Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Pelican attacks newsman, Torah Bright takes a gold for Australia, Tiny avian alive and well in Portland

Pygmy Owl
Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, I just finished looking at a story in the New York Times, which talked about millions of Americans, ending last year unemployed.

I am therefore delighted to report, then, that an American Congress which has been acting more like gladiators in Nero’s Coliseum than a united body of strong, intelligent, experienced, capable human beings dedicated to the best interests of the national constituency have apparently decided that passing an economic stimulus measure which will also keep millions from going homeless is probably better for their re-election chances than the infantile name calling and resistance for resistance sake which seems to have been an unfortunate by-product of a presidential election which also, initially, gave one party a majority on Capitol Hill. I mean, come on you guys, isn’t this just a little embarrassing late at night when there are no cameras on or spin doctors handy?

The measure passed the Senate and is expected to be endorsed by the House after, we assume, a couple three more tantrums just to remind us that arrested emotional development is not limited to Hollywood actors making a comeback or major sports figures who cannot keep their flies zipped. For more on this one, please go here.

I also watched Meet the Press last Sunday and was reassured somewhat that General David Petraeus, commanding general, US Central Command, intends to observe the Geneva Convention in Iraq and Afghanistan and to make things a lot better for the gay and lesbian soldiers. If war must be necessary and apparently these are, it’s probably best that they be conducted under rules of engagement which would not precipitate an international Judgment at Nuremberg and incite even more violence against the US.

Well, Seattle’s Park Director took it upon himself to ban smoking of tobacco in apparently what he mistakenly assumed was his domain. Nudity and firearms are both legal, but not tobacco. The Right To Die Slowly and Painfully literally rolled over when smoking was outlawed in pubs and restaurants here. I guess the idea of walking almost as far for a cigarette as some would for a camel and then being busted for lighting up was probably that proverbial straw. The Park Director got a flood of all kinds of mail and modified his policy enough to staunch the flow of protest. For this really weird spin on interactive government, please go here.

Anyone who helps children has my total support so this one about some folks in my state of Washington hosting kids from the part of Belarus, in the former Soviet Union, where Chernobyl happened, really captured my attention and my heart.

According to Seattle Times reporter Marc Ramirez, there are 45 groups nationally who do this. We probably a little more empathetic than a lot of areas because we host the Hanford Nuclear Reservation and before it was closed down, it infected a lot of people who lived in the area. These are known locally as “downwinders.”

As I read Marc’s story about this one 21 year old girl from Belarus getting to spend a summer out of a still really toxic environment, I found myself wondering what it would be like to go to Heaven for a summer and then have to come back to Earth. These Chernobyl Children have families who love them but I’d still like to make it possible for them to have their kids permanently placed here in the Northwest and in healthy places in Alaska, Hawaii, and the continental US. I’d like to see Canada, which has a lot more room, come on board with this too. Those Belarus kids are just as much the future of the world as those I see every day because I live next to the University of Washington. For more on this one, please go here.

For a scientific and yet dramatic account and explanation account of what happened on April 26, 1986, check out this speech and question and answer a Ukrainian scientist, Dr. Vladimir Chernousenko, gave to a group in Texas. For an excellent overview of this, please go here.

MORE GOOD NEWS

Well, we just got word that Washington State has qualified for a share of the $787 billion federal stimulus spending package. We’re getting a six-million dollar grant that will be used to train workers in energy-efficient construction jobs. According to Seattle Times reporter Kyung M. Song:

“The money will be used to pay for 4,700 veterans, disabled or low-income adults and other residents to get certified to work in green industries — one of the fields targeted for investment under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act signed by President Obama last February.

“The grant was announced Wednesday by U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis twice, once with U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and separately with U.S. Rep. Jay Inslee, D-Bainbridge Island.

“Murray said the grant would help the state capitalize on growing demand for energy auditors, insulation installers and other clean-energy jobs.

"’Washington is uniquely situated to become a leader in the field of green energy," Murray said. But "we have to build the workforce before we do anything else.’"

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

I’ve long maintained that a community, no more than the proverbial “man,” lives by bread alone
; that the arts are to the soul what a good loaf a wheat bread (or in my case, a monster pepperoni pizza) is to the body. Apparently patrons of Seattle’s cultural cuisine agree. The ACT Theatre is posting its first surplus in four years. To see how they managed to pull this off in the midst of a Recession, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

It’s been my experience ~ and I’m sure yours, as well ~ that survival is also always about attitude and often it’s about dispelling old fears and shining a real strong light on the things we hear in the dark, late at night. This celebration of growing older somehow seems to fit that definition and trust me, regardless your age, you’re going to love Seeing Old-Age As a Never-Ending Adventure. Yep, go here.

