Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo to watch a couple of grizzly bears in their Northwest setting? Yep, click here and thanks to our friends at Puget Sound NBC affiliate KING 5.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.

REVIEWS

Music CDs


Over the holidays, I had a chance to experience Susan Boyle’s “I Dream A Dream” CD. And if ever there was a good time for this one, it is surely now, when it seems as though the whole world could use some hope, some inspiration and an example of how a complicated soul simply expressed can make a difference. I was a professional dance and show combo leader with time in grade at 18 and I know what it takes to move an audience.

It’s a lot more than just being able to sing well. To sing for working class people, who don’t really believe anybody who hasn’t been where they have, it takes being able to get inside the song and become that song.

Check out the selections on her CD. They include: Wild Horses; I Dreamed A Dream; Cry Me A River; How Great Thou Art; You’ll See; Daydream Believer; Up To The Mountain; Amazing Grace; Who I Was Born To Be; Proud; The End of the World; and Silent Night.

Susan does that with each and every one of them. Getting into the song and becoming the song. Like most folks, I suspect, I wanted to hear I Dream A Dream first. That was the same stellar experience the first time I watched her totally wow a panel of British judges and then do it all over again in the Colonies as it were.

As I listened, though, to the other songs, I totally forgot about Susan, the one who did that one. Like she did, I became the soul of those for whom these songs are written and for whom she sings them. It wasn’t hard because I am one of those.

And as haunted as hard times make all of us, including me, she took me to a place where people experience it about as deep as it cuts and yet survive to grow and find a better life. She made me feel a little less lonely and a lot more connected.

I was brought up to believe that whatever a person did in this life, they should never forget who they are as a person. Ms. Boyle has done that both by personal example and in her art. I expect me and mine will be in her debt for some while.

Thank you, Susan, Lass. We are honoured by your society.

To purchase this online, we invite you to go here.

Good Reads

For those into words that resonate, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsman I know than a man named Mike Browne, professionally known as Tomatoman Mike and the publisher of The Tomato Man Times. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

FOR YOUR ONLINE SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

We invite you to do all your amazon.com through by tapping the photo of Susan or the ad. The Northstar Journal receives a 15% commission on whatever you purchase through this link.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

I made chowder, you made pickles. Let’s trade
I so love it when my “home and native land” proves yet again that they have something to teach the International Community about surviving hard times. You’ll love this one, gang. With thanks to the Toronto Globe & Mail.

And lest we think this is limited to country folk, consider this one, headlined, Bootstrapping taken to new extremes in tech industry

Or how about a seasonable application regarding Christmas trees? (This will be a real stretch for those of you in Toronto, New York, Dublin, London and Paris) Ever imagine having one delivered to your home by bicycle? Real close to the category of You Guys Think I Make This Stuff Up so by all means, go here ye yahoos of little faith

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Ever had trouble getting behind eating a lot of fruits and vegetables despite how good they are for you? Ever had trouble selling that one to your kids and grandkids? Ever been totally sold on the idea then gone to the market and been totally tasered by the price of good health in some places? If your answer is yes to any or all of the above, you really need to check this site out. Fruits and veggies: more matters.

ONLINE TOOLS FOR THE KIT

WorldStart.com - The best source of computer information, tips, education, entertainment, industry news, graphics and useful websites.

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

CCleaner - Free software downloads and software reviews - CNET Download.com
The home of Spybot-S&D! “For the past few years I've been using two free programs to remove the tracking cookies we accumulate every time we visit a site. Both have proven safe and reliable. Try them. You'll be surprised at the amount of binary barnacles your pore little hard accumulates as it sails the cyber seas. Sorry, but neither program eliminates alliterative purple patch prose. Like mine.”
Mike Browne, Sacramento, CA

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.

MEDIA

Overview

For those interested in what’s going on in the world of magazines and newspapers in general, we highly recommend Woodenhorsepub.com. They publish a weekly online newsletter for media professionals and for readers simply interested in the future of the publications they enjoy and an advance on new ones they might. Their website is located here.

Entertainment

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

BBC Knowledge Magazine – designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

News

BBC – Best source of international news.

The New York Times – Best source of American news.

The Vancouver Sun -- outstanding source for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

Reuters – Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

KING 5 News – Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

Talent For Hire
Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist – Whether it’s a one time press release, book or product review, difficult business correspondence, resume or classified ad composition you need, take a look at the services offered menu on my writer-for-hire homepage and we’ll get together on it.