We reported earlier about a new “cult” of people who are taking things they enjoy doing and are good at and making a living. This is a series and the link to this one carries them all. We’re going to be running this reminder until that series is finished. Yep, go here.

2010 OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES IN VANCOUVER

Under a definite “DO NOT EVER underestimate a Canadian woman” and with profound prejudice because we’re from the same province, we’d like to congratulate snowboarder Maelle Ricker on her gold, despite still recovering from injuries that would have kept most timberjacks I’ve ever known in camp for the season. I’m also proud that Maelle and I come from the same province. In Canada, that makes us practically back fence neighbors. For more on this particular flower of Maple Leaf athletic prowess and Canadian personhood, please go here.

Well, even though I’m from both countries involved, I was not pleased by the upset when the “underdog” American team delivered a surprising thumbing to the Canadians Sunday night.

In the first place, I’m not accustomed to viewing the United States as an underdog in any context. Second, I suspect that just maybe Canadians bought into that a little too much and set themselves up for a big fall. But that’s also why I don’t usually become involved in sports other than those in which I personally participate. However, I’ve come up with a rational that might work.

I’m taking the population of a particular nation and dividing it by the number of medals it has won. I’m not done with this by any means but based on current totals, between the United States and Canada?

So far, Canada has won a gold medal for every 5-million of her people; the U.S., one for every 44-million. In total medals so far, Canada’s per capita is about one in 31,000; the States, one in about 12-million. So yep, by this math, Canada is ahead. I can live with that.

I can also live with the fact that more Canadians watched this hockey game than they have anything in their history. I’m also pacifying myself with the knowledge that the gold is still up in the air. To see how Olympic hockey is organized, please go here.

For a daily tabulation of medals by country, please go here.

For an overview of the Olympics and daily news updates, please go here.

And for a schedule of upcoming events, please go here.

We would like to join our Australian readers in celebrating Torah Bright’s gold in the women’s halfpipe. I don’t imagine most of us associate Down Under or “Oz” with snowboarding but after what this lass did at Cypress Mountain, I expect that will change some. Nice going, Torah. Finest kind. Yep, for more on this one, go here.


HEALTH NEWS

I totally love it when a bad habit for which I’ve been criticized for years turns out to actually be good for people
. So I’m coming out of the closet about this one. About once a week or so, I wake up in the middle of the night with a screaming case of popcorn munchies. Somehow, that seems to have not gone over nearly as well as the same penchant for ordering a pepperoni pizza, which makes me even less popular because this house does not have a graveyard shift. Well, the pepperoni cravings have yet to be validated but not the popcorn. It’s good for a person and you can read about it yourself by going here.

With all this really horrific weather we’ve been having this winter, I’ve noticed a lot of people stampeding to their local pharmacy or health food store for more vitamins. While the idea of prevention is totally on-target, you might just want to take about three minutes to read the Health Age article on supplements. As tight as money is these days, you’ll also want to consider it from that standpoint as well. For more information, yep, go here.

CRITTER STUFF
Well, it’s not every day, I don’t imagine, that a pelican attacks a member of the media. Even in Sydney, Australia. Nobody seems to know exactly what the provocation was. This particular journalist was not a member of the paparazzi undercover at the Taronga Zoo to get the goods on an errant avian spouse. This was a weather person. But, as Ralph, our resident raccoon and advisor on such matters opined, in these regards, “How would you like it if that weather dude broadcast from YOUR front porch? Thanks, Ralph. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP.

Okay, this is weird, even for us so I’m not going to Bronx cheer the skeptics among you guys this time. If I wasn’t familiar with a city in the United States and the Pacific Northwest that reminded me a lot of a Bambi movie on orange tab acid, I would be inclined to totally not believe me either. The scene is Portland, Oregon (and yeah, for our readers in Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Tennessee, Texas and Australia, “the one in Oregon”. The species involved: the pygmy owl. Once thought nearly extinct in the American Pacific Northwest, these little nocturnal flying pest control devices are apparently making a comeback among a whole bunch of human beings who are glad to see them. Yep, check it out here.

To see a real cool video on this little avian and to get an excellent copy of an online wildlife field guide, please go 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
To receive The Northstar Journal as a weekly ezine, with enhanced graphics, please email a request for same to minstrel312@aol.com


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 Seattle 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


ZamZuu.com: “The Ultimate Shopping Experience”

In keeping with our policy of encouraging economic recovery through individual entrepreneurship, this one comes to us with a human interest resonance to it, as well. There’s a woman who works in public affairs in Washington, DC who, when this Recession hit, though not in danger of losing her own job, wanted to help busy families save money and time.

She also wanted to do so using more of her education in finance and experience with people than her full time professional position required. So she’s decided to start her own online business. It’s called ZamZuu.com, in memory of her father, whom she loves and reveres but who is not, unfortunately, still among us.

ZamZuu.com advertises itself as the ultimate shopping experience and while that sounds a lit-tle high-flying for anything smaller than Saks, Macys, etc. Upscale, it does offer this really interesting combination of travel and online mall shopping.

“Ultimate” is also a real subjective word, at least for me. In the circles I run, ultimate might be this like totally Zen meditation experience in the Himalayas. Etc., right? Well, when it comes to online shopping, ultimate to me is “easy to get into, easy to navigate, cool stuff presented so even a Cro-Magnon could understand it and affordable on my extremely limited budget."

I had a good time with this one so, in this case, I go along with the hyperbole and Northstar’s recommending it. Check it out here.

Writer At Work is a blog which comes to us from Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, England and here’s another case of appropriate hyperbole. Cadie, its author, is a university writer in training with a visually impressive informational website worthy of a professional with three decades more time in grade. Whether it’s specific advice to her peers or a dynamite story on a literary event in the United Kingdom, she does an admirable job of, as they say in the Colonies, “covering her bases.” She learns quickly, this one, and passes it along. What I also truly like about this site is that it is also a lifestyle slice of Merry Olde and from as ingenuous a source as I’ve met in some while. She’s a trip, gang. Check her out here.

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.

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

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

ZamZuu.com: “The Ultimate Shopping Experience”. For a truly rewarding mix of travel bargains and online mall shopping, you'll love this one.

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”

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.

Seattle Times – Best source for news of the city and the Puget Sound. Its reportage is unbiased but their columns and other opinion pieces do reflect the predominant values of the Pacific Northwest.

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.

Entertainment

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

Writer At Work -- a visually impressive informational website which includes specific advice to writers, a list of resources for same and dynamite stories on a literary events in the United Kingdom, this one is for the aspiring writer and the professional alike.

TomatoMan Times -- For those who love good writing, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsmen out there now than professionally known as Tomatoman Mike. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck is, 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.

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, February 16, 2010

The 2010 Winter Olympics: Who Really Gets the Gold?

Photo courtesy of CTV

Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, I don’t know how it is where you live but in my house, the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver are dominating the news.

This event has personal and historical significance for me. I was there at the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley when, for the first time since the modern games began, the American hockey team defeated both the Canadians and the Russians to take the gold.

I related to it for other reasons besides the patriotism I felt at the time. Squaw Valley is in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of Northern California, near Lake Tahoe. As a boy, I hiked, hunted, fished and helped build a homestead in those peaks. I was steeped in their history and I knew them in all seasons.

What also struck me was that here were these people from all over a world that had a Cold War going on and a new American president who promised to pay equal attention to the olive branch and the arrows. Here, in what amounted to my backyard, the best of their athletes competed with one another under a universal banner of honor and good sportsmanship.

Somehow, back then, I got the idea that if the nations of the world could do that in the Sierra Nevadas ~ which, face, it are picturesque but are also stone cold and desolate hell in winter, as the Donner Party found out ~ they might possibly one day live in peace on the rest of the planet.

That was some fifty years ago, I grant you, and there are times when we don’t seem any closer to it now than we were back then. But the fact is that we have come a long way since then and these Games are a constant renewal of that faith of mine born in the innocence of childhood, forged in my generation’s ‘great war,” and tested some by history since.

So who do I think really gets the Gold at the Games? Yep, you’re way ahead of me. We all do.

Well, here’s one that could have some interesting political and international complications, except it doesn’t. According to those who manufacture sticks for the game, more Canadian hockey players are southpaws, while their American counterparts shoot right-handed. Being also left-handed, for once I feel NOT in the minority here. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

MORE GOOD NEWS

We were delighted to learn that the Texas registered nurse who was charged herself after she filed a complaint against a local doctor for, according to Associated Press reporter Betsy Blainey, “improperly encouraging patients to buy herbal medicines and wanting to use hospital supplies to perform a procedure at a patient's home” was found not guilty by a jury. We never really did understand this one because it sounded like something that hasn’t been seen in the Lonestar since the March 16, 1903 “retirement” of Judge Roy Bean, in legend and in fact, sometimes “the only law west of the Pecos.” For more on this one, yep, go here.

In order to help protect endangered fish species, Canada’s largest grocery market chain has pulled shark, skate, orange roughy, and Chilean sea bass off their shelves and is providing customers with information cards listing alternatives. Their plan is to extend this to pet foods and a Loblaw spokesman said they expected to have the policy fully implemented in two years. There are 1,036 corporate and franchised stores, 376 associate stores and 4,692 independent stores involved. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

We’re proud to report that the Puget Sound’s Mercer Island Police Department is going green. To check out Washington State’s first hybrid law enforcement vehicle, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

One of the positive effects that these succession of storms which are battering the American Midwest, South and East Coast is having is that the mayors in all of the impacted areas know they’ve only got so much time to galvanize and employ all equipment, personnel and other resources before blame for whatever damage is caused and however many lives are lost also falls on City Hall. For a window on this one, please go here.