Are you a travel editor looking for color shots of Seattle? Are you an art dealer looking for new work to carry on consignment? You might enjoy checking out a gallery of my work for sale

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

In Tribute to Miep Gies, Thoughts of Warmer Times, And Our Heart Goes Out to Haiti



















Thoughts of warmer days. These were taken on Lake Washington on July 29, 2009, when the official temperature reached 103, making it the hottest day on record. For more hot/warm weather windows, please go here. For more photos like this, please visit my online gallery. Photos by MS(R)M

Hi again and yep, from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound, it’s been another interesting week.

We join the rest of the world in mourning the passing, at age 100, of Miep Gies, the brave woman from the Netherlands who helped Anne Frank and her family hide from the Germans during World War II and, after the Gestapo finally discovered them, made sure Ms Frank’s diaries were returned to the only one of them to survive the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, Anne’s father Otto. Anne died there at age 15 of typhus. For a moving tribute to a quiet, humble and incredibly brave human being, please go here. For more on Miep’s life and times, please go here.

And our heart certainly goes out to those hundreds of thousands in Haiti victimized by the worst earthquake in 200 years. For more on this one, please go here. And to learn how you can help, please check this link.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

Workers at Portland, Oregon’s Daimler Truck plant received good news when it was announced that the struggling operation was awarded $40-million in federal funds to develop more fuel efficient technologies. Daimler was one of nine companies to receive such an award. For more on this one and a list of the others involved, please go here.

And under the category of breaking stereotype, Detroit takes best read in this category. As Susan Salny of the New York Times reports:

“With $6,000 and some Hollywood-style spunk, four friends opened this city’s only independent foreign movie house three months ago in an abandoned school auditorium on an unlighted stretch of the Cass Corridor near downtown.”

Yep, this is one of those, if they can do it there, maybe we can do it here stories so for more on this, please go here.

MORE GOOD NEWS

Congratulations to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada for winning the Sightline Institute’s Cascadia’s Greenest City award. I’m also pleased that Seattle came in second and Portland, for whose major daily newspaper I once worked, third.

For those of you unfamiliar with Cascadia, it basically extends south from the Alaska Peninsula to San Francisco and east across British Columbia to western Alberta, then south through parts of Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Nevada and Northern California.

In my experience, there’s nothing quite so empowering and inspiring as a good example. So to find out what criteria the Institute used and how each city ranked by category, please go here.

A small Washington state community has found a unique way to recycle Christmas trees by letting the goats at a local animal rescue eat them. I love it and yep, only in Washington and remember where you read it first. Yep, go here.

Maybe not so good news but if anyone still doubts global warming, they might want to take a hike up Mt. Rainier. According to Seattle Times science reporter Sandi Doughton:

“The fallout from Mount Rainier's shrinking glaciers is beginning to roll downhill, and nowhere is the impact more striking than on the volcano's west side.”

I can see Mt. Rainer from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound and I was on the Canadian border when her sister, Mt. St. Helens, erupted. A lot of us count on those glaciers to keep Lady Rainer cool, calm and unriled. Understandably, then, we’ll be keeping a close eye on this one. You can too, by going here.

CRITTER STUFF

We’ve got three totally beautiful stories to share with you this week and the first is about this absolutely darling dolphin who had the misfortune, as a baby, to get her tail caught in a crab pot rope. Despite every effort possible, Winter lost her fluke and it was decided she’d be safer in the Clearwater Marine Aquarium in Florida, where she could also be rehabilitated. She became an instant hit, of course, and attracted the attention of a small company which has been making prosthetic flukes for her. This is one of the most moving and inspirational I’ve read in a long time. For an interview with Winter’s trainer, Abby Stone, on The Bonnie Hunt Show, please go here. To see where Winter lives, yep, please go here.

Closer to home, our local orca pot increased its number by one on New Years Day. A twelve-year-old killer whale had a calf, which was spotted as J Pod moved south of Vancouver Island and into the Puget Sound. Yep, he/she’s a cutie and for a pix of mother and child and more on this one, please go here. Our thanks to Dave and Marilee from Victoria, British Columbia, Canada and to the Victoria Times Colonist for this one.

I loved this one because I love it when animals keep humans guessing. And according to Tom Stienstra, San Francisco Chronicle Outdoors Writer. Some are.

“The question on everyone's mind lately has been: Where have San Francisco's famous sea lions gone? The answer might lie about 500 miles north of the Golden Gate, where an estimated 2,000 sea lions have recently arrived off the central Oregon coast.”