Meeting the environmental goals of the region is expected to create 47,000 jobs in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana over the next 20 years, according to a plan approved by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. For more on how this breaks down occupationally, please go here.

The retail sector is already feeling this new economic surge. According to Seattle Times business reporter Katie Ormsby:

“Even during the recession, shoppers have increasingly asked for more clothing, shoes and accessories made from sustainable and organic materials.

“Manufacturers and retailers are responding. Companies such as REI and Nordstrom are stocking more "green" merchandise, including scarves made from recycled cashmere sweaters, organic cotton shirts and running shoes featuring biodegradable midsoles.”

Yep, for more on this one, please go here

We reported earlier about a new “cult” of people who are taking things they enjoy doing and are good at and making a living. This is a series and the link to this one carries them all. We’re going to be running this reminder until that series is finished. Yep, go here.

2010 OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES IN VANCOUVER

With seven flags under this masthead, highlighting one athlete or country; singling out one human drama against a backdrop of hundreds might not be the most appropriate thing, from an editorial standpoint, to do.

On the other hand, as a member of the International Community and a journalist of same, the death of a Georgia competitor, the speculation about whether an American lady skier’s injuries will cost her the Gold, to Canada getting her first, it is all the highest and most ennobling of human behaviour.

It was also in the keeping of the history of both summer and winter Olympic Games. For a totally fascinating look, from ancient Greece to modern Canada, please go here.

The City of Vancouver, the Province of British Columbia and Canadians from Victoria to Halifax worked together for seven years in preparation for these games. The dedication to environmental concerns and fundamental quality of life issues will have positive impacts resonating for decades to come and which have further produced prototypes, which can be emulated across the entire planet. This is one our grandchildren will be reading about and to learn more, yep, please go here.

And to learn about the host country, please go here. Canada Facts & Figures

HEALTH NEWS

American First Lady Michelle Obama formally kicked off “Let’s Move,” her war on childhood obesity last week. According to the Center For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), two out of every three American adults is obese and one-third of America’s children. America also ranks first among nations in adult obesity and child obesity both. For the specifics on this one and how you can help, please go here.

Well, it looks like it really is possible to be bored to death. In a study to be released in April in The International Journal of Epidemiology, it’s definitely a state of mind that encourages such at-risk behaviors and habits such as cigarette smoking, drinking and other forms of substance abuse. For more on this one, please go here.

CRITTER STUFF

Well, campers at the San Diego Zoo’s Wild Animal Park must have though they were in a Tarzan movie early Valentine’s Day morning when the elephant herd started trumpeting the arrival of their newest member, a male calf born to mother Ndlulamitsi. Both are doing fine but it’s rumored the father is still recovering. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP.

Sometimes old saws ~ the literal kind ~ stay in vogue despite their antiquity because the continue to be true. Invariably, it’s been necessary to learn to crawl in order to walk. Until now. And a six month old with a cradle of cat’s worth of curiosity who decided to skip the kneepad stage and get on with the exploration of his world We go to England for this one and yep, oh ye of little faith, you guys get to go 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


An image of snow-capped Llaima Volcano in springtime is available at the Earth Observatory, along with an incredible array of other outer space images. This is one of NASA’s more engaging websites and it’s here, as well, that you can subscribe to their online newsletter. Whether you’re an aerospace/astronomy buff or simply enjoy stargazing, this is an excellent site.

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 Seattle 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.

We invite you to do all your amazon.com by tapping this link. The Northstar Journal receives a 15% commission on whatever you purchase through 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 craftsmen out there now than professionally known as Tomatoman Mike. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck is, 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?

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

For Valentine's Day, a Story of Love in Hard Times




Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, this Sunday, we celebrate Valentine’s Day and during times that could admittedly be some better. Rather than editorialize about it, though, I’d like to share with you a story about love during hard times. It’s based not just on one actual event but several. It speaks of love on levels which really resonate for me and I hope it do for you as well. It’s entitled “Rain.”

Married once and younger then, their lives had been a collage of rain dimpling a duck pond, wishing games in the high branches of the evergreens, intimate meals in the kitchen and nights that grew richer with familiarity.

A strange, almost inarticulate love, theirs, and perhaps best captured in the mornings she'd fall asleep at her easel, exhausted over a night's work, or the cold-coffee dawns he'd come home with raw fingertips and nothing to show for a week on the road with his band.

"I like it."

"You don't think the trees are too green?"

"They're beautiful."

"I'm glad you're home."

"Me too."

"How much do we owe the landlord?"

"I'm glad you're home. The landlord will keep."