I’ve been to Florence this time of year and it’s a real nice break from the pandemonium of urban society. San Francisco’s been going through a lot of changes lately and they’ve never been known for doing anything on the hush and nod.

My guess most of these new arrivals to Sea Lion Caves were probably light sleepers who just needed to catch up on their zzzzzs. As large as they are, those are probably ZZZZZZZZZZZZs. I expect they’ll be up there some while. San Francisco doesn’t show any signs of keeping it down past ten p.m. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.


FROM YOU GUYS FOR YOU GUYS

ty mick. i liked hearing about the coyote. my dad had a coyote for a pet when he was a teenager and evidentally both adapted well until my grandfather sold the coyote. i have always thought that was mean spirited of him. warmest regards, fay

Fay, as always, a pleasure, lass. We kind of tripped out on it too.







Well, when I first heard about this one, I didn’t believe it so I don’t expect you guys to either. Yep, into the YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP category for this one. To make a point recently, some passengers on Seattle’s newly initiated light rail line boarded the train in downtown’s Westlake Center and then took their pants off. On the scene were television crews, astounded passengers and more pundits than vultures on the Great Serengeti after a lion feast.

The Chamber of Commerce is not going to like this but Seattleites have a reputation for doing things sans clothing. Nudity is legal in all our public parks (I’ve never seen anybody in their birthday suit in the 20 years I’ve lived here but then I don’t go looking for stuff like that with gun or camera.)

I guess my objection to it is primarily aesthetic. I’ve staged special events and if I was going to get a bunch of semi-nude people together to draw attention to a cause or complaint, I’d hire models of both sexes and all gender persuasions. If we’re going to appeal to the libido here, for crying out loud, let’s get them ogling good before they turn away in mock outrage and impersonate the fine, upstanding and straitlaced citizens that give a town a good reputation.

That’s it for this week. We’ve got some cool stuff down below you might want to check out. Stay the course, gang. We’re getting there and we’re going to make it. And thanks once again for the ear. And stuff.

Rusty


NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS



FUN STUFF

Virtual Experiences

How about a trip to Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo to watch a couple of grizzly bears in their Northwest setting? Yep, click here and thanks to our friends at Puget Sound NBC affiliate KING 5.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.







REVIEWS

Music CDs


Over the holidays, I had a chance to experience Susan Boyle’s “I Dream A Dream” CD. And if ever there was a good time for this one, it is surely now, when it seems as though the whole world could use some hope, some inspiration and an example of how a complicated soul simply expressed can make a difference. I was a professional dance and show combo leader with time in grade at 18 and I know what it takes to move an audience.

It’s a lot more than just being able to sing well. To sing for working class people, who don’t really believe anybody who hasn’t been where they have, it takes being able to get inside the song and become that song.

Check out the selections on her CD. They include: Wild Horses; I Dreamed A Dream; Cry Me A River; How Great Thou Art; You’ll See; Daydream Believer; Up To The Mountain; Amazing Grace; Who I Was Born To Be; Proud; The End of the World; and Silent Night.

Susan does that with each and every one of them. Getting into the song and becoming the song. Like most folks, I suspect, I wanted to hear I Dream A Dream first. That was the same stellar experience the first time I watched her totally wow a panel of British judges and then do it all over again in the Colonies as it were.

As I listened, though, to the other songs, I totally forgot about Susan, the one who did that one. Like she did, I became the soul of those for whom these songs are written and for whom she sings them. It wasn’t hard because I am one of those.

And as haunted as hard times make all of us, including me, she took me to a place where people experience it about as deep as it cuts and yet survive to grow and find a better life. She made me feel a little less lonely and a lot more connected.

I was brought up to believe that whatever a person did in this life, they should never forget who they are as a person. Ms. Boyle has done that both by personal example and in her art. I expect me and mine will be in her debt for some while.

Thank you, Susan, Lass. We are honoured by your society.

To purchase this online, we invite you to go here.

Good Reads

For those into words that resonate, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsman I know than a man named Mike Browne, professionally known as Tomatoman Mike and the publisher of The Tomato Man Times. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

FOR YOUR ONLINE SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

We invite you to do all your amazon.com through by tapping the photo of Susan or the ad. The Northstar Journal receives a 15% commission on whatever you purchase through this link.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

I made chowder, you made pickles. Let’s trade
I so love it when my “home and native land” proves yet again that they have something to teach the International Community about surviving hard times. You’ll love this one, gang. With thanks to the Toronto Globe & Mail.