There were, as well, those funny/sad times when the edge cut so deep it blunted itself on midnight cornflake conversations.

"What are you doing still up?"

"Couldn’t sleep. What's your excuse?"

"I missed you. Go for a walk?"

"Like this?"

"You look fine."

"Okay."

And then they'd stroll the quiet streets, reaping a clear night star harvest, or stand alone on the levee, watching the moon play on the rolling glass river. Sometimes it was back to the all-night coffee shop, where they would sit across from each other without talking, or needing to. Theirs was the rule of no apology, and that gentle dictate blessed their lives for two years and a season.

Then time and an era caught up with them.

His best friend was killed in Iraq over Thanksgiving, and she sold two of her canvases, only to learn they'd been purchased for their frames. She began her rage at one end of town, he his at the other, and they met in the heat of it all at the coffee shop. She cursed him for something he said, and he slapped her. In a moment of absolute terror, they told each other they were sorry.

He came back 18 months later with a limp and a double row of campaign ribbons. They talked over coffee, and he whistled at the prices her paintings were bringing. She reached out to touch the gaunt planes of his cheeks. They dined together, then went walking.

Along dusty country lanes, they played in rainbow leaves, chased squirrels and waded in the Indian summer silt of bullfrog ponds. They renamed the trees and called the southbound geese by the colors of the palette.

He memorized her eyes again, and traced her long mane from bangs to shoulder blades. She felt the gentle strength of his hands and heard the quiet joy of words a cordite-parched throat could barely speak. Love was theirs once more -- and for an emerald instant -- time and an era left them in peace.

When he returned to stay, she met him at the airport and saw him through the final mile home. He never smiled or told her how glad he was to see her. She never mentioned how much she had missed him. When the final strains of epitaph faded into the eternal chill, she walked home and sat down on the living room couch.

Rain fell softly beyond her.

And moving right along here and stuff.

Our hearts and prayers certainly go out to those of us east of the Mississippi as you prepare for yet a second onslaught of polar weather. These storms hit us first, from San Diego to Seattle, so we have some idea of what you’re going through. We’ve also studied some on your history and you’re a tough and resilient people. You’ll adjust, survive and grow. Like New Yorkers have done since 9/11. Good luck, Godspeed and let us know if there’s anything we can do to help.

And to our neighbors, friends and family in California, reeling still from the
aftermath of these same two storms, certainly at least in equal measure and with some personal identity. How you’re handling it makes me proud to have been raised among you.

It strikes me, and this is weird but you guys know how my mind works, is that the West Coast and the East Coast, the South, the Midwest, the Southwest and even, Lord love ‘em, Texas might have in common is that despite all your political, religious, etc. differences, when it comes to dealing with bad weather, y’all seem to have this remarkable knack of acting like Americans.

So yeah, albeit not by birth and always with some reservations, I guess how you’re pulling together from my equivalent of Victoria to Halifax, makes me proud to also be an American.

Please don’t take this wrong, but I’m beginning to suspect some of you colonials might make good Canadians after all. Finest kind, folks. Finest, flipping, kind.

We join our readers in Pennsylvania in mourning the passing of Congressman of John P. Murtha who died earlier this week in Arlington, at the Virginia Hospital Center, of complications of gall bladder surgery. According to the New York Times’ David Stout:

“Mr. Murtha’s death came two days after he became the longest-serving congressman in Pennsylvania history, his office said, surpassing the record of Joseph M. McDade, a Scranton Republican who served from 1963 to 1999.

Elected in 1974 and the first Vietnam combat veteran to serve in Congress, Mr. Murtha voted in 2002 to authorize use of military force in Iraq. But he evolved into a leading foe of the war as it was conducted under the administration of President
George W. Bush.”

To learn more about this remarkable individual, please go here.

We cross the Pond and a good portion of Europe to the Swiss Alps and this one about a local skier surviving an avalanche trapped and unable to move for 17 hours but blessed with an air pocket big enough to keep him breathing. I’ll tell you what, if I wasn’t already a little claustrophobic, I’d be opening doors and windows now. I can think of no more horrific way to die than being buried alive. According to one source, the average length of survival time after an avalanche is 45 minutes. It’s one reason I still believe in miracles, regardless their source or inspiration.
Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

MORE GOOD NEWS

This next one’s another blog written by a columnist for a new online publication started by some staffers from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, after it stopped its presses on March 16 of last year. I’ve worked for several newspapers and regret that this was not one of them. Whether you agree with the reality of global warming or not, if you like entertaining and insightful writing, you love this one. It’s by Robert McClure and it’s headlined
Consumers really can affect global warming — particularly if they live in the United States. Our thanks to Investigative West.