And lest we think this is limited to country folk, consider this one, headlined, Bootstrapping taken to new extremes in tech industry

Or how about a seasonable application regarding Christmas trees? (This will be a real stretch for those of you in Toronto, New York, Dublin, London and Paris) Ever imagine having one delivered to your home by bicycle? Real close to the category of You Guys Think I Make This Stuff Up so by all means, go here ye yahoos of little faith

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Ever had trouble getting behind eating a lot of fruits and vegetables despite how good they are for you? Ever had trouble selling that one to your kids and grandkids? Ever been totally sold on the idea then gone to the market and been totally tasered by the price of good health in some places? If your answer is yes to any or all of the above, you really need to check this site out. Fruits and veggies: more matters.

ONLINE TOOLS FOR THE KIT

WorldStart.com - The best source of computer information, tips, education, entertainment, industry news, graphics and useful websites.

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

CCleaner - Free software downloads and software reviews - CNET Download.com
The home of Spybot-S&D! “For the past few years I've been using two free programs to remove the tracking cookies we accumulate every time we visit a site. Both have proven safe and reliable. Try them. You'll be surprised at the amount of binary barnacles your pore little hard accumulates as it sails the cyber seas. Sorry, but neither program eliminates alliterative purple patch prose. Like mine.”
Mike Browne, Sacramento, CA

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.







MEDIA

Overview

For those interested in what’s going on in the world of magazines and newspapers in general, we highly recommend Woodenhorsepub.com. They publish a weekly online newsletter for media professionals and for readers simply interested in the future of the publications they enjoy and an advance on new ones they might. Their website is located here.

Entertainment

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

BBC Knowledge Magazine – designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

News

BBC – Best source of international news.

The New York Times – Best source of American news.

The Vancouver Sun -- outstanding source for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

Reuters – Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

KING 5 News – Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

Talent For Hire
Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist – Whether it’s a one time press release, book or product review, difficult business correspondence, resume or classified ad composition you need, take a look at the services offered menu on my writer-for-hire homepage and we’ll get together on it.

Are you a travel editor looking for color shots of Seattle? Are you an art dealer looking for new work to carry on consignment? You might enjoy checking out a gallery of my work for sale

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Tasmanian Devil rescued from extinction and other news of considerable consequence




Hi again and yep, from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound, it’s been another interesting week. And one of those where most of the “headline news” seems to change every few hours or so and ranges from health care to the newly revealed private life of a national icon to the Herculean (and perhaps Sisyphian) task of protecting airline travelers from terrorists, and including a man in Las Vegas whose government benefits were reduced so, in retaliation, he kills two people who had nothing to do with it and is himself killed.

One Nevadan I spoke to said that at least the guy got his Social Security death benefits. I seriously doubt that but it did address the general craziness that seems to accompany times like these. I also thought it was a rather sad commentary on human compassion. I wish I could say it was limited to just this one individual but it wasn’t.

That is NOT the way I like leaving one year and entering another so I exercised a personal option. I decided to ignore it all until it all settles out and to turn, instead, to things more positive that are also going on in the midst of all this Armageddon-unfolding coverage of these other works in progress. Yuppers, I went looking for GOOD news and by golly, I found some.

Moving right along then, eh?

The first assessment of how the United States reacted to the swine flu pandemic has come in, and, as, Donald G. McNeil, Jr. of the New York Times reports:

Although it is too early to write the obituary for swine flu, medical experts, already assessing how the first pandemic in 40 years has been handled, have found that while luck played a part, a series of rapid but conservative decisions by federal officials worked out better than many had dared hope.

Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

And under the profoundly good example category and so true to the Pacific Northwest way of doing things, a Seattle woman who built the first girls school in Afghanistan found out that one of the local militants, recently returned from Pakistan, is trying to get this institution closed down. So the founder of that school is going back to Afghanistan to make sure that does not happen.

Hope she remembers to pack wool sox with her Birkenstocks and that this yahoo who has made this trip necessary has also made peace with his ancestors. Like our Canadian neighbors to the north, we’re mostly laid back. Until roused. Yep, check it out.

And again, from the Puget Sound and if you think rich folks don’t care, you just might want to check out a new PBS documentary addressing, as Seattle Times reporter Kristi Heims puts it:

What is the secret to happiness? Even billionaire philanthropists want to know.

Just in time for the post-holiday doldrums, a new documentary conceived by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen aims to shed light on that question.

Yep, for more on this one, go here.