We’re going to keep following what’s going on in Haiti and here’s another of the reasons why. We want to wish former American President Bill Clinton good luck in his role as United Nations special envoy to Haiti. He’s been given the additional responsibility of overseeing the United Nations’ aid effort and reconstruction. This is also a good overview of the efforts in progress and those planned.
For more on this one, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

We found this one really validating personally
. It seems that you folks really do forward things to one another that you find on the Net. According to New York Times reporter John Tierney:

“Researchers at the
University of Pennsylvania have intensively studied the New York Times list of most-e-mailed articles, checking it every 15 minutes for more than six months, analyzing the content of thousands of articles and controlling for factors like the placement in the paper or on the Web home page.

The results are surprising — well, to me, anyway. I would have hypothesized that there are two basic strategies for making the most-e-mailed list. One, which I’ve happily employed, is to write anything about sex. The other, which I’m still working on, is to write an article headlined: “How Your Pet’s
Diet Threatens Your Marriage, and Why It’s Bush’s Fault.”

But it turns out that readers have more exalted tastes, according to the Penn researchers,
Jonah Berger and Katherine A. Milkman. People preferred e-mailing articles with positive rather than negative themes, and they liked to send long articles on intellectually challenging topics.”

For more on this one, please go here.

We reported earlier about a new “cult” of people who are taking things they enjoy doing and are good at and making a living. This is a series and the link to this one carries them all. We’re going to be running this reminder until that series is finished. Yep, go here.

With the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver slated to begin on Friday, we thought you might like some facts and figures on the host country herself. Please go here.

CRITTER STUFF

Since I’m a music lover and also a profound fan of dolphins, porpoises, seal, seal lions and other marine mammals up to and including great white whales, I was delighted to learn blue whales have now lowered their voices in what appears to be an expression of greater happiness and contentment

Jill Leovy, of the Los Angeles Times reports:

“It's the same old tune, but the pitch of the blues is mysteriously lower -- especially off the coast of California where, local researchers say, the whales' voices have dropped by more than half an octave since the 1960s.

“No one knows why. But one conjecture is that more baritone whales indicate healthier populations: The whales may be less shrill because they're less scarce and don't have to pipe up to be heard by neighbors.”


For more on this one, please go here and for some fantastic facts on these, not only the largest and loudest creatures on earth but among the most mysterious, check this out.

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP.

What if I told you guys that there was this lady with a real sick son, who went to her family doctor, who cursorily checked his patient out and said that it was nothing more than this child acting up for more attention? What if I told you that the mother of this child went home and her very young son didn’t get better so not having the money to go anywhere else, she plugged his symptoms into an Internet search engine and came back with something that pointed to a brain tumor. (Yep, you’re way ahead of me but indulge me and let me finish this) So yep, she goes to another general practitioner who runs some tests and the child’s brain tumor is caught in time. Yep, oh ye of little faith, please go 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


This image of snow-capped Llaima Volcano in springtime is available at
the Earth Observatory, along with an incredible array of other outer space images. This is one of NASA’s more engaging websites and it’s here, as well, that you can subscribe to their online newsletter. Whether you’re an aerospace/astronomy buff or simply enjoy stargazing, this is an excellent site.

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 Seattle 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 through by tapping the photo of Susan or the ad. The Northstar Journal receives a 15% commission on whatever
you purchase through 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?

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

An American president lays it on the line, Leonard Cohen wins a Lifetime Achievement Award and Tai Shan goes to China to make other Pandas

Tai Shan


Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, last Wednesday evening, like millions of other people on the planet, I watched America’s chief executive pretty much lay it on the line.

President Obama, in his State of the Union Address, echoed much of what he said in his inaugural speech. Among other things, he reiterated that it is not up to a president or any other single elected individual or government body to arbitrarily make policy; but rather that “policy” should emanate from and reflect the wishes of the people.

He also said that while he would do his best to make those changes necessary, being human and new to the job, he not only expected to make mistakes but to be told that by the constituency (“us guys,” gang) and given our support in correcting for course.

In his assessment of the financial crises we’re in, he pointed out ~ and accurately so ~ that after eight years of a Republican White House – his administration did not cause what we’re facing now. His administration inherited it.

I’m real surprised, considering something incredibly stupid I heard in a chatroom I visit to sample public opinion about “America always going to hell when the ‘Dems’ are in office,” that Barack Obama did not remind people that prior to the Great Depression ~ and mind you, this was before the two-term limit on presidents was passed ~ the Republicans occupied the White House for three terms/12 years and that it was a Democrat the people chose to get them out of it.

America’s chief executive, has, however, consistently stated that he does not consider this a partisan endeavor and so far, for the most part, he’s held to the high road in these regards.

Admittedly, he’s rocking the Good Old Boy Club on Capitol Hill with his Mr. Smith Goes to Washington approach to working together. Apparently he’s not endearing himself to some other folks either. In another chatroom, I ‘heard’ someone say “We’ve got a coon in the White House.” No, I am NOT making this up so don’t even go there.

I’m recalled of another man who felt the same way America’s chief executive does and did pretty much the same thing, albeit not as a politician. Because of my profound love of that individual, I was solidly opposed to Barack Obama becoming president during these tense and trying times.

I did not want to see happen to the senator from Illinois what I saw happen to a man I admire and respect right up there with Moses, Mohammed, Jesus, Eamon DeValera and Gandhi and who was gunned down in Memphis a month after I turned 19 by some hate-filled idiot with a rifle and a lot of other ignorant, bigoted and gutless precedent backing the play.

I’m a white man so maybe I’m not supposed to feel this way but Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. meant a lot to me and I’m not sure I could remain a rational and peaceful human being if Barack Obama went out the same way. I pray Almighty God I’m not the only white guy who feels that way.

Moving right along, then, February is Black History Month in America and to learn more about the contributions these Americans have made to the nation and to the world, please go here and here.

I’m sorry to say, I didn’t watch the Grammy Awards. I understand it took on some aspects of a high-wire act. What I noted and am proud to share is that Canadian singer, songwriter, poet and novelist Leonard Cohen won a Lifetime Achievement Award. For more on this remarkable individual, please go here.

We bid a sad farewell to American author J. D. Salinger, perhaps best known for his novel Catcher In the Rye. The reclusive writer died last Wednesday at his home in Cornish, New Hampshire, at the age of 91. For more on this literary icon, please go here.

MORE GOOD NEWS

Well, we note with some alarm and a little consternation, this rash of automotive industry recalls. It’s like an international ooops with potentially grave consequences for millions of people around the world. So I’ve been looking at some alternatives and one that seems to be taking hold from Beijing to Boston to Brussels to Mumbai is the electric bicycle. Check this New York Times story out and for a list of electric bike manufacturers and more information, please go here.

We’re going to keep following what’s going on in Haiti and here’s one of the reasons why. It’s headlined: Near Quake’s Epicenter, a City Ready for Business and to my mind, it’s as heroic and inspirational a story as I’ve heard in some while. For those who have any doubts about these people’s resiliency, pride and determination to not only recover but build a better world for themselves, I’ll submit this one for consideration. Please go here.

Definitely under the category Why I Do Not Arbitrarily Dislike the Affluent, Just Because I’m Not One of Them, this particular vignette is about one of those millionaires who lives across the lake from me and has been the subject of some controversy. He’s giving $10-billion to coming up with vaccines that could keep a lot of children from dying.

To the cynical, it might be a marketing move. To me, it’s an act of compassion by a human being doing what he can, with what he has, to make a difference. In that regards, he’s no different than you and I and even though I sincerely doubt that I’ll ever be invited to his home, anyone who cares about kids is welcome in mine. Yep, for this one, please go here.

I also found a profound element of kismet in Fit Pregnancy Magazine’s deciding that Portland, Oregon is the best city in the American Northwest to have a baby. For the criteria involved and how other cities in this region ranked, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

We reported earlier about a new “cult” of people who are taking things they enjoy doing and are good at and making a living. This is a series and the link to this one carries them all. We’re going to be running this reminder until that series is finished. Yep, go here.

How are we faring, really, in all of this? Americans are, at the very least, the sum of the seven flags under this masthead and some else. Right along with the rest of us, they’re learning. Yep, check it out.

CRITTER STUFF

This first one weirds me out on a couple three levels. During the driest January since records have been kept here in Seattle, California experienced extreme flooding and now, down in San Diego, they’ve got a invasion of giant squid on their beaches.

It would be a lot more dramatic if it was like this totally and possibly apocalyptic event but San Diego’s already been through trials by fire and flood and there’s nothing in any religious texts I’ve ever read that suggests a plague of squids. These creatures also paid a previous visit like this in July of last year.

I figure that since they’ve so far not come ashore, this isn’t going to be a real hard adjustment for the humans involved. Scientists have no idea why the squids are behaving like this and apparently the squids are not volunteering any information.. Yep, check it out here and our thanks to the Palm Beach Post for this one.

In living testimony that the contention that a dog is “man’s” best friend and sometimes vice versa is not limited to stories in Alaska, America, Flanders or Greece, there’s one canine who owes its rescue from a Baltic ice floe 15 miles off Poland to the crew of a Polish oceanographic research vessel. If they make a movie about this one, I’m having a party behind it so yep, check it out here.

It’s with a heavy heart that America says good-bye to one of the most adorable creatures born under the Stars and Bars in some while. His name is Tai Shan and under an agreement with the Red Chinese government, now that he’s old enough, this panda bear will be going back to the home of his ancestors to, well, like make other panda bears and stuff. Nice going, Tai Shan. You rock, kid. Yep, go here.