And for those of us who insist on seeing through the worst of times to a happy ending and are also into gadgets and stuff, including a small electric bicycle motor that recharges during coasting and breaking there’s a technology show in Las Vegas I really wish had been done at the convention center here in Seattle. My jealousy in these regards notwithstanding, check this one out.

Several blogs ago, we reported that Seattle has become the nation’s most congested city. We also shared with you that light rail service is running between the Seattle-Tacoma Airport (SeaTac) and downtown Seattle’s Westlake Center.

Now, it appears, there’s another alternative and that’s a site that also helps taxi drivers and their families by making it possible for people to share a cab ride to and from SeaTac. Granted, winter is not our prime tourist season, but then again, we don’t always wait for it to stop raining before we fix a leak in the roof. Yep, go here.

This one may not come as especially good news to women but an Australian study has concluded that women who take mates get heavier than women who do not. Don’t stone the messenger and for more information, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

Surviving hard times also means taking care of yourself and sometimes, as busy as we are working, looking for work, doing the domestic engineer thing, etc., the simpler tending to our health is, the more likely we are to do it. This one is for kicking a cold or the flu and involves drinking a warm cup of something you probably already have in the refrigerator. Check it out.

MORE GOOD NEWS

Something has been discovered on the moon that is totally weird but could very likely make the colonization of that big piece of cheese a reality a lot sooner than anticipated. It’s a hole about 260 feet/70 meters high and 213 feet/65 meters wide and covered over with a thin layer of lava. They’re called lava capsules and the moon, Mars and earth have them. This one would essentially shield a lunar colony from the extreme effects of temperature, etc. And now that water’s been positively confirmed up there, the whole idea’s being taken more seriously in government and private sectors alike. For more on this one, please go here.

CRITTER STUFF

Well, we’ve got two good ones for you this time and from half the globe apart. The first involved the miraculous survival of nine out of ten sled dogs in Alaska when their musher (driver), in training for that Iron Man of the Way North, the Iditarod, fell off and the team continued on without him. For more on this one, please go here.

We didn’t know that the Tasmanian Devil, that whirling dervish Warner Brothers made so famous as a cartoon character, was facing extinction due to cancer. Apparently, however, scientists have discovered the cause and are discovering a host of vaccines to treat it. I can’t say I’d ever want to run into one of these in the wild but if Tasmanian and other places on the other side of the globe think they’re cool, I have absolutely no issues. Yep, for more on this one and to see what a real Tasmanian Devil looks like, please go here.

FROM YOU GUYS FOR YOU GUYS

In response to our commentary on the Pew ranking of the most religious American states, we received this, from a reader Pennsylvania emailed:

Interesting stats on religion per state. Pennsylvania ranks pretty high in the importance of religion. My childhood hometown was reported to have the highest number of churches per capita in the United States (possibly in the world).

What's odd about these stats, however, is that the divorce rates in many of the most religious states tend to be higher than in the least religious. I read an article about that a couple of years ago. (Also, if I recall correctly, the percentages of out-of-wedlock births are higher in many of the most religious states.)

On the other hand, the divorce rates in the New England states tend to be lower. (PA has a medium religious score and a lower divorce score, which is cool.)

Here's the most recent data I could find quickly online.
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0923080.html

I guess those heathens know how to stay married.

I also noticed that the further west one moves, the less importance seems to be placed on religion, which strongly suggests to me that any efforts to save red souls before sending their souls to perdition in such places as Sand Creek could perhaps be more wisely invested in white souls.

Having said this, however, I hope it’s also clearly understood that I shared this with my tongue planted firmly in my cheek. Remember, I also believe in astrology, the Easter Bunny, romance and Santa Claus. I am not a definitive source for any of this stuff, however.

And this one sort’ve slides over into the YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP category so what if I told you that right in the middle of Seattle, in a real nice but not UP Upscale neighborhood, there’s a wild coyote whose been running loose for a couple of months but hasn’t eaten any pets or human beings so it’s like everybody’s going, cool and, it’s rumored greeting him by various names one might reserve for the average domesticated canine. I know what you’d think. You’d think I was making this stuff up just to make Seattle sound weirder than it already is. So go here for a picture and full details, ye of little flipping faith.

That’s it for this week. We’ve got some cool stuff down below you might want to check out. Stay the course, gang. We’re getting there and we’re going to make it. And thanks once again for the ear. And stuff.

Mick

NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

FUN STUFF


Virtual Experiences

How about a trip to Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo to watch a couple of grizzly bears in their Northwest setting? Yep, click here and thanks to our friends at Puget Sound NBC affiliate KING 5.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.