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP. Okay, sigh. What if I told you guys that one way of healing a human brain was to introduce cells from the tail of a mouse? Okay, when you’re done rolling on the floor about this one, go here and check it out, ye of little flipping faith. This one was like ultimate weird of the week for me.

FROM YOU GUYS FOR YOU GUYS

In response to our wishing a very special lady, a Happy 70th Birthday:

thank you for the lovely birthday wishes, my friend. I did have a great day and yep, 70 is simply a number and life is wonderful. On another note, my companion and I struggle with how much this 'red-headed comedian' was given in severance pay. I hope the amount is not a struggle for him to live within. All we can think of is how many people could be helped with just a fraction of what he 'earned'. Some of this stuff makes no sense to me. Thanks again, Rusty, Peggy, Sacramento, California

Peg, you're more than welcome and some of it totally blows me away too. But then I've never held that human beings were the smartest creatures ever created, except perhaps in the eyes of their own reflection.

In response to our article on International Holocaust Remembrance Day:

I know it's true Rusty and it makes me shiver..............plus thinking about where we are today and the course we are on...........! Thanks for sharing. Sandy, USA

You’re more than welcome, Lass. And Sandy, what’s going on in the world sometimes scares both the shamrock and the Star of David out of me. But then our species has been embarked upon this apparent path to self-extinction for some while now and while we may lack the talent for peace, we seem to be equally inept at TOTALLY blowing it. May we continue to be as maladroit in these latter regards.

A general response from America’s Southland:

From the red clay, humidity and easy living of South Alabama....Greetings. I agree completely with your statements vis a vis the holocaust.. Those who deny this seminal event in Jewish history and in the history of mankind (will any feminists be reading this?) in general remind me of an ostrich with its head in the sandor an old alabama 'possum who's playing dead. Regarding Haiti: I feel the natural compassion for other suffering human beings, however on the subject of relief funds I'm afraid my opinon of this is on a tangential course compared to many. Enough money has been funnelled into Haiti over the past 20 years to pave the entire country and erect earthquake resistant structures. I do realize that most of these funds wound up lining the pockets of Papa Doc Duvalier and Baby Doc Duvalier. Let's not forget the sterling leader, Jean Baptiste Aristide. I'm sure he skimmed his share. I don't feel responsible for this but I don't begrudge humanitarian shipments of food and medical supplies. Mr. Obama has already pledged one hundred million taxpayers dollars to Haiti...I would not be surprised if the USS Carl Vinson wound up just shooting bales of money off its catapults into the countryside. This wouldn't be any less willy nilly than aid packages given the Haitians in the past. Regarding Conan.......I agree. This is the silliest man in television today and unworthy of any consideration whatsoever. I realize that I'm in the minority but Jerry Seinfeld has NEVER uttered anything that I found even remotely funny........as is the case with Conan. I enjoy comics like Robert Klein and George Carlin who inject a little intellectual acumen into their presentations. Live long and prosper.

p.s. I don't know how I overlooked the bit about the WASPS of WW2. Being an aviator I especially appreciate their efforts which freed male pilots to go overseas and fight the air battles. Don't let any feminists see this statement. I'm not prepared to defend my male chauvinist pig pronoucements. As an aside to this, it's interesting that Russian women flew combat missions in WW2 or "The Great Patriotic War" to them. Several of them became aces and German pilots were mortified to find that a woman had shot them down. Many of them flew the best soviet fighter, the YAK 7 from the Yakovlev bureau. Some of them flew the obsolete Polikarpov Po-2 biplanes and harrassed the German troops at night. The Germans called them "nachthexen" or night witches It's also interesting that another obsolete biplane, the British Fairey Swordfish was instrumental in sinking the German battleship Bismarck. Speedy Neutrino, Alabama, USA

Dixie, what amazes me most about your feedback ~ aside from the fact that I agree with most of it ~ is that I know you also got it all said in one breath. Apparently they’re not only continuing to grow them intelligent below the Mason Dixon Line, but with a healthy set of lungs. Speedy, we are honored by your society.

FROM ANOTHER VERY SPECIAL LADY:

thank you for the newsletter. i loved the pic of a yellow lab. i love conan too next to letterman. leno is not a fave. hugs, fay, USA

Fay, if the big guys like those comedians, or some rock stars we both could name but are not here, had as faithful a supporter of their art and enterprises as you have been of The Northstar Journal, a lot more of them would still be with us because they would have remembered who we do things like this for in the first place. Thank you.

ANOTHER RESPONSE FROM THE STATES:

Fascinating articles! Thanks. CIP, Pennsylvania, USA

You’re more than welcome, Counselor.

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 Seattle 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 through by tapping the photo of Susan or the ad. The Northstar Journal receives a 15% commission on whatever you purchase through 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