REVIEWS

Music CDs


Over the holidays, I had a chance to experience Susan Boyle’s “I Dream A Dream” CD. And if ever there was a good time for this one, it is surely now, when it seems as though the whole world could use some hope, some inspiration and an example of how a complicated soul simply expressed can make a difference. I was a professional dance and show combo leader with time in grade at 18 and I know what it takes to move an audience.

It’s a lot more than just being able to sing well. To sing for working class people, who don’t really believe anybody who hasn’t been where they have, it takes being able to get inside the song and become that song.

Check out the selections on her CD. They include: Wild Horses; I Dreamed A Dream; Cry Me A River; How Great Thou Art; You’ll See; Daydream Believer; Up To The Mountain; Amazing Grace; Who I Was Born To Be; Proud; The End of the World; and Silent Night.

Susan does that with each and every one of them. Getting into the song and becoming the song. Like most folks, I suspect, I wanted to hear I Dream A Dream first. That was the same stellar experience the first time I watched her totally wow a panel of British judges and then do it all over again in the Colonies as it were.

As I listened, though, to the other songs, I totally forgot about Susan, the one who did that one. Like she did, I became the soul of those for whom these songs are written and for whom she sings them. It wasn’t hard because I am one of those.

And as haunted as hard times make all of us, including me, she took me to a place where people experience it about as deep as it cuts and yet survive to grow and find a better life. She made me feel a little less lonely and a lot more connected.

I was brought up to believe that whatever a person did in this life, they should never forget who they are as a person. Ms. Boyle has done that both by personal example and in her art. I expect me and mine will be in her debt for some while.

Thank you, Susan, Lass. We are honoured by your society.

To purchase this online, we invite you to go here.

Good Reads

For those into words that resonate, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsman I know than a man named Mike Browne, professionally known as Tomatoman Mike and the publisher of The Tomato Man Times. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

FOR YOUR ONLINE SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
We invite you to do all your amazon.com through by tapping the photo of Susan or the ad. The Northstar Journal receives a 15% commission on whatever you purchase through this link.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

I made chowder, you made pickles. Let’s trade
I so love it when my “home and native land” proves yet again that they have something to teach the International Community about surviving hard times. You’ll love this one, gang. With thanks to the Toronto Globe & Mail.

And lest we think this is limited to country folk, consider this one, headlined, Bootstrapping taken to new extremes in tech industry

Or how about a seasonable application regarding Christmas trees? (This will be a real stretch for those of you in Toronto, New York, Dublin, London and Paris) Ever imagine having one delivered to your home by bicycle? Real close to the category of You Guys Think I Make This Stuff Up so by all means, go here ye yahoos of little faith

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Ever had trouble getting behind eating a lot of fruits and vegetables despite how good they are for you? Ever had trouble selling that one to your kids and grandkids? Ever been totally sold on the idea then gone to the market and been totally tasered by the price of good health in some places? If your answer is yes to any or all of the above, you really need to check this site out. Fruits and veggies: more matters.

ONLINE TOOLS FOR THE KIT

WorldStart.com - The best source of computer information, tips, education, entertainment, industry news, graphics and useful websites.

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

CCleaner - Free software downloads and software reviews - CNET Download.com
The home of Spybot-S&D! “For the past few years I've been using two free programs to remove the tracking cookies we accumulate every time we visit a site. Both have proven safe and reliable. Try them. You'll be surprised at the amount of binary barnacles your pore little hard accumulates as it sails the cyber seas. Sorry, but neither program eliminates alliterative purple patch prose. Like mine.”
Mike Browne, Sacramento, CA

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.

MEDIA

Overview

For those interested in what’s going on in the world of magazines and newspapers in general, we highly recommend Woodenhorsepub.com. They publish a weekly online newsletter for media professionals and for readers simply interested in the future of the publications they enjoy and an advance on new ones they might. Their website is located here.

Entertainment

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

BBC Knowledge Magazine – designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

News

BBC – Best source of international news.

The New York Times – Best source of American news.

The Vancouver Sun -- outstanding source for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

Reuters – Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

KING 5 News – Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

Talent For Hire
Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist – Whether it’s a one time press release, book or product review, difficult business correspondence, resume or classified ad composition you need, take a look at the services offered menu on my writer-for-hire homepage and we’ll get together on it.

Are you a travel editor looking for color shots of Seattle? Are you an art dealer looking for new work to carry on consignment? You might enjoy checking out a gallery of my work for sale